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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug. 9, 1976

;[i' ' ' ' ' ' £:~h::;:; :~:;;:;::::;;::·: : :·i r----A;~~~i)-~;th~---- ! ~~~~«n page I) Search continues

Viking

.

'

•• •

(Continued from page I)
·material" is respons ible,
Klein 'said .
·
In the recheck, the soli
sample will be sterlllied first
so no organisms could
remain, ensuring that if the
tesults are the same, some
other factor is at work .
Viking's soil«ooping arm,
stuck since Tuesday, was
reactivated Ibis weekend.
. The trouble might have been
caused by frost oo Mars,
where lhe .temf&gt;!!rature 13
usuaUy (ar below ·zero.
Meanwhile, Viking 2
slipped into an egg&lt;!haped
orbit around Mars Saturday,
~reparing to land a second
life-seeking robot , set for
Sept. 4.
Viking 2 and the portion of
Viking I still orbiting were
scanned Mars for a safe place
to land the second imtrumertt
package.
SUIT FILED

A suit lor partition of real
estate in Lebonan Township,
Meigs County has been filed
in the Meigs Co unty Common
Pleas Court by Augusta Birch
Powell of Torch against
Ralph D. Birch, et al.

r

history in United States /

By~~r~l~l:nN~r~t~ON
The

::·:
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·,,·[,.·j···'j:···

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The Golden Rule is always
followed by the "Friendly
Ones." Aller all, YOU are
fhe most imporfanf part of
our business ...

POMEROY
C~ENT BLOCK
~~-iool

00

::~.:,: ,.,.,.,.,
HOSPITAL NEWS

•. ,.•. ,.,.,,,.,.•. ,.,.,., ••,,.,.•• ,.•.,.,,••,,,,., ••,,.,, •• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,.,,,,,,,,.,.,,.,,.,,, •• ,,.,,,., ••,.,, •• ,,,,;:::

I gone as 1.1 loogtime private

w:~~;~~r:~~;::~ro~~-i; m~~f~~:~f~~1~:~~~u~; E?::~::.;.1

.:·:
PHILADELPlliA IUPI) 41st lntemaUonal :;;; Pomeroy passed away
H Eucharistic Congrelarss, which ended Sunday, wa~ one od~ ~ug~~~~~~\,~~~er~l:e ~~:~~~
:;:: tbe most spectacu assemblies of the Roman o.,alhollc ::;: veteran of World War I and
( O!urch ever held in Ibis coontry.
;~;; had spent a year In France as
}
It was a time of renewal, a time to feel good about being ) a member of the A.E.F.
.. Cath oI'lc, a time to wl'lness tothefa 1tb focged and lived out ;:::
.. Signal
.
:;:;
He IsCorps
survived
by his wi fe
;;:: In dozens of ways in some 100 countries.
:;:; Allee; a son , Stephen ; his
:;:: The church has been In turmoil foe a decade since the ;;;: wife, Sara, and three grand} Second Vatican Council. Attendence at Mass decllned. :~;~ children, Steve, Jr., Jeff, and
.·.·
.... Cathy
:
two
brothers.
;:;: Prl'estly a nd religl'ous voca ti"ons sIacked. There was ::::
Clarence,
Sr
., Chesler,
and
:;:;
confusion
and
controversy
over
birtb
control,
tbe
role
of
{
Ira,
Rutland
.
,
and
two
s(sfers,
;.;.
dn . I
I
..
: :, : ~ women an 1 urgtca renewa.
:;:; Addle Pullins of Texas
But the Congress, with Its 60 different masses, its bold ~;~: community In Chesler Twp.
;:;: ethnic affirmations and its inclusiveness, was good news.;;:: ~~ . Oorofhy Reif of Grove
·::;
Cardinal James Knox, a powerful member. of the {
Asis ter, Bertha Sayre, died
~omCan
CUria anlldedPopehe Paul's personal representative to ) In .f~70. funeral was hel d In
u•e o~gress, ca . t Congress "the place of worship of ;:;:
·~
ington
af Funeral
the
u•e unJVersaI churc h• of ••
u•e whoIe woe ld • unltlngus in :::;. Worth
Rutherford-Corbin
':'; bonds ofhfaith witb tbe Holy Father and with millions of \ Home with interment in fhe
:;:; our brot ers throughout lhe world ,"
;::; MI. Hermon Cemefery In
;:;: Behind lhe jubilation and devotion !bat brought 100 000 :;:; Chesler Twp .. Meigs County,
.... pilgrims to John F. Kennedy stadium were two the~es ::;; on Au~ust 7· The minister
~.,'.•,: whose meaning and significance is yet to be measured ·. '.'··' · was
pas for ev
of .theOwen
NorthSfewart
Bapti st,
:::: - That Catbolic piety, especially as related to venera- ;:;: Church of Columbus.
:.:.•.:. ;::~( ;~~ ~charist, is and rn\lst be related to Catholic ::.::. .
C. H. McElhinny
Charl es H. !Chuck!
•.f.: ... - '!'hat ther:~ispantustanprec
t eddentedea..C"Iinse~sus among } McElhinny, 85, Fourth st.,
. w.eo1ogtans, w• roe n an
u•O co, the "real :::: Middleport , died S un~ay
;:;: .presence" of Christ in the elements of bread and wine
:;:: morning
at
Veterans
{
The first of lhose tbemes will be tested in Det~it in { Memorial Hospita l following
""lober when ••
.·.· a IN
lingering
ill ness.
:;:;.. ""
u•e US
. ; churc h has an unprecedented ::::
. McElhinny was born
. \ rep_resentative gathering to map a five-year plan of social ::' March
1891 in Galfla
[\:, ••

"I n th e end, you will never
lose if you fol low tf1e· Gold.
en Rule,~·

.

17,

Hemlock

Grove,

d Ie d

former Marine lieutenant
colonel military aide who
resigned his commlsalm to
take the job.
The NIIons go to few social
events. They have ' been to a
gatberlng at the Palm
Springs estate of former
ambassador to Britain
Wa Iter A.nnen berg, 1fhere
FrankSinatrarecenUy took a
fourth wife.
. They dine out occaslonaUy
at restaurants within driving
range, Ford visited NIIon In
the hospital and Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger has
calledatSanCI~mente. Their
daughters, Julie and Trlcla,
and their husbands, are frequent visitors at the estate .
A detachment of mere !ban
20Secret Se t vi ce agents, pa id
for by the government,
prgul~a.t guatbeJ~~e ~:.:;,~.

~~!~.~~~h;1 Roy~~~!vlllfn

Toronfo, Ohio.
Mr. Cumming was born
Aprll11, 1886, a son of fhe lafe
John and
Radford
Cumm
lngs .Sarah
He was
also
ded 1 d
to':~~ andn0 e;!~;~~~~~ 'II!~:
nice.
·
. S'urvlvinn•
are
two
1
dllaugh
elrsK.I ngMrps
. EvNereyff
UCI 11 e
, eru, . "
and Mrs. James {Clarice)
Stewa rt , · Toronto . . two
grandchi ldren and one great.
gr~dc~~';,;mlngs. a refired
ca rpenfer, was a 50·year
member of file Naf lonal
Grange. He beIonge d fo
. HeF~~r~IG~~~~~~;san~~·1 be
hel d at 1 p. m. Wednesday at
the Ewing Funeral Home
wi th the Rev. Wil liam McNeil
officiaflng.
wilmet
l be In
H 1 k GBurial c
F~i~n~ m::Vecall eat ef~.; ·
~=~ h_f~~d~~~ lime after

Ill the dozen houses on the

ERWIN ISLIM! CAIN
COOLV I.LLE _ Erw in
(Slim) Cain, of 7730 Mound
St .. Orienf. Ohio, formerl y of
the
area neo
r
h Hocki~porf
dl
1 dl

compound surroQitdlng
Nbron's property turns away
tourist cars.
It is next to Impossible for
the news media to get any

s~~':iay ~~ ~~~·P~~r"m/t

ggr:o~t~;t~,~:!~~~rf~ ~~~:!f~~rfi~~ofy~: ~~!::;~~ :: ~:

brofhers.
Survivl n~ are his w'of·e, William
laura BlseFloyd
Cain. Ca
Heinwasand•
Gertrude ells McEl hinny ; a member of the Freewill
Veterans Memorial Hospital Kanauga; Betty Brooks, 1~~?,.~~~~·) ~~te.s'~~le~le~ : Bapflsf Cliurch of Orient, of
. Saturday Admissions ~ Albany. r
fhe Bricklayers Union, and
dale , Calif. ; a brother , had been employed t.he pasf
Ernestine Fisher, Syracuse;
Sunday Discharge
Roberf, of Middleporf ; a 15 days at Orient State ln.
Harland Greene , Vinton; Patricia Spencer.
grandda ughter and two stifufe . A world war 2
Julian Stevens, Gallipolis ;.
·
grea t-grandsons, al l of ve teran , he .received the
Alice Coleman, Albany ,·
Hal•er Medlcal Center
aGnlend. ndeaole)',e,a~nd several nieces Purple
in lhe European .
._ HeartOpe
(Birth•Aug. 6)
Joseph Jasper, Racine.
Mr .
c lhin ny was 8 Thea .• r ot
rations.
·s _
Mr·. and Mrs. Donald
·
· -- ......,, ·
Surviving are his wife,
Saturday Dlscharge
member of Hearn United levanchia Randolph Cain, at
Michael Hubbard, Ura Lambert, daughter,
Wellston
.
Methodist
Churchn ofin world
Mid· home ; as t0pd aug hfer, ...
... s.
... 7)
dleporf ,• a vefera
(Birth
Largent, Wesley Allen ,
s, ,...g.
Marvin ( Mar jor ie)
Crystal Koenig, Gladys
Mr . and Mrs . Mon ty WF ar I. Band belonged to . Keebaugh, Pomeroy ; a half·
eeney · en nett Posf 128, brother, Oral eao·n, lo'ffle
P
ht
l eg .oon. He was a Hock ing ; a halfsisfer, Mrs.
'
Moore. Shl'rley Roush , earson, daug er, Hen- Amer·can
Ronald Carr , Fred Birtcher . derson, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. retired carman foreman on Eula Reed, Marion,. Ohio;
Sunday Admissions - Jerry Mayse, daughter • ~~:'C':,~~r;[e;a i~~o~~e New two sfep.grandchi ldren, Mrs.
Darlene Hooper, Athens·, Huntington, W. Va .; .Mr. and
F
Debra Buck and Mrs. Tanya
Mr Dal Sn d d hte
uneral services wi ll be Davis, both of Pomerov ; two
Alice Nease, Pomeroy;
s . . e Y er, aug r, · heldaf 2p. m. Tuesdayaffhe step . great-grandchildren,
Joseph Stewart, Bidwell·; Oak Hill ; Mr. and Mrs. Alva Rawl ings .coatS Funera l Jennifer and Jullenna Buck ,
Cleaise Gibson, l..&lt;Jng Bot- Clark, son, P omeroy ; Mr. H0f1'1e with the Rev. Robert Pomeroy, and his mofher·in.
and Mrs C&lt;!cil Lambert son Bum~arner oftlc laling . I
... Be 'fh R d I h
lorn.' Esther . Comstock' ·, .Patnot.
. .
'
' Buro· a wo"ll be ·,n f•e
'
Gravel
aw.
''"
s. and
r a twoan aunts.
oP '
"
Reedsville.
Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Funeral services will be
(Blrth.s, Aug.S)
Friends may call at fhe .held Wednesday af 2 p.m.
Mr. an&lt;! Mrs. David Smith, fu'*'al home at any time. from the Whlfe Funeral '
daughter, Bidwell ; Mr. and Milifary ri tes will be con- Home wifh fhe Rev. Eldon
Mrs . Eddie Bare, son , dueled at the groveside by Blake in charge. Burial wil l
Monday fhru Thursday
Feeney·Benneft Post.
follow in Eden Cemetery.
Augusft-12
Galli
polis;
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Friends may coli af the
NOT OPEN
Clyde Weaver, daughter,
·
Dayton Biggs
funeral home Tuesday from 2
RACINE
- Dayfon B~
· gs, to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
New Haven, W. Va .
R
fi/ , oufe 1, Racine, di
at
Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
his residence on Sunday.
Aug ust 1J.1A·I5, Wa if
Mr . Biggs was born Oct. 9, BONI ELECI'ED
Disney's No Deposit, No
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio
Now
Yoo
Know
1918,
the son of fhelafe Pearl
Return . David Ni ven ,
Darren · McGavin , Don
The egg of tbe extinct ~nd Addie Decker Biggs. He (UPI ) - Armco Steel Corp.
IS surv1ved by two sisters, has elected Robert E. Bon! as
Knotts , Hen;c~e l Bernard i. Hepyor nis
bird· . of .Blanch
Biggs. Racine, and.
Barbara Feldon
· Mada!l"scar was l!Je largest INs. George lAddie Mae l vice president of research
Show slarts 7 p.m.
kno\vn, measuring 13 inches . Brown. Mason ; two nieces, and technology, replacing
.._.,___.__...... long and nine inches ·around. Mrs. Thomas (S usie) McKay, Lee F. WeitzenkOrn, ·wbo Is
Columbus, and Mrs. Richard retiring after 37 years of
!Mary) Terry, Marsville.
Funeral services will be service with Armco.
Dr. 8oiu is a metallurgical
held af 3 p. m. Tuesday at the
Dorcas Unifed Me thodist engineer who earned his
Church wi th fhe Rev . bachelor's degree at the UniFreeland Norris officiating. versity of Cincinnati and his
Burial will be in fhe Green.
wood Cemetery. Friends may master's and doclllr's
call at the Ewing Funeral degrees from CarnegieHome.
Mellon University,
Pittsburgh.
Elmer Whilfington
He joined Armco in 1956 as
Funeral services for elmer
Whitling ton, 85, Rutland, who a research engineer.
died Saturday at Veterans
Memorial Hospifal, were held
. ASKTOWED
af 2 p. m. today at the
Phillip Jon Weaver, 211,
Rutland Chapel of the Walker Syracuse; and Karen Elaine ·
Runeral Home with the Rev.
Neigler, 2(), Syracuse; Adrian
Amos Till is officiating .
Mr. Whifflngton was born Eugene Barnette, Jr., 18,
May 24, 1891 in Meigs County, Route 2, Racine, and Calhy
a son of fhe lafe Daniel and Ann Wolfe, 16, Route 2,
Mary Whitfington . He was a
Paul
Brent
refired employe pt the New Racine ;
York Cenfral Railroad .
Wolverton, 26, Route 4,
. Surviving are a daughter, Pomeroy, and Ramona Lee
INs. Rufh Slover. Fosleria ;
five grandchildren, seven Relms, 2S, Route 4, Ponneroy ;
great-grandch ildren , one David H. Matbeny, 21, Route
great.greaf-grandchild, and I, Reedsville, and Katrina
several nieces, nePhews lind Sue Baley, 17, Route I, l..&lt;Jng
cousins. Preceding him In
death were his parents, a son, Bottom, and Donald Wayne
,. a daughter, two brothers and Ervin, 23, Racine, and Sue
a sister. IN. Whlftlnglon was Ann Cunningham, 21,
a member of the Knights of Pomeroy, Route ?·
Pyfhlas af Buffalo, W. Va.,
and the Brotherhood of

San Clemente number and
got a secretary. The reporter
asked how Mrs. Nixon was
doing. "Fine," said the girl
on the other end. ..._ __ -~'"''" .,..,
made the familiar remark
·that NIIon no longer has a
press secretary
and that
she
Cllllld
not comment
on any
·
·
other matters.
There was a brief flap In
Junewhenallteraryagentln
NewYorkannouncedplansto
publish a book about Nixon's
secret love affair witb the
wifeofanAmericandiplomat

HARIUSBUJIO, Pa. (UPI)
·~ P'rtU)' the 23rd
- Sclentlsll 1re still often did )'00 ride the
searching fer lbe flnt 10Ud elen!Gn
,}the~:::1
clue In their frustrating Stratford?" 1!1
attempt to Identify Ute ub. "How
ma
American Legloo mystery you ll*fd In the Belli~
lllneaa.
str1tfonl eacb dlyT
They have ordered a many houn did roulpllld In
detailed look at the Uvea of the 'Ben Franklin HGtel eacb
thOIIIIIIda of pee • • who day?
,
attended • ~cion cswnlllln
"Did )'Gil 11M Ice In 110ft:
ln.Pltilldelphla.
"' drlnlll? DIILiou ~Mice from
The death toll rote t6 'l1 outside tlli .tlcMI? Did YCII
Sunday . Auth1orWtn" buy blocffce? Frml wblcb
announced
dealha fl .two store did you buy Ice?" It
more victims - Oeq~ls liked,
'
8oyle, 80, of L\llerne County,
"Did youlget 11 free beer
and Harold Davia, M, of mug ,Jt IJie Frlcla)' ~
Phll.lldelphla. In llddltloll,l$; sessi~~?"::Jnd you dtlnll:
cases of the Wneia have beelj any~bn the !l'te beer
cooflrmed.
,.
.
mt~~~?J!t~JaQay a dellpte
Sclentllts seard!td far a 110uveJil; paa'rDid y011 drink
v1rua or poillon that may hive any water at the Bellewecauaed the Ulneaa. They 11- Stratford? Did you 1111 1111'
ready hav.~ ruled 011! ._cterla . ..., JllOIII the Belleweor a hiBhlY contagloua vinii, ;'Si:ratfontlilr'mlxed drlnll?"
oot researchers aay a slow- . aslled anotljer ..
growing, treu vlrwl could b8 ' .Part 1 Of .'lhe lnvestlgatlm
the caUBe.
~
,llhlfled fOCUI to manmade or
Dr. Leona~d Bachman, llatur,.t poilonl !hit coulcl
state health aecretary, asked have cauaed the lllneaa. But
aO · Amer.lean
Legion IOIIIebNithof!lcialswere not ·
and fa¢11y · !IPtlmllllc a polson will , be
• members
members who attended the found.
,
July 21-24 convention to fill
"It Ia awfully dltflcult to
out a detaUed questloonalre. aay at this point euct.ly whllt
"We are trying to form a eompound might be Involved,
very detailed profile of aU of or If It Ia In fact a ~.
the COl. ventioneers," said Dr. cr If In fact we're deaU. wlt!i
W1111 a m
P a r k 1n , a group of chemical agents,"
Pennsylvania ' s chief said Dr. Richard Cohn, a
epidemiologist, "We want to consultant toxicologist~
get a statistical profUe of working fcir the state,
•
!hose who became W and
"•
those who did not, and then omOAN DROWNS
,
ldllfook
for
slgnlflc~nt
LOVELAND, Colo. (UPI) :
erences. "
:.... Officials In Colorado said·'
· There are 23 parts to the Saturdiy one of the 47 victims :
qu~~~questions focus . lderitlfled In the Big "
oo hotels where tbe activities Thm~paon River !lood was an •
were held, and on one day In
said the victim
parUcular - July 23, ooe of was Identified only as Roll '
the busiest days of the Venrlck of Ohio. his .
convention.
hometown was not avaUable . .

lnD-

the

otg::tw

in Europe.

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_.__ _ __:P~R~IC::E~F:IFT~E~EN~CE~NTS

Ohio miners are returning to work
By TIM MILLER
picket lines which Ohio
' United Preas Intenllltlonal
miners refused to cross. .
• Ohio
miners · began
The firlll mine struck In
returning to the coalfh!lds Ohio, Peabody Coal Co.'s
today because they "realize SwmyhW mine near New
we can only have ooe leader Lexington_ in Perry County,
and that Is Arnold Mlller," was open today.
Howard Kldd, mine superJohn Guzek, president of
United Mine Workers District vlaor, said, "A lot of the men
reported for the third shift
6, said.
Guzek said the Jresiderits Mooday night and almOIII aU
·of the 51 UMW locals In Oltlo showed up for the first shift
· voted ''overwhelmingly '' Tue.sday."
Moodily to go back to work
Guzek said today he hoped
and end two weeks of "the men In West Virginia
,sporadic wildcat walkouts can settle their problem but
which have crippled mine In the. meantime our
production.
obUgatlon is . to return Ill
Aboui 70 per cent of the work."
mines were reported open
The miners In West
today, he · said, ·and he Virginia walked off the job In
expected more to follow suit protest of federal court
later today. He said the Wtion intervention In what they said
leaders want to follow the was unloocompany affairs.
advice of Mjller, UMW
"We haven't had that kind
president, who has urged of problem here," Guzek
strlldng mlnera across Ap- said. "We sympathize wit!i
palachia to return to work. their problem. But our men
The wildcat strikes began are responsible. We have an
one month ago In West obllliation to follow orders
Vil'glnla. and spread. Qhlo and Mr. Mlller wQ~~ts us tO
Julf'28' Wl\en roving miners wcrk. If we·stay out we are
from Weill Virginia set up . going to destroy olB'selves."

MWer and members of the
· union 's International council
were to . meet todlly with
miners in West Virginia in an
e(fort to get the men there
back to work.
The Southern Ohio Coai·Co .

had filed an appeal In
Cincinnati federal court
seeking 'to overturn a rufing
last week in Colwnbus ,!bat
refused Ill order 1,500 miners
back to work at ,. the

company's three Meigs Valley Coal Association said
County mines.
most mines were worklng·but
But miners were reportedly WQuld not give the names of
back to work today at the Specific sites that. were open
t!iree sites.
because of the fear !bat West
A spokesman for the Ohio Vtrginians would once again
put up picket lines.

Old cruiser sold

Meigs mines still closed
Spokesmen at the Soalhent Ohio Coal Co., neat S.lem
Center, said at lla.m. today they bad oo toowledge of aoy
miners' lntentloos to return to W&lt;ll'k. The ned sblft begtaa at
4 p.m . today, however, when {urUier developmeats may be
expected.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thur sday through
Saturday, a cbance ol
sbowers and )\'ann Thursday and Friday with blghs
The bid of George Quillen, $1,881.20.
sewer improvements could In the mid to upper 80s and
Middleport, on the 1974 pollee
Mayor Hoffman told be another area for the
lows In the 60s. Fair and
cruiser not used as a trade-in council the Economic village application.
tur!llng cooler Saturday
on ·the purchase of the new D.e ve I o p men t
AdSen. Robert Taft and a
with highs In tlie upper 70s
pollee vehicle, was accepted ministration , under new group from Washington will
to the low 80s and lows In
by Middleport Village regulations, will have 100 he in Columbus on AUg. 'f/ to
the 50s to the mid 60s.
Council In regular session percent grants for public advise city and viUage ofMonday night.
. works but as yet guidelines on ficials of facts of the new 100 :;:::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::::::;:::;:::::
Quillen's bid of $407 was tbe qualifying have not been percent public works grants.
only one received.
received.
·
Mayor Hoffman said he will
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The Ballou said Monday he bad
Council approved the July
The EDA will notify him of attend and invited other
Ohio Bell Telephone Co. says fijed the request with the
report of Mayor Fred Hoff- Uiose guidelines as soon as village officials to attend .
a recently approved rat~ PUCO, which must rule by
man showing receipts of they are received.
· Council discussed several
increase that will bring tbe Sept. 8.
$1,756.20 In fines and fees and · The mayoc mentioned Page residents who have Indicated
~p&amp;py an estimated 1203
$125 in merchant police St. as a possible project' and they will be Interested in
The PUCO gave Ohio Bell
million in add\tlmal incpme an 8.03 per cent rate of relupt
cdUecU01111 for a total of councilmen later suggested purchasing resurfacin g
is not enough,
. materials from the Shelly Co.
In figuring tbe rate bike altd
The
rompaily
said
Monday
. when it begins resurfacing
the company said 'that was
It wants an additional $13 not a fair and reasonable rate
projects
in
Middleport
.
·
•.
Oluncil, upon the suggestion
All .three bids on a pickup mUllon and has as.ked tbe of retW'Il.
of Councilman James truck for lhe Meigs Olunty Public Utilities Commlssioo
·::~'::::::::::::::~::~::~:::=:~=::::::;:;::::::,::::::::·:~::~:·8::!::8·:·:·:~:·:::·~:·:::·:::·::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::s
The company bad asked
Brewer, · informally agreed Highway Department were of Ohio lo reconsider a during the hearings last
that tbe purchase of a cement rejected Monday by the previous rate Increase mooth for a 10.03 or 10.8 per
mixer, about ~. would be Meigs County Commissioners request. The commission cent rate of return.
bene_flcial in making more alter they decided to make ruled July 8 that the company
The higher rate of return a
could
hike
rates
enough
to
lasting
repairs
to
the
street
new
specifications
for
a
1977
utility Is allowed the more
By United Preu Internadonal
bring in the $203 mUilon.
but tabled any action until vehicle and readvertise.
money It can charge
CHICAGO - AGRICULTURE SECRETARY EARL L.
But Joseph Reed, Ohio Bell customers.
Brewer looks into prices
The original specifications
BUTZ has termed the nation's ~.8 bllllon food stamp program
vice
president for public
further .
called for a 1976 pickup truck.
If the PUCO denies the
operated by his depattrnent 'Ia natlooal disgrace becauae It
affairs,
.
s
aid,
"Sin
ce
we
Brewer
also
said
ihat
he
Bids
were
received
from
Dan
request,
Ohio Bell can appeal
provides fer t!ie greedy as weD as the needy." Butz told a fundasked
for
$216
mUiloo
,
that's
feels
he
should
be
kept
well
Thompson
Ford
,
Smithdirectly
to
the Ohio SuJreme
raising dinner for Republican gubernatorial candidate James
·
what
we
want."
informed
on
village
affairs
Nelson
and
Pomeroy
Motor
.Court,
but
Reed refused to
Thompson Mooday night !bat President Fcrd has asked
Coinjlany
attoritey
Otarles
and
commented
that
he
was
Co.
say
if
the
company
would do
futgress to tighten eligibility for the stamp program - so far
not
aware
of
the
idenMeeting
with
the
comso.
wilhout success.
.
tificatlon of an officer missioners was Bob Fra•ier
Agriculture Department effOrts to pare the program by
working for the police of Capital Insurance to Trial produces
adopting administrative regulations are "to give more
department
through the outline a cancer insurance
·assistance to t!le poor and elderly and to cut off tbe benefits to
CETA
program.
He said he program which will become
those who are not truly in need," Butz said. But tbese efforta
has
no
objection
to lhe in- available to county employes. innocent verdict
have been tbwarted by a court injWtction, he noted. "What's
dividual, but objected to not Frazier was authorized by
needed In Washington Is a new Congress and a new approach to
A day-long trial was conbeing advised of the employe. the commissioners to prepare
problemofiOlving," Butz said.
II was agreed that he and material to be presented Ill ducted in the Meigs County
other council members will the employes in preparation Court of Judge Robert Buck
CLEVELAN!).:..DEPUTY STATE WELFARE Dlrecto
Monday to obtain justice in
be advised in the future.
for enrollment.
Raymond F. McKenna said Monday cuts in aid to dependent
The annual hole-in-one
Attending were Mayor
C. E. Blakeslee of the . the alleged theft of a 35 cent oontest of the PomeroychUdren will go Into effect in October when welfare checks will
Hoffman , Clerk-Treasurer Meigs County Regionat' plug of tobacco from Middleport Lions Club for
be a dollar less for each family member.
Gene
Grate, Councilmen Commission also met wilh Kroger 's in Pomeroy.
"Thill has turned Into a political football," said Jaclr
sight conservation proThe defendant in the case, grams is underway this
Brewer,
Marvin Kelly, the Commissioners to request
Kolesar, pUblic affairs director for the , Cuyahoga County
William Walters, Carl Horky $750 for ·matching money on a Walter McWharter, 58, week through saturday at the
Welfare Department, "If people working .In business or
and George Meinhart, and planning project. Also Harrisburg, Ohio, was Pomeroy Golf Club.
industry loll a dollar t!iey wouldn't think much about it. But in
Police Chief J. J . Cremeans. meeting with the Com- charged with petty theft In
tbese caees; every dollar has to come from rent, food or
Hours of the annual contest
missioners was Cecil Moore the case. He entered a plea of are from 5 p.m. until dark
utilities, which are outrageously high In poor, rundown
who requested that before innocent and asked for a jury through Friday evening and
housing."
.
school starts the weeds along trial. The five member jury from 1 to dark on Saturday.
tbe Go!~ Ridge". Road be returned an innocent verdict Three trophies will be
ATHENS, GREECE - GREEK AND TURKISH troops
mowed.
Present were Henry after hearing testimony . awarded at the end of the
manned battle stations aloog t!ielr conunon border today In a
"!just couldn't believe that I had won $10 OOo" was
Wells,
Warden
Ours and Taxpayers of the county will week to the best scoring
growing war of nerves between the two NATO members over
Kathryn McKinney's reaction to her recent ~ in the
pay the costs in the case.
Bernard Gilkey.
oil rights In the Aegean Sea. The move to a war footing by both
Ohio Ulttei'y. But she did, and next week someone from
woman, man and junior 16
The Meigs County Sheriff's
countries could endanger NATO's soutbeast flank. NATO
the Ohio lottery Conunlssloo will be here to preseni 'her
and under, who collie closest
Dept. reported Monday a one
sources In Bruaseill said Monday tbe tension "is a source of
the check.
to lhe pin.
car accident on Main St. in
eoilllnulnli cmcern to us."
For Mrs. McKinney winning that much money means
The closest to the hole will
Portland , just soutb of SR 124.
A Greek government spoke8man caUed the reports of
''no more payment books.'' That's the first thing ahe plans
receive
a sel of matched golf
Avehicle operated by Mary
troop movements "e:raggerated:' and Tuikillh Prime Minister
to do-pay all the bills. In anticipation of receiving tbe
clubs.
J. Smith, 17,Rt. I Portland
Suleyman Dem1re1 said In Istanbul "there 1.1 no cauee for
m011ey, Mrs: McKinney, her husband, Burdelle, a
On Thursday from 1 to 6
was southbound on Main St.
alann." In Washington, a State Department 11p0kesman saki construction worker at Philip Sporn and the family took a
p.m ., there will be a special
when her young son Russell
the United States was "keeping a very cioae eye on the
several days' bip through West Virginia and Virginia last
LE HARAS DE PIENCOURT, France (UP! )
putting con test with a
reached out and took hold of
situation" and urged both countries to show restraint.
week.
Secretary of State Henry Kissinger said today there
"putter" to be the prize.
the steering wheel, causing
Mrs. McKinney won the lottery with an instant game
was
"no
legal
basis"
for
Greece
and
Turkey
to
go
to
There
will be 18 holes for a $1
her to swerve to the left side
CALHOUN, LA.- AN UNDERGROUND GAS pipeline, ticket purchased at Mark V. II wasn't her first win,
war over their Aegean Sea dispute and !bat lhe United
charge.
of the road into a mailbox
ruptured by a road grader, eltploded Monday, kUling six
however. 9te had woo $10 once and $2 twice on tickets
States is in close cmtact with both governments.
Monday evening Chuck
owned by Howard Eberspersons and Injuring 111other in a blast heard more than four
from Mark V. Almost since t!ie lottery began in Ohio she
Kissinger emerged from the horse !ann estate in
Follrod was the winner of a
bach.
rnUes away. "I !bought it was an airplane or aomethlng at flrat, has qurcbased tickets about every week.
Normandy where . he was resting to chat with ·:.::.: do•en golf balls for getting
There were no injuries and
!ben I could see the fire," said Harold Jooes, a worker at an
Mr. and Mrs. McKinney, who live at 477 Sycamore St.,
newBIIten. Asked about the worsening Greek-Turkish .... .closest to the pin for the day
no citation was issued.
Atkanaas-l..&lt;Julslana Gu Co., plant four rnUea away from the
Middleport, have a son, Lou, and a daughter, Jo, at home .
dispute, Klssinger .said, "We are really practically in :;:: · and winning a golf hat for
exploelon site.
Another daughter, Peggy and her husband Earle Wood
daily contact wltb hoth governments.
:;;; second closest was James
IN HOSPITAL
"One of !he little boys who Uvea down there said It JVas Just
and tbetr IW\) year old son, Steven, resi~ In a mobil~
"We believe this dispute must be settled peacefully. ;:;; Thomas. Folirod was two
Mrs . Jake Lee is a surgical
a baD offire.Heaaldhebied to gettohllhouae but couldn't for
home ned doo~. The other member of the family is Jennie
There Is no legal basis for ml!Jtary action. Actually, it ::~: feet , ll inches from tbe bole
patient
at the Holzer Medical
thefire."Theroadgraderwas cutting a drainage dllch when It
Hanl!lber, Mrs. McKinney's mother, who will be 92 in
is the responsibility of the Europeans as much as of the ;:;~ ~nd Thomas was six feet, 11 ·
Center and is In Roorn 310.
ripped through the pipeline. The blast dug 1 crater 3fl.leet deep
October.
United States.
:::; mches. Anyone getting a hole ·
and IOsal!d the tw1Mc1 fll'ader aside Uke a broken toy. Flames
"We are taking no position on the legal aspects of this ;:;: in one during the week wilj
cbarred a hall-mile strttcb of timber aloog the parilh road.
dispute," Kissinger sa111.
::;; receive $200.
.
Kissinger spoke as Greek and Turkish troops ::;:
. RADNOR, PA. -THE SOVIET UNION Willits f210 mlllllln
manned battle staUonsalong their common border in a :;:;
Receipts for automotive affidavits and assignments; inspections with $374 going to
from CBS-TV far talevlllan rights to
11110 Summer Olympic
growing war of nerves between the two NATO :;:;
title activities in tbe office of 'rl penalties, and 15 certified the state and f34 to the
Games In Molcow, ICCGI'dq to TV Guide magazine.
Meigs County Clerk of Courts copies. Of tbe total fees, tbe county . The office issues 11
SEORC TO MEET
Columinat Frank Swertlow aald In an article publllhed
Larry
Spen~er for July county receives $2,123and tbe
certificates of Iitle on boats;
The Southeastern Ohio
Mooday the Rua111111 a1ao are inllalng
Olympic talecasts totaled ,2,634.50.
French Foreign Minister Jean Sauvagnargues about
state
$511.50.
Regional
Council
on
six
notaUons
of
lien
and
nine
Include porlralta of Ruaalan athletee at heme and filmed pieces
During
the
month
the
office
Spencer's
office
collected
applications,
affidavits
and
Alcoholism
will
meet
at
1
oo Ruaalan culture. "Any network lignlng lltlcb an agreement
selling : .: :.: p.m. Thursday at the Trinity
Issued
990
certificates
of
title,
$40
for
salvage
inspection
assignments
with
a
total
could leave ltaelf open to the charge of presm~Ung Rusllan
"We had a very friendly conversation," Kissinger .... Chapel, 300 Wooster st.,
propaganda," swertlow wrote, "even though tbe network and 352 notations of Den; 182 fees, all of which goes to the collection of $24.50 wlth $17.25
memorandums; five salvage state . There was a total of going to the county and $7.25
Marietta. The meeting Ia .
not the RUaslina would JrQduce
culttB'al lnaerta."
·e
titles ; 1029 applications, $408 collected for 136 auto to tbe state .
open to tbe public.
•·

Ohio Bell
wants more

All bids
rejected
on truck

Auto hits

mailbox

Kissinger quiets fears
of new war in Mideast

Title work has brought in $2,634.50

99~

49~

m=:~~:~1~~!:;~~~~~~~~~:=

the

.. ,

r

limit 6 Bars please

1.-----------------~----------~--------------------------JL~--~------------~·..:.
~

•

en tine

0

o·

from tile left are Edison Baker, Thereon jobnaon, C. E.
Blakeslee, and Naoma Brinker.
·

_.__ __;_-...:_
M...:_
I . .:_DL=E.:. .P:. :.R:. :. :T,_:O:.:.:H.:.:IO_ _ _ _ ____::TU~E~SD~A~Y,..::,A~~G~U~S:._T,!;10~,!:19~7~6:...___

the

POMEROY, OHIO

$40,000.00 .Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

"

· . ·:

3days. only- Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
•

at y

e
VOL ·xx.VIII NO' . 80

COMMISSION MEETS - The Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission met Monday to consider funding
proposal ~or a capital improvements stuclY. 9town here

•

She couldD't believe

'

'0

••

.

The PlaMing Commission Commission. Meigs County Js
also reviewed a West Virginia included in !bat 18 county
study of locations for the area.
o . venswood bridge
The Athens based firm Is
propo sed ....
and went on record as having seeking $441,000 In federal
no obJ eel1ons to the proposed funds to provide such service .
si'A
""• which is immediately Planning Commission
downstream from Ravens- members felt that the firm
ood
had. done a good Job in the
wA proposal
'
by an Athens past· and approved the
based finn to provide health proposal.
plaMing In an 18 county area
Afinal item of business was
under the name of South- ,a propQsal sent to the
eas1ern Oh io Health Systems Planning Commission from
Foundation, Inc. was ap- the Ohio B\Jreau of Emd b
(Contlnued on page 18)
prove
Y the Planning

Hole-in-one
competition
is underway

Main Store, Annex and Warehouse open weekdays and Saturdays·
9:30to5and Fridays9:30to8p.m.

.

One Commission member
voiced cohcern for hiring a
consultantwbennofunding to
pay him avaUabl•.
• makeslee
said that lhere ts an "understood agreement" that no
financial obligation will he
Incurred untll the proposal
had been submitted, approved, and the Federal
fundi were granted fot the
capital improvements study.
. Blakeslee recommended
James Jennings ,....
•··A, of
Colwnbus as consuttan•·
"' to
prepare the . proposal for
federal fundi. He also asld
lhat applicaUons for federal
money ahould be in by Aug .
31, but that Ume could be
longer by going through
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
VaUey Development district.
Buckeye Hills has handled
. past proposals for ,· the
Planning Commission .
. Blakealee's recommendation
was approved.

JNews • • ."in BriefsJ

•695

TROUSERS

By BOB TITUS
The Melg• CoWtMty Plannlng
Commlss1on
onday afternoon Initiated a capital
1mprovemen ts studY of lhe
t
coun
.... f . led 1
government
willaue ldera•• 000
prov e ·.,.,
to begin
the study of the county's
ability
to finance capllal
im
provements (anytlllng of
permanent value to the area,
such as roads or recreation
faclliUea). Another fa,OOO. will
come Irom Iocal fWtds,
ma king the total eoat of the
study $9,000, Half of 1M local
§hare Is to be paid in October,
with the remainder the
following March.
Executive Director C. E.
Blakeslee suggested a consultant be used to submit a
proposal lor: the capital
Improvements study to
·several .concerned agencies
In order to obtain the
necessary local funding .

I

w

T~o button thr.u flap pockets • long

SENIOR CITIZENS

fenance of Way.
Burial was In While Oak
Cemetery In the Harrisonville area .

,.

Capital improvements study
approved by·planning group

·"•
•

:.·', :.·

~=~ ~=~~ ~~ ~~~~~·s

:\J,,,,,;:,~:', , ;},, ~in·

the

'

•

:1~,~~~,:,~,:~~~~:,:~~~;::::;: : : : :: : : :: : : : : : :::/:\

�3- The Dally Sentlne~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesay, Aug. I0,1976

, 2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , 'fuesda) , Aug 10, 1976

;Candy Man gets season's third no-hitter game

·H ouse approves post card registration law
By~OHNMI~E

Ullited Preis lnlmuiUcnal
'n1e Houae Monday passed
a bill, which may have more
effect oo lhe 1976 pollttcal
campaign !han all of the
rhetoric from either the
Republicans
or
the
Democrats - a post card
registration law .
It, too, Is tbe subject of
partlaan debate. Democrat
Jimmy Carter supported the
measure and tl's possible !bat
President Ford, a Republican
whO Is trying to stay m office,
coulq veto It
As the lill passed by a 2311147 vote Monday, aU :;o states
could matl m voter
registration
forms , a
privilege now allowed m only
17 The House rejected a
provision to set up a Voter
Registration Administration
to mail federal election forms

to au persons eligtble to vote
The forms will be m post
offices.
The preluninary acts for
the 1976 GOP coo ventlon
began Monday, with Ford
and Ronald Reagan sttll
caJoli ng, wheedli ng, and
scratchmg for delegates
UP!'s latest COWl! sllowed
Ford Wltll 1,121 of Ute 1,130
votes needed to nommate
wh1le Reaga n had 1,036
Another
I 02
are
Wlcommttted
Ford seemed confid ent
Mon day,
wi th
aides
announc in g that he was
working on his acceptance
speech The calls also went
out Monday to Ute "more
lhan a dozen" men and
women lUlder conSideration
as h1s vtce preSident Ford
asked them to submit
complete health and fmanctal

Harrisses guilty
on two counts
By JACK V. FOX

LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Symbionese Uberation Army
members William and Emily
Harris, found guilty of two
counts of lddnapmg durmg an
SLA crune spree wtth
Patricia Hearst, could
receive 25 years in priSOn and
they stlll face tnal for
abducting Miss Hearst.
The jurors, who returned
the verdict Monday, were
ordered back to court today
to be questioned by the Judge
on defense charges of
prejudice
The Harrises, college
sweethearts m Indiana drawn
into tbe radical movement m
Ute San Francisco Bay area,
took the verdict With no show
of emotion, They slouched m
their chairs behind a
bulletproof glass barrier
dividing the special "high
aecurity" cpurtroom
Defense lawyer leonard
Weinglass accused Judge
Mart Brandler of preJudice,
saying he was sure the
verdicts would be overtW11ed
oo appeal "I don 'I think
these verdicts will stand up m
any court in the land,"
Weinglass Bald.
The jury, ending a threeweek trial and a marathon
nine days of deliberatwns,
!DUDCI the Hanise~ guilty of
lteallrig two cars during a
wild flight across the city
But Ute moll serious verdicts
found them guilty of
lddnaplng teen.qer Thcmas
Malbews at gunpoint and the
ld&lt;klaping of Frank Sutter.

taking his car and $250
Miss Hearst faces tn al
begmnmg Jan lO on Ute same
charges of kidna p, robbery
and assault brought against
theHarrises
They stem from a 22-bour
spree 10 Ma)', 1974 that began
with M1ss Hearst spraymg a
sporting goods store Mill
automatic carbine fire to free
Harns from a guard leading
tn lhe virtijlll exuncuon of the
SLA's hard core the next day
Pohce, alerted that the SL~
was tn Los Angeles,
discovered and surrounded
the band's h1deout S x
" urba n guerillas"
includmg their leader,
Donald "General Fteld
Marshal C10que" DeFreeze
- were killed by police
bullets or the fire that leveled
lhe house.
The JurY found the Harnses
lllllocent on SI X charges of
assault w11h a deadly weapon
ln the store shoot mg accepting lhe HarriS defense
Ill at threw the blame oo Miss
Hearst, stressmg that she
was the ooly one to fire any
shots.
At her federa l bank
robbery trial in San
FranCisco Miss Hearst said
she opened ftre as "a reflex

records
Reagan 's campaign to
Wlseat Ford has been marked
by gambles all along and he
took another ooe Monday.
urging Ut e GOP convention to
re qu ire candidates to
announ ce the1r running
mates or all the pledged
delegates would be freed 12
hours before the balloting
begtns.
Reagan has already picked
Sen. Richard Schweiker , RPa., whi ch ha s drawn

By STEVE GERSI'EL
KANSAS CITY, Mo (UPI )
- Ronald Reagan IS trymg to
pressure President Ford into
disclosmg his choice of a
runnmg mate, a move lhat
could undereut Ford 's
delegate strength and boost
lhe Caltforman's chances for
the nomination.
Again catchin g the Ford
camp by surprise, Reagan
campaign Jllanager John
Sear s Monday ur ged the
Republic an Na tio nal
Convention to reqUir e

Arena m the Kansas City
stockyards. the UP! colUll
had both candidates short of
the 1,130 needed for
nommation.
In new pollmgs Mmday,
Ford gamed two delegates
and lost ooe He now has 1,121
- nme slloct. Reagan lost two
delegates, one tu Ford and
ooe to Q!e. 102 lUlCcmmltted,
for a total of 1,036
Reagan appeared headed
for another defeat wben the
rules committee vmes today
on a proposal, strongly
candidates to announ ce backed by Ford, to prevent
runmng mat es before delegates bound by state law
delega tes
select
th e from bolting tllerr candidate
presidential n&lt;rnmee
Part of Reagan's ''trust the
delegates" rule would free all
the del egates pledged to
Ford, should the PreSident
refuse to dtllCiose his choice
12 hours before ballotln!l 11)1 MICHAEL J. CONLON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) hegtns for the presiden tial
Ralph
Nader Ulmks Jimmy
nomination
Carter
is bright, well read
Sears' proposal was
and
tlUled
into some major
Immediately and
overwhelmingly killed by the consumer ISSUes - but he
temporary rules committee, woo1 say whether he likes
dommated by FOI'd fdlowers him well enough go to work
But Sears, a sllrewd and for him
The
Nader-Carler
mnovative tactiCian, said he
courtslup
Ulat began last
would take the fight IA1 the
weekend
when
Carter mvtted
conventioo floor
Nader
to
viSit
hun
in Plains,
The latest Raagan gambit
Ga
,
seems
to
have
unpressed
surfaced as preliminary work
began toward Ute Qpelllng of Nader mostly because Carter
the party's 31st coovenlton botllered In talk to him at all.
"You can't get m to see
MOII da)•,
PreSident
Ford unless you're
Stx days belore the openmg
Henry
Ford,"
Nader told
ceremooies at Kemper Sports
rep&lt;rlers, nOCing that he has
been unable ID gam access to

Adult basic
• •
trammg

is offered

:::eWhile House lor iiOme
The d1alogue contmued
Monday when Carter
addressed a group of
representatives of public
mterest groups, offi~ of
regulatory agencies· and
cmsumer~nented

congresSional aides.
Nader, who arranged the
quest100 and an:;wer seSSliJII,
said be came away from his
weekend meetmg believmg
Carter was " bright",
although he declined to
compare bim to otber public
figures. Hesrudnopostmany
Carter admini!tral.ton was
iliscussed but declined to say
whether he would be
Interested m one if offered.
Carter did take time to
warmly endorse a p1ece of
legiSlation whtch Nader
OOIISiders the ooe thing he
wants to accompliS~ as a
consumer advocate. The
legislahm would create an
agency
for consumer
advocacy - an Independent
body to mtervene on behalf of
l'IJ!sumers and other Wiel'8 of
government sei'Yices wben
deciSions are being made
The leglslatlOO baa passed
both the House and Senate
but has been tied lJil in
l'IJI!erence ccmmittee since
last spring because President
Ford 18YS be will veto 1t.
Carter urged Focd to Sign it
but promised to make the

DR. LAMB

Heat can harnl body

..

••
fj

get fr om a mouth thermome ter ) IndiVI dU als
suflenng from severe heat
stress Wllh a heat stroke may
ha1•e Widespread body ltssue
damage.
The bram cells are par-·
Ucularly sensitive to heat and
cannot be replaced 1!
damaged Many parts of the
body regenerate if damaged,
but not the bram cells . At
body temperatures of 110
degrees F death will occur If
the temperature persists.
For these reasons I conSider a fever of l 06 degrees F
as dangerous, not from the
disease but from the fever
Itself Any elevatiOn above
lhts pOint should be treated
vigorously to lower the body
temperature.
The crtUcal level of body
temperature Is about 106
degrees F The body seems to
have
some
special
mecharusm that usually stops
the nse In temperature w1th
Illnesses at thiS level A fever

~port, frlendlltlp, advice
and crltldlm In the upcoo'llng
campaign period."
Although he said, "I
reserve the rieht to clial8ree
with you," Carter eeemed to
be setting • tone of
cooperatlm. Ford has sniped
at Cmgress many times lor
wastmg time and mmey
while neglectmg important
national needs like defense
and energy.

There are about 900
delegates m 19 states bound
by state laws, and without a
new rule they could switch
Sides or perhaps abstam to
deny a ~stbaUot mmmatlon.
The rule would favor Focd.
Delegates In several states
are legally bollld to Ford but
loyal emotionally to Rtag11.n.
The reverse Is true, too, but
Reagan likely would gain
more from the gambit than
Ford
Reagan has urged Ford to
name a running mate since
he annolUlced two weeks ago
his chOice was Sen. Richard
Schwe1ker of Pennsylvania.

In his search, Ford has
notified a number of
posslbthtles - Including
Commerce Sea'etary Elliot
Richardson, Sens. Howard
Baker, EdwaFd Brooke and
William Brock, and Iowa
Gov Robert Ray.
Brooke and Brock said they
were not interested.
Wblle Reagan forces
seemed ready to risk
convention sllowdowns over
rules, they were trymg to
avOid a coofrontation m a
platform , but any umty
platform was certain tn be
challe~ed by ardent conservatives.

IS sometimes helpful aDd lhe
body can control Its temperature m normal environmental temperature. A,
hny thermostat m the bram
regulates the body temperature. By turmng on heat
genera hng mechamsms the
body temperature will rise,
by turning on the cooling
mechamsms the body tempera lure will fall . When you
have a fever the body thermostat has s1mply been reset
at a hi gher level Asptrm and
s1m1lar medtcmes cause the
body to rest the thermostat at
&gt;a lower level, reducing the
lever.
The body tempera lure
would r1se to levels that
would cause dealh 1f 11 were
not for the
cooling
mecharusms The food breakdown to give you energy
releases lots of heat energy.
Exercise mcreases the
metabolism of food or stored
fat dep osits and also
generates lots of heal. The

¥

heat IS lost through your skin.
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 7-6,
Body Temperature and
Fever, to give you more
complete informatiOn. Others
who want more Information
can send a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope with
50 cents for 11 Just addrm
your letter to me In care of
thts newspaper, P 0 Box 326,
Ssn Antnmo, Tx 78292.
In general, m Illnesses, you
need not worry about brain
damage If the body tern·
perature 1s 105 degrees F or .
less At 106 degrees If efforts
should certainly be made to
reduce the body temperature
to protect agamst the adverse
effects of the body heat.
To protect agatnst heat
stroke as might occur m a
lab&lt;rer or an alhtete If the
body temperature Is 104
degrees F aDd accompanied
by any signs of impending
hea I buildup, steps should be
taken at once to cool the body

CLIFTON- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith gave a farneU
porty Mlllday, August 2, In hmor of their 1011, Randy, who left
for the U.S. Army Aucuat ~. Ice cream, Cllke and punch
served Ill Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Johnlon IIDll &lt;lluctle, Mr '
and Mrs. Isaac Lewis and Daren YOIIIII, Mr. and Mrs. Kennlt
Bass, Kendra and Korena, Mr. and Mrs. Charlel CU'twrlchl~
Elaine Grogan and Quia, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewll, Terw
&amp;nith, Greg r-ta, Dannie Hannoo and grandparenta Mn:
Olga Lewis and lAurene Lewil He received farewell glftl
from Mr. and Mrs. Freemln JohniOII and Oluckle, Ell~,.
Grogan, Mr and Mn. Charles Cartwrl8ht, Katie Ba18 anu

m

matter a campa1gn ISSue and
a top priority m his
administration if elected and
Ford has vetoed Ule
legis! atloo

In response to =surner,
corporate, environmental
and related queStions, Carter
also wd he:
- BeUeves there is too
much VIolence oo television
and the President has an
obligation to "express
displeasure" when he sees
9JIIIetbing he doesnUke He
Bald he would appoint a
atnswner advocate to the
Federal Oomm umcallons
Commission
- Would not now fllror a
nationwide ban or pniubittve
tax oo throw-away beverage
cans and bottles. He wd be
reallydoesll know too much
about the issue and reserved
the right to change his mmd if
lie could find more olll abolll
it
Believes a natimWide
nofatilt automobile insurance
law IS " Inevitable" but
hesitates to commit h•moelf
00 the issue yet.
- Iloe!In't lmow if he would
carry regulatory morm I9J
far as to dumande the avU

Aeronautics Board or the
Interstate Commerce
Co mmtssion to let the
trucking and 8ll'tine industry
oompete solely on the IIIIsts of
the marketplace.
- Would prefer to leave the
licensmg of corporatioos to
the states rather than require
some kmd of federal
chartermg system as bas
been suggested by some
consumer groups.
- Would prefer not to
comnut himself on the ISSue
of paymg money to atnSIII!er
groups and oCher citizens to
present their views In
government decisi.oo-maldng
IDltil be sees bow well the
consumer advocacy agency
would work.

CLIFTON - Visiting Mrs. Walter Blake for tbe weekend
and a family reuntoo We Mr. and Mrs. Don Roberl.l Ill"
daughter, Sennce of S. Carolina, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Roberta aM
family, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roberts, Mrs. Olarles Allen arid
two chUdren, Mrs. Mlrpret Cackler, all of Delaware. Ohlot
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Roberts and daughter of O'oton, Ohio ; Mr.
and Mrs. Olarles Blake, Valerie, of Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Olarlott McNickols and Jerry of &amp;lnlxiry, Ohio.
CLIFTON- ASUI'J)I'Iae blrtll:lay party was held Tuesday,
Aug. 3, at the Cllltm United Methodist Ch!rch Annex In bono~
of Evelyn Lockett. Hostess was Madalyn Chattin. Ice crei~m,
cake and plU1Ch was served to Mrs. Harley Powell, Mrs. James
Preston, Mrs Lester Jahnaon, Mrs. Bill WIUiams, Mrs!
Rlchard Glll!ey, Mrs. James Lee, Mrs. Helen Barker, Mr~ 1
Bob Olattin, Mrs. Chester OUver, Mrs. Denver Blake, Mrs.
Tom Wllltams, Mrs, Uoyd WIUiams, Rev and Mrs. 0, B.
Hatcher, Roger Kle111, Mlsi! Katie Oliver and Miss Brendli
OlatUn.
·:
SendJntl gifts were Harley Powell, Mrs Kenny Ault, Mrs.
Pearl Smith, Mrs. Elver Fox, Mrs. Walter Blake and Mrsj
Mary Davis,

Mrs. Goerge Johnson, Mrs. Larry Fry, Mrs. Glen Glaze
and Cindy Glue were !!hopping in aillllcotlle recently and ~
attended the play, "Tecumseh."
Mrs Katie Bass and Charles Jobnson spent a weelten4
recently visiting her soo and family , Dr. and Mrs. Ray Dea/1
Heaton at McLean, Va. Mrs. Uoyd Wllltams accompanle\f!
them and visited Mr and Mrs. Tom Williams and family a
Indian Head, Macyland.
•

I

Mrs. Molly Fox Is in East Uverpool, Ohio Ill see her st.ster
who is seriously ilL
Mr. and Mrs. T(lll Williams, Jeff and Cindy of Indian"
Head, Maryland spent the week with Mr and Mrs. Uoyd
Williams. Jeff and Cindy Is remaining for several weeks. Mrs.
and Mrs. Bill Crouch, Alexandria, VIrginia called on Mr. ana
Mrs. Tcm WilJiams they attend the Mason County .Fair
visited other points of mterest. Mr and Mrs. O'ouch was VeTY,
happy by the hospitality !bey received at the fair and while
visiting other places In West VIrginia.
:

ana

and Bnan Varian, children of Mr. and Mrs. J~
Varian spent the week with their grandmother Mrs. Rose Dlllii
at West JelferiiOII, Ohio
'
LETART - Twenty five attended the first day of Churcb
School at Graham United Methodist Clmrch on Monday with
Brenda Memtt, director. Mary Ann l,l.ichards Is in charge of
the music.
The theme of the school Is "God's Love Is Jesus." T!Mi
school will cmtinue lhrougb Friday.
GROUND BROKEN
Ruth Pickens teaches tbe Nursery group and her helper Is
Sl'. CLAIRSVIlLE, Ohio Carolyn Grimm.
.
(UP!) - GroiDld was broken
Barbara Bumgarner teaches the Kindergarten Class and
Monday afternoon for $1 Diane Roush 18 a helper.
million in recrea tiona!
Mary Ann Richards teaches the Mlddler's and Estbe~
facilities at Barkcamp State Brown Instructs tbe Junior Class. (luis Shelton serves as a
Park m Beim~t Coo.nty.
helper.
Much of the unproyements .
The Rev. Tim Allen teacbes the Youth Class and his wife,
will be for tbe banliCapped. Carolyn assists
Seventr.tw~ more Class B
Members of the congregation of the church flll'lllsl!
"'mpsltes will be aclded to refreshments each day A wiener roast will be held at the
Ule ensting 65 sites. Also conclustoo 11 the school on Friday.
~
among the 101provements
will be a new service building
NEW HAVEN - Halph Gibbs, Sr. was sW']l'lsed on his 81st
to be heated by 90iar energy birthday Wednesday at the Senior Citizen meeting room at the
Factlitles are to be New Haven Ubrary. Others attending were his daughter, Mrs:
ClllllPleted by June 1, 1977.
Emogene Walker, and Mrs. Alice Kirby, Mrs. Mae Howard,
CLOSING SET
Mrs. Nellie MacKnight, Mrs. Grace Cunningham, Mr. and
Closmg time for aU open
Mrs. Jim Wiee, Mr. and Mrs. Golden Hazelett, Mra. ~
classes entries m Ule Metgs
GOLFERS WANTED
&amp;nith, Mrs Grace Brown, Mrs. Mide MacKnight, Mrs. Esther
County Fatr will be 4 p.m
All Meigs Htgh School MacKnight, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Grinstead, Mrs. Edna
Frtday The horse sllow. and students who are mterested Wayl.alid, Mrs Thelma Capehart, Mrs. Edna Roush, and Mr.
horse and pony pulls are not m trymg out for the Metgs Fred SpeDCer.
1
governed by the deadline. Golf Team are to report to the •
In addttlOO to a potluck dimer, ice cream and birthday
The secretary wiD be at the Pomeroy Golf Course at 10 cake were served tn the hoooree, Mr. Gibbs, and others
f311' board office at lhe Rock a.m on Monday, Aug 16. mentioned
' •·
Sprmgs Fairgrounds IA1 ac- Those attending are Ill take
The group actiVIties Include playing dominoeB an&lt;l
cept entries from 10 a.m. to 4 clubs and be prepared to quilling. The ladles in the past have made cotton rugs which
p.m on botll Thursday and begm practicmg on !bat day . are now for sale.
Friday.
Bob Oliver ,. the golf coach
MASON - The MaiOil City Hlatorical Society meeting
August 5th voted to have open house on September 19 In the
afternoon.
Landon Smith placed the red wood sign made by Vernon
Cadle of Leon on the !root of the house. The engraving reads as
follows :
"Mallon City Hlllorlcal Society formed In 1974, plaque
donated by Harry Campbell."
,
A picture of the sign was sent to Mr. Campbell and he
receved this before his death several weeks ago. lila
cmtrlbutioo
was greaUy appreclated, as are all others.
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans has been adjusted for the
Landm
Smith, presided at the meetlnl!. Mrs. Earl
Mrs.
Farms, Inc., the IIBusage and three-for-two stock spht
Ingels
presented
devltlooala ftom John 14th chapter; 1·12
restau rant company effecllve March 19, 1976.
ver11e1
which
was
followed with the group praying the Lord's
The corporaUon's whollyheadquartered here, reports
Prayer.
The
treasurers'
report was given by Mra. Delwon
consolidated sales for 1ta first owned restaurant subsidiary,
quarter ended July 30 , Bob Evans Farm Foods, Inc Roberta.
The president appointed Mrs. Earl Ingels and Mrs. Fred
totalled $15,621,623, an in- reports consolidated aales for
Taylor
to serve m botb the Memorial Book Drive and
Ute
same
period
of
~.141,000
crease of 22 percent over the
Membenhlp.
Membership dues ate
$12,768,363 reported for Ute as compared to sales of
II
waa
brought
out that beat pictures have been framed by
correspondtqg quarter of $3,258,000 for 1975's f1rst
Mrs.
Smitb
and
~nted
to the society. 1
quarter.
1975.
Mra. Ray Proffitt Is to wt a sign on the front door
First quarter net income of
' Consolidated net meome
Informing
out of town guests whom to cootact to see in the
was $1,002,623 or $.81 per the restaurant subsidiary
share, compared with was f448,000, compared to home wben no ooe Is there. The society members sent a get
1597,624 or $.49 per share for $305,000 mcome the previous well card to Mrs. Addle Brown.
A poUuclt dinner was enjoyed by Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs.
year. The restaurant chain's
lhe ftrst quarter last year.
Delwon
Roberta, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Reverend Mrs. Robert
contribution
to
corporate
The net mcome per share
Maring,
Mrs Landon Smltll and Mrs. Zelma Hunter.
c9nsollda ted earnings per
sllare for the quarter was
' $ 36, compared to $ 25 in 1975
,,.. Dlofl Y IINTIN"
Daniel E. Evans, Chairman
DfVOIID 10 fill
of
the Board of Bob Evans
IN711Uf01
, Holzer Medlea1 Cealer
PROTECT HAIR
MIHIJ..MASOflf A ..A
Farms attributed the in( DIJebargeo, Aug. t)
CHUrlI L. 1AHHIHIU
At
the
beach, wearing your
crease.Jn
overall
consolidated
Gall Buck, Richard Carter,
bft lfl
l)eair
in
a
ponytail will keep It
aoun HOifi.Df
sales to the addition of new Tim Gillis, George Holley,
Clt~Uf,.,
out
of
your
eyes. So wm
restaurants, overall m- Paula Jackson, Thelma
Pw'-lltf~M ~Wtr •• _,, .. twr•r 1ty.
weanng
a
8!1Uor's
hat if you
'"'- &lt;Mikl 'leltey ~ ... ~. creased restaurant sales, 'and
Jordan, Thomas Justice,
111 Cottrt It r.-ro, ~.C)hlo 4UM.
want
to
protect
bleached
hair
Ute addition of new sausage Kathleen Kingery, William
lu•~•., Office
Htorte Mt 21,.
or
a
sun~Uve
head.
marketing areas.
liltOI' ..I rtM»M tft lliJ ,
.Krebs, Melissa Marcum,
"This
year's
first
quarter
..._..
d••
.......
'
"
'
.
..
..
Mrs. John McGowan and
,.,...,• .,. ottlo .
DRESSIING UP
,
Includes sales from 23 daughter, Sally Meadows,
w•• Grtfflth ~Y Inc. ... restaurant, and only lSof that Ssmuel Morris, Mrs. Paul Keep in mind that one
11-m .., •••• 1
•··· m tNrtl total were in operali011a year R0111 and son, Irene Son, really good outfit Ia worth
he , New Yorfl N.T. 1..17
lu'*-lpt... ,.to.;. Dell..,.. ..,.
ago," Evans IIBid. Bob Evans
Swearing, Mrs. three inelpenllive onea. Th~
_.,* ....,. ......... 1J lelttt ,., Farms alsO introduced Its Bryan
Darrell Tilley and daughter, acceuortet you choose carl
....... .,. Mot• . . . . .....,. _ . _
change Ita feeling.
Nf¥ke Mt ..tleW., OM IMftth. ~&amp;usage m the BaiUmore,, Mrs. Richard Tilley and son.
U.JS ly -11 lft ot.lo .... W Y• OM
Md. and WaslllnCton, D.C.
BJrtba, Aug. I)
y.., tft.tt: II• -the t1Ut Tlw. .
SOOO'HE SKIN
markets
In September, 197~,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
......... " ............ 1ft. , ....:
U your sldn Ia Irritated or
II• fiMifttht •tUt: three IMitfht, U.M. increasing our 18UIIge sales Tuccerl, daughter, Rto
......!pl... , . laduMI lu..tey
territory from 9 states to 11 Grande; Mr. and Mrs. John chapped, a handful of baiting
TIMH-hftthtel
states plus the District of Turnbull, daughter, Hart- aodlln your bath can soothe
and relieve It.
Colwnbla "
ford, W. Va
Tanuny

Sausage firm's sales,

net up in 1st quarter

'1.

...... ..._•••""......,.to....

1...:..--------'
;

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Spol'll Editor

Clara Williams.

'

Nadar talks to Mr. Carter

GaWa CoWlty, through the
sponsorship of the Sctoto
Valley Local School District,
will offer classes m adult
'
basic educallon m the
Oleshire area (locabon ID be
named later date ), Galiia
MASON PERSONAL MENTION
Mrs Fred SpeDCer, Mason and her daughter, Mrs. June Academy High School, and
R111111I ri Pougbteepiie, N Y are wcationmg in Hawau Mrs North Gall1a High School.
The class m Cheshire will
Roalb, an aviatrix, took ber mother there by plane
Mr. IIDII Mrs. James King of ChillicoChe, are also vacatiorung be m session two days a week
frotn JOam to 2 pJD and
at Hawaii. Mr King was a former resident of Mason.
Ralpb &amp;118 is resuperatmg at his borne in Hartford, I~&lt; O mghts a week from 61D 9
p m The class at Gallta
fdlotring surgery at Cbarlestoo General Hospital.
Mrs. James I.oydand two sons of Nasllport, 01110 VISited last Academy will be m seSSion
nek With her pal1!nl.s, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Me Darnel, Sr. and four mghts a week from 6 to 9
attended the Mason Coo.nty F311', where Mrs Loyd's niece p.m The class at North
IJmi8e McDoniel was crowned Mason County Fatr Queen and Gallta High School v.ill be m
sesston on Tuesday and
received &lt;tiler bmcn
Mrs. Sberman Focd has retllrned home from Mt Carmel Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. All
8olpltal wlwre she spent eleven days. Mrs Ford's brotller and classes Will begm on Sepwife, Mr. and Mrs Jolm Hughes of Raceland, .Ky. VISited temher 7
We are planmng classes 10
nadly with Mr. and Mrs. Ford at tllell' home on Fowih St.
Mr. and Mrs. DiJ:ie McCauley, Lisa, Lora and Jon have read1ng, mathematics ,
1etined fnm a vacatim at Gatlinsburg, Tenn. Mrs. Enghsl1 , Amencan history
Mcelaley and daugbters, Lisa and !.ora VISlted recenUy Wlth and Consumer Education . If
anyone is Interested in any of
relatives at YOIIIIgSiown, Ohio.
Mrs. Ama Avis of Roanoke, Va. is VISiting her siSter, Mrs. Ute hsted classes or would have suggestions for possible
Emma Ryan ill Mallon.
Mrs. OWe Henry of Huntlngtlln, Mrs. Ger1 Ward of Costa class offerings contact
MAu, llld Bobby Porter of CalHornia were recent visitors of Howard Neekamp, Coordina tor, at 388-8724
Mr. IIDll Mrs. Jolm Marshall.

By lAwrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB Pleue inform me and many
other pare nts if this
statement IS orrect· " The
main reasoo for controlling a
fever 11 to make a child more
comfortable. Fevers do not
CIIUie brain damage and
rarely cauae convuswns "
I know people who believe
this Is the reason for thetr
child's brain damage If this
II true a person taking care of
a child with a fever should not
need to worry needlessly
Otbenllle all parents sllould
be Informed of the real truth.
DEAR READER - The
statement you refer Ill IS an
over·stmpliflcahon
Exceulve heat will damage
body 1tas1111. The point 1s
what degree heat you are
tallnc about. Body ceiiJ begin
to .00. damage at tern·
peralures of 108 degrees F.,
or a~. ( Nole: the body
temperature may not be qul te
the ~arne temperature as you

a consumer protection forwn
tllat he will tW11 a c~sumer
protection agency Into a
campaign Issue. Ford has
threatened a veto and Carter
said If Ills sustained he would
make such an agency top
priority.
In another mdicatioo that
Cmgress• performance will
be a key part of the
campaign, Carter met wltll
House ccmmittee chalnnen
Mooday, telling them, "I

Reagan tries working up Veep issue

acuoo ! '
The verdict came about 20
mmutes after Brandler
derued the defense's mohoo
for a mistrial 011 gro~ of
multiple mc1dents
of
IrTegular cooducl by Jurors
and prospective jurors.

crlllctsm from some pany
conservatives. l'ord 110 far
has been unwilling to
annolU1Ce his selection of a
TWlOing mate
" It IS a simple nliice rule
It says 'trust the delegates, "'
srud Reagan strategist John
Sears "Is It too much to ask
that we doo 't gtve any leader
a blank check?"
Carter began putting
pressure on Ford from
another side Mooday, telling

need yo~r deep COOllllillnent,

PITTSBURGH (UPI) - It
was "Candy Night" for some
15,000 fans at Three Rivers
Stadtwn Mooday night and
while !bey munched on their
chocolate treats the man for
whom the pn:motloo was
named treated them and a
national televlsloo audience
to the fulfillment of his
boyhood dream.
The usual110oke wasn't oo
his fastball but tt didn't stop
Pittsburgh's John "Candy
Man" Candelaria He went to
his sinker and came away
wltll the third no.hitter ofthe
1976 baseball season,
handcuffing the Los Angeles
Dodgers 2-0 and sending them

':oooPERSTOwN, N.Y. (UP!) - The way all the kids
fiocked around him and pleaded !Of his autograph, you'd think
t:loyd "Uttle Poison" Waner had l-oon freshly discovered, and
l!ie tact Is he was by a brand new generation onJy a lew days
ago
It happened at Yankee Stadtwn last Saturday.
Uoyd Waner, who playt:(l the outfield for Pittsburgh with his
older brother, Paul, "Big Polson," and who accwnulated a lHe
total of 2,459 hits, was asked whether he wanted to play In one
~those old timers' games preceding the regularly scheduled
l'IJ!tep\ between the Baltimore Orioles and Ne)V York Yankees.
' What do you do wben your heart IIBYs ye5, yes, and your
ttain tells you no, no 1
, Uoyd Waner, 70yearsY,oung, said he'd love to play, get up Ill
bel 011e more lime.
' He didn't tell them hecouldn'tfollow the ball anymore. Good
God he could hardly see it at aU, bquse even If It meant him
getting hit, how could he ever resist one more Ume at b~t
~!!!fore all those people in the ball park, moSt of whom weren I
even born yet when he and his big brolller, Paul, slarred for
the Pirates.
"Honey, I can't see anymore to hit the ball," Uoyd Waner
liOfll!ded apprehensively tn his long devoted wife, Fran
"Oh, I bel you can," she encouraged him, not sure at all Ulat
Ke could.
Ed Lopal, the former Yankee ~arpeter, was pitching for the
I!IJler side when Lloyd Waner came up to bat Saturday. Lopat
throws lefl-handed and Waner swings from Ute same side.
tirdlnarUy left-handed hitters like to take the day off and go to
lbe beach when a left-bander Is pitching for the other side.
" Uoyd Waner stepped Into the batter's box and looked over
IAlpat's ftrst two deliveries. On the !bird ooe, It was like some
!!liS• out of a rare old book.
" Smoothly, effortlessly, rnagntflcenUy, 70-year~ld Uoyd
Waner swung at the ball the same way he had done so many
thousands of Urnes before.
" The ball took off m a straight line over second base and into
tenterfield as litUe Uoyd Waner, alll35-pounds of him, trotted
down to first base wtth a clean, solid single.
" The crowd of 47 798 ate it up and gave him a heart-wanmng
Ovatlon. In the p~ess box, Marty Appell, the Yankees' public
kiaUons man, had so many questions about how old Waner
'1\ras, be finally got on Ute public address system and
announced, "Lloyd Waner is 70 years old."
He looked far younger slgnmg for all the kids, who gathered
around bim MondJw here, where he attended the tnducUon of
'Bob Lem011 Robin Roberts, Freddie Liildstrom, Cal Hubbard ,
{toger Con~or and Oscar Charleston mto baseball's Hall of
fame.
Uoyd Waner was elected Ill the Hall of Fame hunself nme
years ago, 15 years after his brolller made It, and it was a litUe
amusing M011day how many more people asked hun about !bat
1\ase hit of hiS off Ed Lopat last Saturday !ban any of those
oUter 2 459 hits he collected in his 17-year career
" "I did have a UtUe trouble seemg the ball," he confessed,
laughing. "Lopat wasn't tbroWIIlg hard. It was nice of him to
toss it up there like we used to say, half-bit already "
clmag~ anybody lmmg out a base hit at ,70, though,.and so
'
'eilsUy, and smoothly 1
' "It's all m your body and wrists," said Waner. "You liave to
try and hit the ball oo a line. That's the way Paul and I always
tried to do Paul was the best. I'll tell you he was He never
tried telling me how to hit until we were botllm pro ball I'd
lead off, he'd be m back of me, and if he'd see I was doing
8omething wrong, he'd say, 'Uoyd, you're lungtng,' or 'You're
hitting off Ute pttcher's motion.'"
. .
Paul Waner died m 1965, leaving behind a 333 JHelime
average for 20 years m Ule big leagues. Lloyd, whom he
recommended to the Pirates, had a .316 lHetiiDe figure . The
two brothers came from Harrah, Okla , and were always close
• "011, gee whiz, do I nuss him," Uoyd Waner satd, biting his
lip "! can't tell you how much He always told me to be
nonchalant, to play the same way we did on the farm. I'd like 1A1
get one thing str&amp;ght about Paul's drinlnng .... He did tt m
!Nblic because be liked to mix Witll people. That's why some of
Ulem accused hlin of hemg a drunkard. He aidn't drmk Utat
much at all . "

to thetr sixth straight defeat.
"Now I'm goona drink beer
all night and 1 doo 't think
anyooe can blame me," satd
the happy Candelaria. "This
tssomelhing I dreamed about
since 1 was a little boy It's
something every kid dr~ms
about It's tbe fulfillment of a
lifetime dream."
Not since Nick Maddox oohllted
Brooklyn
In
Pittsburgh's olcl E~tlen
Park 10 1907 had a Pirate
pitched a n(l.flitler m this
ctty
And Monday mght even
'

tllough the 22-year&lt;&gt;ld Cande!aria "knew from the first
UVllng" he had one in the
works, a nmth-inning pop Ry
bytbe Dodgers' Bill Russellth~ final out- kept htm
Wlcertain of gaming that
fame
"!thought Russell's fly was
gonna fall in at first ," said
lhe fl.foot-7 lefl-hander m the
jubilant Ptrates' dressing
room "I thought to mysell,
'what a way to lose 1t.'"
But center fielder AI OUver
raced in to grab the ball onehanded, brushin g a~ainst

sllortstop Frank Taveras and
insurmg Candalarla's nohitter
"There was no way I was
gomg to miss It," Bald OUver
" I had a good jwnp on the
ball and I saw It all the way.
And I JUSt couldn't walt to get
to Candy after I got It "
Oliver made a formal
presentation of Ute ball to
Candelarla.m the midst ofthe
clubhouse celebration after
the players laid towels wltll
candy bars on them from the
door of Ute clubhouse tn the
hurler's locker

The 1&amp;11 no-bitter by a
Pirate was pitched by Dock
Ellis at San Diego, JIDle 12,
1970 Larry Dierker of
Houston had the National
League's other oohltter this
year and John '!Blue Moon"
Odom and Francisco Barrios
combined for a Chicago
White SoE no-bitter in lbe
American League.
Despite the roar of the
crowd that rocked the
stadiwn, Candelaria feltllke
his old self until two out in the
ninth inning.
"I dtdn't feel any
different," he satd. "I knew I

Hall
of
Farner
Lemon
Frame has
top seed in adlllits beaning Mom

COOPERSTOWN, N Y
run
(UP!)
- Bob Lemon, a cool
bowling
profe ssiOnal with pmpomt

'

tt~:

BUFFALO, N y (UP! ) _
Da ve Frame clinched topseed 1 toda ,1 f ala 0f the
or
Y m
$60,000 Buffalo Open Bowling
Tournament by winning
seven of his last eight games
Mooday night
Frame, of Baldwin Park,
CalH., had a 4~ame total
pinfall of 9,917, commg oo
9,287 actual pins-a 221
average--and 630 bonus pins
for a 21-3 matchplay record
Also making today's fmals
were Jim Plessinger, State
College, Pa., 9,679; Bobby
Fenton , Los Angeles, 9,578;
Ssm Flanagan, Parkersburg,
WVa , 9,559; and Bus Oawalt,
Muncie, Ind., 9,556.
Although Frame made a
rout of the race for top seed,
the other finalists were m a
tight battle, wtth Nelson
Burton Jr., Gus Lampo and
Demus Lane ftghting for the
other four spots m today's
finals Burton had Ute best
chance of movmg mto Ute top
five but when he lost to
Fent011 24~190 in Ute final
game, hts chances were
lost
Frame, who was third last
week for his best placing ever
on the Professional Bowlers
Association tour. can finish
no worse than second this
week
The champton will receive
f&amp;,OOO

c':l"trol during his brilliant
p1tching ca reer, had a
k M da
coofesswn to rna e oo Y
when he and five other
baseball Immortals were
inducted mto the Hall of
Fame
He clauned he IS the only
ptlcher who ever " beaned"
his mother.
Dtsplaymg a comblnatioo
of pnde and wit, Lemoo
explamed how as a youngster
be asked his mother to act as
a batter while he tl)rew a
newly deve loped curve ball to
his father
"I threw a hangmg curve
and 11 wasn 'l the last one I
ever threw," sa1d Lemon as
the aud1ence attending the
Indu ctiOn ceremonies
laughed
"Early Wynn
always sa1d be would sttck
011e in his mother's ear to
prevent a base hit. But I'm
lhe only one who ever d1d
slick roe m my mother's ear.
"What happened was tllat I
hit my motller while pttching
to my father .
"I had my bad days on the
fteld,'' he added. "But I dtdn'l
take Ulem home Wlth me I
left them in a bar aloog the
way home "
Lemon, who woo 'Jf.Yl games
during an 11-year career with
the Cleveland Indians
formally was mducted along
With Robm· Roberts, a 286game wmner during hts
career
Also entermg the Hall of
Fame
wtth Lemon and
EARNED RUN AVERAGE
Roberts,
who spent most of
( based an 108 mmngs P•1ched l
NATIONAL LEAGUE Nor his
career with the
man Cln 2 25 R 1chard , Hou
2 44 , ::;tanhOuse
Mfl
2 60, Pluladelphta Phillles, were
Jones SO 2 62 . Seaver NY Fred Ltndstrom, a star
2 65
infielder for the New York
AMERICAN LEAGUE Fo
drvch Det 1 91 , Tra vers Mil G1811ts m the 1920s, former
2 17 Garland Bait 2 65 , Blue , American League umpire Cal
Oak 2 73 , Blyteven Tex 2 80
Hubbard ; the late Roger
STRIKEOUTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE Sea Connor, the game's !1rst
ver NY 171. Rtchard Hou 148 , homerun king, and the late
Messersm"h , All 128 . N1ekro
Oscar Chadeston, who
Atl 121, Mont efusco, SF 120
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ryan , played his entire career m the
Cal 207 , Tanana
Cal 167
Blyleven, Tex 154 , Hunt er NY old Negro leagues.
122 Jenkms, Bos 111
Lemon, 56, used an old
saymg which he said
his feelings best
" :;- -: ·~ expressed
!·'":: ~::::?-: ;. "? :"·~·· : ·:···: :~~·:··: ':...· :":: ·. .. . .:· ·.~....... : '.. 7"". .; .::;o :;,:, :·. :~: ··=~·::···::
about his election to the Hall
"I've run wtth the
elephants, I've heard the owl
and I've Down wttl! the

:; ,:, ;:,;;:. ;:,;.::;:.::.

Ma 1or Leiiue standings

Cleveland 4 Chicago 2

By Untted Press International
National League

East
Phll•d elph la
Pittsburgh
New York

w

Ga

(All Times EDTI
Molwaukee (Travers 13 il at

670
545 13 11'2

Oakland {Blue 9 10). 11 p m
Boston Uenk 1ns 11 8) at
California (ROSS 6-13), 10 30

L Pet

73

36

60 SO

(Only games scheduled)
Tod•v's Probable Pitchers

10,000 candy bars never as sweet
By CHRIS TURKEL
UP! Sports Writer
The sweetest thing m Pittsburgh Monday rught wasn't
the 10,000 candy bars gtven to
Pirate patrons m h011or of
"Candy Ntght "
Exceedmg everyone 's
foodesl expectallons was the
man they call "Candy," 22year~ld John Candelaria ,
who pttched the third nohitter of the maJor league
sea' as Pittsburgh beat the
Lot .ngeles Dodgers, 2-0
The 6-foot-7 left-bander
struck out seven and walked
only one m wmnlng h1s 11th
game agamst four losses He
retired the last 18 men m a
row after pitching hiS way out

·

Chicago

57 56
51 62

SO• 18
451 24

St Lou is
Montreal

46 62 426 26lf7
New York (Eilts 11 6) at
38 68 358 33 1h Kansas C1fy (Hassler 1 7) , 8 30

·~

Ch~&lt;ago

100 ooo o1 o- 2 1 o

201 000 lOx - 4 9 0
Bl'ett (67) and ~oot. B1bb y,

Cleveland

LaRoche {8) and Fosse WPebb
18 41
1

pm

west

W L Pet
GB
7J 39 652
59 52 532 131h
57 56 496 11112
55 59 482 19
Atlan1a
51 61 455 22
Srm Francisco 49 66 426 25th
Monday's Games
Montreal 2 San Francisco 1
Pittsburgh 2 Los Angeles o
Houston 13 St LOll iS 4
(Only games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pltcllers

Cincinnati
Los Angeles
Houston
San Diego

tAll Times EDTI

Ma lor League Leaders ,
Bv United Press International

BATTING

Mtnn esota (Goltz 9 10) at
( based on JOO at bats )
Balt1more (Palmer 14 10 J, 7 JO
NAliONAL LEAGUE
pm
•
G AB R H
Texas (Sl y Ieven 9 12 and Rose . cm
!12454 98151
Hargan 4 31 at Detroit (Roberts Grtffey , Cln 102 385 89 121
11 11 and Crawford 0 3) , 2, 5 JO Olover PI!
102 404 58 133
pm
Mad lock Chi 105 379 51 124
COnlv games schedule d)
Fos ter , Ctn
102 405 66 132
Wednesday 's Games
Maddox , Ph• I 102 359 53 114
Mllw at Oakland, night
Morgan, Ctn 94 315 87 100
Boston at Callforn1a , n1ght
Robmson P1 t 86 304 46 96
New York et Kan City , night
Geronmo Cn 100 328 43 102
Tew.as at Detroit ntoht
Cardenal Ch 107 405 49 125

Minn. at Ba lt •more.

~lgh t

Pet

333
330

329
327

326
318

317
316
311

309

Chicago (Burris 9&gt;11 , 2 30 p m

New Y or k ( Koos man 13 1), 8 05

Brett KC
LeFlore , Oet
Carew Mm
Garr, Chi
Munson, NY

( Nolan

10 6)

at

Sa n Francisc o &lt;Q~~ss l e r 2 8)
at M on treal (Carr ithers 5 7)j
8 OSP m
San Di ego (Jones 18 6) ' '

Pm
'
Atlanta (Niekro 11 8) at
Phllad elphta (Underwood 6 J) ,

1 35 p m

Los Angeles ( Sutlan 12 9) a!
Pittsburgh ( Reuss 10 61. 7 35

pm
Houston (McLaughlin 1 1) at
St Louis {M cLothen 9 11) , 8 30
pm
Wednesday 's Games
(:lncmnatl at Chicago
San Fran at MontreaL night
San Diego at New York , night
p..tlanta at Phda, nigh t
~os Ang at Plttsburgh 1 nlgh1
Houston at St Louis, nigh t

American League
Eut
New York
Baltim ore
Cleveland
~aston

Oetrott

~Milwa ukee

W
64
55
53
52
52

47

Wesl
W

KOM&amp;S City
Ooklond

r....

M1nnesota
Chlcogo
California

GB
L Pet
... 593
52 514 B'h
56 486 1Jlh
5~ . 486 11'h
57 477 12'14!

68
58
55
53
4S
48

~58

448 15112

GB
Pel
42 618
53 523 10 11:1
55 500 13
55 "' 14
62 ,436 20
&amp;• 4'29 21

L

Monday's Results
Kansas C!tv 8 New York 2
Texas a Detroit 1

Chicago at Cleveland night

Malor League Results

Bv United Pren International
National League

r,

V
tOnly gam es scheduled!

AMERICAN LEAGUE
G, AB II H Pet
McRae KC
99 340 57 121 356

Cinc inna ti

AthenS pUt
m" losers'

pm

110 448
103 416
106 408
94 378
104 419

69 155 346
70 136 327
67 1J I 321
44 119 315
55 130 310

106 381 50 liB 310
Sar Frncosco 000 010 ooo- 1 4 o Carty Cle
109 397 Sl 172 307
Montre&amp;l
100 000 001- 2 ll 0 Slaub . Del
92 359 50 110 '306
Barr tlO 8) and Rader , Sadek Ly nn Bos
100 450 75 136 302
(8).
StanhO use
(8 5)
and RIvers, NY
HOME RUNS
Ca rter
NATIONAL LEAGUE King
~ NY 32, Schm 1dt, Phtl 30
Los Angeles 000 ooo ooo- o o l man
Pittsburgh 000 020 OOx- 2 52 Fosler, Cm 24, Monday , Ch i 2()'
Rau . Hough (9) and Yeage r , M org•n Cin 19
AM E R I CAN LEAGUE
Candelaria ( 11 4) and over LP
Banda, Oak 22, Jackson and
- Rou (10 9)
L May , Bait and Hendrlck j Clev
Houston
100 OOl47Q-13 14 l 19, Rice and Yastrzemskl. Bos
51 LOUIS
020 000 02Q- 4 7 4 and Thbmpson Oet 16
RUNS BATTED IN
Larson (2 3) and Herrmann
NATIONA~ LEAGUE
Fos
a Forsch, walla ce (8) , Solo
man
(8),
Curt1s
(9) and ~er Cln 98 , Morgan, Cln 79 ,
Simmons
LP- Forsch (51) Sch mid\ Phtl 78, Kingman , NY
and LuimSkt Ph il 72
HR - Houslon. Cedeno 1161
AM E R I C A N LEAGUE
Chambliss !Jnd Munson, NY 73 ,
(Only games scheduled )
Mayberry , KC 71. Yastrzemsk.l
Amencan League
BurroughS Tex 68
New York
000 101 000- 2 8 0 eos andSTOLEN
BASES
Kansas C•1Y 301 400 OOK --- 8 12 0
NATIONAL LEAGUE Mor
Holtzman, Jackson (41. Tt
gan Cm and Taveras Pitt 37 ,
draw (7), Lvle IB J and Munson ,
Cedeno, Hou 36, Lopes . LA 35 ,
Leonard l\4 4) and Mart me z
Srock
, SLL 34
LP - Holtzmon 19 81 HRsAM E R I CAN LEAGUE
Kansas Cltv, M c: Rae {7), Ot 1s North , Oak 56 Bay lor. , Oak 44
{13) ; New York, Munson (121
LeFlore, Oet , Patek, KC and
Oak 41
Te•os
015 000 2DO- 8 12 l Campaneris,
PITCHING
DelrOrl
000 001 OQO- I 8 0
Most Vlctones
arll~s IBBI ond Sundberg.
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jones.
Lemanczyk , Laxton (3 ), Bere
s o 18 6 Carllon Ph1i 13 4.
{81 and Freehan LP - Leman c
zyk (J 4) HR- Detroit Staub Koosman, NY 13 7 Ruthven ,
Atl 13 9 Rtc;:hard Hou 13 11
11 0}

bracket
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Four wmners b1 acket and
four losers bracket games
highlighted today's action in
lhe secood day of the 51st
American Legton state
baseball tournament.
In Monday's games: Steve
Dackin tossed a ooe4litter as
Uma blanked Coshocton 7-0 ,
three pttchers combined for a
two-httter as Scioto beat
Archbold 16-0; Euclid topped
Athens 8-4 , Woodlawn edged
Ashley 7.0; Piqua squeezed
past Maynard 4-3, Kent got
by
Portsmouth
6-5;
WUioughby beat Euclid 6-5 in
12 innings and Scioto downed
Wadsworth 2-1
in morning games today
Woodlawn (21-6) was pitted
against Ptqua (39-5 and Lim.·
(37-18) agamst Kent (25-15-3)
In the wmner's bracket and
Athens (26-7) against Asllley
(26-7) m a loser's bracket
wbere the loser IS elimtnated
Afternoon losers bracket
games pitied Portsmoulh (389) agamst Archbold (20-10);
Maynard (23-8) agamst
Wadsworth (28-13) and
Coshocton (23-16 ) agamst
Euclid (49-7-1)
Late afternoon games m
the wmners bracket folUld
Scioto ( 38-6) playing the
Lima-Kent winner and
Willoughby (23-6) playing tbe
Woodlawn-Piqua wmner.
~

how they ran

Born Back Stage was third.
COL UMBUS (UP!) Gold Duster won the first
Rorty Hanover won the
race
.and Ohio Hope the
featured
pace
at
Scioto
screaming eagles," he satd. accepted by hiS grandson,
second
to return $25 20 on the
Downs
Monday
night,
going
"I told my wife last night that Francis Caldwell, who said it
dally
double
combination of 6
after this It's aU downhill for was "a great honor to receive the mile In 2.041~ for driver
and 12
me but, of course, slle knew this plaque on behalf of the Dick Richardson.
A crowd of 4,205 wagered
He
defeated
Don
lorenzo
Caldwell family," while
!hat years ago "
$430,757.
by
ooe
length
and
returned
Roberts, who yielded a Charleston 's plaque was
record 502 homers durmg hiS accepted by his Sister, Mrs. ~. $3.20 and $2 80 Chabru
career , nodded toward the Katherine Horsley, who said, was third
Ebb Direct woo the first
other Hall of Famers and "for 22 years I hoped and
NORTHFIELD , Ohio
race
and Gay Ins11 the second
Bald, "When I was elected I prayed this day would
(UP!
) - Mary Mel scored a
to return $12 80 on the rughUy
wondered If I really bel011ged come ''
fourlength
victory over
An aU-mght ram and the double combination of 4 and Steady Joann In MOilday
Alter looking at these beat-up
threat of more ram forced the 4
guys, I know I belong "
A crowd of 4,600 wagered night's featured $1,400 ninth
Undslrom, 70, descr .bed induction ceremontes to be
race at Northfield Park.
his election as "the handy held 10 a hotel ballroom $287,257
The winner, with Lew Wil·
work of the Supreme Bemg instead of on the grounds of
Iiams In tbe sulky, covered
Fame
and the greatest thing that the Hall of
CINCINNAT( (UP! ) - the mile in 2:03 3-a and paid
ever happened to me," while Ceremonies.t were presided Winged Brook, wtth jockey $2.80, $2.80 and $2.20 Ellacott
Hubbard, 75, lhe ftrst man over by Commissioner Bowie Tommy Meyers aboard, wm Ricky showed.
ever elected to boUt the Kuhn, who pointed out, "Of the featured eighth race at
In the lOth race trifecta, tbe
Baseball and Football Halls all the thousands of men, who River Downs Monday, going 4-6-6 combinatim returned
of Fame, said he was "very have played major league the six fUrlongs m 1 10 3-a.
$2,617 80.
proud, very humble and very baseball, only one per cent
Attendance was 3,246 The
He defeated Crooked Cross
have made II here "
happy "
by ooe and ooe.Jtalf lengths handle was $312,156
Connor 's plaque was

t:l;:~ the SCOREBOARD ~r~rie~s ,~
l~

had It from lhe flrll lnnin8.
Doeln't every pttcber lu)ow
It? My back hurt$ now but 1,~
always does after I pitch.
But when when only
Ruuell stood between him
and his masterpiece, be
admltted "my legs started
shaklnl!like crazy·"
Candelaria, now 11-4,
retired Ute last 18 betters he
faced and then described the
ooly other ball !bat was close
to ruining his bid.
"It was (Ted) Sizemore's
line drive Ill Taveras in the
sixth Inning," he said. "Afoot
either way and It's a base hit.

of a basesloaded Jam m the
tJurd mnlng
''I wasn 1t nervous until
lhere were two outs In the
nmth Then &gt;my legs started
shakmg
hke
crazy,"
admitted the Brooklyn-born
Candelaria "!don't lhink I'll
ever have a bigger thrill
Wlless we w10 a World Senes,
and I'm not so sure that will
surpass this "

Candelaria's n(l.fl1tter was
the hr~t Ptrate one m
Pittsburgh since 1907.
The Pirates scored their
two runs m the fifth when
Rtchte Zisk and Dave Parker
opened w1th smgles off
starter and loser Doug Rau,
10-9, and boUt scored 011 Bill

Rains stop_much
f
0 sports events
Press
By
United
International
Heavy rams that accompamed Hurncane Belle on 1ts
path up the East Coast
Monday night wtped out
VIrtually all scheduled sports
activtty and caused a rarity ,
a postponed pro football
game·.
ANallonal Football League
preo6eason game between the
New York Jets am! Ute New
York Gt~nts, scheduled for an
8 p m EDT slart at Yankee
St1 wn, was called five
hours before ga metune
A spokeSIOan for tbe Jets
srud offiCials were concerned
about fans getting to and
from Yankee Stadium durmg
the hetghl of the hurricane 's
pass over New York
Proceeds of the game go to
charily and officials of both
clubs are attempting to
arrange a makeup date.
Two NFL clubs did manage
to play a pre-lleason game m
Phlladelph18 but only 16,000
fans, less than a quarter of
the expected crowd, .sllowed
up to watch the World
Champton Ptltsburgh
Steelers slip and slide to a 147 vtctory over the Eagles
Drtvmg ram and 3S mile-per·
hour wmds that Whipped
around Veterans Stadium
made playm g· conditions
treacherous
At North Conway, N H,
torrenllal rain forced movement of the finals of the
$100,000 Volvo Internauonal
tennis tournament 80 miles to
an Indoor fa cthty m
Manchester , N .H Jimmy
Connors defeated Raul
Ramirez, 7-6, 4-V, 6-3, m a
match played wtthout
spectators. Only tournament
officials and some members
of Ule press were allowed
lDStde the uny facility
Elsewhere, a World Team
Tennis match between the
Boston Lobsters and the New
York Sets at the Nassau
Cohsuem m Umondale, N Y.,

was postpooed because of
hazardous trav eling
conditions
It
was
rescheduled for Sunday only
if Boston is still m playoff
cootenllon
The harness racmg
program
at
Yonkers
Raceway in New York and
the Thoroughbred program
at AUantic City m New
Jersey also were scrapped
The ram also halted rmnor
league baseball aciiVIIy.
International League games
at Pawtucket, R I , and
Tidewater, Va , were ramed
out along w1th Eastern
League contests at Quebec
C1ty in Canada, Bnstol,
Conn , and West Haven,
Conn.
MINSHAlL ELECTED
CLEVELAND (UP! )
Former Rep. William E.
Minshall, R.Ohio, has been
elected to the board of
directors of The Amertcan
Shtp Building Co.
Minshall, who represented
the 23rd distnct for 20 years
before retirmg In 1975 to
return to prtvate law
pracllce, also is a former
General ColUlsel for the U S
Maritime Admmistration.

Robmson's double.
In other Nallooal League
games, Houston routed St.
Louts, 13-4 and Montreal
edged San FranciSCO, 2-1. In
the American League ,
Kansas Clly ripped New
York, 8-2, Texas drubbed
Detroit, 8-1, and Cleveland
beat Chicago, 4-2
Astros 13, Cardtoals 4:
Cesar Cedeno hit foc the
"cycle" - pounding a single,
double, triple and hiS 16th
homer - scored four runs
and drove m fiVe, ID lead
Houston 's romp past St.
Lows Rookie Dan Larson, 23, went all the way to beat
Bob Forsch, 5.7
Expos 2, Giants 1:
The NL 's leading pmchhltter, Jose Morales, singled
borne tbe WUVling run w1tb
two out in the bottom of the
nmtll tn boost Montreal over
San Franctsco Morales'
club-record 16th pmchhlt
made Don Stanhouse, &amp;jj, a
complete.gwne Willner
Royals 8, Yankees 2·
Amos Otis bit his ftrst home ·
TlUl since JlUle 15 and added
two run-scormg doubles to
lead Kansas City past New
York, in a duel of the AL
division leaders Denms
1eonard went Ute distance in
rBISmg his record to 14-4,
while Yankee starter Ken
Holtzman, 11-8, surrendered '
e1ghl runs before leaving in
the fourtll
Rangers 8, Tigers 1:
Juan Bemquez' two-run
smgle highlighted a ftve-run
Texas outburst in Ute lhtrd

that enabled Nelson Briles to
post his first victory since
July 3 Briles struck out six
and did not walk a man in
evenmg hiS record at B.a. He
had pitched seven starts
witllout a decision
Indians 4, Wblte SoK 2:
George Hendrick smgled
home a prur of runs and Dave
LaRoche ptcked up h18 12tb
save m leading Cleveland
over Chicago, ending the
Indians' five-game losing
streak. Jim Bibby got hiS
eighth victory in 12 deciSions.

-·

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*:
*

a Adolph's Dairy Valley ~
~

~

*

~ Hrs. · 1o.OO A.M. Ttlll . OO P.M Sun.-Thurs .
:
:
1o.oo A.M. Tll12 :00 PM. Fn . &amp; Sat.
~
992 -2556
"'
W. MAIN
POMEROY. O. It

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DaNNINGatllDS AGENCY IN\;.
I'

'

Middleport, Ohio
992·2342

�3- The Dally Sentlne~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Tuesay, Aug. I0,1976

, 2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , 'fuesda) , Aug 10, 1976

;Candy Man gets season's third no-hitter game

·H ouse approves post card registration law
By~OHNMI~E

Ullited Preis lnlmuiUcnal
'n1e Houae Monday passed
a bill, which may have more
effect oo lhe 1976 pollttcal
campaign !han all of the
rhetoric from either the
Republicans
or
the
Democrats - a post card
registration law .
It, too, Is tbe subject of
partlaan debate. Democrat
Jimmy Carter supported the
measure and tl's possible !bat
President Ford, a Republican
whO Is trying to stay m office,
coulq veto It
As the lill passed by a 2311147 vote Monday, aU :;o states
could matl m voter
registration
forms , a
privilege now allowed m only
17 The House rejected a
provision to set up a Voter
Registration Administration
to mail federal election forms

to au persons eligtble to vote
The forms will be m post
offices.
The preluninary acts for
the 1976 GOP coo ventlon
began Monday, with Ford
and Ronald Reagan sttll
caJoli ng, wheedli ng, and
scratchmg for delegates
UP!'s latest COWl! sllowed
Ford Wltll 1,121 of Ute 1,130
votes needed to nommate
wh1le Reaga n had 1,036
Another
I 02
are
Wlcommttted
Ford seemed confid ent
Mon day,
wi th
aides
announc in g that he was
working on his acceptance
speech The calls also went
out Monday to Ute "more
lhan a dozen" men and
women lUlder conSideration
as h1s vtce preSident Ford
asked them to submit
complete health and fmanctal

Harrisses guilty
on two counts
By JACK V. FOX

LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Symbionese Uberation Army
members William and Emily
Harris, found guilty of two
counts of lddnapmg durmg an
SLA crune spree wtth
Patricia Hearst, could
receive 25 years in priSOn and
they stlll face tnal for
abducting Miss Hearst.
The jurors, who returned
the verdict Monday, were
ordered back to court today
to be questioned by the Judge
on defense charges of
prejudice
The Harrises, college
sweethearts m Indiana drawn
into tbe radical movement m
Ute San Francisco Bay area,
took the verdict With no show
of emotion, They slouched m
their chairs behind a
bulletproof glass barrier
dividing the special "high
aecurity" cpurtroom
Defense lawyer leonard
Weinglass accused Judge
Mart Brandler of preJudice,
saying he was sure the
verdicts would be overtW11ed
oo appeal "I don 'I think
these verdicts will stand up m
any court in the land,"
Weinglass Bald.
The jury, ending a threeweek trial and a marathon
nine days of deliberatwns,
!DUDCI the Hanise~ guilty of
lteallrig two cars during a
wild flight across the city
But Ute moll serious verdicts
found them guilty of
lddnaplng teen.qer Thcmas
Malbews at gunpoint and the
ld&lt;klaping of Frank Sutter.

taking his car and $250
Miss Hearst faces tn al
begmnmg Jan lO on Ute same
charges of kidna p, robbery
and assault brought against
theHarrises
They stem from a 22-bour
spree 10 Ma)', 1974 that began
with M1ss Hearst spraymg a
sporting goods store Mill
automatic carbine fire to free
Harns from a guard leading
tn lhe virtijlll exuncuon of the
SLA's hard core the next day
Pohce, alerted that the SL~
was tn Los Angeles,
discovered and surrounded
the band's h1deout S x
" urba n guerillas"
includmg their leader,
Donald "General Fteld
Marshal C10que" DeFreeze
- were killed by police
bullets or the fire that leveled
lhe house.
The JurY found the Harnses
lllllocent on SI X charges of
assault w11h a deadly weapon
ln the store shoot mg accepting lhe HarriS defense
Ill at threw the blame oo Miss
Hearst, stressmg that she
was the ooly one to fire any
shots.
At her federa l bank
robbery trial in San
FranCisco Miss Hearst said
she opened ftre as "a reflex

records
Reagan 's campaign to
Wlseat Ford has been marked
by gambles all along and he
took another ooe Monday.
urging Ut e GOP convention to
re qu ire candidates to
announ ce the1r running
mates or all the pledged
delegates would be freed 12
hours before the balloting
begtns.
Reagan has already picked
Sen. Richard Schweiker , RPa., whi ch ha s drawn

By STEVE GERSI'EL
KANSAS CITY, Mo (UPI )
- Ronald Reagan IS trymg to
pressure President Ford into
disclosmg his choice of a
runnmg mate, a move lhat
could undereut Ford 's
delegate strength and boost
lhe Caltforman's chances for
the nomination.
Again catchin g the Ford
camp by surprise, Reagan
campaign Jllanager John
Sear s Monday ur ged the
Republic an Na tio nal
Convention to reqUir e

Arena m the Kansas City
stockyards. the UP! colUll
had both candidates short of
the 1,130 needed for
nommation.
In new pollmgs Mmday,
Ford gamed two delegates
and lost ooe He now has 1,121
- nme slloct. Reagan lost two
delegates, one tu Ford and
ooe to Q!e. 102 lUlCcmmltted,
for a total of 1,036
Reagan appeared headed
for another defeat wben the
rules committee vmes today
on a proposal, strongly
candidates to announ ce backed by Ford, to prevent
runmng mat es before delegates bound by state law
delega tes
select
th e from bolting tllerr candidate
presidential n&lt;rnmee
Part of Reagan's ''trust the
delegates" rule would free all
the del egates pledged to
Ford, should the PreSident
refuse to dtllCiose his choice
12 hours before ballotln!l 11)1 MICHAEL J. CONLON
WASHINGTON (UP! ) hegtns for the presiden tial
Ralph
Nader Ulmks Jimmy
nomination
Carter
is bright, well read
Sears' proposal was
and
tlUled
into some major
Immediately and
overwhelmingly killed by the consumer ISSUes - but he
temporary rules committee, woo1 say whether he likes
dommated by FOI'd fdlowers him well enough go to work
But Sears, a sllrewd and for him
The
Nader-Carler
mnovative tactiCian, said he
courtslup
Ulat began last
would take the fight IA1 the
weekend
when
Carter mvtted
conventioo floor
Nader
to
viSit
hun
in Plains,
The latest Raagan gambit
Ga
,
seems
to
have
unpressed
surfaced as preliminary work
began toward Ute Qpelllng of Nader mostly because Carter
the party's 31st coovenlton botllered In talk to him at all.
"You can't get m to see
MOII da)•,
PreSident
Ford unless you're
Stx days belore the openmg
Henry
Ford,"
Nader told
ceremooies at Kemper Sports
rep&lt;rlers, nOCing that he has
been unable ID gam access to

Adult basic
• •
trammg

is offered

:::eWhile House lor iiOme
The d1alogue contmued
Monday when Carter
addressed a group of
representatives of public
mterest groups, offi~ of
regulatory agencies· and
cmsumer~nented

congresSional aides.
Nader, who arranged the
quest100 and an:;wer seSSliJII,
said be came away from his
weekend meetmg believmg
Carter was " bright",
although he declined to
compare bim to otber public
figures. Hesrudnopostmany
Carter admini!tral.ton was
iliscussed but declined to say
whether he would be
Interested m one if offered.
Carter did take time to
warmly endorse a p1ece of
legiSlation whtch Nader
OOIISiders the ooe thing he
wants to accompliS~ as a
consumer advocate. The
legislahm would create an
agency
for consumer
advocacy - an Independent
body to mtervene on behalf of
l'IJ!sumers and other Wiel'8 of
government sei'Yices wben
deciSions are being made
The leglslatlOO baa passed
both the House and Senate
but has been tied lJil in
l'IJI!erence ccmmittee since
last spring because President
Ford 18YS be will veto 1t.
Carter urged Focd to Sign it
but promised to make the

DR. LAMB

Heat can harnl body

..

••
fj

get fr om a mouth thermome ter ) IndiVI dU als
suflenng from severe heat
stress Wllh a heat stroke may
ha1•e Widespread body ltssue
damage.
The bram cells are par-·
Ucularly sensitive to heat and
cannot be replaced 1!
damaged Many parts of the
body regenerate if damaged,
but not the bram cells . At
body temperatures of 110
degrees F death will occur If
the temperature persists.
For these reasons I conSider a fever of l 06 degrees F
as dangerous, not from the
disease but from the fever
Itself Any elevatiOn above
lhts pOint should be treated
vigorously to lower the body
temperature.
The crtUcal level of body
temperature Is about 106
degrees F The body seems to
have
some
special
mecharusm that usually stops
the nse In temperature w1th
Illnesses at thiS level A fever

~port, frlendlltlp, advice
and crltldlm In the upcoo'llng
campaign period."
Although he said, "I
reserve the rieht to clial8ree
with you," Carter eeemed to
be setting • tone of
cooperatlm. Ford has sniped
at Cmgress many times lor
wastmg time and mmey
while neglectmg important
national needs like defense
and energy.

There are about 900
delegates m 19 states bound
by state laws, and without a
new rule they could switch
Sides or perhaps abstam to
deny a ~stbaUot mmmatlon.
The rule would favor Focd.
Delegates In several states
are legally bollld to Ford but
loyal emotionally to Rtag11.n.
The reverse Is true, too, but
Reagan likely would gain
more from the gambit than
Ford
Reagan has urged Ford to
name a running mate since
he annolUlced two weeks ago
his chOice was Sen. Richard
Schwe1ker of Pennsylvania.

In his search, Ford has
notified a number of
posslbthtles - Including
Commerce Sea'etary Elliot
Richardson, Sens. Howard
Baker, EdwaFd Brooke and
William Brock, and Iowa
Gov Robert Ray.
Brooke and Brock said they
were not interested.
Wblle Reagan forces
seemed ready to risk
convention sllowdowns over
rules, they were trymg to
avOid a coofrontation m a
platform , but any umty
platform was certain tn be
challe~ed by ardent conservatives.

IS sometimes helpful aDd lhe
body can control Its temperature m normal environmental temperature. A,
hny thermostat m the bram
regulates the body temperature. By turmng on heat
genera hng mechamsms the
body temperature will rise,
by turning on the cooling
mechamsms the body tempera lure will fall . When you
have a fever the body thermostat has s1mply been reset
at a hi gher level Asptrm and
s1m1lar medtcmes cause the
body to rest the thermostat at
&gt;a lower level, reducing the
lever.
The body tempera lure
would r1se to levels that
would cause dealh 1f 11 were
not for the
cooling
mecharusms The food breakdown to give you energy
releases lots of heat energy.
Exercise mcreases the
metabolism of food or stored
fat dep osits and also
generates lots of heal. The

¥

heat IS lost through your skin.
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 7-6,
Body Temperature and
Fever, to give you more
complete informatiOn. Others
who want more Information
can send a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope with
50 cents for 11 Just addrm
your letter to me In care of
thts newspaper, P 0 Box 326,
Ssn Antnmo, Tx 78292.
In general, m Illnesses, you
need not worry about brain
damage If the body tern·
perature 1s 105 degrees F or .
less At 106 degrees If efforts
should certainly be made to
reduce the body temperature
to protect agamst the adverse
effects of the body heat.
To protect agatnst heat
stroke as might occur m a
lab&lt;rer or an alhtete If the
body temperature Is 104
degrees F aDd accompanied
by any signs of impending
hea I buildup, steps should be
taken at once to cool the body

CLIFTON- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Smith gave a farneU
porty Mlllday, August 2, In hmor of their 1011, Randy, who left
for the U.S. Army Aucuat ~. Ice cream, Cllke and punch
served Ill Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Johnlon IIDll &lt;lluctle, Mr '
and Mrs. Isaac Lewis and Daren YOIIIII, Mr. and Mrs. Kennlt
Bass, Kendra and Korena, Mr. and Mrs. Charlel CU'twrlchl~
Elaine Grogan and Quia, Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewll, Terw
&amp;nith, Greg r-ta, Dannie Hannoo and grandparenta Mn:
Olga Lewis and lAurene Lewil He received farewell glftl
from Mr. and Mrs. Freemln JohniOII and Oluckle, Ell~,.
Grogan, Mr and Mn. Charles Cartwrl8ht, Katie Ba18 anu

m

matter a campa1gn ISSue and
a top priority m his
administration if elected and
Ford has vetoed Ule
legis! atloo

In response to =surner,
corporate, environmental
and related queStions, Carter
also wd he:
- BeUeves there is too
much VIolence oo television
and the President has an
obligation to "express
displeasure" when he sees
9JIIIetbing he doesnUke He
Bald he would appoint a
atnswner advocate to the
Federal Oomm umcallons
Commission
- Would not now fllror a
nationwide ban or pniubittve
tax oo throw-away beverage
cans and bottles. He wd be
reallydoesll know too much
about the issue and reserved
the right to change his mmd if
lie could find more olll abolll
it
Believes a natimWide
nofatilt automobile insurance
law IS " Inevitable" but
hesitates to commit h•moelf
00 the issue yet.
- Iloe!In't lmow if he would
carry regulatory morm I9J
far as to dumande the avU

Aeronautics Board or the
Interstate Commerce
Co mmtssion to let the
trucking and 8ll'tine industry
oompete solely on the IIIIsts of
the marketplace.
- Would prefer to leave the
licensmg of corporatioos to
the states rather than require
some kmd of federal
chartermg system as bas
been suggested by some
consumer groups.
- Would prefer not to
comnut himself on the ISSue
of paymg money to atnSIII!er
groups and oCher citizens to
present their views In
government decisi.oo-maldng
IDltil be sees bow well the
consumer advocacy agency
would work.

CLIFTON - Visiting Mrs. Walter Blake for tbe weekend
and a family reuntoo We Mr. and Mrs. Don Roberl.l Ill"
daughter, Sennce of S. Carolina, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Roberta aM
family, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roberts, Mrs. Olarles Allen arid
two chUdren, Mrs. Mlrpret Cackler, all of Delaware. Ohlot
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Roberts and daughter of O'oton, Ohio ; Mr.
and Mrs. Olarles Blake, Valerie, of Pomeroy, and Mrs.
Olarlott McNickols and Jerry of &amp;lnlxiry, Ohio.
CLIFTON- ASUI'J)I'Iae blrtll:lay party was held Tuesday,
Aug. 3, at the Cllltm United Methodist Ch!rch Annex In bono~
of Evelyn Lockett. Hostess was Madalyn Chattin. Ice crei~m,
cake and plU1Ch was served to Mrs. Harley Powell, Mrs. James
Preston, Mrs Lester Jahnaon, Mrs. Bill WIUiams, Mrs!
Rlchard Glll!ey, Mrs. James Lee, Mrs. Helen Barker, Mr~ 1
Bob Olattin, Mrs. Chester OUver, Mrs. Denver Blake, Mrs.
Tom Wllltams, Mrs, Uoyd WIUiams, Rev and Mrs. 0, B.
Hatcher, Roger Kle111, Mlsi! Katie Oliver and Miss Brendli
OlatUn.
·:
SendJntl gifts were Harley Powell, Mrs Kenny Ault, Mrs.
Pearl Smith, Mrs. Elver Fox, Mrs. Walter Blake and Mrsj
Mary Davis,

Mrs. Goerge Johnson, Mrs. Larry Fry, Mrs. Glen Glaze
and Cindy Glue were !!hopping in aillllcotlle recently and ~
attended the play, "Tecumseh."
Mrs Katie Bass and Charles Jobnson spent a weelten4
recently visiting her soo and family , Dr. and Mrs. Ray Dea/1
Heaton at McLean, Va. Mrs. Uoyd Wllltams accompanle\f!
them and visited Mr and Mrs. Tom Williams and family a
Indian Head, Macyland.
•

I

Mrs. Molly Fox Is in East Uverpool, Ohio Ill see her st.ster
who is seriously ilL
Mr. and Mrs. T(lll Williams, Jeff and Cindy of Indian"
Head, Maryland spent the week with Mr and Mrs. Uoyd
Williams. Jeff and Cindy Is remaining for several weeks. Mrs.
and Mrs. Bill Crouch, Alexandria, VIrginia called on Mr. ana
Mrs. Tcm WilJiams they attend the Mason County .Fair
visited other points of mterest. Mr and Mrs. O'ouch was VeTY,
happy by the hospitality !bey received at the fair and while
visiting other places In West VIrginia.
:

ana

and Bnan Varian, children of Mr. and Mrs. J~
Varian spent the week with their grandmother Mrs. Rose Dlllii
at West JelferiiOII, Ohio
'
LETART - Twenty five attended the first day of Churcb
School at Graham United Methodist Clmrch on Monday with
Brenda Memtt, director. Mary Ann l,l.ichards Is in charge of
the music.
The theme of the school Is "God's Love Is Jesus." T!Mi
school will cmtinue lhrougb Friday.
GROUND BROKEN
Ruth Pickens teaches tbe Nursery group and her helper Is
Sl'. CLAIRSVIlLE, Ohio Carolyn Grimm.
.
(UP!) - GroiDld was broken
Barbara Bumgarner teaches the Kindergarten Class and
Monday afternoon for $1 Diane Roush 18 a helper.
million in recrea tiona!
Mary Ann Richards teaches the Mlddler's and Estbe~
facilities at Barkcamp State Brown Instructs tbe Junior Class. (luis Shelton serves as a
Park m Beim~t Coo.nty.
helper.
Much of the unproyements .
The Rev. Tim Allen teacbes the Youth Class and his wife,
will be for tbe banliCapped. Carolyn assists
Seventr.tw~ more Class B
Members of the congregation of the church flll'lllsl!
"'mpsltes will be aclded to refreshments each day A wiener roast will be held at the
Ule ensting 65 sites. Also conclustoo 11 the school on Friday.
~
among the 101provements
will be a new service building
NEW HAVEN - Halph Gibbs, Sr. was sW']l'lsed on his 81st
to be heated by 90iar energy birthday Wednesday at the Senior Citizen meeting room at the
Factlitles are to be New Haven Ubrary. Others attending were his daughter, Mrs:
ClllllPleted by June 1, 1977.
Emogene Walker, and Mrs. Alice Kirby, Mrs. Mae Howard,
CLOSING SET
Mrs. Nellie MacKnight, Mrs. Grace Cunningham, Mr. and
Closmg time for aU open
Mrs. Jim Wiee, Mr. and Mrs. Golden Hazelett, Mra. ~
classes entries m Ule Metgs
GOLFERS WANTED
&amp;nith, Mrs Grace Brown, Mrs. Mide MacKnight, Mrs. Esther
County Fatr will be 4 p.m
All Meigs Htgh School MacKnight, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Grinstead, Mrs. Edna
Frtday The horse sllow. and students who are mterested Wayl.alid, Mrs Thelma Capehart, Mrs. Edna Roush, and Mr.
horse and pony pulls are not m trymg out for the Metgs Fred SpeDCer.
1
governed by the deadline. Golf Team are to report to the •
In addttlOO to a potluck dimer, ice cream and birthday
The secretary wiD be at the Pomeroy Golf Course at 10 cake were served tn the hoooree, Mr. Gibbs, and others
f311' board office at lhe Rock a.m on Monday, Aug 16. mentioned
' •·
Sprmgs Fairgrounds IA1 ac- Those attending are Ill take
The group actiVIties Include playing dominoeB an&lt;l
cept entries from 10 a.m. to 4 clubs and be prepared to quilling. The ladles in the past have made cotton rugs which
p.m on botll Thursday and begm practicmg on !bat day . are now for sale.
Friday.
Bob Oliver ,. the golf coach
MASON - The MaiOil City Hlatorical Society meeting
August 5th voted to have open house on September 19 In the
afternoon.
Landon Smith placed the red wood sign made by Vernon
Cadle of Leon on the !root of the house. The engraving reads as
follows :
"Mallon City Hlllorlcal Society formed In 1974, plaque
donated by Harry Campbell."
,
A picture of the sign was sent to Mr. Campbell and he
receved this before his death several weeks ago. lila
cmtrlbutioo
was greaUy appreclated, as are all others.
COLUMBUS - Bob Evans has been adjusted for the
Landm
Smith, presided at the meetlnl!. Mrs. Earl
Mrs.
Farms, Inc., the IIBusage and three-for-two stock spht
Ingels
presented
devltlooala ftom John 14th chapter; 1·12
restau rant company effecllve March 19, 1976.
ver11e1
which
was
followed with the group praying the Lord's
The corporaUon's whollyheadquartered here, reports
Prayer.
The
treasurers'
report was given by Mra. Delwon
consolidated sales for 1ta first owned restaurant subsidiary,
quarter ended July 30 , Bob Evans Farm Foods, Inc Roberta.
The president appointed Mrs. Earl Ingels and Mrs. Fred
totalled $15,621,623, an in- reports consolidated aales for
Taylor
to serve m botb the Memorial Book Drive and
Ute
same
period
of
~.141,000
crease of 22 percent over the
Membenhlp.
Membership dues ate
$12,768,363 reported for Ute as compared to sales of
II
waa
brought
out that beat pictures have been framed by
correspondtqg quarter of $3,258,000 for 1975's f1rst
Mrs.
Smitb
and
~nted
to the society. 1
quarter.
1975.
Mra. Ray Proffitt Is to wt a sign on the front door
First quarter net income of
' Consolidated net meome
Informing
out of town guests whom to cootact to see in the
was $1,002,623 or $.81 per the restaurant subsidiary
share, compared with was f448,000, compared to home wben no ooe Is there. The society members sent a get
1597,624 or $.49 per share for $305,000 mcome the previous well card to Mrs. Addle Brown.
A poUuclt dinner was enjoyed by Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mrs.
year. The restaurant chain's
lhe ftrst quarter last year.
Delwon
Roberta, Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Reverend Mrs. Robert
contribution
to
corporate
The net mcome per share
Maring,
Mrs Landon Smltll and Mrs. Zelma Hunter.
c9nsollda ted earnings per
sllare for the quarter was
' $ 36, compared to $ 25 in 1975
,,.. Dlofl Y IINTIN"
Daniel E. Evans, Chairman
DfVOIID 10 fill
of
the Board of Bob Evans
IN711Uf01
, Holzer Medlea1 Cealer
PROTECT HAIR
MIHIJ..MASOflf A ..A
Farms attributed the in( DIJebargeo, Aug. t)
CHUrlI L. 1AHHIHIU
At
the
beach, wearing your
crease.Jn
overall
consolidated
Gall Buck, Richard Carter,
bft lfl
l)eair
in
a
ponytail will keep It
aoun HOifi.Df
sales to the addition of new Tim Gillis, George Holley,
Clt~Uf,.,
out
of
your
eyes. So wm
restaurants, overall m- Paula Jackson, Thelma
Pw'-lltf~M ~Wtr •• _,, .. twr•r 1ty.
weanng
a
8!1Uor's
hat if you
'"'- &lt;Mikl 'leltey ~ ... ~. creased restaurant sales, 'and
Jordan, Thomas Justice,
111 Cottrt It r.-ro, ~.C)hlo 4UM.
want
to
protect
bleached
hair
Ute addition of new sausage Kathleen Kingery, William
lu•~•., Office
Htorte Mt 21,.
or
a
sun~Uve
head.
marketing areas.
liltOI' ..I rtM»M tft lliJ ,
.Krebs, Melissa Marcum,
"This
year's
first
quarter
..._..
d••
.......
'
"
'
.
..
..
Mrs. John McGowan and
,.,...,• .,. ottlo .
DRESSIING UP
,
Includes sales from 23 daughter, Sally Meadows,
w•• Grtfflth ~Y Inc. ... restaurant, and only lSof that Ssmuel Morris, Mrs. Paul Keep in mind that one
11-m .., •••• 1
•··· m tNrtl total were in operali011a year R0111 and son, Irene Son, really good outfit Ia worth
he , New Yorfl N.T. 1..17
lu'*-lpt... ,.to.;. Dell..,.. ..,.
ago," Evans IIBid. Bob Evans
Swearing, Mrs. three inelpenllive onea. Th~
_.,* ....,. ......... 1J lelttt ,., Farms alsO introduced Its Bryan
Darrell Tilley and daughter, acceuortet you choose carl
....... .,. Mot• . . . . .....,. _ . _
change Ita feeling.
Nf¥ke Mt ..tleW., OM IMftth. ~&amp;usage m the BaiUmore,, Mrs. Richard Tilley and son.
U.JS ly -11 lft ot.lo .... W Y• OM
Md. and WaslllnCton, D.C.
BJrtba, Aug. I)
y.., tft.tt: II• -the t1Ut Tlw. .
SOOO'HE SKIN
markets
In September, 197~,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
......... " ............ 1ft. , ....:
U your sldn Ia Irritated or
II• fiMifttht •tUt: three IMitfht, U.M. increasing our 18UIIge sales Tuccerl, daughter, Rto
......!pl... , . laduMI lu..tey
territory from 9 states to 11 Grande; Mr. and Mrs. John chapped, a handful of baiting
TIMH-hftthtel
states plus the District of Turnbull, daughter, Hart- aodlln your bath can soothe
and relieve It.
Colwnbla "
ford, W. Va
Tanuny

Sausage firm's sales,

net up in 1st quarter

'1.

...... ..._•••""......,.to....

1...:..--------'
;

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Spol'll Editor

Clara Williams.

'

Nadar talks to Mr. Carter

GaWa CoWlty, through the
sponsorship of the Sctoto
Valley Local School District,
will offer classes m adult
'
basic educallon m the
Oleshire area (locabon ID be
named later date ), Galiia
MASON PERSONAL MENTION
Mrs Fred SpeDCer, Mason and her daughter, Mrs. June Academy High School, and
R111111I ri Pougbteepiie, N Y are wcationmg in Hawau Mrs North Gall1a High School.
The class m Cheshire will
Roalb, an aviatrix, took ber mother there by plane
Mr. IIDII Mrs. James King of ChillicoChe, are also vacatiorung be m session two days a week
frotn JOam to 2 pJD and
at Hawaii. Mr King was a former resident of Mason.
Ralpb &amp;118 is resuperatmg at his borne in Hartford, I~&lt; O mghts a week from 61D 9
p m The class at Gallta
fdlotring surgery at Cbarlestoo General Hospital.
Mrs. James I.oydand two sons of Nasllport, 01110 VISited last Academy will be m seSSion
nek With her pal1!nl.s, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Me Darnel, Sr. and four mghts a week from 6 to 9
attended the Mason Coo.nty F311', where Mrs Loyd's niece p.m The class at North
IJmi8e McDoniel was crowned Mason County Fatr Queen and Gallta High School v.ill be m
sesston on Tuesday and
received &lt;tiler bmcn
Mrs. Sberman Focd has retllrned home from Mt Carmel Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. All
8olpltal wlwre she spent eleven days. Mrs Ford's brotller and classes Will begm on Sepwife, Mr. and Mrs Jolm Hughes of Raceland, .Ky. VISited temher 7
We are planmng classes 10
nadly with Mr. and Mrs. Ford at tllell' home on Fowih St.
Mr. and Mrs. DiJ:ie McCauley, Lisa, Lora and Jon have read1ng, mathematics ,
1etined fnm a vacatim at Gatlinsburg, Tenn. Mrs. Enghsl1 , Amencan history
Mcelaley and daugbters, Lisa and !.ora VISlted recenUy Wlth and Consumer Education . If
anyone is Interested in any of
relatives at YOIIIIgSiown, Ohio.
Mrs. Ama Avis of Roanoke, Va. is VISiting her siSter, Mrs. Ute hsted classes or would have suggestions for possible
Emma Ryan ill Mallon.
Mrs. OWe Henry of Huntlngtlln, Mrs. Ger1 Ward of Costa class offerings contact
MAu, llld Bobby Porter of CalHornia were recent visitors of Howard Neekamp, Coordina tor, at 388-8724
Mr. IIDll Mrs. Jolm Marshall.

By lAwrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB Pleue inform me and many
other pare nts if this
statement IS orrect· " The
main reasoo for controlling a
fever 11 to make a child more
comfortable. Fevers do not
CIIUie brain damage and
rarely cauae convuswns "
I know people who believe
this Is the reason for thetr
child's brain damage If this
II true a person taking care of
a child with a fever should not
need to worry needlessly
Otbenllle all parents sllould
be Informed of the real truth.
DEAR READER - The
statement you refer Ill IS an
over·stmpliflcahon
Exceulve heat will damage
body 1tas1111. The point 1s
what degree heat you are
tallnc about. Body ceiiJ begin
to .00. damage at tern·
peralures of 108 degrees F.,
or a~. ( Nole: the body
temperature may not be qul te
the ~arne temperature as you

a consumer protection forwn
tllat he will tW11 a c~sumer
protection agency Into a
campaign Issue. Ford has
threatened a veto and Carter
said If Ills sustained he would
make such an agency top
priority.
In another mdicatioo that
Cmgress• performance will
be a key part of the
campaign, Carter met wltll
House ccmmittee chalnnen
Mooday, telling them, "I

Reagan tries working up Veep issue

acuoo ! '
The verdict came about 20
mmutes after Brandler
derued the defense's mohoo
for a mistrial 011 gro~ of
multiple mc1dents
of
IrTegular cooducl by Jurors
and prospective jurors.

crlllctsm from some pany
conservatives. l'ord 110 far
has been unwilling to
annolU1Ce his selection of a
TWlOing mate
" It IS a simple nliice rule
It says 'trust the delegates, "'
srud Reagan strategist John
Sears "Is It too much to ask
that we doo 't gtve any leader
a blank check?"
Carter began putting
pressure on Ford from
another side Mooday, telling

need yo~r deep COOllllillnent,

PITTSBURGH (UPI) - It
was "Candy Night" for some
15,000 fans at Three Rivers
Stadtwn Mooday night and
while !bey munched on their
chocolate treats the man for
whom the pn:motloo was
named treated them and a
national televlsloo audience
to the fulfillment of his
boyhood dream.
The usual110oke wasn't oo
his fastball but tt didn't stop
Pittsburgh's John "Candy
Man" Candelaria He went to
his sinker and came away
wltll the third no.hitter ofthe
1976 baseball season,
handcuffing the Los Angeles
Dodgers 2-0 and sending them

':oooPERSTOwN, N.Y. (UP!) - The way all the kids
fiocked around him and pleaded !Of his autograph, you'd think
t:loyd "Uttle Poison" Waner had l-oon freshly discovered, and
l!ie tact Is he was by a brand new generation onJy a lew days
ago
It happened at Yankee Stadtwn last Saturday.
Uoyd Waner, who playt:(l the outfield for Pittsburgh with his
older brother, Paul, "Big Polson," and who accwnulated a lHe
total of 2,459 hits, was asked whether he wanted to play In one
~those old timers' games preceding the regularly scheduled
l'IJ!tep\ between the Baltimore Orioles and Ne)V York Yankees.
' What do you do wben your heart IIBYs ye5, yes, and your
ttain tells you no, no 1
, Uoyd Waner, 70yearsY,oung, said he'd love to play, get up Ill
bel 011e more lime.
' He didn't tell them hecouldn'tfollow the ball anymore. Good
God he could hardly see it at aU, bquse even If It meant him
getting hit, how could he ever resist one more Ume at b~t
~!!!fore all those people in the ball park, moSt of whom weren I
even born yet when he and his big brolller, Paul, slarred for
the Pirates.
"Honey, I can't see anymore to hit the ball," Uoyd Waner
liOfll!ded apprehensively tn his long devoted wife, Fran
"Oh, I bel you can," she encouraged him, not sure at all Ulat
Ke could.
Ed Lopal, the former Yankee ~arpeter, was pitching for the
I!IJler side when Lloyd Waner came up to bat Saturday. Lopat
throws lefl-handed and Waner swings from Ute same side.
tirdlnarUy left-handed hitters like to take the day off and go to
lbe beach when a left-bander Is pitching for the other side.
" Uoyd Waner stepped Into the batter's box and looked over
IAlpat's ftrst two deliveries. On the !bird ooe, It was like some
!!liS• out of a rare old book.
" Smoothly, effortlessly, rnagntflcenUy, 70-year~ld Uoyd
Waner swung at the ball the same way he had done so many
thousands of Urnes before.
" The ball took off m a straight line over second base and into
tenterfield as litUe Uoyd Waner, alll35-pounds of him, trotted
down to first base wtth a clean, solid single.
" The crowd of 47 798 ate it up and gave him a heart-wanmng
Ovatlon. In the p~ess box, Marty Appell, the Yankees' public
kiaUons man, had so many questions about how old Waner
'1\ras, be finally got on Ute public address system and
announced, "Lloyd Waner is 70 years old."
He looked far younger slgnmg for all the kids, who gathered
around bim MondJw here, where he attended the tnducUon of
'Bob Lem011 Robin Roberts, Freddie Liildstrom, Cal Hubbard ,
{toger Con~or and Oscar Charleston mto baseball's Hall of
fame.
Uoyd Waner was elected Ill the Hall of Fame hunself nme
years ago, 15 years after his brolller made It, and it was a litUe
amusing M011day how many more people asked hun about !bat
1\ase hit of hiS off Ed Lopat last Saturday !ban any of those
oUter 2 459 hits he collected in his 17-year career
" "I did have a UtUe trouble seemg the ball," he confessed,
laughing. "Lopat wasn't tbroWIIlg hard. It was nice of him to
toss it up there like we used to say, half-bit already "
clmag~ anybody lmmg out a base hit at ,70, though,.and so
'
'eilsUy, and smoothly 1
' "It's all m your body and wrists," said Waner. "You liave to
try and hit the ball oo a line. That's the way Paul and I always
tried to do Paul was the best. I'll tell you he was He never
tried telling me how to hit until we were botllm pro ball I'd
lead off, he'd be m back of me, and if he'd see I was doing
8omething wrong, he'd say, 'Uoyd, you're lungtng,' or 'You're
hitting off Ute pttcher's motion.'"
. .
Paul Waner died m 1965, leaving behind a 333 JHelime
average for 20 years m Ule big leagues. Lloyd, whom he
recommended to the Pirates, had a .316 lHetiiDe figure . The
two brothers came from Harrah, Okla , and were always close
• "011, gee whiz, do I nuss him," Uoyd Waner satd, biting his
lip "! can't tell you how much He always told me to be
nonchalant, to play the same way we did on the farm. I'd like 1A1
get one thing str&amp;ght about Paul's drinlnng .... He did tt m
!Nblic because be liked to mix Witll people. That's why some of
Ulem accused hlin of hemg a drunkard. He aidn't drmk Utat
much at all . "

to thetr sixth straight defeat.
"Now I'm goona drink beer
all night and 1 doo 't think
anyooe can blame me," satd
the happy Candelaria. "This
tssomelhing I dreamed about
since 1 was a little boy It's
something every kid dr~ms
about It's tbe fulfillment of a
lifetime dream."
Not since Nick Maddox oohllted
Brooklyn
In
Pittsburgh's olcl E~tlen
Park 10 1907 had a Pirate
pitched a n(l.flitler m this
ctty
And Monday mght even
'

tllough the 22-year&lt;&gt;ld Cande!aria "knew from the first
UVllng" he had one in the
works, a nmth-inning pop Ry
bytbe Dodgers' Bill Russellth~ final out- kept htm
Wlcertain of gaming that
fame
"!thought Russell's fly was
gonna fall in at first ," said
lhe fl.foot-7 lefl-hander m the
jubilant Ptrates' dressing
room "I thought to mysell,
'what a way to lose 1t.'"
But center fielder AI OUver
raced in to grab the ball onehanded, brushin g a~ainst

sllortstop Frank Taveras and
insurmg Candalarla's nohitter
"There was no way I was
gomg to miss It," Bald OUver
" I had a good jwnp on the
ball and I saw It all the way.
And I JUSt couldn't walt to get
to Candy after I got It "
Oliver made a formal
presentation of Ute ball to
Candelarla.m the midst ofthe
clubhouse celebration after
the players laid towels wltll
candy bars on them from the
door of Ute clubhouse tn the
hurler's locker

The 1&amp;11 no-bitter by a
Pirate was pitched by Dock
Ellis at San Diego, JIDle 12,
1970 Larry Dierker of
Houston had the National
League's other oohltter this
year and John '!Blue Moon"
Odom and Francisco Barrios
combined for a Chicago
White SoE no-bitter in lbe
American League.
Despite the roar of the
crowd that rocked the
stadiwn, Candelaria feltllke
his old self until two out in the
ninth inning.
"I dtdn't feel any
different," he satd. "I knew I

Hall
of
Farner
Lemon
Frame has
top seed in adlllits beaning Mom

COOPERSTOWN, N Y
run
(UP!)
- Bob Lemon, a cool
bowling
profe ssiOnal with pmpomt

'

tt~:

BUFFALO, N y (UP! ) _
Da ve Frame clinched topseed 1 toda ,1 f ala 0f the
or
Y m
$60,000 Buffalo Open Bowling
Tournament by winning
seven of his last eight games
Mooday night
Frame, of Baldwin Park,
CalH., had a 4~ame total
pinfall of 9,917, commg oo
9,287 actual pins-a 221
average--and 630 bonus pins
for a 21-3 matchplay record
Also making today's fmals
were Jim Plessinger, State
College, Pa., 9,679; Bobby
Fenton , Los Angeles, 9,578;
Ssm Flanagan, Parkersburg,
WVa , 9,559; and Bus Oawalt,
Muncie, Ind., 9,556.
Although Frame made a
rout of the race for top seed,
the other finalists were m a
tight battle, wtth Nelson
Burton Jr., Gus Lampo and
Demus Lane ftghting for the
other four spots m today's
finals Burton had Ute best
chance of movmg mto Ute top
five but when he lost to
Fent011 24~190 in Ute final
game, hts chances were
lost
Frame, who was third last
week for his best placing ever
on the Professional Bowlers
Association tour. can finish
no worse than second this
week
The champton will receive
f&amp;,OOO

c':l"trol during his brilliant
p1tching ca reer, had a
k M da
coofesswn to rna e oo Y
when he and five other
baseball Immortals were
inducted mto the Hall of
Fame
He clauned he IS the only
ptlcher who ever " beaned"
his mother.
Dtsplaymg a comblnatioo
of pnde and wit, Lemoo
explamed how as a youngster
be asked his mother to act as
a batter while he tl)rew a
newly deve loped curve ball to
his father
"I threw a hangmg curve
and 11 wasn 'l the last one I
ever threw," sa1d Lemon as
the aud1ence attending the
Indu ctiOn ceremonies
laughed
"Early Wynn
always sa1d be would sttck
011e in his mother's ear to
prevent a base hit. But I'm
lhe only one who ever d1d
slick roe m my mother's ear.
"What happened was tllat I
hit my motller while pttching
to my father .
"I had my bad days on the
fteld,'' he added. "But I dtdn'l
take Ulem home Wlth me I
left them in a bar aloog the
way home "
Lemon, who woo 'Jf.Yl games
during an 11-year career with
the Cleveland Indians
formally was mducted along
With Robm· Roberts, a 286game wmner during hts
career
Also entermg the Hall of
Fame
wtth Lemon and
EARNED RUN AVERAGE
Roberts,
who spent most of
( based an 108 mmngs P•1ched l
NATIONAL LEAGUE Nor his
career with the
man Cln 2 25 R 1chard , Hou
2 44 , ::;tanhOuse
Mfl
2 60, Pluladelphta Phillles, were
Jones SO 2 62 . Seaver NY Fred Ltndstrom, a star
2 65
infielder for the New York
AMERICAN LEAGUE Fo
drvch Det 1 91 , Tra vers Mil G1811ts m the 1920s, former
2 17 Garland Bait 2 65 , Blue , American League umpire Cal
Oak 2 73 , Blyteven Tex 2 80
Hubbard ; the late Roger
STRIKEOUTS
NATIONAL LEAGUE Sea Connor, the game's !1rst
ver NY 171. Rtchard Hou 148 , homerun king, and the late
Messersm"h , All 128 . N1ekro
Oscar Chadeston, who
Atl 121, Mont efusco, SF 120
AMERICAN LEAGUE Ryan , played his entire career m the
Cal 207 , Tanana
Cal 167
Blyleven, Tex 154 , Hunt er NY old Negro leagues.
122 Jenkms, Bos 111
Lemon, 56, used an old
saymg which he said
his feelings best
" :;- -: ·~ expressed
!·'":: ~::::?-: ;. "? :"·~·· : ·:···: :~~·:··: ':...· :":: ·. .. . .:· ·.~....... : '.. 7"". .; .::;o :;,:, :·. :~: ··=~·::···::
about his election to the Hall
"I've run wtth the
elephants, I've heard the owl
and I've Down wttl! the

:; ,:, ;:,;;:. ;:,;.::;:.::.

Ma 1or Leiiue standings

Cleveland 4 Chicago 2

By Untted Press International
National League

East
Phll•d elph la
Pittsburgh
New York

w

Ga

(All Times EDTI
Molwaukee (Travers 13 il at

670
545 13 11'2

Oakland {Blue 9 10). 11 p m
Boston Uenk 1ns 11 8) at
California (ROSS 6-13), 10 30

L Pet

73

36

60 SO

(Only games scheduled)
Tod•v's Probable Pitchers

10,000 candy bars never as sweet
By CHRIS TURKEL
UP! Sports Writer
The sweetest thing m Pittsburgh Monday rught wasn't
the 10,000 candy bars gtven to
Pirate patrons m h011or of
"Candy Ntght "
Exceedmg everyone 's
foodesl expectallons was the
man they call "Candy," 22year~ld John Candelaria ,
who pttched the third nohitter of the maJor league
sea' as Pittsburgh beat the
Lot .ngeles Dodgers, 2-0
The 6-foot-7 left-bander
struck out seven and walked
only one m wmnlng h1s 11th
game agamst four losses He
retired the last 18 men m a
row after pitching hiS way out

·

Chicago

57 56
51 62

SO• 18
451 24

St Lou is
Montreal

46 62 426 26lf7
New York (Eilts 11 6) at
38 68 358 33 1h Kansas C1fy (Hassler 1 7) , 8 30

·~

Ch~&lt;ago

100 ooo o1 o- 2 1 o

201 000 lOx - 4 9 0
Bl'ett (67) and ~oot. B1bb y,

Cleveland

LaRoche {8) and Fosse WPebb
18 41
1

pm

west

W L Pet
GB
7J 39 652
59 52 532 131h
57 56 496 11112
55 59 482 19
Atlan1a
51 61 455 22
Srm Francisco 49 66 426 25th
Monday's Games
Montreal 2 San Francisco 1
Pittsburgh 2 Los Angeles o
Houston 13 St LOll iS 4
(Only games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pltcllers

Cincinnati
Los Angeles
Houston
San Diego

tAll Times EDTI

Ma lor League Leaders ,
Bv United Press International

BATTING

Mtnn esota (Goltz 9 10) at
( based on JOO at bats )
Balt1more (Palmer 14 10 J, 7 JO
NAliONAL LEAGUE
pm
•
G AB R H
Texas (Sl y Ieven 9 12 and Rose . cm
!12454 98151
Hargan 4 31 at Detroit (Roberts Grtffey , Cln 102 385 89 121
11 11 and Crawford 0 3) , 2, 5 JO Olover PI!
102 404 58 133
pm
Mad lock Chi 105 379 51 124
COnlv games schedule d)
Fos ter , Ctn
102 405 66 132
Wednesday 's Games
Maddox , Ph• I 102 359 53 114
Mllw at Oakland, night
Morgan, Ctn 94 315 87 100
Boston at Callforn1a , n1ght
Robmson P1 t 86 304 46 96
New York et Kan City , night
Geronmo Cn 100 328 43 102
Tew.as at Detroit ntoht
Cardenal Ch 107 405 49 125

Minn. at Ba lt •more.

~lgh t

Pet

333
330

329
327

326
318

317
316
311

309

Chicago (Burris 9&gt;11 , 2 30 p m

New Y or k ( Koos man 13 1), 8 05

Brett KC
LeFlore , Oet
Carew Mm
Garr, Chi
Munson, NY

( Nolan

10 6)

at

Sa n Francisc o &lt;Q~~ss l e r 2 8)
at M on treal (Carr ithers 5 7)j
8 OSP m
San Di ego (Jones 18 6) ' '

Pm
'
Atlanta (Niekro 11 8) at
Phllad elphta (Underwood 6 J) ,

1 35 p m

Los Angeles ( Sutlan 12 9) a!
Pittsburgh ( Reuss 10 61. 7 35

pm
Houston (McLaughlin 1 1) at
St Louis {M cLothen 9 11) , 8 30
pm
Wednesday 's Games
(:lncmnatl at Chicago
San Fran at MontreaL night
San Diego at New York , night
p..tlanta at Phda, nigh t
~os Ang at Plttsburgh 1 nlgh1
Houston at St Louis, nigh t

American League
Eut
New York
Baltim ore
Cleveland
~aston

Oetrott

~Milwa ukee

W
64
55
53
52
52

47

Wesl
W

KOM&amp;S City
Ooklond

r....

M1nnesota
Chlcogo
California

GB
L Pet
... 593
52 514 B'h
56 486 1Jlh
5~ . 486 11'h
57 477 12'14!

68
58
55
53
4S
48

~58

448 15112

GB
Pel
42 618
53 523 10 11:1
55 500 13
55 "' 14
62 ,436 20
&amp;• 4'29 21

L

Monday's Results
Kansas C!tv 8 New York 2
Texas a Detroit 1

Chicago at Cleveland night

Malor League Results

Bv United Pren International
National League

r,

V
tOnly gam es scheduled!

AMERICAN LEAGUE
G, AB II H Pet
McRae KC
99 340 57 121 356

Cinc inna ti

AthenS pUt
m" losers'

pm

110 448
103 416
106 408
94 378
104 419

69 155 346
70 136 327
67 1J I 321
44 119 315
55 130 310

106 381 50 liB 310
Sar Frncosco 000 010 ooo- 1 4 o Carty Cle
109 397 Sl 172 307
Montre&amp;l
100 000 001- 2 ll 0 Slaub . Del
92 359 50 110 '306
Barr tlO 8) and Rader , Sadek Ly nn Bos
100 450 75 136 302
(8).
StanhO use
(8 5)
and RIvers, NY
HOME RUNS
Ca rter
NATIONAL LEAGUE King
~ NY 32, Schm 1dt, Phtl 30
Los Angeles 000 ooo ooo- o o l man
Pittsburgh 000 020 OOx- 2 52 Fosler, Cm 24, Monday , Ch i 2()'
Rau . Hough (9) and Yeage r , M org•n Cin 19
AM E R I CAN LEAGUE
Candelaria ( 11 4) and over LP
Banda, Oak 22, Jackson and
- Rou (10 9)
L May , Bait and Hendrlck j Clev
Houston
100 OOl47Q-13 14 l 19, Rice and Yastrzemskl. Bos
51 LOUIS
020 000 02Q- 4 7 4 and Thbmpson Oet 16
RUNS BATTED IN
Larson (2 3) and Herrmann
NATIONA~ LEAGUE
Fos
a Forsch, walla ce (8) , Solo
man
(8),
Curt1s
(9) and ~er Cln 98 , Morgan, Cln 79 ,
Simmons
LP- Forsch (51) Sch mid\ Phtl 78, Kingman , NY
and LuimSkt Ph il 72
HR - Houslon. Cedeno 1161
AM E R I C A N LEAGUE
Chambliss !Jnd Munson, NY 73 ,
(Only games scheduled )
Mayberry , KC 71. Yastrzemsk.l
Amencan League
BurroughS Tex 68
New York
000 101 000- 2 8 0 eos andSTOLEN
BASES
Kansas C•1Y 301 400 OOK --- 8 12 0
NATIONAL LEAGUE Mor
Holtzman, Jackson (41. Tt
gan Cm and Taveras Pitt 37 ,
draw (7), Lvle IB J and Munson ,
Cedeno, Hou 36, Lopes . LA 35 ,
Leonard l\4 4) and Mart me z
Srock
, SLL 34
LP - Holtzmon 19 81 HRsAM E R I CAN LEAGUE
Kansas Cltv, M c: Rae {7), Ot 1s North , Oak 56 Bay lor. , Oak 44
{13) ; New York, Munson (121
LeFlore, Oet , Patek, KC and
Oak 41
Te•os
015 000 2DO- 8 12 l Campaneris,
PITCHING
DelrOrl
000 001 OQO- I 8 0
Most Vlctones
arll~s IBBI ond Sundberg.
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jones.
Lemanczyk , Laxton (3 ), Bere
s o 18 6 Carllon Ph1i 13 4.
{81 and Freehan LP - Leman c
zyk (J 4) HR- Detroit Staub Koosman, NY 13 7 Ruthven ,
Atl 13 9 Rtc;:hard Hou 13 11
11 0}

bracket
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) Four wmners b1 acket and
four losers bracket games
highlighted today's action in
lhe secood day of the 51st
American Legton state
baseball tournament.
In Monday's games: Steve
Dackin tossed a ooe4litter as
Uma blanked Coshocton 7-0 ,
three pttchers combined for a
two-httter as Scioto beat
Archbold 16-0; Euclid topped
Athens 8-4 , Woodlawn edged
Ashley 7.0; Piqua squeezed
past Maynard 4-3, Kent got
by
Portsmouth
6-5;
WUioughby beat Euclid 6-5 in
12 innings and Scioto downed
Wadsworth 2-1
in morning games today
Woodlawn (21-6) was pitted
against Ptqua (39-5 and Lim.·
(37-18) agamst Kent (25-15-3)
In the wmner's bracket and
Athens (26-7) against Asllley
(26-7) m a loser's bracket
wbere the loser IS elimtnated
Afternoon losers bracket
games pitied Portsmoulh (389) agamst Archbold (20-10);
Maynard (23-8) agamst
Wadsworth (28-13) and
Coshocton (23-16 ) agamst
Euclid (49-7-1)
Late afternoon games m
the wmners bracket folUld
Scioto ( 38-6) playing the
Lima-Kent winner and
Willoughby (23-6) playing tbe
Woodlawn-Piqua wmner.
~

how they ran

Born Back Stage was third.
COL UMBUS (UP!) Gold Duster won the first
Rorty Hanover won the
race
.and Ohio Hope the
featured
pace
at
Scioto
screaming eagles," he satd. accepted by hiS grandson,
second
to return $25 20 on the
Downs
Monday
night,
going
"I told my wife last night that Francis Caldwell, who said it
dally
double
combination of 6
after this It's aU downhill for was "a great honor to receive the mile In 2.041~ for driver
and 12
me but, of course, slle knew this plaque on behalf of the Dick Richardson.
A crowd of 4,205 wagered
He
defeated
Don
lorenzo
Caldwell family," while
!hat years ago "
$430,757.
by
ooe
length
and
returned
Roberts, who yielded a Charleston 's plaque was
record 502 homers durmg hiS accepted by his Sister, Mrs. ~. $3.20 and $2 80 Chabru
career , nodded toward the Katherine Horsley, who said, was third
Ebb Direct woo the first
other Hall of Famers and "for 22 years I hoped and
NORTHFIELD , Ohio
race
and Gay Ins11 the second
Bald, "When I was elected I prayed this day would
(UP!
) - Mary Mel scored a
to return $12 80 on the rughUy
wondered If I really bel011ged come ''
fourlength
victory over
An aU-mght ram and the double combination of 4 and Steady Joann In MOilday
Alter looking at these beat-up
threat of more ram forced the 4
guys, I know I belong "
A crowd of 4,600 wagered night's featured $1,400 ninth
Undslrom, 70, descr .bed induction ceremontes to be
race at Northfield Park.
his election as "the handy held 10 a hotel ballroom $287,257
The winner, with Lew Wil·
work of the Supreme Bemg instead of on the grounds of
Iiams In tbe sulky, covered
Fame
and the greatest thing that the Hall of
CINCINNAT( (UP! ) - the mile in 2:03 3-a and paid
ever happened to me," while Ceremonies.t were presided Winged Brook, wtth jockey $2.80, $2.80 and $2.20 Ellacott
Hubbard, 75, lhe ftrst man over by Commissioner Bowie Tommy Meyers aboard, wm Ricky showed.
ever elected to boUt the Kuhn, who pointed out, "Of the featured eighth race at
In the lOth race trifecta, tbe
Baseball and Football Halls all the thousands of men, who River Downs Monday, going 4-6-6 combinatim returned
of Fame, said he was "very have played major league the six fUrlongs m 1 10 3-a.
$2,617 80.
proud, very humble and very baseball, only one per cent
Attendance was 3,246 The
He defeated Crooked Cross
have made II here "
happy "
by ooe and ooe.Jtalf lengths handle was $312,156
Connor 's plaque was

t:l;:~ the SCOREBOARD ~r~rie~s ,~
l~

had It from lhe flrll lnnin8.
Doeln't every pttcber lu)ow
It? My back hurt$ now but 1,~
always does after I pitch.
But when when only
Ruuell stood between him
and his masterpiece, be
admltted "my legs started
shaklnl!like crazy·"
Candelaria, now 11-4,
retired Ute last 18 betters he
faced and then described the
ooly other ball !bat was close
to ruining his bid.
"It was (Ted) Sizemore's
line drive Ill Taveras in the
sixth Inning," he said. "Afoot
either way and It's a base hit.

of a basesloaded Jam m the
tJurd mnlng
''I wasn 1t nervous until
lhere were two outs In the
nmth Then &gt;my legs started
shakmg
hke
crazy,"
admitted the Brooklyn-born
Candelaria "!don't lhink I'll
ever have a bigger thrill
Wlless we w10 a World Senes,
and I'm not so sure that will
surpass this "

Candelaria's n(l.fl1tter was
the hr~t Ptrate one m
Pittsburgh since 1907.
The Pirates scored their
two runs m the fifth when
Rtchte Zisk and Dave Parker
opened w1th smgles off
starter and loser Doug Rau,
10-9, and boUt scored 011 Bill

Rains stop_much
f
0 sports events
Press
By
United
International
Heavy rams that accompamed Hurncane Belle on 1ts
path up the East Coast
Monday night wtped out
VIrtually all scheduled sports
activtty and caused a rarity ,
a postponed pro football
game·.
ANallonal Football League
preo6eason game between the
New York Jets am! Ute New
York Gt~nts, scheduled for an
8 p m EDT slart at Yankee
St1 wn, was called five
hours before ga metune
A spokeSIOan for tbe Jets
srud offiCials were concerned
about fans getting to and
from Yankee Stadium durmg
the hetghl of the hurricane 's
pass over New York
Proceeds of the game go to
charily and officials of both
clubs are attempting to
arrange a makeup date.
Two NFL clubs did manage
to play a pre-lleason game m
Phlladelph18 but only 16,000
fans, less than a quarter of
the expected crowd, .sllowed
up to watch the World
Champton Ptltsburgh
Steelers slip and slide to a 147 vtctory over the Eagles
Drtvmg ram and 3S mile-per·
hour wmds that Whipped
around Veterans Stadium
made playm g· conditions
treacherous
At North Conway, N H,
torrenllal rain forced movement of the finals of the
$100,000 Volvo Internauonal
tennis tournament 80 miles to
an Indoor fa cthty m
Manchester , N .H Jimmy
Connors defeated Raul
Ramirez, 7-6, 4-V, 6-3, m a
match played wtthout
spectators. Only tournament
officials and some members
of Ule press were allowed
lDStde the uny facility
Elsewhere, a World Team
Tennis match between the
Boston Lobsters and the New
York Sets at the Nassau
Cohsuem m Umondale, N Y.,

was postpooed because of
hazardous trav eling
conditions
It
was
rescheduled for Sunday only
if Boston is still m playoff
cootenllon
The harness racmg
program
at
Yonkers
Raceway in New York and
the Thoroughbred program
at AUantic City m New
Jersey also were scrapped
The ram also halted rmnor
league baseball aciiVIIy.
International League games
at Pawtucket, R I , and
Tidewater, Va , were ramed
out along w1th Eastern
League contests at Quebec
C1ty in Canada, Bnstol,
Conn , and West Haven,
Conn.
MINSHAlL ELECTED
CLEVELAND (UP! )
Former Rep. William E.
Minshall, R.Ohio, has been
elected to the board of
directors of The Amertcan
Shtp Building Co.
Minshall, who represented
the 23rd distnct for 20 years
before retirmg In 1975 to
return to prtvate law
pracllce, also is a former
General ColUlsel for the U S
Maritime Admmistration.

Robmson's double.
In other Nallooal League
games, Houston routed St.
Louts, 13-4 and Montreal
edged San FranciSCO, 2-1. In
the American League ,
Kansas Clly ripped New
York, 8-2, Texas drubbed
Detroit, 8-1, and Cleveland
beat Chicago, 4-2
Astros 13, Cardtoals 4:
Cesar Cedeno hit foc the
"cycle" - pounding a single,
double, triple and hiS 16th
homer - scored four runs
and drove m fiVe, ID lead
Houston 's romp past St.
Lows Rookie Dan Larson, 23, went all the way to beat
Bob Forsch, 5.7
Expos 2, Giants 1:
The NL 's leading pmchhltter, Jose Morales, singled
borne tbe WUVling run w1tb
two out in the bottom of the
nmtll tn boost Montreal over
San Franctsco Morales'
club-record 16th pmchhlt
made Don Stanhouse, &amp;jj, a
complete.gwne Willner
Royals 8, Yankees 2·
Amos Otis bit his ftrst home ·
TlUl since JlUle 15 and added
two run-scormg doubles to
lead Kansas City past New
York, in a duel of the AL
division leaders Denms
1eonard went Ute distance in
rBISmg his record to 14-4,
while Yankee starter Ken
Holtzman, 11-8, surrendered '
e1ghl runs before leaving in
the fourtll
Rangers 8, Tigers 1:
Juan Bemquez' two-run
smgle highlighted a ftve-run
Texas outburst in Ute lhtrd

that enabled Nelson Briles to
post his first victory since
July 3 Briles struck out six
and did not walk a man in
evenmg hiS record at B.a. He
had pitched seven starts
witllout a decision
Indians 4, Wblte SoK 2:
George Hendrick smgled
home a prur of runs and Dave
LaRoche ptcked up h18 12tb
save m leading Cleveland
over Chicago, ending the
Indians' five-game losing
streak. Jim Bibby got hiS
eighth victory in 12 deciSions.

-·

Th!! Week's SPICiol

USED CARS
.

12 OLDSMOBIL£
TORONADO
Dark g61d w1! h black v•ny l
r oof brawn v1nyl 1nter1or ,

full power . a1r. AM FM
rad1o, ti lt wheel, good ftres

'2295
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You ' ll L•ke Our Qual •ly •
Way of Doing Bus mess
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs 'ltl6 oo
Til~""'

m Sat

******************************~
~
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS.
:
:
:

*:
*

MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY.
FRESH· PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES.

~fM;~

r.~\1~~,~

:
:

*:
*

a Adolph's Dairy Valley ~
~

~

*

~ Hrs. · 1o.OO A.M. Ttlll . OO P.M Sun.-Thurs .
:
:
1o.oo A.M. Tll12 :00 PM. Fn . &amp; Sat.
~
992 -2556
"'
W. MAIN
POMEROY. O. It

*

l******************************

DaNNINGatllDS AGENCY IN\;.
I'

'

Middleport, Ohio
992·2342

�5-Tbe O.lly SeMillel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., rue.lay,Aua. IO.lt76

Gallipolis Fruth Pharmacy Grand Opening is Tuesday

•

•- The Dally SenUnei,Middleport-l'omeroy. 0., Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1976

Kids all over the place when .car ·rams crowd, kills four
OORPUS CHRISri. Tex.
(UPl) - The dance at the
Boy's Qub end!d jult before
l a.m., and the flrlll aa;ldent
happened u the hundred or
to teen.qera were saying
t.lek lalt goocllyea.
A lllort clllllance away a car
rtUbed Into the rear end of
another car, · a minor
~dent, but 1001e of the
ynutha r111 to - If anyone
Will Injured. other couples
moved towards the scene,
and.100n between 50 and 100
l:!da were mUUng around tbe
two vehicles Involved. ·
••
Nobody saw the other car

r.unlng, but II wouldn't have
made much difference. At 911
miles an hour, no ooe could
have moved fast enough.any·
way.
. "It was just a tremendous
linpact, kids aU over the
place,"
said
Wally
Rodriguez, an offduty deputy
who was picking up his
daughter at the dance.
"It was like a slaughter
house. He ran through the
crowd like a bunch · of
turkeys. I saw ooe body
splrining like a ·lop. It was
horrible. It was Ule worst
thing I've ever witnessed;in
!&amp;years as a deputy sheriff."
The speeding car slammed
through
the crowd and into
••
the side of one of the other
: GOING TO FWRIDA
cars, then It careened back
!Brs. Ferne B. Hayman of into the street through mor~·
F.aj!t Letart will spend the .teen-agers.
next two weeks In Wampum,
The car raced down the
?a: the guest of her cousins, '
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence Epler.
Wli!Ie there she will attend
11M! Grundy Gala at Aurora, a
VACATIONENDED
reanion of the Grundy first
Mr. and Mrs. William
cousins of which Mrs. IJ:jlew and children, Cheryl
Jl4yman is the oldest. Recerl and Billy, Pomeroy, and Mrs .
viii tors of Mrs. Hayman were Sadie Thuener , Syracuse,
lilt Rev. and Mrs. Paul have returned from a two
lf4Yman of .Galion and Mrs. week vacation at MyrUe
An Belles, WeUston .
Beach, S. C. and Florida.

.

Four teen-agers were killed
street dragging at least Ulree
youths with it. The last oflhe and more than I5. other
three dropped to the road 430 injured.
"We're not sure who was
feet away.

.

•

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI ) The audience coosisted of 400
International scholars, but a
bunch of frogs - had they
been able to understsnd
English, of course - would
have been aU ears.
The
largest
"herpetological" meeting in
the world at Miami
University Monday centered
oo the sex lives of frogs With humans tossing out what
amoWlted to a few pointers
lor interested frogs .
Nearly 100 scientific papers
· ·are being presented at this
wee)t's joint meeting of The
Herpetologists League and
The SocietY. for the Study of
Amphibians and Reptiles, au
in the interest of furthering
herpetology - that branch of
zoology dealing with reptiles
and amphibians.
But male frogs would have
been interested In the conclusioos drawn by Kentwood D.
Wells of the Canal Zone's
Smithsonian Tropical
Research Institute, who
reported on "Courtship
Behavior .in Frogs.''
Aiter studying tbe "advertising" caUs of groups of
males, WeUs outlined five
ways he figured inales ''may
increase their chances of
Duke's statement from obtaining mates":
Cblcago said:
.
-Alternate calls with
''Whenever reports of
auegations are made to thlll
office It Is our obligatioo to
cooduct Inquiries Into this
matter.
"I have advised Ohio State
University of our intentions to
do ao In this matter and I
know Ohio State University
intends to do so as weU."
The State News quoted
mnamed sources In a series
TIJESDAY
last week of copyrighted
MEIGS ATHLETIC
stories In which OSU was SO&lt;&gt;sters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
IICCIISed of using improper at high school.
practices to recrliit footbaU
MEIGS HIGH Marching
players.
. .
Band, 7 Tuesday at high
The News quoted Duke as school.
I sayiJig :
SATURDAY
" We coowct a diligent
PYTHIAN SISTERS of
effort to look at any Wilkesville, buffet supper at
aUeptlons concerning rnles tlle hall , Saturday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Yiolatloos. We will look into $2.50 for adulls, $1.25 for
ihose pubUshed .last week."
children . Entertainment.
Warren
S.
Brown, Proceeds to be used for
executive director of the payment on the hall.
Natlooal Collegiate Athletic
A&amp;aoclatlon, said be had not
read the State News stories,
"But we always loot into
aUegatlons which appear In

OSU allegations
•

lx&gt;LUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio

s.;ate Unlv.-slty said Mooday

ltl'had received no formal
ll!ltlflcatloo of any NCAA
IJ(vestlgatlon Into alleged
football recruiting violatloos
at the \!OI!verslty. . .·
'GSU's comment Cllllll! after
Blil Ten ·commlnloner
~4fllt Duke said his ofllce
wiNJd Investigate allegations
oL i violations of conference
rqulatlons by osu.
'Pie NCAA said It always
iDQks· Into aueptlonl which
~In print• .
T'ne amouncement of the
!aveStlgallons came ifter the
Michigan State University
llllident nenp&amp;per, The Sta!A!
Nlwl, quoted Duke 11 saying
t-e; will loot Into allegatloos
. aaalnlt
Ohio
State
U!llveralty, last season's
~renee

champion.

Lut week The State News

hill fWl lbree oopyrlgiUd
....- ssylng an umuned
..-ce lntllcat.ed recruiting
vtlliatlona by OSU bead
tooU.U coacb Woody Hayes.
Csu Director fi Atbledes
Edward Weaver Mooday
l.~ued
the
following
stat&lt;."Dea:
.l'Vhio 'State University hu
received
no
formal
DitlflcaUon
of
any
iahtlllpllon Ill tile Jlll1 ol
!It NCAA coocemlng the
llleted recr!litlnC vlolatlona
niJorted lui week by the
MJc!dpn State University
.lflldellt newspaper. Ohio
SQlle Unlvenlty and the Big
Ten COIWlllted reprdlng the
matter Immediately
fdJlowlng
the
Initial
llleptlona and will proceed
to: biOI dgN the qJid(ty ol
..... reporll. 'lbe Oblo State
tlmvenlty repeats Ita earlier
~e ol lull cooperallon In
1141 oll1cla1 invettlgatlon."

J.:

manslaughter and driving old son. Both of them were In did " Saldana said. "Not jllll
while lntollicated.
the car, but now we think the for 'my ktd, but for the othen
too ."
"But we've released him son was driving."
now and arrested hi.! IS-yearPollee ldenUfied the dead
as Robert Lee Valdez, 16;
August Special
GUbert Allman, 15; Lucy
Martinez, 1•. and her sllter,
lb. Martinez, 1!.
"I can\ talk about It," said
GUberto Martinez, falher of
calls of the tree frog In the two girls who were killed.
JOuthem Germany.
" It hurts too much."
SlQ,OO
Schneider coocentrated on
Humberto Saldana, the
the "methods" of calling, father of the Valdez youth,
noting that mating calls directed his lhoughts to the
169 N. Second St.
began In early May and driver of the car.
Middleport, o.
cootlnued through the first
"I want to make sure he
half of July. Calls began gets punished for what he
l'honl! 992-2725
coosistently In the evening
and cootlnued until midnight,
unless It got too cold.
Schneider also noted that
calls came in a serJes of 15 to
30, and that each caU "com"The Insurance
Store"
prised
nine . pulses."
•
However,. the "German tree
frog expert added that
1. Auto Insurance
8. Jewelry and Other
mating calls differed from
Viluabltl .
2. Home ' "surance
9. Bu~lness PackaQe
J r-"\Obile Hom.es
several other calls the fr;og Is
4. Hea11h lnsuranu
Policies
capable of, including
s. Lift Insurance
10. Lia bility Insura nce
11 , Farm I nnr1nce
6. Boat lnsu rln,ce
''territ~lal;, calls and "dis7. Motortvcles
·
tress'' calls.
The results of the week's
"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
reporting
here
will
assembled in a book C(lllpiled
by .cmventlon coordinators
PACKAGE POLICY - Put your auto. home, health
Dr. Douglas Taylor and Dr.
and IHe insurance into ONE policy. Save money and
h~ve one premium due.date for all your Insurance.
Sheldon Guttman of the
Miami University zoology .
faculty.
Some Of Our Other Service&gt;:
Guttman has the distinction
Copy Servic.=-Nofary Service-Car leasing
ol having a frog named after
Service
him. He discovered an
REUTER:BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
unusual yellow frog ·with a
black saddle paUem on its
0
The Insura nce Stone"
back. Scientists caUed the
unusual frog a "one In a
214 E. MAIN · ''
PH. 992·5130
billion rarity" and named it
the "Guttman Saddle Fro(! .';

Paper is given on courting by f~ogs

8ig
Ten to probe
.
'

driving lhecar ,"said a pllllce
spokesman. "First·•· we
arrested a suspect and
charged him with inwlmtart

Social
Calendar

-"Parasitize" other
neighboring males, thus
calling males.
reducing interference.
-And finally, abandon
-Change the temporal pattern of calling as male acoustic signaling and sWitch
to an active searcll strategy.
cl!!nsities change.
Dr. Hans Schneider of the
- Produce mere C(lllplex
University
of Bonn in
ctJlls as male densities inGermany
reported
m various
crease.

Market Report
Ohio Volley Uveslock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
8-7·7&amp;

Stocker Ca tile, Steers - 250
to 300 lbs 26. to 32., 300 to 400
lbs 26. to 33.50, 400 to 500 lbs
'll . to 34., 500 to 600 lbs 25. to
33.• 600 to 700 lbs 28. to 36.. 700
lbs and over 27.50 to :IS.75.
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300
lbs 23. to 29 .. 300 lo 400 lbs 24.
to 30. 400 to 500 lbs. 21. to
28.50, SOO to 600 lbs 21.50 .to
29.25, 600 to 700 lbs 25. to 31.,
700 lbs and over 26. to 33.
Stock Cows &amp; Bulls (By the
head) - Stock cows 125. to
280 .. stock cows and calves
170. to 320., stock bulls 175. to
260., baby calves IS. to 50.
By the pound - Canners
and cutters COWS 18. to 23.50,
holstein cows 24, to 26.75,
commercial bulls 29. to 35.50.
Pigs - 22. to 16.
Lambs - Tops 90 lbs to 110
34. to 36.50, seconds.7.5 lbs. to
80 31. to 34.
Veal Calves- Tops 220 lbs
to 250.54. to 59.50, medium 200
lbs to 300 16. 53.50, culls 45. to
down.
Sows 350 lbs up 34. to 37.

VISITING HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davidson
and children . have been in
Middleport visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Emerson Jones. From
here they went to Dayton to
visit Mr . Davidson's family.
They will return to · their
hOme in New Jersey, and
then later this month will go
to Aruba where lllr. Davidson
will work · with ESSO. The
family only recenUy returned
from Belgium.

TEACHER EMPLoYED
Irene Barnes of Pomeroy
graduate of Ohio University,
has been employed as a home
economics teacher at ·the
Gallia Academy and will
begin her employment Ulere
MQ!lday .

Athens Livestock Sales, IDe.
Albany, Ohio
Aug. 7, 1976
FeederSteers (400-8001bs.)
22.so.35.
Feeder HeHers ( 400-700
lbs.) 20.-30.75.
· Slaughter Bulls (Over 10110
lbs.) 31.75-35.
Feeder Bulls ( 400-800 lbs.)
22.50-33.75.
Utility 23.50-27.80, Canner·
Cutter 19.-23.50.
Veals ( (]IOice-Prime) 40.-

Budget Body
Permanen1s

Kay's Beauty_Salon,

REUTER-BROGAN

. By lloiiTIIQ
With tile IP'and opening
Auiuat 10 of the new Fruth'a
Phannacy on Rt. 35 near
GaUipolla, the people of
GaUla
County
and
5urroundlng areas will
receive tile beat of JerVIce In
a modem, atylllhly dellgned

bl!lldlnc-

Work on the f220,000

structure begun In Marcil hu
been compleled and Fruth.'s
Ia now open to serve

customers.

AI part of Ill grand opening
celebraUoo during the week
of Aug. 10 to Aug. 15, Fruth
Pharmacy of Gallipolis will
give away 12 prizes each day
In drawings io be held
throughout the week . . AU
visitors - no purchase
necessary - are eligible to
win, Including four grand
prizes to be given away on
Aug. 15. The grand prizes
Include a lkpeed bicycle,
ladles and men's watchea,l
and more.

The pharmacy is located on
Rt. 35 directly across from
the Holzer Medical Center.
Proximity of Holzer was
ooe of the reasons given by
regllltered pharmacist Don
Pullin for the locaUon of the
new pharmacy. The other
reason was the large num~r

.

PICNIC SCHEDULED
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Ball Assn. picnic for
all players will be held
Saturday, 12 noon, at Fort
Meigs . Mothers of players
are to prepare tWo covered
dishes.

TO
FRUTH PHARMACY
ON YOUR
GRAND
OPENING
HEATING &amp; C00l1NG.

CLEARANCE

CONTRACTOR

BURNETI'S ROOFING
_ &amp; HEATING

GROUP TO APPEAR
RUTLAND
The
Homeward Bounds.. a
musical group, will ·be at the
RuUand Church of Gnd at
7:30 p.m. Saturday. The
public is inviled.

UPPER RIVER RD.

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

area people. They are
Bridget Pitchford, Debbie
Van Sickle, Charla Cook,
Chrisllne A. Ayala, Mitchell
Meadows, Deloris Swartz,
Marti Hamilton, 'J'helma
Jeffers and Charlena Chase.
Bridget Pitchford is a 197~
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and lives a 'Rt. I
Thurman. Her hobbles are
sewing and art. She is
engaged to Samuel Stephens,
with the wedding date set for
Sept. 4.
Debbie Van Sickle, a
resident of Cheshire, is
married to . Dennis Van
Sickle. They have a ·young
daughter Carey Michelle.
Debbie is a 1973 graduate of
of people who shop in the area Point Pleasant High School
from Gallipolis. According to and attended Marshall
Pullin , the pharmacy has University.
been doing twice the business
Charla Cook lives at ·Rt. 2
!han had been expected.
Ga IIi pOlis with her husband
There will be two Rodney and their three year
registered pharmacists on old daughter Melissa . Charla
duty at Fruth's. They are Dan is a 1969 graduate of Galli a
Meadows, former owner of Academy High &amp;hool.
Village Pharmacy in Mid·
Christine A. Ayala resides
dleport, and Mr. PuUin who at 2004 Chatham Ave . in
worked at Fruth Pharmacy Gallipolis with her husband
In Point Pleasant.
Carlos and her ·daughter
Meadows, a graduate of the Adrienne, who is one year
Cincinnati College
of
ld Sh · 1971
d te f
Pharmacy·, is a registered 0 · e IS a
gra ua 0
Gallia Academy High School
pharmacist in both Ohio and and likes to cook and sew.
Wes t Virginia. He is a
Mitch Meadows, the son of
member of the Ohio State Dan Meadows, lives in
Pharmaceutical Assoc . and Middleport. He works as a
resides in Middleport. His stock clerk and graduated
hObbies are skiing, hunllng from Meigs High School in
and dirt bike riding .
1976. His hobbies are
Pullin , a resident of Point · basketball, skiing, and dirt
Pleasant , graduated from bike riding.
hi gh school there in 1963, He
Deloris Swartz, a secretary
was a graduate of the .West at Fruth 's, was last employed ·
Virginia School of Pharmacy by the J. c. Murphy Co. in
· in 1970. He is a registered Gallipolis. She is married to
pharmacist in bOth Ohio and Rober t Swartz of Point
West Virginia, and has been ·· Pleasant. She is a" 1967
employed by Fruth's in Point graduate of Point Pleasant
Pleasant since graduation High School. Her hobbies are
from college. He is a member sewing, motorcycle riding,
of the Odd Fellows, Kiwanis and boating .
Club, Moose Lodge, and
Marti Hamilton is a 1966
belongs to lhe West Virginia gradua te of Kyger Creek
Pharmaceutical Assoc .. and High School and attended Rio
the Mason County Humane Grande College. She has two
Society . His wife, Connie, sons, Todd Allen , 6, Chadd
helps him show· and breed Thomas, 4. Her hobbies inHimalyan cals. His hobbies elude boating, painting with
are football officiating and oils, and crafts.
hunting.
Thelma Jeffers is a 197~
In addition to two graduate of Ga llia Academy
registered pha rmacis.ts , High -School and was last
Fruth's employes 10 other employed ~t Price and Son 's

,............................... ..............
~

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Phannacy . She attend&amp; the
F.W.B. church, where ahei.t a
Sunday school IA!acher. Her
hobble~ are swllnmlnfl, bike
ridJnll, hlki.ng, and cooking, ' l
Olarlena Cbue l.t a l97l ri
IIJ'adua!A! of Northeast High', •
School In St. Pe!A!rsburg, Fla.,.:
She hu a son RObby. who fs ...
eight months old.
,.,
Hours of business for the\
new Fruth's Pharmacy wijb •'
be Monday through Saturday., ;;
9a.m. to9p.m. and Swlday 12. ~
noon to 8 p.m. Fruth'J· .~
Pharmacy will have a famUy, ,;
record system of keepll)g,..,
record of prescrlpUona._ and• ·
Will haodle charge accounta-.•.•.

BEST
WISHES

JACK FRUTH

President of three corporations ·

.

TO
"

,)

FRUTH'S ....
PHARMAC·
ON THEIR

TO

GRAND
OPENING

JACK FRUT}-I AND STAFF
ON YOUR GRAND OPENING OF .

MR. BEE

POTATO

FRUTH PHARMACY

CHlPS
and
SNACKS ·

An Asset To Our Community. ''
GOOD LUCK.. ·.

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
. COURT STREET

DISTRIBUTOR

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

••

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I{

&gt;t'

:

CHOIR TO REHEARSE
Rehearsal
of the Voices of
.a.
·
Uberty Choir will be held at 8
Hogs 43.50-43.90.
Pigs (By tbe head ) 15.· p.m. tonight at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church . .
34.60.

.•'
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')

UP TO $5,000.00

~t.''

The State News aeries loi- - ;.,;o;lo;..J=~==;
lowed statementa lnm OSU ,;:
Coach Woody Hayes that be
repcrted MSU fer violating
recruiting regulations.

'•

AND

WORTH OF STOCK REDUCED

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$yracuse ·

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1-6 winner

Get

•SYRACUSE - An eighth
llint.ng raUy produced a 7-6
vSctory of Syracuse of visiting
Middleport Friendly Tavern
nere Sunday In a~ In·
&lt;11!pendent League game.
~ac use's record went to 12-

~4.

Syne• • 008 41-7 10 1
MlddleportOOO,OOO 80--8 13
Hubbard, R. Clerk (7)

( WPJ and Alb. VIII Mitre,
Ault ~7) (LP) and

poou.

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12,

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' :&lt;)

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aot

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,,
R. E. FRENCH

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: Middleport, trailing 6-0
after 6\1lnnings, Ued it up In
tfae bottom of the regulation
7Jh and luiiMinl!, chasing a
11arter Jbn Hubbard off t)le
Jjlound In the proceu. Randy
ljlarll got the fire out and
pldted up the victory in the
tit illllnll by shutting the
cjoar on Middleport after
.lyrI run liCI'OSS in
!lie top of tile frame.
• Syr- pilcberl walked
fanned 7. Jbn Hubbard
Gad thraa ~~~. Jim Hemsley
tWo. No Middleport player
iad more than one.
' Rick Van Maire opened on
h mound for Middleport and
ira relieVed·by Perk Ault In
lhe aeventh. Ault IAJok the
lou. Between them tlley
iraiked only three llld atruck

'

With autOmatic sensors that
adjust numeral brightness for
easy reading. day or nigh! ...
simp lified one-button s~Uing

controls ... scratch resis tant
mineral c rystals th~t keep

readouts sharp and clear.
We have them in alllhe
. dynamic, new styles. Fine
jewelry fashions , capable of
accuracy to within a minute
a year. From $99lo $160 .
(
Try one on loday .

in the

ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE

BIG VARIETY ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS,

seat
Loan.

BASEBAU GLOVES AND BALLS!
WOMEN'S HALTER TOPS

ADDITIONAl ITEMS

&amp;.SAVINGS
EST 1912

.

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ADDED DAilY'

\

OPEN FRIDAY
Tl~ 8 PM ·
SAl TIL 5

12:i (:;: Main Street

GOESSLER'S

I

\

..

I

1

l
\

co.

.1 .

&gt;

)

J

"'*""F'RA·N KLI

~!l:.!-2171

PHONE
992-3491

Pomeroy

Court St.

f

.' •

.

. :.

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JEWELRY STORE .

'\ l

I l'\

MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

QUARTZ
. WATCHES
.

service and real value to ·your customers.

,JS\

CANDY SPECIAL UP TO 50% OFF

CITY LOAN

182601 Qoldlolle finish . 111.

1

.

.

When you need money to keep your car running, or for any good
reason, talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and
with consideration. You ean borrow with trust where people save
with trust. City Loan &amp; Savings.

Shown: 11~ St•lnless steel. fUI.

TO
Fruth Pharmacy on the opening of your
new store. We know that you will provide excellent

2~202 E. MAIN ST.

PHONE 304 ~ 485-7301

•

231f OHIO AVENUE

•

PARKERSBURG. WEST VIRGINIA 26101

POMEROY, OHIO
••

1~

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It

�5-Tbe O.lly SeMillel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., rue.lay,Aua. IO.lt76

Gallipolis Fruth Pharmacy Grand Opening is Tuesday

•

•- The Dally SenUnei,Middleport-l'omeroy. 0., Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1976

Kids all over the place when .car ·rams crowd, kills four
OORPUS CHRISri. Tex.
(UPl) - The dance at the
Boy's Qub end!d jult before
l a.m., and the flrlll aa;ldent
happened u the hundred or
to teen.qera were saying
t.lek lalt goocllyea.
A lllort clllllance away a car
rtUbed Into the rear end of
another car, · a minor
~dent, but 1001e of the
ynutha r111 to - If anyone
Will Injured. other couples
moved towards the scene,
and.100n between 50 and 100
l:!da were mUUng around tbe
two vehicles Involved. ·
••
Nobody saw the other car

r.unlng, but II wouldn't have
made much difference. At 911
miles an hour, no ooe could
have moved fast enough.any·
way.
. "It was just a tremendous
linpact, kids aU over the
place,"
said
Wally
Rodriguez, an offduty deputy
who was picking up his
daughter at the dance.
"It was like a slaughter
house. He ran through the
crowd like a bunch · of
turkeys. I saw ooe body
splrining like a ·lop. It was
horrible. It was Ule worst
thing I've ever witnessed;in
!&amp;years as a deputy sheriff."
The speeding car slammed
through
the crowd and into
••
the side of one of the other
: GOING TO FWRIDA
cars, then It careened back
!Brs. Ferne B. Hayman of into the street through mor~·
F.aj!t Letart will spend the .teen-agers.
next two weeks In Wampum,
The car raced down the
?a: the guest of her cousins, '
Mr . and Mrs. Clarence Epler.
Wli!Ie there she will attend
11M! Grundy Gala at Aurora, a
VACATIONENDED
reanion of the Grundy first
Mr. and Mrs. William
cousins of which Mrs. IJ:jlew and children, Cheryl
Jl4yman is the oldest. Recerl and Billy, Pomeroy, and Mrs .
viii tors of Mrs. Hayman were Sadie Thuener , Syracuse,
lilt Rev. and Mrs. Paul have returned from a two
lf4Yman of .Galion and Mrs. week vacation at MyrUe
An Belles, WeUston .
Beach, S. C. and Florida.

.

Four teen-agers were killed
street dragging at least Ulree
youths with it. The last oflhe and more than I5. other
three dropped to the road 430 injured.
"We're not sure who was
feet away.

.

•

OXFORD, Ohio (UPI ) The audience coosisted of 400
International scholars, but a
bunch of frogs - had they
been able to understsnd
English, of course - would
have been aU ears.
The
largest
"herpetological" meeting in
the world at Miami
University Monday centered
oo the sex lives of frogs With humans tossing out what
amoWlted to a few pointers
lor interested frogs .
Nearly 100 scientific papers
· ·are being presented at this
wee)t's joint meeting of The
Herpetologists League and
The SocietY. for the Study of
Amphibians and Reptiles, au
in the interest of furthering
herpetology - that branch of
zoology dealing with reptiles
and amphibians.
But male frogs would have
been interested In the conclusioos drawn by Kentwood D.
Wells of the Canal Zone's
Smithsonian Tropical
Research Institute, who
reported on "Courtship
Behavior .in Frogs.''
Aiter studying tbe "advertising" caUs of groups of
males, WeUs outlined five
ways he figured inales ''may
increase their chances of
Duke's statement from obtaining mates":
Cblcago said:
.
-Alternate calls with
''Whenever reports of
auegations are made to thlll
office It Is our obligatioo to
cooduct Inquiries Into this
matter.
"I have advised Ohio State
University of our intentions to
do ao In this matter and I
know Ohio State University
intends to do so as weU."
The State News quoted
mnamed sources In a series
TIJESDAY
last week of copyrighted
MEIGS ATHLETIC
stories In which OSU was SO&lt;&gt;sters, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
IICCIISed of using improper at high school.
practices to recrliit footbaU
MEIGS HIGH Marching
players.
. .
Band, 7 Tuesday at high
The News quoted Duke as school.
I sayiJig :
SATURDAY
" We coowct a diligent
PYTHIAN SISTERS of
effort to look at any Wilkesville, buffet supper at
aUeptlons concerning rnles tlle hall , Saturday, 5 to 8 p.m.
Yiolatloos. We will look into $2.50 for adulls, $1.25 for
ihose pubUshed .last week."
children . Entertainment.
Warren
S.
Brown, Proceeds to be used for
executive director of the payment on the hall.
Natlooal Collegiate Athletic
A&amp;aoclatlon, said be had not
read the State News stories,
"But we always loot into
aUegatlons which appear In

OSU allegations
•

lx&gt;LUMBUS (UPI)- Ohio

s.;ate Unlv.-slty said Mooday

ltl'had received no formal
ll!ltlflcatloo of any NCAA
IJ(vestlgatlon Into alleged
football recruiting violatloos
at the \!OI!verslty. . .·
'GSU's comment Cllllll! after
Blil Ten ·commlnloner
~4fllt Duke said his ofllce
wiNJd Investigate allegations
oL i violations of conference
rqulatlons by osu.
'Pie NCAA said It always
iDQks· Into aueptlonl which
~In print• .
T'ne amouncement of the
!aveStlgallons came ifter the
Michigan State University
llllident nenp&amp;per, The Sta!A!
Nlwl, quoted Duke 11 saying
t-e; will loot Into allegatloos
. aaalnlt
Ohio
State
U!llveralty, last season's
~renee

champion.

Lut week The State News

hill fWl lbree oopyrlgiUd
....- ssylng an umuned
..-ce lntllcat.ed recruiting
vtlliatlona by OSU bead
tooU.U coacb Woody Hayes.
Csu Director fi Atbledes
Edward Weaver Mooday
l.~ued
the
following
stat&lt;."Dea:
.l'Vhio 'State University hu
received
no
formal
DitlflcaUon
of
any
iahtlllpllon Ill tile Jlll1 ol
!It NCAA coocemlng the
llleted recr!litlnC vlolatlona
niJorted lui week by the
MJc!dpn State University
.lflldellt newspaper. Ohio
SQlle Unlvenlty and the Big
Ten COIWlllted reprdlng the
matter Immediately
fdJlowlng
the
Initial
llleptlona and will proceed
to: biOI dgN the qJid(ty ol
..... reporll. 'lbe Oblo State
tlmvenlty repeats Ita earlier
~e ol lull cooperallon In
1141 oll1cla1 invettlgatlon."

J.:

manslaughter and driving old son. Both of them were In did " Saldana said. "Not jllll
while lntollicated.
the car, but now we think the for 'my ktd, but for the othen
too ."
"But we've released him son was driving."
now and arrested hi.! IS-yearPollee ldenUfied the dead
as Robert Lee Valdez, 16;
August Special
GUbert Allman, 15; Lucy
Martinez, 1•. and her sllter,
lb. Martinez, 1!.
"I can\ talk about It," said
GUberto Martinez, falher of
calls of the tree frog In the two girls who were killed.
JOuthem Germany.
" It hurts too much."
SlQ,OO
Schneider coocentrated on
Humberto Saldana, the
the "methods" of calling, father of the Valdez youth,
noting that mating calls directed his lhoughts to the
169 N. Second St.
began In early May and driver of the car.
Middleport, o.
cootlnued through the first
"I want to make sure he
half of July. Calls began gets punished for what he
l'honl! 992-2725
coosistently In the evening
and cootlnued until midnight,
unless It got too cold.
Schneider also noted that
calls came in a serJes of 15 to
30, and that each caU "com"The Insurance
Store"
prised
nine . pulses."
•
However,. the "German tree
frog expert added that
1. Auto Insurance
8. Jewelry and Other
mating calls differed from
Viluabltl .
2. Home ' "surance
9. Bu~lness PackaQe
J r-"\Obile Hom.es
several other calls the fr;og Is
4. Hea11h lnsuranu
Policies
capable of, including
s. Lift Insurance
10. Lia bility Insura nce
11 , Farm I nnr1nce
6. Boat lnsu rln,ce
''territ~lal;, calls and "dis7. Motortvcles
·
tress'' calls.
The results of the week's
"If You Have It, We Can Insure It"
reporting
here
will
assembled in a book C(lllpiled
by .cmventlon coordinators
PACKAGE POLICY - Put your auto. home, health
Dr. Douglas Taylor and Dr.
and IHe insurance into ONE policy. Save money and
h~ve one premium due.date for all your Insurance.
Sheldon Guttman of the
Miami University zoology .
faculty.
Some Of Our Other Service&gt;:
Guttman has the distinction
Copy Servic.=-Nofary Service-Car leasing
ol having a frog named after
Service
him. He discovered an
REUTER:BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
unusual yellow frog ·with a
black saddle paUem on its
0
The Insura nce Stone"
back. Scientists caUed the
unusual frog a "one In a
214 E. MAIN · ''
PH. 992·5130
billion rarity" and named it
the "Guttman Saddle Fro(! .';

Paper is given on courting by f~ogs

8ig
Ten to probe
.
'

driving lhecar ,"said a pllllce
spokesman. "First·•· we
arrested a suspect and
charged him with inwlmtart

Social
Calendar

-"Parasitize" other
neighboring males, thus
calling males.
reducing interference.
-And finally, abandon
-Change the temporal pattern of calling as male acoustic signaling and sWitch
to an active searcll strategy.
cl!!nsities change.
Dr. Hans Schneider of the
- Produce mere C(lllplex
University
of Bonn in
ctJlls as male densities inGermany
reported
m various
crease.

Market Report
Ohio Volley Uveslock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
8-7·7&amp;

Stocker Ca tile, Steers - 250
to 300 lbs 26. to 32., 300 to 400
lbs 26. to 33.50, 400 to 500 lbs
'll . to 34., 500 to 600 lbs 25. to
33.• 600 to 700 lbs 28. to 36.. 700
lbs and over 27.50 to :IS.75.
Heifer Calves - 250 to 300
lbs 23. to 29 .. 300 lo 400 lbs 24.
to 30. 400 to 500 lbs. 21. to
28.50, SOO to 600 lbs 21.50 .to
29.25, 600 to 700 lbs 25. to 31.,
700 lbs and over 26. to 33.
Stock Cows &amp; Bulls (By the
head) - Stock cows 125. to
280 .. stock cows and calves
170. to 320., stock bulls 175. to
260., baby calves IS. to 50.
By the pound - Canners
and cutters COWS 18. to 23.50,
holstein cows 24, to 26.75,
commercial bulls 29. to 35.50.
Pigs - 22. to 16.
Lambs - Tops 90 lbs to 110
34. to 36.50, seconds.7.5 lbs. to
80 31. to 34.
Veal Calves- Tops 220 lbs
to 250.54. to 59.50, medium 200
lbs to 300 16. 53.50, culls 45. to
down.
Sows 350 lbs up 34. to 37.

VISITING HERE
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Davidson
and children . have been in
Middleport visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Emerson Jones. From
here they went to Dayton to
visit Mr . Davidson's family.
They will return to · their
hOme in New Jersey, and
then later this month will go
to Aruba where lllr. Davidson
will work · with ESSO. The
family only recenUy returned
from Belgium.

TEACHER EMPLoYED
Irene Barnes of Pomeroy
graduate of Ohio University,
has been employed as a home
economics teacher at ·the
Gallia Academy and will
begin her employment Ulere
MQ!lday .

Athens Livestock Sales, IDe.
Albany, Ohio
Aug. 7, 1976
FeederSteers (400-8001bs.)
22.so.35.
Feeder HeHers ( 400-700
lbs.) 20.-30.75.
· Slaughter Bulls (Over 10110
lbs.) 31.75-35.
Feeder Bulls ( 400-800 lbs.)
22.50-33.75.
Utility 23.50-27.80, Canner·
Cutter 19.-23.50.
Veals ( (]IOice-Prime) 40.-

Budget Body
Permanen1s

Kay's Beauty_Salon,

REUTER-BROGAN

. By lloiiTIIQ
With tile IP'and opening
Auiuat 10 of the new Fruth'a
Phannacy on Rt. 35 near
GaUipolla, the people of
GaUla
County
and
5urroundlng areas will
receive tile beat of JerVIce In
a modem, atylllhly dellgned

bl!lldlnc-

Work on the f220,000

structure begun In Marcil hu
been compleled and Fruth.'s
Ia now open to serve

customers.

AI part of Ill grand opening
celebraUoo during the week
of Aug. 10 to Aug. 15, Fruth
Pharmacy of Gallipolis will
give away 12 prizes each day
In drawings io be held
throughout the week . . AU
visitors - no purchase
necessary - are eligible to
win, Including four grand
prizes to be given away on
Aug. 15. The grand prizes
Include a lkpeed bicycle,
ladles and men's watchea,l
and more.

The pharmacy is located on
Rt. 35 directly across from
the Holzer Medical Center.
Proximity of Holzer was
ooe of the reasons given by
regllltered pharmacist Don
Pullin for the locaUon of the
new pharmacy. The other
reason was the large num~r

.

PICNIC SCHEDULED
LETART FALLS - The
Letart Ball Assn. picnic for
all players will be held
Saturday, 12 noon, at Fort
Meigs . Mothers of players
are to prepare tWo covered
dishes.

TO
FRUTH PHARMACY
ON YOUR
GRAND
OPENING
HEATING &amp; C00l1NG.

CLEARANCE

CONTRACTOR

BURNETI'S ROOFING
_ &amp; HEATING

GROUP TO APPEAR
RUTLAND
The
Homeward Bounds.. a
musical group, will ·be at the
RuUand Church of Gnd at
7:30 p.m. Saturday. The
public is inviled.

UPPER RIVER RD.

GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

area people. They are
Bridget Pitchford, Debbie
Van Sickle, Charla Cook,
Chrisllne A. Ayala, Mitchell
Meadows, Deloris Swartz,
Marti Hamilton, 'J'helma
Jeffers and Charlena Chase.
Bridget Pitchford is a 197~
graduate of Gallia Academy
High School and lives a 'Rt. I
Thurman. Her hobbles are
sewing and art. She is
engaged to Samuel Stephens,
with the wedding date set for
Sept. 4.
Debbie Van Sickle, a
resident of Cheshire, is
married to . Dennis Van
Sickle. They have a ·young
daughter Carey Michelle.
Debbie is a 1973 graduate of
of people who shop in the area Point Pleasant High School
from Gallipolis. According to and attended Marshall
Pullin , the pharmacy has University.
been doing twice the business
Charla Cook lives at ·Rt. 2
!han had been expected.
Ga IIi pOlis with her husband
There will be two Rodney and their three year
registered pharmacists on old daughter Melissa . Charla
duty at Fruth's. They are Dan is a 1969 graduate of Galli a
Meadows, former owner of Academy High &amp;hool.
Village Pharmacy in Mid·
Christine A. Ayala resides
dleport, and Mr. PuUin who at 2004 Chatham Ave . in
worked at Fruth Pharmacy Gallipolis with her husband
In Point Pleasant.
Carlos and her ·daughter
Meadows, a graduate of the Adrienne, who is one year
Cincinnati College
of
ld Sh · 1971
d te f
Pharmacy·, is a registered 0 · e IS a
gra ua 0
Gallia Academy High School
pharmacist in both Ohio and and likes to cook and sew.
Wes t Virginia. He is a
Mitch Meadows, the son of
member of the Ohio State Dan Meadows, lives in
Pharmaceutical Assoc . and Middleport. He works as a
resides in Middleport. His stock clerk and graduated
hObbies are skiing, hunllng from Meigs High School in
and dirt bike riding .
1976. His hobbies are
Pullin , a resident of Point · basketball, skiing, and dirt
Pleasant , graduated from bike riding.
hi gh school there in 1963, He
Deloris Swartz, a secretary
was a graduate of the .West at Fruth 's, was last employed ·
Virginia School of Pharmacy by the J. c. Murphy Co. in
· in 1970. He is a registered Gallipolis. She is married to
pharmacist in bOth Ohio and Rober t Swartz of Point
West Virginia, and has been ·· Pleasant. She is a" 1967
employed by Fruth's in Point graduate of Point Pleasant
Pleasant since graduation High School. Her hobbies are
from college. He is a member sewing, motorcycle riding,
of the Odd Fellows, Kiwanis and boating .
Club, Moose Lodge, and
Marti Hamilton is a 1966
belongs to lhe West Virginia gradua te of Kyger Creek
Pharmaceutical Assoc .. and High School and attended Rio
the Mason County Humane Grande College. She has two
Society . His wife, Connie, sons, Todd Allen , 6, Chadd
helps him show· and breed Thomas, 4. Her hobbies inHimalyan cals. His hobbies elude boating, painting with
are football officiating and oils, and crafts.
hunting.
Thelma Jeffers is a 197~
In addition to two graduate of Ga llia Academy
registered pha rmacis.ts , High -School and was last
Fruth's employes 10 other employed ~t Price and Son 's

,............................... ..............
~

.I

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t

Phannacy . She attend&amp; the
F.W.B. church, where ahei.t a
Sunday school IA!acher. Her
hobble~ are swllnmlnfl, bike
ridJnll, hlki.ng, and cooking, ' l
Olarlena Cbue l.t a l97l ri
IIJ'adua!A! of Northeast High', •
School In St. Pe!A!rsburg, Fla.,.:
She hu a son RObby. who fs ...
eight months old.
,.,
Hours of business for the\
new Fruth's Pharmacy wijb •'
be Monday through Saturday., ;;
9a.m. to9p.m. and Swlday 12. ~
noon to 8 p.m. Fruth'J· .~
Pharmacy will have a famUy, ,;
record system of keepll)g,..,
record of prescrlpUona._ and• ·
Will haodle charge accounta-.•.•.

BEST
WISHES

JACK FRUTH

President of three corporations ·

.

TO
"

,)

FRUTH'S ....
PHARMAC·
ON THEIR

TO

GRAND
OPENING

JACK FRUT}-I AND STAFF
ON YOUR GRAND OPENING OF .

MR. BEE

POTATO

FRUTH PHARMACY

CHlPS
and
SNACKS ·

An Asset To Our Community. ''
GOOD LUCK.. ·.

COMMERCIAL &amp; SAVINGS BANK
. COURT STREET

DISTRIBUTOR

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

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CHOIR TO REHEARSE
Rehearsal
of the Voices of
.a.
·
Uberty Choir will be held at 8
Hogs 43.50-43.90.
Pigs (By tbe head ) 15.· p.m. tonight at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church . .
34.60.

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UP TO $5,000.00

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The State News aeries loi- - ;.,;o;lo;..J=~==;
lowed statementa lnm OSU ,;:
Coach Woody Hayes that be
repcrted MSU fer violating
recruiting regulations.

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AND

WORTH OF STOCK REDUCED

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$yracuse ·

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1-6 winner

Get

•SYRACUSE - An eighth
llint.ng raUy produced a 7-6
vSctory of Syracuse of visiting
Middleport Friendly Tavern
nere Sunday In a~ In·
&lt;11!pendent League game.
~ac use's record went to 12-

~4.

Syne• • 008 41-7 10 1
MlddleportOOO,OOO 80--8 13
Hubbard, R. Clerk (7)

( WPJ and Alb. VIII Mitre,
Ault ~7) (LP) and

poou.

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R. E. FRENCH

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: Middleport, trailing 6-0
after 6\1lnnings, Ued it up In
tfae bottom of the regulation
7Jh and luiiMinl!, chasing a
11arter Jbn Hubbard off t)le
Jjlound In the proceu. Randy
ljlarll got the fire out and
pldted up the victory in the
tit illllnll by shutting the
cjoar on Middleport after
.lyrI run liCI'OSS in
!lie top of tile frame.
• Syr- pilcberl walked
fanned 7. Jbn Hubbard
Gad thraa ~~~. Jim Hemsley
tWo. No Middleport player
iad more than one.
' Rick Van Maire opened on
h mound for Middleport and
ira relieVed·by Perk Ault In
lhe aeventh. Ault IAJok the
lou. Between them tlley
iraiked only three llld atruck

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With autOmatic sensors that
adjust numeral brightness for
easy reading. day or nigh! ...
simp lified one-button s~Uing

controls ... scratch resis tant
mineral c rystals th~t keep

readouts sharp and clear.
We have them in alllhe
. dynamic, new styles. Fine
jewelry fashions , capable of
accuracy to within a minute
a year. From $99lo $160 .
(
Try one on loday .

in the

ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE

BIG VARIETY ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS,

seat
Loan.

BASEBAU GLOVES AND BALLS!
WOMEN'S HALTER TOPS

ADDITIONAl ITEMS

&amp;.SAVINGS
EST 1912

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ADDED DAilY'

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OPEN FRIDAY
Tl~ 8 PM ·
SAl TIL 5

12:i (:;: Main Street

GOESSLER'S

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"'*""F'RA·N KLI

~!l:.!-2171

PHONE
992-3491

Pomeroy

Court St.

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JEWELRY STORE .

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MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER

QUARTZ
. WATCHES
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service and real value to ·your customers.

,JS\

CANDY SPECIAL UP TO 50% OFF

CITY LOAN

182601 Qoldlolle finish . 111.

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When you need money to keep your car running, or for any good
reason, talk to us. We handle Personal Loans quickly, easily and
with consideration. You ean borrow with trust where people save
with trust. City Loan &amp; Savings.

Shown: 11~ St•lnless steel. fUI.

TO
Fruth Pharmacy on the opening of your
new store. We know that you will provide excellent

2~202 E. MAIN ST.

PHONE 304 ~ 485-7301

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231f OHIO AVENUE

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PARKERSBURG. WEST VIRGINIA 26101

POMEROY, OHIO
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�6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tui'Sday, Aug, 10, 1976

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7- Tbe O.UySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1976

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LARGE BillLDING LARGE PARKING LOT - There will be plenty of room for the
customers at the new ~th's Pharmacy. The pharmacy is'tocated on Rt. 30 directly across
from the Holzer Medical Center . The buDding itself cost over $220,000 to construct.

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COURTEOUS SERVICE - These two women work at the front cou~ter of Fruth's
Phannacy. They are left, Olarlena Cllase and Debbie Van Sickle.
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Fruth Pharmacy makes use of the bright and eye-

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catching wall coverings that are used throughout the
store . There wiD be a' large variety of cosmetics on hand
wben fully stocked.

· HERE ARE SOME MORE - These are more people who are working for Fruth's
Pharmacy. Front row, Mitch Meadows. Back row, left to right, Charla Cook, Bridget Pi1ch·
ford, Brenda Roberts and Christine Ayala.

Big bags, little bags, hang them, carry them too
NEW YORK -Hang it all.
Or buckle it.
Then go for a bike ride or a
walk to the corner for an
Italian ice or milk shake.
· Do anything that doesn't
require a handbag jammed ·
wit.h checkbook, make-up
case, overstuffed wallet and
brush and comb, allerRY, diet
and stress pills, old and new
tissues, paper clips, loose
change, address book and
ballpoint penscov.e rs,

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ATTRACTIVE AREA ~ This is anQther view of the
Gift Sh~ at the new Fruth Pharmacy. The shop itself is

situated on a raised portion of the store floor Attr!ICtive
wrought iron columns grace the gift sh~ area,

,..

TO

worry. In additio to simple
drawstring and fold -over
pouches that are just right for
a two dollar bill, there are
miniature; deceptively flat
organizers or envelopes.
Simply unfold them and
voila,. enought pockets, card
slots and zippered compartments to reassure the
most insecure .
' Belt bags are, after all, a
decoration , so you don 't have
to stick to just one . Try two at

"

a time, one a little higher
than the other, with the bags
on oppasir.o sides of the body,
For sununer, you'll find
cowhide the most popular
maUorial, ranging from glove
softness
to
western
roughness, and you 'll find it
· in natural earth tones as well
as red , whiU, and blue .
That's just the soiids.lf you
want serape stripes of denim
blue, orange, yellow and
beige, or calico prints, those

are around to he hung, too.
If leather doesn't appeal,
pick a bag of canvas, vinyl,
corduroy, suede or straw.
And if you doll 't want to
button, snap or drawstring it
shut, find one that relies on
Velcro strips which adhere to
each other . Unintentionally,
they provide a sound alarm
system : when the bag is
opened, the separation of the
strips sounds exactly like a
sheet being ripped.

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FRUTH PHARMACY ON THE
GRAND OPENING .OF YOUR NEW
PHARMACY AT 364JACKSONPIKE,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO. WHILE AT FRUTH

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PHARMACY BE SURE TO VISIT

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PhARmAcy

THE FAMILY READING CENTER
WHERE YOU'LL FIND A COMPLETE
LINE OF PAPERBACK BOOKS &amp;
MAGAZINES.
BEST WISHES FRUTH PHARMACY

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BUSY AT WORK - Even though the "grand opening" for the new Fruth's Phannacy is

not unlll August lOth, the employes there have been hard at work to meet the needs

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Gallipolis and the surrounding communities. Shown here in the foreground are' DeloriS
Swartz, Marti HamUton, and Thelma Jeffers. Dan Meadows, registered pharmacist, is in
the bllckground. '

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FROM

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VALLEY NEWS SERVICE, INC.

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. 1919 GARFIELD AVE.
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.
FUlL SERVICE - ThiA II what the new Fruth
Ph81'11l8cy m Rt. 35 near Gallipolla will be featuring. They
will have charge &amp;cCOWJis, a family record syatem, and

PHONE {304) 421·1441

I

sunglasses, breath mints and
that cute little lipstick with
mirror you never use.
Get dow to the essentials.
You don 't need 'more than
keys and quarters, so stick
them in a belt bag and fasten
it around your waist. Or hang
it around your ·neck, over
your shoulder, or on any free .
appendage.
.I f all this freedom is going
to make you feel like Linus
witho.ut his blanket, don 'I

,,

'

will flU all (ll'eacriptiotll. The size of the pllannacy
counter shown here will make cuatomen waiting las , J
crowded and more ccmfcrtable.

ANOTHER VIEW of tbe front of Fruth's Pharmacy of Gallipolis. In tbe few days of
bllllneu before the store's grand opening today, "Business already has been twice as good
u apected."

�6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tui'Sday, Aug, 10, 1976

! .•

7- Tbe O.UySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1976

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..

LARGE BillLDING LARGE PARKING LOT - There will be plenty of room for the
customers at the new ~th's Pharmacy. The pharmacy is'tocated on Rt. 30 directly across
from the Holzer Medical Center . The buDding itself cost over $220,000 to construct.

••

•••••••••••

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•••

'

0

'

•

'

••

0

•

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••

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··· ······· ··· ·······
COURTEOUS SERVICE - These two women work at the front cou~ter of Fruth's
Phannacy. They are left, Olarlena Cllase and Debbie Van Sickle.
·

"'~·~·

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.........
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it

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•

SHARP - The Cosmetics department at the new
Fruth Pharmacy makes use of the bright and eye-

..

~

ft

•

1•

~

~

....•'.. ' ., .,. . ....
...
'

~-

t

.~
;

t

' ...
r

•

.~

•••

catching wall coverings that are used throughout the
store . There wiD be a' large variety of cosmetics on hand
wben fully stocked.

· HERE ARE SOME MORE - These are more people who are working for Fruth's
Pharmacy. Front row, Mitch Meadows. Back row, left to right, Charla Cook, Bridget Pi1ch·
ford, Brenda Roberts and Christine Ayala.

Big bags, little bags, hang them, carry them too
NEW YORK -Hang it all.
Or buckle it.
Then go for a bike ride or a
walk to the corner for an
Italian ice or milk shake.
· Do anything that doesn't
require a handbag jammed ·
wit.h checkbook, make-up
case, overstuffed wallet and
brush and comb, allerRY, diet
and stress pills, old and new
tissues, paper clips, loose
change, address book and
ballpoint penscov.e rs,

""1'11s1:1.~s
:Lt.GOO'P

l).

co

.

•

'

:'
•
••
••
•

ATTRACTIVE AREA ~ This is anQther view of the
Gift Sh~ at the new Fruth Pharmacy. The shop itself is

situated on a raised portion of the store floor Attr!ICtive
wrought iron columns grace the gift sh~ area,

,..

TO

worry. In additio to simple
drawstring and fold -over
pouches that are just right for
a two dollar bill, there are
miniature; deceptively flat
organizers or envelopes.
Simply unfold them and
voila,. enought pockets, card
slots and zippered compartments to reassure the
most insecure .
' Belt bags are, after all, a
decoration , so you don 't have
to stick to just one . Try two at

"

a time, one a little higher
than the other, with the bags
on oppasir.o sides of the body,
For sununer, you'll find
cowhide the most popular
maUorial, ranging from glove
softness
to
western
roughness, and you 'll find it
· in natural earth tones as well
as red , whiU, and blue .
That's just the soiids.lf you
want serape stripes of denim
blue, orange, yellow and
beige, or calico prints, those

are around to he hung, too.
If leather doesn't appeal,
pick a bag of canvas, vinyl,
corduroy, suede or straw.
And if you doll 't want to
button, snap or drawstring it
shut, find one that relies on
Velcro strips which adhere to
each other . Unintentionally,
they provide a sound alarm
system : when the bag is
opened, the separation of the
strips sounds exactly like a
sheet being ripped.

•' ' .

.,

••
·'••

..

'.
'•

.,,
'

·I

••\

FRUTH PHARMACY ON THE
GRAND OPENING .OF YOUR NEW
PHARMACY AT 364JACKSONPIKE,
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO. WHILE AT FRUTH

••

•

'

.

.••

/

'

PHARMACY BE SURE TO VISIT

...

'- ..

.

,

-

PhARmAcy

THE FAMILY READING CENTER
WHERE YOU'LL FIND A COMPLETE
LINE OF PAPERBACK BOOKS &amp;
MAGAZINES.
BEST WISHES FRUTH PHARMACY

-

.

I

t 1: t

;~

"

~

I'

~

- ""
""

BUSY AT WORK - Even though the "grand opening" for the new Fruth's Phannacy is

not unlll August lOth, the employes there have been hard at work to meet the needs

~(

Gallipolis and the surrounding communities. Shown here in the foreground are' DeloriS
Swartz, Marti HamUton, and Thelma Jeffers. Dan Meadows, registered pharmacist, is in
the bllckground. '

...••.
..s

FROM

.

..
.. ,-..r.

VALLEY NEWS SERVICE, INC.

"'
&gt;.JI
M

. 1919 GARFIELD AVE.
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.
FUlL SERVICE - ThiA II what the new Fruth
Ph81'11l8cy m Rt. 35 near Gallipolla will be featuring. They
will have charge &amp;cCOWJis, a family record syatem, and

PHONE {304) 421·1441

I

sunglasses, breath mints and
that cute little lipstick with
mirror you never use.
Get dow to the essentials.
You don 't need 'more than
keys and quarters, so stick
them in a belt bag and fasten
it around your waist. Or hang
it around your ·neck, over
your shoulder, or on any free .
appendage.
.I f all this freedom is going
to make you feel like Linus
witho.ut his blanket, don 'I

,,

'

will flU all (ll'eacriptiotll. The size of the pllannacy
counter shown here will make cuatomen waiting las , J
crowded and more ccmfcrtable.

ANOTHER VIEW of tbe front of Fruth's Pharmacy of Gallipolis. In tbe few days of
bllllneu before the store's grand opening today, "Business already has been twice as good
u apected."

�1-TIIIDIIIJ'

Senl!nel, MiddleJ?Ort·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1976

Store Hours:
Mondatfriday 9-8

"•I,Mlddleport-Pcmeroy,O., Tue&amp;day,Aug.IO, 1976

.I

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Saturday~

Closed Sundays So Our Employees

c

Can Spend It For Family and Church.
We Wish .Other StoresWould Do

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The Saine

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HALF
HAMS

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READY TO SERVE YOU- That Is what the two registered pharmacists at Fruth's
Pharmacy want to do . They are frQm the left, Dan Meadows and Don Pullin. Meadows is a
graduate of the Cincinnati College of Pharmacy and Pullin Is a graduate of uie West
Virginia University School of Pharmacy.

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G1FT NEEDS FILLED - There is a wide selection of
almost every type of gift in Fruth's Gift Shop. There are

TAVERN BONELESS

cards, candles. pottery, and clever personal ·message
woodcuts, to note just a few.

HAM

Fire detector is a most modest investment in remaining alive
By Don Oaldey
· There,. were 8,600 deaths
from home fires iJt America
laat year, and up to half of
those deaths could have been
· prevented if families ha.d
Installed a fire detector
costing less than ~. according to the Nalional
Bureau of Standards.
"It is ironic," says Ken
K~ou 'chko,
market
development manager in the
residential division of
Honeywell, Inc ., "that many
people will spend $150 to $300
a ~ar on fire insurance to
protect their homes and

belongings but won 't spend a
fraction of that to protect
themselves. A house and
furniture can be replaced;
lives can't be replaced."
This situation is changing,
however, and changing
rather spectacularly.
Honey-Well is only one of a
number of companies involved in what has become
one of the fastest-selling
consumer products introduced in recent years:
When transistorized
detectors first went on the
market in 1971, :&gt;0,000 ·were

sold. Last year, Ule figure
was 2.5million, and sales this
year are expected to top 3.5
million. Banks are offering
them as premiums to lure
dep ositors and some in.surance

companies

are

giving discounts on fire insurance rates if detectors are
installed.
Presently, 11 states require
fire or smoke detectors in all
new housing and two others
require them in all new
multifamily dwellings .
Legislation is pending in most
other states. In addition, tlle
Federal
Housing
Ad-

ministratlon requires .fire

protection in aU new homes
for which it ..Tites mortgage
insurance.
As with most new products,
we are in the midst of a
shaking-out period among
competing manufacturers
and -the public is confronted
with a confusing variety of
detectors.
Basically, there are two
main \ypes : heat detectors
and smoke de tectors. Both
may be · either battery
operated or AC (house
curr•nt) operated by being

plugged into a wall ouUet or
wired directly into house
wiring. Both sound a piercing
warning signal.
But beat detectors are too
slow, says the Bureau of
Standards. They require a
significant build-up of heat
before Uley operate, and most
fire deaths are caused not by
actual flames but by
asphyxiation , often long
before visible fire breaks out.
Most fire prevention experts favor smoke detectors,
and again Ulere are two basic
types :
those
using
photoelectric cell and those

using an ionization chamber.
The Ia Iter is the more sensitive of the two, but because
of its sensitivity may also be
set off simply by smoke from
a stove oc high humidity.
Some
types
like
Honeywell's, utilize a dual
ionization chamber capable
of · detecting microscopic
particles of combustion
generated in the initial stage
of a fire, crucial minutes
before it progresses to the
next ·three s(ages of
smoldering, flame and high
heat. This type is also said to

lie less .susceptible to false
alarms.
Amodel code for household
fire warning equipment
adopted by the national F:ire
Protection Association
recommends that a heat or
smoke detector, preferably
AC-wired, be located between
the- bedroom area and the
rest of the house because the
major threat from (ire is at
night when everyone is
asleep. In two-story homes,
another detector should be
located at the top of the
stairwell to the basement or
lower floor.

RAY CROMLEY

Consumer
agency's
comedy of errors
BY Ray Cromley

.FRUTH'S
PHARMACY
LOCATED ON
f '
RT. 35 - ACROSS
FROM HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER.
I

BEST OF LUCK ON YOUR OPENING!
1I'

We were pleased to have been
chosen to supply your new
store with the carpeting.

Larry's Wayside furniture
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

3RD &amp;OLIVE STREETS
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W.ASillNGTON - Advocates of an all-powerful cmsurner
pro~on agency with authority to move into any area of
government, spmsor court cases or enforce regulations
protecting consumers fr001abuse by producers, should study
what has happened to the Coosumer Product Safety
Commission. LaWJChed some years hack, the coiDI)lission had
these same ends.in view amid good wishes and hope.
This troposed IJ'olectim agency, if created, could well
follow the same sad path.
The fact is that internal governinent investigations
repeatedly turn up new evidence that the &lt;XlD8Wlier troduct
safety commission is a chamber of horrors ...: as well as
inefficient.
For one, a recent official study charges the conimisslon
with regularly failing to notify manufactllrers and importers
of new safety regulations they are supposed to follow. Yet it
holds them strictly accountable fot the rules they haven't even
heard Of an fi.ncl it next to impossible to secure information
about. Worse yet, when they do learn the rules, manufacturers
frequently find !bern ambiguous to the point of absurdity
making no sense.
Further, the cor:nmissim's men quite frequently seem
more interested in prosecuting cases and lxrllding up a record
of convictions at court than in securing safer cmsumer
troducts.
On the me hand, the .courts ha~ thrown out numerous
cases when it became clear that the man.Jlfactllrers concerned
had promptly corrected the problems complained of once they
learned what the regula!ions were and what they'd been doing
wrong.
On the other hand, the comml.uloo's personal shaw lltue
interest in follow-tllrough. They have made few attempts to
help manufacturers in complying, either by suggesting
practical remedies or by occasionally rechecking to determine
whether imtrovements had been made .
carrying its enf.orcement powers to excess, an exercise in
absurdity, the commission has Insisted on carrying cases. to
court so trivial they've been dropped m order of the presiding
judge. .
Listed prominently, too, in recent studies are reports of
inefficiency so great in the processing of caaes by the
commission that when brought to court, they've been thrown
out because the very age of the complaints made them suspect.
But above all, the courts have been bothered by the patent
unfairness of many commission regulationS, vagueness of the
rules for one. The lack of any adequate definition of what
hazards the regulations were set up to overcome Is another
problem. In other words, it baa not been clear either to
manufacturers or to the courts what euctly the rules were
~posed to accomplish.
To make matters worse, there has been so Utue delegation
of authority by the col!llllis8lonets that 1111 staff has been
bogged down with the lone a!ld COIIly process of preparallon
for perhaps hundreds of court cases which staff members
themselves have recunmended not prOieC!Iting. In the end, of
course, these cases have been dropped as not worth it - after
thOUIJalllb of man houra have been waated. Thla Ia not
considering the lou of staffers available to look for
prosecution of CUIII where manufacturel'l truly ignore the
safety of consumers.
What we have here, in essence, ill another case of
bureaucracy gone wild, enforcing the letter of the law and not
the spirit.
It Ia also the result of 1 growing IJ'actice in Washington of
recent years, putting lawyers in poets best served by men
experienced In engineering, science and manufacturiJ18 who
would think more of solving troblems and less on securing
convictions.

But even the best detector
can only be a warning. That
warning may be wasted, says
the association, unless a
family has planned in advance for rapid exit from
their residence. There should
be at least two alternative
escape routes from each
room, and children especially
should be drilled on what to
·do in case of a fire.
Nor can any detector
prevent a fire caused by
·smoking in bed or careless
use of storage or flammable
liquids and materials.

COOKIES

BALlARD

or
PIUSBURY

6 pack

WHOLE
HAM

BISCUITS

ASST. FlAVORS
8' oz.

1:

,_I

,,
q

LB.

'

l

MOIST &amp; EASY

PKGS.

1
' )

•
I

CAKE MIX

13lh

l

oz.

NEW FLAVORS

Cook's Nook
Clleesecake is always a tantalizing sufilmer dessert aDd
this recipe featuring peaches is irure to delight your family.
PEACH CHEESE CAKE
Ingredients : 1 package (three ounces) peach gelatin, 1 cup
boiling water. 1 package ( 11 ounces) no-bake cheese cake, 3
tablespoons sugar, !teaspoon ground cinnam'on, one.third cup
melted margarine, I can {8o/• ounces) peach slices, cold mUk.
Dissolve gelatin in balling water. Set aside to cool.
Combine graham cracker crumbs, sugar, cinnamon and .
melted margarine . Press miXture firmly against the boltcm of
an eight-inch spring form pan. Refrigerate 15 minutes.
Drain Pf!Ch slices, reserving syrup. Add enough cold iDIIk
to syrup to make l'h cups liquid. Pour liquid into small, deep
mixing bowl. Add cheese cake filling and beat at -low speed
with electric mixer or rotary blender until blended. Beat at
medium speed three minutes longer. Immediately add cooled
gelatin, beating to blend well. Pour into prepared pan. Chill
until flfiD.
Garnish top of cake with pe~ch slices. Run a spatula
around edge Qf cake before removing from pan. Makes one
·eight-inch cake. ·
Try this delldous cooler when you're trying to beat the

heat of those scorching summer days.
.
PINEAPPLE BANANA COOLER
Ingredients: 4mediUm bananas, 2'h cups orange juice, 'h
cup IIIiJe juice, l'h quarts pineapple juice, 2 pints vanilla ice
cream, pineapple chunks and maraschino cherries.
Combine mashed bananas and fruit -juices, blending
thoroughly. Chill. Pour into clliUed tall glaases, topping each
serving with scoops of ice cream. Garnish with pineapple
chunks and cherries.
·

WHITNEY

~
~

••

;
•
I

j.
I

64

oz.

•
•It
•
••

e•
•

••
•
.,I

VAN CAMP'S

I
I

•

80Z.

,
'

SKINNER
SHORT CUT

GOLDEN ISLE

12

1-LB.

SALTINE CRACKERS

oz.

49~

NESTE A
INSTANT TEA
3 OZ. JAR

.

Another way to use your peaches is this cooling dessert.
PEACHY ntUIT SALAD
Ingredients: one package (three ounces) cream cheese,
softened, 'h cup mayonnaise, l'h cups diced fresh or canned
peaches, . I cup quartered maraschino cherries 'h cup
miniature marshmallows, I pint vaniDa ice cream,' softened,

MIRACLE
WHIP

red food colori!Jg, lettuce cups.
Blend cream cheese with mayonnaise. Stir in peaches,
cherries and marshmallows. Fold in ice cream. Add a few
drops red food coloring to lint mixture light red. Pour into an
eight-inch square pan; frene ..cut into clne·lnch cubes.' Place
eight cubes In each lettuce cup.

a privately owned
with Edward s.
Reddig as chainnan. White
Engines manufactures a line
of gasoline, diesel and multifUel engines for IIXIUIIrial,
farm and military markets.

~

3
ro~~ !
BEENIE WEENEE

$ 69

ORANGE

thawed, I cup apricot neclar, chilled, 2 cups
pmeapple juice, chilled, 2cups water, one-third cup sllgar, one·
third cup lemon juice, II', cups ginger ale, chilled, vanilla ice
cream, orange slices, maraschino cherries.
Combine orange juice concentrate, apricot nectar,
pineapple juice, water, sugar and lemon juice; stir unlll sugar
is dissolved. Pour Into six chilled tall glasses. Add enough
ginger ale to eacb glass to make two-thirds full. Add scoops of
ice cream. Garnish lj'ith orange slices and cherries.

Is subject to
by the board of
of White Motor

~ .

ORANGE

~centrale,

Monday,
approval
directors
Corp.
CRL is
company

~

CAN

KRAFT

FRUIT PUNCH FWAT
Ingredient-s : I can (six ounces) frozen orange juice

FIRM SOLD
EASTLAKE, Oblo (UP!) A letter of intent to sell White
Motor Corp.'s wholly owned
subsidiary, White Engines,
Inc., Canton, Oblo, to CRL
Corp. ,- Cleveland, for an
undisclosed sum, bas been
signed by S.E. Knudsen,
White Motor chairman and
chief executive officer.
The sale, awounced

151f2 oz.

Chum Salmon

A variation is this refreshing idea.

.

.,:I

QT. ·

SALAD DRESSI N_G

69~

WllH

LIMIT 1 COUPON
EXPIRES

ONLY

'

YELLOW
.

ONIONS

LB.

'NEW RED

COUPON

~

COUNTRY TIME

LEMONADE
33 OZ. CAN

$}49
WllH COUPON

LIMIT I COUPON
EXPIRES 8-14-76 .

~-····-·--·--··-'

10 LB. BAG
I

J

"I

�1-TIIIDIIIJ'

Senl!nel, MiddleJ?Ort·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1976

Store Hours:
Mondatfriday 9-8

"•I,Mlddleport-Pcmeroy,O., Tue&amp;day,Aug.IO, 1976

.I

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Saturday~

Closed Sundays So Our Employees

c

Can Spend It For Family and Church.
We Wish .Other StoresWould Do

'

',.

'

The Saine

I
I

•'

••'

••
•
&lt;

•

~

•
'••

HALF
HAMS

•
'I
''

. I

I
~

I

'
READY TO SERVE YOU- That Is what the two registered pharmacists at Fruth's
Pharmacy want to do . They are frQm the left, Dan Meadows and Don Pullin. Meadows is a
graduate of the Cincinnati College of Pharmacy and Pullin Is a graduate of uie West
Virginia University School of Pharmacy.

.•.

•.

G1FT NEEDS FILLED - There is a wide selection of
almost every type of gift in Fruth's Gift Shop. There are

TAVERN BONELESS

cards, candles. pottery, and clever personal ·message
woodcuts, to note just a few.

HAM

Fire detector is a most modest investment in remaining alive
By Don Oaldey
· There,. were 8,600 deaths
from home fires iJt America
laat year, and up to half of
those deaths could have been
· prevented if families ha.d
Installed a fire detector
costing less than ~. according to the Nalional
Bureau of Standards.
"It is ironic," says Ken
K~ou 'chko,
market
development manager in the
residential division of
Honeywell, Inc ., "that many
people will spend $150 to $300
a ~ar on fire insurance to
protect their homes and

belongings but won 't spend a
fraction of that to protect
themselves. A house and
furniture can be replaced;
lives can't be replaced."
This situation is changing,
however, and changing
rather spectacularly.
Honey-Well is only one of a
number of companies involved in what has become
one of the fastest-selling
consumer products introduced in recent years:
When transistorized
detectors first went on the
market in 1971, :&gt;0,000 ·were

sold. Last year, Ule figure
was 2.5million, and sales this
year are expected to top 3.5
million. Banks are offering
them as premiums to lure
dep ositors and some in.surance

companies

are

giving discounts on fire insurance rates if detectors are
installed.
Presently, 11 states require
fire or smoke detectors in all
new housing and two others
require them in all new
multifamily dwellings .
Legislation is pending in most
other states. In addition, tlle
Federal
Housing
Ad-

ministratlon requires .fire

protection in aU new homes
for which it ..Tites mortgage
insurance.
As with most new products,
we are in the midst of a
shaking-out period among
competing manufacturers
and -the public is confronted
with a confusing variety of
detectors.
Basically, there are two
main \ypes : heat detectors
and smoke de tectors. Both
may be · either battery
operated or AC (house
curr•nt) operated by being

plugged into a wall ouUet or
wired directly into house
wiring. Both sound a piercing
warning signal.
But beat detectors are too
slow, says the Bureau of
Standards. They require a
significant build-up of heat
before Uley operate, and most
fire deaths are caused not by
actual flames but by
asphyxiation , often long
before visible fire breaks out.
Most fire prevention experts favor smoke detectors,
and again Ulere are two basic
types :
those
using
photoelectric cell and those

using an ionization chamber.
The Ia Iter is the more sensitive of the two, but because
of its sensitivity may also be
set off simply by smoke from
a stove oc high humidity.
Some
types
like
Honeywell's, utilize a dual
ionization chamber capable
of · detecting microscopic
particles of combustion
generated in the initial stage
of a fire, crucial minutes
before it progresses to the
next ·three s(ages of
smoldering, flame and high
heat. This type is also said to

lie less .susceptible to false
alarms.
Amodel code for household
fire warning equipment
adopted by the national F:ire
Protection Association
recommends that a heat or
smoke detector, preferably
AC-wired, be located between
the- bedroom area and the
rest of the house because the
major threat from (ire is at
night when everyone is
asleep. In two-story homes,
another detector should be
located at the top of the
stairwell to the basement or
lower floor.

RAY CROMLEY

Consumer
agency's
comedy of errors
BY Ray Cromley

.FRUTH'S
PHARMACY
LOCATED ON
f '
RT. 35 - ACROSS
FROM HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER.
I

BEST OF LUCK ON YOUR OPENING!
1I'

We were pleased to have been
chosen to supply your new
store with the carpeting.

Larry's Wayside furniture
GAlliPOLIS, OHIO

3RD &amp;OLIVE STREETS
•
'

W.ASillNGTON - Advocates of an all-powerful cmsurner
pro~on agency with authority to move into any area of
government, spmsor court cases or enforce regulations
protecting consumers fr001abuse by producers, should study
what has happened to the Coosumer Product Safety
Commission. LaWJChed some years hack, the coiDI)lission had
these same ends.in view amid good wishes and hope.
This troposed IJ'olectim agency, if created, could well
follow the same sad path.
The fact is that internal governinent investigations
repeatedly turn up new evidence that the &lt;XlD8Wlier troduct
safety commission is a chamber of horrors ...: as well as
inefficient.
For one, a recent official study charges the conimisslon
with regularly failing to notify manufactllrers and importers
of new safety regulations they are supposed to follow. Yet it
holds them strictly accountable fot the rules they haven't even
heard Of an fi.ncl it next to impossible to secure information
about. Worse yet, when they do learn the rules, manufacturers
frequently find !bern ambiguous to the point of absurdity
making no sense.
Further, the cor:nmissim's men quite frequently seem
more interested in prosecuting cases and lxrllding up a record
of convictions at court than in securing safer cmsumer
troducts.
On the me hand, the .courts ha~ thrown out numerous
cases when it became clear that the man.Jlfactllrers concerned
had promptly corrected the problems complained of once they
learned what the regula!ions were and what they'd been doing
wrong.
On the other hand, the comml.uloo's personal shaw lltue
interest in follow-tllrough. They have made few attempts to
help manufacturers in complying, either by suggesting
practical remedies or by occasionally rechecking to determine
whether imtrovements had been made .
carrying its enf.orcement powers to excess, an exercise in
absurdity, the commission has Insisted on carrying cases. to
court so trivial they've been dropped m order of the presiding
judge. .
Listed prominently, too, in recent studies are reports of
inefficiency so great in the processing of caaes by the
commission that when brought to court, they've been thrown
out because the very age of the complaints made them suspect.
But above all, the courts have been bothered by the patent
unfairness of many commission regulationS, vagueness of the
rules for one. The lack of any adequate definition of what
hazards the regulations were set up to overcome Is another
problem. In other words, it baa not been clear either to
manufacturers or to the courts what euctly the rules were
~posed to accomplish.
To make matters worse, there has been so Utue delegation
of authority by the col!llllis8lonets that 1111 staff has been
bogged down with the lone a!ld COIIly process of preparallon
for perhaps hundreds of court cases which staff members
themselves have recunmended not prOieC!Iting. In the end, of
course, these cases have been dropped as not worth it - after
thOUIJalllb of man houra have been waated. Thla Ia not
considering the lou of staffers available to look for
prosecution of CUIII where manufacturel'l truly ignore the
safety of consumers.
What we have here, in essence, ill another case of
bureaucracy gone wild, enforcing the letter of the law and not
the spirit.
It Ia also the result of 1 growing IJ'actice in Washington of
recent years, putting lawyers in poets best served by men
experienced In engineering, science and manufacturiJ18 who
would think more of solving troblems and less on securing
convictions.

But even the best detector
can only be a warning. That
warning may be wasted, says
the association, unless a
family has planned in advance for rapid exit from
their residence. There should
be at least two alternative
escape routes from each
room, and children especially
should be drilled on what to
·do in case of a fire.
Nor can any detector
prevent a fire caused by
·smoking in bed or careless
use of storage or flammable
liquids and materials.

COOKIES

BALlARD

or
PIUSBURY

6 pack

WHOLE
HAM

BISCUITS

ASST. FlAVORS
8' oz.

1:

,_I

,,
q

LB.

'

l

MOIST &amp; EASY

PKGS.

1
' )

•
I

CAKE MIX

13lh

l

oz.

NEW FLAVORS

Cook's Nook
Clleesecake is always a tantalizing sufilmer dessert aDd
this recipe featuring peaches is irure to delight your family.
PEACH CHEESE CAKE
Ingredients : 1 package (three ounces) peach gelatin, 1 cup
boiling water. 1 package ( 11 ounces) no-bake cheese cake, 3
tablespoons sugar, !teaspoon ground cinnam'on, one.third cup
melted margarine, I can {8o/• ounces) peach slices, cold mUk.
Dissolve gelatin in balling water. Set aside to cool.
Combine graham cracker crumbs, sugar, cinnamon and .
melted margarine . Press miXture firmly against the boltcm of
an eight-inch spring form pan. Refrigerate 15 minutes.
Drain Pf!Ch slices, reserving syrup. Add enough cold iDIIk
to syrup to make l'h cups liquid. Pour liquid into small, deep
mixing bowl. Add cheese cake filling and beat at -low speed
with electric mixer or rotary blender until blended. Beat at
medium speed three minutes longer. Immediately add cooled
gelatin, beating to blend well. Pour into prepared pan. Chill
until flfiD.
Garnish top of cake with pe~ch slices. Run a spatula
around edge Qf cake before removing from pan. Makes one
·eight-inch cake. ·
Try this delldous cooler when you're trying to beat the

heat of those scorching summer days.
.
PINEAPPLE BANANA COOLER
Ingredients: 4mediUm bananas, 2'h cups orange juice, 'h
cup IIIiJe juice, l'h quarts pineapple juice, 2 pints vanilla ice
cream, pineapple chunks and maraschino cherries.
Combine mashed bananas and fruit -juices, blending
thoroughly. Chill. Pour into clliUed tall glaases, topping each
serving with scoops of ice cream. Garnish with pineapple
chunks and cherries.
·

WHITNEY

~
~

••

;
•
I

j.
I

64

oz.

•
•It
•
••

e•
•

••
•
.,I

VAN CAMP'S

I
I

•

80Z.

,
'

SKINNER
SHORT CUT

GOLDEN ISLE

12

1-LB.

SALTINE CRACKERS

oz.

49~

NESTE A
INSTANT TEA
3 OZ. JAR

.

Another way to use your peaches is this cooling dessert.
PEACHY ntUIT SALAD
Ingredients: one package (three ounces) cream cheese,
softened, 'h cup mayonnaise, l'h cups diced fresh or canned
peaches, . I cup quartered maraschino cherries 'h cup
miniature marshmallows, I pint vaniDa ice cream,' softened,

MIRACLE
WHIP

red food colori!Jg, lettuce cups.
Blend cream cheese with mayonnaise. Stir in peaches,
cherries and marshmallows. Fold in ice cream. Add a few
drops red food coloring to lint mixture light red. Pour into an
eight-inch square pan; frene ..cut into clne·lnch cubes.' Place
eight cubes In each lettuce cup.

a privately owned
with Edward s.
Reddig as chainnan. White
Engines manufactures a line
of gasoline, diesel and multifUel engines for IIXIUIIrial,
farm and military markets.

~

3
ro~~ !
BEENIE WEENEE

$ 69

ORANGE

thawed, I cup apricot neclar, chilled, 2 cups
pmeapple juice, chilled, 2cups water, one-third cup sllgar, one·
third cup lemon juice, II', cups ginger ale, chilled, vanilla ice
cream, orange slices, maraschino cherries.
Combine orange juice concentrate, apricot nectar,
pineapple juice, water, sugar and lemon juice; stir unlll sugar
is dissolved. Pour Into six chilled tall glasses. Add enough
ginger ale to eacb glass to make two-thirds full. Add scoops of
ice cream. Garnish lj'ith orange slices and cherries.

Is subject to
by the board of
of White Motor

~ .

ORANGE

~centrale,

Monday,
approval
directors
Corp.
CRL is
company

~

CAN

KRAFT

FRUIT PUNCH FWAT
Ingredient-s : I can (six ounces) frozen orange juice

FIRM SOLD
EASTLAKE, Oblo (UP!) A letter of intent to sell White
Motor Corp.'s wholly owned
subsidiary, White Engines,
Inc., Canton, Oblo, to CRL
Corp. ,- Cleveland, for an
undisclosed sum, bas been
signed by S.E. Knudsen,
White Motor chairman and
chief executive officer.
The sale, awounced

151f2 oz.

Chum Salmon

A variation is this refreshing idea.

.

.,:I

QT. ·

SALAD DRESSI N_G

69~

WllH

LIMIT 1 COUPON
EXPIRES

ONLY

'

YELLOW
.

ONIONS

LB.

'NEW RED

COUPON

~

COUNTRY TIME

LEMONADE
33 OZ. CAN

$}49
WllH COUPON

LIMIT I COUPON
EXPIRES 8-14-76 .

~-····-·--·--··-'

10 LB. BAG
I

J

"I

�..

ALE

CLEAR

•'·

STARTING WEDNES'DAY, AUGUST 11TH
TREAT
YOURSELF

TOMORROW 9:30 SHARP
HUNDREDS OF ITEMS DRASTICALLY REDUCED

Now, during our clearance sale, is your
chance to save on truly fine qualify
furniture. Many items from our regular
stock are now reduced from 10 lo 60 pet.
There is always plenty of free parking
and of course FREE delivery . Enjoy the
economy of quality at Tope's.

DURING AUGUST ONLY

THIS IS OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER

'

UP TO 1f2 OFF

SELIG-. Contemporary Sofa in gold,
and off while paHo.rn , heavy
labnc, extra comfortable, reversible
back and seat cushions.
REG . 5680
SA.LE

ALL STYLES, OUTSTANDING FABRICS,
BEAUTIFUL STYLING IN TRADITIONAL

AND OONTEMPORARY

KROEHLER - Traditional soia and
matching .loveseat, polyester fabric ,
green, whrte, gold floral. Bolsters on
both pieces. flock sample.
.

10% TO 40% OFF

SOFA REG. 595
L.S. REG. '495
1

OOOSE FROM 15 MODELS IN STOCK

'588

DREXEL - Traditional 82" sofa in
gree~ and pastel floral, excellent
quahly and comfort, attached back
rnegs. bolsters.
REG. 5745
SALE

SUCH BEAUTIFUL MlODS AS
CHERRY, OAK, MAPLE AN~ PINE .

'399
5

Y2

SALE •499
S.ALE '299

BO~~R

*OVER 10 DIFFERENT BEDROOM
SUITES ON SALE

UPTO

OFF

595

~

INQ.UDING OCCASIONAL, LOUNGE, REWNER.
B01H UPHOLSTERED- AND WOODEN ROCKERS
SWIVEL AND PARTY CHAIRS
.

S~FAS

BY GILLIAM--A very line
qual~ty manufacturer of Traditional
furntlu~e: All of these are 85" long and
are stnkrngly aHractive.
Regular ·$845 Each
,
Three•are offered on sale at

*OVER
100 CHAIRS ON SALE
.

,.•

EACH

Two Are Now Reduced to

I

495

EACH

HERITAGE - Traditional, blue
geometric cover, 84", buHon back." 2
cush. seat, our finest quality .
REG. S869
.
NOW

'434
Y2
OFF
------------------J""--:-:~:::-~~~~;.,;~
FROM UP TO

*LIVING ROOM AND FAMILY ROOM
TABLES
OVER 16 GROUPS ON SALE
SEVERAL AT CLOSE.()lJT PRICES
WALNUT, MAPLE, OAK, PAINTED. CHERRY, PINE
UPTO

Y2

OFF

SIX FEET IN HEIGHT, MANY DIFFERENT USES:
DESK, BAR, SlORAGE, PHOlllGRAPHIC
EQUIPMENT, STERm AND OF COURSE
FOR BOOKS

1f2

LOVE SEATS

OFF

*OVER 10 ·DIFFERENT DINING ROOM
.
SUITES ON SALE
'

ALL STYLES - ALL ANE QUALITY.
lHESE SUITES ARE BUILT 10 LAST
FOR ALIFETlME.

bac~.

excellent sealing for occasional

charr.
Reg, $425

.

SALE

. •99

:LA-Z-BOY- Pop-up head rest recliner
'"· orange-copper nylon cover , Oak
tnm .
REG. S295
; SALE ·

'177

OR EX EL- Stripe velvet in bold and
green. High back .
REG. $3,38
SALE

'177
chair. the

HERITAGE blue lounge
finest seating you can imagine . .
Geometric cut velvet cover- A man's
chair.
REG. 5549
SALE

.•199
LEATHER-·2 chairs ·and ottoman in
genuine leather by Heritage.
Traditional-! in tan, 1 in dark brown.
lifelime furniture.
Reg. ChairS59~ Sale
~th
Ottoman 225
.P1eces
HIGHLAND HOUSE- Chair in lime
green velvel. beautiful styling. slight
cover damage. Almost unnoticable.
REG . .$278
SALE

. .

'144

RATTAN- Bentwood Rocker, Cane
~:~~~and back, natural finish, only two
SALE

'99

PARTIAL LISTING
For those who can . use a small sofa
these are particularly good values. .
MAXWELL ROYAL - Loveseal,
brown Quaker design, high back, pine
frame.
REG.$495
SALE

MAXyYELL - Royal loveseat, 56"
long, rn green tweed with solid pine
frame, loose cushions lor easy
reupholstering.
REG.$475
SALE

'199
KROEHLER- Loveseat in Early
Amer. styling, blue green cover, nylon
two cushion. high back.
. REG.$395
·SALE
'

'·.

·•199

•.

I
I'

...

•

'

-.

•

••

....."'

..".,.

Many _More Chairs On Sale
Too Numerous To List

••

•
"'

We Accept Federal Food StBmps ~ ~ ~
· . .• . · t' .~ . ;.; , , .PHONE 99_2·3480
.!!Orner Mill a ~a ~nd. SIS·: We reserve the right to limit quanlilies. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

BONELESS CUT

"

.

'"·

DINING ROOM SUITES

..

"

~

Li~ht

oak. dining .room suites - 65" lighted
chrna. 4 s1de charrs, .2 arm chairs in green
velvet, server. Table 44x64, ext. to 94 W·2
leaves.
.
.
REG. $1976
SALE
2 Beclutiful Traditional suites- one in white,
one in cherry. Both feature: 52"1ighted china.
·oval table 42x62, ext. to 82", 2 side chairs and 2 ·
arm chairs. Reg. $1280.

".'

Ext~a ~hairs and back pads availiible.
Charrs m gold or green velvet.

...
...."'
..
.......
..

LIVING AND FAMILY ROOM

,••.,

TABLES

....
...•

'"

''•
~

' .

~

5 LBS. OR MORE .

. .

"
FRESH
LEAN

~GROUND .ROUND•....• !~.! 1
USDA CHOICE

1.49_ LB.·

BOILING BEEF.•............L!·.6te

MOTOR OIL ...............................·........... 59~
EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

SMUCKER . ·

"'

CONTAC COLD CAPSULES .. ~~::~:~......~ 11• ·!
'ROLAIDS ................••••..••••.....•..•.•••••.•...... 59"' s

......

69~

. QT. JAR

.WHOLE Dill PICKLES

,.,
I!'&lt;: olio

DURKEE

..~· ·

.....
....
~

. QT. JAR .

SLICED DILL PICKLES

.....
• 4

s also on Sale.

CASH SAVER

25LB.

'

DOG FOOD

SAMSONITE

BAG

5

· COZ.V KITTEN .,

CAT ·FOOD·
HI flO

I

·'

'

l·LB.
BOX

CRACKERS · .
1

69~

. . . -UtC"E'.COCKTAIL

BEEF 51
DUMPL: ·

3 ROLL PKG.

.

MINUTE MAID

~.CHICKEN &amp;

.

:"Ill, TURKEY.

LEMONADE

KRINK~ ~~
PO,TAJOES

CANS

69~

.

\oo

• )filii\
)
s~ !!.~ 1\2

EGGS

GRADE B lARGE DOZ.

69~

QT•

·

DAIRY BUY

· ·.

•

•Fine Furniture
•Custom Drapery

f

'ill• ,.•

l1

•Carpet

•Interior Design

lfz

•••
...

,,...

....

(One block below City Park)

GAL

8
PAK

2teSTALK

!

BROi.JGHTON'S
lfzGAL
HOMO MILK

PRODUCE -

CELERY

BRetJOHTON'S
2% Mltie··d'
~~~~

79~

I

.;

16 OUNCE
RETURNABLE BOffiES

.,,,

8 PAK - 16 Ol Bll.S.

69~
~

I

$109

DIET RITE

8 PAK
16 OUNCE
BOTTLES

PEACHES

. • l'
\

I
B
~

l

~

~

....
.
..

~

l!

·~

~,,,,3J~

~

s:~R: 99~. 2~:~ss~ !:·· 49~

oz.$·}

~

'

.

BAIIQUETDINNERS

$299
15

I

.

~1C~tTENNIAL DECANTER

......

Hours:
Daily 9:30-5
Mon.- Fri. 9:30·8

.. '·!!:

'1.19LB.

QUAKER STATE

·~

•

MINUTE STEAK

WINCHESTER LITTLE CIGARS........~2 29

.,

VALLEY BELL

ONE SEl.ECJED GROUP FROM 5K TO 751JJ OFF ·

5

...

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

N~k or pine 3 pc. set, Reg. $357

USDA CHOICE -

BUCKET STEAK

·~

'

HAM SALAD
LB. 79e · .

USDA CHOICE

09

·•

HOME MADE

WIENERS
LB. 79e

·

GROUND CHUCK.••. ~! ate
l\1~.. CI'IOfCE ·~

'

SUPERIORS
ALL MEAT

~

sn •122 ·

·.. .•..•...~;·69°
CHUCK ROAST
.·
CENTER CUT

LB. 89~

.,

.

All other pieces also 114 Off,
1 group only. Must sell in sets of coffee and 2
end tables .
·
• Butcher Block chrome trim, 3 pc. ·Reg. 51 ' 5· SALE
PC.

Second at Grape
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0332

10% '

SAUSAGE

SttORT RIBS OF BEEF~.L!~7te

~

SALE •59 ea.

FRESH LEAN

59~

RATH BREAKFAST

~

...••·•

Walnut Contemporary Tables, very well built.
All pieces available - end, coffee, storage
cocktail or end. Reg. $79 ea.

La

CHUCK ·ROAS1 ..••.... ~~.ttel,
,RESH LEAN

~

SALE '1144

ENGLISH CUT

•

"'

'1295

'

GROUND BEEfL .....L~.6te

.-..

"'
..,,

.

'

USDA CHOICE ARM CUT

•
".•
oj

PARTIAL LISTING

Furnit:w-e
Galleries

IVERY PICTURE AND WALL
ACCESSORY IN OUR ENTIRE
STORE REDUCED

CHUCK .ROAST

CHUCK ROAST......•.•~B~ ate

.....,
..
....•
.

.

These all measure 6'x9', all bound and
enhance any room. .
CARD TABLES AND CHAIRS
' He~vy .woven !lecorator rug in wool,
des1gn rn greert and biHersweet, floor
sample.
Chairs-Walnut or gold
Reg s 1
'144
All
St
I
Reg. $399
.ee
SlO' a$8e
SALE
White Nylon Shag, floor sample.
Padded Seat
$15 $12
Padded Seat and Back
95
Reg. sl
SALE ..
$19 su
~1 9
TABLE5--Walnut or gold
2 in yellow. 1-a high low Shag.
· 30" Square
S20 516
1- two-tone. both nylon
34" Square
$25 S20
Reg . S99 ea. ,
. _.. .SALE ,66 . t---::::o:=:-:-:~~~-...,.•••
2 in yellow. 1-a l!(gh low Shag.
MISCELLANEOUS
' •'
1- two tone. both nylon
' Contemporary Book Cases
1/a Off
Reg. $99 ea.
SALE
Ste~rns a~d Fqster Mattresses and Box
Orange, Nylon Reg. S85 SA
. LE
Spnngs. Firm and extra firm. All sizes now on sale.
•
Red . Nylon. Reg . $79 SALE '99 .' Cr~denz~- 67" length with doors. Anti qua
•
Green-White Shag, Nylon
,
white w1th green trim.
·
.·
.
•
•
Reg. $130
' SALE '99
Reg. 5349 .
SALE $199
' .••.
13 MORE ON .DISPLAY
• 2 Louis XIV Living Room Tables, white.
'
Reg . $195 ea.
SALE S88ea.

"' NOW REDUCED

BLAKE CUT

....,
.~

ONLY '199

'55

~0!

AT MARK V
SPECIAL PRICE

• Open Dai~ 9 to 10
··Sun.,10 to 10 .

CH'UCK·· ,ROAST•....•.•. ~.7te

'

Outstanding Candlelight Pine Suite, 66" triple
dresser with deck mirror, cannon ba 11 bed,
chest on chest.
Reg . S10i4;
SALE '899

AREA RUGS

·

COOLER
For a quick
cooloflle-ofl In
hot weather, run cool water
over your wrists.

iijj ·

...
."'•
.l"".

.,.....

Close out on beautiful light oak suite with
bright brass hardware. 72" triple dresser with
pediment mirror, 9 poster bed, ·queen size. 6
drawer chest on chest, night stand - "The
Country Look".
Reg . $1302 .
SALE . , .

12 other Tiibles . Grou

~ ·~ 1':J..

1

...••

SALE '699

BEAUTIFUL

.

•

Mrs. Fraix:es Martin, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Powell ,
Wanda Eblin, Mrs. Mildred
Jacobs, Mrs. Donna Gilmore,
Mrs. nna Jacobs, Joan and
Harry Clark, and the Rev:
and Mrs. Shook.

*

Rural English Bedroom Suites- In oak, triple
dresser with arch mirror, panel headboard
with frame; ~ drawer chest. 2 drawer night ·
stand. Reg. saao.

3

meeting gifts were presented
to the Rev . Mr . and Mrs.
Shook to welcome them back
for anotller year.
Mrs. Wright read tile Bible
preface. Mrs, Mildred Jacobs
had devotions reading "Little
But Powerful " from James 3,
and Mrs. Martln had prayer.
Ice cream and cake were
served to Jack, Jane and
Sean Jacobs, Frank and Ida
Martin, Frankie and Steve,

BEEF SALE

"'•

'
•'

Jean Wrigh( Mrs. Donna
Gilmore, Mrs. Tina Jacobs
and Mrs. Shook. Reports
were given by tllose reading
books not on the required list
A report was given on the
r~ent Ohio Conference at
Mansfield and it was noled
tllal women of tlle l!lCal
church assisted in serving a
tea. The Rev . Floyd Shook
was reassigned to the Laurel
Cliff Church and at the

USDA CHOIC.E

'

PARTIAL LISTING

'599

t-~-=:.::..::..::.....::!~~~~-...J REG. $155

'1'99

BOOKCASE

UPTO

.
99
HEf!ITAGE lime green traditional low

•340
.

*FAMOUS LA-Z-BOY RECLINERS
FROM

SELIG - Chrome arm green velvet
co11temporary lounge chair.
Reg. $340
SALE '

b,ro~n

"""
Denny, Judy Harrison,
James Barrows, Jeanette
Barrows, Ray Barrows,
Jimmy Barrows, Harley
Eblin, Sr., Ja· ne Eblin, Harley
Eblin, Jr., Brian Eblin, Stacy
Eblin, Cindy Blackell.
Tammy Johnson , Dave
Johnson, Randy Snider,
Delores Elliott, Gregory
Hall, De Ann Denny, Brian

•

BEDROOM SUITES

PARTIAL LISTING

PARTIAL LISTING

Hall, Betty R--.. , CrystBI

w

.

CHAIRS

SOFAS

*OVER '30 SOFAS MARKED DOWN

Hope Eblin, Robert Brush
Da
B ush 01
'
wn r ' ana Brush,
Roberl Eblin, Elva Grlll!ser
Don Ebli n, 8leve Eblin •
Wanda EbUn, Robert Barton '
PattY Baron,
1 Scottie Barton '
JoeY Bar1on, Edllh Barton •
Bren c1a wyatt, Robby Wyatt,'
Rebecca Eblin, Mamie
Stephenscm, Jimmie Snider
Bill Stephenson, Lawrenc~
Eblin, Barry Stewart, Judv

•

Reading awards presented.Thursday

.....

w•

(All ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SAl,£)

•

'

Weal Tope's hope your summer hes
been enjoyable and very relaxing.
And as family activities and needs
return to the home, treat yourself to
Tope's truly fine quality furniture.
We are specialists in bringing you
and your type of furniture together.

PARTIAL LISTING BELOW
.

•

The. annual Eblin family
reunloo
wu held Swldav at
lheroadlldeiNirkonRou~33
-' til 82
be
"'o-bertm~
Barto rs attending.
""
n gave prayer
prece dl ng dl nner and
recognluon was given
the
.
t member. Don Eblin
oldes
68, and Adam Wyatt'
youngest, five weeks.
'
Attending were !fa Eblin
Robert Eblin, Hyllis Eblin'
•

'

Ebhn, Roy Eblin, Olio (;,
IA!hn, Adam Wyall, Shirley
Jeffers, Donald Jeffers
Ricky Jeffers, Barbar~
Eblin, Jeff DeLong, Kenneth
Read ing awards were
Eblin, Donna Eblin, Tony
presenled
by Mrs. Doris
Eblin, John Eblin, James
Shook !o members of the
Eblin and Lois J. Eblin.
Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
LABCOATSCORES
Church at a meeting Thur~­
II you wanl the look of "work day night at the Ohio River
clothes" withoullhe expense, campsite of Mr. and Mrs.
think abOut a patch-pocketed Uoyd Wright.
medical label coat, avaUable
Receiving awards for Bible
at uniform houses and perfect readings and books from a
for a different cover-up. required reading list were
Especially, If you dye it.
Mrs. Frances Martin, Mrs.

62 attend Eblin reunion

'

••

'

You Are Cordially Invited To Our Semi-Annual

SAVE

'

11- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleporl.Pomeroy•0 ·· ru-•·
-...y, Aug. 10,1976

...,...,

•,

�..

ALE

CLEAR

•'·

STARTING WEDNES'DAY, AUGUST 11TH
TREAT
YOURSELF

TOMORROW 9:30 SHARP
HUNDREDS OF ITEMS DRASTICALLY REDUCED

Now, during our clearance sale, is your
chance to save on truly fine qualify
furniture. Many items from our regular
stock are now reduced from 10 lo 60 pet.
There is always plenty of free parking
and of course FREE delivery . Enjoy the
economy of quality at Tope's.

DURING AUGUST ONLY

THIS IS OUR BIGGEST SALE EVER

'

UP TO 1f2 OFF

SELIG-. Contemporary Sofa in gold,
and off while paHo.rn , heavy
labnc, extra comfortable, reversible
back and seat cushions.
REG . 5680
SA.LE

ALL STYLES, OUTSTANDING FABRICS,
BEAUTIFUL STYLING IN TRADITIONAL

AND OONTEMPORARY

KROEHLER - Traditional soia and
matching .loveseat, polyester fabric ,
green, whrte, gold floral. Bolsters on
both pieces. flock sample.
.

10% TO 40% OFF

SOFA REG. 595
L.S. REG. '495
1

OOOSE FROM 15 MODELS IN STOCK

'588

DREXEL - Traditional 82" sofa in
gree~ and pastel floral, excellent
quahly and comfort, attached back
rnegs. bolsters.
REG. 5745
SALE

SUCH BEAUTIFUL MlODS AS
CHERRY, OAK, MAPLE AN~ PINE .

'399
5

Y2

SALE •499
S.ALE '299

BO~~R

*OVER 10 DIFFERENT BEDROOM
SUITES ON SALE

UPTO

OFF

595

~

INQ.UDING OCCASIONAL, LOUNGE, REWNER.
B01H UPHOLSTERED- AND WOODEN ROCKERS
SWIVEL AND PARTY CHAIRS
.

S~FAS

BY GILLIAM--A very line
qual~ty manufacturer of Traditional
furntlu~e: All of these are 85" long and
are stnkrngly aHractive.
Regular ·$845 Each
,
Three•are offered on sale at

*OVER
100 CHAIRS ON SALE
.

,.•

EACH

Two Are Now Reduced to

I

495

EACH

HERITAGE - Traditional, blue
geometric cover, 84", buHon back." 2
cush. seat, our finest quality .
REG. S869
.
NOW

'434
Y2
OFF
------------------J""--:-:~:::-~~~~;.,;~
FROM UP TO

*LIVING ROOM AND FAMILY ROOM
TABLES
OVER 16 GROUPS ON SALE
SEVERAL AT CLOSE.()lJT PRICES
WALNUT, MAPLE, OAK, PAINTED. CHERRY, PINE
UPTO

Y2

OFF

SIX FEET IN HEIGHT, MANY DIFFERENT USES:
DESK, BAR, SlORAGE, PHOlllGRAPHIC
EQUIPMENT, STERm AND OF COURSE
FOR BOOKS

1f2

LOVE SEATS

OFF

*OVER 10 ·DIFFERENT DINING ROOM
.
SUITES ON SALE
'

ALL STYLES - ALL ANE QUALITY.
lHESE SUITES ARE BUILT 10 LAST
FOR ALIFETlME.

bac~.

excellent sealing for occasional

charr.
Reg, $425

.

SALE

. •99

:LA-Z-BOY- Pop-up head rest recliner
'"· orange-copper nylon cover , Oak
tnm .
REG. S295
; SALE ·

'177

OR EX EL- Stripe velvet in bold and
green. High back .
REG. $3,38
SALE

'177
chair. the

HERITAGE blue lounge
finest seating you can imagine . .
Geometric cut velvet cover- A man's
chair.
REG. 5549
SALE

.•199
LEATHER-·2 chairs ·and ottoman in
genuine leather by Heritage.
Traditional-! in tan, 1 in dark brown.
lifelime furniture.
Reg. ChairS59~ Sale
~th
Ottoman 225
.P1eces
HIGHLAND HOUSE- Chair in lime
green velvel. beautiful styling. slight
cover damage. Almost unnoticable.
REG . .$278
SALE

. .

'144

RATTAN- Bentwood Rocker, Cane
~:~~~and back, natural finish, only two
SALE

'99

PARTIAL LISTING
For those who can . use a small sofa
these are particularly good values. .
MAXWELL ROYAL - Loveseal,
brown Quaker design, high back, pine
frame.
REG.$495
SALE

MAXyYELL - Royal loveseat, 56"
long, rn green tweed with solid pine
frame, loose cushions lor easy
reupholstering.
REG.$475
SALE

'199
KROEHLER- Loveseat in Early
Amer. styling, blue green cover, nylon
two cushion. high back.
. REG.$395
·SALE
'

'·.

·•199

•.

I
I'

...

•

'

-.

•

••

....."'

..".,.

Many _More Chairs On Sale
Too Numerous To List

••

•
"'

We Accept Federal Food StBmps ~ ~ ~
· . .• . · t' .~ . ;.; , , .PHONE 99_2·3480
.!!Orner Mill a ~a ~nd. SIS·: We reserve the right to limit quanlilies. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

•

BONELESS CUT

"

.

'"·

DINING ROOM SUITES

..

"

~

Li~ht

oak. dining .room suites - 65" lighted
chrna. 4 s1de charrs, .2 arm chairs in green
velvet, server. Table 44x64, ext. to 94 W·2
leaves.
.
.
REG. $1976
SALE
2 Beclutiful Traditional suites- one in white,
one in cherry. Both feature: 52"1ighted china.
·oval table 42x62, ext. to 82", 2 side chairs and 2 ·
arm chairs. Reg. $1280.

".'

Ext~a ~hairs and back pads availiible.
Charrs m gold or green velvet.

...
...."'
..
.......
..

LIVING AND FAMILY ROOM

,••.,

TABLES

....
...•

'"

''•
~

' .

~

5 LBS. OR MORE .

. .

"
FRESH
LEAN

~GROUND .ROUND•....• !~.! 1
USDA CHOICE

1.49_ LB.·

BOILING BEEF.•............L!·.6te

MOTOR OIL ...............................·........... 59~
EVERY DAY LOW PRICE

SMUCKER . ·

"'

CONTAC COLD CAPSULES .. ~~::~:~......~ 11• ·!
'ROLAIDS ................••••..••••.....•..•.•••••.•...... 59"' s

......

69~

. QT. JAR

.WHOLE Dill PICKLES

,.,
I!'&lt;: olio

DURKEE

..~· ·

.....
....
~

. QT. JAR .

SLICED DILL PICKLES

.....
• 4

s also on Sale.

CASH SAVER

25LB.

'

DOG FOOD

SAMSONITE

BAG

5

· COZ.V KITTEN .,

CAT ·FOOD·
HI flO

I

·'

'

l·LB.
BOX

CRACKERS · .
1

69~

. . . -UtC"E'.COCKTAIL

BEEF 51
DUMPL: ·

3 ROLL PKG.

.

MINUTE MAID

~.CHICKEN &amp;

.

:"Ill, TURKEY.

LEMONADE

KRINK~ ~~
PO,TAJOES

CANS

69~

.

\oo

• )filii\
)
s~ !!.~ 1\2

EGGS

GRADE B lARGE DOZ.

69~

QT•

·

DAIRY BUY

· ·.

•

•Fine Furniture
•Custom Drapery

f

'ill• ,.•

l1

•Carpet

•Interior Design

lfz

•••
...

,,...

....

(One block below City Park)

GAL

8
PAK

2teSTALK

!

BROi.JGHTON'S
lfzGAL
HOMO MILK

PRODUCE -

CELERY

BRetJOHTON'S
2% Mltie··d'
~~~~

79~

I

.;

16 OUNCE
RETURNABLE BOffiES

.,,,

8 PAK - 16 Ol Bll.S.

69~
~

I

$109

DIET RITE

8 PAK
16 OUNCE
BOTTLES

PEACHES

. • l'
\

I
B
~

l

~

~

....
.
..

~

l!

·~

~,,,,3J~

~

s:~R: 99~. 2~:~ss~ !:·· 49~

oz.$·}

~

'

.

BAIIQUETDINNERS

$299
15

I

.

~1C~tTENNIAL DECANTER

......

Hours:
Daily 9:30-5
Mon.- Fri. 9:30·8

.. '·!!:

'1.19LB.

QUAKER STATE

·~

•

MINUTE STEAK

WINCHESTER LITTLE CIGARS........~2 29

.,

VALLEY BELL

ONE SEl.ECJED GROUP FROM 5K TO 751JJ OFF ·

5

...

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

N~k or pine 3 pc. set, Reg. $357

USDA CHOICE -

BUCKET STEAK

·~

'

HAM SALAD
LB. 79e · .

USDA CHOICE

09

·•

HOME MADE

WIENERS
LB. 79e

·

GROUND CHUCK.••. ~! ate
l\1~.. CI'IOfCE ·~

'

SUPERIORS
ALL MEAT

~

sn •122 ·

·.. .•..•...~;·69°
CHUCK ROAST
.·
CENTER CUT

LB. 89~

.,

.

All other pieces also 114 Off,
1 group only. Must sell in sets of coffee and 2
end tables .
·
• Butcher Block chrome trim, 3 pc. ·Reg. 51 ' 5· SALE
PC.

Second at Grape
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0332

10% '

SAUSAGE

SttORT RIBS OF BEEF~.L!~7te

~

SALE •59 ea.

FRESH LEAN

59~

RATH BREAKFAST

~

...••·•

Walnut Contemporary Tables, very well built.
All pieces available - end, coffee, storage
cocktail or end. Reg. $79 ea.

La

CHUCK ·ROAS1 ..••.... ~~.ttel,
,RESH LEAN

~

SALE '1144

ENGLISH CUT

•

"'

'1295

'

GROUND BEEfL .....L~.6te

.-..

"'
..,,

.

'

USDA CHOICE ARM CUT

•
".•
oj

PARTIAL LISTING

Furnit:w-e
Galleries

IVERY PICTURE AND WALL
ACCESSORY IN OUR ENTIRE
STORE REDUCED

CHUCK .ROAST

CHUCK ROAST......•.•~B~ ate

.....,
..
....•
.

.

These all measure 6'x9', all bound and
enhance any room. .
CARD TABLES AND CHAIRS
' He~vy .woven !lecorator rug in wool,
des1gn rn greert and biHersweet, floor
sample.
Chairs-Walnut or gold
Reg s 1
'144
All
St
I
Reg. $399
.ee
SlO' a$8e
SALE
White Nylon Shag, floor sample.
Padded Seat
$15 $12
Padded Seat and Back
95
Reg. sl
SALE ..
$19 su
~1 9
TABLE5--Walnut or gold
2 in yellow. 1-a high low Shag.
· 30" Square
S20 516
1- two-tone. both nylon
34" Square
$25 S20
Reg . S99 ea. ,
. _.. .SALE ,66 . t---::::o:=:-:-:~~~-...,.•••
2 in yellow. 1-a l!(gh low Shag.
MISCELLANEOUS
' •'
1- two tone. both nylon
' Contemporary Book Cases
1/a Off
Reg. $99 ea.
SALE
Ste~rns a~d Fqster Mattresses and Box
Orange, Nylon Reg. S85 SA
. LE
Spnngs. Firm and extra firm. All sizes now on sale.
•
Red . Nylon. Reg . $79 SALE '99 .' Cr~denz~- 67" length with doors. Anti qua
•
Green-White Shag, Nylon
,
white w1th green trim.
·
.·
.
•
•
Reg. $130
' SALE '99
Reg. 5349 .
SALE $199
' .••.
13 MORE ON .DISPLAY
• 2 Louis XIV Living Room Tables, white.
'
Reg . $195 ea.
SALE S88ea.

"' NOW REDUCED

BLAKE CUT

....,
.~

ONLY '199

'55

~0!

AT MARK V
SPECIAL PRICE

• Open Dai~ 9 to 10
··Sun.,10 to 10 .

CH'UCK·· ,ROAST•....•.•. ~.7te

'

Outstanding Candlelight Pine Suite, 66" triple
dresser with deck mirror, cannon ba 11 bed,
chest on chest.
Reg . S10i4;
SALE '899

AREA RUGS

·

COOLER
For a quick
cooloflle-ofl In
hot weather, run cool water
over your wrists.

iijj ·

...
."'•
.l"".

.,.....

Close out on beautiful light oak suite with
bright brass hardware. 72" triple dresser with
pediment mirror, 9 poster bed, ·queen size. 6
drawer chest on chest, night stand - "The
Country Look".
Reg . $1302 .
SALE . , .

12 other Tiibles . Grou

~ ·~ 1':J..

1

...••

SALE '699

BEAUTIFUL

.

•

Mrs. Fraix:es Martin, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Powell ,
Wanda Eblin, Mrs. Mildred
Jacobs, Mrs. Donna Gilmore,
Mrs. nna Jacobs, Joan and
Harry Clark, and the Rev:
and Mrs. Shook.

*

Rural English Bedroom Suites- In oak, triple
dresser with arch mirror, panel headboard
with frame; ~ drawer chest. 2 drawer night ·
stand. Reg. saao.

3

meeting gifts were presented
to the Rev . Mr . and Mrs.
Shook to welcome them back
for anotller year.
Mrs. Wright read tile Bible
preface. Mrs, Mildred Jacobs
had devotions reading "Little
But Powerful " from James 3,
and Mrs. Martln had prayer.
Ice cream and cake were
served to Jack, Jane and
Sean Jacobs, Frank and Ida
Martin, Frankie and Steve,

BEEF SALE

"'•

'
•'

Jean Wrigh( Mrs. Donna
Gilmore, Mrs. Tina Jacobs
and Mrs. Shook. Reports
were given by tllose reading
books not on the required list
A report was given on the
r~ent Ohio Conference at
Mansfield and it was noled
tllal women of tlle l!lCal
church assisted in serving a
tea. The Rev . Floyd Shook
was reassigned to the Laurel
Cliff Church and at the

USDA CHOIC.E

'

PARTIAL LISTING

'599

t-~-=:.::..::..::.....::!~~~~-...J REG. $155

'1'99

BOOKCASE

UPTO

.
99
HEf!ITAGE lime green traditional low

•340
.

*FAMOUS LA-Z-BOY RECLINERS
FROM

SELIG - Chrome arm green velvet
co11temporary lounge chair.
Reg. $340
SALE '

b,ro~n

"""
Denny, Judy Harrison,
James Barrows, Jeanette
Barrows, Ray Barrows,
Jimmy Barrows, Harley
Eblin, Sr., Ja· ne Eblin, Harley
Eblin, Jr., Brian Eblin, Stacy
Eblin, Cindy Blackell.
Tammy Johnson , Dave
Johnson, Randy Snider,
Delores Elliott, Gregory
Hall, De Ann Denny, Brian

•

BEDROOM SUITES

PARTIAL LISTING

PARTIAL LISTING

Hall, Betty R--.. , CrystBI

w

.

CHAIRS

SOFAS

*OVER '30 SOFAS MARKED DOWN

Hope Eblin, Robert Brush
Da
B ush 01
'
wn r ' ana Brush,
Roberl Eblin, Elva Grlll!ser
Don Ebli n, 8leve Eblin •
Wanda EbUn, Robert Barton '
PattY Baron,
1 Scottie Barton '
JoeY Bar1on, Edllh Barton •
Bren c1a wyatt, Robby Wyatt,'
Rebecca Eblin, Mamie
Stephenscm, Jimmie Snider
Bill Stephenson, Lawrenc~
Eblin, Barry Stewart, Judv

•

Reading awards presented.Thursday

.....

w•

(All ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SAl,£)

•

'

Weal Tope's hope your summer hes
been enjoyable and very relaxing.
And as family activities and needs
return to the home, treat yourself to
Tope's truly fine quality furniture.
We are specialists in bringing you
and your type of furniture together.

PARTIAL LISTING BELOW
.

•

The. annual Eblin family
reunloo
wu held Swldav at
lheroadlldeiNirkonRou~33
-' til 82
be
"'o-bertm~
Barto rs attending.
""
n gave prayer
prece dl ng dl nner and
recognluon was given
the
.
t member. Don Eblin
oldes
68, and Adam Wyatt'
youngest, five weeks.
'
Attending were !fa Eblin
Robert Eblin, Hyllis Eblin'
•

'

Ebhn, Roy Eblin, Olio (;,
IA!hn, Adam Wyall, Shirley
Jeffers, Donald Jeffers
Ricky Jeffers, Barbar~
Eblin, Jeff DeLong, Kenneth
Read ing awards were
Eblin, Donna Eblin, Tony
presenled
by Mrs. Doris
Eblin, John Eblin, James
Shook !o members of the
Eblin and Lois J. Eblin.
Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
LABCOATSCORES
Church at a meeting Thur~­
II you wanl the look of "work day night at the Ohio River
clothes" withoullhe expense, campsite of Mr. and Mrs.
think abOut a patch-pocketed Uoyd Wright.
medical label coat, avaUable
Receiving awards for Bible
at uniform houses and perfect readings and books from a
for a different cover-up. required reading list were
Especially, If you dye it.
Mrs. Frances Martin, Mrs.

62 attend Eblin reunion

'

••

'

You Are Cordially Invited To Our Semi-Annual

SAVE

'

11- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleporl.Pomeroy•0 ·· ru-•·
-...y, Aug. 10,1976

...,...,

•,

�Morris reunion
held july 31

•

Polly's Pointers

Areunion was held July 31 ·
at the home of Mr. and Mra.
Gerald Morris, Rutland.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Bachner; •
Ml~dleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Morris and grandlon,
New Marshfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Nelson Morris, Dona
Howett, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Sanders, Carrie, ..,;;...,
Brenda, Doug and Shelley,
Mrs. Myrle Knopp, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Knopp, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Knopp, New
Carlisle; Mr. and Mr1. Dot!
Sanders, Athens ;- Mr. and
Mrs. Con Ator, Myrta
Stanley, Albany, and Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Morris, Cathy and
Steve, Rutland,

Benzine removes
.transfer patterns
DEAR POLLY- How does
one remove excessive transfer pattern marks !rom quilt
blocks? I am embroidering
some and there are many
such marks that I do not want
t~ embroider. I washed one
block but the marks
remained. - MRS. T.D.
DEAR MRS. T.D. - One
maker of such patterns
suggests removing blue
·transfers by soaking In
benzine for obout five
·minutes and then washing
with pure soap and lukewarm
water.
Another
says
washablclabrlcs require only ·
mild soap and water (which
you said did not work In your
case). For non-washables,
place on a paper towel with
the stamped side up and rub
with a cloth dipped In
cleaning fluid. Rub will! clean
parts of the cloth until trailsfer disappears. I think the
latter could also be tried on
washable Iabrie. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is that

fSOCiar

I Calendar

'l'llree'a u Bit Crowded Here
Dear Rap :
I advertlaed for women roommates to share eJ)lel18es on
my apartment. The two I chose seemed fine at the time but 1
whenever it rams there are . soon found lhilt one is a slob •nd the other a bimbo. Ou~de of
.
always inconsiderate drivers this, they're quite easy to get along with.
It
turns
out
I
do
all
the
housecleaning
and
cooking,
and
halt
who race madly along very
the
time
I
can't
even
sleep
because
Trtsh
Is
noisily
entertaining
close to the curb and splash
pedestrians wl!o are waiting a man.
When I complain, they call me prudl.sh and picky. n 1
to cross lhe street. I have had
throw
these two out, is there any chance I'd get better room·
rain and niud splashed all
mates
next time, or are all single females this way nowadays?
over my clothes by such nuts,
PRISCU..LA
.
even when I step back as far
as I can. ~ MRS. L.H.
DEAR POLLY - L. P. Dear Pris :
Odds on getting nearilerfect roommates from an
wan ted to know about
advertisement
for same are about par with wimlng the giant
cleaning while suede leather.
panda
at
a
carnival
stand.
I found I could remove axle
In
apartment
sharing,
you takes their money and you
'grease from my white suede
THE FIVE GENERA T!ON lamlly pictured here Includes, left to right, William Haley ,
takes
your
chances,
Good
luck
- but don't count on it. dress with a super spot
Rutland, the greal-f!re&amp;t1!randfather; .Bernice Nelson, Rutland, the great-1lfandmother; .
remover sold by a well known HELEN
Bob Nelaon, Owensb&lt;ro, Ky. , the grandfather, and Vicki Nelson Fiorella lflOlher of Jill
+++
door to door salesman for
SEPARATE SOLUTION
Nelson Fiorella, OwenSboro.
.,,
'
·
Dear
Priscilla
:
brushes. Spray on a WHITE
Your best hell for vacation
Why not depend on attrition ? Triah will surely move out to
cloth and then rub the spot
clothes ·are. inlercba~eable
CHECKING S'I'RAPS
be
with
a man soon, and "the slob" may decide you're toe .. ;;..'-..;,_'*'-~~~---~~~-~'%.'%"«'' SEN 10 R Cittiens Garden
instead of spraying directly
separales.
Iota of scar- ·
Club
Wednesday
at
I
p.m.
To avoid peeping bra straps vas, bells Use
on it so as to avoid rings . I picky and leave. Meanwhile scout around for more compatible
and
jewelry to
Bring heavy cord for under a lank lop, wear a
but don't lay your hopes on advertisements next
discovered this nine years roommates
chBIIIJe
the
look
of
an ouUit.
macrame .
time. - SUE
strapless bandeau bra.
ago and am still using it and
PAST COUNCILORS
+++
also for an occasional Rap :
C
LUB,
Chesler Council 323, .
cll!aning of my while suede
People often ask, "What is Hell?"
.D. of A. pi~nic, lodge hall, 6 p.
shoes. - DORIS.
The answer is : IllVE.
m. Wednesday .
DEAR READERS - Do
WEDNESDAY
No matter if it's pareni..:hlld love, man-woman love or
WHITE ROSE Lodge , 6
test llrst on an lncoasplcuous whatever type, love is Hell oo earth.
POMEROY Youth Baseball p.m. W~nesday for a picnic
.
'·
s.,Ot. There are different
Sooner or later you lose Jove, by death or separation or league picnic and swimming
suede fabrics now on the rejection. What makes it-worse Is you can't lace the !act lhat party, Royal Oak Park, 6 at the home of Mrs. ~rothy
market and wbal works well one day your loved ooe will be gbne, thus making the loss p.m. Hot dogs and beverage Morris, Soutlt Second Ave.,
on one may not work. on WleX)lOCted. This deepens the wound. TIJere may be heaven furnished . Each family bring Middleport. Members are to
take a covered dish and their
another. - POLLY.
alter death, but I truly cannot see a Hell worse lhan loss of the covered dish and table ser- own table service . Families
DEAR POLLY - I have a ooe you love. - A 16-YEAR-OLD WHO KNOWS
viCe . Fee_of 50 cents to swim . invited.
most considerate friend .
WHITE ROSE Lodge ,
When she introduces me to ·Dear 16:
THURSDAY
annual
picnic, 6 p.m. Wedsomeone I should know and
MEIGS
COUNTY Humane
There's one Hell worse than loss or love - and that's nesday at the home of Mrs.
may not be able lo place right inability to loye. Doo't ever become :,o fearful ollosing that Dorothy
Society,
7:30
Thursday night
Morris , , South
away she always says "You you won 'I risk loving . - HELEN
al
Pomeroy
Thrift Sh op.
Second Ave., Middlepor t.
remember Mary Jones from
.
'
.
.
+++
Members to take covered Public welcome.
Chicago•" or that Mary 16:
AUG
26·SEPT6
THURSDAY.
August
26
dish and own table service.
PAST OFFICERS, Racine
.
.
*THo OSMONDS
Jones is someone's sister and
STARRING
'
What you don 'I know yet is that loss of love Is only a very
Chapler 134, OES to meet at
so on. This jogs one's temporary Hell. Recuperation usually takes less lhan two Families invited .
World's !goNNIE AND MARIE
7:30p.m. Thursday at temple
ROSE
GARDEN
Club,
memory just enough to avoid months.! HOPE you'llagree with me, come October.- SUE
Lar~est :,~ LAN . wAYNE. MERRILL. JAY
Wednesday, 8 p.m. at the to make pin-Oils for 75th
any embarrassment. +++
•JIMMY
'
anniversary
observance.
home of Mrs. Roy })lmigan.
ree Willi
HATTIE.
Rap :
DEAR POLLY :- I always
Entertainment Mo~~c~ugust 27 ·
•• . ·
I'm 18 and my problem is lhat my pannts are aU set for . ~+....~4MH+H+~.....H)~H............_
had
trouble
getting · metobectme a doctor.'l'llat'sall they talk about!
Program * K.C. AND THE SUNSHINE BAND
'
readymade draperies to hang
* DAN FLEENOR' S
I'm not sure what I want to be yet, but I know it's not a
AUTO Tl!llli&lt;UiiQYI.
properly a I Ute bottom, until! doctor!
·
SATURDAY. Augu ~ l 28
decided lo .use two and lour
* TELLY SAVALAS
Should I become one just to keep things cool between my
inch wide bands cut from folks and ine, or risk the chance of them not speaking to me? -~·--F-LEENOR ' S
paper grocery bags. Just DOC?- NO!
~n the draperies arid pleat
Mon., Tues:. Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00
them to the bottom with your Doc-No :
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
bands. Be sure to check the
Level with your folks. If you aren't geared for medical
length to make sure you are training, you'll never make it through medical school. Better
properly positioning the they should !mow this now !hail waste years on false hopea. pleats. Slip on a band and fold HELEN AND SUE
over just enough to keep the
.
.H'IJlli.Aml~!li!!.11! .
pleats in their proper places
THURSDAY Sep tember 2
and then staple in piBce.
area churcbes are invited to
HYMN SING SLATED
• RED $KELTON
Leave these bands on for two
~'lEN!; SIMA.Atl
A hymn sing will be held participate, there will be a .
FRIDAY. Sep tember:.
or •three days and wben Sunday . afternoon al the special group from the
773-5592
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va.
* OHIO PLAYERS
removed the plea Is will look Bradford Church of Christ at Gallipolis Church of Christ,
• Q!:tJO STATE.~~I!ITRACTOR PV.LL
as good as in custom-made 2 p.m. under sponsorship of 'lThe &lt;lristian--Heir~'' .
SATURDAY. Septembe r 4
• THE BOB HOPE SHOW
drapes. - PAM. .
. the. church youth group. All
* JOHN DAVIDSON

S'
I

4

'•
'='
&gt;

I

TUESDAY
TiiOSE persons Interested
in Ute fight against antihunting groups are urged to
attend a meeting in Jackson
Thesday at the Memorial
Building, 7:30 p.m. Anyone
mlerested in protecting the
rlghl to hlDll, fish and trap is .
invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Cl ub, 7:30 Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Dollie Hayes,
Workshop
on
flower
arranging for the Meigs
Co unty Fair with each
member to display and ex· ·
plain construction of a flower
arrangement. RuUt Moore
will . have the ecology
message on preserving
water,
FAIRPLAY CHAPEL, 7:30
Tuesday meeting with all
churches and singers invited.
.Chapel is located on Meigs
County road I, off State Rouie
32!i or 124. Rev. Thereon .
Durham ·is pastor. the
evening wiU feature a special
speaker.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday meeting to
The first birthday of Gary
vacate the hall for the Meigs
County Fair.
Edwin Snouffer II was
with a party at the
REGULAR MEETING OF celebrated
home
of
his
parents, Mr. and
Racine Masonic Lodge 461,
Mrs.
Gary
E. SnoUffer, I
7:30p.m. Thesday at Masooic
Uncoln
Drive,
Pomeroy.
hall . Work will be in first
Gifts were presented to him
degree.
by Mr. and Mrs. Bill
REGULAR MEETING Snouffer, grandparenta,
Chapter 53, D.A.V., for Melody . SnoUffer, an aunt;
Tuesday cancelled. Instead a Mr. and Mrs. ·Dana SnoUffer
picnic wiil be held at 6 p.m. at and their son, Joshua, Mr.
Fa-est Acres Park. These and Mrs. Donald M. Newell,
at tending are to take a grandparents; Mrs. Maxine
covered dillh . In case of rain, Brumley,
a
'g reat·
picnic will be held al Chapter grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
H(IJ}e.
John Pope and children, Otad
and Johnny. Tina and Shelly
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID- Bartels and children, Joshua
DLEPORT Uons Club, noon and Megan.
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.

FRIIM-Y UNTIL 8 PM

1

LB.

100% PURE LEAN

/

GROUND BEEF
USDA CHOICE LEAN &amp; TENDER

BONELESS CUBE-.STEAK
BY THE PIECE

89~

LB.

LB.

'1.59

.

LB.

CHUNK BOLOGNA

49~

.

'

~

'
Admi~s• on S2 00 lor Adults . 50~ for Ch rldrcn 12 and ui)Cier
Ch1ldrtJn 12 aml under FRI:E weekdays unltl Noon

I

••

•••
:

FRENCH CITY ·
USDA CHOICE

§...=

;

CUT GREEN BEANS......... 4~~~s $1

ROAST

3 ll. 49~

10 LB. $109

SELF RISING FLOUR.........~--·-~-.79~
FABRIC SOFTENER .:........ ~~~~~~.99$

Me~!

.

.....••
.
•

::•

~

LB.~~~

..•

...•
t

~ ~~·-:-':7:~·:-:

r:

•;

• • - ~•

COUPON

. 'I

:•

1: :
BOX
: :IJ
lj. :
Expires: 8-14-76
.
: -"
·.
Twin City Gateway
.. I
.~........... ·~·f!!til""·....~·~·w· ................................................... "IJ:.'
J z::-====·~1
0... . . . .
-

::
3

C.

.

GROUND
BEEF
A~ount

Any

lb.

79

'

SAUSAGE

BOLOGNA

24

oz: • , 69

09

59~

12 OZ.

•

•

0

•

.,..

•

•

W/C

•

•

..

•

•

•

•

Expires : 8-14-76
•
•

•

•

• . ·I·.

CATSUP

.

59~

•

•

•

0

-:f

•

•

•

•

•

•
•

•

•

•
0

•

•

•

•

•

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~
)II ~·

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0

0

•

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~ ~- ·

t

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....
•

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0

•

•

•

•

•

••

COUPO N

-

WESSON OIL
W/C

38 oz. Bn.

Expires: 8-14-76
•

Crf

•

NO. 125

WIC

Twiri City Gateway

•

-

•••

•

•

:-P.

,. ~~·!·~-~-~-~-~-~·!·~-~-~-~-~-~-~~~~~~
·-·- .....
~ ..

W/C

Twin City Gateway

HUNT'S

20 oz.
· BTL

•

49~ .

NO. 105

~ -

•

l' ·

I

CLOROX 2

SUGAR CRISP

•

TASTE

COUPON r

r

-~

Ohio Valley

•·--":'"":--;1

. . . . . . . . . ·I

POST

PALMOLIVE

DISHWASHING LIQUID.. ~~-~~:~1

20 LB~BAG

'

.•

.... $]29 .=
4 CUT PORK LOIN •••••••••••••••••••••~·..... ~ ••

FAMILY
1

or Martha White

STA-PUF

White Potatoes

•

LIBBY'S

Gold

U.S. NO. 1

I•

CHUCK

ONIONS

lA

SIRLOIN TIP STEAK

Cr rcus

Shivo The- Clown
Ohro VrUage
Hrgh School Jazz Feslr..-al
H•gh School Marchr:'\9 Band
Festrval
• AII ·O hiO State F.a ~r Band
• AII ·Ohio State Fa1r
Youth Cho1r
• All -OhiO Sta te Fatr
· Voulh Syn'lphony
• Nahona t Amateur Box.ng
Tournament
• World s Largesl Sla te Ftw
Fme AilS Exh1b1t
. • Worlds Larges.t S.latc Farr
Horse Show
• WOrlds Largest Lrvestock
Exhibr\lon
• World 's largest Jumor Farr

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

TOWN HOUSE CRACKERS~~~·69~

&amp;&amp;
TISSUE.. ~.~-~~~.~~: . ~·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

•
•
•
•

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP "'1
TWP. CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY

RUSSET
POTA'(DES

COTTONELLE

LB.

• Harness Racrng

KEEBLER

FABRIC sonENER .........'.~~-~~:8,

RUMP ROAST

Lives tock Au ction
• Comme rcral LrVe stock Sfl l(~

SALAD DRESSING .............. ~~-. .79~

. ·

USDA CHOICE-BONELESS, ROLLED &amp;TIED

. • Sale of Champrons

NEW MAID

8fte
TRASH BAGS ............... ~.~~--~~- ~·

LB.

• NEll SED AKA
* DEMOLITION DERBY

SALTINE CRACKERS........ 3~;:49~

.

ROUND STEAK

•

PRIDE

Extra HeavY.

'1.29
'1.29
•1.39

USDA CHOICE

*

• .!2!J.!! !lA\!1 oSD!'

NOODLES ................................. ~.~~-- 39~

.

LB.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

MONDAY (LAB OR OAY) . Sept ember 8

INN MAID

DOWNEY

STEAK

Open Eves. Ti19:00.

• O.HIQ STAT~ .I'~~ TIII\CTO~ PV.l-~ ·
SU NDAY, September 5
THE BOB HOPE SHOW

ACTUAL USE .REPORT

POTATO STICKS...................;~~~z_., 49~

·

QUANnTIES RIGHTS RESERVED

.

MASON FURNITURE

GREER

BES PAK

CHUCK

'

GARY SNOUFFER

Y£U.OW

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Social
Calendar

First birthday is observed

,,_.

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS - 9 AM TO 6 PM
PRICES EFFECTIV~ AUGUST 10 THRU 14

Expires : 8-14-76

:

.

Twin City Gateway

:·

~-~·~·'!·~·~·~·~·:·~·~·"!·:·~·~·~·~·!!·~·~·!1
7 ?L';?!f:!;!;t:f:]ti;! :t•;f;tti;Z !t'ti
•

.

.

�Morris reunion
held july 31

•

Polly's Pointers

Areunion was held July 31 ·
at the home of Mr. and Mra.
Gerald Morris, Rutland.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Bachner; •
Ml~dleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Morris and grandlon,
New Marshfield; Mr. and
Mrs. Nelson Morris, Dona
Howett, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Sanders, Carrie, ..,;;...,
Brenda, Doug and Shelley,
Mrs. Myrle Knopp, Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Knopp, Dayton; Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Knopp, New
Carlisle; Mr. and Mr1. Dot!
Sanders, Athens ;- Mr. and
Mrs. Con Ator, Myrta
Stanley, Albany, and Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Morris, Cathy and
Steve, Rutland,

Benzine removes
.transfer patterns
DEAR POLLY- How does
one remove excessive transfer pattern marks !rom quilt
blocks? I am embroidering
some and there are many
such marks that I do not want
t~ embroider. I washed one
block but the marks
remained. - MRS. T.D.
DEAR MRS. T.D. - One
maker of such patterns
suggests removing blue
·transfers by soaking In
benzine for obout five
·minutes and then washing
with pure soap and lukewarm
water.
Another
says
washablclabrlcs require only ·
mild soap and water (which
you said did not work In your
case). For non-washables,
place on a paper towel with
the stamped side up and rub
with a cloth dipped In
cleaning fluid. Rub will! clean
parts of the cloth until trailsfer disappears. I think the
latter could also be tried on
washable Iabrie. - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - One of
my Pet Peeves is that

fSOCiar

I Calendar

'l'llree'a u Bit Crowded Here
Dear Rap :
I advertlaed for women roommates to share eJ)lel18es on
my apartment. The two I chose seemed fine at the time but 1
whenever it rams there are . soon found lhilt one is a slob •nd the other a bimbo. Ou~de of
.
always inconsiderate drivers this, they're quite easy to get along with.
It
turns
out
I
do
all
the
housecleaning
and
cooking,
and
halt
who race madly along very
the
time
I
can't
even
sleep
because
Trtsh
Is
noisily
entertaining
close to the curb and splash
pedestrians wl!o are waiting a man.
When I complain, they call me prudl.sh and picky. n 1
to cross lhe street. I have had
throw
these two out, is there any chance I'd get better room·
rain and niud splashed all
mates
next time, or are all single females this way nowadays?
over my clothes by such nuts,
PRISCU..LA
.
even when I step back as far
as I can. ~ MRS. L.H.
DEAR POLLY - L. P. Dear Pris :
Odds on getting nearilerfect roommates from an
wan ted to know about
advertisement
for same are about par with wimlng the giant
cleaning while suede leather.
panda
at
a
carnival
stand.
I found I could remove axle
In
apartment
sharing,
you takes their money and you
'grease from my white suede
THE FIVE GENERA T!ON lamlly pictured here Includes, left to right, William Haley ,
takes
your
chances,
Good
luck
- but don't count on it. dress with a super spot
Rutland, the greal-f!re&amp;t1!randfather; .Bernice Nelson, Rutland, the great-1lfandmother; .
remover sold by a well known HELEN
Bob Nelaon, Owensb&lt;ro, Ky. , the grandfather, and Vicki Nelson Fiorella lflOlher of Jill
+++
door to door salesman for
SEPARATE SOLUTION
Nelson Fiorella, OwenSboro.
.,,
'
·
Dear
Priscilla
:
brushes. Spray on a WHITE
Your best hell for vacation
Why not depend on attrition ? Triah will surely move out to
cloth and then rub the spot
clothes ·are. inlercba~eable
CHECKING S'I'RAPS
be
with
a man soon, and "the slob" may decide you're toe .. ;;..'-..;,_'*'-~~~---~~~-~'%.'%"«'' SEN 10 R Cittiens Garden
instead of spraying directly
separales.
Iota of scar- ·
Club
Wednesday
at
I
p.m.
To avoid peeping bra straps vas, bells Use
on it so as to avoid rings . I picky and leave. Meanwhile scout around for more compatible
and
jewelry to
Bring heavy cord for under a lank lop, wear a
but don't lay your hopes on advertisements next
discovered this nine years roommates
chBIIIJe
the
look
of
an ouUit.
macrame .
time. - SUE
strapless bandeau bra.
ago and am still using it and
PAST COUNCILORS
+++
also for an occasional Rap :
C
LUB,
Chesler Council 323, .
cll!aning of my while suede
People often ask, "What is Hell?"
.D. of A. pi~nic, lodge hall, 6 p.
shoes. - DORIS.
The answer is : IllVE.
m. Wednesday .
DEAR READERS - Do
WEDNESDAY
No matter if it's pareni..:hlld love, man-woman love or
WHITE ROSE Lodge , 6
test llrst on an lncoasplcuous whatever type, love is Hell oo earth.
POMEROY Youth Baseball p.m. W~nesday for a picnic
.
'·
s.,Ot. There are different
Sooner or later you lose Jove, by death or separation or league picnic and swimming
suede fabrics now on the rejection. What makes it-worse Is you can't lace the !act lhat party, Royal Oak Park, 6 at the home of Mrs. ~rothy
market and wbal works well one day your loved ooe will be gbne, thus making the loss p.m. Hot dogs and beverage Morris, Soutlt Second Ave.,
on one may not work. on WleX)lOCted. This deepens the wound. TIJere may be heaven furnished . Each family bring Middleport. Members are to
take a covered dish and their
another. - POLLY.
alter death, but I truly cannot see a Hell worse lhan loss of the covered dish and table ser- own table service . Families
DEAR POLLY - I have a ooe you love. - A 16-YEAR-OLD WHO KNOWS
viCe . Fee_of 50 cents to swim . invited.
most considerate friend .
WHITE ROSE Lodge ,
When she introduces me to ·Dear 16:
THURSDAY
annual
picnic, 6 p.m. Wedsomeone I should know and
MEIGS
COUNTY Humane
There's one Hell worse than loss or love - and that's nesday at the home of Mrs.
may not be able lo place right inability to loye. Doo't ever become :,o fearful ollosing that Dorothy
Society,
7:30
Thursday night
Morris , , South
away she always says "You you won 'I risk loving . - HELEN
al
Pomeroy
Thrift Sh op.
Second Ave., Middlepor t.
remember Mary Jones from
.
'
.
.
+++
Members to take covered Public welcome.
Chicago•" or that Mary 16:
AUG
26·SEPT6
THURSDAY.
August
26
dish and own table service.
PAST OFFICERS, Racine
.
.
*THo OSMONDS
Jones is someone's sister and
STARRING
'
What you don 'I know yet is that loss of love Is only a very
Chapler 134, OES to meet at
so on. This jogs one's temporary Hell. Recuperation usually takes less lhan two Families invited .
World's !goNNIE AND MARIE
7:30p.m. Thursday at temple
ROSE
GARDEN
Club,
memory just enough to avoid months.! HOPE you'llagree with me, come October.- SUE
Lar~est :,~ LAN . wAYNE. MERRILL. JAY
Wednesday, 8 p.m. at the to make pin-Oils for 75th
any embarrassment. +++
•JIMMY
'
anniversary
observance.
home of Mrs. Roy })lmigan.
ree Willi
HATTIE.
Rap :
DEAR POLLY :- I always
Entertainment Mo~~c~ugust 27 ·
•• . ·
I'm 18 and my problem is lhat my pannts are aU set for . ~+....~4MH+H+~.....H)~H............_
had
trouble
getting · metobectme a doctor.'l'llat'sall they talk about!
Program * K.C. AND THE SUNSHINE BAND
'
readymade draperies to hang
* DAN FLEENOR' S
I'm not sure what I want to be yet, but I know it's not a
AUTO Tl!llli&lt;UiiQYI.
properly a I Ute bottom, until! doctor!
·
SATURDAY. Augu ~ l 28
decided lo .use two and lour
* TELLY SAVALAS
Should I become one just to keep things cool between my
inch wide bands cut from folks and ine, or risk the chance of them not speaking to me? -~·--F-LEENOR ' S
paper grocery bags. Just DOC?- NO!
~n the draperies arid pleat
Mon., Tues:. Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00
them to the bottom with your Doc-No :
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
bands. Be sure to check the
Level with your folks. If you aren't geared for medical
length to make sure you are training, you'll never make it through medical school. Better
properly positioning the they should !mow this now !hail waste years on false hopea. pleats. Slip on a band and fold HELEN AND SUE
over just enough to keep the
.
.H'IJlli.Aml~!li!!.11! .
pleats in their proper places
THURSDAY Sep tember 2
and then staple in piBce.
area churcbes are invited to
HYMN SING SLATED
• RED $KELTON
Leave these bands on for two
~'lEN!; SIMA.Atl
A hymn sing will be held participate, there will be a .
FRIDAY. Sep tember:.
or •three days and wben Sunday . afternoon al the special group from the
773-5592
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va.
* OHIO PLAYERS
removed the plea Is will look Bradford Church of Christ at Gallipolis Church of Christ,
• Q!:tJO STATE.~~I!ITRACTOR PV.LL
as good as in custom-made 2 p.m. under sponsorship of 'lThe &lt;lristian--Heir~'' .
SATURDAY. Septembe r 4
• THE BOB HOPE SHOW
drapes. - PAM. .
. the. church youth group. All
* JOHN DAVIDSON

S'
I

4

'•
'='
&gt;

I

TUESDAY
TiiOSE persons Interested
in Ute fight against antihunting groups are urged to
attend a meeting in Jackson
Thesday at the Memorial
Building, 7:30 p.m. Anyone
mlerested in protecting the
rlghl to hlDll, fish and trap is .
invited.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Cl ub, 7:30 Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Dollie Hayes,
Workshop
on
flower
arranging for the Meigs
Co unty Fair with each
member to display and ex· ·
plain construction of a flower
arrangement. RuUt Moore
will . have the ecology
message on preserving
water,
FAIRPLAY CHAPEL, 7:30
Tuesday meeting with all
churches and singers invited.
.Chapel is located on Meigs
County road I, off State Rouie
32!i or 124. Rev. Thereon .
Durham ·is pastor. the
evening wiU feature a special
speaker.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday meeting to
The first birthday of Gary
vacate the hall for the Meigs
County Fair.
Edwin Snouffer II was
with a party at the
REGULAR MEETING OF celebrated
home
of
his
parents, Mr. and
Racine Masonic Lodge 461,
Mrs.
Gary
E. SnoUffer, I
7:30p.m. Thesday at Masooic
Uncoln
Drive,
Pomeroy.
hall . Work will be in first
Gifts were presented to him
degree.
by Mr. and Mrs. Bill
REGULAR MEETING Snouffer, grandparenta,
Chapter 53, D.A.V., for Melody . SnoUffer, an aunt;
Tuesday cancelled. Instead a Mr. and Mrs. ·Dana SnoUffer
picnic wiil be held at 6 p.m. at and their son, Joshua, Mr.
Fa-est Acres Park. These and Mrs. Donald M. Newell,
at tending are to take a grandparents; Mrs. Maxine
covered dillh . In case of rain, Brumley,
a
'g reat·
picnic will be held al Chapter grandmother, Mr. and Mrs.
H(IJ}e.
John Pope and children, Otad
and Johnny. Tina and Shelly
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID- Bartels and children, Joshua
DLEPORT Uons Club, noon and Megan.
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.

FRIIM-Y UNTIL 8 PM

1

LB.

100% PURE LEAN

/

GROUND BEEF
USDA CHOICE LEAN &amp; TENDER

BONELESS CUBE-.STEAK
BY THE PIECE

89~

LB.

LB.

'1.59

.

LB.

CHUNK BOLOGNA

49~

.

'

~

'
Admi~s• on S2 00 lor Adults . 50~ for Ch rldrcn 12 and ui)Cier
Ch1ldrtJn 12 aml under FRI:E weekdays unltl Noon

I

••

•••
:

FRENCH CITY ·
USDA CHOICE

§...=

;

CUT GREEN BEANS......... 4~~~s $1

ROAST

3 ll. 49~

10 LB. $109

SELF RISING FLOUR.........~--·-~-.79~
FABRIC SOFTENER .:........ ~~~~~~.99$

Me~!

.

.....••
.
•

::•

~

LB.~~~

..•

...•
t

~ ~~·-:-':7:~·:-:

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•;

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COUPON

. 'I

:•

1: :
BOX
: :IJ
lj. :
Expires: 8-14-76
.
: -"
·.
Twin City Gateway
.. I
.~........... ·~·f!!til""·....~·~·w· ................................................... "IJ:.'
J z::-====·~1
0... . . . .
-

::
3

C.

.

GROUND
BEEF
A~ount

Any

lb.

79

'

SAUSAGE

BOLOGNA

24

oz: • , 69

09

59~

12 OZ.

•

•

0

•

.,..

•

•

W/C

•

•

..

•

•

•

•

Expires : 8-14-76
•
•

•

•

• . ·I·.

CATSUP

.

59~

•

•

•

0

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•

•

•

•

•

•
•

•

•

•
0

•

•

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....
•

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0

•

•

•

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••

COUPO N

-

WESSON OIL
W/C

38 oz. Bn.

Expires: 8-14-76
•

Crf

•

NO. 125

WIC

Twiri City Gateway

•

-

•••

•

•

:-P.

,. ~~·!·~-~-~-~-~-~·!·~-~-~-~-~-~-~~~~~~
·-·- .....
~ ..

W/C

Twin City Gateway

HUNT'S

20 oz.
· BTL

•

49~ .

NO. 105

~ -

•

l' ·

I

CLOROX 2

SUGAR CRISP

•

TASTE

COUPON r

r

-~

Ohio Valley

•·--":'"":--;1

. . . . . . . . . ·I

POST

PALMOLIVE

DISHWASHING LIQUID.. ~~-~~:~1

20 LB~BAG

'

.•

.... $]29 .=
4 CUT PORK LOIN •••••••••••••••••••••~·..... ~ ••

FAMILY
1

or Martha White

STA-PUF

White Potatoes

•

LIBBY'S

Gold

U.S. NO. 1

I•

CHUCK

ONIONS

lA

SIRLOIN TIP STEAK

Cr rcus

Shivo The- Clown
Ohro VrUage
Hrgh School Jazz Feslr..-al
H•gh School Marchr:'\9 Band
Festrval
• AII ·O hiO State F.a ~r Band
• AII ·Ohio State Fa1r
Youth Cho1r
• All -OhiO Sta te Fatr
· Voulh Syn'lphony
• Nahona t Amateur Box.ng
Tournament
• World s Largesl Sla te Ftw
Fme AilS Exh1b1t
. • Worlds Larges.t S.latc Farr
Horse Show
• WOrlds Largest Lrvestock
Exhibr\lon
• World 's largest Jumor Farr

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

TOWN HOUSE CRACKERS~~~·69~

&amp;&amp;
TISSUE.. ~.~-~~~.~~: . ~·

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

•
•
•
•

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP "'1
TWP. CLERK
MEIGS COUNTY

RUSSET
POTA'(DES

COTTONELLE

LB.

• Harness Racrng

KEEBLER

FABRIC sonENER .........'.~~-~~:8,

RUMP ROAST

Lives tock Au ction
• Comme rcral LrVe stock Sfl l(~

SALAD DRESSING .............. ~~-. .79~

. ·

USDA CHOICE-BONELESS, ROLLED &amp;TIED

. • Sale of Champrons

NEW MAID

8fte
TRASH BAGS ............... ~.~~--~~- ~·

LB.

• NEll SED AKA
* DEMOLITION DERBY

SALTINE CRACKERS........ 3~;:49~

.

ROUND STEAK

•

PRIDE

Extra HeavY.

'1.29
'1.29
•1.39

USDA CHOICE

*

• .!2!J.!! !lA\!1 oSD!'

NOODLES ................................. ~.~~-- 39~

.

LB.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

MONDAY (LAB OR OAY) . Sept ember 8

INN MAID

DOWNEY

STEAK

Open Eves. Ti19:00.

• O.HIQ STAT~ .I'~~ TIII\CTO~ PV.l-~ ·
SU NDAY, September 5
THE BOB HOPE SHOW

ACTUAL USE .REPORT

POTATO STICKS...................;~~~z_., 49~

·

QUANnTIES RIGHTS RESERVED

.

MASON FURNITURE

GREER

BES PAK

CHUCK

'

GARY SNOUFFER

Y£U.OW

USDA CHOICE BEEF

Social
Calendar

First birthday is observed

,,_.

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS - 9 AM TO 6 PM
PRICES EFFECTIV~ AUGUST 10 THRU 14

Expires : 8-14-76

:

.

Twin City Gateway

:·

~-~·~·'!·~·~·~·~·:·~·~·"!·:·~·~·~·~·!!·~·~·!1
7 ?L';?!f:!;!;t:f:]ti;! :t•;f;tti;Z !t'ti
•

.

.

�'
14- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0., WTuesday,Aui . 10, 1976

=

Bernice Bade Osol
For Wednndoy, Aug.11, 1178
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
Don't do things In a way that'
allows loose tong ues tO wag.
Keep everything out In the

The Publisher rese-rv es
tc:l lt c&gt;r rej,ct
any
deemed Ob ·

the rlo"t to

ltc::tlonal. The publisher
will not be re-sponsible for

RATES
For W•nt Ad Strvlcf'
5 cents per word one

Someone you envision as an

ally may not be as supportive
as yo1.1 think. Th is person 's
game .plan is not in harmony
with yours.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
YOur thinking Is not apt to be
too practical today. Your vision
Is limited . Watch outl You may
design future plans with sq uare
wheels.
LEO (July 2·3-Aug. 22) You
cou ld make some bad buys today because you're more conce[ned about the packaging
than the contents.

VIRGO (Aufi . 23-Sopt. 22)
Indecision Is your nemesis tod ay , part ic ularly In ta mlly
matters . Your wishy- washy
ways could confuse them, too .
LIBR A (Sept. 23-0cl' 23) Don 't
turn your back on anyone who
needs your help 1oday. You
won' t like yolJ rse lf it-you had an
opportunity to lend a nand and

in$ertlon .

instrHon .
Minimum Charge- Sl .OO.
H cents per word thre,e
c onsec;ut lve Insertions .
26 cents per word six
~: onsecut lve · Insertions .

25 Per Cent Olscount on

paid ads -and ads paid
within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 . 00 t·or
80
word

-minimum ..
Each

cents .

..=· _::: =-:_ -~·=

rlrst d•v ot

~EGUlATIONS

TAURUS (April · 2D·Moy 20)
You r friends wlll not be imressed by any alleclal io ns

GEM INI (Moy 21 -Juno 20)

i

~!~~,·.~~:~_teo

,mo re than one Incorrec t

1

I

"li:;~;~~:j:~~· For ~a~t Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds!
Notfr.:is
BUsiness
Services
_.d,
...
P~meroy

open to frustrate the gossips .

you adopt today. Pretense wUI
produc, results opposite o l
what you hoped for .

oddltl~nal

word 3

BliND ADS
Additional 25c Cheroe
per Advert isement .
OFFICE HOURS
8 : 30 a .m . to .5 :00 p .m .
Do lly, 8:30 o .rn . 10 12 : 00
Noon Sat urday .
Phone today 992 -2156 .
NOTICES
ATTN .: I!
All HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sal~s. Rummage ,
Porch and Basemen t Porch
and Basement SaiPS , etc .
mj.lst be paid In advance .
Gt! t yours In early by
stopping by our office at
The Dally sentineL 111
Court St . or writ ing BO)(
729, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
with your remitta nce .

GOlDEN WEOOING Anniversary.
Pret.erv• th is wonderfu l doy
with photographs of the fomlly
together. with your friends ond
of courn rhe coke! Call Ken
Grover PhotO{Iraphy . Cheater,
Ohio . Phone 985·41 155 .

Motor Co.

·-·----

NOW scheduling plano lestons
for Foil t~rm .' Phone (tJ.l A) 61:}7~
_ 6361 or(61 •) 985·•22b. _ __

Will core for elderly women in
my home . Phone m· 731~ .

JOE'S Carry Oul. ~ Locusl , Mid ·
dleport, Ohio. New hours ,
9:00 til 11 :00. FridOy and Sctur.
day , 9:00 !ill 12:00. Phone
em·3152 .
I Will do babysitting In ,.n~ home,
MOnday through Friday, Mrt.

Dovld Ashley . Phone em·6085.

NOw

1970 RENAULT4 Or.
$710
Good tlr .. , clean Interior. grey finish, radio, 4 speed.
' 1970 CAMARO CPE .
$11195
automallc. P . steering . e•lra good radial tires.
Needs some body work .

v.e.

19n VEGA ST. WAGON
$1615
LocaL l owner, .,utomatlc trans ., power steering ,
rad io, red finish, good fires , really clean.

accepting plano students ,

beginnel'!l, lnterm~iate , odvonced student, . Call m .

2270.

POMEROY MQTOR CO. ®· .
OPEN EVE~~I:OO P.M.
POMeROY, CHilO

SATURDAY, July 3 1, block aod
white female b•ogle lost In
\llcinity of Chfller . Ph one (61")
985·3574. REWARD.
.
TWO English Setters lolt near Rt .
33 Road1 ide parks . and

Creek •. One mole
K''nnsbury
r;o
and one female, both wearing
collarS. Phone 992-7283.
FoUNO-',::.l:...a:::
d::.
ie:.:
s'.:...:.:
w::.
rl:.:
st= wc.
ol_c_h - in

1970 Olds Cutlass S, 2 dr., factory
otr· , au to ., power steering, 350
2 bbl . $1200. Coli 992-7539 .

1968 Chevelle Mollbu , tuppers
Plains, automatic. Phone {6U )
Kroger 's Parking l ot, July 30th . ·
667·3653 .
Pay for ad . Phone {6!A) 992·
5339.
1974 Volkswagen . excellenl in·
side and out. Phone I (614 )
FOUND 2 breed of coo·ndogs In
n3 -5367 .
Ra ci ne
vici nity .
Please
1972 A.M.C. Hornet XSST 6 cyl ..
describe. Phone 9"9·2350.
automa tic . ·runs good , must
IN Memory of Helena F. Balcer
sell. $1100. Phone 992·2280.
who passed away. I year ago ,
1968 Chevy Belair ~7 automOtic ,
Aug ustlO .
new tires , low mileoge, e• ·
We mlu her · love and cheery A
GREAT
OPPORTUNITY I
ceUent condition . Colt W2ways:
Unlim ite d
earnings .
&gt;709.
With her we spent our happiest
O.monstrote Toys and Gifts o
doys,
few evenings a w'ek . NO ...-. 1970 ford Bronco. Phone 99'1 ·
_In memory wesM her the some ,
perience. NO paperwork . NO
00&lt;2.
As long as w8 li'ole , we'll cherish
GIMMICt&lt;S!
Gc;uoline 1973 Dus1er 3-40, take over
her name .
alowonce. Earn FREE Sample
payments . Con be seen . f irst
Sadly missed by son , . Lgrr'y ,
Kit. Coil 742·23n. Write TOY
house on leli , out Sowmon 's
Phvllis, Shawn and Matt .
LADIES PI'.RTY PLAN ,
Run Rood .
Johnst~wn , Po. 15904.
1975 Ford F·2SO Ranger , chrome
PERFECT f.or housewives ~ith
wheels, wide tires , 17 ,000
soles abi.lities. Toking mormiles , lots more extras!
tgage · applitolions , high in·
Perfect condition. Phone 843·
come potential, no 81(perienc:e
2136.
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY - have
necesuory . Cor requ i red .
1971 Nova V·8, p.s., a ir , best of·
aerial photos of your construe·
Phonel-614·221-0100.
fer . Phone t:Wl -7897 .
tion site , business, coal and A
_:_:D.c
Dc:
Rc.
ES'-S'ER::Sc_w
:_:o::n.ct..:..::I::M
td c:.M
_E_D_IA_T_E·
gas leo1es of you, form : Ken . LYI Work at home, no ex· 1971 Monfe Carlo, a ir, am ·l m
·Gro')fe, photographer, Chelter,
perience neca510 ry· _ ex ·
stereo radio . Phone 992-5671.
Ohio. Phone 985· A15.5.
cellent pay . Write American
1967 V.W. Beetle , exce llent runn wEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY Service . 6950 Woyzato Blvd ..
ing condition , body rough .
Remember the day fOt"ever!
Suite 132, Minneapolis, MN
S•50 . Also , 1966 V.W.
The com(Siete story of you r
5S..26.
Squarebotk rvns good, good
wedding in a beautilul album. Do YOU ~AVE PARTY PLAN EX·
work · co,, S25o., Phone (614·)
Coil
Ken
Gr over .
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
378-6376 oher 5 p.m. Also ho"'e
Phologropher, Chesler . Ohio.
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
guns for sale .
Phone 985·4155.
MANAGERS IN YOLiR AREA.
1969 Plymouth Rood Ru nner, 1976
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
Oldsmobi le Cutloss ,. 1~73
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INEST ·
Chevy pickup . Call992 ·59.o(7.
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR
DEliVERING : CALL COLLECT TO 69 Chrysler Newport. good condition , naw tires, new battery .
CAROL DAY 518·489-8395 OR
Phone 949-m2.
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR ·
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE ..
ALBANY, N. Y. 1m5.
NOTICE OF APOINTMENT
· .
Cue No. 211U BRAKE mec:hanic .· ·s tate salary ex.
·Estate ot C•rl L. Greenlees
pected . Write Box 729·H . %
Deceased
Th. Daily Sentinel , Pomeroy, WilL DO odd jobs . rooling, poin·
NOt ice is hereby g iven lhat
Ohio.
Ava J . Greenlees of Route No .
ling, hauling, tree work , and
"· Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 has DEMONSTRATORS
mowing . Phone992·7A09.
AND
been
duly · appoin-ted
MANAGER n-.ded to work
E&gt;;ecutrhc of the Estate of Carl
·with the oldest Toy &amp; Gift Shop
· L. Greenlees , deceased , late of
Party Pion in the country.
Meigs County, Ohio.
. Creditors are requ ired to
Highes f-' commissions - No fnfile their claims w ith sa id
vfttment. Call or write today,
· t idu clary w ithin three months .
SANTA's Parties , Avon , Conn. At&lt;C 'Reg ist e red Ge r man
oared this 28th day of J ulv
Shepherd puppies , shots ,
06001.
P)1one 1 (203) 673·3&lt;55 .
1976.
'wormed . 2 Iorge moles. -4
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
females . Phone 992·5623.
Manning 0 . Webster
Judge
AKC Ir ish Setter puppies, 8 weeks
Court of common Pleas .
old. $75. Phone9•9.m6.
Probate Division
OlD furniture , Ice bo)(es, brass
IBI 3, 10, !7 , 3tc
beds, wall telephonu and
ports, or complee households .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. .. .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli m -n61J.

=:::.:;:=:::.:..----::---

-----

didn't.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24,Nov. 22)
What you accept as a tip from
an insider could really cost you
money today unless you check
H out. Th e information is f!aw-

ed :
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc.
21 ) You have a tendency today
to promise a bit more than yo u
ca n ex pect to deliver . You
might do th is to gain stature.

CAPR ICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
19) You could be a trifle too
gullible tod ay for you r own
good: U someone tells you he
ca ught ·a big fish , ask to see a
photograph.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1t)
Loss of s mall but valuable
possessions is possible today.
Don't leave your rings on the
washstand or your watch in the
golf cart .
PISCES (Ftb. 20·M•ch 20) A
friend who is a real time wa ster
ca n disrupt your schedule it
you let ~er linger too tc;mg over
morni ng coffee .

~Your
WBirthday
Aug. 11, 1871
The lure of distant places will
be very tempting to you thls
comil"'g year. Make your plans
wolf in advance if yo1,1 e x ~ect a
ha ppy voyage.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
James F. Butcher, Jennifer
S. Butcher to Michael L.

Olllds, Twila S. &lt;llilds, lot,
. ~tlddleporf.
Mildred Filch, affidavit.
Lillie Groppenbacher, S.

CASH poid for oil mak" and COONER'S Campers , Sal4ts and
Carr Wlnla's to William G.
models of mobile hOflles ,
Renrol. OEN HOUSE SALE.
COUNTY: MEIGS
Phone
orec~
Code
61-4·423·9531
.
Begin~
July 30. Drawings,
Pee~. Della L. Peek, part lot
PUILIC I!OTICE
retreshmenh , lake Mei gs 28 or
The following documents SSCothSS for junked auto, Frye's
462, Middlep«t.
were received or prepared by
32 to BASHAN ond follow signs.
Truck Auto Port, , Rutland .
Board of Trustees of The Ohio Envlrcnmental
Phone
742·2011.
1971
StarCraft camper with own·
Columbia Township to Ohio Protection Agency during the
ing. Phone Bob Soyre . 247previous
week
.
Anyone
Power Co., coal, Colwnbla. aggrieved or adversely ~~f . COINS, currency , tokens . gold
2166.
and sliver jewelry , We need
Donald R . Martin, Palrlcla fected by !nuance, denial ,
19M and older U.S. coins . Coli
modlt lcallon, revocation or
A. Martin to LaiTy W. Goble
for other 742·2331 or come out
renewal of any permit(s).
Billy R. Goble, 7 acres; licenu(sJ. or varlence(sl
to our coin shop on Rutland and
mav request an adiudlcatlon
leoding · Creek Rd. Roger WANTED Ia rent house or small
&amp;alem.
hearing by written request
Wamsley .
Evereet E . Grant, Charlotte pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
form in country . Call coll.ct .
592·6010evenings. Responsible
L. Grant to Charles F. Section 3145 .07 within thlrly TIMBER, Po,....roy Forest Pro·
couple .
(30J davs of the directors
ducts. Top price for standing
Johnson, Terri Johnson lot • propond
to issue or
sowtimber. Call Kent Honby ,
Middleport.
• • deny suchaction
documents . That
1·446·8510.
Ralph D. Lavender, Mary statute does not provide for
hearing requests to The OEPA
Janice Lanvender to Sher- on applications, complaints,
verif ied complaints , orders. or
FURNISHED , 2 bedrm . apartment ,
man A. Cundiff,
M. tlnalactlons
.
adults only 1 in M iddleport .
Cundiff, lots, SyracUBe.
Within 30 days Of publica tlon IF YOU have a service to offer,
Phone 992·387" .
Clyde E. White, dec. to In a newspaper in the affected . want to buy or sell something,
county
person may also :
ae looking for work ... or 3 AND 41 RM. furnished and un·
Mary L. White, alfid. for
( 1) subml written comments
ho tevar . . . you 'II get results
furnished
opts. Phone 992w
5-4
trans. , Bedford.
relating to actions, propose-d
faster with a SentinefWant Ad .
3-4.
, complaints,
or
Helen E. Bargelob to actions
verified com plaints ;
OJ
Call992·2156.
COUNTRY Mobil&amp; HOme Park . Rt.
Charlea W. Barceloh, Lena B. request a public meeti ng YARDSale, Weds . throughFriday ' 33; tenm iles northotPomeroy.
and Saturday from 9 o .. till
Lars- Iota with concrete patios,
Bargeloh, 3.81 acres, Olive. regarding proposed actions ;
and ·Or (3) request notice Of
sld.wolks , runners and off
Norman Yeauger, Dorothy further
. actions
or
dark . Clothes, antique glass,
streetparklng. Phone992·7479.
furniture, and books. 2 mlle1
Yeaucer to Ja)'llllU' Coal Co., proceedings .
Final actions to Issue , deny,
aboveLetortFcllllonRI. 338.
3 Room furnished · hou 1e with
.30 acre, Salisbury.
modify , revoke or renew
both. Adulh onlv. Phone 992. ,
licenses,
or yARD Solo, 698 Lourol St., Mid·
$535 .
Allen Yeauger, Ella Mae permits.
var iances that · Ire not
dleport. Tuesday , Weds. and
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co., preceded
by proposed ec:tfons
Thunday .
_. room · furnis hed apt, clo'e to
JO acre, Salisbury.
may be appealed to · the En ·
Powell 's Super Volu still
Board of Review, " Family Garage So 1• · starting
available. Phone992 ·3658.
Alfred Yea uger, Hilda vlrqnmel')tal
Suite 305, 395 Eut Broad
Monday through Friday at long
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co.,
Street 1 ColumbUs, Ohio, ,.3216, -'B
=ott:.:o::
m::.•.::si"g"'
ns:..:o:.:t.!:p.::
o•:.:•..:o:c
ff"ic::
• :..
·_
2 Bedroom trailer, $28 we&amp;k , all
All such final act ions ere so utilities paid'. Phanefi92.3J2...
.30 acre, Salbbury.
Identified in thiS notice . All YARD SAlt on .Lourel Cliff ol Emel
other requests for
ad Ale1hir•'s old home place. 9th 3 ·Rooms and both , furnished
iud lca·tlon hearings, and other
through 13th, Plenty of clothing
apartment, all util ities furnish·
. communications c:oncernlng
and odds and ends. lOa .m. till
eel. Inquire ot 356 North Four·
.public hearings _ · public
dark .
th, Middleport .
meetings,
ldludlcatlon
·
hearings, complaints of any 4 Fomlly Yard Sole , 156 Pearl ONE u.oroom apartments at
Tile A1•-e
kind. and regulations, should
Srroer, Middleporl. Monday,
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
for $11)4 monthly plu ~ tlec. or
By VJIIIed ~ Illlenlalleu be addressed to The Legal Tuet: ond Weds. August 9, 10,
Section , Ohio EPA.
11. Women '•,· men's, thlldren's
$130 Including •kKtrlc. LOWER
TodaJll n.dly, Aq. 10, PFtecords
. 0 . •3216,
Boic 10.9,
Columbus,
' co'"''·
I 1•~ o idbo ttl es, hom.,-,-..e
--~
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
Ohio,
(61,.)
,.66
-6037.
,
lhe 223rd t111 19'16 with 143 Unless otherwise stlftd In flower poft, two pair roller ·convenient to · shOpping on.
to follow.
part icular !'!Of lees , all other , skates and other misc. items.
Third and Mill Streets In Mid-

uirralne

any

L_ _ _.

at

1be 111001111 between 11.1 full .
~g~~~n~~ca~~onpsroJ~~~~dl~!
phue and lui quarter.
lions and requests tor public

Tile moraine alan are
Juplte' and Sllurn.
The enning ltln are Mer•
·curr, Min IJid venu~.
Thole !lorn on lhll day are
under ~ qn of Leo.
Herbert Hoover, Slit Jftll·
dent"' till Unlled lllalel, born Aq. 10, 1174.

m.eetlnas. st\Ciuld be addressed

either to The New soUrce, Air,
or N JlOES Permit R.cords ·
Sec: II
whichever II ap .
, at Ttle Ohio EPA,
. BOJII: 1049, Columbus,
•3216 .

I'll !ua.aEddle l'llber ad
Jane WJ'!IU"" bcim 1111 tldl
date, he In 1t28 and lbe In
ltll,

II) tO, lie
f

Television

GA~~
SA~ T~l'f'doy,
1
0

~:•po:;~~~~nedn~:.w h~:: qu:-~~

Friday
ton ,,w. Va.,
manager at Apt . 16, or call
· fur-, .
street behind post otf1ce. turn
m.n21 .
left, first street below post of-"'
'1'-'
lc:.:
• :...
· - - - - -- - - ONE bedroOm apartments at
YARD and Furniture Sole starts
RIVERSIDE. Phone992·3273 .
·

W.O., August 11 C!f 10:00 a .m.
Including onoloctric pump wirh
variance from
tan~ . $110: rototlller, $1:25
ben
each, two months o_ld. Turn off
Route 7 ot Hidden Loko1 sign ,
Dr ..
one-fourth mile down Forest
Run Road or call 992·7M5.
GARAGE SALE, Thuf'ldOy, Frldoy
and Soturdoy, August 12, 13
and ,,., 701 Beech Sfrtet, Mid ·
dloporl , Ohio , Mlsc.l!oms.

--

" (-

•

.

l'nl Oodge Charger . $1300, el( ·
cellent conditiOn . Phone {304 )

675· 2651. .

lOCUST POSTS , round or split .
Phone 9.. 9.277-4 .
(OAL. limestone, and calcium
chloride and ca lcium brine for
dust control and speciol mix:ing
salt for formers . Main Street,
Pomeroy , Oh io or phone 992:3891.

cANNING peaches now reody
thru August . Several va rieties
by the bushel 1 111 bushel or
peck . Please bring own c_orl tolt1er, 2 convenient locations :
Midway Marke t. Pomeroy,
9'92· 2582; BOb's Market, Mason,
n3·572 1.
!97'1 Ka,..,asaki 175, Enduro, $250.
Set of motorcycle carr ie-rs , $ 13.
Phone 9'12·5523 ,

cANNING tom.atoes and sweep
peppe rs . Cleland Fa rms .
Geraldine Cleland. Racine,
Ohio.
IN CASH

2~

(:hannel CB, am -fm

rod io . 8 track stereo. Coli 992 -

3965 .

1971

HONDA

CL ·• SO.

12 ,000

- - ----

Ohio

Undtr~redtlllt 1o
'ltmel'lluy
School Peckqt Plcturtl
Seniors&amp; YMrHok
- Wtcldlngs-

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

KEN GROVER

Squort Veri lnstolled

'6.95

Photogrephy
985-4 155
Clltsltr, ohio
7· 14·1 mo.

TH!=V ('AI M THE-Y '&lt;1 OH, OH! A&gt;! D l'M Af
W5F!.E TI': Yfrv·G TO 1~1/IEIICON 5•r::
cO NTA CT A FfMA'E
5ECRET AGENT AT
132 6EAC0r.J ST.!

David Plf'ions, OWner

WIN AT BRIDGE
North eliminates gueaawork

949-H.I4

6·7·1 mo.

_
.,ER.
-

American
Auto 'Sales

You can IIVt hundreds
lhoullnds of dollln
with llumlnum or vlnyt ·
siding.

NORTH
• Q 10 8 7
• 7 53

fftEE ESnMATES!

"'K 10 53

••111

,.........

IMUiation Sel'flc:ll

llltrtt itrtiMIIItks
mJIM

Wlnshleld R~pllcoment
Free Estlmetls
On Body Work
Expert Pointing
Insurance Work

GLEN R. BISSE.U.

I!PUI:l,!IIT

IIIIICICIIIS

AT949-2801

diiUII
SIDift5.SOffiTT

rutz.ml

··

5~304

949-2860
PLEASE
NOSUNDAYCALLS
8·9-76 1 m~.!!L .-

~ 111-1

'OUR BP..i~F

'5TROb,l..l-lOFF

...,.

· -~---,

A· ~
:
.

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutte.s,
Painting and Repair

H""'".. r fiDPe: l{OU

OR

GUTTER SERVICE

.

ANY PITCH
. ANY SIZE

Tlle Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

Continuous one piece
gutters. W~ hang it, or do It
yourself. Special prices Ia '
builders.

liOUtheallm Ohio
Tnm Rafter Co.

AI. TROMM CONST

· Box 28-A
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph. (6141742-24419
We Oillvtr
7·28·4 mos.

Rutland
142·2321
All Work Guaronleed
Free Estimotos

mo.

992-7320
7·9· 1 mo.

ANTIQUE restorations , reproduc·
lions, cobiner making and fur·
nilure repair. 131 V. 3rd, Mid. dleporl , ·e m.5735 doy ond
evening.

HOUSE for sole , 2 largo
\:&gt;edrooms. Iorge living room,
kitc hen , dining , carpettl, $~, 000
in Harrisonville. Phone 742·
2796.

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

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

.------------i
SWIMMING
POOLS

Above end below ground
pool kits for the do-il· '
your5elf man .
All pao I suppiiH IVIIilb le,

TUPPERS Ploins· Eostern area , 2 HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
yr. old bi-level hom~&gt; lo·cat&amp;d on
up. Middle~rt , near Rutland.
l 'lt ocl-es . Rt. 7. 1-:iggscrest
Coil em·74BI . .
Manor , 3 or _. bedrooms ; 2
baths . tiving , dining room a nd NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
all alec. , 1 acre, Middleport,
kitchen, with refrigerator and
dose to Rutland. Phone 992range , famil y room , 1 laundry,

too.

D. Bumgardner

11 ACRES - Of grassy
pasture with new fence. 4
bedroom rftldence, 1'12
bath I, spring water, near
the mines. 529.000.

only S200

1 - Gooa used 12 cu . ft.
freezer only $125

•

Landmar11

W.

.Jack
tarsey,Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

WilL do sewing and alterations .
Neat work , reasonable rates ,
Phone J.an Trussell , 949-2660.

MOBILE home for' sale or rent , 3
bedrooms , ol utilities poid .
Phonem-nSL
197'0 Double wide mobile home
set on permanent foundat ion,
lronr porch , 2~6
• ~! 1
. . acres auvy
mile from Racine. 3 bedrOOms ,
!=en tral olr conditioning, stove

~~~ns-C~;!~:;~~;~r. l~~~;,:;~

Ph0ne9.t9-281S.

)973 Kirkwood 1:1x65 mobile
home , front den , with boy windows , completely carpetd ex·
cept kitchen, excellent condition. For •ale or anum• .
poyrnonts . Coil Rondy Wlllloms ,
7,.~·2172.
_

SE

only SS,SOO .

1 Good used · (almost
new) IS cu. ft . free10r

Pome~

heatl.

Rufus'

Rufus!

NEW Ll STING 15 acres
with g~s well,
F.A.
fume~. 3 btdrooms, bath,
nice kitchen, new t,mlly
room with large flreplece
and 2 cer block garage. All
mlntrall II $32,500.

GRACIOUS - 1 story older
brick home with 2 corner
lots . 5 large BR. 2 baths .
Ultra modern kitchen h•s
everythl119 and more too .
N. G. hoi water heat. 12
rooms, $20,000.00

4th ACRES ~ Near grade :
schllOI. 6 room honit, all
utllltln, central elr and
heal, and ote~r buildings.
Asking $Z9,500.

DON'T PAY high rent. Bur.
this . '2 story frame . Roo ,
siding end carport like
new. 3 bedrooms. bath. N.
G. hoot. 7 rooms In all .
JUST $7,SOO.OO

HAVING
TROUBLE
SELl-ING, CALL. US AT

ABNER

I ONE IT A LLlD

~ACRE4 be~l.
Bath. Full width living R.

ru~·~.c~~s·Po~6~·. ~·at I~:

Large
Garage
(Middleport) . Asking
s19,soo.oo
AN
$11dOO.OO
SW.EETHEART ~ ltanth•
type - 3 nice bedrooms.
Bath . Very nice kitchen .
Utility. N.G. Furnace . Full
bo5ement lde•l for 'Rec.
room. Steel siding. Small
lot.
•
we hlvt qualiFied buyer•
for ne- homH '-! ua
Mllyovra.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·2259 ... 992-2568

1

•

Ol.JJOF

MY BELOVED

22 YEARS OLD,
AND A MULTI -:-

MOTHEFC rr- SHE

MILLIONA IRE' !!-

DISCOVERED

GAS!!-

SECRET-

Syslems _lnstolled . by
licensed Installer. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742-2,.09,

chortled South .
" An unnecessary waste of
time , energy aud guesswork,"
replied North . "The hand was
unbeal&lt;lble with no problems
at all ."
South started out well by
ducking the first heart, but
when East led Lhe jack of
diamonds , South should have
gone right up with his ace.
Next would come a trump to
dummy foilowed by a ruff of
the last heart. Then South
would lead his qllftll of
diamonds and claim 1111 contract. It wouldn ' t matter
which opponenL held the king
of diamonds . He would be
caught in an end play.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST! I, 1976

6 :DO-Summer Sernesler to .
6:1}---Farm Report 13.
WEST
EAST
6:2o-The Story 13.
• 53
•A
6: 3(}.-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
¥ KQ J 82
\t 10 9 4
8; Christopher Clo5ellp 10.
t K93
tJ 108752
6:45--Mornlng Rport 3.
• Q97
.8 64
6:5D-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
SOUTH i DI
6:55--Good Morning, Trl State 13.
• KJY642
7:DO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,.13; CBS
¥ A&amp;
News 8: Chuck While Reports 10.
tA Q
7:,5--Bugs Bunny
Frlends .IO.
.A J 2
7: 3D-Schoolles 10.
Both vulnerable
8 :DO-Jeff's Collie 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesa me St.
33 .
Wesl North Ea1t South
8: 3D-Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A.M . J; Phil Donahue 4,1S; Lucy Show 8: Mike
Pass 2 •
Pa9S 4 A
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13.
Pass Pass Pass
9: 3D-Cross· Wits 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattleta les ·a;
Opening lead - K •
Mike Douglas 13.
Here is a nother question on
10 :0o-Sanford &amp; Son 3 .~. 15: Price Is Right 8,10; Bit
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
revokes . Dec larer leads . a
With Knit 33 .
spade
from dummy. He is in·
On the opposite end of the
10: 15--General Hospital 6.
.
10:3(}.-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;
spectrum from the finesse formed by an opponent that
You 33.
designed to give declarer an the lead is in his own hand . He
leads
a
heart.
A
Delaware
11
:DO-Wheel
of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday ~ ; Edge of
extra entry to dummy is the
Night 6; Gambit 8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
.
finesse taken for the sheer joy reader wants to know if Ibis Is
a revoke .
11 :3D-Hollywood Squares 3.4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
of finessing .
The answer is that it
Love of Life 8,10.
South ducked the first heart
definitely
is a revoke if he has
11 : 55--Take Kerr 8; Ms . FIKII 10.
and won the continuation .
12 : DO-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun ~ ;
Then he led a trump . East took a spade in his own hand . The
revoke
becomes
established
News 6,8, IQ; Sesame St. 33 .
his ace and shifted to the jack
12: 3o--Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
when
a
n
opponenL
plays
to
tbe
of ~iamonds . South promptly
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
finessed his queen and the revoking card.
12 :55--NBC News 3.15.
(For
a
co
py
of
JACOBY
defense had three tricks in .
1 :DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Some five minutes later South MODERN, send $7 to : "Win
Young &amp; the Res'lless 10; Nol For Women Only 15;
had finessed successfully · a l Bridge ." cl o this
Elec. Co . 33.
.
against West's queen of clubs newspaper. P. 0 . Bo• 489,
1 : 3D-Days of O~r Lives 3,4,1S; Family Feud 6,13; As
Radio City Station . f/e w York.
and won the rubber .
The World Turns 8, 10; Evening at Pops 33.
" Pret t y good guess , " N. Y. 10019)
2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:3(}.-Doctors 3,~ ,1 S ; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
I
Light 8, 10; Strauss Family 33.
3:DO-Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Romagnolls' Tabl,e 20.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3: 15--General Hospital 13.
3 :30-Bewlfched 6; Match Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
ACROSS
. 39 Kinsman
You 20 ; Ourstory 33.
.
1 Wine
(abbr. )
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somersel15;
disorder
40 Carried
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
6 Fii - fiddle
DOWN
20,331 Movie " Little Boy Lost" 10; Dln•h 13.
I Italian
( 2 wds.)
4:3(}.- Bewilched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
9 Underground
city
Sesame St. 20,33; Flintstones 15.
e)ltrance
2 European
5 :00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: lm·
possible 15.
II Publication,
republic
5: 3D-Adarn. 12 4; News 6; Fam ily Affair 8; Elec . Co .
for short
3 Luster
20,33; Adam-12 13.
12 Kind of
4 " Brian's -"
Yesterday's ADswer
6:DO-News
3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
nwnber
5 Note
6
:3o-NBC
News3,4,
1l; ABC News 13: Andy Grllfllh 6;
II Babylonian 28 Commuter's
13 Devoured
from
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Book Beat
reading
14 Tine
Guido
deity
33.
material
15 Dock
6 Absalom's 18 ltsy-bitsy
7 :DO-T r liffror Cons. 3: ToT elllhe Tru1h 4; Bowling hi
29 Dimlni.!h
20 Attraction
Trim
chief
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8 ; News 10; Wild
30 Ward off
Inhabit
7 Fabric
at Giza
Kingdom 13; Family Altair 1S; Co~surner Survival
31 Proofreading
19 Blunder
8 Ten per..
23 Manage
Kif 20: Tourists are Com ing 33.
mark
·
7:3(}.-Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune~ ; Maich
24 Akin
Llama land
center
Game PM 6; S25,000 Pyrarnld 8; The Judge 10; To
25 Click beetle 33 Brief note
21 Chinese
9 Tyke
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdorn 15; Robert
36 Vietnamese
2S Lobsterpagoda
10 Peach
MacNeil Report 20,33 .
holiday
Newburg
2% .On the other
variety
8 :0D-LIIIIe House on the Pra ir ie 3. 4. 15; Bionic Woman
hand
13: World at War 6: Plloi"Hazard's People" 8,10;
Z3Mine
Nova 20.33.
'
·
extract
9 : DO-Pi lot " Over and Out " 3.4. 15; Barella 6,13; Movie
Zl Indian
" The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman" 8, 10;
1
buffalo
Great Performances 33 ; Upst airs, Downstairs ·20.
9 : 3(}.-C hi co &amp; the Man 3,4, 15 .
27 Fencill!l
10 :0(}.-Hawk 3,4,15; Starsky
Hutch 6,13'; Life of
dununy
Leonardo Da VInc i 33 ; News 20.
28 Type
10:3(}.-Aimanac 20.
of bet
11 :Do-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; ABC News 33 .
31 That
11 : 1(}.-News 8.10.
(Fr. )
11 :3(}.-Johnny Carson 3,~. IS ; Movie "The Burglars"
Direction
6,13; Janakl 33.
on ship
11:4(}.-Mo vie " When Elghl Bells Toll " 8; Movie "The
French
Desperate Ones" 10.
revo1:OD--Tomorrow 314.
lutionary
1 :AD-News 13.
hero
Tasteless
fare
35 Repeat
Caen's
Unocromblt thest four Jumblto,
one letter to each square, to
sununer
form four ordinary warda.
• ·.o
38 Greek
goddess

•••

:n

a.

~~~

Is
~INK ~INGS

OJT!
FIND OUT WHO I
REALLY AWl ... WHAT
I. R&amp;&lt;\LLY WANT
OJT OF LIFE .1

l ...I eEUEVE I CAN
UNDERSTAND ~.1..131L LY!
A LITTl.E VACATIUN

WOULD 00 YOU 0000 I

sorvlco. Jene Rodman , phone

992-5910.

-

811LL5 0' FIRE!!
IT'S WILFERT!!

WMPO AM-FM

HOME ON LEAVE!!

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT
·'

0011 Repot I, .: i

TIME NO SEE

!~

r

JII

CRYPTOQ UOTES

-----.....1
!
r------------~~--~~~
···~
=·;·--~~·;-;;~~
HEAR.-NEWS.' FIRsT·-ON

1

hints . E~ch day the corte le tt e rs arc difTere nt.

PDEUQCH

JQZZDDK

WILFERT!! LONG

to work It :

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One h.•tt('r simply stands for an ot h er. ln this sample A is
u ~ed for th e three L's, X for tht' tw o O's, e tc. Sing le letters-.
apostrophes, the length and formation o( the words are aU

VUEH

LON6 TIME

. ,....n.I.-J ,_

iu-+-1-+-"1-+-l,--l

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL ..
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . LOWu
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILlr
PULLINS, PHONE em·2478 DAY
OA"JJGHT.
BUILDING, ' remodeling , an~ :
rtpoi11. Qualily work , tfflclonl

and 5P&amp;

9:3(}.-PIIol 6,13, 8.10.
•
10 :DO-City of Angels .3.~. IS : Pilot 6, 13; Swllch 8, 10;
Olympiad 33.
10 : 3D-Pilot 6, 13; News 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4.6,8•.10,13.15; Black Perspec;llve on the ·
News 20; ABC News 33 .
11 :lo-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Mystery of the Week
6, 13; Movie "The Wings of Eagles" 8; MOvie " Guns
at Batasl" 10; Janakl 33 .
1:DO-Tomorrow 3J: News 13.

~lYWID~;:u..J

PTIC

SEPTIC TANKS cle~ 'Aodorn
Sonllatlon , 992·39!·1 ~r 992·
2428.
WILl do . roofing, construction
plumbing and hoollng .. No lob
too Iorge or too s,.,oll. Phone '
742·2318.
CI'.RPENTER, · flooring, ceiling •
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
'
·
·
VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·'
VICE. Meigs·Athens County.·
Boltrl from $3m up. Morrill
c~o... (614) 698·3021.

LOVELY CORNEA OVER tu.....;.992;.;;.;
·»2=S.:..

•

a.

2•38.
DEXTER Business
building ebout 30 ' 40 for

1 knew
I wouldn'
like it
down
here!

You don't
qot a brain
tn l.jerfool

TEAfORD

1 - Good used JO cu. ft.
freezer only $150

Romagnolls' Table 20; Strauss Family 33 .
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let' s Deal With It 6;
Match Game PM 8:. Price Is Rlght10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Nashville On The Road 15.
8:DO-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Pop! 8, 10;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33; AI The Top 20 .
8:30-L.averne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Good Times 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kif 33 .
9:DO-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Pilot 6,13; M ·A·S· H 8,10;
E venlng AI Pops 331 Men Who Made the Movies 20;

~~aW~

Noble Summit Rd ..
Middleport
PHON'E em.5724
7·21· 1 mo.

FREEZER SAL£

10

• 64

. CONTACT

IIHIDOW$ &amp; DOOIS

St . Rt. 1
Coolville, Ohio
661-31l7 .
7·21· 1 mo.

~2~2

........

7481.
and goroge . gQod gorden 9rec .
$3.1 ,000. Phone (614) 985·4245 . SMALL form 'for sale, 10'/o down,
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
3 .Bedroom house in Middleport.
ty, W. Vo. Phone (30&lt;) 772·
Phone 992·30412.
3102or (304) m-3227.
197'3 Hondo Sll70 . e)(ceUent con ·
HOUSE for sole, 391 South Second
dit ion , $250. Pl1one992·5213.
Ave ., Middlepo rt. Phone 99'2· COUNTRY farmland with secludMEN'S used work clothes- . $2 .50
~65 .
·
ed w~ods, water, and good OC · · BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Comset , o lm-ost new washer a nd GOOD CATilE FARM FOR SALE
cess tn Mon roe County, W. Vo.
plete ServiCe. Phone 9·9-2487
dryer , G.E. matched set . $300 .
BY OWNER . 71 ceres M&amp;l
S1.000 down, call (30-4 ) n 2•
or 9-49-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
1
3102
Store hours: 9:00·5:00 Monday
Jock5on Co . Fenced. modern 5
or(~) m- 3227 ·
Bradford .
·
through Saturday . Closed
house ,
newly 2 ·bedrooms , Iorge modern kit. ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Thundoy . Bailey's. Middle_port. · room
redecorated ,
completely
chen, farced oif furnace. lin· ·
Sweepers, too5ters, irons, all
KAWASAKI 5(X) , good cond ition ,
carpeted . 55 acr&amp;s ga:od
coin Hgts . 992·5737.
small opplian~es . Lawn mower,
$675 . Phone 949·2628 or 9 .. 9.
next to State 'Highway Garage
pasture, 15 ocres wooded 3 bedroom houle for sole a·t 520
2626.
virgin timber, developed spr·
Sycomore St., Middleport, good
on Route 7. Phone (61-4) 985ings , good born, and orher
buy for $8,000. Phone em.3578, :::'3::::'
825::'.::-::ccc-.,-:-:----.,-IV75 Hondo C.O. 125·S street ·
buildings, hig h country ." rolling
or 992-7667.
bike , 2. ~ miles . will sell
hifls , excellent view . Appoint. -::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::; REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
reasonable . Phone 742-2233.
ment only . Phone (61,.) 384 · r
ond all types of general repoit.
FOR SAlE, gooqusedT .V.'s , cOlor
2591 after 5 p.m. ·P-rice
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
SSO.OOO.
perlence. Phone 992·2409.
,
and black and white. Harrison 's
T.V. Service. 276 Sycamore St .,
D&amp;o
TREE
Trimming,
20
.,.ears
ex·
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
Middleport , Ohio. Phone em. "' Room house and bath , cellar ,
perience . Insured free
.110
Me~hlnic Pomeroy, 0.'
garage
,
outbulding
,
nlca
2522.
estimates . Call 992.-2384 or
gorden spot , well , city water ,
Phon.• 9~-ll1~
·'
20 ft . Starcrolt with .400 cu. in.
(614) 698·7257 Acclb"'a-'
ny". ·-~~
gos and elec. Phone (614) 992·
RUTLAND ....: Business
motOr wit h Jet drive. Phone
5871.
SEWING
MACHINE
Repolrs,
oer·
building first floor , and a 5
em·7721.
-~-vtce,
oil
makes,
992·228.4
.
The
1. 15 ocre1 o.
d on Leading room apartment up. Nat.
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
liKE new, 3 h.p. tiller , 35,000 BTU
Creek Road w1th water top, gas, city water and a good
Authorized Singer SOles and
heater, buil t-in sink. Phone
Call em.5352 or 9'12·24'16.
place for a b~slness .
S...vlce. We sharpen Scissors .
em .JA6S.
Askl~g $13,500.
, FARM , 2 bedr,oom house with
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ood
1975 Hondo CB125 , approx . 500
bath, full . basement, carport
batkhoe worlc: clump truclcs
miles, perfect condition . Coli
NICE
HOME
Modern
and other. outbuildings. Plenty
and lo-boys for hire; will t,Gul
(61•) 985 ·3501 olter 3 p.m.
of water. Must sell sua to ill kitChen. dining and living
fill
dirt, to soil, limestone and
heolth to bo&amp;t offer, Coli 992· on first ftmr, 3 bedrooms,
197.o4 Suzuki G. T. 380, excellent
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
5282
.
•nd
beth
on
2nd.
Full
cQnd,tion. Call 742·2143 after 5
ltro, doy p/lone 992·7019,
basement, natural gas
p.m . o r contact Dol los Weber .
HOUSE for sole, 3 bedrooms , oil
nighl phone em ·3525 or 992·
electric, Fomily room fully fired hot water furnace,
5232.
WOODEN playpen , excellent con·
carpered With wood-burning front and back porchet.
difion , very reasonable. Used
EXCAvATING, dour, bockho,.
fireplace, lorr lot with storage $29.500.
by 1 child. Phone doy llme, em.
and dltcher, Charles R. Hot·
bulfding on
garden spoce.
37:12 or after 5 p .m. 992-2961 .
BARGAIN -Nice Inside 2
lleld , Bock Hoe Service ,
~ustic Hills , Syrgcu•• · Phone
bedrooms. modern · both,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742· 20118. ~
197' V. W. bus . Phone 992·7692 .
em.7836.
nice
kitchen,
notulol
gils
GR~'S CB SALES, locoltd ol Er·
3 lots for 1ale In t-4orrlsonvllle.
F .A. furnace and full
win 's Gulf Service, Mid,
Phone 992·751W .
bo11menl at only $5,500.
dleporl, Ohio. Phono
em.
miles , sissy bar, crosh bors ,
pull bock hand le bars , new tire
and seals, ScrOmb!er side
pipes , ~. Coll949·2•80.

APT. far rent , 5 roams and both.
, Phone (614) 985·3350.
1 bedroom apartment, all elec·
trk off street porking. Phone
em:m4
1'16912.60. 2btdroom Schult, air
;:-'==..:.:.·--,...--...,.--conditioner, · very good condi·
2 Bedroom trailer, real nice. , 7-ri"on
'':'::.P-'h=
o ne,_7:..~::;2c,;-3=
0 18::.·~-ulililios J"ld. Phone em.J3U.
195-1 Libtrly Mobile Home 8•50.
1975 Mobile home, 3 bedroar,s in
$700.00. Someone to take over
Mason , W. Vo . $ISO pe~r month.
balance. of payments . Call 992·
Phone (6U)698·m2. .
2524.

----

-~~~illl.

We Ieoine

1971 Chevrolet Caprice , e~o:cellent
condition., $1700. Phone 992·
521 3::..- - - - " " " ' ; ' - - : ' 3 speed on the
condition . May
South Fourth
or phone

S:DO-Bonenza 3: I Dream of Jeannie 4; Partridge
Family ·a, Mission.: .lrnposslble 15.
5:3(}-Adam ·12 4; News 6; Family Aflalr 8; Electric
Company 20.33 Adam ·12 13.
6 :DO- News 3.4.8, 10. t3, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 : 30-NBC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6; CBS News 8.10;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Ull•s, Yoga and Yo~ 33 .
7:DO-Truth or Con..,quences 3: To Tell The Trulh 4;
Bowling tor Dollars 6; Let' s go lo the Races 8;
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Family Affair 15;

CARPET SHOP

-CortiJift!t Sclleol Stryt,.t

for easy viewing

TUESDAY , AUGUST 10, tm

RACiftE

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Atrltl - lndustrle l
Constructl8n """rtls

l~g

YOU

WM

KDV

DKZG

UWMWKC

FQUQPIEVH

YOU

JEV
YQZZ-

QZMD

Q

WK C. Yesterday's
KNOWN TO
KNOW. -

Z .
JDUKH
CrypCoquote: A CELEBRITY IS ONE WHO IS
MANY PERSONS HE JS GLAD HE DOESN'T
H. L. MENCKEN
(C) t9'76 Kin&amp; Featurt-S s ,ndlcale, ln.c . ),

TOO MUCH

CAMEZE~
P'
\

I

I

Now UT""'t the tin: led !etten
to fonn I he nrprlte &amp;NWtr, u

::::::::;~k~~;::::;:;::;~·;;=~IUJ~I'~..ted b7 the above eutoon.
............::Ptitl=lll=•=•:.:::AIISWII=•=--_.:.JI (

XUI D

IL..

(.l.nen lo.orrow)

I

Jumhl"' PIETY

Yetterd•r'•

·

An•w~tn

LYRIC

UNFAIR HEARTH

Could 4 rnan "'"o clean• uptWI bt
thii7-"FilTHY RICH"

. DADBURN SEA !!
IT SA&gt;15 IN ~E NINTH
CHAPTE!l OF ECCLESIASTES,
'A LIVIN6 006 15 6ETTER •
THAN A DEAD LION '"

"AS

Theology
and the

Dog.

~AT

DOES
THAT

MEAN ?

I

KNOW, 81JT
A61:EE WIT'" IT!

DON'T

�'
14- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0., WTuesday,Aui . 10, 1976

=

Bernice Bade Osol
For Wednndoy, Aug.11, 1178
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 11)
Don't do things In a way that'
allows loose tong ues tO wag.
Keep everything out In the

The Publisher rese-rv es
tc:l lt c&gt;r rej,ct
any
deemed Ob ·

the rlo"t to

ltc::tlonal. The publisher
will not be re-sponsible for

RATES
For W•nt Ad Strvlcf'
5 cents per word one

Someone you envision as an

ally may not be as supportive
as yo1.1 think. Th is person 's
game .plan is not in harmony
with yours.
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
YOur thinking Is not apt to be
too practical today. Your vision
Is limited . Watch outl You may
design future plans with sq uare
wheels.
LEO (July 2·3-Aug. 22) You
cou ld make some bad buys today because you're more conce[ned about the packaging
than the contents.

VIRGO (Aufi . 23-Sopt. 22)
Indecision Is your nemesis tod ay , part ic ularly In ta mlly
matters . Your wishy- washy
ways could confuse them, too .
LIBR A (Sept. 23-0cl' 23) Don 't
turn your back on anyone who
needs your help 1oday. You
won' t like yolJ rse lf it-you had an
opportunity to lend a nand and

in$ertlon .

instrHon .
Minimum Charge- Sl .OO.
H cents per word thre,e
c onsec;ut lve Insertions .
26 cents per word six
~: onsecut lve · Insertions .

25 Per Cent Olscount on

paid ads -and ads paid
within 10 days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 . 00 t·or
80
word

-minimum ..
Each

cents .

..=· _::: =-:_ -~·=

rlrst d•v ot

~EGUlATIONS

TAURUS (April · 2D·Moy 20)
You r friends wlll not be imressed by any alleclal io ns

GEM INI (Moy 21 -Juno 20)

i

~!~~,·.~~:~_teo

,mo re than one Incorrec t

1

I

"li:;~;~~:j:~~· For ~a~t Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds!
Notfr.:is
BUsiness
Services
_.d,
...
P~meroy

open to frustrate the gossips .

you adopt today. Pretense wUI
produc, results opposite o l
what you hoped for .

oddltl~nal

word 3

BliND ADS
Additional 25c Cheroe
per Advert isement .
OFFICE HOURS
8 : 30 a .m . to .5 :00 p .m .
Do lly, 8:30 o .rn . 10 12 : 00
Noon Sat urday .
Phone today 992 -2156 .
NOTICES
ATTN .: I!
All HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sal~s. Rummage ,
Porch and Basemen t Porch
and Basement SaiPS , etc .
mj.lst be paid In advance .
Gt! t yours In early by
stopping by our office at
The Dally sentineL 111
Court St . or writ ing BO)(
729, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
with your remitta nce .

GOlDEN WEOOING Anniversary.
Pret.erv• th is wonderfu l doy
with photographs of the fomlly
together. with your friends ond
of courn rhe coke! Call Ken
Grover PhotO{Iraphy . Cheater,
Ohio . Phone 985·41 155 .

Motor Co.

·-·----

NOW scheduling plano lestons
for Foil t~rm .' Phone (tJ.l A) 61:}7~
_ 6361 or(61 •) 985·•22b. _ __

Will core for elderly women in
my home . Phone m· 731~ .

JOE'S Carry Oul. ~ Locusl , Mid ·
dleport, Ohio. New hours ,
9:00 til 11 :00. FridOy and Sctur.
day , 9:00 !ill 12:00. Phone
em·3152 .
I Will do babysitting In ,.n~ home,
MOnday through Friday, Mrt.

Dovld Ashley . Phone em·6085.

NOw

1970 RENAULT4 Or.
$710
Good tlr .. , clean Interior. grey finish, radio, 4 speed.
' 1970 CAMARO CPE .
$11195
automallc. P . steering . e•lra good radial tires.
Needs some body work .

v.e.

19n VEGA ST. WAGON
$1615
LocaL l owner, .,utomatlc trans ., power steering ,
rad io, red finish, good fires , really clean.

accepting plano students ,

beginnel'!l, lnterm~iate , odvonced student, . Call m .

2270.

POMEROY MQTOR CO. ®· .
OPEN EVE~~I:OO P.M.
POMeROY, CHilO

SATURDAY, July 3 1, block aod
white female b•ogle lost In
\llcinity of Chfller . Ph one (61")
985·3574. REWARD.
.
TWO English Setters lolt near Rt .
33 Road1 ide parks . and

Creek •. One mole
K''nnsbury
r;o
and one female, both wearing
collarS. Phone 992-7283.
FoUNO-',::.l:...a:::
d::.
ie:.:
s'.:...:.:
w::.
rl:.:
st= wc.
ol_c_h - in

1970 Olds Cutlass S, 2 dr., factory
otr· , au to ., power steering, 350
2 bbl . $1200. Coli 992-7539 .

1968 Chevelle Mollbu , tuppers
Plains, automatic. Phone {6U )
Kroger 's Parking l ot, July 30th . ·
667·3653 .
Pay for ad . Phone {6!A) 992·
5339.
1974 Volkswagen . excellenl in·
side and out. Phone I (614 )
FOUND 2 breed of coo·ndogs In
n3 -5367 .
Ra ci ne
vici nity .
Please
1972 A.M.C. Hornet XSST 6 cyl ..
describe. Phone 9"9·2350.
automa tic . ·runs good , must
IN Memory of Helena F. Balcer
sell. $1100. Phone 992·2280.
who passed away. I year ago ,
1968 Chevy Belair ~7 automOtic ,
Aug ustlO .
new tires , low mileoge, e• ·
We mlu her · love and cheery A
GREAT
OPPORTUNITY I
ceUent condition . Colt W2ways:
Unlim ite d
earnings .
&gt;709.
With her we spent our happiest
O.monstrote Toys and Gifts o
doys,
few evenings a w'ek . NO ...-. 1970 ford Bronco. Phone 99'1 ·
_In memory wesM her the some ,
perience. NO paperwork . NO
00&lt;2.
As long as w8 li'ole , we'll cherish
GIMMICt&lt;S!
Gc;uoline 1973 Dus1er 3-40, take over
her name .
alowonce. Earn FREE Sample
payments . Con be seen . f irst
Sadly missed by son , . Lgrr'y ,
Kit. Coil 742·23n. Write TOY
house on leli , out Sowmon 's
Phvllis, Shawn and Matt .
LADIES PI'.RTY PLAN ,
Run Rood .
Johnst~wn , Po. 15904.
1975 Ford F·2SO Ranger , chrome
PERFECT f.or housewives ~ith
wheels, wide tires , 17 ,000
soles abi.lities. Toking mormiles , lots more extras!
tgage · applitolions , high in·
Perfect condition. Phone 843·
come potential, no 81(perienc:e
2136.
AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY - have
necesuory . Cor requ i red .
1971 Nova V·8, p.s., a ir , best of·
aerial photos of your construe·
Phonel-614·221-0100.
fer . Phone t:Wl -7897 .
tion site , business, coal and A
_:_:D.c
Dc:
Rc.
ES'-S'ER::Sc_w
:_:o::n.ct..:..::I::M
td c:.M
_E_D_IA_T_E·
gas leo1es of you, form : Ken . LYI Work at home, no ex· 1971 Monfe Carlo, a ir, am ·l m
·Gro')fe, photographer, Chelter,
perience neca510 ry· _ ex ·
stereo radio . Phone 992-5671.
Ohio. Phone 985· A15.5.
cellent pay . Write American
1967 V.W. Beetle , exce llent runn wEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY Service . 6950 Woyzato Blvd ..
ing condition , body rough .
Remember the day fOt"ever!
Suite 132, Minneapolis, MN
S•50 . Also , 1966 V.W.
The com(Siete story of you r
5S..26.
Squarebotk rvns good, good
wedding in a beautilul album. Do YOU ~AVE PARTY PLAN EX·
work · co,, S25o., Phone (614·)
Coil
Ken
Gr over .
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
378-6376 oher 5 p.m. Also ho"'e
Phologropher, Chesler . Ohio.
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
guns for sale .
Phone 985·4155.
MANAGERS IN YOLiR AREA.
1969 Plymouth Rood Ru nner, 1976
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
Oldsmobi le Cutloss ,. 1~73
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INEST ·
Chevy pickup . Call992 ·59.o(7.
MENT, NO COLLECTING OR
DEliVERING : CALL COLLECT TO 69 Chrysler Newport. good condition , naw tires, new battery .
CAROL DAY 518·489-8395 OR
Phone 949-m2.
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR ·
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE ..
ALBANY, N. Y. 1m5.
NOTICE OF APOINTMENT
· .
Cue No. 211U BRAKE mec:hanic .· ·s tate salary ex.
·Estate ot C•rl L. Greenlees
pected . Write Box 729·H . %
Deceased
Th. Daily Sentinel , Pomeroy, WilL DO odd jobs . rooling, poin·
NOt ice is hereby g iven lhat
Ohio.
Ava J . Greenlees of Route No .
ling, hauling, tree work , and
"· Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769 has DEMONSTRATORS
mowing . Phone992·7A09.
AND
been
duly · appoin-ted
MANAGER n-.ded to work
E&gt;;ecutrhc of the Estate of Carl
·with the oldest Toy &amp; Gift Shop
· L. Greenlees , deceased , late of
Party Pion in the country.
Meigs County, Ohio.
. Creditors are requ ired to
Highes f-' commissions - No fnfile their claims w ith sa id
vfttment. Call or write today,
· t idu clary w ithin three months .
SANTA's Parties , Avon , Conn. At&lt;C 'Reg ist e red Ge r man
oared this 28th day of J ulv
Shepherd puppies , shots ,
06001.
P)1one 1 (203) 673·3&lt;55 .
1976.
'wormed . 2 Iorge moles. -4
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
females . Phone 992·5623.
Manning 0 . Webster
Judge
AKC Ir ish Setter puppies, 8 weeks
Court of common Pleas .
old. $75. Phone9•9.m6.
Probate Division
OlD furniture , Ice bo)(es, brass
IBI 3, 10, !7 , 3tc
beds, wall telephonu and
ports, or complee households .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt. .. .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli m -n61J.

=:::.:;:=:::.:..----::---

-----

didn't.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24,Nov. 22)
What you accept as a tip from
an insider could really cost you
money today unless you check
H out. Th e information is f!aw-

ed :
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dtc.
21 ) You have a tendency today
to promise a bit more than yo u
ca n ex pect to deliver . You
might do th is to gain stature.

CAPR ICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
19) You could be a trifle too
gullible tod ay for you r own
good: U someone tells you he
ca ught ·a big fish , ask to see a
photograph.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 1t)
Loss of s mall but valuable
possessions is possible today.
Don't leave your rings on the
washstand or your watch in the
golf cart .
PISCES (Ftb. 20·M•ch 20) A
friend who is a real time wa ster
ca n disrupt your schedule it
you let ~er linger too tc;mg over
morni ng coffee .

~Your
WBirthday
Aug. 11, 1871
The lure of distant places will
be very tempting to you thls
comil"'g year. Make your plans
wolf in advance if yo1,1 e x ~ect a
ha ppy voyage.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
James F. Butcher, Jennifer
S. Butcher to Michael L.

Olllds, Twila S. &lt;llilds, lot,
. ~tlddleporf.
Mildred Filch, affidavit.
Lillie Groppenbacher, S.

CASH poid for oil mak" and COONER'S Campers , Sal4ts and
Carr Wlnla's to William G.
models of mobile hOflles ,
Renrol. OEN HOUSE SALE.
COUNTY: MEIGS
Phone
orec~
Code
61-4·423·9531
.
Begin~
July 30. Drawings,
Pee~. Della L. Peek, part lot
PUILIC I!OTICE
retreshmenh , lake Mei gs 28 or
The following documents SSCothSS for junked auto, Frye's
462, Middlep«t.
were received or prepared by
32 to BASHAN ond follow signs.
Truck Auto Port, , Rutland .
Board of Trustees of The Ohio Envlrcnmental
Phone
742·2011.
1971
StarCraft camper with own·
Columbia Township to Ohio Protection Agency during the
ing. Phone Bob Soyre . 247previous
week
.
Anyone
Power Co., coal, Colwnbla. aggrieved or adversely ~~f . COINS, currency , tokens . gold
2166.
and sliver jewelry , We need
Donald R . Martin, Palrlcla fected by !nuance, denial ,
19M and older U.S. coins . Coli
modlt lcallon, revocation or
A. Martin to LaiTy W. Goble
for other 742·2331 or come out
renewal of any permit(s).
Billy R. Goble, 7 acres; licenu(sJ. or varlence(sl
to our coin shop on Rutland and
mav request an adiudlcatlon
leoding · Creek Rd. Roger WANTED Ia rent house or small
&amp;alem.
hearing by written request
Wamsley .
Evereet E . Grant, Charlotte pursuant to Ohio Revised Code
form in country . Call coll.ct .
592·6010evenings. Responsible
L. Grant to Charles F. Section 3145 .07 within thlrly TIMBER, Po,....roy Forest Pro·
couple .
(30J davs of the directors
ducts. Top price for standing
Johnson, Terri Johnson lot • propond
to issue or
sowtimber. Call Kent Honby ,
Middleport.
• • deny suchaction
documents . That
1·446·8510.
Ralph D. Lavender, Mary statute does not provide for
hearing requests to The OEPA
Janice Lanvender to Sher- on applications, complaints,
verif ied complaints , orders. or
FURNISHED , 2 bedrm . apartment ,
man A. Cundiff,
M. tlnalactlons
.
adults only 1 in M iddleport .
Cundiff, lots, SyracUBe.
Within 30 days Of publica tlon IF YOU have a service to offer,
Phone 992·387" .
Clyde E. White, dec. to In a newspaper in the affected . want to buy or sell something,
county
person may also :
ae looking for work ... or 3 AND 41 RM. furnished and un·
Mary L. White, alfid. for
( 1) subml written comments
ho tevar . . . you 'II get results
furnished
opts. Phone 992w
5-4
trans. , Bedford.
relating to actions, propose-d
faster with a SentinefWant Ad .
3-4.
, complaints,
or
Helen E. Bargelob to actions
verified com plaints ;
OJ
Call992·2156.
COUNTRY Mobil&amp; HOme Park . Rt.
Charlea W. Barceloh, Lena B. request a public meeti ng YARDSale, Weds . throughFriday ' 33; tenm iles northotPomeroy.
and Saturday from 9 o .. till
Lars- Iota with concrete patios,
Bargeloh, 3.81 acres, Olive. regarding proposed actions ;
and ·Or (3) request notice Of
sld.wolks , runners and off
Norman Yeauger, Dorothy further
. actions
or
dark . Clothes, antique glass,
streetparklng. Phone992·7479.
furniture, and books. 2 mlle1
Yeaucer to Ja)'llllU' Coal Co., proceedings .
Final actions to Issue , deny,
aboveLetortFcllllonRI. 338.
3 Room furnished · hou 1e with
.30 acre, Salisbury.
modify , revoke or renew
both. Adulh onlv. Phone 992. ,
licenses,
or yARD Solo, 698 Lourol St., Mid·
$535 .
Allen Yeauger, Ella Mae permits.
var iances that · Ire not
dleport. Tuesday , Weds. and
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co., preceded
by proposed ec:tfons
Thunday .
_. room · furnis hed apt, clo'e to
JO acre, Salisbury.
may be appealed to · the En ·
Powell 's Super Volu still
Board of Review, " Family Garage So 1• · starting
available. Phone992 ·3658.
Alfred Yea uger, Hilda vlrqnmel')tal
Suite 305, 395 Eut Broad
Monday through Friday at long
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co.,
Street 1 ColumbUs, Ohio, ,.3216, -'B
=ott:.:o::
m::.•.::si"g"'
ns:..:o:.:t.!:p.::
o•:.:•..:o:c
ff"ic::
• :..
·_
2 Bedroom trailer, $28 we&amp;k , all
All such final act ions ere so utilities paid'. Phanefi92.3J2...
.30 acre, Salbbury.
Identified in thiS notice . All YARD SAlt on .Lourel Cliff ol Emel
other requests for
ad Ale1hir•'s old home place. 9th 3 ·Rooms and both , furnished
iud lca·tlon hearings, and other
through 13th, Plenty of clothing
apartment, all util ities furnish·
. communications c:oncernlng
and odds and ends. lOa .m. till
eel. Inquire ot 356 North Four·
.public hearings _ · public
dark .
th, Middleport .
meetings,
ldludlcatlon
·
hearings, complaints of any 4 Fomlly Yard Sole , 156 Pearl ONE u.oroom apartments at
Tile A1•-e
kind. and regulations, should
Srroer, Middleporl. Monday,
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
for $11)4 monthly plu ~ tlec. or
By VJIIIed ~ Illlenlalleu be addressed to The Legal Tuet: ond Weds. August 9, 10,
Section , Ohio EPA.
11. Women '•,· men's, thlldren's
$130 Including •kKtrlc. LOWER
TodaJll n.dly, Aq. 10, PFtecords
. 0 . •3216,
Boic 10.9,
Columbus,
' co'"''·
I 1•~ o idbo ttl es, hom.,-,-..e
--~
RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS
Ohio,
(61,.)
,.66
-6037.
,
lhe 223rd t111 19'16 with 143 Unless otherwise stlftd In flower poft, two pair roller ·convenient to · shOpping on.
to follow.
part icular !'!Of lees , all other , skates and other misc. items.
Third and Mill Streets In Mid-

uirralne

any

L_ _ _.

at

1be 111001111 between 11.1 full .
~g~~~n~~ca~~onpsroJ~~~~dl~!
phue and lui quarter.
lions and requests tor public

Tile moraine alan are
Juplte' and Sllurn.
The enning ltln are Mer•
·curr, Min IJid venu~.
Thole !lorn on lhll day are
under ~ qn of Leo.
Herbert Hoover, Slit Jftll·
dent"' till Unlled lllalel, born Aq. 10, 1174.

m.eetlnas. st\Ciuld be addressed

either to The New soUrce, Air,
or N JlOES Permit R.cords ·
Sec: II
whichever II ap .
, at Ttle Ohio EPA,
. BOJII: 1049, Columbus,
•3216 .

I'll !ua.aEddle l'llber ad
Jane WJ'!IU"" bcim 1111 tldl
date, he In 1t28 and lbe In
ltll,

II) tO, lie
f

Television

GA~~
SA~ T~l'f'doy,
1
0

~:•po:;~~~~nedn~:.w h~:: qu:-~~

Friday
ton ,,w. Va.,
manager at Apt . 16, or call
· fur-, .
street behind post otf1ce. turn
m.n21 .
left, first street below post of-"'
'1'-'
lc:.:
• :...
· - - - - -- - - ONE bedroOm apartments at
YARD and Furniture Sole starts
RIVERSIDE. Phone992·3273 .
·

W.O., August 11 C!f 10:00 a .m.
Including onoloctric pump wirh
variance from
tan~ . $110: rototlller, $1:25
ben
each, two months o_ld. Turn off
Route 7 ot Hidden Loko1 sign ,
Dr ..
one-fourth mile down Forest
Run Road or call 992·7M5.
GARAGE SALE, Thuf'ldOy, Frldoy
and Soturdoy, August 12, 13
and ,,., 701 Beech Sfrtet, Mid ·
dloporl , Ohio , Mlsc.l!oms.

--

" (-

•

.

l'nl Oodge Charger . $1300, el( ·
cellent conditiOn . Phone {304 )

675· 2651. .

lOCUST POSTS , round or split .
Phone 9.. 9.277-4 .
(OAL. limestone, and calcium
chloride and ca lcium brine for
dust control and speciol mix:ing
salt for formers . Main Street,
Pomeroy , Oh io or phone 992:3891.

cANNING peaches now reody
thru August . Several va rieties
by the bushel 1 111 bushel or
peck . Please bring own c_orl tolt1er, 2 convenient locations :
Midway Marke t. Pomeroy,
9'92· 2582; BOb's Market, Mason,
n3·572 1.
!97'1 Ka,..,asaki 175, Enduro, $250.
Set of motorcycle carr ie-rs , $ 13.
Phone 9'12·5523 ,

cANNING tom.atoes and sweep
peppe rs . Cleland Fa rms .
Geraldine Cleland. Racine,
Ohio.
IN CASH

2~

(:hannel CB, am -fm

rod io . 8 track stereo. Coli 992 -

3965 .

1971

HONDA

CL ·• SO.

12 ,000

- - ----

Ohio

Undtr~redtlllt 1o
'ltmel'lluy
School Peckqt Plcturtl
Seniors&amp; YMrHok
- Wtcldlngs-

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

KEN GROVER

Squort Veri lnstolled

'6.95

Photogrephy
985-4 155
Clltsltr, ohio
7· 14·1 mo.

TH!=V ('AI M THE-Y '&lt;1 OH, OH! A&gt;! D l'M Af
W5F!.E TI': Yfrv·G TO 1~1/IEIICON 5•r::
cO NTA CT A FfMA'E
5ECRET AGENT AT
132 6EAC0r.J ST.!

David Plf'ions, OWner

WIN AT BRIDGE
North eliminates gueaawork

949-H.I4

6·7·1 mo.

_
.,ER.
-

American
Auto 'Sales

You can IIVt hundreds
lhoullnds of dollln
with llumlnum or vlnyt ·
siding.

NORTH
• Q 10 8 7
• 7 53

fftEE ESnMATES!

"'K 10 53

••111

,.........

IMUiation Sel'flc:ll

llltrtt itrtiMIIItks
mJIM

Wlnshleld R~pllcoment
Free Estlmetls
On Body Work
Expert Pointing
Insurance Work

GLEN R. BISSE.U.

I!PUI:l,!IIT

IIIIICICIIIS

AT949-2801

diiUII
SIDift5.SOffiTT

rutz.ml

··

5~304

949-2860
PLEASE
NOSUNDAYCALLS
8·9-76 1 m~.!!L .-

~ 111-1

'OUR BP..i~F

'5TROb,l..l-lOFF

...,.

· -~---,

A· ~
:
.

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutte.s,
Painting and Repair

H""'".. r fiDPe: l{OU

OR

GUTTER SERVICE

.

ANY PITCH
. ANY SIZE

Tlle Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

Continuous one piece
gutters. W~ hang it, or do It
yourself. Special prices Ia '
builders.

liOUtheallm Ohio
Tnm Rafter Co.

AI. TROMM CONST

· Box 28-A
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph. (6141742-24419
We Oillvtr
7·28·4 mos.

Rutland
142·2321
All Work Guaronleed
Free Estimotos

mo.

992-7320
7·9· 1 mo.

ANTIQUE restorations , reproduc·
lions, cobiner making and fur·
nilure repair. 131 V. 3rd, Mid. dleporl , ·e m.5735 doy ond
evening.

HOUSE for sole , 2 largo
\:&gt;edrooms. Iorge living room,
kitc hen , dining , carpettl, $~, 000
in Harrisonville. Phone 742·
2796.

LITILE ORPHAN ANNIE

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

.------------i
SWIMMING
POOLS

Above end below ground
pool kits for the do-il· '
your5elf man .
All pao I suppiiH IVIIilb le,

TUPPERS Ploins· Eostern area , 2 HOMESITES for sole, I acre and
yr. old bi-level hom~&gt; lo·cat&amp;d on
up. Middle~rt , near Rutland.
l 'lt ocl-es . Rt. 7. 1-:iggscrest
Coil em·74BI . .
Manor , 3 or _. bedrooms ; 2
baths . tiving , dining room a nd NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
all alec. , 1 acre, Middleport,
kitchen, with refrigerator and
dose to Rutland. Phone 992range , famil y room , 1 laundry,

too.

D. Bumgardner

11 ACRES - Of grassy
pasture with new fence. 4
bedroom rftldence, 1'12
bath I, spring water, near
the mines. 529.000.

only S200

1 - Gooa used 12 cu . ft.
freezer only $125

•

Landmar11

W.

.Jack
tarsey,Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

WilL do sewing and alterations .
Neat work , reasonable rates ,
Phone J.an Trussell , 949-2660.

MOBILE home for' sale or rent , 3
bedrooms , ol utilities poid .
Phonem-nSL
197'0 Double wide mobile home
set on permanent foundat ion,
lronr porch , 2~6
• ~! 1
. . acres auvy
mile from Racine. 3 bedrOOms ,
!=en tral olr conditioning, stove

~~~ns-C~;!~:;~~;~r. l~~~;,:;~

Ph0ne9.t9-281S.

)973 Kirkwood 1:1x65 mobile
home , front den , with boy windows , completely carpetd ex·
cept kitchen, excellent condition. For •ale or anum• .
poyrnonts . Coil Rondy Wlllloms ,
7,.~·2172.
_

SE

only SS,SOO .

1 Good used · (almost
new) IS cu. ft . free10r

Pome~

heatl.

Rufus'

Rufus!

NEW Ll STING 15 acres
with g~s well,
F.A.
fume~. 3 btdrooms, bath,
nice kitchen, new t,mlly
room with large flreplece
and 2 cer block garage. All
mlntrall II $32,500.

GRACIOUS - 1 story older
brick home with 2 corner
lots . 5 large BR. 2 baths .
Ultra modern kitchen h•s
everythl119 and more too .
N. G. hoi water heat. 12
rooms, $20,000.00

4th ACRES ~ Near grade :
schllOI. 6 room honit, all
utllltln, central elr and
heal, and ote~r buildings.
Asking $Z9,500.

DON'T PAY high rent. Bur.
this . '2 story frame . Roo ,
siding end carport like
new. 3 bedrooms. bath. N.
G. hoot. 7 rooms In all .
JUST $7,SOO.OO

HAVING
TROUBLE
SELl-ING, CALL. US AT

ABNER

I ONE IT A LLlD

~ACRE4 be~l.
Bath. Full width living R.

ru~·~.c~~s·Po~6~·. ~·at I~:

Large
Garage
(Middleport) . Asking
s19,soo.oo
AN
$11dOO.OO
SW.EETHEART ~ ltanth•
type - 3 nice bedrooms.
Bath . Very nice kitchen .
Utility. N.G. Furnace . Full
bo5ement lde•l for 'Rec.
room. Steel siding. Small
lot.
•
we hlvt qualiFied buyer•
for ne- homH '-! ua
Mllyovra.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·2259 ... 992-2568

1

•

Ol.JJOF

MY BELOVED

22 YEARS OLD,
AND A MULTI -:-

MOTHEFC rr- SHE

MILLIONA IRE' !!-

DISCOVERED

GAS!!-

SECRET-

Syslems _lnstolled . by
licensed Installer. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742-2,.09,

chortled South .
" An unnecessary waste of
time , energy aud guesswork,"
replied North . "The hand was
unbeal&lt;lble with no problems
at all ."
South started out well by
ducking the first heart, but
when East led Lhe jack of
diamonds , South should have
gone right up with his ace.
Next would come a trump to
dummy foilowed by a ruff of
the last heart. Then South
would lead his qllftll of
diamonds and claim 1111 contract. It wouldn ' t matter
which opponenL held the king
of diamonds . He would be
caught in an end play.

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST! I, 1976

6 :DO-Summer Sernesler to .
6:1}---Farm Report 13.
WEST
EAST
6:2o-The Story 13.
• 53
•A
6: 3(}.-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
¥ KQ J 82
\t 10 9 4
8; Christopher Clo5ellp 10.
t K93
tJ 108752
6:45--Mornlng Rport 3.
• Q97
.8 64
6:5D-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
SOUTH i DI
6:55--Good Morning, Trl State 13.
• KJY642
7:DO-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,.13; CBS
¥ A&amp;
News 8: Chuck While Reports 10.
tA Q
7:,5--Bugs Bunny
Frlends .IO.
.A J 2
7: 3D-Schoolles 10.
Both vulnerable
8 :DO-Jeff's Collie 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesa me St.
33 .
Wesl North Ea1t South
8: 3D-Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A.M . J; Phil Donahue 4,1S; Lucy Show 8: Mike
Pass 2 •
Pa9S 4 A
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J. 13.
Pass Pass Pass
9: 3D-Cross· Wits 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattleta les ·a;
Opening lead - K •
Mike Douglas 13.
Here is a nother question on
10 :0o-Sanford &amp; Son 3 .~. 15: Price Is Right 8,10; Bit
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
revokes . Dec larer leads . a
With Knit 33 .
spade
from dummy. He is in·
On the opposite end of the
10: 15--General Hospital 6.
.
10:3(}.-Celebrlly Sweepstakes 3,4, 15 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;
spectrum from the finesse formed by an opponent that
You 33.
designed to give declarer an the lead is in his own hand . He
leads
a
heart.
A
Delaware
11
:DO-Wheel
of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday ~ ; Edge of
extra entry to dummy is the
Night 6; Gambit 8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
.
finesse taken for the sheer joy reader wants to know if Ibis Is
a revoke .
11 :3D-Hollywood Squares 3.4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
of finessing .
The answer is that it
Love of Life 8,10.
South ducked the first heart
definitely
is a revoke if he has
11 : 55--Take Kerr 8; Ms . FIKII 10.
and won the continuation .
12 : DO-Fun Factory 3,15; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun ~ ;
Then he led a trump . East took a spade in his own hand . The
revoke
becomes
established
News 6,8, IQ; Sesame St. 33 .
his ace and shifted to the jack
12: 3o--Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Search
when
a
n
opponenL
plays
to
tbe
of ~iamonds . South promptly
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
finessed his queen and the revoking card.
12 :55--NBC News 3.15.
(For
a
co
py
of
JACOBY
defense had three tricks in .
1 :DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 8;
Some five minutes later South MODERN, send $7 to : "Win
Young &amp; the Res'lless 10; Nol For Women Only 15;
had finessed successfully · a l Bridge ." cl o this
Elec. Co . 33.
.
against West's queen of clubs newspaper. P. 0 . Bo• 489,
1 : 3D-Days of O~r Lives 3,4,1S; Family Feud 6,13; As
Radio City Station . f/e w York.
and won the rubber .
The World Turns 8, 10; Evening at Pops 33.
" Pret t y good guess , " N. Y. 10019)
2:DO-S20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:3(}.-Doctors 3,~ ,1 S ; One Life to Live 13; Guiding
I
Light 8, 10; Strauss Family 33.
3:DO-Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Romagnolls' Tabl,e 20.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3: 15--General Hospital 13.
3 :30-Bewlfched 6; Match Game 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
ACROSS
. 39 Kinsman
You 20 ; Ourstory 33.
.
1 Wine
(abbr. )
4:00--Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somersel15;
disorder
40 Carried
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
6 Fii - fiddle
DOWN
20,331 Movie " Little Boy Lost" 10; Dln•h 13.
I Italian
( 2 wds.)
4:3(}.- Bewilched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
9 Underground
city
Sesame St. 20,33; Flintstones 15.
e)ltrance
2 European
5 :00-Bonanza 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: lm·
possible 15.
II Publication,
republic
5: 3D-Adarn. 12 4; News 6; Fam ily Affair 8; Elec . Co .
for short
3 Luster
20,33; Adam-12 13.
12 Kind of
4 " Brian's -"
Yesterday's ADswer
6:DO-News
3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
nwnber
5 Note
6
:3o-NBC
News3,4,
1l; ABC News 13: Andy Grllfllh 6;
II Babylonian 28 Commuter's
13 Devoured
from
CBS News 8.10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Book Beat
reading
14 Tine
Guido
deity
33.
material
15 Dock
6 Absalom's 18 ltsy-bitsy
7 :DO-T r liffror Cons. 3: ToT elllhe Tru1h 4; Bowling hi
29 Dimlni.!h
20 Attraction
Trim
chief
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8 ; News 10; Wild
30 Ward off
Inhabit
7 Fabric
at Giza
Kingdom 13; Family Altair 1S; Co~surner Survival
31 Proofreading
19 Blunder
8 Ten per..
23 Manage
Kif 20: Tourists are Com ing 33.
mark
·
7:3(}.-Last of the Wild 3; Name That Tune~ ; Maich
24 Akin
Llama land
center
Game PM 6; S25,000 Pyrarnld 8; The Judge 10; To
25 Click beetle 33 Brief note
21 Chinese
9 Tyke
Tell the Truth 13; Wild Kingdorn 15; Robert
36 Vietnamese
2S Lobsterpagoda
10 Peach
MacNeil Report 20,33 .
holiday
Newburg
2% .On the other
variety
8 :0D-LIIIIe House on the Pra ir ie 3. 4. 15; Bionic Woman
hand
13: World at War 6: Plloi"Hazard's People" 8,10;
Z3Mine
Nova 20.33.
'
·
extract
9 : DO-Pi lot " Over and Out " 3.4. 15; Barella 6,13; Movie
Zl Indian
" The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman" 8, 10;
1
buffalo
Great Performances 33 ; Upst airs, Downstairs ·20.
9 : 3(}.-C hi co &amp; the Man 3,4, 15 .
27 Fencill!l
10 :0(}.-Hawk 3,4,15; Starsky
Hutch 6,13'; Life of
dununy
Leonardo Da VInc i 33 ; News 20.
28 Type
10:3(}.-Aimanac 20.
of bet
11 :Do-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; ABC News 33 .
31 That
11 : 1(}.-News 8.10.
(Fr. )
11 :3(}.-Johnny Carson 3,~. IS ; Movie "The Burglars"
Direction
6,13; Janakl 33.
on ship
11:4(}.-Mo vie " When Elghl Bells Toll " 8; Movie "The
French
Desperate Ones" 10.
revo1:OD--Tomorrow 314.
lutionary
1 :AD-News 13.
hero
Tasteless
fare
35 Repeat
Caen's
Unocromblt thest four Jumblto,
one letter to each square, to
sununer
form four ordinary warda.
• ·.o
38 Greek
goddess

•••

:n

a.

~~~

Is
~INK ~INGS

OJT!
FIND OUT WHO I
REALLY AWl ... WHAT
I. R&amp;&lt;\LLY WANT
OJT OF LIFE .1

l ...I eEUEVE I CAN
UNDERSTAND ~.1..131L LY!
A LITTl.E VACATIUN

WOULD 00 YOU 0000 I

sorvlco. Jene Rodman , phone

992-5910.

-

811LL5 0' FIRE!!
IT'S WILFERT!!

WMPO AM-FM

HOME ON LEAVE!!

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT
·'

0011 Repot I, .: i

TIME NO SEE

!~

r

JII

CRYPTOQ UOTES

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HEAR.-NEWS.' FIRsT·-ON

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hints . E~ch day the corte le tt e rs arc difTere nt.

PDEUQCH

JQZZDDK

WILFERT!! LONG

to work It :

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One h.•tt('r simply stands for an ot h er. ln this sample A is
u ~ed for th e three L's, X for tht' tw o O's, e tc. Sing le letters-.
apostrophes, the length and formation o( the words are aU

VUEH

LON6 TIME

. ,....n.I.-J ,_

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

EXCAVATING, BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL ..
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED . LOWu
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILlr
PULLINS, PHONE em·2478 DAY
OA"JJGHT.
BUILDING, ' remodeling , an~ :
rtpoi11. Qualily work , tfflclonl

and 5P&amp;

9:3(}.-PIIol 6,13, 8.10.
•
10 :DO-City of Angels .3.~. IS : Pilot 6, 13; Swllch 8, 10;
Olympiad 33.
10 : 3D-Pilot 6, 13; News 20.
11 :DO-News 3,4.6,8•.10,13.15; Black Perspec;llve on the ·
News 20; ABC News 33 .
11 :lo-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Mystery of the Week
6, 13; Movie "The Wings of Eagles" 8; MOvie " Guns
at Batasl" 10; Janakl 33 .
1:DO-Tomorrow 3J: News 13.

~lYWID~;:u..J

PTIC

SEPTIC TANKS cle~ 'Aodorn
Sonllatlon , 992·39!·1 ~r 992·
2428.
WILl do . roofing, construction
plumbing and hoollng .. No lob
too Iorge or too s,.,oll. Phone '
742·2318.
CI'.RPENTER, · flooring, ceiling •
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
'
·
·
VERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·'
VICE. Meigs·Athens County.·
Boltrl from $3m up. Morrill
c~o... (614) 698·3021.

LOVELY CORNEA OVER tu.....;.992;.;;.;
·»2=S.:..

•

a.

2•38.
DEXTER Business
building ebout 30 ' 40 for

1 knew
I wouldn'
like it
down
here!

You don't
qot a brain
tn l.jerfool

TEAfORD

1 - Good used JO cu. ft.
freezer only $150

Romagnolls' Table 20; Strauss Family 33 .
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let' s Deal With It 6;
Match Game PM 8:. Price Is Rlght10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Nashville On The Road 15.
8:DO-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; Pop! 8, 10;
Lowell Thomas Remembers 33; AI The Top 20 .
8:30-L.averne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Good Times 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kif 33 .
9:DO-Pollce Woman 3,4,15; Pilot 6,13; M ·A·S· H 8,10;
E venlng AI Pops 331 Men Who Made the Movies 20;

~~aW~

Noble Summit Rd ..
Middleport
PHON'E em.5724
7·21· 1 mo.

FREEZER SAL£

10

• 64

. CONTACT

IIHIDOW$ &amp; DOOIS

St . Rt. 1
Coolville, Ohio
661-31l7 .
7·21· 1 mo.

~2~2

........

7481.
and goroge . gQod gorden 9rec .
$3.1 ,000. Phone (614) 985·4245 . SMALL form 'for sale, 10'/o down,
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
3 .Bedroom house in Middleport.
ty, W. Vo. Phone (30&lt;) 772·
Phone 992·30412.
3102or (304) m-3227.
197'3 Hondo Sll70 . e)(ceUent con ·
HOUSE for sole, 391 South Second
dit ion , $250. Pl1one992·5213.
Ave ., Middlepo rt. Phone 99'2· COUNTRY farmland with secludMEN'S used work clothes- . $2 .50
~65 .
·
ed w~ods, water, and good OC · · BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Comset , o lm-ost new washer a nd GOOD CATilE FARM FOR SALE
cess tn Mon roe County, W. Vo.
plete ServiCe. Phone 9·9-2487
dryer , G.E. matched set . $300 .
BY OWNER . 71 ceres M&amp;l
S1.000 down, call (30-4 ) n 2•
or 9-49-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
1
3102
Store hours: 9:00·5:00 Monday
Jock5on Co . Fenced. modern 5
or(~) m- 3227 ·
Bradford .
·
through Saturday . Closed
house ,
newly 2 ·bedrooms , Iorge modern kit. ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Thundoy . Bailey's. Middle_port. · room
redecorated ,
completely
chen, farced oif furnace. lin· ·
Sweepers, too5ters, irons, all
KAWASAKI 5(X) , good cond ition ,
carpeted . 55 acr&amp;s ga:od
coin Hgts . 992·5737.
small opplian~es . Lawn mower,
$675 . Phone 949·2628 or 9 .. 9.
next to State 'Highway Garage
pasture, 15 ocres wooded 3 bedroom houle for sole a·t 520
2626.
virgin timber, developed spr·
Sycomore St., Middleport, good
on Route 7. Phone (61-4) 985ings , good born, and orher
buy for $8,000. Phone em.3578, :::'3::::'
825::'.::-::ccc-.,-:-:----.,-IV75 Hondo C.O. 125·S street ·
buildings, hig h country ." rolling
or 992-7667.
bike , 2. ~ miles . will sell
hifls , excellent view . Appoint. -::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::; REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
reasonable . Phone 742-2233.
ment only . Phone (61,.) 384 · r
ond all types of general repoit.
FOR SAlE, gooqusedT .V.'s , cOlor
2591 after 5 p.m. ·P-rice
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
SSO.OOO.
perlence. Phone 992·2409.
,
and black and white. Harrison 's
T.V. Service. 276 Sycamore St .,
D&amp;o
TREE
Trimming,
20
.,.ears
ex·
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
Middleport , Ohio. Phone em. "' Room house and bath , cellar ,
perience . Insured free
.110
Me~hlnic Pomeroy, 0.'
garage
,
outbulding
,
nlca
2522.
estimates . Call 992.-2384 or
gorden spot , well , city water ,
Phon.• 9~-ll1~
·'
20 ft . Starcrolt with .400 cu. in.
(614) 698·7257 Acclb"'a-'
ny". ·-~~
gos and elec. Phone (614) 992·
RUTLAND ....: Business
motOr wit h Jet drive. Phone
5871.
SEWING
MACHINE
Repolrs,
oer·
building first floor , and a 5
em·7721.
-~-vtce,
oil
makes,
992·228.4
.
The
1. 15 ocre1 o.
d on Leading room apartment up. Nat.
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
liKE new, 3 h.p. tiller , 35,000 BTU
Creek Road w1th water top, gas, city water and a good
Authorized Singer SOles and
heater, buil t-in sink. Phone
Call em.5352 or 9'12·24'16.
place for a b~slness .
S...vlce. We sharpen Scissors .
em .JA6S.
Askl~g $13,500.
, FARM , 2 bedr,oom house with
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ood
1975 Hondo CB125 , approx . 500
bath, full . basement, carport
batkhoe worlc: clump truclcs
miles, perfect condition . Coli
NICE
HOME
Modern
and other. outbuildings. Plenty
and lo-boys for hire; will t,Gul
(61•) 985 ·3501 olter 3 p.m.
of water. Must sell sua to ill kitChen. dining and living
fill
dirt, to soil, limestone and
heolth to bo&amp;t offer, Coli 992· on first ftmr, 3 bedrooms,
197.o4 Suzuki G. T. 380, excellent
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef·
5282
.
•nd
beth
on
2nd.
Full
cQnd,tion. Call 742·2143 after 5
ltro, doy p/lone 992·7019,
basement, natural gas
p.m . o r contact Dol los Weber .
HOUSE for sole, 3 bedrooms , oil
nighl phone em ·3525 or 992·
electric, Fomily room fully fired hot water furnace,
5232.
WOODEN playpen , excellent con·
carpered With wood-burning front and back porchet.
difion , very reasonable. Used
EXCAvATING, dour, bockho,.
fireplace, lorr lot with storage $29.500.
by 1 child. Phone doy llme, em.
and dltcher, Charles R. Hot·
bulfding on
garden spoce.
37:12 or after 5 p .m. 992-2961 .
BARGAIN -Nice Inside 2
lleld , Bock Hoe Service ,
~ustic Hills , Syrgcu•• · Phone
bedrooms. modern · both,
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 742· 20118. ~
197' V. W. bus . Phone 992·7692 .
em.7836.
nice
kitchen,
notulol
gils
GR~'S CB SALES, locoltd ol Er·
3 lots for 1ale In t-4orrlsonvllle.
F .A. furnace and full
win 's Gulf Service, Mid,
Phone 992·751W .
bo11menl at only $5,500.
dleporl, Ohio. Phono
em.
miles , sissy bar, crosh bors ,
pull bock hand le bars , new tire
and seals, ScrOmb!er side
pipes , ~. Coll949·2•80.

APT. far rent , 5 roams and both.
, Phone (614) 985·3350.
1 bedroom apartment, all elec·
trk off street porking. Phone
em:m4
1'16912.60. 2btdroom Schult, air
;:-'==..:.:.·--,...--...,.--conditioner, · very good condi·
2 Bedroom trailer, real nice. , 7-ri"on
'':'::.P-'h=
o ne,_7:..~::;2c,;-3=
0 18::.·~-ulililios J"ld. Phone em.J3U.
195-1 Libtrly Mobile Home 8•50.
1975 Mobile home, 3 bedroar,s in
$700.00. Someone to take over
Mason , W. Vo . $ISO pe~r month.
balance. of payments . Call 992·
Phone (6U)698·m2. .
2524.

----

-~~~illl.

We Ieoine

1971 Chevrolet Caprice , e~o:cellent
condition., $1700. Phone 992·
521 3::..- - - - " " " ' ; ' - - : ' 3 speed on the
condition . May
South Fourth
or phone

S:DO-Bonenza 3: I Dream of Jeannie 4; Partridge
Family ·a, Mission.: .lrnposslble 15.
5:3(}-Adam ·12 4; News 6; Family Aflalr 8; Electric
Company 20.33 Adam ·12 13.
6 :DO- News 3.4.8, 10. t3, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 : 30-NBC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6; CBS News 8.10;
Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Ull•s, Yoga and Yo~ 33 .
7:DO-Truth or Con..,quences 3: To Tell The Trulh 4;
Bowling tor Dollars 6; Let' s go lo the Races 8;
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Family Affair 15;

CARPET SHOP

-CortiJift!t Sclleol Stryt,.t

for easy viewing

TUESDAY , AUGUST 10, tm

RACiftE

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Atrltl - lndustrle l
Constructl8n """rtls

l~g

YOU

WM

KDV

DKZG

UWMWKC

FQUQPIEVH

YOU

JEV
YQZZ-

QZMD

Q

WK C. Yesterday's
KNOWN TO
KNOW. -

Z .
JDUKH
CrypCoquote: A CELEBRITY IS ONE WHO IS
MANY PERSONS HE JS GLAD HE DOESN'T
H. L. MENCKEN
(C) t9'76 Kin&amp; Featurt-S s ,ndlcale, ln.c . ),

TOO MUCH

CAMEZE~
P'
\

I

I

Now UT""'t the tin: led !etten
to fonn I he nrprlte &amp;NWtr, u

::::::::;~k~~;::::;:;::;~·;;=~IUJ~I'~..ted b7 the above eutoon.
............::Ptitl=lll=•=•:.:::AIISWII=•=--_.:.JI (

XUI D

IL..

(.l.nen lo.orrow)

I

Jumhl"' PIETY

Yetterd•r'•

·

An•w~tn

LYRIC

UNFAIR HEARTH

Could 4 rnan "'"o clean• uptWI bt
thii7-"FilTHY RICH"

. DADBURN SEA !!
IT SA&gt;15 IN ~E NINTH
CHAPTE!l OF ECCLESIASTES,
'A LIVIN6 006 15 6ETTER •
THAN A DEAD LION '"

"AS

Theology
and the

Dog.

~AT

DOES
THAT

MEAN ?

I

KNOW, 81JT
A61:EE WIT'" IT!

DON'T

�,,

-16- Tht Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·P~m~eroy, 0 ., Tuesday, A.ug. 10, 1976

·-·-----~

STEIGER
"UP
AND
ABOUT"
INGLEWOOD, calli. (UP!)
- Actor Rod Steiger, who
(Continued from page I)
.
won an Academy Award in
ployment Services. They are
the World Trade Center In Applying for $44 mlllion 1988 lor hla portrayal of a
New York City, where federal funds to continue Soatbem pollee ·chief In "In
mlatcbed doors IWIIIII! on employment services, and the Heat of the Nl&amp;ht,"
underwent. a cardiac bypass
their. hlngee.
wanted input from the · Saturday and is now
Directly in Ita path were a Colllllli5sion:
recuperating in a private
number ol New York's
One commission member
wealthy suburbs, many of said an employment office
whose residents were should be located in Meiss
allowed Monday to leave County, to prevent people
their jobs early In order to wanting employment from
get borne before the having to travel 60 mUes or
hurricane ~lt. Belle Uttered more. The PlaMing Com· ·
tile communities with debris' mission gave its approval of
and sent trees and Umbs tile proposal.
crashing lniC power lines. ·
The next meeting of tile
In the one-hour trip aeross
CommisSion is scheduled for
Long Island, Long Island the third Monday in Sep·
Soood and into Norwalk, the !ember.
stor m began "losing its
Punch," the National
Weather Service said.

Capital

New York Ci~y whacked with 90-mph winds
1

By JOHN MOODY

NEW YORK (UP! )
Hurricane Belle slapped
America's most populous
metropo111an center with 90
mlle-an-bour winds and
(llowed through New York 's
wealthy bedroom suburbs
loday, then sma!hed Itself to
death oo t11e lowll!nds of New
EngWid.
.
The
season's
first
hurricane· did a surprise
"wiggle," brushed New York
Qty and clitved a path
through Long Island Into
southern CoMectlcut, killing
at least one person, sending
thousands of others fleeing to
safety, downing power lines
and tri8gerlng floods. .
But Belle arrived too' little
too late to live long. The ~

Two sentenced
in Meigs court
Two 18 year · old Akron
youths were gi veil sentences
of from six months to five
years at the Correctional,
Medical and Recepti on
Center in Columbus as the
retult of an attempted
breaking and entering at
Modern Supply Store in
Pomeroy last week.
Sentenced Monday in the
Meigs County Cominon Pleas
Court by Judge John C.
Bacon were Nathan Mc·
Donald and Charles Rit·
tenour . Also sentenced on a
three charge Violation of
probation ·was Dave Darst,
Middleport, He, too will go to
the Correctional, Medical and
Reception
Center
at
Columbus.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMI'M'ED - Christine
Jones, Pomeroy ; Paul Ray,
Long Bottom; Linioul
Johnson, Reedsville ; Bar·
bara . McQuaid ; Lorain ·
Herbert Clarke, Coolville;
Neal White, Pomeroy; Mary
Layne, Cheshire ; Clyde
Ferrell, Pomeroy; Gladys
Goulding, New Haven ;
Mildred Bissell, Tuppers
Plains; Nellie Wines,
Oteahire.
DISCHARGED - Charles
HaMabs, Vanedia Knight,
Christine Johnson, Pearl
Darst, MlchaellWl II, Erma
Hollon.

DIVORCES GRANTED
Divorces have been
granted in the Meigs County
Common Pleas CoW't to Betty
Jean Blake, Pomeroy from
Odell Golden make, Pomeroy
on growtds of gross neglect
and atreme cruelty and
granted custody of two minor
chlldten wttll su~t; and to
Florence Custer, Middleport,
!rom Theodore CUster, Rt. I,
Racine, for gross neglect.

mlle trip . across western
l..oog Island fractured and
weakened Its eye, and lhe
''tight little storm" shattered
belore dawn in tile already
waterlogged Connecticut
countryside between Nor·
walk and Danbury.
At 4 a.m. EDT, the
National Weather Service
downgraded Belle to a
tropical
storm
with
maximwn winds of 55 m.p.h.
and discontinued hurricane
warnings. Belle, It said,
''continues .to weaken."
But the storm's remnants
held dangers of their o\Wil.
The Weather Service warned
of gale.force winds over New
York aild western New
England and of posSible flash
floods in Connecticut and
M.assachusetts,
still
recovering lrom heavy
weekend rains.
Belle was hotll later and
weaker lhan e~pected in
arriving at its "landfall" on
Long Island, thus sparing the
126-fnUe stretch of land and
its 2.1'&gt; million population
possibly greater dealh and

destruction.
The storm had packed
winds of 115 m.p.h. as it
pushed northward off tile
Atlantic Coast Monday. By

Today, in briefs
ATLANTA UP! - Commerce Secretary Elliot L.
Richardson said today violations of elhical and legal standards
by major U.S. corporations create an "Ugly and Intolerable
spectacle" showing crucial lessons of Watergate were lost on
the Jl'ivate sector.
·
·
In a speach before the American Bar Association
cooventlon, Richardson urged the assembled lawyers to give
"sage and conscientious" counsel to tbelr clients scr !hat the
damage chronicled for lhe past 18 monlhs may not have a
lasting effect on .the U.S. and world economies.
Richardson criticized those who say competition in tlie
world markets needa new standards of conduct, producing a
rationale of sorts for corporate payoffs. He said lhe United
States asswned leadership in world trade because of "our
willingness to set standards for our o\Wil conduct and thai of
others.
"If we relinquish our advocacy of such standards, we will
pay, in the long term, a grave Jl'lce."
.

BURR RELEASED

CIIICAGO (UP!)
Raymond Burr, best known
as television's Perry Ma5911
and Ironsides, has canceled
lite final week of a scheduled
five-week performance in
"The Good Doctor" beMuse
of a painful dental problem.
George Keathl ey,
managing director of Drury
Lane Theater, said Burr for
three weeks "has been
.iroubled by a persistent
dental problem, which has
caused him severe pain."

identify a disease that has kWed :1 persons.
Thousands -of ql¥!stionnalres were filled out at .the 931
American Legion posts in Pe!IISylvanla. Monday by
Legionnaires, their famllies and friends who attended the
Philadelphia conventioo July 21 to :M but escaped the lllneaa.
"What we are ootng now is moving beyond lhe early limits
of our tests, both on the statistical and cbemlcal sides," said
IJI'. Denis Lucey, state health commissioner.

u'-4,56995

with
Reg.
s19ss
\ Above~The-Fioor
Cleaning Tools

GREGORY'S BASICS
ITHACA, N.Y. (UP!)
Contedlan Dick Gregory said
·Monday ~he "multibillion
dollar junk-lood hustle" can
be fought only by "someone
with a Cabinet positloo and
lhe power of the Jl'esident
behind him.''
At the opening sesSion of
the
Norlh
American
Vegetarian Conference at
Ithaca College, lhe civil
rights activist and ardent
vegetarian told the meeting
of vegetarians a "Secretary
of Food and · Nutrition" is
needed to "deal with basic
hwnan needs."
The North American
conference is a prelude to the
International •Vegetarian
Cooference, to be held next
year in India,

Murdock, and teacher aides,
Dorollty Hall and Carol Buck.
The
board
approved
severance pay for the retiring
superintendent.
Uoyd L. Myers, principal

SEE US FOR AN AUTO LOAN TODAY!

en ........,.,·,... . .,

...,..the'"'"' wao:•:ct

flrMII ........

t.Fmt fot ,our

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

............. ,.. ... ....., Jn ........ """. ""',.. oftllltekl

at Soutllwestern High School,
was appointed as compliance
wage and hour officer.
Acting Superintendent
David C. . Campbell an·
no~nced that the 1976-77
DPPF (Disadvantaged Pupil
Program Fund) has been
submitted for approval.
• Campbell said it has been
expanded this year 19 inClude
an art program for the South·
western and Hannan Trace
areas.
In the past, the program
has provided funds for an art
instructor in the NorUt Gallia
area. Kyger Creek has had
art since the district was
formed . Its program is
separate from the other art
program offered under
DPPF.
James Harris, school
psycholog ist,
outlined
proposed plans to transfer
two handicapped children
!rom their home school areas
to either Oteshlre-Kyger or
Addaville. The move is
necessary in order that the
children may be in a one-level
sl&lt;ucture.
Both are severely handicapped. They would require
transporlaUon by a private
vehicle. The board requeated
Asst. Prosecuting Attomey
William N. Eachus to
research the problem to see
what the liability would be for
an aide to transport the
children from their homes to
ghe Kyger Creek area.
Board clerk Mrs. Naomi
Beman was authorized to
place $110,973,80 In a Building
Replacement Fund for
HaMan Trace fligh School. A
bill for $13,942 submitted by
Carter and Evans Inc . on the
repairs made thus far to the
building was approved for
payment.
.

ANGEL TREADS

30% OFF
Men's, Women's
And Children's
Sizes

heritage house
Middleport, o.

The board autllorized Mrs.
Beman to make payment to
Carroll Norris Dodge for five
new school buses when the
buses are approved . by the
State Highway Patrol and
transportation director
chmeans.
During the opening minutes
of the sesSion, boa1'd cierk,
Mrs. Beman gave a detailed
report of the district's
financial status. She said
under new legislation, the
board must put in escrow
teachers' salaries totaling .·
$166,000. She estimated expenditures for the remainder
of the year at $1,952,835.82
which will leave the district
Wilh a balance of $150,000 at .•
the end of tile year.
Board member James
Blevins said be felt !hat the
board should set. priorities to
spent the money before Ute
year ended. Acting Supt.
Campbell was autllorized to
make a· list of priorities.
Board president J . E.
Cremeens noted that if tllere
is going to be a balance it
should be used to purchase

WALK-UP '!'ELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 To 7 P.M.

.

Tuesday lhru Thursday

August 10·12

Niven,

Show starts 7 p.m.

DIAL·A-NA ~

H11 11tttnO•to

Cllln from low
pill tO d..p thll

On Second Street and at the Mechanic
Street Warehouse .
.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

We are cha~glng our line of power tools and offer the following
Black &amp; Decker tools at close· out prices. All Items are new, In
original cartons and carry full .factory warranty. All sales final
and sublect to stocks on hand.

7104

3/8" DRilL

7114

.* Reg.

Spec.

Model No. ' Description

*Reg. Spec.

3/8" V.S. DRILL

13.99 9.50
22.99 15.50

7980 DRILL BIT SHARPENER 24.9917.00

7004

1/4" DRILL

12.99 9.00

7504

7006

1/4" DRILL KIT

19.99 13.50

7900 BENCH GRINDER 34.99 24.00

49.99 34.00

7000

.

112" REV. DRILL

7181

3!8" V.S. DRILL KIT

32.99 22.50

7130

3/8" DRILL

15.99 11.00

7404. FINISHING SANDER 18.99 13.00
'

JIG SAW

'A" DRILL

7120 318" V.S. DRIU
WI lock
7014 W'. V.S. DRILL

13.99 9.50

9.99 6.75
24.99 17.00
21.99 15.00

Member federal Deposit Insurance Corporatior.
DIPOr.ITS INS

BAKER

TO •4Q,OPr

•

*Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price Effective January 21, 1976

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

J,

FURNitURE

MIDOLEPORT, 0.

line."

FREE CUSTOMER PARKING.

BLACK &amp;_DECKER POWER TOOLS

Description

,.The Department Store. of BuildinR Since 1915"
.

A partial work stoppage
rem ai ned at.the Meigs Mines
today although most of the
miners involved in the month
old strike returned to begin
the midnight shift.
Sources whO insisted on
remaining anonymous said
when the employees arrived
at the gates they were met by
a number of independent
l&lt;uckers who reportedly had
put up their own ''picket

-,

CLEANS SHAGS I

FRIENDLY BANK"

..

~

Powerized to clean
or above the
strokes. Huge dis;posoabiE&gt;:dust~l
bag has 560 cu. ·
capacity. Life ti me lub,rl cl~tecjl
motor never needs I

"THE
amER
VALUES

.

According to the unofficial

•-WAY

'

lounging clothes; Monalee
Peck, grand, Becky Ed·
wards, rese rve, sports
clothes; Vicki Johnston,
grand, Darlene Thornton,
reserve , short dress-up
outfit ; Debbie Birchfield,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

grand, Mary Mora, reserve, .
long dress-up outfit ; Niese!
Duvall, grand , Donna
Thornton , reserve, coats and
jackets; Sonia Carr, grand,
Carolyn Bowen, reserve,
clothing complements.
Others selected to model
their garments at the (air ·
were Lori Robinson, Tara
Guthrie, Denise Stegall, and
Mary Jacobs, in the clothing
from lop to toe category ;
Becky Eichinger , Kathy
Blake and Lori Louks, topping your oulflt; Jeannie
Welsh , Rael.een Oliver ,
Mindy Long, joyful jumper;
Beth Perrin , clothes for
school ; Deborah Woodyard,
lounging clothes; Tammy
Starcher and Brenda Bishop,
sports clothes ; Diane Smith,
long dress-up outfit.
Others modeling their
garments last night were
Tamara Clark, Glenda Gum,
Valerie Jeffers, Ruth Ann
Fry, Mandl Williams, Tracey
Schul, Tammy Calaway,
Cindy · Harris, Dee Dailey,
Denise Lambert, Judy
Alexander, Denise Turner,
Benitla Deeter , Phyliis
Davis, Beretta Deeter,
Tammy Black, Donna Lillie,
Me~an
Long, Melissa
Scarbrough, Debbie Pooler,
Dawn G6eg leln, Di~ie Eblin,
Christina Quivey , Diana

Smith, Henrletla Thomas ,
Terre Wood, Lori wood ,
Melissa Thomas, Angie
Spen.cer, Beth Frederick, .
Becky Ambrose, l.en a
Sampson .
Gina Johnson, Carla
Whaley, Paula Swindell,
Teresa Dorst, Angela Baker,
Claircy Webb, Robyn Pitzer,
Judy Holter, Renee Trussell,
Jan Rife, Allee Ritchi e,
Roberta Larkins, Judy
perry, Beth Ritchie, Paula
Ufe, April Parker, Patty
Parker, Denise White, Becky
Dorst, Crystal Roush, andy
Pitzer , Linda Donohue,
Rh onda Haning, Christy
Evans, Tracey Jeffers ,
Brenda Boyles, Jerrie Jordan, Newanna Harvey ,
Becky Pooler, Brenda
Calaway~ Beth Riebel, Paige
Hayman, Marcia Holcomb,
Patty ' Dyer, Teresa Hunt,
Pam Evans, Kathryn Qulvey,
J,tnda Partlow, Beckie
Phillips, Cindy [)orst, Sharon
Henderson, Angie. Sinclair,
Tammy Pitzer .
Mary Colwell , Opal Dyer,
Sharon Karr, April Wise,
Virginia Jordan, Jamie Ray,
Paula Hysell , Susan Hen·
derson, Brenda Sampson,
Barbara Douglas, Kathy
Parker, Sara h Goebel.
Awelcome to open the style
(Continued.on page 2)

Partial shift on.joh at coal mines

source ,
EDOE KLEENER
Ct••nsth1l
tntto'-!gh
Inch •long
Itt. bntbolrd

grand, ·. ~resa Carr, reserve,

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1976

Model1416

Darren McGavin, Don
KnoHs. Herschel Bernardi.
Barbara Feldon

Model No.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COMBINATION FOR

Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
August 13-14 ·15 Wall
Disney's, No Deposit, No
David

NO. 81

Grand champions and
reserves in clothing projects
modeled by nearly 150 young
people were selected at the
annual Meigs County 4-H
Style Revue Tuesday night at
Meigs High School.
Ingrid Hawley and Jan
Holter narrated the revue
which was climaxed with the
announcement. of the queen
and king, Niese! Duvall,
daughter o( Mr. and Mrs.
James W. Duvall, Reedsviile,
and Lester Jeffers, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Jeffers, of
near Albany.
Judging th~ garments were
Mrs. Susie Miller, Pomeroy,
home economics instructor,
and Brenda Stricklin, Sue
Bitner, and Sharon Smutney,
Athens,. a ll home economic
majors oat Ohio University .
The gratH~ champions and
reserve champions along
with the top 25 per cent of the .

young people modeling last
night will participate in the
style revue to be held at the
Meigs County Fair · Wednesday night.
In the several categories
winners were Lea Ann Gaul,
grand champ.ion, and Sheila
Koenig, reserve champion,
total look series ; Rhonda
Riebel, grand champion, and
Kim Eblin,. reserve, clothing
from lop lo toe; Pam Riebel,
grand, and Cheryl Folmer,
reserve, topping your outfit;
Pam Murphy, gt'and, Sonya
Wise, reserve, joyful jumper;
Beth Wilson, grand, Connie
Stout, reserve, clolhes for
school; Camille Swindell,

en tine

at y

Regular S8990

NOT OPEN

Return .

•

VOL XXVIII

te~tbooks and other needed
supplies.
At Utat point, Mrs. Beman
reminded Ute board that It
must borrow money during
Ute months of Jailuary and
February to meet lhe payroll
and pay bills.
Dua n e
Hu n t er ,
representing the Conunlttee
for Better Schools, said the
campaign for the passage of
tile 2.1 mill levy bond issue
for the elementary schools
and 2.4 mill bond issue for a
new hi&amp;h sChool went as
plaMed. The election was
beld today in Gallia County.

MEIGS THEATRE

night by Pam Holcomb, last year's queen.. Lester Jeffers,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jeffers, near Albany, was
named !his year's junior fair king.

NIESEL DUVAlL; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James
. W. DuvaU, Reedsville, was crowned 1976 Meigs County
Junior Fair queen, at the Meigs High School Tuesday

THIS K!TIEN LOST HIS LEG in a trap set wllhin the village Umlts lA Pomeroy.
"Watch where your small children are playing and keep your pets on your o\Wil premises",
warns tile Meigs County Hwnane Society.

lfJV;·;;===::=:=: =·:== = = =:=='i'~,,,.,,B;=i;{;\1
.,,

7250

"IT'S TRUE" -' - -

By 114lb Hoelllch

I

Four teachers hired
Following a t.wo hour, i'&gt;O
minute executive session
Monday night, tile Gallia
County Local Board of
Education employed four
teachers and accepted the
resignations of fo ur other
employees.
Hired on one-year contracts were elementary in·
structors VIrginia Farmer,,
Rio Grande; Garren L.
Synder, Rt. I, Gallipolis, and
Gayle C. Craig, Gallipolis.
Wayne DaJe. Bergdoll,
Chill icothe, a 14-year
teaching and coaching
veteran, was employed as
physical education and
driver's ed teacher, and head
basketball coach at Southwestern High School.
Bergdoll , a graduate of
Ashland College and West
Virginia WeSleyan College,
replaces Richard HamUton,
who resigned last week to
lake a guidance counselor
position at Oak Hill.
Bergdoll
began
his
coaching career at RuUand in
1962. Since thaI time, he
coached at Coalton, West
Carlinglon, and for the past
four_years at Bishop Flaget in
Ross County.
·
During his tenure as head
coach at Bishop Flaget,
Bergdoll's teams complied an
overall 00-34 mark. His best
.year was ·in 1973 when his
club had a 19-3 record. In
1974, his Panthers knocked
the talented Hannan Trace
Wildcat squad out of the Class
A District Tournament.
J)ISt this past spring, his
Panther baseball team went
to ' the state finals before
being ousted. Mrs. Snyder
graduated from
Ohio
University and has 10 'years
teaching experience.
Botll Farmer, a graduate of
Rio Grande College, and
Gayle Craig, Cenlnl' State
University are first year
teachers . There are still
seven teaching vacancies in
the county.
Resignations accepted
were those of David Citrter,
vocational agriculture in·

4-H Champions named

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Weather

=~~~t a~u~t~n~a~:

"_,.~ Mnl ....

.

-

WASHINGTON UP!- WITH ONLY MINOR CUTS, the
Senate has passed a $104 billion defense money bill that will
undoubtedly be lhe hl&amp;hest In history, even after lhe House
HONG KONG UP! - CHINESE OFFICIALS renewed
looks it over. After all, lhe Hoi!St version was $105.4 billion.
their warning today that powerltll new earthquakes may hit
The Pentagon lost less than $4 billion !rom the amount lhe devastated Tangshan area of norlheast China at any
requested, but it may not be satisfied. Defense Secretiii\Y m001ent. ·
Donald Rumsfeld hBB said he will return to Congress to seek
The warning..tsslied verbally to forel&amp;ners In Pekirig-(:ame .
more funds to make up for those cuts. The defense budget for ooe day after a quake described as "considerably strong"
Fair totiight with lows fiscal 19'16 was $90.5 billion.
rocked the capital. There were no reports of damage or Injury.
around 60 . Mostly sunn y
.
HIDldreds olllftenltocks have been recordec! since July 28
Wednesday with highs 80 and
~RISBURG,PA.UPI - SCIENTlSTSAREiocuslngon when a severe earthquake rocked Olina's costal areas and
ss·. Probability of rain is near parlte.s, a par~de and th~ drinks ~ food ~ce at ·an . devastated Ttqlhan, an Industrial city with a populatlon of
zero per cent today, 10 per Amertcan Legton convention in lhetr frustrating search to about a million 100 mUes soulheast of Peking.
cent l&lt;inight and Wednesday.

•. ~ THINKING ABOUT
A NEWER MODEL CAR?

. . ............. 11 I

the time it hit long laland,
winds were down to 90
m.p.h.-lliill enough to sway
the world's second tallest
buildings, tbe twin .towers of

~. a hospital apoteaman,
said.
The spokenan did not
know when Sttlger coal¢
leave the hospital, but lllld be
Is "up and about and
procrellllng very wen." Be,
.... trllllfemd fma tbt
lntenllw care unit to a
private room at Daniel Frteman H01pltal Monday.

lhe

truckers

demanded
lo
become
unionized and ~sked the
miners to remain out in
sympathy with them. Some
miners honored the request
and ·went home but others
decided to work.
There was no picket line
when the morning shift
report.,d at 8 a.m. However,
some miners didn't report to
work·. while others did . Those
not working said they weren 't
sure if they were to honor the

truckers' request or work .
Officials at the Southern.
Coa l Company were in
conference this mor ning
discussing the situation.
By TIM MiiLER
United Press Intotuational
A back to work movement
in Ohio's coalfields lost
strength loday as pickets
closed some mines despite
orders from United Mine
Workers Union officials lor
lhe men to return to work.
The presidents of lhe 51
UMW locals in Ohio voted last
week lo order their men back
to work and most of the
state's 18,000 soft coal miners
did so at the beginning of this
week.
But pickets showed up
today at mines in Belmont
and Meigs counties and the
miners , as they have
lhroughout the wildcat strike,
refused to cross tile picket
lines.
About 80 per cent of the

state's miners were reported
back on the job Tuesday.
But, John Guzek, president
of UMW District 6, said
today, " We are . losing
strength. They are not as
many men working today as
there was Ttiesday."
Guzek, and the Ohio VaUey
Coal Operators Association,
refused to say specifically
which mines were open for
. fear that West Virginia
mtners would set up picket
li1tes .at them and close all
Ohio mines.
·
"The picket lines are the
. big lhing," Guzek said. "Our
men want to go back 1&lt;1 work
but !hey won't cross pic.ket
lines."
Only one mtne in Ohio, the
Saginaw mina in Belmont
County, bas voted not to go
back. The mine is owned by
the Ogleby-Norton Coal Co.
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
officials met today to discuss
what action to take, if any,
against. its 1,500 miners at

EAST MEIGS _ Twelve
By United Press International
membersofagroupknownas
COWETA, OKLA. - LEADERS OF a fundamentalist "Conce rned Taxpayers
chW'ch are waiting for God to resurrect five church members About the Studenl Transfers"
killed in a car crash while returning from a revival meeting. in the Eastern District mel
"Deep in my heart I know·Jesus will raise these people with the Eastern Local Board
!rom lhe dead," David Steele, a former drug addict and one of of Education Tuesday
eight ministers of tile New Testament Holiness Church of evening.
Jesus Christ, said Tuesday. ' 11 believe it because I know He
'!'he group met to discuss
candoit.Hecandoanylhlng.Hehealedme.''
the transfer ordered in July
of students from Ken o
KANSAS CITY, MO. - WITH THE IMPLIED approval of Bashan to Riverview. The
both President Ford and Ronald Reagan, a Republican youngsters had been at·
platform subcommittee Tuesday night overwhelmingly tending school at Chesler.
recommended support of a constitutional amendment to The group objected to the
. prohibit abortion.
move according to John.
·
The subcommittee voted 13-t to adopt a wordy, Riebel, superintendent. The
complicated proposal supporting "efforts of those who ~eek bOard stood by its decision,
enacbnent of a constitut.ional amendment to restore protection however.
The question of school
of the right to life of the unborn ." Subcorrunlttee chairman
.
supervision
and a school
Charles Pickering indicated he had asaurances It was
nurse
also
was
discussed. The
compaUble with the wishes of bolh presidential candidates. It
board
stressed
11 is nol saying
also ·appeared acceptable to the more conservative Reagan
supporters who have objected to backroom negotiations be· a nurse is not needed, but due
to financial problems they
t.ween lhe t.wo camps.
.
'
are unable lo hire one.
The following bids were
HURRICANE BELLE'S RAMPAGE across Long Island,
Connecticut and parts of New England brought down trees and
power lines and caused millions of dollars worlh of property
damage. More than 300,000 homes in the region were stU!
without light 24 -hours after the storm struck.
Four persons were killed - two in Vermont, one on Long
Island and another in Connecticut. Officials on Long Island,
which took the brunt of the.srorm, estimated the damage at $9
Y·
million . Approximately 200,000 homes were without elecuical
power.
But thousands of Long Island residents, who had
The Areawide Review
\
evacuatad their homes, returned Tuesday aitd found the Committee of Ohio Valley
hurricane had caused far less damage than weather experts Health Services Foundation,
had feared.
Inc. will hold a meeting
Monday, August 16, at the
BEIRUT, LEBANON - Ring-wing forces launched Meigs Inn in Pomeroy. The.
another beavy aasault on lhe Palestinian camp of Tal Zaatar general business session
today In whllt appeared to be a finitl bid to capture it after a 53- beginning at ? p. m: is open to
day siege.
the public.
Pushed back into a far corner of tile camp wllh their beavy
The agenda includes
munitions said to be critically low, the Palestinian defenders consideration of an apwere reported to be cnunbUng under a heavy Christian rocket plication for reimbursement
and mortar assault !rom three directions:
eliglblity of expenses related
to capt tal expendi fures for a
KANSAS CITV, MO. - JAMES BUCKLEY, . the proposed 100 bed nursing
Conservative Party' senator from New York, may have his home factli ty in Pomeroy.
,,
llllllle placed in nomination for president at lhe RepubUcan The name of the proposed
convention In a move that could keep President Ford or Ronald factli ly is Pomeroy Park
Reagan from a first ballot victory.
Care Center, Inc.
The possibility that Buckley would intervene In what has
OVHSF, Inc ., conducts
been considered a private duer bet.ween Ford and Reagan these capital expenditure
IUI'faced only a week before Republicans crowd into Kemper reviews in conjunction with.
Sports Arena for the roll call to select their next presidential the Ohio Depar·tment of
candldale.
Health in accordance with
Section 1122 of the Social
ATLANTA - Jimmy Carter, saying (JCJllf:·Watergate Security Act and Section
America has faUed to come UD with new standards lor · 3701.87 of the Ohio Revised
(Continued on page 12)
Code.

Nurs:bJ.g home
proposal is on
Monda agenda

accepted : Gasoline ·from
Sohio Company, Zanesville;·
fu el oil , Sohio Company,
Zanesville: baked goods,
Betsy Ross, Middleport ;
dairy products, Valley Bell,
Point Pleasant, and tires and
tubes, Meigs Tire Center,
Pomeroy.
It was noted that the board
is still seeking insurance for
school buses and bids will he
received al the ne~t meeting

on Aug. 23.
Hired were one bus driver,
· D. Marcinko ; one kin·
dergarten teac her aide,
Florence Myers, and two
part-lime cooks, Doris
Koenig and Ruth Ann
Scarborough. Ttui board
decided to have one full lime
and one part-lime cook at
each of the elemetnary
schools.
The board agreed to grant

an easement to the Chester
Unfted Methodist Church for
building purposes . They
approved the requesl of the
clerk lo request an advance
draw on local lax money if
needed.
The t976-77 school lunch
policy which will be sub·
milled to Co lumbus was
approved . Delails will be
ann ounced late r . Also
discussed was roof repair
needed at Tuppers Plains and
lo Ute gym floor at the high
schooL
Attending were Oris Smith,
president, David Smith ,
Dorsel Larkins, Dorothy
Calaway , Doug Bissell, board
members, Eloise Boston ,
clerk, Chesler Gooding ,
principal, and Riebel.

GOP dlVI
• •dmg
•

vIe• tnam b}arne

By DON PHILLIPS
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP! )
- Republicans on a platform
subcommittee briefly relived
thelrpartintheVietnam War
Tuesday night, and agreed
they cannot lay alllhe blame
on tbe Democrats.
· Almost every member of
the
foreign
policy
subcommittee, both Reagan
and Ford supporters, agreed
to ~hange PIa tform Iangnage
which appeared to blame
Democratic administrations
entlrely for lhe war.
"This is one of the most
hypocritical paragraphs I've
ever read," said Fred W.
Streetman of Florida,
Se(ore ihe ·di sc ussion
ended almost everyone,
including Sen. Hugh Scott, R·
Pa., and Rep. David Treen,
R·La., agreed that not only
had Republicans not been
blameless, some were among
the staunchest supporters of
lhe war.
The paragraph in a
proposed platform draft
began, "When Republicans
asawned executive office in
1969, we were confronted witll
a war not of OW' making ."
It credited Republicans
with negotiating peace,
blamed Democrats for
refusing to give aid to
Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia
after the U.S. troop pullout,
and concluded:
"The
American people upderstand

clearly
where
the
responsibility for these
actions rests."
Streetman
said the
paragraph tended to blame
Democrats for the war, but
" we (Re&gt;•ublicans) fought
against liberals who said get
out of Vietnam.''
Sen. Roman Hruska, R·
Neb., said DemOcrats started
the war, "the chips were
down and we had to follow the
nag."

l~ding

may

he Corps' funded
Ted Newsome of the U. S.
Corps of Eng ineers Huntington District, inspec ted
river erosion in Middleport
Tuesday, including the boat
landing at the end of Walnut
St.
Mayor Fred Hoffman met
with Newsome to discuss
solutions to the erosio n
problem .
Erosion at the boat landing
off Walnut Street has been
brought to the attention of the
Corps several times by the
mayor and the Corps has
inspected the site with the
possibility of the Corps
funding this project under the
stream
bank
erosion
demonstration program of
Section 32 of the 1974 Flood
Control Act .
Three sites, one each at
Portsmouth, Ravenswood ,
and South Charleston , have
already been selected for
erosion control under this act.
Under this program the
Co rps would use va ri ous
experimental meth ods of
erosion control and would
maintain the area for a
period of five years, after
which the sponsoring agency
would be responsible.
The mavor was informed

that the Corps would evaluate
the site and notify him of
fur ther developments within
this program as money
becomes available. At the
present lime $300,000 has
been appropriated by
Cpngress for this initial year
of the program.
The erosion at the lagoon
area was also discussed and
Newsome inf ormed the
mayor lha I he would inspect
this area and see if anything
could be worked out Where
the Corps might be able to
assist, in alleasl t.,mporarily
providing some form of
protection.
·

Weather

Low tonight in the 60s .
Continued warm Thursday ,
chance · of showers mainly
in afternoon . Highs Thursday will be In the lower 90s.
Probability of rain 10 per cent
today, 20 per cent tonight, 30
per cent Thursday.

Police m ake

Judge of

49 arrests

exhibits

Scott, a member of the
Senate Foreign Relalions
Committee, said 1\epublicans
always had supported
American troops after war)l
had begun. "We aU go into it
a n d ReP ubI I can s
wholeheartedly support it,''
he said. "But that doesn't
mean we started the war."
Both Treen and Charles
Coy of ·Kentucky objected
particularly to the phrase
· ''not of our making," saying
it laid all lhe blame on .
Democrats for a war hoth
parties supported.
Staff members were told to
draft new language on the
VIetnam section to satisfy
their objections.
·
SQUAD CALLED
The Middlep or t
Emergency Squad was called
Tuesday mornig to 504 S.
Third Ave . lor Frieda
Faehnle whO was taken to
Hulzer Medical Center.

Boat

shift Tuesday ~nd almost
everyone came in today."
The Peabody facility was
the first Ohio mine to close.
West Virginians put up picket
lines July 26 as !heir wildcat
.walkout, in protest over COW't
intervention in companyunion affairs , spread to
neighboring states.
Peabody flied a suit
similiar to Southern Ohio's
Monday in U.S. District in
Columbus asking that the
tJMw locals at lhelr Ohio
mines in Coshocton andPerry counties be fined
$45,850 for each day they are
off the job.

.

Parents·object to pupil transfer

.;.:

their three Meigs County
mines.
Most of the employes
reported lor work Tuesday
but picketing halted work
today.
Southern Ohio was denied a
request for a federal court
order in Colwnhus last week
to force the, men back to
work. They filed an appeal in
Cincit\nati and a ruling is
e~pected !his week.
Howard Kidd, supervisor at
Peabody Coal Co.'s Sunnyhill
Mine near New Lexington,
said today, "Things are
pretty weU normal. Most of
the men reported for second

Forty-nine arrests made by
the Midd!eporl Police
Department in July ac·
cording lo the monthly report
of Police Chief J. J .
Cremeans.
or the total number, 14
were arrested on a disorderly
manner charge. There were
four arrests each for driving
.while intoxicated, running a
slop sig n, and speeding .
Three were arreste d for
assault and battery and two
each for loitering, disturbing
the peace, passing on a
yellow line, running a red
ligh_t and driving without a
license. There was one arrest
on eac h of the following
charges :
parking
on
sidewalk , squealing tires ,
failing to yield the right of
way, petty theft and allowing
an unlicensed'person lo drive .
Four cases were dismissed
and one was transferred lo
county court.
Parking meier collections
for the month amounted to
f74t and the police cruiser
was driven 3,564 miles.

••

Follrod winner
second night
of golf·shoot

is named

Mrs. Robert Mill er of
Legion Terrace, Pomeroy, a
home economics teacher, will
judge the exhibits in the
Chuck Folirod of Pomeroy domestic arts department at
was a winner for the second the Meigs County air.
evening Tuesday night at the
Mrs.
Rober t Lewis;
annual hole-in-one contest chairman , asks thai all ar·
being held at the Pomeroy licles for judging be on the
Golf Club by the Middleport· grounds between 8:30 and 10
Pomeroy Lions Club.
a. m. Tuesday morning. At 10
Chuck got nearest to the the judging will begin based
pin , si~ feet and five inches, on the score card of 10 per·
to win first place for ihe cent for appearance; 50 per
evening and a prize of a dozer cent for workmanship ; 10 per
golf bails . Second place for cent for style, and 30 per cent
the evening went to Cully for mat.,rials. Ribbons and
Ne lson, Owensboro, Ky ., who premiums in three places will
was seven feet, two inches be awarded in all75 classes of
from the pin . He won a golf the show. Articles are lo
hal.
remain ln place unlil after 4
The contest is being held p. m. on Aug. 21 and any
from i'&gt; p.m. to dark through removed before that time will
Friday and on Saturday from forfeit the premium.
1 p.m. to dark. On Thursday
The secretary's 'office on
from t to 6 p.m. there will be U1r fairgrounds will be open
a putting contest wilh the from 10 a. m. to 4 p. m,
charge being $1 for 18 holes. Thursday and Friday to
Prize will be a ll:!w putter .
accept entf)CS.
~

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