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10 - The O.UySenllneL~port.Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Aug.23, 1111

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PAYMENT MADE
S1a te AudiWr Thomas E.
Ferguson's office announced
the largest Intangible tax
revenue dl.strtbuuon ln Oh)o
history with $96,321,983.21
going to the state's 88
counties. Meigs County's .
shal'l! was $108,25$.38.

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MEIGS tHEATRE

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CLOSED

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Aug. 2) lhru Aug. 26

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August 27-21-29

Mollllr Jugs &amp; Speed

'

OUT THREE TIMI!'.S

Cklands reunite

The Pomeroy Emergency

Squad answered three calls
Saturday night. At 6:30p.m .
the squad went to Chester for
Georgia Thomas who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Cenler. At 7:50 p.m., the
Middleport unll was called
for the Pomeroy squad which
was out and took Doris Miller
from a Pomeroy cafe to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 10 p.m. the squad went to
Oak St. for Mr. and Mrs. Ira
Zickefoose who were tu. They
were taken to VeteranR
Memorial Hospital and admltted.
.

The eighth annual Cleland
reunion was held recenUy at
Forest Acres Park near
RuUand with a basket dinnet .
at noon. Following the dinner
homemade Ice cream was
served by 1\ir. and Mrs.
Bruce Davis who used
freezers donated by the
Rutland Volunteer Fire
Department.
Atlendlng were Mr. and
Mrs. · Sylvan Cleland, Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs. Pat
Ryan and daughters, Sugar
Grove; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Bohner, Jennifer Cottertll,
Mr . and Mrs. Louis Flocken,
Jerry Cotterill, Columbus;
Mr, and Mrs. Merle Davia,
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cleland,
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Davis
and sons, Rutland .
Frances Cotterill, Worthlnglon; Flora McClure,
Albany ; Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Stansbury, Rick McFarland,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hat.

Bill Cosby. Raquol. Welch ,
Harvey

Keitel ,

Allen

Garfield, Bruce

Davison.

PG

Show starts at 7 p.m.

NOW YOU KNOW
There are more than 3,000
varieties of tea.

IF.YOU ARE A CAREER GAL ·

INIOII~IGIEI
fits ·into your life.
~~"

you can do quick loads
. in the evening with your
Wide, Big Capacity, Fully Automatic
Washer &amp; Dryer
that lit most anywhere.

' ·•

Results of the tractor
pulling coo~st that began at
12:30 p. m, Saturday at the
Meigs County Fair were
announced loday.
first place trophies were
s;ven to winners' in every
pull. The next pull will be
Sept. 12, Sunday and it will he
a . state sanctioned pull
(O.S.T.P.A.)
Classes are 5,000., 7,000,
9,000 modified .and 1500 and
1700 mini. Southeaslern Ohio
Tractor Pullers, Assn. is the
c.lub for this area and for
more infonnalion about pulls
or memberships, contact
Belinda Bowling, Racine ,
Ohio, 949-2794 (secretarytreasurer).
How they finished, ln or-

only 1101!11 hilS it and in rol~araund
IIIII Jllnn-lltly installed models, too.

der:

FIRST PULL
Career girls ere buty glrls.· Norge can seve

.~ou

5,000 out of field, Bill
Cliftoq, Eric Brooks, Dale
Pe!ty, Jon Miller, RDbert
Loar, William Setty.
1600 Mini-Rod - Jim
Carrington, Jim Steele, Gary

time

and( I Vmoney
withI a"lv~
automatic
washer and,.,·!N
dryer .
t'
1 , ' I()!
'\·
In your kitchen, or
You'll never ruh

throom, or even in 1 closet.
oui oi clean things again.
Automa~ic Dryer

Automatic Washer

-21010tbs.'
gelo clollles

reaHy

• dries 2 to 10 lb. loads

cleon •

all tobt-lc llmer control

on Iabrie c:oiltroUed

• permanent pfess cook:lown

10 progremmed cycles

• mulll

permenenl press core

AITIONS FILED
One peUUon for dissolution
of marriage and another f..- a
div&lt;rce have been !Ued in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. Filing for dissolulion
of marriage were Samuel
Eugene McKinney and Ruth
Ann McKinney, both Of Roule
I, Long Bottom. The petition
f..- divorce was filed' by
Timothy Mark Spires of
. RuUand, against Anna Louise
Spires ' · c-o LuciDe J acks •
.Route 1, RuUand. He charges
the defendunt with gross

heal selection

. • blo elllcienlllnt filler

• Ideal drying weather bu!H right
.

.

fllul Ncqe commerclll heavy-duty quality in a home

waaher and dryer

INGELS FURNITURE

:

Dearing, Ed Dorst, Jim
Haley, Gary Carrington,
7,000 Out of Field - Jim
Carnahan , Jim . Johnson,
Larry Slinks, Curt Battrill ,
Russell Reed, ~roy Welsh.
7,000 l'owder Puff - Jackie
Slink a, Nancy Carnahan ,
Jane Wagner, Darlene
Newell, Sue Floyd, Sarah
Welsh.
5,000 Modified - Joe
Johnson, Harold Ford, Ray
Brooks, Mike Haley, Fred
Sleele.
1700 Mini-Rod - Jim
Carrington , Jim Haley, Ed
Dorst, Ron Deartng; Jim
Smith.
9,000 Out Of Field - Mike
Salser, Curt BattriU, Jim
Carnahan, Jerry Colburn Sr.,
Leroy Welsh, Jerry Colburn
Jr .

FA'IHER.SON CHAMPS
CINCINNATI (UPi)
Eldon and Btad Rowe Of San
Diego, CaUl., seoond seeded
in the three-day NaUanal
Father-Soo Clay Court Tennis
Tournament, easily defeated
think'anked Fred and Bruce
McNair of Olevy 0188e, Md.,
6-4, 6-2, Sunday to win . the
clwnpiOII!bip.
A default by top.aeeded
Stephen and Dek Potts of
Washington,' D.C., gave
Oscar and Jim Harper,
Altadena, Calif., lblrd place.
Fifth-eeededGienandGarv
.,
Hippenstiet of Fresno, Calif.,
defeated Ken and Eric Mat.

7
=99:=2·=2&amp;~3~5::::±:=::::::::::%:::0:·:·~ne:g:lec~t~t
crue Y· MofMdu._,ty.,.and_e,.xtr..,.eMm.,..e the
thew.
feedln
ol Clnclnnlitl
consolation
~. game
6-l in

'·- -- ·

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watched by more t1w1 250
fans at the Cnclnnati Tennis
Club.

'

on, g8s- wellS come in
together on. The aver~e
Frank Herald, Rt. 1, person who loees $120,000 In
Middlep&lt;Jrl, believes there's three dry welll can't get out
oil and PI out there In those of debt on what they make
hlllll, but thai people llhould Just by working, Herald said.
"DrilUng to a big glllllble,"
not rush wlldly out to Invest In
he
continued, "because
wellllto get rich quick.
nobody
knciws what's going to
" This ll not a business for
happen
when , you drill.
two people !ust to get
BJIIOBTmJS

Carl Taylbr, Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Taylor, Barbertoo; Mr. •
and Mrs' Wayne Cleland and
family, Mr.· and Mra. Q)'de
Hamptoo and Bud, Langs·
ville; Mr. and Mrs. CecU
Carpenter, Sprtng!leld; Mr. ~
and Mra. 1Archie Wheeler,
Mr. ' and Mrs. Kenneth ,
Wheeler and Shanllon, and
Diana Wheeler, Dexter.

Wrangler
Western Jeans

REEDSVILLE .
Mrs. Olive Weber of Keno
visiled Tuesday with Mrs.
Lucille Smith.
Mrs. Waller Brown spent a
few days with Mr . and Mrs:
William Thomas and family
at Springfield.
Mr . and Mrs. · Richard
Smith of Akron visited with
.Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ruth.
Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Riebel
have moved their trailer
home to Belpre. ·
Mrs. Mary K. Rose of Long
Bottom Route spent an
evening with Mrs. Ruth Anne
Balderson .
Mrs. Lyle Balderson

_........

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AND

MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPT.
FIRST FLOOR
'lim
Who else but Wrangler can give you so
. much style and value for your money?
A perfect example is thi~ classic
cowbOy cut jean and western shirt
combo . The rugged, heavy weight jean
of Wrangler Wrandom "3.50" blue
denim is designed to fit easily over
your boots. Shirt Is yoked, tapered and
with long taHs. Available In solids,
plaids. checks, fi!lrals.
.

VOL XXVIII . NO. 90

\

•INews.

The "FRIENDLY ONES"

ALSO WRANGLER WESTERN. JACKETS
I

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our customers.

"II you aren't big enough
for criticism; you are too

small for praise. 11

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK
Department Store

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Prescription Drug Store .· . .

3days onlr- Monday, Tuesday
and
Wednesday
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$40,000.00 -- Maximum Insurance For Each. Depositor
Mlmbtr Federal Deposit lnsuran~e Corporation
••

REG. '1.93

REG. 11.22

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REG. 11A9

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POMEROY; OHIO
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REG. 11A9

. .in Brie~sf
~~ I

By United l'laiiDierDIIUeul
WASHlNGTON - FOOD PRICES WILL GO UP at the
"relatively slow" pace of 3to 4 percent through the first hall of
~9771! this year's crops are as blg as currently expected and
UVIlllock production stays near recent levels, the Agriculture
Department says..
Monday's Agricultural Outlook Summary was the first to
offer • specific estimate of 1977 food prospects, although II was
strnnar to what department spokesmen had been saying In
general terms.
·
The repcirt said food prices probably will edge . up
moderately for the second half of 1976, ending 2 per cent above
January's price level. For 1976 as a whole, they said, the food
price average will be 3to 4 per cent above 1915, compared with
last year's 8.5 per cent increase and the 14.5 per cent leaps of
the two preceding years .

Western shirts in sizes small {i4-1..1iM
medium (15-151h) large (16-16112) and
extra large (17-17112) . You'll like this
selection .
·
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always try to measure up
to 1he praist we hear from

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

·:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~:::;~::;:;:~:•:•:::!:!:~!:!:!:•:::;:::~8~:?-~:!:::::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::~=x::::::--:-.::::::::

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100

NOW YOU KNOW
A Swiss goatherd lived to
see his peasant name become
a symbol of elegance - he
was . hotel maestro Cesar
Ritz.

HITS ANOTHER WEU. - Frank Herald, Rl. 1
Middleport, has gone Into the gas well bUiinels with some
success. So far he has drWed five wells and has struck gas
and oil In aU five. Thla picture ofhtalatest atrtie is located
on Fred Lemley property on Leading Creek Road.
Workmen are lowering the derrick after having reached
the natural gas seam.

en tine
TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

State rests case against Hendricks

I

' ' ·:· It~!~

THE SAFE, CONVENIENT,
INEXPENSIVE WAY TO SEND MONEY

employment, at 1,262,600,
showed a slightly greater
percentage gain.

. .,

Western jeans In flare leg and straight
leg styles. Sizes 29 to 44 waist. Lengths
fr.o m 29 to 36 Inches.
·

;;;=~

..
Ieve1s.-·
The bureau said factory

well produces between 50,000
to lOO,OOOcublc feet Of gas per
day, along with live to 20
barrels Of crade oU. He said
that in order to tum a prolll
natural gas prices will have
to rlse above their present
· level of' $1.45 per cubic
thousand feel.
"We're wondering If there
Is a real gas shortage, he
continued. "The gas is here,
bu t there is a problem of
availability due to high
drilling cosis."
He estimated that nearly 40
wells have been drilled, including dry weUa. He alllo
said that "some limestone ln
the area is difficult to drill
through, otherwise it is pretty
fair drilling."
In some areas, he has gone
to a depth of 1600 feet to strike
gas:
There are two grades Of oil
ln the Meigs County wells .
One .Is the prl:;;ed Pennsylvania grade crude which is
used
for
automobile
lubrica Uon and the other,
called "Corning", used as
road tar.
Herald leases drilling sites
from the owner In return for
one-1lighth of aU profits. If no
gas or oil is found, then the
land is restored and the
person who owns the land
owes him nothing.

!'"- ~ -

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The Farmers Bank
· Money.Order.

July level of employment In
Ohio was 4,383,200 an inerease of 1.7. per cent from
July 197 ~.
"Higher wage rates plus
more overtime lifted the '
average hourly earnings of
Ohio's factory production to s
new. all-time high ," the
bureau .said. "Last month's
average of $6.IO was 10 per
cent above year-earlier

EveryUme we drill a new
well It's just ltkl a new adventure."
Herald ll president Q! HSD
011 and Gas Co. He I$ not the
only lc.:al person trying to tap
this source of wealth. Other
area-baaed groups ~lude
1l1e ·Cameron Brothers of
Zanesville and Clark Talbott,
who drills both for himSelf
and Herald. Each of these
outfits Is In businesa for
themselves.
Herald speculated that a
large seam of ga~ and oU runs
from Galltpolis upriver to
Marietta. He plans to start
drilling another 100 wells.
The areas he I~ lnteresled In
developing are located In
Rutland
and Bedford
To~nshlps .
Since he began work In
March, ,Herald has drilled
five wells and has s~uck gas
In all five, Including oU.
Pressure in two or the wells
produced "T~xas gushers".
Th drilling b !ness is
verye expensive~ Herald
estimates that il costs $40,000
to sink one well. He estimates
that between $10 to $20
million will be spent in the
next few years in an effort to
obtain gas and oil in this area.
Even though he luis five
wells, Herald. claims he is
"just breaking even". Each

a1
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COLUMBUS (UPI) Ohio's unemployment rate In
July was 7 per cent of the
civlllan labor !circe compared
to the naUonal rale of 7.8 per
cent,lt was announced today.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services said the

WESTERN
SHIRTS f·~
\

The

Jobless rate 7%

TWO ASSISTED
Two calls were answered
Monday by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad. The first
call was at 9:03 a.rn. to the
residence of Harold King,
Route 2, Pomeroy, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for medical treat.
ment. At 9:02p.m. the squad
went to the Dead Man's
Curve· residence ,of Gladys
Rumfleld . .Mrs. Rumfleld,
experiencing difficulty in
breathing, was traf18ported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

ANOlliER SHIPMENT!

Special value

.. ...

and

Driller is 5 for 5, so·far

ELBERFELDS I·N ~OMEROY

AT '111E TRACI'OR PUlL - Joe Johnton, above, center, won the 5,000 lb. modified
tractor pull. On the left is JII!l Johnson, CCHlwner ol the tractor. Right IS lovely Rhoda West,
&lt;I?een of the SEOTPA. They e&lt;mpeled Saturday at the 113th Meigs County Fair. Picture by
Jun Hamm.
·

Tractor pull
winners' noted

field and Shane, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mra. Hurley Rife, ,
Jimmy and Shirley, Mr. and
Mra. Charla Goldenn, Mr .
and Mrs. Ray Rife, Wellatoo ;
Mr. and Mra. JilT)' Folaon
andfrl•y,Stewart; Mr. and
Mra. Hershel Wheeler Guy~­
ville; Mr . andMrs. HurleyFJ.
Rife and daughter, Jacklon;
Mr. and Mrs. Joeeph Red·
man Tom Redmln Gloria
Barker · Louis Je~n arid
Raiph Parsons, Mr. and Mrli.
Delbert Rednian, Dunbar, W.
Va.
•
· Mr. and Mrs. Dan ~n
and family, Mr. and Mra.
Frank Kirk and family
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr.
Mrs. Rona~ Watklna, !1111'0,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mr1. Wendell Cleland, GahaMa, Mrs.
Charlott.e Grant, Debbie,
Michael, Minersville.
Mr. and Mra. Charlu
Beckie, Tert Lynn, Paul,
Doylestown; Mr. and Mra.
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DETROIT - The United Auto Workers union has decided
to select a "strike target" auto compsny - one of the Big
Tbree automakers that would be shut down without an
Industry-pacing contraCt settlement by next month. Labor
observers predicted the untoo would choose betWeen General
Motors and Ford, the giants of an auto Industry that provides
13.4 miWon jobllln this country. A strike against either could
have a ctolpplln&amp; blow on he national economy.
Once the target Is chosen, bargainers will have until
midnight, Sep!. 14, to work out details of that pattern-aetting
agreement. Should they fail, as has been the case in the past
three negotiating years, the "target" company could be struck
while Its ctmpetltors contln11e to build cars.
HOT, DRY WEATHER AND SWIRLING winds fed fires
that ravaged parks and wildlife refuges in the northern
midlands and thunderstorms raked portions of the South.
Fjreflghterl frun the National Forest Service were caUed In to
' Mlchlgan'a western Upper Peninsula Monday to help battle a
three-week-old fire raging out of control In the Seney National
Wildlife Refuce.
,
Officials said the fire was still within the boundaries of the
IIS,ooo.8cre refuge and posed no lnunedlate danger to
surrounding state-owned Ianda. "This Is one of the driest and
hlgheat fire danger perloda ln the summer that we've
·experienced .In many years," a Forest Service spokesman
said. The blaze was beUeved to have been Ignited July 30 by a
bolt ol lightning.
Nelll'ly 400 firefighters were baiUing a forest fire that has
bumed more than 2,000 acreil In the Boundary Walel;l Canoe ·
Area of &amp;iperlor National Forest. &amp;iperlor National Forest
olftctala banned open fires In the forest, Including camp fires.

from his test patterns testified that the deceased was from 10
to 141eet from the muzzle of the giln when be was shot. Molnar
stated that only aometblng solid Uke furniture or a tree could
cause deviaUan in his findings and thP'. ihe fact that Hendricks
was wounded oo the knuckle of the forefinger on 1the left hand
had ., ot cauaed subl!tantial deviation In his findings.
1 •lao Stated that he baaed hl8 opinion on the dlltance from
the muzzle to the dece~ on the fact that therJ were no
powder burns on the shirt of the defendan\8. Powder burns are ·
generally found at a dlltance of from three to five feet, he
staled.
.
,
In conc.ludlng the prosecution, Prosecutor Bernard Fultz
added to the testimony a stlpulauon staUng that blood found on
the blouse of Mrs. Hendricks had been determined to be Type
A· that the deceased's blood was type A; thalli was impoasible
U:get a blood type on the shu-ts worn by Ml's- Hendricks at the
time of the shooting, and reaults of blood tests for illcohol made
m the deceased.
QUESTION: MURDER OR SELF DEFENSE
A case ot ''unnecessary- not premedtaled - execution"
as charged by the prosecution, or an act performed out of fear
and mounting pressure, as claimed by the defense?
These are the approaches to the murder trial of Mary
.Virginia Hendricks, 51, Minersville, and a jury this week Will
have to decide what is the case. ·
The trial of Mrs. He{ldricks got underway ln lbe Meigs

..
By Bob HoefUch
The State .rested Its case before 10 o'clock this morning In
the Meigs County Cornmm Pleas Court where Mary Virlllnia.
Hendricks, 61, Minersville, is .being tried for murder for .the
June 1 shooting of.her huaband, Floyd Eugene Hendricks, 50,
at tbe couple's Welshtown Hllllume In Minersville.
One ol the final two wilneaes f&lt;W the p-o~ec~~tlon, when
court riiiii!JIIed at 9 this llllll'r1lng was Eber Pickens, a member
of the Sytacuse Emergency Squad which ans-wered a call to
the Hendricks residence fallowing the llhooUng.
Pickens described the position ol the body which layon the
kitchen floor and explalned what took place in looking for vital
signs. He said that both arms of the deceased were under the
body when the squad arrived but pointed out that one arm was
moved from under the body ln checking for vital signs. A
dgaret lighter alld a package of clgilrettes fell from the hand
of the ann which was moved, Pickens testified.
. TheflnalwitnessfortheStatewasSteveMolnar,aflrearrns
spectaUst with the Bureau of Criminal Investigation at
London. Several Items brought Into the courtroom by Molnar
were admitted as stale ~bits._ Among these were the .12
. gauge single shot shotgun used m the shooting, the heavily
blood soaked red knit shirt worn by Hendricks, a spent shell,
pellets and wadding, and cardboard sections showlnfl test
patterns of fire with the .12 gauge gun used ln the shooting.
Molnar said that he found no defects in the gun at all and

Games, fun on horses
A fun show of games on Cole , In the egg and spoon
horses and ponies for 4-H and race ; Kelly Meeks, Fae
other youths was held Friday Reibel, Beth Hart, Lee Lewis
night at the Meigs County and Charles Knopp, ln the
Fair In the horse show ring in boot race.
the center field.
Kelly Meeks, Leslie Cole,
J. R. Kennedy was an- Fae Reibel, Charles · Knopp,
noitncer for the show with Bill ahd Karl Suchoza, apple·bob·,
Downie, J r. anhd Jeff Danle1s Brenda Williams picked up
serving as I e ring· crew·b by Bobby Williams, first ,
Timers were Mlke Jones, Bo John
. ny Greer, picked up
MeIer and Sh erry Indesta d, Kelly Meeks, second·, and
whi!e the score keepers were Charles Knopp picked up by
Marilyn MeIer and Rachel Brett Jones , third, In the
Down le.
pickup race ; Belind a
h
hi
The
K I -~ p~n~trophy went Whittington and Cheryl
to elY ee . lbbons were Arnett, fi rst, ~e bie
awarded in the first five Woodyard and Tanun
ard,
/
places.
second; Gene Cole and Kelly
The classes
·-~ f' and the win- Meeks, third, Melissa lhle,
ners lis"" lfsl through fifth and Fae Reibel , fourth, and
were Kelly Meeks, Greg Cole, Brenda Williams and SheUa
Tony
E · Kenne
d T dy, Tammy·
Ward · Bing, fifth in the drunkards'
10 , paradize.
rvtn, an ammy
the barrel race ; Kristin . Tony Kennedy, Tammy
Anderson , Gene Cole, Melissa Ervin, Kristin Anderson,
Jhle Brenda Williams Lesli B d W'll'
d J I'
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e ren a ' •ams an
u 1e
1

WASHlNGTON - THE NATIONAL CANCER InButute
and the American Cancer Suclety, for the time being at least,
oppoae routine X-ray screening ol women under 50 at their
lreast cancer detection centers In 'II elites. NCI and ACS .
olftctala took thll stand In "Interim guldeUnea" sent Monday to
directors of tile jcllnlly llpofiiOred cUnlcs, which have screened
2113,000 WCIIIIeR since the pf'081'am began In 1973.
Proarlm coordbtalor Richard COIItlow said the guldelinell
lhould help teh cenlerl decide when to uae X-ray
lllllllllllltP'IphyunWNCichlefFrankJ. RaUIICher Jr. ~lves
two reporll on the ~jeel and makes a final declaton "within the nut aeveral weeks." Rauacher ordered teams to
work on effects of X-ray screening after a staff scientist said
the l'iaks ol mammognjily causing · cancer in
"asymptumatic'' younger ,women mlght be greater than the
There will he no educa!!on
beneftll of spotting early Bi8ns of the disease in that age group. program for the Meigs
County mentally retarded
residents dul;ing the next
school year.
GOING TO STATE '
This was the decision of the
ON DEAN'S LIST
In demonstration talks on Meigs County Commissioners
Named to the dean's Jist for 11vestock at the Meigs County Monday .
Faced with Inadequate
the first swnmer session at Junior Fair, Fae Reibel of
Pomeroy
won
the
·grand
funds
to send the ·mentally
the Hocking Valley Technical
champion
award
and
will
retarded
to the Guiding Hand
College ln NelllonvtUe were
Charle• L, Newhouse, travel to the Ohio State Fair School ln Gallia County and
Middleport, and James M. on Sept. 2 to compete at the being without local facilities
slate level.
ln which to conduct a school,
n~, Syrac:uae.

County Common Pleas Courtroom Monday afternoon with only
~pectators on band to bear the detalla of the
shooting of F1oyd Eugene Hendricks, 50, on June 1 by Mrs.
Hendricks. ACC«"dtng to the prosecution, Mrs. Hendricks
murdered her husband with a .12 gauge sholj!un at a coup~'s
Welshtown Hill htme.
·
After a jury was sealed the 12 members and one alternate,

a handful of

~~~~ka~ :,:e =~o~oo:e~tvi~::~=

understand references to be made by witnesses during the
trial.
The trial proper got underway Mmday afternoon with the
Prosecutor Bernard FultZ and Defense Attorney James
Bermett giving opening remarks. Fultz said the evidence
would be presently obJectively to show that Mrs. Hendricks
ccmmitled, "an unnecessary - not premeditated execution.''
On the other hand, Defense Attorney Bennett said that the
H~drl~ka ho~e had been a ''pressure cooker" for a long time .
He said th.t the evidence will llhow that Mrs·. Hendricks
conunitled the act of shooting her huaband out of "fear of
pressure .,.

.

"It was either him or me", Attorney Bennett quoted Mrs.
Hendricks telling her neighbors following the shooting.
First witness to be called was Virginia Marie Ellis, a.
(Continued on page 12)

Mayor proposes
•
wage mcreases
for next year

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Fair Thursday and
Friday. Chance of showers
about Saturday. Highs in
Elberfeld, potato race ; Tony the 80s. Lows from'' the
Kennedy, Debbie Woodyard, upper 50s to mid 60s .
. Tammy Ward, Gene Cole and .::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::l::::::::::::.:::::::::
Les' ie Cole, flab race; and
Bobby Williams, Brenda
Williams, Charles Knopp ,
Cammy Lewis, and Kelly
Meeks, sack race.
A proposed wage Increase
In the dash for cash race
Cl
to ·ght Lo ln the schedule for Middleport
the winners were Tony 1 earnd 01mt'd · 60sws Mostly Village employes for next
. Kennedy, Tamm
. y Ervin , ow a
·
Wednes daY· Hi·ghs 1·n · year was presented to
Gre"• Cole, Kelly Meeks and sunny
th
·d
d
r 80s Middleport Village Council
Fae Re•'bel ,.n .. the cone race
e ml ·t anf ·uppc
· r
20
night.
1 per cent or study Monday
Pr 0babil1 Y0 ran
the Wl·nners were Gre"• Cole, lod
d 10
t t n·ght
Mayor Fre d Ho ffman ,
Tony Kennedy, Tommy
ay an
per ·cen o '
presenting the proposal for
d
Wed
d
Ervin, Gene Cole, and an
nes ay.
increases for all village
Charles Knopp ; in the ride
employes, asked council to
and run the winners were
study the suggested Increases
Gene Cole, first; .Fae Reibel,
but stressed that there is no
second·, Melissa lhle, lblrd ·,
CLOTHING OFFERED
rush ln the matler since the
Debbie Woodyard, fourth and
raises would not be in effect
Lesll'"~ Cole, fifth .
Free
day will
be until next year, even if apheld
at clothing
the Salvat1'on
Army
Winners in the first eight · II$ Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy,' proved by councl.
·1 "We have
harrell race were Kelly from 10 a.m. to 12 noon a fine group of tmployes",
Meeks, Tony Kennedy, Fae
th
led
Reibel Tammy Ervin and Thursday. All Meigs County
e mayor commen ·
,•
area residents are invited.
Counctl also approved the
Debb1e Woodyard.
.
third reading of an ordinance

Weather

::r

•

to br1ng 1oca 1 drug
regulations and laws in line
with provision of state 1aw
and the ordinance was
·
adopted.
Mayor Hoffinan presented
council a copy of the new
Middleport Comprehensive
Plan update which was
completed through the efforts
of the council, the citizens
advisory committee and the
·
p1anning comm•ssion
wt'th
much of the compilation and
the printing being done by
Buckey e . Hllls-Hockin~
Valley Reg ional Planning
Commission, Marietta.
Jeff Burt and Harry
(Contlnuea on page I~)

No school for mentally retarded this year
the Commission made the
decision to dispense with ·
school this year.
It was indica ted, however,
that plans wlll go forward
loward building to school for
the mentally retarded and
hopefully have It ready for
occupancy by next fall.
Judge Manning Websier,
president of the Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation,
and Judith Koch, a district
representative of the Ohio
I,

Department of Mental
Retardation, me.t with the
Commissioners Monday
morning to discuss the
problems.
They had earlier in the day
viewed the basement of the
former Meigs · County
Children's Home building on
Mulberry Heights as ~
possible toea lion for classes
this year. However, both
were o(tlie opinion ihat there·
was not enough space

avallable and that extensive
remodeling would have to be
done, even If there were
enough space.
Judge Webster, at the
request of Commissioners
Henry ·,Wells and Warden
Ours, listed the expenses
Involved in sending the
mentally retarded residents
to Gallla County. The cost to
the county lor the year, Judge
Webater said, would be about
$59,000 with trqnsportation

,,

costing an addtUr.o1al $16,000
and the required employll)ent
of a superintendent stlll
another. $15,000, making a
total of about $90,000.
Commissioner Ours said he
felt the most the county could
make available would be
around $40,000, but be told ·
Judge Webster and Miss
Kock that county funds would
be checked to see If there was
any way possible that the rest
of the money could be found.

Lale Monday afternoon the
commissioners announced
that funding was not
available and made the
decision not to · provide
education lor the mentally
retarded citizens this year.
In other action taken by the
Commissioners at Monday's
meeting approval was given
to a $12,789 project prupoaed
by Engineer Wesley A. Buehl
calling for Inverted seal and
(Continued on page 12)
tt&gt;

�•

2. -

n.e nauv Sentinel, Mkldleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TuesdaY. Aug. 24,lf16

TOM TIEDE

layings will he discussed

•

~ Wring

note as "unae«ptable"
because il did not mil
respcNililily Iii: lbt dealbs.

earnmgs up

Sales in the third quarter
IIPd the ~th pr!riad

AKRON, &lt;Xlio t UP II 'De mal th earning! totaling
~.9 million, compared with

.-. .,.pect 1o ~ our
~ lllWII!I1lllm m.;ng
the ...ma~ ol orr flll'.ll
rear and maintain it lltlUlgly
inl4 1971,'' a&lt;lled FirMone
aDd Riley.

nl"t new highs, ~to

same Raymond C. Firestone,

cbairman, and Rld:llrd A.
Riley. pnsi clent, wbo said the
rl!lL'&lt;rl third qiWter Slles
...n acl!itiftd because of a
strong pre-Qrlke invmcry
J»Sition.

the last frscal
h!at, Wfte llllD&lt;l&lt;liK'I!d IOda)•
"! the Fir1!slooe nee a.
-. ,bbec Co.

Third quarter earnings
:I! &lt;wed to $21..5 millioo, oom;Ao11!d with $35.! millioo a
-~ar ago. jrimarll~ beaUS!'
,f the tlni ted f\11 bber
'll.orkers Union's strike
~ .liM Fil'5ooe and lhree
...-t,er majtx" dremakers..
Htnre l'tr, sale£ irl lbe
q~W&lt;..II' inmased u per em
lo Hill mil1lllll .,_ last.
1 3!''$ Dl&gt; millioo, and fllr

parts of our ~ 1M!

ba•e beftJ strike affer:ted,"
Riley and Flreslale said.
''lnveni«ie£ mll.St be
replenilbed at both 1l'llalesale
and retail le'lels and the
8111mlcbile companies are

By liJCRAlU)

I

.nss.

I

Ca!llal N!IIIS ~ said
the North Korean army
Sl.al1ds ''Nally to lllllililate
tbe u.s. imperia1iiU if they
~a D!W

1Fil'.''
The Sou'tb Klnan

r-m-

u.s. position .

However, South Korean
rMio •stalions quoted Forftgll
Ministry officials as ayiQg
· ~ nt'll' U.S. position

!lbouldbe tOeD Ill tbe o:JIICeiX
of .a step in I series rl

s. tJSIAK

AT'IlQI., N.Y. (UPf)
Molt &lt;if the inma!A!S at the
Attica Clrrectime.l F acility,
!aile of the bloOdy lJlisoo
.rfbellion in 19'/l, \10M!d today

mD'l'eiS., t1

They said F'&lt;rtjgn Millisi:er
P.art t oog-jin and O.S.
Ambassador Richard L.
Sheider met for 3D mimltes
1 Ill cm!imle iheir "'gene-al ilbis ~ ani! the two
•' er e
I Wii:e'' on1il iheir demands '.ov ern m&lt;ent s
"cOQPeratU.g
tuUp .tnd
fir
l'l!!lmn
.mel
1 A .,oiesmlm at !the mu- ·
ciosely."

•'Otce the strike is seuled,

,---------------------------1
j
l..l«ln fll .,...
Tbty sb:eclcl
1

the

alrci1!ft c:arrter uss Midnr
amduc1e1 ~ilons .olf the
_ . - - ci It-, iD&lt;:I1dDc
lllgiU by aboul15 and llld
ligbler ainnll whicb it car·
Mrs. Tbt U,lllO .Amtrlcan
lraops in Soulb Korea also
ba ve beftJ plaoed on alort.
In a ~ monilored
Monday in Tokyo, North
KerN called Ford a ''lm! tl
ftl'" for lllOIJililiD&amp; tbe u.s.
forcu. In a separate
4spatcb, tbe (North) KcrNn

in tbe

firmed

jn&gt;'jeeting higb ~ctkm

an lrtkoelllflcl.
be
leu IliaD M.,. nls laq I• be Albjeel I&amp; ro4rldD by
thr edltarl uri be slpe;l wllll the ~·· .._
!Names a.y be triUIIMid apaa pallc:atiiL
HeftW£,• rtq!lellt, ames will be rlildo8toll..dten
sblulil be Ia .p all , llCidredlac ta.s, ...t per-

time.

Uailed States in ealliDg the
note from North Korean
President JUm n-&amp;mg
' 'UIIaeeeptable," had no
olfiCiAI cmunmt of ~ shift

Attica
strike

''Wberl full opontionS NSD-

rates.

AI tbe !llDt

ment.. whicb bad jciDed the

me, .,;, expect to ~
posting bealtby gllins in aD

• ~ moo1l:ls sales jrmJped
!.7 per em! from $!.7 millim
a r- a;go 0 $3 million.

Money·intended for urban

lat« e~ its stand aDd
called the message a
'-polili" . ...

•

~restone
~:s. i millioo ~the

lt also followed • !Ofttning
of the U.S. position on a or1h
Kcr1!8D U&lt;Xe of l"'!gg"et over
the dratM of the Al:rleric8ns.
The Sta te Department,
wtdcb bad flnl desr:rlled the

DemWtariud Z..,e.
The deciJim followed a call
Monday by President Ford
fer sucb a meetiDI! to oeei
assuranca !run North Korea
at the safety of American
troops in the Panmunjom
area. Ford is vacalimirl! in
Vall, Colo.

PANMUN JOM. Korea
(UPI) - NGrth KerN IIPd the
lllf. CmunaDd today agreed
1o bold a meeting of the
Korean Armistice
O;lmnlWioo Wednesday to
&lt;fuo:'U'IS the' alaylngs of two
~~rican officers by North
oresn ~uar~ in t.be

l

im1Jm.9eairity lacility said
1 thai ooly "abom SSS" mma!A!S

Bat Dor!g-A !Tho, Soulll
Korea
's largeSt nationally
1
I
.-ent ttl mess haU for ~ted daily, .slid in an
-~~..
II ~ and lben l'fltllmed 1!dit&lt;rial 'today emitl«l, "Is
the O.S.. backing do1n1
Ill their oells. l'he 'QUiet,
peacefl1l strike began agiiD?" that if 1be United
Mmday ..nb abou1 911 per States ana South l({)rea
cem of the :pr'ison's 1)143 Jre[a' ~~ ID firm
actim in coonecllrm Yiitb tb!
I inmates .tmng p8l'l.
I 'The inmates, pr:essiDg lor killings, it would eDIXIIII'Ige
mlmges iD prole a:ud greater North Korean
IIliJ!tallcy_
·seni~cing p11oee dnus.
·remained
in
their
rcells
Dear l§r:
I ...,., really ~ 1.1 the clap ~tick ·d puttliQg a l'elldini., Sleeping and ~
~ d a kill.ell ..tUdl bad been a:aght .in a ·trap arptmtl They refllsed to wari or Syracuse
·attend meals.
l'l1mmly in tbe paper.
"We do iD1m! to Iii! down
1 am tbe rie d ·&lt;ne rl tbe!Je mean, lleru., blood tbirst}'
and
talk to inmate il~ 1ll
lfawen and I nm to !1ft ~ lllraigllt abollt a In
as!le!lsbcwlkmg tliis ttling lrill
SY&amp;M::lUSE
'!lhe
My hjrsbarrl does ddfll:xir1! ·~ to ~ trim!lelf a[ CO!Illrnlfo.,~ ;Ji ~"" fir Syracuse Emergency Squad
Departmen~
.of speu1Fnday andSatur.day 1.1
mt aalding ..,, tlihe blllllbat il5i4JP05bd to lbe canghl rw !be
Qrrectiooa!
Serll'i.&lt;ES
said.
ses bim g« up bmlredan :to llllb sn .rna~er is ~
the Meigs Oaunty Fair.
"tbo in the lnp uy klll6' ftlanpas!lll:ie..I'w! 1I&lt;Bl 'bimca!l
(!)c Fri.day sl £:80 pliD., ,the
~ and 1211 lhan bo bid lap&amp; set ~ iballgll it '1&amp;1111111
•squad itook flresley Parsons,
!beic land 8IXI jallt he. •••lbebew !lief bid. q (J[ ebiltlrom
11le l ! r Racine, \Wit!l an
cble by. In an 111r a-be's hMIIRp!ing be's caug'bt me« JJr
Ualletl
Pnu ·bearll attack, to Veterans
Memorial HC!Spital. oY 10:80
boo dognnd lflr....,. hi! amglli
and they reren'i .I t$ . f'
lmt _., mud!..
Today is 'l:aeldaJ.'.- M. ~Jill_, the squad ~ Sarah
rm oo;t S~Yill&amp; an lrappl!nl ar. this 10r tm mt t'l'ei'I'CIIt in '4tle '!3l!lb day d. Lti&amp; '1!iittl US aratson, G ailipolis, to
IIIU' llllrt·P 'Sbf U:leralresu we Mmld illlelhan ltD.
.10 follow.
!Pleasant Val!.ey Hospital
As (U lbe ll7!jmah: 'lrijd! are .eavgbt, d111"t people realize
1be moon il eppoacbiDg after she holl &lt;r fainled 'aDd
dial IDQil rllbe:se llrimols 1ft lbe ~ '!bat if .they 'l ill Jr1F .m-.
reeeiWld a back inlurf.
Wnrwd; 011 (lUI' alft trCIIid be Ofd)i\ J.etel si1h
I 1$ 1
1he mo~ stars are Sa'iarda}' at l :liD p .m.. lile
lllls, 11 I n!s., 111111 fDDs! A* w mas aliii1DibeB snn :and lt!pila'.
squad .toot 0a11as w~.
aboat Ullle ar 111e1e lllinp1a People ~Pe r:alled Ill)' I•H4•d,
1be eusdag Ita'S are Mer- ll.u1iland, t.o Veterans
:Memartal Hospital with
~ lim jo lr.lp .. dllir land lo pt rid Ill """"''" ailidl. ary, !liars ml v-.
·' tng:ioinglbeirmipSW#flhCiDtbl!irct.jckrns
1haaebm1&lt;m thildale~ laoonti&lt;IDS na:ived in a
Well, l'&gt;'e Slid &amp;Ill ca.a. [bop! ,people .nn lhiDt .abwt tis am lbe Sill d
~ aooident .at ille
aad 11011 Jet- pid:uie of a bart ldUell, !11ticb I'm :llli'T'f
llc!mm! Calbolie Ciar1lzla1 m~an of ROU!A!S ill and
'
mt'f*'ed, mau 1btm !Dot it ls a •'"''""e ... ,a.., lhiDg Ri£bard Onbioc .... lxnl Allg~ 24, l.llllli.
7.
1!l'itiJ b appa:s - 'Name W'dbbeld aa uqll!lit.
&lt;kllhill clay in bi&amp;arJ';
In l7 A.D, 'bol•.., 11!11!
.l iplrll Briefs
killed,
and f.be cities of By
1Ji.ai!H
GaUia
fiKure$ doubled

l

!

i)au,. •

:

' •• ?Itt# t4i/h:

:,

unit
busy at fair

"""""'"t

be"*'"'"'

I

+.,+Mil!

v...,.

fair

lUnpeii IIIJd

~

_.. ~ by

w

!'

the a\ljiiw

TAMPA, l'1a. (IJP!II -'fbe

Dear Sir:
1n Ill~ , tbe Britisb
111'11111d lib to.._ l!by ~ftf ,_: the papa- lla:les lbal
urptq
eel W...ing!lll, D.C.
tbe Gallla Cormty Faii bill fnm
1o 20;0110 peopr
'lbeJ
bamed lbe Capltol
att.rwtq Ndl 0.,? ~ a, bill to walk anlUIId i1s
hr!Jdiog
md tbe em w..e
faugrowdato l't!ll!iae lbiiUhilcaaldaot pGIII!ibly,be; lbln IIIIi
manMt.
lS oct ........, rocm fllr lllat Jm11Y pqle!
In 1m, Amelia Earbart
'1be Gallla Cordy Fair" ... a nice Jlmiar Fair and many
lwoame
tbe lin! WOOliD !:4
lclp~wlddldmr JllllliJ' peoplt to the fllir but it does
mate
a
lr'aDiollllinmtal rmnot Mft a
ar a l'k2tla:i: tbat are: •• iJnporta.m
10 lbe COIIIty fain in Ibis area (lbeJ .alao llr'q in the crowds). llql fligtL
In l!ill, France clr!on"ed
Becaw of Ibis I f!el that tbe ctber lain in Ibis ftgim are
ita lin! b}'llrogen bomb in the
beiJc greatly ~ in the area d attenta'"· - 5oulb Par.iflc.
Bedl)' eoumn, ru. 3, Pwoaot.

Tampa Bar BoeeaneerJ

ar •aamic Mt. v...iua.

u..-

_p••'••.,.

placed four · plaJer&amp; on
wdhe-s Mcmdt)'. V&lt;lurling
tidaff .and Jllllll retarn
...U'- c.rt Rowin, ll
J411Hvaal att dUce ~ ar

'fr.lu....,...

AIID placed 111 nivers aa
lbe Bu.cs · trimmed tlleir
RJiter tD

5I JJere ljnehet \ti

~ Oolavito,

wide teoeiiti
Kent Geydol 8IXI I'I1JllliDg
badt Alan Plltmall.

Playboy's advice poor on jogging
usually do not comment on

DEAlt OR. LAMB- An
artldt in lut March's issue
o1 Playboy Magazine titled
" Jogging Can KiU You ... And
'{llat's Notllle llall of lt," has

sudl articles but in my
opinion this one has been such

llllaiEQ. Acopy of the article
Is enclosed, It is Cfrlainly
dllllearleninl to think tbal I
bave been damaglnc my body
for oeveral years by jogging
ralher than adlieving tbe
Intended effect - good
Ileal lb. Actually ,l bave never
fell betler in my life lllall I
baft the put -~al yean.
J"'lginll has been in·
vigorallna and bighiY.
beneficial psycbOI"'IiCIIIy
and pbylicaiiJ (or so I

and found not one item. His
claim tbat joggil!g cauaes
nricoee veins is tomplelely
cORtrary
to
known
physiology. He stated tbat
"wilb every tl!ump of the
loot, a column of blood
9eVeral feet higb pounds tbe
veins of the legs like s bat..
tering ram." WeD the good
doctor needs to review his
circulatory dynamics and
CGIIIidel' facta rather than
flctiDn.
The facta are tbat aa you
llland sUD there is a large
cOlumn of blood that inaeues the pressure in tbe
veins in the lep. But u soon
aa JOU start waiting the
coolraelinfl mUICies equeeze
IJJe deep veins and empty

a public disservice that I feel
compe~ to respond to your
query.

Frankly 1 searclled tbe
UDdoubledly sbatlered the
psycllological equilibritDD of article diligently to find
lboulands of joggen and liJill !bing I could agree wi Ill

IIJoulbl)-

Is Dr. Sdlmldt's theory on
tbe harlllful effect on joglng
valid? 1 see be provides no
dotiiieltatlon of his COD·
lelllla. I would ft'I'J mucll
l)lpl'tdate receh1DI JOUr

.

•DEAR
• • READER
ar IJda article.-

,

I

•

Compassion not·

poor beinR spent instead
for tennis courts, bike

paths in affluent IJN!JIS

strong
KANSAS CITY (NEA) -

1

'
~utt

ldeoioUbaar~bi!IIIIJr

concern in the leadenblp, a

According to Repub lean balanced
budget
In
moderates, ~Y fortunes
began to decline 11'ith !be Washington has become
death of Teddy Roosevelt. It . more important to IJJe cauae
slid from being !be party of than a balanced diet In .\!&gt;.
R
d palachla. flu Jerry Ford
Lincoln •. , T.
. an been to Bedford Stuyvaant?
progn=YISID to beinc. the Does Ronald Reagan give a .
party of CalYin Coolidge, !bought for the millions who
Herbert Hoover, AU t.andon, would die If be pushed his ·
Toni [le,..,y , BaiT)' Gold-'Ill
.
lo 'Ia
,_ and Ri hard ~•-m
feud ,., COIIIIliiiiUII1l I
wa..,.
c
""' .
I i I -A; F ,
I tbe
One thus wonders wbat "'I ~ """' · ~rr or no •
everyone is cheering about 'at party s !DlBge IS one ?f aloof .
Ibis GOP convention. The arrogance, and mUJions of
slide has become an Ameri~ns resent it.,
.
avalanche. Republicans are
lrontcally, many of lbeae ,
oo lbe endancered species list millions are phiiOIOJ)blcaDy, •
Four out of five Americans if not formally, RepubUcan.
!X&gt;lied refuse to identify witb 'I1le n.slion has for 200 years .
the Grand Old Party. nutty- been c?n~er.vatlve and;
-.even of the 50 states have constructionrstic. But u New
ant i _Republic wn 8 d _ Ya.:k Uruvei'SI.ty Prof. Irvine
ministrations. The wags here Knstol remmds . us, the
· believe that if somelhing isn't maJOrity ,c;annot Sllllpiy be
dooe to reverse lbe party's assumed, It has.to be welded
decline the Dell coov.entlon together out of disparate .
may ~ be held in the parts.'' Alas, the Repubiicln
foyer r1 111e Ripon Society. arc has gone . cold. Ralber,.
.In cne important sense the than , mass . !Is potential.
party deserves its troubles. constituents, 1t has over !be ,
In its haste to become the years carelessly let Urem
part)• of respanslbilily and wander away.
.
~tabilityit has forgotten
Older c!lizens are a case m
t.hat politics is paople . pomt. Krislol says they lend
robe conservative, often bold
on to the old value!!, and !bus
should
appreciate
Republicanism. Yet in- .
creasincly they do not. Many•
elderly Republicans ere '
IUnling ro the Democrats. '
·Others are so disillusioned
with lbe party they are
dropping out of the political
•OCil!lnlttion loamp&amp;Dy, ' and be((rt be was cutlbort by a process altogether. John
By 11011'ARD A. :rYNl!IR
lti{I;())W (UPJI - 'lbne Dennis Robert Bum, 26, )lqe who asked blm to Pecoraro of Washington's
Cmcerned Seniors for Belter
.Amerieans pleaded guilty I1I1IIIIITied, of W!ite!IIIJDe, ·~ cloae to tbe facts."
Bums did n&lt;t testify dtDig Government says he thinks •
UM~ay tD 1111uallDc a poiDis N.Y., 1Wre !llnllted in JUDI!
of 10 older people will vote
•m beroio .m.o tbe .Soviet Gring .. stop in. ¥01100• .. llle ~'ira 9l!SSiQn that lasted six
for Jinuny Carter this year. ·
U!im. Two ci them lllld • tbey new from Kuala almolt 11&amp; bouts.
Boll! Amaer 111111 Bmrer "ali! I personally hope It's 10 ;
Savietmlll't!Dey W!ftlding l..uu1!m to Am!terdam.
;
Anlstfr told the aJUrt tbal idedified their Am!llerdam of 10."
as ,p Ut anriers fir ·llbe
Why
the
switch?
Hq K~~~g, sqapore IIIJd antact aa a " Mr. David
OJine9e.
'1be defendants, the ,f int Kuala l.mnpur """ used by Lee." Bnlwtt said tltat Ill bis " Because we can read the
papers, too," says Rudy
American~~ to be lried in IJJe :tbe OlineiC! .a s "capu.ls far arrival in AmlterdiiD frcm
Scmet umon in eight rsrs. ~" btraiD to Amlter· Las Vegas, be and Amster Danstedt of the Nlional,
faad pUon lams·u l"" lo lCl dam. He said tbe Asian met three limes wilt! Lee, Council of Senior atizens. He
liOIIIUS bad n!plaeed t'llrtey .mo was acompaaied by two recalls that Nixon opposed
)'ell!li eadl.
,after
tbe l'llltilb ~rnment db« OUlelle to the final "almost every social security
Genld Alnlter. l3., d Nt'll'
'
b
anned
ClllliVIIID! of the meeting in a nightclub, increase that came across bis
Yat Illy, tbe fini 1D testify
~
poppy,
source of before be - cleared for lbe desk " , and that Jerry Ford
before ~ line .lDdCI!S tlfll
bas tried to cut more recent
heroin,
at
the
rErpSt
rl the millilll.
ml!ll and.aoe ;wcm.w"
·d h!
SS
hikes in half. As for R.
tl1ited States.
ID Kllli8 tmnpr , Am!m
-~!PIIiAdllad 'byaOil!lle
Reagan,
he denouces SS at!
'l!ra11d', lbe '111!&gt;1 to lestify, said a IIIII dneloped wbm
man iin Aml!tmllm .mere .be
any
cost,
a thought !bat'
tiViDg, to t'arr!' . . . iSIIicl be~ to mmtpm!J' Lee and • OJb eee !Dill aad
'""'~·t n
"
Amlt4iJ Cll wbat Alnll« de- wife btviCb1 • Ylqlit false- terrifies most elderly voters
..... ... ,
.~~
. . . . Wla
_:_+j
scribed u m "all njenses bottomed .Utea• to their who get the monthly checks.
~ ..., lDo aluc!b • iptl':l,
So it is that many older~
Utili 'ft WCIIIlrJ attract less paid ncatiaD" fer • paj1DI!il1 bolft. .., ftlllnd it W18c:cepla·
people
wonder why they'
.
O
f.
SI;OOO.
attmlilll," .. .... .llid.
ble•" be ·said. "11 bad an
should
support
the GOP when
"NamDcs
for
me
is
very
extreme
·
weigbt.
It
was
Amalir, will u doim•lloroecloecl
it
doesn
't
support
them. II!:
lliloltratt
brnn•l
bad
bad
m
'engbebJe("
and ltDf'!!lployed; Paul
lbe
94th
Congress
there
were:
Tile ,mt.
I ...,aratll:r
lila-, :11, 4l Las Vtp~, preoio111 cmtaet '1ritb it lit
weD
over
100
Democrats,
bu~
Nev ~ mat ied, father of four ·liAY lime. I lhcluglt it ~ were madified and tbe lbree
d a m.ldiog lii'I8DIIg« fir a be like a ·llcilywood ll!llrie," cbed;ed them 011 ·an Aerodot only nine Republicans, who'
sided wi!h the aged on 90 per
:tbe IIN"Y lll!t Bntwer said !liglj, be said.
cent or more of beneficial•
legislation. "When people get
- - - - - - - - - old,"
says Pecoraro, "They
tbe Osmr:ull, JoiDly Cash, need help more lhan ever.
MliC Davis, The Fifth .IJimrn. The trouble witb P.epublicans
1iD11, LJDD Aodam, Red is IIIey just don't seem to care
Slt:eltcm IIIJd Rme SiDard.
about it."
Tile fair, wilb tbe theme
lienee the sun sinks deeper'
·~ of .the AmerieaD on lhe party. •Besicjes the
~... opelll Thllnday IDOl'· elderly, the rural coni
Ding, rutDng tmoagb Labor slituency is shrinking, and
Day. ~ lhocre 12 days the suburban, and the small
·a, JAY GDIIAN
~ citillii2Jruugb;lut the me lllllY !lilt tractor puDa,
a!JLlllmUS (Cl'l j - li state, primarily for· the lit.- . racing, IIIIo tbrill town . Negligence is the
t....,.... C!'fti'J ,eu, WJdl Olllitilimcrol edtilitcn IIIII sbon, batj)n twirling ultimate sin for a politiclil
party. People do not want to
miiJim• ci 'rilitort ml hal a '1'11it1n. ('dmnbus wu lbe contests, country music
be
nor do they
..Iiana! ~ation
ate in 11$1, Onelllld in 00. !lboWI....mdlll. ..allll m ...alld wantengineered,
to
be
forgotten.
n•a called tbe ·aDo ,State Dayton had it in 18$3, Ill.
The road back for
Fair and it .b epl badt in fcJIJowed by Newark in l.l5l.
And, if you've ever asked Republicanism, then, is line!l
October r1 WO al Camp The state fair also had younelf OOw maD1 cupcake.tl
W..,inpm !lbout two llld appalranees in Sandut\;y, can a perat eat • in II with human beings. Thet
...,NNfJiiBfromwbatwu ZnuvHle , Toledo, aeoorrds, that, too, foo WUI needn't"be coddled by their
then the cem. of Ontinnati Springfield and Mlllllfield. cbcov« - at this year's party but they must be
'fbetualtbaltimewaaa before becoming 1%3rd amuaJ Oblo state Fair. defended by ·it . •
For instance, polls in·
IInse day eveat 'tlitllalkeat per111111m!Jy .eatabJilbe1 in
dicate
lhatatleast40per cent
•htl fm dlllp.
OiumM ill lllif.
of
peOJl!e
over ~ resent
'Ibe &amp;nt fair bardiJ camADd lblt lnlp Ill to tbll
having
"been
forced into
JllrS with l.be Cllliblr of fair ,ear's !%H. (JUo Stale Fair, BLOOMINGDALE PIE.\
retirement; it is a form of
wiKb wiD.beCiD here 'l'burl- . .,
feata inc mere than
LOS ANGELES (UP!)' dli!_criml~al,l,on which one
Betty
Newllng
Bklomlugdale,
day.
13,000 es!jhited itetnl, 11101'1!
day,
one way or another, will,
Bam in 1150, aD mjnYik lblll I'IOO,GIID ill pranhgn related Lo !be depll'llnent
end.
Will
the GOP help end it?
llld odMr "'ilikd ileml IIQiey 8IXI proudly lrllclng store family, faces a
Will'
the
party fight for !be
were Judled dllriDR the titlt to .U ' 'wtrld'sisrgest" madnpem 15,000 rme and two
right
of
everf,one
ro hold tbjs
yranr mprfloa tor ber guilty
~ of tbe &amp;nt day ci lWei.
job
long
as'
he
is
pbysicall,Y
tbe fl!r I.Dd tileD were
'Ibe tlllo SWte F* bllllbe plea l.o cbargtetr uf CIIICeallng
·able?
One
suspects
not, but
nHbited fllr lbe ganJ wcrld'a larptt 1ta1e fair • llmloe for two Cbrlstlan
so.
If
public dlntc tbe rantlr!der hone .._. Wllrid'J lsrgest Dlor dr !U!I Imported frcm one ' hopes·
.Republicanism is ro survive
rll.be fair.
li: 1 ri edrilitlm, w.-ld'l
(end if ilce~ ro exist we'd
Tile belt CDW Ofti' .lbree largelt Janlor fair, worlcl'a
· have t.o·reinvent lt) it will
,_.dddlringtbalfintfair largelt alate fair _.._
have to begin batUing for
rta!iftd a I* Hl•IW uf flli. boxing tournament, the
ra
Iller than against those
Fortbebeltbeifu,theiiW!ft world's largnt fine arta
good
.peop!e'wh9 hold its fate
reoelftd a • l*aldi!lh
ahlbit and features tbe
ill lbeir bands.
·• ·
Followlal! lbe mat 1111150, warld'a J.u'8etl 1ta1e fair
•·
the lllllllll1 fair waa beld Ill -*Jilcle.
A total of U mlllJon
LOS ~GELES. (UPI) ' penms1111ied tbe 1175 fair
CtuckKnGaald
~lilt
" : . :":::"
aad It raiDed tine di171- .
year's
No.
2qUrt.wback
Rill
TJU ,....•• Yillkn JawonMI'
*'11
11t1rt
for
tbe
a.:.·~:-··:s
apedld to top the ....... d.
,_...
I penms wbo Yilited the fair. vAlENT1NO 'I1UIIIJTE
Ia
.qeJes Billa
RimaSaturday
••'""
lbe Bulfa)o
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
-'• grouadl Jut )'NI" Oil the
, , , 1 . : ; : : , .._
.,. ·, clty'allli'th llde. And many of
Silent ac:nen star Mary Ma- night, followed by ttto
... · - . I'
a-lalrgu.l wD1 bo lbln c:Lann, 76, and ·actor John quarters of play by tbe
!II ' - ' ...
· ....
·
far wbll fair cedall term Hall, were lllllOil8 '100 people team's top.rated !ligna!
........
Olfke
......
tfl.11N.
_ _ .........
"!be lln8le IDOl! lmportaJt will paid tribute lo JludWpb can.. Jamee Hmla.
!{noK alao placed free
...... .... .. faetar......
it ,.lbe ' lf01Itb of the Valendno Monclay at the ~
._..,, OMe.
llllfet)'
BW llln~pa Ill tbl;
....... _ _ •• · - atale ..... .
ann~w...,. of the aetor'a
death.
.
• ;
j ...... W
...
M
ia
lbe
.........
touted
lnaeU". lilt. S1111p1011
7 • . ..• Jill . . .
·~
....-.y
"Be waa lire kindest, IIUfhnd • ll!ll'lbM . .
. free
grandltand
' 9 lfllw ,.._ I I :A llr • edl!rtiiD:ment with IDitiDee
deamt IIIII IDCIIlllllllllderete tmiDI pndlee
llld
waa foreed 19 mill
llilt)mlu
imqlnlble,"
llld
_bf
wl» played latlll'ciQ'• ......... the
,.,...
·
·
•
llliDI
of
tbe
Nsc
l
- I D Mill
........ _ .. _......... ..... the entert•hmwul, field.
In ~ J1IO\IIelj with the nMJaad Raldlra.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11.11;Jtwett
•AI Cluk, wllow!D liD Ofti'
..... •
'
0 ,_,
'l1lll ,..,... perbill&amp;l In- "Shellt,"'wlro dled at the ap
llqlllll'l p. . . ,. tbe
" "~·- · -- -...... dadeU...d
BobN..!
Rape Jalm
David- "' 31.
Do..6 D - r a. lwL
• . . - , . . _ _ , r• DU~~o~Ua 1
IIIII p,_lbe llllciV It the nat hnlftlb,- npii!CIII
,..,. T•
T.O, SaftiU, et')'Jitllcle III'Yietl at It 11ft ......... br •• f:..
......__ _ _ _ ___. , K.C.IIIII lbe 8aMdne Bind,
HGIIywaod MIIIICirial PM!. ,... pro l:od ""'·

Americans confess heroin

was smuggled for Chinese

State Fair started

way back in 1850

mm

DR. LAMB

Lutm&lt;; E. Lamb, M.D.

• 'J-The DaUySeM!ntl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Aug. 24,1976

Urem. The ,pressure in tbe
veins in the legs !ben drops
drama lically ro a1mo11 nil
The superficial •eins in the
legs drain directly into tbe
deep veins and also .empty.
Hence walking, Jegging and
running do not pound the
veins will! a column of blood
but aclullly ~ lbe
pressure inside UJe mns.
He slated lbal rumlng jars
the heart and saggesla that it
is hlll1! like a pendulum from
the large arteries Inside tbe
chest. An elementary miew

of anatomy will show lhrit the
heart is cushioned on tbe
diaphragm directly over lbe

stomach

rather

than

Swinging wildly Uke a pendulum inlide tile cheat. There

jogging are almosl: always
from ruming too fast or
overdoing it whm ooe is not
trained . 1llis can ca111t a
bear! atlack, but not from

jarring crusts loose. For
, uw.e information 111 U!ia
problem I am aending you
'I1le Heallll Letter number 42, Jogging, Em'tion, Sudden
Dealb. Otbers who want lbe
delails about llil can ·llelld a
long,
liampecl,
self·
addresaed envelope with so
centa for it. Just aenc1 your
letter to me in care of UU
newspaper, P.O. Box mlil,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
The article abo cl•lmed
that women denlopecl

...U. tnaata Ub deflated
from Joai'C. N:-

are no cues an .--.1 of

..noons

rumlng causlnc tbe beart to
be torn from ita pl8ce In lhe

lu.ally will develop
saauw
If 111ey don't . . a

chest or ID ID)' WI)'
displaced. The runrt1nc does
not jar crusta out oflbe 'ar·
leries as IJJe article Implies.
J&lt;utng can cauae Pile
dangel'l, partiCQ!arly if not
dme properly. Dealbs from

'#

brlllliere eva! If only stan.
~· The problem Is not

Joalng. My best advice is ro
not let IJJe Playboy article
interfere with JOur good
exerctse hablta.

as

-Of

'I ' - ·

-.-•-.&amp;·-·

. . . . . . . .

9

•

=--=--.:...--= -...... ~. . .
s

2

.....

. . . . . .

Jut"*

•z-.

......

I

•

»

Sipe sharp BASEBALL Eckersley downs Royals 4-3
'f or Browns

A's 3, Orioles 1:
in the slsth inning, capped by
He said, "l bad a bad first diving stop of the ball.
By JOE FROHLINGER
Sal
Bando
and
Don
Baylor
Jlm Rice's two,run single.
Ray
F
produoecl
!be
hall but I kept plugging away.
UP! Sporta Writer
hit
solo
homera
and
Vida
Blue
Bill
1..«, with relit! help from
IJrsl
three
Cleveland
runs
Major ln1•• Sllndings
Dennis Eckersley limited Since 1 got · beck In the
By United Prsu onrernatlonor Western Division leader rotallon, I've bad a good wit.h his IJrsl h..ne run since lcrued a sis-hit shutout as Dick Pole and Tom Murphy,
National Le1gue
e..r
Karu!as City to seven hits breaking ball and I've been 1974 In the third inning and a Oakland belli Baltimore. The won hi1 first starting
w.. l . Pet. G a . Monday night and George getting ahead of the hitters. tw0'£Uil single In tbe f-'11'. · game marked the flnl road asalgnment since last Aug. 24
•
Ph i ladeJphl a 81 41 .664
I'm pitching reel well now," n.e RoyaiJ tied lhe IIC!JI'e at ~ victory fer Blue since June 6. as he pitched seven inilin~ of
67 s• 545 u•, Hendrick delivered a two-out
Plll5burg h
New York
Ron Pruitt started !be 3 on a pincbbit two-out, two- He Improved his record to 12- seven-hit baH, Nolan Ryan,
~~ '••' .S088 21!,, sincie in the bottom of the
I'm going to fight my way Chicago
By ED McFAlL
who struck out seven batters
11.
Cleveland
ninth~nning rally run double by Jamie Quirk In
S. 66
26 ninll! to score Rick Manning
St . Louis
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) the
seventh
Inning
after
·
Ttcen
5,
Wblte
Sos
f
:
in
five Innings, absorbed bis
into being No. I."
with
a
Qne-oul,
pinch-hit
Montreat
'' 11 .3A7 38
and give the Cleveland
FoiTell Gresg runs a tidy
Slpe 'a third touchdown
Frank
White's
saalftee
Oy
in
16th
loss in 26 dl!(islons.
Rookie
shortstop
Mark
single
and
raced
to
third
oo
we.r
Indians.
a
4-3
will
over
the
Pet. 0 8
!hip and il Itaya tidy even drive ·was a clai!81c two· Cin c innati W80. . L,.
Wagner,
called
up
from
tbe
third
provided
a
run.
Yanks
I, Twins 4:
Manning'sd®ble.
Rico
Carty
.16 .635
Royab.
after I winning battle,
minute drill as he took his Los Angel es 69 ss .551 101
In other game~, Oakland Evansville in lbe American
Graig Nettles celebrated
Eckersley struck out 12 wu given an intentional wailt
Di~o
61 66 .480 19 '
One of the Cleveland learn 119 yards after getting Sail
Houston
10 11 .•n 20', batters lo give l!im ,88 to fill the bases but pinch· turned back Baltimore, ~. · .woclaUon last week with a his 331\d birtbdsy a day Ia te
Bro111111 aated Qregg Monday !be ball with 2:02 left in the . Allonlo
57 19 .452 73 strikeouts in his last 52 hitter Manager Frank Detroit shaded Chicago, 5-4, "good field , no hit" as he rapped out four hits,
sen Froncl.co 55 71 .437 25
innings. Recalled from exile Robinson forced Pruitt at lhe Boston cUpped California, 7- reputation, did his best lo . including two doubles and a
night In die locker room if ll'le second quarter.
Mondlv 's Gamts
The
drive,
which
Included
a
teams' 21-17 preseuon
Ph iladelph ia • Allonto 2
in the bullpen on July 30, the plate. Hendrick then drilled 3, New York . walloped dispel that tag wllb a two-run home run. 'lbunnan Munson
~yard
pass
play
to
returning
victory over the winless
9-4,
and single slstb lming single to helped !be Yankees snap a
sr, Loul• 9 Cincinna ti 5
21-yearold has pitched Steve Mingorl's first pitch Minnesota,
Diego s Pittsburgh 4
Philadelphia Eagles had Browns favorite Paul San
LOS Angeles 6 Monlreal 3
Superbly in the Second half at and beat Cookie Rojas' throw Milwaukee downed Texas, 8- keep his average at .500 as three.game losing streak by
earned the ,play~rs tbe right Warfield, ended when Sipe
Detroit beat Chicago.
knocking in three runs. Ken
!Only go me• ~thedu led l
the season and no one llnows to first after the Royals' 2.
to go home · "casual," p!!Ssed nine yards to rookie
Red Sox 1, Artgela S:
Hoi11Jnan gained the win to
Tod•1Y~~~
~ft,chers . it better than he dOes.
second baseman made a
meaning without wearing wide receiver Dave Logan lor
Boston rallied for six runs Improve his record to u.a.
.Philadelphia " or lion IS 41 at
lbe BroWIIII' final 1e0re with Atlanta {Messer smith 11 10),
Ues.
Brewen 11, Rangers Z:
7: 35p .m .
"You came with Ues, didn't 13 seconds left In the half.
George Scott drove in three
51. 1,..ou1s ! Fa lcone .10 l lJ at
Slpe, who. played only the Cincinnat i ! Za chry li ·• L s ~ os
you?" 111kejl the bead coach,
runs wltb his 13th homer and
who hlld seen his re$fgenl first half, hit 12-of·l6 passes p.m.
two doubles and scored twke
Piltsburgh ICandelar ia 1'1 4)
Browns score their third for 157 yards. Plolppa IDok at San Oieyo {Strom 10· 13). 10
to Send Mllwaukee past
.
Texas,
·
straight preseason win. over in the second half and p .m
M
eat ICarr lthers 6 9 ) at
"Then you go home witb failed to score,
L os Ang eles (Hooton 7 12).
A throw Sunday caught snd I don't think he's going to slowpitch !Oftball . for the
By LAURIE HORN
30 p.m.
But the Eagles' atfense was 10:Houstoh
ties."
I Andujar 6 9) at
NORTH · PROVIDENCE, C«ry square In the chest and make it. It's a ·terrible, , Pawtucket Merchants, a
Gregg said he was "escep· having troubles of 118 oWn end Chicago (Renko 5.6) , 1: 30 p .m.
local amateur team. The
R.I.
(UP!) - II looked like a he awnpled before he made terrible mess."
N~w
York
I
L
DIIch
7
·
11)
at
Uonally pleued" with the managed only two I ourth·
San Francisco I Barr. 10 10 ), bad breall when a throw from
Merchants were iosinc, &amp;-2,
se&lt;oond
base.
His
yoWJg
wife,
Robert
went
through
Rhode
COLUMBUS (UP! ) play of backup quarterback quarter touchdowns on short 10:ll p .m.
when Corry wu struck.
· Egor, pacing second coming
Kathleen,
watched
as
revival
Island's
prestigious
LaSalle
second base knocked the wind
Brian Slpe, who led the runs by James McAIJsler, the
Wedne:.day 's Gamet
Officials caned off aD slow- down to the stretch , came on
Phila at Atlanta , night
out of Robert Corry. No one efforts by a nurse and a squad Academy and did a year or
Browns to three second· last wilb 10 seconds left in the Montreal
at Los Angeles . night
pitch
!Oftball games in Rhode · strong at the finish to nip
of
rescue
workers
failed.
two of college. Then be
quarter touchdowns, two of game that was played in 8ii Piltsburgh at San Diego, night dreamed he wouldn't get
Island
· unlll · after the Pandy Grattan by a nose in
Monday,
with
the
body
married Kathleen and they
M Chicngo
lip.
them on his !coring passes; degree weather witb high Houston
New York a l San Fr ancisco
funeral,
C«ry, 28, was from a good taken to !be stale morgue for bad two children, Kerri Lynn, 1
the featured $1,500 eighth
and provided the margin of lrumidity ,
(Only ga mes schedul ed )
The
name
Robert
runs
an
autopsy,
the
Corry
family
5,
Erin
Lee,
21&gt;,
and
bssebaU
family
.
His
father,
race at Scioto Downs Monday
An sn!lJ'Y Dick Vermeil, the
victory . .
through
!be
Corry
famUy
the
American
League
gathered
at
the
elder
responsibililles.
He
went
to
also
·
named
Robert,
played
.
night.
Old that mean Gregg might Eagles' .new .head coach,
East
Robert's horne to share their work for !be power company way basebaU ran through
Chee Chee Love showed ,
W,. L, . Pd. GB minor league baD ill his
use a two quarterback berated himself in the locker
73 48 .103
youth. Given a summer grief and try to take stock of · and moved away from Corry's veins. "He was .a
The
winiler, driven in 2' 1Y.!
room, although he promised New York
system?
63 59 .516 W 1
Baltimor e
good kid," said Robert Cocry, 2-5 by Sam Noble, returned
what
happened.
home-from
suburban
Nortb
Sunday,
tbere
wasn
't
a
place
"I've got · a No. I lbere would be some veterans Cl
61
61
.496
13
ev eland
"He never made a mistake Providence
59 64 .480 15 Robert was more likely to be
to
rural a nephew 10 years older. "He $11.60, $4.80 and $3.60.
quarterback and . a No. 2 going in today's squad Detroit
58 64 ,475 15 ?
loved it," Corry said. · ~ 11 was
Boston
in
his
life,"
his
mother
said,
than running herd from first
Cumberland, R.I.
The 9-2- nl ~ htly double
· M i lwaukee
quarterback," he · said, ciltdown to 49 players.
54 65 .454 18
choking
back
tears.
"His
base to second to beat out a
After he moved to Cumber· his Ufe."
West
displaying the same pealness · "There's a Jack of
combination of Canadian
GB double play attempt.
father is in very bed shape land, Corry began playing
Bomb and""Sis Omaha was
pattern . "! have two discipline out there and that's Kansas Ci ty W75.. L,48. Pet.
.610 1
worth $73.80.
quarterbacks, My No. I is why I'm not doing a good Oakland
Malor League Results
67 $7 .540 8 ,
By United Press International
M inneso ta
62 63 .496 14
Attendance was 3,567 and
·job," be said,
(Mike) Phipps."
1
National League
Te l(aS
58 66 .468 17 1
Vermeil said a lot of "guys Chicago
But· Sipe, whO engineered
Phtadelphia 000 000 040- 4 9 o the handle $242,862.
54 71 .432 21
Atlanta
010 000 1()()--,. 2 6 0
54 71 ..432 21
scoring drives of 86, 19 and 69 with pride" ere work inc "but California
LonbOrg , McGraw (81 and
Monday 's Results
yards, didn't agree ·with they haven't in)proved as Cleveland 4 Kansas City 3
Boone ; Ruthven, Devine (8) ,
NORTHFIELD, Oh io
Marshall {9) and Correl l. WPmuch as they should In view Oakland J Batlimore 0
Gregg's categories.
(UP!)
- Solo Hill took the
Lonborg (1 4·8) , LP- Rut hven
7 California 3
"I'm not a backup quarter· of the effort they put out. I Boston
(13 12 l. HR - Atlar~ta , Hender_. lead just past the balf·mile
Octroi! s Ch ic ago 4
beck," said the three-yea'r can't believe we.'re 0-4. I'm New York 9 Minnesota -4
son { 10) .
pole and won by . a
6 Te~~;as 2
veteran from · San Diego very disappointed. We must Milwaukee
comfortable
thre e lengths
St . Lou iS
101200 230- 914 I
Today's Probable Pitchen
state. "Right now I'm No. 2 be tough, more poise, better
Cincinnati
001 001 201- 5 10 0 over Villanese In the $20,500
(All Times EDT)
Denny , Greif (6 J. Hrabosky
Kansas City (Leonard JS.SJ at
but I don't intend being No.2. concentration, better disci(9 } and Simmons f Billingham , Ohio Sires Stakes qualifier
Cleveland (Wa j ls s.s J, 7: 30p .m .
pline."
(5 ). Me Enanev (7 1. Monday night at Northfield
Oakland !Torrez 10·10 1 . at
singleseason record for stolen Sarmienlo
·CINCINNATI (UPI) - His is,
Borbon (8) and Bench . WP Battimore (Garland 1S.J) , 7:30
What
Templeton
did
wasn
't
bases (118 in 1974), was Oenny {8-6 ). LP - Billingham Park.
name is Garry Templetort.
p.m .
.
California (Hart zell J ..t J at He's 20 years old, playing surprising to the Reds' Joe
giving Templeton a private (11 .9) , HRs- CinCinnali , Mor " Count Me finished third In
Boston (Wise 9 10 1. 7: 30p .m .
the 3-year-old filly trot.
Morgan.
Lou
Brock
and
lesson on taking leads off gan 2 1251 .
Chicago (Br ett 7·8l at Detroit only his second full season of
The winner was reigned ill
Pittsburgh
000 220 000- 4 B 1
(Roberts 12· 121, 8 p .m .
pro basebaU, and he can run Willie Crawford, like Gomez, first.
S
.
a
n
Diego
000
212
()())(
-'S
11
0
Minnesota ( Bane 4-5) at New
2,05
1-5 by trainer.&amp;iver"That's another thing
like a deer, turn base hits into were passing out rave notice!
Rooker , R. Hernandez (~ ) .
(Alexander a.BJ. B p.m
. WILMINGTON, Ohio in his first pro game. One York
lessee
Terry Holton and paid
about lbe kid: He's eager to Giusti (6) and Sangulllen ;
Mi lwaukee [Augus-tine 6-81 at outs and within a couple of on the Cardinals rookie
S
awyer
,
Tomlin
(5).
Johnson
(UP!) - The Cin~lnnati kick went only nine yards.
Texas (Bri les 8 8l o9 :1J5 p.m .
$5.40
for
the victory. ·
learn," said Gomez. "And he (5 ), Metzger (7) and KendalL
years, if not sooner, will. be before the game.
·
Wt'dnesday's
Games
Monday
night's program,
Bencals figure to be without
"That nine-yardet M i lwaukee at Te)(as . night
"Brock and Crawford retains everything you tell WP- Johnson ( 1· 1), LfJ- ROOk ·
the ·National League's
reserve linebacker Chris destroyed me," moaned the Ch icago at Detroit , night
at which a crowd of 2,420
perennial AD-Star shortstop. weren't kidding because I him.. .a real eager beaver." er (10-71.
Kan City a! Cleveland . night
Devlin for several weeks of Harvard grad who is trying to Oakland
wagered $251,090, was the
!mow
when
they
are
and
when
The
Cards
called Montreat
That was Pr.eston Gomez's
at Battimore ,'night
000 20.1 000- 3 8. 0
'the regular season because of take the regillar punting job M innesota at New York, night capsule . description of they aren't;" said Morgan. Templetoo lip from lbelr LOs Angeles 020 004 OOX- 6 8 1 final leg of a five-race series.
Stanhouse . Tay lor 16 ) and Ten qualifying fillies will
Californ ia at Boston
a broken ·collarbone Devlin away from veteran Dave
Templeton walked twice, Tulsa farm club, where be Foote,
Templeton Monday night
· carler (6 ); John (7 ·3 )
suffered in Sunday's 23-17 · Green. "I'd like to have done
before the St: Louis Cardinals stole a base, singled, tripled was betting ,321 with 25 stolen and Yeager . LP - Stanhouse ( 9· meet at Scioto Downs ill
HR --Los Angeles , Buckner Coiwnbus Sept. 13 lor the
pre-season . loss to the better, tbat's for sure."
Maior League Leaders
went out and mauled the and drove .home two runs in bases. To make room for hlm, 8).
(6
1
.
By United f'ress International
Minnesota Vikings.
·Also
unhappy
was
$46,000 Capitol Trot.
fi~e at-bats. In !be sixth
they moved veteran Don
Reds~.
Batting
,,The injury to Devlin, a defensive beck Danny Reece.
{Only games scheduled )
( based 'On JlS at bats)
What Gomez, the cards' inning, the youngster made Kessinger, a former AIIStar
National league
second year pro out of Penn Aweek ago he was a bero for
an
almost
unbelievable
play
shortstop,
to
second
base.
G. AB. R. H. Pel third base coach, neglected to
This Week's
Spoetal..
State, was the first serious returning a kickoff 86 yards MadlOCk , Chi 116
"Templeton," continued
418 56 140 .335 add
was that young by ranging far l.o his left for
'
injury a Bengal has r&lt;CI!ived for a touchdown. Sunday the Morgan , Cin 107 359 97119 .331 Templeton also has fantastic George Foster's torrid !lfllasb Gomez, "bas great baseball
American League
Griffey. Cin 115 425 97 140 ,329
Ibis year.
rookie out of Soutbern Cal MaddOX
and then making a strong, instincts. I don't know who Kansas Ci ty 001 000 200- 3 7 0
, Phil 115 411 58 135 .318 hearing,
VALUE
The defeat at Minnesota was beaten by Vikings' Oliver , PII 105 413 58 135 .327 He must have.
accurate throw to first for tbe taught him ... his father or his Cleveland 001 200 001- 4 13 0
RATED
Fitzmorr
is.
Mingori
(ll
and
116 508 lOS 164 .323
was !be first Bengal pre- receiver Sam White on a 32- Rose, Cin
putout.
sandlot
coaches
...
but
he
Even
though
Templeton
St
inson
;
Eckersley
(9.10)
and
Foster , Cin 115 456 72 147 .312
season loss after three yard touchdown pass that Luznski
Gomez, fungoing grounders already knows a Jot about Fosse. LP - M ingor i (J .4l. HR , Phil 118 425 65 132 .311 wasn't
within listening
straight victories and head gaveMinilesota the victory In Robinson , Pi r 96 328 47 lll2 .311 distance, he played as if he before ll!e game, pointed how the game should be Cieveland , Fosse {I ).
USED CARS
Garvey , LA 124 494 65 15 1 .306
coach Bill Johnson said !bat the closing seconds,
toward
first
base
where
Oakland
oro
001
1110-3
7
0
played
."
Buckner , LA 118 494 56 151 .306 were out to prove he's every
Baltimore
000 000 000- 0 6 0
beyond the loss of Devlm,
American League
"That's the· way it goes,"
bit the player Gomez said he Brock, who holds baseball's
Blue 111·11) and Newman ;
G,
AS·
R
,
H,
Pel
"the worst thing about the shrugged Reece. "One week
Flanagan (0·4 and Dempsey .
McRae. KC 111 384 61135 .352
whole day was !be 95 yards in a hero, the next Week down in Brett, KC
HR s- Oakland , Sando
( 24),
123 SOl 79 172 .343
Bayl or ( 14 ).
LeFlore . Oet 117 474 79 15-1 .325
penalties. Most of Ulose caUs the dumps."
Min 121 464 74 lSO . 32~
took us out of real good field
The Bengals, now In their Carew,
California
020 000 010- J 11 1
Boslock , Min 98 3S3 53 114 .323
Boston
000 106 oo,., --. 7 9 2
posltlon."
'
final week of training camp, Staub , Det 123 449 SS 141 .314
'
Ryan , Scott (6 ), Drago ( 8)
, Chi
1()3 405 49 127 .314
Hard 1op coupe, gr een with
However, Johnson was play· tbeir next-to-last pre- Garr
and
Haney
:
Lee
,
Pole
(
81.
Carty , Cle
111 422 56 130 .308
pleued with lbe performance sea.son game Saturday night Lynn , Bos 106 413 58 126 .305 By
Press paying me $135,000 to play and Kiick with the Denver Murphy (8 ) and Fisk. WP- Lee vi nyl i nterior , automatic
United
LP- Ryan 11 0-111 HR tra nsm ission. V·8 motor .
Munson
,
NY
117
472
65
143
.303
Broncos. Morris, 29, figures 12-41.
of rookie guard Glenn at New Orleans.
only three plays a game."
International
Boston , Yastrzemsk i ( 11).
Home Runs
Bujnoch, a second round
The final link qf the Miami
Csonka and Kiick both left to latch on with some other
·National League : Kingman ,
Chicago
100 000 012- 4 11 .1
NY and Schmidt , Phil 32 ; running game that carried the Dolphins following the
ilraft pick out of Texas A&amp;M,
team just as easily.
Detroit
?00 003 OOx - 5 6 0
•2195
Fos~r . Cin 28; Morgan . Cln 25 :
In another transaction on a
who played across from
the Dolphins to three straight 1974 season to play in the
Gossage , Monroe (1 ) and
Monday , Ch i n.
American League : . Sando . Super Bowl appearances was World Football League bul surprisingly heavy day of Essian ; Bare (6·61 and wock en .
Minnesota's All-Pro Alan
fuss . LP- Gossag e (a .n J. HRs
Oak 24 : Jackson and L .May ,
Page.
Ball , 22; Nellles, NY 21: discarded Monday and the since have hooked on with activity, the St. Louis - Ch ic ago, Spencer I 10), Lemon
Not so pleased wa~ punter
leading scorer in National other NFL teams, Csonka Cardinals acquired defensive (3 1
·
Hendrick. Clev 20.
•
Runs Baited In
You'll Like Our Quali ty
Pat MelD ally, who averaged
Football League history with ll!e New York Giants end John Zook from the Minnesota 100 002 100- 4 8 2
National League : Foste,r, Cin
Way
of Doing Businoss.
Atlanta
Falcons
in
exchange
New York
003 104 lOx - 9 17 3
108 ; Morgan, Cln 92 ; Schm idt , figures he too will be given
GMAC FINANCING
, Burg meier (4 ). John·
Ph il 84 ; Luzin!~ki , Phil 8 1: the axe by the end of the
for their tbelr firstround pick sonSinger
Pomeroy
(6) ,
Hughes
(6 ) and
992-5342
Watson , Hou 15.
in next year's college draft Wynegar ; Holtzman ( 11 8) and
American League : Mayberry , week.
Open Evenings 'tiii :OO
KC and Chambliss . NY 82 ;
and reserve offensive Munson . LP- Sing er (I0 .9l . HR
International
The Dolphins waived fleet
Til 5 "'.m. Sat,
- New York , NettleS {21) .
L.Msy, BaH &amp;nd Munson , NY
league
Stand!ngs
llnernan
Greg
Kindle.
Mercury
Morris,
the
second
BO ; Jackson , Batt 78 .
United Press lnternationa I
Zook was a seven-year
Stolen Bases
leading rusher in !be learn's
W. L. Pel. GB
By RICK GOSSEUN
National League : . Ta11eras , history, to make room for a
starter
at end for Ule Falcons
Rochester 81 46 .638
P itt and Brock, St .L 44 ;
tlPI Sports Writer
Syracuse
.
74
53
.583
7
and
joins
Wait Patuiski,
Morgan , Cln 42 ; Cedeno, Hou host of promising runners,
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS.
:
NFL Exhibiti~n Standings
All the Philadelphia 38: Lopes , LA 37.
Rhode
Island
65
63
.508
16'
1
'
Marvin
Upshaw,
Mike
and George Blanda says he
American
League:
.
North
.
Memphis
62
66
.484
19'
1
2
Uoited Press lnternatlona I Phlllies need ·to be the best
MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY .
~
Oak 59 ; LeFlore , D ~ t 47 ; expects to be waived by the
Richmond 60 68 .469 2111, Sensibaugh and Rodrigo
American Confeiehte
team in baSeball is Dick Campaneris,
Oak 45 ; Baylor, Oakland Raiders sometime
Barnes as recent trade
Tidewater
58
67
.464
2l
Eut·
•
Ruthven- according to Dick Oetk 44 ; Patek, KC 43.
FRESH PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES.
:
Charleslon 57 67 .460 22'11 additions to the St. Louis
this week,
W L T Pet. PF PA o .. b
Pitching
Toledo
51
78
.395
31
Miami " ~ 0 0 ].000 98 61 nul ven.
defense. The Carda bad one of
Most Vic;tories
"It's only speculation on
Monday's Results
Ball.
2 2 o ·.500 75 54
Ruthven pitched for lhe
National League: Jones, SO my part, but I figure !bey
lbe must explosive offenses in
Memphis 11 Tidewater 8
"New Eng. 2 2 o .lOll 72 66 Plolllies for three years but '19-9 : Koosman , NY 16·7;
the entire NFL last season
may
waive
me
this
week,"
lt
Phil J!J.4; Sulton, LA
Charleston 6 Ri chmond 2
· &gt;Buffalo 1 3 o .250 '78 72 never finished with a record Cartton.
15
.9
;
Lonborg
.
Phil
14.8
:
but
lbeir defense ranked lOth
Rochester
9
Toledo
5
said the 26-year veteran
, NY Jets I 3 0 .250 70 94 above .500 Now with the Richard. Hou 14·13.
Rhode Island 12 Syracuse 6 of lbe 13-team NFC.
Central
.
American League : . .Palmer , Blanda, whose 335 field goals,
WL T'Pct.' PF PA Atlanta Braves, he has estab- Bait
Another notable cut
11 · 11 : Garland, Salt 15 3; 943 points after touchdowns
x.PIIts. 4 1 o .800 a9 45 llshed himself as one of the Leonard , KC Js .s; Figueroa , and 2,002 poinl8 are ail NFL
Monday
was
former
Cine inn. 3 1 o· .750 97 64 National League's top NY 15 ·7; Fjdrych , Det 14 -5;
quarterback Cornelius lt Hrs.: lO:OOA.M. Tilll,OO P.M. Sun.-Thurs. lt
Tanana. Cal and Fitzmorr is, re(Ords.
Cleve.
3 i. o •750 83 52 pitchers this season.
KC
14.9;
Tiant,
Bos
and.
lo:OO A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat .
:rt
Houston 0 :,~st .OOO 51 79
"I don't care for being here
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Greene of Ohio State, an 11th· :
Monday rught, If it hadn't. Trailers, Mil 14· 10 ; Hun1er, NY
round
draft
pick
by
Dallas,
as
an
insurance
policy
In
case
.
992-2556
:
Former Oakland A's pitcher
w L T Pet. PF PA been lor one bad inning· u \2 ,Earned
Run Average
who was given a look by the : W. MAIN
the
other
kicker
can't
cut
it.
POMEROY.
0.
:rt
Marcel
Lachemann,
35,
was
Oakland
3' '1 0 ,.750 92 63 aga'inst the Phlls, Ruthven (ba~ed on 117 innings pitched)
National League: , Richard , It's been frustrating and
named a University, of Cowboys as a: wide
Denver'
J 2 0 .600 96 5.5 would bave bad · his . 14111
San Diego 2 2 D.SilO 72 61
Hou 2.58 : Seaver , NY 2.62 ; discouraging for me after all
Soulhern California assistant receiver.
Norman , Cin 2.6A ; Zachry, Cln the years I've helped this
Kan. Clly
~ ~ o .500 55 57 victory.
baseball coach, it was
Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 ~7 67 · He allowed just three Phlls 2.66 ; Matlack . NY 2.n .
team."
American
league:
Fidrych
,
announced Monday.
National Conf•rence
to reach base over the first Det 2.21 ; Travers , Mil 2.38 ;
Blanda
has
not
yet
stepped
LachemaM, a former USC
.Jr~ ;;~ 1 PF P.A seven
inning~.
· but Garland , Bait 2.53 : Blue , Oak onto lbe field In four Oakland
2.58 ; Palmer . Bait 2.70.
player,
replaces
Pat
NY Giants 3 1"0 .750 70 41 Philadelphia scored four runs
Strikeouts
exhibitions and seems to have Harrison, who left to become
·st. Louis
3 1.0 .750 62 56 on four hits In !be eighth
National League : Seaver , NY
Oailas
1 J o .250 73 72 inning, to saddle hlm with hls 179 ; Richard, Hou 164 ; Mon . lost his kicking job to rookie an assistant coach at Oral
I(_,,,,
; 'lAVI 1n \
lefusco , SF 138 ; Koosman, NY Fred Stelnforl of Boston ColHt ( l' WIT\; I·W
Roberts.
•Wash .
I 3 o .250. ~7 80 12111 defeat, a 4-2 declaloo
1
r-t;,1
1
Rnt r~ P.RO
135 ; Messersmilli and Nlekro, lege.
Philo
o A o .000 A7 79
·
U~ fHilf.Hl \&lt;tOo/5
,
·
Central
, . Ruthven said, of his days In All 133.
Morris, .who teamed with
\ , ,lj I N-:-~llk'l\1-k E,
League: Ryan , Cal
W L T Pel PF PA Philadelphia, "We all began 240Americ;an
; Tanana , car 1B6; [)tyle .... en . Larry Csonka and Jlm Kiick
-~ I
Chicago
3 1 o .750 81 64 to believe that· the PhiUies Te)( 110 : Hunter , NY 139;
in the Miami backfield to
ONTARIO, Calif. (UP!) · Minn .
2 2 0 .500 46 74 were the best team ln Eckersley, Clev 135.
guide Miami to a pair of The California Angels wUI
., l
•Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 43 80 baseball We llnew It back
Super
Bowl conquests and hold an open tryout camp 'for
Detroit
~.!19 .:roo 78.119 then .... AU !bey haven't got
one runnerup ftnish from aspiring baSeball players on
W L T Pel. PF PA now is me and I'm cne of the
1971-73, said he was not Saturday and Sunday at John
' LosAng. 4001.0009144 best"
surprlaed he was let go by the Galvin Park.
•• San Fran. 4 o 0 1.000 12 56
18 the first Ume I've
·Scouts Lou Cohenour and
New Orlean; 1 o .no 14 61 faced him," said Phlllles Mllwaukoe 201 100 200-- I 13 I Dolphins,
. \.
(
"The
way
the
offense
is set Paul Frey are scheduled to
Texas
000
100
OlDl
7l
Seattle
o 4 0 .000 56 122 lbot18top Larry Bow&amp;,· who
Rodri9Llez. castro · (8) and up, alIbis point ill my career, . conduct the tryouts beglllirlng
' Atlanta
o 4 o .000 37 93 knoclled in the game's Moore ; Umbarger , Bacslk 141.
See BILL CHILDS, at DOWNING·CHILOS, tie kNOWS his lnsur•r,ce .
•l&lt;·lnciudes Collegt AII ·Star winning run wilb a sacrifice ferpko (7) and sundb~ro ~ it's better for me to play at 9 a.m. each day. Athletes
Fahey 18) . WP - ROdriguez (5 .
Middleport, Ohio
.GameMonday's RnuHs
Oy. " ...He's going to be a~ 91,. LP - Umbarger (8.10.1. HRS somewh«e else. Tbat's about must be high school
It
for
me,"
Morris
~ald. "I graduates and be oo older
992.2342
Milwaukee
,
scott
(
13),
-•Cleveland 21 Phllodotr,hla 17 game winner. I wish we
than
23.
'
guess
they
couldu't
see
Thomas
(8.l.
tonlygameschedu edl
badn't traded him."

::tt

";t:::::l:

No one

dream~d

he wouldn't get up

How they ran

1

Rookie Templeton great in
Cards" 9-5 defeat of

Red~

·Bengal linebacker lost

I(

71 OLDSMObiLE
CUTLASS

Dolphins waive Morris

Bad inning
£Or Ruthven

Karr &amp;Van Zandt

.

i;bibi;i~; brings loss

standings

!*******************************
!
!

!

~fM'~

Qft\1&amp;~~\

~ Adolph's Dairy Valley

*

:

i

*

*
.'*******************************

•

,

~~~·

"Thu

Ll..

")

OOWNINGCHILDS AGENCY INC.

''

•

•

�•

2. -

n.e nauv Sentinel, Mkldleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TuesdaY. Aug. 24,lf16

TOM TIEDE

layings will he discussed

•

~ Wring

note as "unae«ptable"
because il did not mil
respcNililily Iii: lbt dealbs.

earnmgs up

Sales in the third quarter
IIPd the ~th pr!riad

AKRON, &lt;Xlio t UP II 'De mal th earning! totaling
~.9 million, compared with

.-. .,.pect 1o ~ our
~ lllWII!I1lllm m.;ng
the ...ma~ ol orr flll'.ll
rear and maintain it lltlUlgly
inl4 1971,'' a&lt;lled FirMone
aDd Riley.

nl"t new highs, ~to

same Raymond C. Firestone,

cbairman, and Rld:llrd A.
Riley. pnsi clent, wbo said the
rl!lL'&lt;rl third qiWter Slles
...n acl!itiftd because of a
strong pre-Qrlke invmcry
J»Sition.

the last frscal
h!at, Wfte llllD&lt;l&lt;liK'I!d IOda)•
"! the Fir1!slooe nee a.
-. ,bbec Co.

Third quarter earnings
:I! &lt;wed to $21..5 millioo, oom;Ao11!d with $35.! millioo a
-~ar ago. jrimarll~ beaUS!'
,f the tlni ted f\11 bber
'll.orkers Union's strike
~ .liM Fil'5ooe and lhree
...-t,er majtx" dremakers..
Htnre l'tr, sale£ irl lbe
q~W&lt;..II' inmased u per em
lo Hill mil1lllll .,_ last.
1 3!''$ Dl&gt; millioo, and fllr

parts of our ~ 1M!

ba•e beftJ strike affer:ted,"
Riley and Flreslale said.
''lnveni«ie£ mll.St be
replenilbed at both 1l'llalesale
and retail le'lels and the
8111mlcbile companies are

By liJCRAlU)

I

.nss.

I

Ca!llal N!IIIS ~ said
the North Korean army
Sl.al1ds ''Nally to lllllililate
tbe u.s. imperia1iiU if they
~a D!W

1Fil'.''
The Sou'tb Klnan

r-m-

u.s. position .

However, South Korean
rMio •stalions quoted Forftgll
Ministry officials as ayiQg
· ~ nt'll' U.S. position

!lbouldbe tOeD Ill tbe o:JIICeiX
of .a step in I series rl

s. tJSIAK

AT'IlQI., N.Y. (UPf)
Molt &lt;if the inma!A!S at the
Attica Clrrectime.l F acility,
!aile of the bloOdy lJlisoo
.rfbellion in 19'/l, \10M!d today

mD'l'eiS., t1

They said F'&lt;rtjgn Millisi:er
P.art t oog-jin and O.S.
Ambassador Richard L.
Sheider met for 3D mimltes
1 Ill cm!imle iheir "'gene-al ilbis ~ ani! the two
•' er e
I Wii:e'' on1il iheir demands '.ov ern m&lt;ent s
"cOQPeratU.g
tuUp .tnd
fir
l'l!!lmn
.mel
1 A .,oiesmlm at !the mu- ·
ciosely."

•'Otce the strike is seuled,

,---------------------------1
j
l..l«ln fll .,...
Tbty sb:eclcl
1

the

alrci1!ft c:arrter uss Midnr
amduc1e1 ~ilons .olf the
_ . - - ci It-, iD&lt;:I1dDc
lllgiU by aboul15 and llld
ligbler ainnll whicb it car·
Mrs. Tbt U,lllO .Amtrlcan
lraops in Soulb Korea also
ba ve beftJ plaoed on alort.
In a ~ monilored
Monday in Tokyo, North
KerN called Ford a ''lm! tl
ftl'" for lllOIJililiD&amp; tbe u.s.
forcu. In a separate
4spatcb, tbe (North) KcrNn

in tbe

firmed

jn&gt;'jeeting higb ~ctkm

an lrtkoelllflcl.
be
leu IliaD M.,. nls laq I• be Albjeel I&amp; ro4rldD by
thr edltarl uri be slpe;l wllll the ~·· .._
!Names a.y be triUIIMid apaa pallc:atiiL
HeftW£,• rtq!lellt, ames will be rlildo8toll..dten
sblulil be Ia .p all , llCidredlac ta.s, ...t per-

time.

Uailed States in ealliDg the
note from North Korean
President JUm n-&amp;mg
' 'UIIaeeeptable," had no
olfiCiAI cmunmt of ~ shift

Attica
strike

''Wberl full opontionS NSD-

rates.

AI tbe !llDt

ment.. whicb bad jciDed the

me, .,;, expect to ~
posting bealtby gllins in aD

• ~ moo1l:ls sales jrmJped
!.7 per em! from $!.7 millim
a r- a;go 0 $3 million.

Money·intended for urban

lat« e~ its stand aDd
called the message a
'-polili" . ...

•

~restone
~:s. i millioo ~the

lt also followed • !Ofttning
of the U.S. position on a or1h
Kcr1!8D U&lt;Xe of l"'!gg"et over
the dratM of the Al:rleric8ns.
The Sta te Department,
wtdcb bad flnl desr:rlled the

DemWtariud Z..,e.
The deciJim followed a call
Monday by President Ford
fer sucb a meetiDI! to oeei
assuranca !run North Korea
at the safety of American
troops in the Panmunjom
area. Ford is vacalimirl! in
Vall, Colo.

PANMUN JOM. Korea
(UPI) - NGrth KerN IIPd the
lllf. CmunaDd today agreed
1o bold a meeting of the
Korean Armistice
O;lmnlWioo Wednesday to
&lt;fuo:'U'IS the' alaylngs of two
~~rican officers by North
oresn ~uar~ in t.be

l

im1Jm.9eairity lacility said
1 thai ooly "abom SSS" mma!A!S

Bat Dor!g-A !Tho, Soulll
Korea
's largeSt nationally
1
I
.-ent ttl mess haU for ~ted daily, .slid in an
-~~..
II ~ and lben l'fltllmed 1!dit&lt;rial 'today emitl«l, "Is
the O.S.. backing do1n1
Ill their oells. l'he 'QUiet,
peacefl1l strike began agiiD?" that if 1be United
Mmday ..nb abou1 911 per States ana South l({)rea
cem of the :pr'ison's 1)143 Jre[a' ~~ ID firm
actim in coonecllrm Yiitb tb!
I inmates .tmng p8l'l.
I 'The inmates, pr:essiDg lor killings, it would eDIXIIII'Ige
mlmges iD prole a:ud greater North Korean
IIliJ!tallcy_
·seni~cing p11oee dnus.
·remained
in
their
rcells
Dear l§r:
I ...,., really ~ 1.1 the clap ~tick ·d puttliQg a l'elldini., Sleeping and ~
~ d a kill.ell ..tUdl bad been a:aght .in a ·trap arptmtl They refllsed to wari or Syracuse
·attend meals.
l'l1mmly in tbe paper.
"We do iD1m! to Iii! down
1 am tbe rie d ·&lt;ne rl tbe!Je mean, lleru., blood tbirst}'
and
talk to inmate il~ 1ll
lfawen and I nm to !1ft ~ lllraigllt abollt a In
as!le!lsbcwlkmg tliis ttling lrill
SY&amp;M::lUSE
'!lhe
My hjrsbarrl does ddfll:xir1! ·~ to ~ trim!lelf a[ CO!Illrnlfo.,~ ;Ji ~"" fir Syracuse Emergency Squad
Departmen~
.of speu1Fnday andSatur.day 1.1
mt aalding ..,, tlihe blllllbat il5i4JP05bd to lbe canghl rw !be
Qrrectiooa!
Serll'i.&lt;ES
said.
ses bim g« up bmlredan :to llllb sn .rna~er is ~
the Meigs Oaunty Fair.
"tbo in the lnp uy klll6' ftlanpas!lll:ie..I'w! 1I&lt;Bl 'bimca!l
(!)c Fri.day sl £:80 pliD., ,the
~ and 1211 lhan bo bid lap&amp; set ~ iballgll it '1&amp;1111111
•squad itook flresley Parsons,
!beic land 8IXI jallt he. •••lbebew !lief bid. q (J[ ebiltlrom
11le l ! r Racine, \Wit!l an
cble by. In an 111r a-be's hMIIRp!ing be's caug'bt me« JJr
Ualletl
Pnu ·bearll attack, to Veterans
Memorial HC!Spital. oY 10:80
boo dognnd lflr....,. hi! amglli
and they reren'i .I t$ . f'
lmt _., mud!..
Today is 'l:aeldaJ.'.- M. ~Jill_, the squad ~ Sarah
rm oo;t S~Yill&amp; an lrappl!nl ar. this 10r tm mt t'l'ei'I'CIIt in '4tle '!3l!lb day d. Lti&amp; '1!iittl US aratson, G ailipolis, to
IIIU' llllrt·P 'Sbf U:leralresu we Mmld illlelhan ltD.
.10 follow.
!Pleasant Val!.ey Hospital
As (U lbe ll7!jmah: 'lrijd! are .eavgbt, d111"t people realize
1be moon il eppoacbiDg after she holl &lt;r fainled 'aDd
dial IDQil rllbe:se llrimols 1ft lbe ~ '!bat if .they 'l ill Jr1F .m-.
reeeiWld a back inlurf.
Wnrwd; 011 (lUI' alft trCIIid be Ofd)i\ J.etel si1h
I 1$ 1
1he mo~ stars are Sa'iarda}' at l :liD p .m.. lile
lllls, 11 I n!s., 111111 fDDs! A* w mas aliii1DibeB snn :and lt!pila'.
squad .toot 0a11as w~.
aboat Ullle ar 111e1e lllinp1a People ~Pe r:alled Ill)' I•H4•d,
1be eusdag Ita'S are Mer- ll.u1iland, t.o Veterans
:Memartal Hospital with
~ lim jo lr.lp .. dllir land lo pt rid Ill """"''" ailidl. ary, !liars ml v-.
·' tng:ioinglbeirmipSW#flhCiDtbl!irct.jckrns
1haaebm1&lt;m thildale~ laoonti&lt;IDS na:ived in a
Well, l'&gt;'e Slid &amp;Ill ca.a. [bop! ,people .nn lhiDt .abwt tis am lbe Sill d
~ aooident .at ille
aad 11011 Jet- pid:uie of a bart ldUell, !11ticb I'm :llli'T'f
llc!mm! Calbolie Ciar1lzla1 m~an of ROU!A!S ill and
'
mt'f*'ed, mau 1btm !Dot it ls a •'"''""e ... ,a.., lhiDg Ri£bard Onbioc .... lxnl Allg~ 24, l.llllli.
7.
1!l'itiJ b appa:s - 'Name W'dbbeld aa uqll!lit.
&lt;kllhill clay in bi&amp;arJ';
In l7 A.D, 'bol•.., 11!11!
.l iplrll Briefs
killed,
and f.be cities of By
1Ji.ai!H
GaUia
fiKure$ doubled

l

!

i)au,. •

:

' •• ?Itt# t4i/h:

:,

unit
busy at fair

"""""'"t

be"*'"'"'

I

+.,+Mil!

v...,.

fair

lUnpeii IIIJd

~

_.. ~ by

w

!'

the a\ljiiw

TAMPA, l'1a. (IJP!II -'fbe

Dear Sir:
1n Ill~ , tbe Britisb
111'11111d lib to.._ l!by ~ftf ,_: the papa- lla:les lbal
urptq
eel W...ing!lll, D.C.
tbe Gallla Cormty Faii bill fnm
1o 20;0110 peopr
'lbeJ
bamed lbe Capltol
att.rwtq Ndl 0.,? ~ a, bill to walk anlUIId i1s
hr!Jdiog
md tbe em w..e
faugrowdato l't!ll!iae lbiiUhilcaaldaot pGIII!ibly,be; lbln IIIIi
manMt.
lS oct ........, rocm fllr lllat Jm11Y pqle!
In 1m, Amelia Earbart
'1be Gallla Cordy Fair" ... a nice Jlmiar Fair and many
lwoame
tbe lin! WOOliD !:4
lclp~wlddldmr JllllliJ' peoplt to the fllir but it does
mate
a
lr'aDiollllinmtal rmnot Mft a
ar a l'k2tla:i: tbat are: •• iJnporta.m
10 lbe COIIIty fain in Ibis area (lbeJ .alao llr'q in the crowds). llql fligtL
In l!ill, France clr!on"ed
Becaw of Ibis I f!el that tbe ctber lain in Ibis ftgim are
ita lin! b}'llrogen bomb in the
beiJc greatly ~ in the area d attenta'"· - 5oulb Par.iflc.
Bedl)' eoumn, ru. 3, Pwoaot.

Tampa Bar BoeeaneerJ

ar •aamic Mt. v...iua.

u..-

_p••'••.,.

placed four · plaJer&amp; on
wdhe-s Mcmdt)'. V&lt;lurling
tidaff .and Jllllll retarn
...U'- c.rt Rowin, ll
J411Hvaal att dUce ~ ar

'fr.lu....,...

AIID placed 111 nivers aa
lbe Bu.cs · trimmed tlleir
RJiter tD

5I JJere ljnehet \ti

~ Oolavito,

wide teoeiiti
Kent Geydol 8IXI I'I1JllliDg
badt Alan Plltmall.

Playboy's advice poor on jogging
usually do not comment on

DEAlt OR. LAMB- An
artldt in lut March's issue
o1 Playboy Magazine titled
" Jogging Can KiU You ... And
'{llat's Notllle llall of lt," has

sudl articles but in my
opinion this one has been such

llllaiEQ. Acopy of the article
Is enclosed, It is Cfrlainly
dllllearleninl to think tbal I
bave been damaglnc my body
for oeveral years by jogging
ralher than adlieving tbe
Intended effect - good
Ileal lb. Actually ,l bave never
fell betler in my life lllall I
baft the put -~al yean.
J"'lginll has been in·
vigorallna and bighiY.
beneficial psycbOI"'IiCIIIy
and pbylicaiiJ (or so I

and found not one item. His
claim tbat joggil!g cauaes
nricoee veins is tomplelely
cORtrary
to
known
physiology. He stated tbat
"wilb every tl!ump of the
loot, a column of blood
9eVeral feet higb pounds tbe
veins of the legs like s bat..
tering ram." WeD the good
doctor needs to review his
circulatory dynamics and
CGIIIidel' facta rather than
flctiDn.
The facta are tbat aa you
llland sUD there is a large
cOlumn of blood that inaeues the pressure in tbe
veins in the lep. But u soon
aa JOU start waiting the
coolraelinfl mUICies equeeze
IJJe deep veins and empty

a public disservice that I feel
compe~ to respond to your
query.

Frankly 1 searclled tbe
UDdoubledly sbatlered the
psycllological equilibritDD of article diligently to find
lboulands of joggen and liJill !bing I could agree wi Ill

IIJoulbl)-

Is Dr. Sdlmldt's theory on
tbe harlllful effect on joglng
valid? 1 see be provides no
dotiiieltatlon of his COD·
lelllla. I would ft'I'J mucll
l)lpl'tdate receh1DI JOUr

.

•DEAR
• • READER
ar IJda article.-

,

I

•

Compassion not·

poor beinR spent instead
for tennis courts, bike

paths in affluent IJN!JIS

strong
KANSAS CITY (NEA) -

1

'
~utt

ldeoioUbaar~bi!IIIIJr

concern in the leadenblp, a

According to Repub lean balanced
budget
In
moderates, ~Y fortunes
began to decline 11'ith !be Washington has become
death of Teddy Roosevelt. It . more important to IJJe cauae
slid from being !be party of than a balanced diet In .\!&gt;.
R
d palachla. flu Jerry Ford
Lincoln •. , T.
. an been to Bedford Stuyvaant?
progn=YISID to beinc. the Does Ronald Reagan give a .
party of CalYin Coolidge, !bought for the millions who
Herbert Hoover, AU t.andon, would die If be pushed his ·
Toni [le,..,y , BaiT)' Gold-'Ill
.
lo 'Ia
,_ and Ri hard ~•-m
feud ,., COIIIIliiiiUII1l I
wa..,.
c
""' .
I i I -A; F ,
I tbe
One thus wonders wbat "'I ~ """' · ~rr or no •
everyone is cheering about 'at party s !DlBge IS one ?f aloof .
Ibis GOP convention. The arrogance, and mUJions of
slide has become an Ameri~ns resent it.,
.
avalanche. Republicans are
lrontcally, many of lbeae ,
oo lbe endancered species list millions are phiiOIOJ)blcaDy, •
Four out of five Americans if not formally, RepubUcan.
!X&gt;lied refuse to identify witb 'I1le n.slion has for 200 years .
the Grand Old Party. nutty- been c?n~er.vatlve and;
-.even of the 50 states have constructionrstic. But u New
ant i _Republic wn 8 d _ Ya.:k Uruvei'SI.ty Prof. Irvine
ministrations. The wags here Knstol remmds . us, the
· believe that if somelhing isn't maJOrity ,c;annot Sllllpiy be
dooe to reverse lbe party's assumed, It has.to be welded
decline the Dell coov.entlon together out of disparate .
may ~ be held in the parts.'' Alas, the Repubiicln
foyer r1 111e Ripon Society. arc has gone . cold. Ralber,.
.In cne important sense the than , mass . !Is potential.
party deserves its troubles. constituents, 1t has over !be ,
In its haste to become the years carelessly let Urem
part)• of respanslbilily and wander away.
.
~tabilityit has forgotten
Older c!lizens are a case m
t.hat politics is paople . pomt. Krislol says they lend
robe conservative, often bold
on to the old value!!, and !bus
should
appreciate
Republicanism. Yet in- .
creasincly they do not. Many•
elderly Republicans ere '
IUnling ro the Democrats. '
·Others are so disillusioned
with lbe party they are
dropping out of the political
•OCil!lnlttion loamp&amp;Dy, ' and be((rt be was cutlbort by a process altogether. John
By 11011'ARD A. :rYNl!IR
lti{I;())W (UPJI - 'lbne Dennis Robert Bum, 26, )lqe who asked blm to Pecoraro of Washington's
Cmcerned Seniors for Belter
.Amerieans pleaded guilty I1I1IIIIITied, of W!ite!IIIJDe, ·~ cloae to tbe facts."
Bums did n&lt;t testify dtDig Government says he thinks •
UM~ay tD 1111uallDc a poiDis N.Y., 1Wre !llnllted in JUDI!
of 10 older people will vote
•m beroio .m.o tbe .Soviet Gring .. stop in. ¥01100• .. llle ~'ira 9l!SSiQn that lasted six
for Jinuny Carter this year. ·
U!im. Two ci them lllld • tbey new from Kuala almolt 11&amp; bouts.
Boll! Amaer 111111 Bmrer "ali! I personally hope It's 10 ;
Savietmlll't!Dey W!ftlding l..uu1!m to Am!terdam.
;
Anlstfr told the aJUrt tbal idedified their Am!llerdam of 10."
as ,p Ut anriers fir ·llbe
Why
the
switch?
Hq K~~~g, sqapore IIIJd antact aa a " Mr. David
OJine9e.
'1be defendants, the ,f int Kuala l.mnpur """ used by Lee." Bnlwtt said tltat Ill bis " Because we can read the
papers, too," says Rudy
American~~ to be lried in IJJe :tbe OlineiC! .a s "capu.ls far arrival in AmlterdiiD frcm
Scmet umon in eight rsrs. ~" btraiD to Amlter· Las Vegas, be and Amster Danstedt of the Nlional,
faad pUon lams·u l"" lo lCl dam. He said tbe Asian met three limes wilt! Lee, Council of Senior atizens. He
liOIIIUS bad n!plaeed t'llrtey .mo was acompaaied by two recalls that Nixon opposed
)'ell!li eadl.
,after
tbe l'llltilb ~rnment db« OUlelle to the final "almost every social security
Genld Alnlter. l3., d Nt'll'
'
b
anned
ClllliVIIID! of the meeting in a nightclub, increase that came across bis
Yat Illy, tbe fini 1D testify
~
poppy,
source of before be - cleared for lbe desk " , and that Jerry Ford
before ~ line .lDdCI!S tlfll
bas tried to cut more recent
heroin,
at
the
rErpSt
rl the millilll.
ml!ll and.aoe ;wcm.w"
·d h!
SS
hikes in half. As for R.
tl1ited States.
ID Kllli8 tmnpr , Am!m
-~!PIIiAdllad 'byaOil!lle
Reagan,
he denouces SS at!
'l!ra11d', lbe '111!&gt;1 to lestify, said a IIIII dneloped wbm
man iin Aml!tmllm .mere .be
any
cost,
a thought !bat'
tiViDg, to t'arr!' . . . iSIIicl be~ to mmtpm!J' Lee and • OJb eee !Dill aad
'""'~·t n
"
Amlt4iJ Cll wbat Alnll« de- wife btviCb1 • Ylqlit false- terrifies most elderly voters
..... ... ,
.~~
. . . . Wla
_:_+j
scribed u m "all njenses bottomed .Utea• to their who get the monthly checks.
~ ..., lDo aluc!b • iptl':l,
So it is that many older~
Utili 'ft WCIIIlrJ attract less paid ncatiaD" fer • paj1DI!il1 bolft. .., ftlllnd it W18c:cepla·
people
wonder why they'
.
O
f.
SI;OOO.
attmlilll," .. .... .llid.
ble•" be ·said. "11 bad an
should
support
the GOP when
"NamDcs
for
me
is
very
extreme
·
weigbt.
It
was
Amalir, will u doim•lloroecloecl
it
doesn
't
support
them. II!:
lliloltratt
brnn•l
bad
bad
m
'engbebJe("
and ltDf'!!lployed; Paul
lbe
94th
Congress
there
were:
Tile ,mt.
I ...,aratll:r
lila-, :11, 4l Las Vtp~, preoio111 cmtaet '1ritb it lit
weD
over
100
Democrats,
bu~
Nev ~ mat ied, father of four ·liAY lime. I lhcluglt it ~ were madified and tbe lbree
d a m.ldiog lii'I8DIIg« fir a be like a ·llcilywood ll!llrie," cbed;ed them 011 ·an Aerodot only nine Republicans, who'
sided wi!h the aged on 90 per
:tbe IIN"Y lll!t Bntwer said !liglj, be said.
cent or more of beneficial•
legislation. "When people get
- - - - - - - - - old,"
says Pecoraro, "They
tbe Osmr:ull, JoiDly Cash, need help more lhan ever.
MliC Davis, The Fifth .IJimrn. The trouble witb P.epublicans
1iD11, LJDD Aodam, Red is IIIey just don't seem to care
Slt:eltcm IIIJd Rme SiDard.
about it."
Tile fair, wilb tbe theme
lienee the sun sinks deeper'
·~ of .the AmerieaD on lhe party. •Besicjes the
~... opelll Thllnday IDOl'· elderly, the rural coni
Ding, rutDng tmoagb Labor slituency is shrinking, and
Day. ~ lhocre 12 days the suburban, and the small
·a, JAY GDIIAN
~ citillii2Jruugb;lut the me lllllY !lilt tractor puDa,
a!JLlllmUS (Cl'l j - li state, primarily for· the lit.- . racing, IIIIo tbrill town . Negligence is the
t....,.... C!'fti'J ,eu, WJdl Olllitilimcrol edtilitcn IIIII sbon, batj)n twirling ultimate sin for a politiclil
party. People do not want to
miiJim• ci 'rilitort ml hal a '1'11it1n. ('dmnbus wu lbe contests, country music
be
nor do they
..Iiana! ~ation
ate in 11$1, Onelllld in 00. !lboWI....mdlll. ..allll m ...alld wantengineered,
to
be
forgotten.
n•a called tbe ·aDo ,State Dayton had it in 18$3, Ill.
The road back for
Fair and it .b epl badt in fcJIJowed by Newark in l.l5l.
And, if you've ever asked Republicanism, then, is line!l
October r1 WO al Camp The state fair also had younelf OOw maD1 cupcake.tl
W..,inpm !lbout two llld appalranees in Sandut\;y, can a perat eat • in II with human beings. Thet
...,NNfJiiBfromwbatwu ZnuvHle , Toledo, aeoorrds, that, too, foo WUI needn't"be coddled by their
then the cem. of Ontinnati Springfield and Mlllllfield. cbcov« - at this year's party but they must be
'fbetualtbaltimewaaa before becoming 1%3rd amuaJ Oblo state Fair. defended by ·it . •
For instance, polls in·
IInse day eveat 'tlitllalkeat per111111m!Jy .eatabJilbe1 in
dicate
lhatatleast40per cent
•htl fm dlllp.
OiumM ill lllif.
of
peOJl!e
over ~ resent
'Ibe &amp;nt fair bardiJ camADd lblt lnlp Ill to tbll
having
"been
forced into
JllrS with l.be Cllliblr of fair ,ear's !%H. (JUo Stale Fair, BLOOMINGDALE PIE.\
retirement; it is a form of
wiKb wiD.beCiD here 'l'burl- . .,
feata inc mere than
LOS ANGELES (UP!)' dli!_criml~al,l,on which one
Betty
Newllng
Bklomlugdale,
day.
13,000 es!jhited itetnl, 11101'1!
day,
one way or another, will,
Bam in 1150, aD mjnYik lblll I'IOO,GIID ill pranhgn related Lo !be depll'llnent
end.
Will
the GOP help end it?
llld odMr "'ilikd ileml IIQiey 8IXI proudly lrllclng store family, faces a
Will'
the
party fight for !be
were Judled dllriDR the titlt to .U ' 'wtrld'sisrgest" madnpem 15,000 rme and two
right
of
everf,one
ro hold tbjs
yranr mprfloa tor ber guilty
~ of tbe &amp;nt day ci lWei.
job
long
as'
he
is
pbysicall,Y
tbe fl!r I.Dd tileD were
'Ibe tlllo SWte F* bllllbe plea l.o cbargtetr uf CIIICeallng
·able?
One
suspects
not, but
nHbited fllr lbe ganJ wcrld'a larptt 1ta1e fair • llmloe for two Cbrlstlan
so.
If
public dlntc tbe rantlr!der hone .._. Wllrid'J lsrgest Dlor dr !U!I Imported frcm one ' hopes·
.Republicanism is ro survive
rll.be fair.
li: 1 ri edrilitlm, w.-ld'l
(end if ilce~ ro exist we'd
Tile belt CDW Ofti' .lbree largelt Janlor fair, worlcl'a
· have t.o·reinvent lt) it will
,_.dddlringtbalfintfair largelt alate fair _.._
have to begin batUing for
rta!iftd a I* Hl•IW uf flli. boxing tournament, the
ra
Iller than against those
Fortbebeltbeifu,theiiW!ft world's largnt fine arta
good
.peop!e'wh9 hold its fate
reoelftd a • l*aldi!lh
ahlbit and features tbe
ill lbeir bands.
·• ·
Followlal! lbe mat 1111150, warld'a J.u'8etl 1ta1e fair
•·
the lllllllll1 fair waa beld Ill -*Jilcle.
A total of U mlllJon
LOS ~GELES. (UPI) ' penms1111ied tbe 1175 fair
CtuckKnGaald
~lilt
" : . :":::"
aad It raiDed tine di171- .
year's
No.
2qUrt.wback
Rill
TJU ,....•• Yillkn JawonMI'
*'11
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for
tbe
a.:.·~:-··:s
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Ia
.qeJes Billa
RimaSaturday
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lbe Bulfa)o
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
-'• grouadl Jut )'NI" Oil the
, , , 1 . : ; : : , .._
.,. ·, clty'allli'th llde. And many of
Silent ac:nen star Mary Ma- night, followed by ttto
... · - . I'
a-lalrgu.l wD1 bo lbln c:Lann, 76, and ·actor John quarters of play by tbe
!II ' - ' ...
· ....
·
far wbll fair cedall term Hall, were lllllOil8 '100 people team's top.rated !ligna!
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ia
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wl» played latlll'ciQ'• ......... the
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·
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of
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l
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In ~ J1IO\IIelj with the nMJaad Raldlra.
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HGIIywaod MIIIICirial PM!. ,... pro l:od ""'·

Americans confess heroin

was smuggled for Chinese

State Fair started

way back in 1850

mm

DR. LAMB

Lutm&lt;; E. Lamb, M.D.

• 'J-The DaUySeM!ntl, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Aug. 24,1976

Urem. The ,pressure in tbe
veins in the legs !ben drops
drama lically ro a1mo11 nil
The superficial •eins in the
legs drain directly into tbe
deep veins and also .empty.
Hence walking, Jegging and
running do not pound the
veins will! a column of blood
but aclullly ~ lbe
pressure inside UJe mns.
He slated lbal rumlng jars
the heart and saggesla that it
is hlll1! like a pendulum from
the large arteries Inside tbe
chest. An elementary miew

of anatomy will show lhrit the
heart is cushioned on tbe
diaphragm directly over lbe

stomach

rather

than

Swinging wildly Uke a pendulum inlide tile cheat. There

jogging are almosl: always
from ruming too fast or
overdoing it whm ooe is not
trained . 1llis can ca111t a
bear! atlack, but not from

jarring crusts loose. For
, uw.e information 111 U!ia
problem I am aending you
'I1le Heallll Letter number 42, Jogging, Em'tion, Sudden
Dealb. Otbers who want lbe
delails about llil can ·llelld a
long,
liampecl,
self·
addresaed envelope with so
centa for it. Just aenc1 your
letter to me in care of UU
newspaper, P.O. Box mlil,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
The article abo cl•lmed
that women denlopecl

...U. tnaata Ub deflated
from Joai'C. N:-

are no cues an .--.1 of

..noons

rumlng causlnc tbe beart to
be torn from ita pl8ce In lhe

lu.ally will develop
saauw
If 111ey don't . . a

chest or ID ID)' WI)'
displaced. The runrt1nc does
not jar crusta out oflbe 'ar·
leries as IJJe article Implies.
J&lt;utng can cauae Pile
dangel'l, partiCQ!arly if not
dme properly. Dealbs from

'#

brlllliere eva! If only stan.
~· The problem Is not

Joalng. My best advice is ro
not let IJJe Playboy article
interfere with JOur good
exerctse hablta.

as

-Of

'I ' - ·

-.-•-.&amp;·-·

. . . . . . . .

9

•

=--=--.:...--= -...... ~. . .
s

2

.....

. . . . . .

Jut"*

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......

I

•

»

Sipe sharp BASEBALL Eckersley downs Royals 4-3
'f or Browns

A's 3, Orioles 1:
in the slsth inning, capped by
He said, "l bad a bad first diving stop of the ball.
By JOE FROHLINGER
Sal
Bando
and
Don
Baylor
Jlm Rice's two,run single.
Ray
F
produoecl
!be
hall but I kept plugging away.
UP! Sporta Writer
hit
solo
homera
and
Vida
Blue
Bill
1..«, with relit! help from
IJrsl
three
Cleveland
runs
Major ln1•• Sllndings
Dennis Eckersley limited Since 1 got · beck In the
By United Prsu onrernatlonor Western Division leader rotallon, I've bad a good wit.h his IJrsl h..ne run since lcrued a sis-hit shutout as Dick Pole and Tom Murphy,
National Le1gue
e..r
Karu!as City to seven hits breaking ball and I've been 1974 In the third inning and a Oakland belli Baltimore. The won hi1 first starting
w.. l . Pet. G a . Monday night and George getting ahead of the hitters. tw0'£Uil single In tbe f-'11'. · game marked the flnl road asalgnment since last Aug. 24
•
Ph i ladeJphl a 81 41 .664
I'm pitching reel well now," n.e RoyaiJ tied lhe IIC!JI'e at ~ victory fer Blue since June 6. as he pitched seven inilin~ of
67 s• 545 u•, Hendrick delivered a two-out
Plll5burg h
New York
Ron Pruitt started !be 3 on a pincbbit two-out, two- He Improved his record to 12- seven-hit baH, Nolan Ryan,
~~ '••' .S088 21!,, sincie in the bottom of the
I'm going to fight my way Chicago
By ED McFAlL
who struck out seven batters
11.
Cleveland
ninth~nning rally run double by Jamie Quirk In
S. 66
26 ninll! to score Rick Manning
St . Louis
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) the
seventh
Inning
after
·
Ttcen
5,
Wblte
Sos
f
:
in
five Innings, absorbed bis
into being No. I."
with
a
Qne-oul,
pinch-hit
Montreat
'' 11 .3A7 38
and give the Cleveland
FoiTell Gresg runs a tidy
Slpe 'a third touchdown
Frank
White's
saalftee
Oy
in
16th
loss in 26 dl!(islons.
Rookie
shortstop
Mark
single
and
raced
to
third
oo
we.r
Indians.
a
4-3
will
over
the
Pet. 0 8
!hip and il Itaya tidy even drive ·was a clai!81c two· Cin c innati W80. . L,.
Wagner,
called
up
from
tbe
third
provided
a
run.
Yanks
I, Twins 4:
Manning'sd®ble.
Rico
Carty
.16 .635
Royab.
after I winning battle,
minute drill as he took his Los Angel es 69 ss .551 101
In other game~, Oakland Evansville in lbe American
Graig Nettles celebrated
Eckersley struck out 12 wu given an intentional wailt
Di~o
61 66 .480 19 '
One of the Cleveland learn 119 yards after getting Sail
Houston
10 11 .•n 20', batters lo give l!im ,88 to fill the bases but pinch· turned back Baltimore, ~. · .woclaUon last week with a his 331\d birtbdsy a day Ia te
Bro111111 aated Qregg Monday !be ball with 2:02 left in the . Allonlo
57 19 .452 73 strikeouts in his last 52 hitter Manager Frank Detroit shaded Chicago, 5-4, "good field , no hit" as he rapped out four hits,
sen Froncl.co 55 71 .437 25
innings. Recalled from exile Robinson forced Pruitt at lhe Boston cUpped California, 7- reputation, did his best lo . including two doubles and a
night In die locker room if ll'le second quarter.
Mondlv 's Gamts
The
drive,
which
Included
a
teams' 21-17 preseuon
Ph iladelph ia • Allonto 2
in the bullpen on July 30, the plate. Hendrick then drilled 3, New York . walloped dispel that tag wllb a two-run home run. 'lbunnan Munson
~yard
pass
play
to
returning
victory over the winless
9-4,
and single slstb lming single to helped !be Yankees snap a
sr, Loul• 9 Cincinna ti 5
21-yearold has pitched Steve Mingorl's first pitch Minnesota,
Diego s Pittsburgh 4
Philadelphia Eagles had Browns favorite Paul San
LOS Angeles 6 Monlreal 3
Superbly in the Second half at and beat Cookie Rojas' throw Milwaukee downed Texas, 8- keep his average at .500 as three.game losing streak by
earned the ,play~rs tbe right Warfield, ended when Sipe
Detroit beat Chicago.
knocking in three runs. Ken
!Only go me• ~thedu led l
the season and no one llnows to first after the Royals' 2.
to go home · "casual," p!!Ssed nine yards to rookie
Red Sox 1, Artgela S:
Hoi11Jnan gained the win to
Tod•1Y~~~
~ft,chers . it better than he dOes.
second baseman made a
meaning without wearing wide receiver Dave Logan lor
Boston rallied for six runs Improve his record to u.a.
.Philadelphia " or lion IS 41 at
lbe BroWIIII' final 1e0re with Atlanta {Messer smith 11 10),
Ues.
Brewen 11, Rangers Z:
7: 35p .m .
"You came with Ues, didn't 13 seconds left In the half.
George Scott drove in three
51. 1,..ou1s ! Fa lcone .10 l lJ at
Slpe, who. played only the Cincinnat i ! Za chry li ·• L s ~ os
you?" 111kejl the bead coach,
runs wltb his 13th homer and
who hlld seen his re$fgenl first half, hit 12-of·l6 passes p.m.
two doubles and scored twke
Piltsburgh ICandelar ia 1'1 4)
Browns score their third for 157 yards. Plolppa IDok at San Oieyo {Strom 10· 13). 10
to Send Mllwaukee past
.
Texas,
·
straight preseason win. over in the second half and p .m
M
eat ICarr lthers 6 9 ) at
"Then you go home witb failed to score,
L os Ang eles (Hooton 7 12).
A throw Sunday caught snd I don't think he's going to slowpitch !Oftball . for the
By LAURIE HORN
30 p.m.
But the Eagles' atfense was 10:Houstoh
ties."
I Andujar 6 9) at
NORTH · PROVIDENCE, C«ry square In the chest and make it. It's a ·terrible, , Pawtucket Merchants, a
Gregg said he was "escep· having troubles of 118 oWn end Chicago (Renko 5.6) , 1: 30 p .m.
local amateur team. The
R.I.
(UP!) - II looked like a he awnpled before he made terrible mess."
N~w
York
I
L
DIIch
7
·
11)
at
Uonally pleued" with the managed only two I ourth·
San Francisco I Barr. 10 10 ), bad breall when a throw from
Merchants were iosinc, &amp;-2,
se&lt;oond
base.
His
yoWJg
wife,
Robert
went
through
Rhode
COLUMBUS (UP! ) play of backup quarterback quarter touchdowns on short 10:ll p .m.
when Corry wu struck.
· Egor, pacing second coming
Kathleen,
watched
as
revival
Island's
prestigious
LaSalle
second base knocked the wind
Brian Slpe, who led the runs by James McAIJsler, the
Wedne:.day 's Gamet
Officials caned off aD slow- down to the stretch , came on
Phila at Atlanta , night
out of Robert Corry. No one efforts by a nurse and a squad Academy and did a year or
Browns to three second· last wilb 10 seconds left in the Montreal
at Los Angeles . night
pitch
!Oftball games in Rhode · strong at the finish to nip
of
rescue
workers
failed.
two of college. Then be
quarter touchdowns, two of game that was played in 8ii Piltsburgh at San Diego, night dreamed he wouldn't get
Island
· unlll · after the Pandy Grattan by a nose in
Monday,
with
the
body
married Kathleen and they
M Chicngo
lip.
them on his !coring passes; degree weather witb high Houston
New York a l San Fr ancisco
funeral,
C«ry, 28, was from a good taken to !be stale morgue for bad two children, Kerri Lynn, 1
the featured $1,500 eighth
and provided the margin of lrumidity ,
(Only ga mes schedul ed )
The
name
Robert
runs
an
autopsy,
the
Corry
family
5,
Erin
Lee,
21&gt;,
and
bssebaU
family
.
His
father,
race at Scioto Downs Monday
An sn!lJ'Y Dick Vermeil, the
victory . .
through
!be
Corry
famUy
the
American
League
gathered
at
the
elder
responsibililles.
He
went
to
also
·
named
Robert,
played
.
night.
Old that mean Gregg might Eagles' .new .head coach,
East
Robert's horne to share their work for !be power company way basebaU ran through
Chee Chee Love showed ,
W,. L, . Pd. GB minor league baD ill his
use a two quarterback berated himself in the locker
73 48 .103
youth. Given a summer grief and try to take stock of · and moved away from Corry's veins. "He was .a
The
winiler, driven in 2' 1Y.!
room, although he promised New York
system?
63 59 .516 W 1
Baltimor e
good kid," said Robert Cocry, 2-5 by Sam Noble, returned
what
happened.
home-from
suburban
Nortb
Sunday,
tbere
wasn
't
a
place
"I've got · a No. I lbere would be some veterans Cl
61
61
.496
13
ev eland
"He never made a mistake Providence
59 64 .480 15 Robert was more likely to be
to
rural a nephew 10 years older. "He $11.60, $4.80 and $3.60.
quarterback and . a No. 2 going in today's squad Detroit
58 64 ,475 15 ?
loved it," Corry said. · ~ 11 was
Boston
in
his
life,"
his
mother
said,
than running herd from first
Cumberland, R.I.
The 9-2- nl ~ htly double
· M i lwaukee
quarterback," he · said, ciltdown to 49 players.
54 65 .454 18
choking
back
tears.
"His
base to second to beat out a
After he moved to Cumber· his Ufe."
West
displaying the same pealness · "There's a Jack of
combination of Canadian
GB double play attempt.
father is in very bed shape land, Corry began playing
Bomb and""Sis Omaha was
pattern . "! have two discipline out there and that's Kansas Ci ty W75.. L,48. Pet.
.610 1
worth $73.80.
quarterbacks, My No. I is why I'm not doing a good Oakland
Malor League Results
67 $7 .540 8 ,
By United Press International
M inneso ta
62 63 .496 14
Attendance was 3,567 and
·job," be said,
(Mike) Phipps."
1
National League
Te l(aS
58 66 .468 17 1
Vermeil said a lot of "guys Chicago
But· Sipe, whO engineered
Phtadelphia 000 000 040- 4 9 o the handle $242,862.
54 71 .432 21
Atlanta
010 000 1()()--,. 2 6 0
54 71 ..432 21
scoring drives of 86, 19 and 69 with pride" ere work inc "but California
LonbOrg , McGraw (81 and
Monday 's Results
yards, didn't agree ·with they haven't in)proved as Cleveland 4 Kansas City 3
Boone ; Ruthven, Devine (8) ,
NORTHFIELD, Oh io
Marshall {9) and Correl l. WPmuch as they should In view Oakland J Batlimore 0
Gregg's categories.
(UP!)
- Solo Hill took the
Lonborg (1 4·8) , LP- Rut hven
7 California 3
"I'm not a backup quarter· of the effort they put out. I Boston
(13 12 l. HR - Atlar~ta , Hender_. lead just past the balf·mile
Octroi! s Ch ic ago 4
beck," said the three-yea'r can't believe we.'re 0-4. I'm New York 9 Minnesota -4
son { 10) .
pole and won by . a
6 Te~~;as 2
veteran from · San Diego very disappointed. We must Milwaukee
comfortable
thre e lengths
St . Lou iS
101200 230- 914 I
Today's Probable Pitchen
state. "Right now I'm No. 2 be tough, more poise, better
Cincinnati
001 001 201- 5 10 0 over Villanese In the $20,500
(All Times EDT)
Denny , Greif (6 J. Hrabosky
Kansas City (Leonard JS.SJ at
but I don't intend being No.2. concentration, better disci(9 } and Simmons f Billingham , Ohio Sires Stakes qualifier
Cleveland (Wa j ls s.s J, 7: 30p .m .
pline."
(5 ). Me Enanev (7 1. Monday night at Northfield
Oakland !Torrez 10·10 1 . at
singleseason record for stolen Sarmienlo
·CINCINNATI (UPI) - His is,
Borbon (8) and Bench . WP Battimore (Garland 1S.J) , 7:30
What
Templeton
did
wasn
't
bases (118 in 1974), was Oenny {8-6 ). LP - Billingham Park.
name is Garry Templetort.
p.m .
.
California (Hart zell J ..t J at He's 20 years old, playing surprising to the Reds' Joe
giving Templeton a private (11 .9) , HRs- CinCinnali , Mor " Count Me finished third In
Boston (Wise 9 10 1. 7: 30p .m .
the 3-year-old filly trot.
Morgan.
Lou
Brock
and
lesson on taking leads off gan 2 1251 .
Chicago (Br ett 7·8l at Detroit only his second full season of
The winner was reigned ill
Pittsburgh
000 220 000- 4 B 1
(Roberts 12· 121, 8 p .m .
pro basebaU, and he can run Willie Crawford, like Gomez, first.
S
.
a
n
Diego
000
212
()())(
-'S
11
0
Minnesota ( Bane 4-5) at New
2,05
1-5 by trainer.&amp;iver"That's another thing
like a deer, turn base hits into were passing out rave notice!
Rooker , R. Hernandez (~ ) .
(Alexander a.BJ. B p.m
. WILMINGTON, Ohio in his first pro game. One York
lessee
Terry Holton and paid
about lbe kid: He's eager to Giusti (6) and Sangulllen ;
Mi lwaukee [Augus-tine 6-81 at outs and within a couple of on the Cardinals rookie
S
awyer
,
Tomlin
(5).
Johnson
(UP!) - The Cin~lnnati kick went only nine yards.
Texas (Bri les 8 8l o9 :1J5 p.m .
$5.40
for
the victory. ·
learn," said Gomez. "And he (5 ), Metzger (7) and KendalL
years, if not sooner, will. be before the game.
·
Wt'dnesday's
Games
Monday
night's program,
Bencals figure to be without
"That nine-yardet M i lwaukee at Te)(as . night
"Brock and Crawford retains everything you tell WP- Johnson ( 1· 1), LfJ- ROOk ·
the ·National League's
reserve linebacker Chris destroyed me," moaned the Ch icago at Detroit , night
at which a crowd of 2,420
perennial AD-Star shortstop. weren't kidding because I him.. .a real eager beaver." er (10-71.
Kan City a! Cleveland . night
Devlin for several weeks of Harvard grad who is trying to Oakland
wagered $251,090, was the
!mow
when
they
are
and
when
The
Cards
called Montreat
That was Pr.eston Gomez's
at Battimore ,'night
000 20.1 000- 3 8. 0
'the regular season because of take the regillar punting job M innesota at New York, night capsule . description of they aren't;" said Morgan. Templetoo lip from lbelr LOs Angeles 020 004 OOX- 6 8 1 final leg of a five-race series.
Stanhouse . Tay lor 16 ) and Ten qualifying fillies will
Californ ia at Boston
a broken ·collarbone Devlin away from veteran Dave
Templeton walked twice, Tulsa farm club, where be Foote,
Templeton Monday night
· carler (6 ); John (7 ·3 )
suffered in Sunday's 23-17 · Green. "I'd like to have done
before the St: Louis Cardinals stole a base, singled, tripled was betting ,321 with 25 stolen and Yeager . LP - Stanhouse ( 9· meet at Scioto Downs ill
HR --Los Angeles , Buckner Coiwnbus Sept. 13 lor the
pre-season . loss to the better, tbat's for sure."
Maior League Leaders
went out and mauled the and drove .home two runs in bases. To make room for hlm, 8).
(6
1
.
By United f'ress International
Minnesota Vikings.
·Also
unhappy
was
$46,000 Capitol Trot.
fi~e at-bats. In !be sixth
they moved veteran Don
Reds~.
Batting
,,The injury to Devlin, a defensive beck Danny Reece.
{Only games scheduled )
( based 'On JlS at bats)
What Gomez, the cards' inning, the youngster made Kessinger, a former AIIStar
National league
second year pro out of Penn Aweek ago he was a bero for
an
almost
unbelievable
play
shortstop,
to
second
base.
G. AB. R. H. Pel third base coach, neglected to
This Week's
Spoetal..
State, was the first serious returning a kickoff 86 yards MadlOCk , Chi 116
"Templeton," continued
418 56 140 .335 add
was that young by ranging far l.o his left for
'
injury a Bengal has r&lt;CI!ived for a touchdown. Sunday the Morgan , Cin 107 359 97119 .331 Templeton also has fantastic George Foster's torrid !lfllasb Gomez, "bas great baseball
American League
Griffey. Cin 115 425 97 140 ,329
Ibis year.
rookie out of Soutbern Cal MaddOX
and then making a strong, instincts. I don't know who Kansas Ci ty 001 000 200- 3 7 0
, Phil 115 411 58 135 .318 hearing,
VALUE
The defeat at Minnesota was beaten by Vikings' Oliver , PII 105 413 58 135 .327 He must have.
accurate throw to first for tbe taught him ... his father or his Cleveland 001 200 001- 4 13 0
RATED
Fitzmorr
is.
Mingori
(ll
and
116 508 lOS 164 .323
was !be first Bengal pre- receiver Sam White on a 32- Rose, Cin
putout.
sandlot
coaches
...
but
he
Even
though
Templeton
St
inson
;
Eckersley
(9.10)
and
Foster , Cin 115 456 72 147 .312
season loss after three yard touchdown pass that Luznski
Gomez, fungoing grounders already knows a Jot about Fosse. LP - M ingor i (J .4l. HR , Phil 118 425 65 132 .311 wasn't
within listening
straight victories and head gaveMinilesota the victory In Robinson , Pi r 96 328 47 lll2 .311 distance, he played as if he before ll!e game, pointed how the game should be Cieveland , Fosse {I ).
USED CARS
Garvey , LA 124 494 65 15 1 .306
coach Bill Johnson said !bat the closing seconds,
toward
first
base
where
Oakland
oro
001
1110-3
7
0
played
."
Buckner , LA 118 494 56 151 .306 were out to prove he's every
Baltimore
000 000 000- 0 6 0
beyond the loss of Devlm,
American League
"That's the· way it goes,"
bit the player Gomez said he Brock, who holds baseball's
Blue 111·11) and Newman ;
G,
AS·
R
,
H,
Pel
"the worst thing about the shrugged Reece. "One week
Flanagan (0·4 and Dempsey .
McRae. KC 111 384 61135 .352
whole day was !be 95 yards in a hero, the next Week down in Brett, KC
HR s- Oakland , Sando
( 24),
123 SOl 79 172 .343
Bayl or ( 14 ).
LeFlore . Oet 117 474 79 15-1 .325
penalties. Most of Ulose caUs the dumps."
Min 121 464 74 lSO . 32~
took us out of real good field
The Bengals, now In their Carew,
California
020 000 010- J 11 1
Boslock , Min 98 3S3 53 114 .323
Boston
000 106 oo,., --. 7 9 2
posltlon."
'
final week of training camp, Staub , Det 123 449 SS 141 .314
'
Ryan , Scott (6 ), Drago ( 8)
, Chi
1()3 405 49 127 .314
Hard 1op coupe, gr een with
However, Johnson was play· tbeir next-to-last pre- Garr
and
Haney
:
Lee
,
Pole
(
81.
Carty , Cle
111 422 56 130 .308
pleued with lbe performance sea.son game Saturday night Lynn , Bos 106 413 58 126 .305 By
Press paying me $135,000 to play and Kiick with the Denver Murphy (8 ) and Fisk. WP- Lee vi nyl i nterior , automatic
United
LP- Ryan 11 0-111 HR tra nsm ission. V·8 motor .
Munson
,
NY
117
472
65
143
.303
Broncos. Morris, 29, figures 12-41.
of rookie guard Glenn at New Orleans.
only three plays a game."
International
Boston , Yastrzemsk i ( 11).
Home Runs
Bujnoch, a second round
The final link qf the Miami
Csonka and Kiick both left to latch on with some other
·National League : Kingman ,
Chicago
100 000 012- 4 11 .1
NY and Schmidt , Phil 32 ; running game that carried the Dolphins following the
ilraft pick out of Texas A&amp;M,
team just as easily.
Detroit
?00 003 OOx - 5 6 0
•2195
Fos~r . Cin 28; Morgan . Cln 25 :
In another transaction on a
who played across from
the Dolphins to three straight 1974 season to play in the
Gossage , Monroe (1 ) and
Monday , Ch i n.
American League : . Sando . Super Bowl appearances was World Football League bul surprisingly heavy day of Essian ; Bare (6·61 and wock en .
Minnesota's All-Pro Alan
fuss . LP- Gossag e (a .n J. HRs
Oak 24 : Jackson and L .May ,
Page.
Ball , 22; Nellles, NY 21: discarded Monday and the since have hooked on with activity, the St. Louis - Ch ic ago, Spencer I 10), Lemon
Not so pleased wa~ punter
leading scorer in National other NFL teams, Csonka Cardinals acquired defensive (3 1
·
Hendrick. Clev 20.
•
Runs Baited In
You'll Like Our Quali ty
Pat MelD ally, who averaged
Football League history with ll!e New York Giants end John Zook from the Minnesota 100 002 100- 4 8 2
National League : Foste,r, Cin
Way
of Doing Businoss.
Atlanta
Falcons
in
exchange
New York
003 104 lOx - 9 17 3
108 ; Morgan, Cln 92 ; Schm idt , figures he too will be given
GMAC FINANCING
, Burg meier (4 ). John·
Ph il 84 ; Luzin!~ki , Phil 8 1: the axe by the end of the
for their tbelr firstround pick sonSinger
Pomeroy
(6) ,
Hughes
(6 ) and
992-5342
Watson , Hou 15.
in next year's college draft Wynegar ; Holtzman ( 11 8) and
American League : Mayberry , week.
Open Evenings 'tiii :OO
KC and Chambliss . NY 82 ;
and reserve offensive Munson . LP- Sing er (I0 .9l . HR
International
The Dolphins waived fleet
Til 5 "'.m. Sat,
- New York , NettleS {21) .
L.Msy, BaH &amp;nd Munson , NY
league
Stand!ngs
llnernan
Greg
Kindle.
Mercury
Morris,
the
second
BO ; Jackson , Batt 78 .
United Press lnternationa I
Zook was a seven-year
Stolen Bases
leading rusher in !be learn's
W. L. Pel. GB
By RICK GOSSEUN
National League : . Ta11eras , history, to make room for a
starter
at end for Ule Falcons
Rochester 81 46 .638
P itt and Brock, St .L 44 ;
tlPI Sports Writer
Syracuse
.
74
53
.583
7
and
joins
Wait Patuiski,
Morgan , Cln 42 ; Cedeno, Hou host of promising runners,
TRY OUR DELICIOUS HAMBURGERS.
:
NFL Exhibiti~n Standings
All the Philadelphia 38: Lopes , LA 37.
Rhode
Island
65
63
.508
16'
1
'
Marvin
Upshaw,
Mike
and George Blanda says he
American
League:
.
North
.
Memphis
62
66
.484
19'
1
2
Uoited Press lnternatlona I Phlllies need ·to be the best
MEAT GROUND FRESH DAILY .
~
Oak 59 ; LeFlore , D ~ t 47 ; expects to be waived by the
Richmond 60 68 .469 2111, Sensibaugh and Rodrigo
American Confeiehte
team in baSeball is Dick Campaneris,
Oak 45 ; Baylor, Oakland Raiders sometime
Barnes as recent trade
Tidewater
58
67
.464
2l
Eut·
•
Ruthven- according to Dick Oetk 44 ; Patek, KC 43.
FRESH PEACH SHAKES AND SUNDAES.
:
Charleslon 57 67 .460 22'11 additions to the St. Louis
this week,
W L T Pet. PF PA o .. b
Pitching
Toledo
51
78
.395
31
Miami " ~ 0 0 ].000 98 61 nul ven.
defense. The Carda bad one of
Most Vic;tories
"It's only speculation on
Monday's Results
Ball.
2 2 o ·.500 75 54
Ruthven pitched for lhe
National League: Jones, SO my part, but I figure !bey
lbe must explosive offenses in
Memphis 11 Tidewater 8
"New Eng. 2 2 o .lOll 72 66 Plolllies for three years but '19-9 : Koosman , NY 16·7;
the entire NFL last season
may
waive
me
this
week,"
lt
Phil J!J.4; Sulton, LA
Charleston 6 Ri chmond 2
· &gt;Buffalo 1 3 o .250 '78 72 never finished with a record Cartton.
15
.9
;
Lonborg
.
Phil
14.8
:
but
lbeir defense ranked lOth
Rochester
9
Toledo
5
said the 26-year veteran
, NY Jets I 3 0 .250 70 94 above .500 Now with the Richard. Hou 14·13.
Rhode Island 12 Syracuse 6 of lbe 13-team NFC.
Central
.
American League : . .Palmer , Blanda, whose 335 field goals,
WL T'Pct.' PF PA Atlanta Braves, he has estab- Bait
Another notable cut
11 · 11 : Garland, Salt 15 3; 943 points after touchdowns
x.PIIts. 4 1 o .800 a9 45 llshed himself as one of the Leonard , KC Js .s; Figueroa , and 2,002 poinl8 are ail NFL
Monday
was
former
Cine inn. 3 1 o· .750 97 64 National League's top NY 15 ·7; Fjdrych , Det 14 -5;
quarterback Cornelius lt Hrs.: lO:OOA.M. Tilll,OO P.M. Sun.-Thurs. lt
Tanana. Cal and Fitzmorr is, re(Ords.
Cleve.
3 i. o •750 83 52 pitchers this season.
KC
14.9;
Tiant,
Bos
and.
lo:OO A.M. Til12:00 P.M. Fri. &amp; Sat .
:rt
Houston 0 :,~st .OOO 51 79
"I don't care for being here
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Greene of Ohio State, an 11th· :
Monday rught, If it hadn't. Trailers, Mil 14· 10 ; Hun1er, NY
round
draft
pick
by
Dallas,
as
an
insurance
policy
In
case
.
992-2556
:
Former Oakland A's pitcher
w L T Pet. PF PA been lor one bad inning· u \2 ,Earned
Run Average
who was given a look by the : W. MAIN
the
other
kicker
can't
cut
it.
POMEROY.
0.
:rt
Marcel
Lachemann,
35,
was
Oakland
3' '1 0 ,.750 92 63 aga'inst the Phlls, Ruthven (ba~ed on 117 innings pitched)
National League: , Richard , It's been frustrating and
named a University, of Cowboys as a: wide
Denver'
J 2 0 .600 96 5.5 would bave bad · his . 14111
San Diego 2 2 D.SilO 72 61
Hou 2.58 : Seaver , NY 2.62 ; discouraging for me after all
Soulhern California assistant receiver.
Norman , Cin 2.6A ; Zachry, Cln the years I've helped this
Kan. Clly
~ ~ o .500 55 57 victory.
baseball coach, it was
Tampa Bay 1 3 0 .250 ~7 67 · He allowed just three Phlls 2.66 ; Matlack . NY 2.n .
team."
American
league:
Fidrych
,
announced Monday.
National Conf•rence
to reach base over the first Det 2.21 ; Travers , Mil 2.38 ;
Blanda
has
not
yet
stepped
LachemaM, a former USC
.Jr~ ;;~ 1 PF P.A seven
inning~.
· but Garland , Bait 2.53 : Blue , Oak onto lbe field In four Oakland
2.58 ; Palmer . Bait 2.70.
player,
replaces
Pat
NY Giants 3 1"0 .750 70 41 Philadelphia scored four runs
Strikeouts
exhibitions and seems to have Harrison, who left to become
·st. Louis
3 1.0 .750 62 56 on four hits In !be eighth
National League : Seaver , NY
Oailas
1 J o .250 73 72 inning, to saddle hlm with hls 179 ; Richard, Hou 164 ; Mon . lost his kicking job to rookie an assistant coach at Oral
I(_,,,,
; 'lAVI 1n \
lefusco , SF 138 ; Koosman, NY Fred Stelnforl of Boston ColHt ( l' WIT\; I·W
Roberts.
•Wash .
I 3 o .250. ~7 80 12111 defeat, a 4-2 declaloo
1
r-t;,1
1
Rnt r~ P.RO
135 ; Messersmilli and Nlekro, lege.
Philo
o A o .000 A7 79
·
U~ fHilf.Hl \&lt;tOo/5
,
·
Central
, . Ruthven said, of his days In All 133.
Morris, .who teamed with
\ , ,lj I N-:-~llk'l\1-k E,
League: Ryan , Cal
W L T Pel PF PA Philadelphia, "We all began 240Americ;an
; Tanana , car 1B6; [)tyle .... en . Larry Csonka and Jlm Kiick
-~ I
Chicago
3 1 o .750 81 64 to believe that· the PhiUies Te)( 110 : Hunter , NY 139;
in the Miami backfield to
ONTARIO, Calif. (UP!) · Minn .
2 2 0 .500 46 74 were the best team ln Eckersley, Clev 135.
guide Miami to a pair of The California Angels wUI
., l
•Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 43 80 baseball We llnew It back
Super
Bowl conquests and hold an open tryout camp 'for
Detroit
~.!19 .:roo 78.119 then .... AU !bey haven't got
one runnerup ftnish from aspiring baSeball players on
W L T Pel. PF PA now is me and I'm cne of the
1971-73, said he was not Saturday and Sunday at John
' LosAng. 4001.0009144 best"
surprlaed he was let go by the Galvin Park.
•• San Fran. 4 o 0 1.000 12 56
18 the first Ume I've
·Scouts Lou Cohenour and
New Orlean; 1 o .no 14 61 faced him," said Phlllles Mllwaukoe 201 100 200-- I 13 I Dolphins,
. \.
(
"The
way
the
offense
is set Paul Frey are scheduled to
Texas
000
100
OlDl
7l
Seattle
o 4 0 .000 56 122 lbot18top Larry Bow&amp;,· who
Rodri9Llez. castro · (8) and up, alIbis point ill my career, . conduct the tryouts beglllirlng
' Atlanta
o 4 o .000 37 93 knoclled in the game's Moore ; Umbarger , Bacslk 141.
See BILL CHILDS, at DOWNING·CHILOS, tie kNOWS his lnsur•r,ce .
•l&lt;·lnciudes Collegt AII ·Star winning run wilb a sacrifice ferpko (7) and sundb~ro ~ it's better for me to play at 9 a.m. each day. Athletes
Fahey 18) . WP - ROdriguez (5 .
Middleport, Ohio
.GameMonday's RnuHs
Oy. " ...He's going to be a~ 91,. LP - Umbarger (8.10.1. HRS somewh«e else. Tbat's about must be high school
It
for
me,"
Morris
~ald. "I graduates and be oo older
992.2342
Milwaukee
,
scott
(
13),
-•Cleveland 21 Phllodotr,hla 17 game winner. I wish we
than
23.
'
guess
they
couldu't
see
Thomas
(8.l.
tonlygameschedu edl
badn't traded him."

::tt

";t:::::l:

No one

dream~d

he wouldn't get up

How they ran

1

Rookie Templeton great in
Cards" 9-5 defeat of

Red~

·Bengal linebacker lost

I(

71 OLDSMObiLE
CUTLASS

Dolphins waive Morris

Bad inning
£Or Ruthven

Karr &amp;Van Zandt

.

i;bibi;i~; brings loss

standings

!*******************************
!
!

!

~fM'~

Qft\1&amp;~~\

~ Adolph's Dairy Valley

*

:

i

*

*
.'*******************************

•

,

~~~·

"Thu

Ll..

")

OOWNINGCHILDS AGENCY INC.

''

•

•

�SentiiiPI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thesday, Aug. 24,l!I'IU
'
4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poole.-uy, 0 ., TU~, AIJ&amp;. 24, i97fi

Patriot

Kung Fu's art
took hijackers

/...

finances

•

muddled
By WALTER F. ROCHE Jr.

BOSTON
(U P! )
Agreement has been reached ·
between the governor's office
and legislative leaders on a
bill, which, sources say,
would avert the possible
financial takeover of the New
England Patriots football
team.
'Patriots officials Monday
vehemently denied the team
Is, facing any financial
difficulties.
:Agreement oo the bill was
rllached Mooday following a
last-minute
series
of
discussions ·between
l&lt;~islators ,
administration
oUicials, business leaders
a4d representativeS of the
Pptriots.
~vera! sources told United
Pfess. Intematlooal that the
b!fl, which would ease
requirements for 1he merger
o( corporations, is aimed at
averting the takeover of the
Patriots by a Chicago bank.
The agreement reached
Mooday calls for the bill to
tah effect in 90 days.
Previously, Pa triots
representatives had been
pushing lor an inunediate
effective date or a delay of ·
ooly 60 days.
Charles Sullivan, son of
Patriots' owner William
" Billy "
SUllivan ,
acknowledged from his New
York office Monday that his
father has a ~ millioo loan
from a Chicago bank. He said
his father 's shares in the
Patriots were pledged as
serurity lor the loan. Tbe
etter Sullivan took out the
llJan in 1975 to regain ·a
t!ntrolling interest of
ptriots stDCk.
,..'(llarles Sullivan aclrnowl~ged
the
Patriot
~j!anizatioo's support of tbe
. ~ and conceded the
~ganizatioo faced financial
~blems earll~ this year.
,•"The Patriots .do 5uwort
iiie bill," he said. "But tbe
"'1!ole thing has turned
arollld. It's not a live IX die
....situatilll. It's not a Patriots

PUPPETEER FEATURED AT ELECTRIC BUIWING - Slllge shows featuring
.
puppeteer Larry Smith will he presented daily on the hour between noon am f p.m. at the
Electric Building during the Ohio SUite Fair. The (lUppets, many of which were created
especially for these shows, will compete for ~ppliances by giving wise usage tips.

State .fair shows to give
tips for wise energy use

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Electric Utility Institute
t OEUI) will present " Get in
the Spirit - Use Energy.
Wisely ," in the Electric
Building at the Ohio Stale
Fair, Aug. 2li through Sept. 6.
Five stage shows fea luring
puppeteer Larry Smith and
OEUI representative Phyllis
Janson will be presented
daily on the hour between
noon and 4 p.m. Smith has
ere a ted several new puppets
specifically for the presentations. T1lese puppets will
participate in a quiz. show.
competing for appliances by
giving wise ener,gy tips.
There "1tl also be a .special
appearance by Hattie lhe
Witch, one of Smith's most
popular puppets.
Other features in t~e
Electric Building this year
will include a Wise Energy
Management display which
mo."
will highlight areas of the
Patriot !le880I1 ticket sales home where energy condropped markedly lhis ~ sumption can be reduced.
and sUmmer after the team Insulation.proper thermostat
llniSled 1975 with a 3-11 control and efficient use of
record aDd star quarterback appliances will .be illustrated
Jim Plunkett was traded to · in the display. In additioo,
.jon Fr8J!Ciaco.
an~que appliances will be
~ Noting a recent upswing in- displayed in comparison with
;tidlet !lilies, Sullivan said, modern appliances to show
;!"!be !elm doesn't have any the vast difference in time
~problems right now. and worked saved IAJday.
:.e•re in better financial
Also, representatives of the
:lihape lhan ever before."
electric utility companies will
: Under the liD, corporations he available to personally
...auld be allowed 1o merge answer questions visitors
"witb the approval of a limple may have .
!'majcrity of the sodtrolders
A comprehensive nuclear
;".instead of the current energy ex:hibit will also he on
~ulrements for a two-Ulirds display . during the fair.
.-vote.
k. , ..., . nuclear power will
be e)[plained and iUustrated.
Topics InclUded are transpurling nuclear mateials,
•
safely issues, the breeder
...,.
concept and environmental
;.o· FIRM DAMAGED
advantages. Models of actual
DAYTON, Ohio ( UPI ) - A nuclear plants will also he on
two-alarm lire at the display. Charles Proctor,
Buckeye Boiler Co., Dayton, noted for his "This Atomic
caused an estimated $115,000 World" demonstrations, will
damage lo the building be available to answer
Mooday nigh!.
. questions on nuclear energy

f

oo August 28 and 29, and
September 4 and 5.
A history of Thomas Edison
and the ,.,en of electric! ty will
also be 4Jred.
The Electric Building will
open from 9 to 9 daily during
the lair.
Members of t he Ohio ·
Electri c Utility · Institute
include The Oinclnnati Gas &amp;

lea

Electric Company,.Oeveland
E le ctric lll.u minating
Company , Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric ·
Company, The Dayton Power
and
Light
Company,
Monongahela Power Com·
pany, Ohio Edison Company,
Ohio Power {)onlpany , and
Toled o Edison Company.

liY W. G. KIROLOS
to land at ·Lux:oc.
CAIRO (UPI ) · - Sii
There they threatened to
E!!YPtian army COIIUD8ndos blow up the plane unless it
•lrline was refueled and demanded
disguised , as
mechanics used lhe Chinese the release of five Arab
.art of Kq Fu to overpower prisoners 'held in Egypt.
· three Palestinian hijackers
While government officials
and free 86 hostages negotiated with the hijackers
unharmed at LuJ:or airport, a from the airport control
.government source said tower, an army officer crept
today.
·
under the plane and Jet the air
Premier Mamdouh Salem out of Its tires.
blamed Monday's hijacking
The officials persuaded tbe
on . Libyan leader Cot . hijackers 1o release a dozen
Moan\mar Khadafy, and the women and chUdren, then
newspaper AI Akhbar vowed told the Palestinians the
that Khadafy ''won't escape" plane had mechanical
from th.e hands of President . problems. The C\llllffi8ndos,
Anwar Sadat.
disguised
as
airline
AU three hijackers were mechanics, ~oarded the
Injured, ooe serioiiBiy, in the · aircraft to examine it.
They left to "pick up lhe
commando attack, Salem
said . He said all were necessary spare parts,"
l'lllestinians, although one Salem said, returning several
carried a Kuwaiti passport, times. until . they' won tbe
and another a Jordanian hijackers' confidence.
passport. The third had
Then they struck, using the
Palestinian travel martial art of Kung FU to
documents.
overpower the hijackers In a
Salem described all three threNninute battle, official
IS members of a Ubyan sources said. They also were
saboteur group and said lhey armed with iron tools they
were promised $250,11110 if had been carrying in their
lhey brought the plane to mechanics' kits.
Ubya.
In a commentary on the
T h e h i 'i a c k e r s commando action, Cairo
CIIM\andeered lhe Egyptair &amp;dio said it proved tbe
Boeing r.rl carrying 92 other Israeli raid on the Entebbe,
passengers and a six-man Uganda airport in July ''was
crew ..Sit flew from Cairo to not a legend u Israel
LUxor, a winter resort 45o attempted to represent it."
miles to the south.
"The Egyptian Armed
They held a knife to tile Forces perform their duty
pilot's throat and demanded without propaga11da and
he fly to Ubya, but when be without makiilg a fuss," the
persuaded lhem the plare radio said.
was short oo fuel they agreed

Clean stall awardl 'tftre
presented to the 4-H horsemen at the Meigs County
Fair. Stalls were checked
each day and awards were
donated to the wtnaers by
the Ktlly Manllfacturlng
eo. of Middleport. Winners
included Fae Reibel,
Tammy Ward, Wed·
nesday; Mike Bowles and
Jull Elberfeld, Thursday,
and Fae Riebel and Jull
Elberfeld, Friday with
Miss Elberfeld being the
overall winner lor the three
days.

FBI close to
indictments in
Hoffa mystery
NEW YORK ( UP I ) ~
Newsweek magazine has
reported that federal investigators are certain they
kn ow who abducted and
presumably murdered lormer Teamster leader Jimmy
Hoffa a year ago. Two Newsweek correspondents, Tom
Joyce and Anthony Marrow,
said in the · peri odical's
currenttssue that Hoffa was
strangled in the basement of
a private residence a short
distance away from the
restauran t where he was last
seen on July 30, 1975.
The reporters said that the
FBI is publicly making no
claims to · be any closer to
solving the case than tbey
were on the day Hoffa
va nished, beCause they do not
have strong enough evidence
to

secure

indictments ,

although they expect to have
the evidence soon. .
Newsweek quoted federal
investigators as saying that
By Elsie R•ch
Hoffa 's rendezvous al the
Mr. and Mrs. Wollialn G. Zuspan and children Billie and Machus Red Fox restaurant
Detroit's
Rebecca and Miss Sarah Zuspan liave returned home from in suburban
vacationing in Mootana.
Bloomfield Township wa s
While there lhey visited .Mrs. Zuspan's sister and familY. arranged with the help of
L. (Ch uckle )
Mrs. Terry (Coonie) Einara:ln at Columbia Falls and also Mol. Charles
Zuspan's (Linda's) brother, Wilber Con!pson, at Great Falls, O'Brien , 42, who was
regarded as Hoffa 's foster
Mootana.

Honeybees make
good
Mason Area News
.
.
·apartment house pets
SAN FRANCISro ( UPJ ) .:_
" The mes IOday are lite
Buu;u.
those in the Garqen « Eden,
Louis Dubay says the sound .00 without ·them to polliliat.e,
of hooey, bees is the sweetest we ~d aU st.arw."
music made.
Dubay said he got bis first
···n is time somebody 'spoke bees in 1927 wlile in a hj.gb
out ·for the hee, often school agricultw'al course in
misunde·r ·s t ood and Missoula, Mont., and for
mistreated," ·says Dubay, awhile was a .successful
who admits a taste for cwunercial hooey jX'Oducer.
wililloln!r brmey.
Now it's just a hobby that
Dubay's been friends with be mixes with bis ago and
the till)i inlecls fer 50 years mural painting business.
and recently began a a "be
He adibi.ts be!!s can be
kind to your neighborhood feisty at times, especially
bee" movement. He even during a fulllllOOII or in bad
claims they make great pets weather. They're most
for apartment dwellers.
cOntent in mild, wann, IWIIIY
It isn't l)fii9J8) to find places and like pllats sudlu
Dubay juinpiq! in his truck, genista , honeysuckle,
complete witb hives and fuchsia,
e.u calyptus,
ladden and going 10 the site hydrangea, rosemary and
d. a swarm of 211,1100 to 50,1100 lavender.
bees that has lighted in tbe
"Bees are gentle .00 pawrong place
like tienL," he .said. "On a warm
SOil'l&lt;!body 's a utanobi.ie.
days when there is lots d.
He perfonns the service nectar, I can go through their
free as president of a bobby hives alii not get slung."
organization called the San
He said IIIBD1 city chRIJen
Francisco Beekeepers.
now have bees u a bobby,
" U they doo 't want the ~ lbem Cll a rool « a
bees," he says of the many bigl1 hedge. 'lbe Bseepera,
distress calla be receives, "I bowev~, are attempting to
take them away and lind a get tbe city lo ll!t uide an
home for them."
area where the bees can he
Dubay saya the bee has kept.
been around as loog as 200
''It iSII't always easy tD
millioo years, is nature's explain your bees lo YDID'
perfect creatioo and that bis landlord IX your IM'ighhors,"
specialty, the San Francilco said Dubay, "altbolq!lllbey
boney bee, is a descendant d. mayhetheperfectpetfortlle
bees brought here frooo Italy apartment dwellers."
in 1111Xi.

.
Notes

~ WA!'~· VA~i;~ENTED

so~.offa

. 's
Napter

Mr . .00 Mrs. &amp;ymood Fields and chiklreo ~yron and
Melanie of New Haven .00 Rev. am Mrs. James Lewis and
grandaughter, Wllldi Stein d. Point Pleasant, have returned
frooo a weeks vacatim trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C.
While theni Rev. Lewis and Mr. Fields went deep sea
li!bing out to miles. They caught aeveral black bass and silver
nppen. They are JJian!ling &lt;!II a fish fry in a few days.
,
They stayed at the Bn!lll&lt; Water Inn and vlllted numerous
attractionl and- mtllleiiiiii. The lealllred attractioo was the •
Wallenda Troupe high wire balaooe act at the Myrtle Beach
PaviUCII.
Several attended the 81Ulual Christian Brethern Church of
Muon pimic &amp;mday at the &amp;cine Loeb.

Mr. andMrs. Larry Grogan and IIOR .have moved into their
nearly c!lllpleted remodeled home on Maple St. in Mason.

BIG JIM'S

gerbil is
best pet

Closed Sundays So Employees Can Spend Pay With Family
We Hope Other Stores Will Do The Same

TIDE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Kevin Napier with ·his
gerbil named "Susan'' took
top honors in 111e pel show
staged Friday morning as a
part of Ute Meigs County
Junior Fair program on lhe
Rock Springs fairgrounds .
Napier 's entry not only won
the best overall guard but
also received first place in
lhe rodent class
Ralph
Jordan with hls dog , " Printz"
was runner-up for the best
overall posi lion . He also took
first place in the category for
best dog and most talented
animal.
Winners in the categories
wer e · Jordan , first, and
Natalie Lambert with ''Rebel
O" in the hest dog ; Napier,
fir st, and Trina Reeves with a
guiney pi g, "Snowball", in
the rodent class; Kim Calvert
with "Oscar" in the best cat;
Suzan Thoma with her dog,
"Cookie", first ; and Teresa
Carr with her lamb, "Nurd",
in the bes t dressed pe-t
category : and Jordan, first
and DOnna Lambert with
"Rebel" in the most talented
category.
The pel show was judged by
Romona
Co mpton
of
Gallipolis who has had wide
experience with animals and
is currently working with a
Gallipolis veterinarian . .
Plaques were awarded to all
the first place winners with
rosettes going to l~e second
place winners.
Mrs. Pa I Thoma , Aaron
Sayre, Eddie Cross and Mr~
Carolyn Reeves assisted with
the pe t show.

MIRACLE WHIP

· SALAD QT.
DRESSING 99~

SUPERIORS
TAVERN BONELESS
.

H

NEW YORK (UP!) ~ Bar­
bara Walters, whose milliondollar move from NBC 's
"Today" show to co-anchor
ABC's evening news stirred
criticism earlier this year,
said her former employer
offered to match lhe mooey if
she would stay.
"When ABC made me the
offer to be the firs! evening
news anchorwoman, it was a .

S

POUND
•
CHEESE SINGLES

CHEF BOY·AR-DE

SWEET PIC·KLES

PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

'

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00

PKG.

THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

PIZZA

32 oz.
JAR

STORE HOURS

MASON FURNITURE

B~NQUET

Mason, W. Va.

FRIED ·CHICK.EN

PHEBE'S STORE
. . · August 24·2•
Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
INe Gladly Accopt Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru.Frlday
9:00to7:00
Saturd.oy 9 to 9

TWIN PACK 69~

Pinto ·Beans

c

BEST PACK
TRASH BAGS

EXTRA HEAVY _
8 COUNT 99~

STA-PUFF
FABRIC SOFnNER

BOILED HAM
~ROUND

WHITE GRAPES
LB.

1 GAL 99~

BANANAS
LB. '100
RUSSET

POTATOES
d Ll..

'1 09

TASTEE

Lllmy'l
Whole Kernel Corn
LUCK'S
WITH PORK
NAVY BEANS

BOLOGNA
303

4 CAres•l•

.,.

LB.

FRENCH CITY

20 CT.

4 PACK 69~

NESTE A

SLICED

STEAK

COIIONEW
TOILR TISSUE

., ••

2 LB. TRAY

SLICED

39

STOKELY
CATSUP

26 oz.

(ANY AMOUNT) ·

PEANUT BUTlER
PEAS, CORN .
WHOLE WHITE

·POTATOES

.NEW
RED
.

40 oz.

'1~'

4rANsS 100

4 LB.
BAG

HORMEL

2roRS 100

GOLDEN ISLE

GROUND BEEF

GALLON

I

'

o·

PEAK

CLOROX

NO. 2~ CAN 49~

F

R

ONLY

CAROUNE &amp; GREER

'PRINGLE$

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

DINNER

MIX

FRIMY UNTIL 8 PM
Herman Grate

. GOLDEN ISLE

GOLDEN ISLE

KRAFT

2 LB. BOX

PEACHES

'

WHOLE

· MASON F. RNITURE

773-5592

.

.

BARBARA EXPLAINS

went to the
restaurant after 'elling
members of his !ami·. he had
thei-e.
a lunch appointment wiht
Anthony Giacalone, a reputed very great challenge: The
Mr . .00 Mrs.&lt;lary Fieli:B of Hartford have returned from Detroit Mafia leader.
challenge was so exciting !llld ·
a vacatioo tJ:ip to Wasbingtnn.
'{he magazine said federal · so demanding that I felt 1
authoritios feel certain lha l . simply11 couldn't turn it
l'
down, she said.
The Graham Baptilt Oiurcb has a new pastor, the Rev .
was not aware he
" It is true that ABC offered
Berman Jooes d. Ripley. Rev. Jones invites everyooe lo come O'Brien
was setting up Hoffa. A
1o cburcb services on each Sunday, Monday and evening federal source told the mea great deal of money, but
l!lef'Vices and Wednesday night Bible study.
NBC matched· that 'mooey,"
magazine : " There is no Miss Walters said in a
question that Chuckle was
Weekend guesl8 d. Mrs. Elizabeth Jeffers were Mr. and used."
question and answers artiCle
Mrs. IUchard Butter and family, Mr. and Mrs . Carl Anthooy
~ the Ladies' Home Journal.
and famlly, Mr. and Mrs. Kaisnore all9f Newark, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Junior RusaeU .00 Mrs. Dorothy Queen d. Mason and
Gene Hall d. Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. Carrol Elliott of St. Mary's drove his car and
toot Mr. and Mrs. J . Robert Roach and Larry to Lexing\011,
Ky. Monday. Mr. Roach is an outpatient at tbe V.A. Hospital

GIANT SIZE

NEW

SPAM
12 oz.
I. CAN

10' lb.

POT A TOES..............•....•....bag

32

oz.

BOmE

69e

�SentiiiPI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thesday, Aug. 24,l!I'IU
'
4- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Poole.-uy, 0 ., TU~, AIJ&amp;. 24, i97fi

Patriot

Kung Fu's art
took hijackers

/...

finances

•

muddled
By WALTER F. ROCHE Jr.

BOSTON
(U P! )
Agreement has been reached ·
between the governor's office
and legislative leaders on a
bill, which, sources say,
would avert the possible
financial takeover of the New
England Patriots football
team.
'Patriots officials Monday
vehemently denied the team
Is, facing any financial
difficulties.
:Agreement oo the bill was
rllached Mooday following a
last-minute
series
of
discussions ·between
l&lt;~islators ,
administration
oUicials, business leaders
a4d representativeS of the
Pptriots.
~vera! sources told United
Pfess. Intematlooal that the
b!fl, which would ease
requirements for 1he merger
o( corporations, is aimed at
averting the takeover of the
Patriots by a Chicago bank.
The agreement reached
Mooday calls for the bill to
tah effect in 90 days.
Previously, Pa triots
representatives had been
pushing lor an inunediate
effective date or a delay of ·
ooly 60 days.
Charles Sullivan, son of
Patriots' owner William
" Billy "
SUllivan ,
acknowledged from his New
York office Monday that his
father has a ~ millioo loan
from a Chicago bank. He said
his father 's shares in the
Patriots were pledged as
serurity lor the loan. Tbe
etter Sullivan took out the
llJan in 1975 to regain ·a
t!ntrolling interest of
ptriots stDCk.
,..'(llarles Sullivan aclrnowl~ged
the
Patriot
~j!anizatioo's support of tbe
. ~ and conceded the
~ganizatioo faced financial
~blems earll~ this year.
,•"The Patriots .do 5uwort
iiie bill," he said. "But tbe
"'1!ole thing has turned
arollld. It's not a live IX die
....situatilll. It's not a Patriots

PUPPETEER FEATURED AT ELECTRIC BUIWING - Slllge shows featuring
.
puppeteer Larry Smith will he presented daily on the hour between noon am f p.m. at the
Electric Building during the Ohio SUite Fair. The (lUppets, many of which were created
especially for these shows, will compete for ~ppliances by giving wise usage tips.

State .fair shows to give
tips for wise energy use

COLUMBUS - The Ohio
Electric Utility Institute
t OEUI) will present " Get in
the Spirit - Use Energy.
Wisely ," in the Electric
Building at the Ohio Stale
Fair, Aug. 2li through Sept. 6.
Five stage shows fea luring
puppeteer Larry Smith and
OEUI representative Phyllis
Janson will be presented
daily on the hour between
noon and 4 p.m. Smith has
ere a ted several new puppets
specifically for the presentations. T1lese puppets will
participate in a quiz. show.
competing for appliances by
giving wise ener,gy tips.
There "1tl also be a .special
appearance by Hattie lhe
Witch, one of Smith's most
popular puppets.
Other features in t~e
Electric Building this year
will include a Wise Energy
Management display which
mo."
will highlight areas of the
Patriot !le880I1 ticket sales home where energy condropped markedly lhis ~ sumption can be reduced.
and sUmmer after the team Insulation.proper thermostat
llniSled 1975 with a 3-11 control and efficient use of
record aDd star quarterback appliances will .be illustrated
Jim Plunkett was traded to · in the display. In additioo,
.jon Fr8J!Ciaco.
an~que appliances will be
~ Noting a recent upswing in- displayed in comparison with
;tidlet !lilies, Sullivan said, modern appliances to show
;!"!be !elm doesn't have any the vast difference in time
~problems right now. and worked saved IAJday.
:.e•re in better financial
Also, representatives of the
:lihape lhan ever before."
electric utility companies will
: Under the liD, corporations he available to personally
...auld be allowed 1o merge answer questions visitors
"witb the approval of a limple may have .
!'majcrity of the sodtrolders
A comprehensive nuclear
;".instead of the current energy ex:hibit will also he on
~ulrements for a two-Ulirds display . during the fair.
.-vote.
k. , ..., . nuclear power will
be e)[plained and iUustrated.
Topics InclUded are transpurling nuclear mateials,
•
safely issues, the breeder
...,.
concept and environmental
;.o· FIRM DAMAGED
advantages. Models of actual
DAYTON, Ohio ( UPI ) - A nuclear plants will also he on
two-alarm lire at the display. Charles Proctor,
Buckeye Boiler Co., Dayton, noted for his "This Atomic
caused an estimated $115,000 World" demonstrations, will
damage lo the building be available to answer
Mooday nigh!.
. questions on nuclear energy

f

oo August 28 and 29, and
September 4 and 5.
A history of Thomas Edison
and the ,.,en of electric! ty will
also be 4Jred.
The Electric Building will
open from 9 to 9 daily during
the lair.
Members of t he Ohio ·
Electri c Utility · Institute
include The Oinclnnati Gas &amp;

lea

Electric Company,.Oeveland
E le ctric lll.u minating
Company , Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric ·
Company, The Dayton Power
and
Light
Company,
Monongahela Power Com·
pany, Ohio Edison Company,
Ohio Power {)onlpany , and
Toled o Edison Company.

liY W. G. KIROLOS
to land at ·Lux:oc.
CAIRO (UPI ) · - Sii
There they threatened to
E!!YPtian army COIIUD8ndos blow up the plane unless it
•lrline was refueled and demanded
disguised , as
mechanics used lhe Chinese the release of five Arab
.art of Kq Fu to overpower prisoners 'held in Egypt.
· three Palestinian hijackers
While government officials
and free 86 hostages negotiated with the hijackers
unharmed at LuJ:or airport, a from the airport control
.government source said tower, an army officer crept
today.
·
under the plane and Jet the air
Premier Mamdouh Salem out of Its tires.
blamed Monday's hijacking
The officials persuaded tbe
on . Libyan leader Cot . hijackers 1o release a dozen
Moan\mar Khadafy, and the women and chUdren, then
newspaper AI Akhbar vowed told the Palestinians the
that Khadafy ''won't escape" plane had mechanical
from th.e hands of President . problems. The C\llllffi8ndos,
Anwar Sadat.
disguised
as
airline
AU three hijackers were mechanics, ~oarded the
Injured, ooe serioiiBiy, in the · aircraft to examine it.
They left to "pick up lhe
commando attack, Salem
said . He said all were necessary spare parts,"
l'lllestinians, although one Salem said, returning several
carried a Kuwaiti passport, times. until . they' won tbe
and another a Jordanian hijackers' confidence.
passport. The third had
Then they struck, using the
Palestinian travel martial art of Kung FU to
documents.
overpower the hijackers In a
Salem described all three threNninute battle, official
IS members of a Ubyan sources said. They also were
saboteur group and said lhey armed with iron tools they
were promised $250,11110 if had been carrying in their
lhey brought the plane to mechanics' kits.
Ubya.
In a commentary on the
T h e h i 'i a c k e r s commando action, Cairo
CIIM\andeered lhe Egyptair &amp;dio said it proved tbe
Boeing r.rl carrying 92 other Israeli raid on the Entebbe,
passengers and a six-man Uganda airport in July ''was
crew ..Sit flew from Cairo to not a legend u Israel
LUxor, a winter resort 45o attempted to represent it."
miles to the south.
"The Egyptian Armed
They held a knife to tile Forces perform their duty
pilot's throat and demanded without propaga11da and
he fly to Ubya, but when be without makiilg a fuss," the
persuaded lhem the plare radio said.
was short oo fuel they agreed

Clean stall awardl 'tftre
presented to the 4-H horsemen at the Meigs County
Fair. Stalls were checked
each day and awards were
donated to the wtnaers by
the Ktlly Manllfacturlng
eo. of Middleport. Winners
included Fae Reibel,
Tammy Ward, Wed·
nesday; Mike Bowles and
Jull Elberfeld, Thursday,
and Fae Riebel and Jull
Elberfeld, Friday with
Miss Elberfeld being the
overall winner lor the three
days.

FBI close to
indictments in
Hoffa mystery
NEW YORK ( UP I ) ~
Newsweek magazine has
reported that federal investigators are certain they
kn ow who abducted and
presumably murdered lormer Teamster leader Jimmy
Hoffa a year ago. Two Newsweek correspondents, Tom
Joyce and Anthony Marrow,
said in the · peri odical's
currenttssue that Hoffa was
strangled in the basement of
a private residence a short
distance away from the
restauran t where he was last
seen on July 30, 1975.
The reporters said that the
FBI is publicly making no
claims to · be any closer to
solving the case than tbey
were on the day Hoffa
va nished, beCause they do not
have strong enough evidence
to

secure

indictments ,

although they expect to have
the evidence soon. .
Newsweek quoted federal
investigators as saying that
By Elsie R•ch
Hoffa 's rendezvous al the
Mr. and Mrs. Wollialn G. Zuspan and children Billie and Machus Red Fox restaurant
Detroit's
Rebecca and Miss Sarah Zuspan liave returned home from in suburban
vacationing in Mootana.
Bloomfield Township wa s
While there lhey visited .Mrs. Zuspan's sister and familY. arranged with the help of
L. (Ch uckle )
Mrs. Terry (Coonie) Einara:ln at Columbia Falls and also Mol. Charles
Zuspan's (Linda's) brother, Wilber Con!pson, at Great Falls, O'Brien , 42, who was
regarded as Hoffa 's foster
Mootana.

Honeybees make
good
Mason Area News
.
.
·apartment house pets
SAN FRANCISro ( UPJ ) .:_
" The mes IOday are lite
Buu;u.
those in the Garqen « Eden,
Louis Dubay says the sound .00 without ·them to polliliat.e,
of hooey, bees is the sweetest we ~d aU st.arw."
music made.
Dubay said he got bis first
···n is time somebody 'spoke bees in 1927 wlile in a hj.gb
out ·for the hee, often school agricultw'al course in
misunde·r ·s t ood and Missoula, Mont., and for
mistreated," ·says Dubay, awhile was a .successful
who admits a taste for cwunercial hooey jX'Oducer.
wililloln!r brmey.
Now it's just a hobby that
Dubay's been friends with be mixes with bis ago and
the till)i inlecls fer 50 years mural painting business.
and recently began a a "be
He adibi.ts be!!s can be
kind to your neighborhood feisty at times, especially
bee" movement. He even during a fulllllOOII or in bad
claims they make great pets weather. They're most
for apartment dwellers.
cOntent in mild, wann, IWIIIY
It isn't l)fii9J8) to find places and like pllats sudlu
Dubay juinpiq! in his truck, genista , honeysuckle,
complete witb hives and fuchsia,
e.u calyptus,
ladden and going 10 the site hydrangea, rosemary and
d. a swarm of 211,1100 to 50,1100 lavender.
bees that has lighted in tbe
"Bees are gentle .00 pawrong place
like tienL," he .said. "On a warm
SOil'l&lt;!body 's a utanobi.ie.
days when there is lots d.
He perfonns the service nectar, I can go through their
free as president of a bobby hives alii not get slung."
organization called the San
He said IIIBD1 city chRIJen
Francisco Beekeepers.
now have bees u a bobby,
" U they doo 't want the ~ lbem Cll a rool « a
bees," he says of the many bigl1 hedge. 'lbe Bseepera,
distress calla be receives, "I bowev~, are attempting to
take them away and lind a get tbe city lo ll!t uide an
home for them."
area where the bees can he
Dubay saya the bee has kept.
been around as loog as 200
''It iSII't always easy tD
millioo years, is nature's explain your bees lo YDID'
perfect creatioo and that bis landlord IX your IM'ighhors,"
specialty, the San Francilco said Dubay, "altbolq!lllbey
boney bee, is a descendant d. mayhetheperfectpetfortlle
bees brought here frooo Italy apartment dwellers."
in 1111Xi.

.
Notes

~ WA!'~· VA~i;~ENTED

so~.offa

. 's
Napter

Mr . .00 Mrs. &amp;ymood Fields and chiklreo ~yron and
Melanie of New Haven .00 Rev. am Mrs. James Lewis and
grandaughter, Wllldi Stein d. Point Pleasant, have returned
frooo a weeks vacatim trip to Myrtle Beach, S.C.
While theni Rev. Lewis and Mr. Fields went deep sea
li!bing out to miles. They caught aeveral black bass and silver
nppen. They are JJian!ling &lt;!II a fish fry in a few days.
,
They stayed at the Bn!lll&lt; Water Inn and vlllted numerous
attractionl and- mtllleiiiiii. The lealllred attractioo was the •
Wallenda Troupe high wire balaooe act at the Myrtle Beach
PaviUCII.
Several attended the 81Ulual Christian Brethern Church of
Muon pimic &amp;mday at the &amp;cine Loeb.

Mr. andMrs. Larry Grogan and IIOR .have moved into their
nearly c!lllpleted remodeled home on Maple St. in Mason.

BIG JIM'S

gerbil is
best pet

Closed Sundays So Employees Can Spend Pay With Family
We Hope Other Stores Will Do The Same

TIDE

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Kevin Napier with ·his
gerbil named "Susan'' took
top honors in 111e pel show
staged Friday morning as a
part of Ute Meigs County
Junior Fair program on lhe
Rock Springs fairgrounds .
Napier 's entry not only won
the best overall guard but
also received first place in
lhe rodent class
Ralph
Jordan with hls dog , " Printz"
was runner-up for the best
overall posi lion . He also took
first place in the category for
best dog and most talented
animal.
Winners in the categories
wer e · Jordan , first, and
Natalie Lambert with ''Rebel
O" in the hest dog ; Napier,
fir st, and Trina Reeves with a
guiney pi g, "Snowball", in
the rodent class; Kim Calvert
with "Oscar" in the best cat;
Suzan Thoma with her dog,
"Cookie", first ; and Teresa
Carr with her lamb, "Nurd",
in the bes t dressed pe-t
category : and Jordan, first
and DOnna Lambert with
"Rebel" in the most talented
category.
The pel show was judged by
Romona
Co mpton
of
Gallipolis who has had wide
experience with animals and
is currently working with a
Gallipolis veterinarian . .
Plaques were awarded to all
the first place winners with
rosettes going to l~e second
place winners.
Mrs. Pa I Thoma , Aaron
Sayre, Eddie Cross and Mr~
Carolyn Reeves assisted with
the pe t show.

MIRACLE WHIP

· SALAD QT.
DRESSING 99~

SUPERIORS
TAVERN BONELESS
.

H

NEW YORK (UP!) ~ Bar­
bara Walters, whose milliondollar move from NBC 's
"Today" show to co-anchor
ABC's evening news stirred
criticism earlier this year,
said her former employer
offered to match lhe mooey if
she would stay.
"When ABC made me the
offer to be the firs! evening
news anchorwoman, it was a .

S

POUND
•
CHEESE SINGLES

CHEF BOY·AR-DE

SWEET PIC·KLES

PEPPERONI OR SAUSAGE

'

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-8:30til 5:00

PKG.

THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

PIZZA

32 oz.
JAR

STORE HOURS

MASON FURNITURE

B~NQUET

Mason, W. Va.

FRIED ·CHICK.EN

PHEBE'S STORE
. . · August 24·2•
Right Reserved to Limit Quantities
INe Gladly Accopt Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru.Frlday
9:00to7:00
Saturd.oy 9 to 9

TWIN PACK 69~

Pinto ·Beans

c

BEST PACK
TRASH BAGS

EXTRA HEAVY _
8 COUNT 99~

STA-PUFF
FABRIC SOFnNER

BOILED HAM
~ROUND

WHITE GRAPES
LB.

1 GAL 99~

BANANAS
LB. '100
RUSSET

POTATOES
d Ll..

'1 09

TASTEE

Lllmy'l
Whole Kernel Corn
LUCK'S
WITH PORK
NAVY BEANS

BOLOGNA
303

4 CAres•l•

.,.

LB.

FRENCH CITY

20 CT.

4 PACK 69~

NESTE A

SLICED

STEAK

COIIONEW
TOILR TISSUE

., ••

2 LB. TRAY

SLICED

39

STOKELY
CATSUP

26 oz.

(ANY AMOUNT) ·

PEANUT BUTlER
PEAS, CORN .
WHOLE WHITE

·POTATOES

.NEW
RED
.

40 oz.

'1~'

4rANsS 100

4 LB.
BAG

HORMEL

2roRS 100

GOLDEN ISLE

GROUND BEEF

GALLON

I

'

o·

PEAK

CLOROX

NO. 2~ CAN 49~

F

R

ONLY

CAROUNE &amp; GREER

'PRINGLE$

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE

DINNER

MIX

FRIMY UNTIL 8 PM
Herman Grate

. GOLDEN ISLE

GOLDEN ISLE

KRAFT

2 LB. BOX

PEACHES

'

WHOLE

· MASON F. RNITURE

773-5592

.

.

BARBARA EXPLAINS

went to the
restaurant after 'elling
members of his !ami·. he had
thei-e.
a lunch appointment wiht
Anthony Giacalone, a reputed very great challenge: The
Mr . .00 Mrs.&lt;lary Fieli:B of Hartford have returned from Detroit Mafia leader.
challenge was so exciting !llld ·
a vacatioo tJ:ip to Wasbingtnn.
'{he magazine said federal · so demanding that I felt 1
authoritios feel certain lha l . simply11 couldn't turn it
l'
down, she said.
The Graham Baptilt Oiurcb has a new pastor, the Rev .
was not aware he
" It is true that ABC offered
Berman Jooes d. Ripley. Rev. Jones invites everyooe lo come O'Brien
was setting up Hoffa. A
1o cburcb services on each Sunday, Monday and evening federal source told the mea great deal of money, but
l!lef'Vices and Wednesday night Bible study.
NBC matched· that 'mooey,"
magazine : " There is no Miss Walters said in a
question that Chuckle was
Weekend guesl8 d. Mrs. Elizabeth Jeffers were Mr. and used."
question and answers artiCle
Mrs. IUchard Butter and family, Mr. and Mrs . Carl Anthooy
~ the Ladies' Home Journal.
and famlly, Mr. and Mrs. Kaisnore all9f Newark, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Junior RusaeU .00 Mrs. Dorothy Queen d. Mason and
Gene Hall d. Hartford.
Mr. and Mrs. Carrol Elliott of St. Mary's drove his car and
toot Mr. and Mrs. J . Robert Roach and Larry to Lexing\011,
Ky. Monday. Mr. Roach is an outpatient at tbe V.A. Hospital

GIANT SIZE

NEW

SPAM
12 oz.
I. CAN

10' lb.

POT A TOES..............•....•....bag

32

oz.

BOmE

69e

�8:-:-Tbe Dall Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pcmeroy, 0., 1\lelday, Aug. 24,
~~:s~::(.m::::=::::·~'ee

Helen Help
~=·

Us •..

Social The Lefevres slated to perfo:,P
sro•'• .._ .-,..,
Calendar

m:me::e: .-.,.,

~·
~~

{I,Ci

·:·:

ll'l'bereaFalberiDibe boue?

RAP:

•

Our mother II goq to be married In about a month to a
doctor. Us t.eensged kids have been caUing him by hla title
durin8 the four y-s we have known him.
Problem: We can't decide how to address him when he is
our stepfather. We can'tsay, "Dad" as we already have ooe, A ·
first name - "Bill" -for a doctor In his 50s doesn't seem

.

right.

Hints please? - SEARCHING FOR SOMETHING
SUITABLE
DEAR SFSS:
Something I'll never understand Ia: why can't famUy
members cone right out and ASK the new stepfather or
stepmother, whoever, a very simple qu~on, "What would
you Uke us to call you?"
Thia could ellmlnate confusion, pc11181ble lmrt feelings, and
cmslderable "Hey, you's." And besides, it demonstrates
acceptance. Try I - HELEN AND SUE

+++

RAP:
Please t~ "Heading for a M011kery" (who complains that
all wcmen are "love 'em and le11ve 'em type~~") he's a victim rl

Mr. a,nd Mr.r. GreR Miller

Miller-Campbell
repeat nuptial vows

Polly's Pointers

,. By ·Polly Cramer

DEAR POlLY - A board
came inside a bolt of
fabric worb beauUfully lor
jresslng the lep to tlacb.
Any fabric shop will sJadly
give you one, I am sure.
I would so much like to
koow what will take dried
blood out of clollling.- MRS.
G.F.
DEAR" MRs.' G.F. - 'lbe .
blood stains ·are doubtless set
in the gannent, if it has been
washed in hoi water.
Othenliae. soak in cold water ,
H mmutes . 11 the stain
remains,
put
three
le'llr..--. household ammonia In a gallon of luke
-.rm water and soak for haH
an hour or so. If stain is sUD
tllere, rub detergent in stain
and then wash, uslng a bleach
that Ia ale for the fabric. Of
COIII'Ie, all such remedies are
to be used only if safe for the
·fabric in quesUon.-POILY.

spoon to dig out the stem part

of strawberries, radishes,
eU:. You cari put a finger
down to the edge of the spoon
without culling youroelf and
make a neat job of surgery
without squashing the fruit. I
discovered this after an eye
operaUon when I could not
see too well. - MRS. D.E.H.
DEAR POlLY- Our back
yard garden produced
tomatoes and so on for us, but
was a real source of food for
lhe squirrels. We cut an old
green garden hose into
various lengths and laid the
pieces around the plants. The
squirrels thought they were
snakes and left our produce
alooe. - VERA.
Polly will selld you one of
ber " peachy" lbank·you
cards, Ideal lor framing or
plaetag In your family
scrapbook, H sbe uses your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem ID bet columa. Write
DEAR POLLY -My Pet Polly'• Pollllen Ill care of
Peeve is that prescripUon lh!JJ newspaper.
and over-the-&lt;:ounter drugs
do not have termination dates
. f(J' their use on the labels. ·
Tbe customer never knows
FIRST CHILD BORN
when they are no longer
Mr.
and Mrs .. Richard A.
aalisfactory, or can't be
Warner
(Sharon McCune) of
safely administered. - MRS.
Pomeroy,
announce Ule birth
M.C.
of
their
first child, a
DEAR POlLY - I was
daughter,
Erin
Beth. The
allocked to read that one of
seven
pound,
three
ounce
the readencut"' flea collars
and put them In her cupboard baby was born Aug. 12 at the
to keep bugs out. T1leae Holzer Medical Center.
collars are IOJic to even dogs Paternal grandparenls are
and cats and I hate to think of Mr. and Mrs. George H.
any food absorbing this. To Warner, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
keep the bllP out just scatter the maternal grandparents
a few bay leaves around, are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
after throwing away all in· McCune, Rt. I, Rutland. Mr.
fested food. Then clean and Mrs. Herman Warner,
cupboards arid put food in Rl. 4, Ponleroy, Mrs. VIola
tlghUy closed jars. Tile en· McCune, Oa, W. •Va.; Mrs.
closed IU'ticle by Ralph Nader Faye Dunlavy, Middleport,
explalna about the8e flea and Mrs. llallie Cross of
collara and theii' danger. - Syracuse are the greatgrandparents.
MRS. M.V.B.
DEAR POlLY- I have 10
maliy rwne aDd address
Iabeii that haw been obtained one way or another
PLAYERS WANTED
aild IIIIVI found I wonderful
EAST MEIGS - Seventb
111e for tbem other than thelr and eighlll grade football
-~-. My husband and I players of Eastern Junior
..blve oar boobhelves full of High School will meet at 6
bGob thai were oflel1 .quite p.m. Wednesday at the high
I.'OIIlly 110 I Jlllleclll label on school.
the IMide ~ ol each one.
WbeniYer a boOk Ia loaned to
-.lllei!Grrowerhu no
l'KAl"!''CE SET
lrOtlbll .........,berlnl from
All Meigs High School girls
whelm II - ball riwed. Our wanting to play ·volley ball
boOka gel relurned rather this year will practice from 10
lban for1011en. - MRS. a.m. to I p.m. at the high
E.A.L.
school gym.They are to take
DEAR POLLY- I • the thelr pllyslcal cards to the
pointed end of • lfapefrull practice session.
thai

BJ JACI V. FOX

precious little stuffed
lllimat.s with bright button
eyes and a stitched smile,
who have long been the
companions of countless little
girls and boys.
"Countless"
is
the
operative word in this case
because when you get
Involved with banks you find
they have an affinity Jf not an
obsell8ion with numbers.
AI any rate, just before the

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Only now II tbe full •ory
anerglng ol the great "Teddy
Bear Caper" at Crocker
Naticlltlllllnk but it carries a
.-se lor tboae who would
mil beau,. money, kldt,
depolltora, teUen and bank
vice jrllldentl.
The heroN of th• piece (or
vlllalna d.,..UQI 011 how you
loolt at It) we~e those

Olristmas season last year
the promotion department at
Crocker - the Dillion's 15th
largest bank with 358
California branches - came
up with "SuMy the Bear."
The deal \\!HS that anyone,
will opened a new checking
account of $100 or more,
would be given a hear.
But let Angela Bohning,
then the new accounts glrl at
the Palos Verdes branch,

J)ick up the story.
"It started out great but
then problems began to
arise," she recalled.
"There were the bears
sitting on the counters cute as
~ould be and everyone
wanted one. Customers woo
already had accounts insisted
they should get a bear. One
man wbo bad a $50,000
savings account threatened
to take out his whole deposit

unless he got a bear.
"We tried to tell them to
just .withdraw SIOO and open
another account and some of
them did. Mothers would
come in with two or more kids
in tow and each child wanted
a bear, of course. But It was
one account, one bear, no
more and no less so they had
to open two or three checking .
accounts.••
On top of

everylllin~

there

.

began to develop · a bear
shortage . The top brass sent
down the word that there
must be a strict accounting
for each bear .
"It got so at our branch that
we had a bear count at the
end of business every day,"
Mrs. Bohning recalled. "The
tellers had to balance their
bears bef(J'e they balanced
Uleir drawers .
"We finally had to appoint

district deputy honor

the ~~nturies, wcmen took what men fished out. They
TEMPE, ARIZ. - . Palti.
remained faltbful when thelr mates fooled around. They were . Lynn Campbell and Greg
so lllllous to get husbands that they'd overlook many faults. Miller exchanged wedding
Now, finally, it's the females' turn. A man has to be pretty vows Saturday, July 3 in Ule
. exceptional in order to hold his girl these days. HFM evidently Tempe Second Ward Olapel
Isn't. - CHUCKUNG GENTLY
of the Olurch of Jesus Christ
DEAR RAP:
of Llltterday Saints. Bishop
"Headlngf(J' a Monkery" said he'd give a month's salary Guy F. Wakefield officiated
to IJIYOIIe who could prove all women weren't 00 Ule make for at the double ring ceremony.
"1001etbinl ~." I'm not and my IIJsband can prove it.
Parents of the bride are
MOI!lwomenaremucbmorefalthfl!lthanmen -just askany Mr . and Mrs . Earl R.
girl who baa beell suddenly dumped. If guys see IOOlethlng Campbell, 512 N. Ironwood,
seder, they tHe oft. Not my husband, of courae. _SECOND Tempe, and parents of the
ANNIVERSARY, AIMING FOR 50
bridegroom.and Mr. and Mrs.
READERS ALL:
Don . Miller, Teinpe, former
So many youag . W&lt;men claimed "Heading for a Meigs County residents . .
Mcintery'1" salary check that he could spend a mooth 111
Given in marriage by her
.-rc:h. Sorry we. can't put them In touch with him. _ fa Iller the bride chose a gown
aELEN AND SUE
of trevlra polyester willl a full
A~ine skirt that swept into a
chapel train. The Queen Anne
neckline was tTimmed in
appliqued Viennese laoe as
were the f.uU long .sleeves.
Her Ulree tiered finger len gill
veil was attached to a tiara of

· Hot water
sets blood stains

Don't mix bears, kids, money·or .bank tellers

ooe of assistant managers as outcry subalaea.
"I remember 011e Wlllll8ll
'the bear man.' He was In
marched
in with a teddy bear
charge of bears. He would
she
had
bought 11 ·a
count them and then lock
Ulem up In the vault at department store," Mrs.
Bobning uid. "91e said her
nights."
son would have nothing to do
All the bear sh(J'tage grew
worse, various branches tried with it because It didn't look
to wheedle more uSunnies" like SuMY . She wan~ to
from banks that still had a 'trade It in on a (rocker bear
·eserve and the Palos Verdes but the bears were aU gone."
branch sent a pic)tup truck to
KILLED IN WRECK
an office in Orange County.
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) There .afe rumors it carried Terrence E. Cofer, 29, of
an armed guard but Mrs. suburban ·Oakwood, was
Bohning thinks Ulat is untrue. killed today when the
FinaUy, Crocker ran out of automobile in which he was
bears some time early In 1976 rlding ran off a clty street and
but it was weeks before the hit a tree.

Mrs. Ritchie receives

+++

RAP :
I just found out that my boyfriend's S1!lrlfrlend is going ,
to have his baby, which Ia amaziJ!g because he told me he
couldn't have cblldren.
Now he wants to become engaged to her. Bef(J'e that, he'd
jromllied to marry ME, 110melime.
. How can I keep him from be in&amp; bamboozled? - REAILY
HURTING
R.H.:
Maybe YOU were the bamboozled one. A man who
jrOmlaes "safety" and a "sometime" marriage may be
looklntfor a fling without the ring. -HELEN AND SUE

The Lefebrei, an Atlanllt, Ulrough the years with rldlo,
Tbe
Ga. gospel singing group, will personal app.e arances, Dean
To.-.!, bll ..wed a
concerti
and
televiaion.
perform Satlirdiy; 7:30 p.m.
new
dlmenaioa to tile
Then there's Rex )'lelon,
at the Washington School in
TUESDAY
who adds his rich, deep baN LeFevre~' prtll'llll wttb ,b1a
Gallipolis.
·
RACINE AMERICAN
Urias LeFevre, founder of voice to the group's IOIInd. rich C:OUOII'J~ valet. And
Legion Awdllary, Post 602, tile origiMl group as well as The younger sounds In gospel the most rteent addltloa to
6:30 Tuesday picnic at Ule being Eva Mae's husband, music hiVe not been the group 11 Jane~· Pllchal,
Racine Park. Members to has recently retired to devote overlooked. The LeFevres who alii yaarilanol oaly one
take their own table service. more time to oulalde in- have added four very of the yOiq[llt and prtttltat
In the event of rain the picnic teresll . '['his leaves Alphus talepted and dedicated youn&amp; soprlltOIIn Gospel•lllllllc, but
one of the most 1114nled.
will be held at the hall.
LeFevre as the sole people to their musical also
These,
Tbe ·LeF...-.., are
LADIES Auxiliary of remaining active member of family. Rex Foster play•
plano as well u bass guitar. wann and 8'11Uint people
Vetera'\5 Memorial Hospital the original group.
picnic Tuesday at park on U.
With Eva Mae performing Ron Hutchins, who sln&amp;s with much to Offer 1111 warld.
S. Rt. 33, 6 p.m. Bring item most of Ule emcee duUes and lead, Is a respected gospel Their muiUJ!Ie . talenll are
for white elephant sale.
playing her di.stinctive plano 'music veteran who's been In gre*tly \IIJPRI.W by
never
PAST Matrons, Pomeroy accompaniment for the the businell8 lor 12 of his 26 wo«JCIMC'
any
mediocrity
1
their
Chapter OES, Tuesday , 7:30 group, they have marched
p.m. at home of Mrs. J, W.
McMurray, Mason, W. Va.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39,7:30 Tuesday night at
the hall.
RACINE
Lodge 461
Tuesday, 7!30 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. · All
master masons invited.
JUNIOR American Legion
CHESTER- Mrs. Dorothy polntment. Mrs. Faye f"!l::;;~
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Hoselton o( Belle Prairie
Post 128, wiener roast, 6:30 ru tchie of Chesler Council Council 269, Belpre, former
Tuesday at the home or Mrs. 323, Daugltters of America, district
deputy,
was
was appointed deputy of
Bonnie Dailey, advisor.
nominated
and
installed
as
District 13 at the recent 82nd
WEDNESDAY
state
outside
sentinel.
At·
annual session of the Slltte
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Council, Daughteu of tending the convention from
8 pm. Wednesd•v ·• ••
Shoes From
America held at the the Chester Council were
home oCMrs. Alfred Yeauger Netherland Hilton Hotel ln Mrs. RiU:hie, Mrs. Doris
,I
.U'
wi Ill Mrs. Erma Roush as Cincinnati .
Grueser, Mrs. Margaret '
assisting hos~ss.
· Dorothy Henthorn, state TutUe, and Mrs. Mary Klly
POMEROY • Middleport councilor , made the ap· Holter. While In CincinnaU
Uley a Itended a Cincinnati ,
Lions Club, noon Wednesday,
Micldi'e.,6.-, / 0,
Reds ball game.
at the Meigs Inn . All Lions
urged to at~nd.
AMERICAN
Legion
•
HOSPITAUZED
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
'
•
CHESTER - Mrs. Georgia
Post 128, Middleport, 6:00
Thoma,
69, of Chester is a
p.m. dinner at the hall with
•
slil'gical
patient
at the Holzer
'l
the Legionnaifes with a
meeting to be held at. 7:30 Medical Center, Room 334.
She was transported to the'
p:m.
hospital Saturday by the
POMEROY LODGE 164, . Pomeroy Emergency Squad
"The Insurance Store"
and A.M., speeial meeting after breaking her hip in a
Complete
Wednesday, 7 pm. with past fall at her home.
lnsuranc.
e Service
masters night to be observed.
All master Masons are in·
vi ted .
MEIGS Band Boosters, 8
p.m. Wednesday at the high
school.
THURSDAY
REUNION SI..ATED
LAUREL Cliff Better
The second reunion of the
Health Club, Thursday, 6:30 descendants of Harry A. and
p.m. annual picnic at Ule Garnet Polk Hayman will be
214 E. Main
. POMEROY
Racine Locks and Dam, West beld Sunday, Sept. 5 at the
Virginia side.
·
home of Clarence E.
Hayman, Sr., Antiquity . C. E.
"QUALITY 1nil
Hayman, Sr. is qresiden t. All
SERVICE"
A thought for the day: friends and relatives of the
British poet &amp;bert Southwell family are invited to attend.
'
'
said, "When fortune smiles, I A steak dinner will be servi.t
•
smile to think how quickly at noon .
she will frown."
·

::~

By Helen Hottel

yetrl.

7_ Tbe pally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 24 , 1976

maU:hing Viennese lace and
pearls. She carried a bouquet
of coral roses, whi~ pompons, yellow carnations and
baby 's breath tied with
yellow ribbon streamers.
Mrs. Robert Jacobsen and
Mrs. Joseph Edwards, sisters
of the bride, served .as bridal
attendants. Miss Teri
Jacobsen, niece of Ule bride,
was flower girL Jim Betz was
best man, and Jerry Miller
and Jim Neece were ushers.
Jeff Edwards, nephew of the
brille, was ring bearer. ·
The new Mrs. Miller attended Westwood High School
and Mesa College and is
employed at Smitty's in
Mesa . Her husband , a
graduate of Meigs High
School, is also employed at
Smitty's.
The newlyweds · reside at
Mesa.

Chatter Club meets
The Olatter Club met at
Royal Oak Park recently for
a cookout of hotdogs and
hamburgers wi th salads ,
desserts and beverages.
Susan Cleland had charge
of the meeting and !'he
·secretary and tr.easurer 's
reports were given by Mrs.
Lee Enoch 'and Mrs. Linda
Van Me~r . Rreeiving bir·
thday gifts were Mrs. Van
Meter and Mrs. Esther

Harden .. Games were played
..1111 prizes going to Mrs.
Frances Carleton, Mr·s.
Cleland, Mrs . Lo(a Harrison
and Mrs. Van Me~r , Silent
auction was held with
proceeds · going into the
!Teasury.
Others attending were Mrs.
Mary Starcher , Mrs. Marie
Leifheit, Mrs . Betty t;liggs,
Mrs." Alice Ja cobs, Mrs .
Hattie Fisher, Mrs . Opal
Biggs, Mrs. Ruth Young,
Mrs. Elaine Spires, and Mrs.
Dorothy Roach.

HERE FOR REUNION
Wayne Gibboris and Miss
Ruth Carson of Bucyrus are
in Middleport visi ling Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Crooks.
They came especially for the .
Carson reunion held Sunday
at Point Pleasant. Also in
Meigs County are Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Sweet and
children, Michael and Stacey,
of Vermont, who are camping
at Royal Oak Park. Mrs.
Sweet is t)le former Evelyn
Gibbons .
DAUGHTER BORN
S. Sgt. and Mrs. John
Domigan announce Ule birth
Of a daughter, Rebecca Lee,
Aug. 21 at Gainesville, Ga.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, 15 ounces. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Cottrill of the
Harrisonville area, and Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Domigan, Rt. 2,
CoolvUle. S. Sgt. Domigan is
serying in the U. S. Army in
Dahloniga, Ga.

VISIT ENJOYED
.
Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Knight, Pomeroy, were In
Caledonia over the weekend
to visit Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Knight and son, S~vie. They
went especially to see Stevie
play in a peewee tournameni.
On Sunday . Mr. and Mrs.
Knight went to Salt Fork
Lllke for a visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Knight who are
staying there for a week.
REUNION ATTENDED
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Powell, Pomeroy, went io
Flat Rock, W. Va. Sunday for
the McKinney reunion.

·"

~ in .sVe_Wlifl

ril£

heJ·i'Me .~

'

•

Reulei..OJIIII8nnce ·•

•

~ ~ ~ Jfe Accept Federtll FoiJd Stamps 1:$-.l::J.
fh1l'i!flM:

•••

:

~rner M.W1and Secortd Sts.

__...,._

We reserve the right to limit quantities

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PICNIC

; HOM~ . M·p...
•

HAMS

l·fAM.SALAD

•..
I

•

~

.:· ALL ..MEAT

PICNIC HAMS

USDA CHOICE

'

•

..

•

11 . , · '

: ALL MEAt '
•

•

0

LB.

OR MORE

GROUND CHUCK

~BO.l.OGNA
•

LB. 89~

•

••-----------------------=
•

.4 $}OO
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP..................... /

SCOT LAD

UGHIWEIGHT JACKETS

lEMONADE·

.LADIES PMT SUilS
REDUCED
LADIES DRESSES

Maid.

. ..,

~.

MENS
CASUAL PANTS
By Haggar , Hubbard and levi.

ll.,at % price Ret- $7.00 to ~-08

REDUCED 20%

···~

SCOT lAD

!.

•

lADIES SlACKS
' '
REDUCED 30%
LADIES KNIT SHEllS
By llw1&amp;clmui&amp;e IIIII ~llrfleld.

•

BUftitdJjnners
9 .,
\ril , '"''

, 'I

(&lt;

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f.~·

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.

PESTA

HAMBURGER DILL SLICES .................. 3 QTs.

MEET CANCELLED
A meeting of the past
. .
.
matrons of Evangeline
JEWELRY STURE
Olapter 17'l, Order of the
Eastern Star, scheduled for Court st.
l'llmerey
this week has been cancelled. _ _ _ _....__ _ __

L

CELERY

$

29~~K

•

WEEK LONG

REGULAR
OR

M.ENS SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS

8 PAK

SUGAR FREE

16 OZ. BOm.ES
MEN'S SOC=Ks:
. li~
REDUCED 20%

: ,. BROUGHTON'S

MEN'S BELlS

R. C.
8 PAK

lh GALLON CARTON

..: Homo
.Milk . 79~
.

16 OZ. BTLS.

3 QT. BTLS.

,

VALLEY.
BELL
•'
'

Flares 1nd str1lght legs. Sizes 29
to 44. A good altctlon.

•

THURSDAY ONL V

COLA

Drns ond cosuol.

GOESSLER'S

•

.,
5 lb.

REDUCED 30%

REDUCED 20%
LEVI DENIM JEANS

.OUARTZ WATCHES

e

1
EGG~~.~.~~~.~~-). . . . . . . ... . . .·. . . .. . . . .~~~~.&amp;ge

eflSY ~~ad i ng, day or night .. .

Shown1 182602 Slllnltu atttl. lf71.
1'12601 Goldton• f111l1h . 110.
•

THROWAWAY

;&amp;1olto,L.... .:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~~~~-~~~~~-·· sge

BEE(:tiloi(,...SUEY, NQo~E-~ ~· ~EEF, SPAGHETII AND
MEAf'U'. NOODLESl~CttltkEN, CHICKEN CHOW MEIN
u

.

POP .................................................. -~·.~.~~~~~ ....59

'

...·,,10..r rl·iH~·.- ''J··;ilf ~·BANQUET
"V
'&gt;, U

KNIT TOPS

.

HI-HO CRACKERS ...........................~.~.~:.~.~~- 69e
TRUESDELL
·~
1 LB. BOX.. 59 .
0range Sl.1ces or Gurn Drops ...................

6 Ol
CANS

By Berbblre, Habaobber, RIJ Wladter, ud C""IIDI

BANANAS

.

·SUNSHINE

•

By Catallaa, Julia, CocldiDg1oa, ul Lori L)'llll.

.

CHAMPBELL

.

'

.' .

ME.NS

stmplthed one -button se tt ing
controls .. . scratch re sistant
mineral crystals that keep
readouts sharp and clear.
We have them in alllhe
dynamic, new styles. Fine
jewelry fa shions, capable of
accuracy to within ~minute
a year. From $991o $180.
Try bne on today.

'10~

FRESH &amp;
LEAN

FRESH &amp; LEAN

LB.

.
tl

79e ·

GROUND ROUND

· . 69c

SLB.

::----------~--------­
~UPERIORS

'129
LB.

GROUND BEEF

•

••

LB. ·

SLICED

~

FRESH &amp; LEAN
"

NO
WASTE

SUPERIORS

:-------~------~~--~---:: suP~fttoRS

99!

BUCKET STEAKS

WHOLE

79e .

LB.

LEAN, PURE
BEEF

NEW BORN ·DIAPERS ................. ?~.-~!:.~?~ .. $} 79

REDUQD 30%

We have them , The eXciting,
new quart;: digitals from
Bulova . Advanced technology
watches tha t lelll he hour.
mmute, second, month and
date. SeH ~ set lor mo nths
ol 28 . .30 and 31 days.
With automatic sensors that
adjust numeral brightness for

PHONE 99_2·3480

I

SUPERIORS

JOHNSON

SHORT $1.£EVE DRESS SHIRTS

$99

'

11

l:J.

Minute Steaks

..

MENS

FROM

· Open Daily 9 to 0 Sun. 10 to 10 ·

T

0

..

.,

�8:-:-Tbe Dall Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pcmeroy, 0., 1\lelday, Aug. 24,
~~:s~::(.m::::=::::·~'ee

Helen Help
~=·

Us •..

Social The Lefevres slated to perfo:,P
sro•'• .._ .-,..,
Calendar

m:me::e: .-.,.,

~·
~~

{I,Ci

·:·:

ll'l'bereaFalberiDibe boue?

RAP:

•

Our mother II goq to be married In about a month to a
doctor. Us t.eensged kids have been caUing him by hla title
durin8 the four y-s we have known him.
Problem: We can't decide how to address him when he is
our stepfather. We can'tsay, "Dad" as we already have ooe, A ·
first name - "Bill" -for a doctor In his 50s doesn't seem

.

right.

Hints please? - SEARCHING FOR SOMETHING
SUITABLE
DEAR SFSS:
Something I'll never understand Ia: why can't famUy
members cone right out and ASK the new stepfather or
stepmother, whoever, a very simple qu~on, "What would
you Uke us to call you?"
Thia could ellmlnate confusion, pc11181ble lmrt feelings, and
cmslderable "Hey, you's." And besides, it demonstrates
acceptance. Try I - HELEN AND SUE

+++

RAP:
Please t~ "Heading for a M011kery" (who complains that
all wcmen are "love 'em and le11ve 'em type~~") he's a victim rl

Mr. a,nd Mr.r. GreR Miller

Miller-Campbell
repeat nuptial vows

Polly's Pointers

,. By ·Polly Cramer

DEAR POlLY - A board
came inside a bolt of
fabric worb beauUfully lor
jresslng the lep to tlacb.
Any fabric shop will sJadly
give you one, I am sure.
I would so much like to
koow what will take dried
blood out of clollling.- MRS.
G.F.
DEAR" MRs.' G.F. - 'lbe .
blood stains ·are doubtless set
in the gannent, if it has been
washed in hoi water.
Othenliae. soak in cold water ,
H mmutes . 11 the stain
remains,
put
three
le'llr..--. household ammonia In a gallon of luke
-.rm water and soak for haH
an hour or so. If stain is sUD
tllere, rub detergent in stain
and then wash, uslng a bleach
that Ia ale for the fabric. Of
COIII'Ie, all such remedies are
to be used only if safe for the
·fabric in quesUon.-POILY.

spoon to dig out the stem part

of strawberries, radishes,
eU:. You cari put a finger
down to the edge of the spoon
without culling youroelf and
make a neat job of surgery
without squashing the fruit. I
discovered this after an eye
operaUon when I could not
see too well. - MRS. D.E.H.
DEAR POlLY- Our back
yard garden produced
tomatoes and so on for us, but
was a real source of food for
lhe squirrels. We cut an old
green garden hose into
various lengths and laid the
pieces around the plants. The
squirrels thought they were
snakes and left our produce
alooe. - VERA.
Polly will selld you one of
ber " peachy" lbank·you
cards, Ideal lor framing or
plaetag In your family
scrapbook, H sbe uses your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem ID bet columa. Write
DEAR POLLY -My Pet Polly'• Pollllen Ill care of
Peeve is that prescripUon lh!JJ newspaper.
and over-the-&lt;:ounter drugs
do not have termination dates
. f(J' their use on the labels. ·
Tbe customer never knows
FIRST CHILD BORN
when they are no longer
Mr.
and Mrs .. Richard A.
aalisfactory, or can't be
Warner
(Sharon McCune) of
safely administered. - MRS.
Pomeroy,
announce Ule birth
M.C.
of
their
first child, a
DEAR POlLY - I was
daughter,
Erin
Beth. The
allocked to read that one of
seven
pound,
three
ounce
the readencut"' flea collars
and put them In her cupboard baby was born Aug. 12 at the
to keep bugs out. T1leae Holzer Medical Center.
collars are IOJic to even dogs Paternal grandparenls are
and cats and I hate to think of Mr. and Mrs. George H.
any food absorbing this. To Warner, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
keep the bllP out just scatter the maternal grandparents
a few bay leaves around, are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
after throwing away all in· McCune, Rt. I, Rutland. Mr.
fested food. Then clean and Mrs. Herman Warner,
cupboards arid put food in Rl. 4, Ponleroy, Mrs. VIola
tlghUy closed jars. Tile en· McCune, Oa, W. •Va.; Mrs.
closed IU'ticle by Ralph Nader Faye Dunlavy, Middleport,
explalna about the8e flea and Mrs. llallie Cross of
collara and theii' danger. - Syracuse are the greatgrandparents.
MRS. M.V.B.
DEAR POlLY- I have 10
maliy rwne aDd address
Iabeii that haw been obtained one way or another
PLAYERS WANTED
aild IIIIVI found I wonderful
EAST MEIGS - Seventb
111e for tbem other than thelr and eighlll grade football
-~-. My husband and I players of Eastern Junior
..blve oar boobhelves full of High School will meet at 6
bGob thai were oflel1 .quite p.m. Wednesday at the high
I.'OIIlly 110 I Jlllleclll label on school.
the IMide ~ ol each one.
WbeniYer a boOk Ia loaned to
-.lllei!Grrowerhu no
l'KAl"!''CE SET
lrOtlbll .........,berlnl from
All Meigs High School girls
whelm II - ball riwed. Our wanting to play ·volley ball
boOka gel relurned rather this year will practice from 10
lban for1011en. - MRS. a.m. to I p.m. at the high
E.A.L.
school gym.They are to take
DEAR POLLY- I • the thelr pllyslcal cards to the
pointed end of • lfapefrull practice session.
thai

BJ JACI V. FOX

precious little stuffed
lllimat.s with bright button
eyes and a stitched smile,
who have long been the
companions of countless little
girls and boys.
"Countless"
is
the
operative word in this case
because when you get
Involved with banks you find
they have an affinity Jf not an
obsell8ion with numbers.
AI any rate, just before the

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Only now II tbe full •ory
anerglng ol the great "Teddy
Bear Caper" at Crocker
Naticlltlllllnk but it carries a
.-se lor tboae who would
mil beau,. money, kldt,
depolltora, teUen and bank
vice jrllldentl.
The heroN of th• piece (or
vlllalna d.,..UQI 011 how you
loolt at It) we~e those

Olristmas season last year
the promotion department at
Crocker - the Dillion's 15th
largest bank with 358
California branches - came
up with "SuMy the Bear."
The deal \\!HS that anyone,
will opened a new checking
account of $100 or more,
would be given a hear.
But let Angela Bohning,
then the new accounts glrl at
the Palos Verdes branch,

J)ick up the story.
"It started out great but
then problems began to
arise," she recalled.
"There were the bears
sitting on the counters cute as
~ould be and everyone
wanted one. Customers woo
already had accounts insisted
they should get a bear. One
man wbo bad a $50,000
savings account threatened
to take out his whole deposit

unless he got a bear.
"We tried to tell them to
just .withdraw SIOO and open
another account and some of
them did. Mothers would
come in with two or more kids
in tow and each child wanted
a bear, of course. But It was
one account, one bear, no
more and no less so they had
to open two or three checking .
accounts.••
On top of

everylllin~

there

.

began to develop · a bear
shortage . The top brass sent
down the word that there
must be a strict accounting
for each bear .
"It got so at our branch that
we had a bear count at the
end of business every day,"
Mrs. Bohning recalled. "The
tellers had to balance their
bears bef(J'e they balanced
Uleir drawers .
"We finally had to appoint

district deputy honor

the ~~nturies, wcmen took what men fished out. They
TEMPE, ARIZ. - . Palti.
remained faltbful when thelr mates fooled around. They were . Lynn Campbell and Greg
so lllllous to get husbands that they'd overlook many faults. Miller exchanged wedding
Now, finally, it's the females' turn. A man has to be pretty vows Saturday, July 3 in Ule
. exceptional in order to hold his girl these days. HFM evidently Tempe Second Ward Olapel
Isn't. - CHUCKUNG GENTLY
of the Olurch of Jesus Christ
DEAR RAP:
of Llltterday Saints. Bishop
"Headlngf(J' a Monkery" said he'd give a month's salary Guy F. Wakefield officiated
to IJIYOIIe who could prove all women weren't 00 Ule make for at the double ring ceremony.
"1001etbinl ~." I'm not and my IIJsband can prove it.
Parents of the bride are
MOI!lwomenaremucbmorefalthfl!lthanmen -just askany Mr . and Mrs . Earl R.
girl who baa beell suddenly dumped. If guys see IOOlethlng Campbell, 512 N. Ironwood,
seder, they tHe oft. Not my husband, of courae. _SECOND Tempe, and parents of the
ANNIVERSARY, AIMING FOR 50
bridegroom.and Mr. and Mrs.
READERS ALL:
Don . Miller, Teinpe, former
So many youag . W&lt;men claimed "Heading for a Meigs County residents . .
Mcintery'1" salary check that he could spend a mooth 111
Given in marriage by her
.-rc:h. Sorry we. can't put them In touch with him. _ fa Iller the bride chose a gown
aELEN AND SUE
of trevlra polyester willl a full
A~ine skirt that swept into a
chapel train. The Queen Anne
neckline was tTimmed in
appliqued Viennese laoe as
were the f.uU long .sleeves.
Her Ulree tiered finger len gill
veil was attached to a tiara of

· Hot water
sets blood stains

Don't mix bears, kids, money·or .bank tellers

ooe of assistant managers as outcry subalaea.
"I remember 011e Wlllll8ll
'the bear man.' He was In
marched
in with a teddy bear
charge of bears. He would
she
had
bought 11 ·a
count them and then lock
Ulem up In the vault at department store," Mrs.
Bobning uid. "91e said her
nights."
son would have nothing to do
All the bear sh(J'tage grew
worse, various branches tried with it because It didn't look
to wheedle more uSunnies" like SuMY . She wan~ to
from banks that still had a 'trade It in on a (rocker bear
·eserve and the Palos Verdes but the bears were aU gone."
branch sent a pic)tup truck to
KILLED IN WRECK
an office in Orange County.
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) There .afe rumors it carried Terrence E. Cofer, 29, of
an armed guard but Mrs. suburban ·Oakwood, was
Bohning thinks Ulat is untrue. killed today when the
FinaUy, Crocker ran out of automobile in which he was
bears some time early In 1976 rlding ran off a clty street and
but it was weeks before the hit a tree.

Mrs. Ritchie receives

+++

RAP :
I just found out that my boyfriend's S1!lrlfrlend is going ,
to have his baby, which Ia amaziJ!g because he told me he
couldn't have cblldren.
Now he wants to become engaged to her. Bef(J'e that, he'd
jromllied to marry ME, 110melime.
. How can I keep him from be in&amp; bamboozled? - REAILY
HURTING
R.H.:
Maybe YOU were the bamboozled one. A man who
jrOmlaes "safety" and a "sometime" marriage may be
looklntfor a fling without the ring. -HELEN AND SUE

The Lefebrei, an Atlanllt, Ulrough the years with rldlo,
Tbe
Ga. gospel singing group, will personal app.e arances, Dean
To.-.!, bll ..wed a
concerti
and
televiaion.
perform Satlirdiy; 7:30 p.m.
new
dlmenaioa to tile
Then there's Rex )'lelon,
at the Washington School in
TUESDAY
who adds his rich, deep baN LeFevre~' prtll'llll wttb ,b1a
Gallipolis.
·
RACINE AMERICAN
Urias LeFevre, founder of voice to the group's IOIInd. rich C:OUOII'J~ valet. And
Legion Awdllary, Post 602, tile origiMl group as well as The younger sounds In gospel the most rteent addltloa to
6:30 Tuesday picnic at Ule being Eva Mae's husband, music hiVe not been the group 11 Jane~· Pllchal,
Racine Park. Members to has recently retired to devote overlooked. The LeFevres who alii yaarilanol oaly one
take their own table service. more time to oulalde in- have added four very of the yOiq[llt and prtttltat
In the event of rain the picnic teresll . '['his leaves Alphus talepted and dedicated youn&amp; soprlltOIIn Gospel•lllllllc, but
one of the most 1114nled.
will be held at the hall.
LeFevre as the sole people to their musical also
These,
Tbe ·LeF...-.., are
LADIES Auxiliary of remaining active member of family. Rex Foster play•
plano as well u bass guitar. wann and 8'11Uint people
Vetera'\5 Memorial Hospital the original group.
picnic Tuesday at park on U.
With Eva Mae performing Ron Hutchins, who sln&amp;s with much to Offer 1111 warld.
S. Rt. 33, 6 p.m. Bring item most of Ule emcee duUes and lead, Is a respected gospel Their muiUJ!Ie . talenll are
for white elephant sale.
playing her di.stinctive plano 'music veteran who's been In gre*tly \IIJPRI.W by
never
PAST Matrons, Pomeroy accompaniment for the the businell8 lor 12 of his 26 wo«JCIMC'
any
mediocrity
1
their
Chapter OES, Tuesday , 7:30 group, they have marched
p.m. at home of Mrs. J, W.
McMurray, Mason, W. Va.
AMERICAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster
Post 39,7:30 Tuesday night at
the hall.
RACINE
Lodge 461
Tuesday, 7!30 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. · All
master masons invited.
JUNIOR American Legion
CHESTER- Mrs. Dorothy polntment. Mrs. Faye f"!l::;;~
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
Hoselton o( Belle Prairie
Post 128, wiener roast, 6:30 ru tchie of Chesler Council Council 269, Belpre, former
Tuesday at the home or Mrs. 323, Daugltters of America, district
deputy,
was
was appointed deputy of
Bonnie Dailey, advisor.
nominated
and
installed
as
District 13 at the recent 82nd
WEDNESDAY
state
outside
sentinel.
At·
annual session of the Slltte
WILDWOOD Garden Club, Council, Daughteu of tending the convention from
8 pm. Wednesd•v ·• ••
Shoes From
America held at the the Chester Council were
home oCMrs. Alfred Yeauger Netherland Hilton Hotel ln Mrs. RiU:hie, Mrs. Doris
,I
.U'
wi Ill Mrs. Erma Roush as Cincinnati .
Grueser, Mrs. Margaret '
assisting hos~ss.
· Dorothy Henthorn, state TutUe, and Mrs. Mary Klly
POMEROY • Middleport councilor , made the ap· Holter. While In CincinnaU
Uley a Itended a Cincinnati ,
Lions Club, noon Wednesday,
Micldi'e.,6.-, / 0,
Reds ball game.
at the Meigs Inn . All Lions
urged to at~nd.
AMERICAN
Legion
•
HOSPITAUZED
Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett
'
•
CHESTER - Mrs. Georgia
Post 128, Middleport, 6:00
Thoma,
69, of Chester is a
p.m. dinner at the hall with
•
slil'gical
patient
at the Holzer
'l
the Legionnaifes with a
meeting to be held at. 7:30 Medical Center, Room 334.
She was transported to the'
p:m.
hospital Saturday by the
POMEROY LODGE 164, . Pomeroy Emergency Squad
"The Insurance Store"
and A.M., speeial meeting after breaking her hip in a
Complete
Wednesday, 7 pm. with past fall at her home.
lnsuranc.
e Service
masters night to be observed.
All master Masons are in·
vi ted .
MEIGS Band Boosters, 8
p.m. Wednesday at the high
school.
THURSDAY
REUNION SI..ATED
LAUREL Cliff Better
The second reunion of the
Health Club, Thursday, 6:30 descendants of Harry A. and
p.m. annual picnic at Ule Garnet Polk Hayman will be
214 E. Main
. POMEROY
Racine Locks and Dam, West beld Sunday, Sept. 5 at the
Virginia side.
·
home of Clarence E.
Hayman, Sr., Antiquity . C. E.
"QUALITY 1nil
Hayman, Sr. is qresiden t. All
SERVICE"
A thought for the day: friends and relatives of the
British poet &amp;bert Southwell family are invited to attend.
'
'
said, "When fortune smiles, I A steak dinner will be servi.t
•
smile to think how quickly at noon .
she will frown."
·

::~

By Helen Hottel

yetrl.

7_ Tbe pally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 24 , 1976

maU:hing Viennese lace and
pearls. She carried a bouquet
of coral roses, whi~ pompons, yellow carnations and
baby 's breath tied with
yellow ribbon streamers.
Mrs. Robert Jacobsen and
Mrs. Joseph Edwards, sisters
of the bride, served .as bridal
attendants. Miss Teri
Jacobsen, niece of Ule bride,
was flower girL Jim Betz was
best man, and Jerry Miller
and Jim Neece were ushers.
Jeff Edwards, nephew of the
brille, was ring bearer. ·
The new Mrs. Miller attended Westwood High School
and Mesa College and is
employed at Smitty's in
Mesa . Her husband , a
graduate of Meigs High
School, is also employed at
Smitty's.
The newlyweds · reside at
Mesa.

Chatter Club meets
The Olatter Club met at
Royal Oak Park recently for
a cookout of hotdogs and
hamburgers wi th salads ,
desserts and beverages.
Susan Cleland had charge
of the meeting and !'he
·secretary and tr.easurer 's
reports were given by Mrs.
Lee Enoch 'and Mrs. Linda
Van Me~r . Rreeiving bir·
thday gifts were Mrs. Van
Meter and Mrs. Esther

Harden .. Games were played
..1111 prizes going to Mrs.
Frances Carleton, Mr·s.
Cleland, Mrs . Lo(a Harrison
and Mrs. Van Me~r , Silent
auction was held with
proceeds · going into the
!Teasury.
Others attending were Mrs.
Mary Starcher , Mrs. Marie
Leifheit, Mrs . Betty t;liggs,
Mrs." Alice Ja cobs, Mrs .
Hattie Fisher, Mrs . Opal
Biggs, Mrs. Ruth Young,
Mrs. Elaine Spires, and Mrs.
Dorothy Roach.

HERE FOR REUNION
Wayne Gibboris and Miss
Ruth Carson of Bucyrus are
in Middleport visi ling Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Crooks.
They came especially for the .
Carson reunion held Sunday
at Point Pleasant. Also in
Meigs County are Mr. and
Mrs . Richard Sweet and
children, Michael and Stacey,
of Vermont, who are camping
at Royal Oak Park. Mrs.
Sweet is t)le former Evelyn
Gibbons .
DAUGHTER BORN
S. Sgt. and Mrs. John
Domigan announce Ule birth
Of a daughter, Rebecca Lee,
Aug. 21 at Gainesville, Ga.
The infant weighed seven
pounds, 15 ounces. Grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Cottrill of the
Harrisonville area, and Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Domigan, Rt. 2,
CoolvUle. S. Sgt. Domigan is
serying in the U. S. Army in
Dahloniga, Ga.

VISIT ENJOYED
.
Mr. and Mrs . Chester
Knight, Pomeroy, were In
Caledonia over the weekend
to visit Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Knight and son, S~vie. They
went especially to see Stevie
play in a peewee tournameni.
On Sunday . Mr. and Mrs.
Knight went to Salt Fork
Lllke for a visit with Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Knight who are
staying there for a week.
REUNION ATTENDED
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Powell, Pomeroy, went io
Flat Rock, W. Va. Sunday for
the McKinney reunion.

·"

~ in .sVe_Wlifl

ril£

heJ·i'Me .~

'

•

Reulei..OJIIII8nnce ·•

•

~ ~ ~ Jfe Accept Federtll FoiJd Stamps 1:$-.l::J.
fh1l'i!flM:

•••

:

~rner M.W1and Secortd Sts.

__...,._

We reserve the right to limit quantities

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

PICNIC

; HOM~ . M·p...
•

HAMS

l·fAM.SALAD

•..
I

•

~

.:· ALL ..MEAT

PICNIC HAMS

USDA CHOICE

'

•

..

•

11 . , · '

: ALL MEAt '
•

•

0

LB.

OR MORE

GROUND CHUCK

~BO.l.OGNA
•

LB. 89~

•

••-----------------------=
•

.4 $}OO
CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP..................... /

SCOT LAD

UGHIWEIGHT JACKETS

lEMONADE·

.LADIES PMT SUilS
REDUCED
LADIES DRESSES

Maid.

. ..,

~.

MENS
CASUAL PANTS
By Haggar , Hubbard and levi.

ll.,at % price Ret- $7.00 to ~-08

REDUCED 20%

···~

SCOT lAD

!.

•

lADIES SlACKS
' '
REDUCED 30%
LADIES KNIT SHEllS
By llw1&amp;clmui&amp;e IIIII ~llrfleld.

•

BUftitdJjnners
9 .,
\ril , '"''

, 'I

(&lt;

-!1-

,\ "'I I.

f.~·

,,,
'\1
li. r H
•.,.~ '""-•11

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, .
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lit

.

PESTA

HAMBURGER DILL SLICES .................. 3 QTs.

MEET CANCELLED
A meeting of the past
. .
.
matrons of Evangeline
JEWELRY STURE
Olapter 17'l, Order of the
Eastern Star, scheduled for Court st.
l'llmerey
this week has been cancelled. _ _ _ _....__ _ __

L

CELERY

$

29~~K

•

WEEK LONG

REGULAR
OR

M.ENS SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT SHIRTS

8 PAK

SUGAR FREE

16 OZ. BOm.ES
MEN'S SOC=Ks:
. li~
REDUCED 20%

: ,. BROUGHTON'S

MEN'S BELlS

R. C.
8 PAK

lh GALLON CARTON

..: Homo
.Milk . 79~
.

16 OZ. BTLS.

3 QT. BTLS.

,

VALLEY.
BELL
•'
'

Flares 1nd str1lght legs. Sizes 29
to 44. A good altctlon.

•

THURSDAY ONL V

COLA

Drns ond cosuol.

GOESSLER'S

•

.,
5 lb.

REDUCED 30%

REDUCED 20%
LEVI DENIM JEANS

.OUARTZ WATCHES

e

1
EGG~~.~.~~~.~~-). . . . . . . ... . . .·. . . .. . . . .~~~~.&amp;ge

eflSY ~~ad i ng, day or night .. .

Shown1 182602 Slllnltu atttl. lf71.
1'12601 Goldton• f111l1h . 110.
•

THROWAWAY

;&amp;1olto,L.... .:. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~~~~-~~~~~-·· sge

BEE(:tiloi(,...SUEY, NQo~E-~ ~· ~EEF, SPAGHETII AND
MEAf'U'. NOODLESl~CttltkEN, CHICKEN CHOW MEIN
u

.

POP .................................................. -~·.~.~~~~~ ....59

'

...·,,10..r rl·iH~·.- ''J··;ilf ~·BANQUET
"V
'&gt;, U

KNIT TOPS

.

HI-HO CRACKERS ...........................~.~.~:.~.~~- 69e
TRUESDELL
·~
1 LB. BOX.. 59 .
0range Sl.1ces or Gurn Drops ...................

6 Ol
CANS

By Berbblre, Habaobber, RIJ Wladter, ud C""IIDI

BANANAS

.

·SUNSHINE

•

By Catallaa, Julia, CocldiDg1oa, ul Lori L)'llll.

.

CHAMPBELL

.

'

.' .

ME.NS

stmplthed one -button se tt ing
controls .. . scratch re sistant
mineral crystals that keep
readouts sharp and clear.
We have them in alllhe
dynamic, new styles. Fine
jewelry fa shions, capable of
accuracy to within ~minute
a year. From $991o $180.
Try bne on today.

'10~

FRESH &amp;
LEAN

FRESH &amp; LEAN

LB.

.
tl

79e ·

GROUND ROUND

· . 69c

SLB.

::----------~--------­
~UPERIORS

'129
LB.

GROUND BEEF

•

••

LB. ·

SLICED

~

FRESH &amp; LEAN
"

NO
WASTE

SUPERIORS

:-------~------~~--~---:: suP~fttoRS

99!

BUCKET STEAKS

WHOLE

79e .

LB.

LEAN, PURE
BEEF

NEW BORN ·DIAPERS ................. ?~.-~!:.~?~ .. $} 79

REDUQD 30%

We have them , The eXciting,
new quart;: digitals from
Bulova . Advanced technology
watches tha t lelll he hour.
mmute, second, month and
date. SeH ~ set lor mo nths
ol 28 . .30 and 31 days.
With automatic sensors that
adjust numeral brightness for

PHONE 99_2·3480

I

SUPERIORS

JOHNSON

SHORT $1.£EVE DRESS SHIRTS

$99

'

11

l:J.

Minute Steaks

..

MENS

FROM

· Open Daily 9 to 0 Sun. 10 to 10 ·

T

0

..

.,

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 24,1976

:

OPEN SUNDAYS- 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M•

Desegregation works says U. S. Commission
•
difficult witll such an
emotional issue as busing.
"On balance, however, this
school desegregation works report makes lt. clear that
- but only when community substanital progress Ia being
leaders and elected officials made in the desegregation of
at aU levels of government our schools," concluded the
report . The
act positively , the U.S. 315 -page
Commission on Civil ·Rights commlaslon also said that
while some school dlatricts
said IDday.
It fails, as it did in Bostoo "have experienced a
and l&lt;Ju!Jlville, when local significant decline In white
officials do no.t exercise , enrollment, evidence 1\oes not
support the widely held belie!
enough leadership
som e times po ii tica ll y
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - In
the vast majority of cases,

that
urban
school
desegregation causes
masaive white !tight."
However, the commisaion
criticized President Ford and
meJllberS of Congress who It
said seek to curb the power of
the courts in the school
integration proctss.
"Such efforts undermine
the desegregation process
and jeopardize the rights of
minority students, " the
commission said .
" Furthermore , these

•

attempts cootrlbute to the "Fulfilling the Letter and
position of aome indlviduals Spirit of the Law that desegregation can be Desegregation of the Nation's
avoided."
Public Schools" was based on
The cornmisaion said it 10 months of hearings and
''lakes issue" with Ford's open meetings in eight cities,
pr o p o s e d
S c h o o 1 including vola We Boston !llld
Des e greg a ti on a n d l&lt;Juisvllle, plus case studles
AssistanCe Act which "seeks of . 29 other school dlatricts
both to narrow the definition and a survey of 1,300 school .
of illegal segregation and to districts.
"Desegregation works "
restrict the scope of remedles
available w the courts."
· said the commission, addfug
The Commission reP&lt;&gt;rt, that It was working "In the
vast. majority of schools In
Boston and l&lt;JulsviUe, In
spite of the detennlnatlon of
some citizens and their
leaders to thwart its

Dole talks in Carter's tracks
By JOHN MllliiE
billion could he cut from the
United Press International
billion Pentagon budget
President Ford apparently request now pending before
. has appointed his Republican Congress.
vice presidential running
Dole follows Carter
mate, Robert Dole, as a one· Wednesday with his own·
man "ll'uth squad," and sent Speech to the Legionnaires.
him after his ~mocratic Carter will be in Des Moines,
opponent, Jimmy Carter.
Iowa, Wednesday to detiver
Carter speaks today before what is billed as a major
an
American
Legion agricultural policy speech
conv~ntion in Seattle where
Wednesday morning at tbe
he is expected to restate his. Iowa State Fair.
position in favor of a military
The Kansas senator plans
thllt is strong but not l&lt;J follow Carter again In the
wasteful; he has said Hawkeye slate.
between $5 billlon and $7
Meeting with reporters

'113

Monday in Washingl&lt;Jn, Dole
said : ''I might he attacking
Carter's positions. We'd llke
to keep him honest.."
Carter worked his way up
the West Coast Mooday. He
met with 50 HollywOod stars
at a morning party aiTanged
by actor Warren Beatty .
Among those attending were
Carroll O'Connor , Louise
Lasser, Sidney Poitier, Faye
Dunaway, Diana Ross, Nell
Simon, Lee Grant apd George
Peppard.
Displaying some of the
most intense emotion of his
c.arnpalgn so far, Carter told

Carter would forgive, no.t
forget Viet draft evaders

the bejeweled audlence :
"Public servants ... have a
special responsibility to
bypass the big shots,
including you and people like
you ... and make a concerted
effort to understand people
who are poor, black, speak a
foreign language, who 'are not
well educated, who are
inarticulate, who are timid,
who have some monummtal
JrOblem.''
With the Carter campaign
off and running, Ford is still
in the planning stages at his
VaU, Colo., retreat. He Ia
meeting with campaign aides
between rounds of golf and
parties. Aides said the
PreSident planned to spend a
few days each week
campaigning.
" The'
PreSident is not a man to stay
in the Oval Office," one
said.
Back in Washington,
another former Georgia
governor announced his
candidacy lor president,
seeking the liclitlnation of the
conservative group · that
meets this week in Ollcago.
Lester Maddox, who won
fame as a segregationist,
· appeai'edina tiny hotel room
wearing a star~gled, red·
white-and-blue tie.
He quoted a publication of
the right wing Uberty Lobby
that linked Carter with rock
musicians and producers "people dealing in drugs and
pornography," he said.

equivalency" in direct
milit$ry
stre!lgth and in
SEATI'LE (uPf) ~Jimmy
strategic
nuclear
fcrces.
Carter told the American
"Yet, as we seek an
Legion today ihat, as
adequate defense, we must
president, he would grant a
face the fact that the very
blanket pardon- for draft
words 'national security'
evaders to end ''the damage,
have fallen into disrepote . 1
hatred and divisiveness of the
want to • hear those wcrds
.Viebiam war."
spokim
with respect once
Carter also said he would
again."
·
maintain adequate U.S. mill·
Carter
said
"whatever the
tary strength through a
pice
and
whatever
the pressdefenae that is " lean,
w-es,"
the
presidmt
must
· muscular and flezible."
Insist on a natlCIIal .defense
In remark! prepared for
"that is lean . and muscular
the Legion's national
and flezible."
"
· coovention in Seattle, Carter
Carter
proposed
cutting
said the pardon issue was
down on military ·transfers,
''about the single hardest
Increasing
the number of
· deci8ion I have had !I) make
students
per military
during tbe campaign."
instructors,
and
halting cost
"I think it Ia time for the ·
overruns - which he said
damage, hatred and divisivewould save billlons.
lies!! of the VIetnam War to he
Car·t er was critical of
119er," the Demucratlc presi·
President Ford dwing his
dential I!O!Da... 'said. "I do
atop in Los Angeles Mcmday
rot favor a biu*et •J!IN!IIy,
before the Town Hall Forum.
rut 1or ~ who violated
Selective Service laws, I new weapms; ml by "a He called for a "tearing down
One driver was cited in
intend to grant a blanket mutual search for peace" of the wall between the
three
area aulD accidents
president
....
Congress
and
with
armament
reduction
perdlm.
probed
Monday ,by the Gallia·
among
the
nations.
between
the
govemmmt
and
"To me, tbere Ia a
Meigs
Post, Staie Highway
the
people."
Carter called for ''rough
diffaeutoe. Amnesty means
Patrol.
Anita E. Campbell, 16,
frown City, was cited to
CINCINNATI (UPI) odometer reading of that car for Olno to adopt its own laws juvenile court for failure Ill
Ohio Attorney General. should be permanently if neighboring states do not yield the righklf-way in an
William ·J. Brown said recorded on that title," said have similar controlll. He accident , at 4:45 p.m. on
Mmday the problem of car Brown. "That way, anybody said cars with rolled back County Rd: a2 and Ti'IT."IIit.
dealers who roll back interested in buying that used . odometers could still be :IJl.
odometers had "reached car can ll'ace the title to moved into Ohio for sale and
AcCording to the patrol,
epidemic proportions in determine the true mileage conswners would not know Miss Campbell pulled from
&lt;lllo" beceuse
are tiot history of the car."
the mileage history of the Twp. Rd. :IJl, onto eounty Rd.
enougb laws to control
Brown said it was useless car.
52, as Greg E. Hinshaw, 17,
dllbmat U1led car .dealers.
Huntington, was north bound
Brown made the statement
on Road.S2. As be came upon
in remarks prepared for
the Campbell vehicle, Hln·.
delivery to tbe Midwest
"'"fliil'
shaw applied his brakes and
Regional Conference of. the
Arninorone-caraccidentat fenceandhedgeontheAgnes Campstidinbe~ thehi 1rear of the
National Association of Tuppers Plains was in- Hill property. Driver of the
ve c e. . . .
~tomeyH~lhaberaDe. .
vestigated Monday by the other ·vehicle was not iden: I DTbere were sl~ohtmJurtthes.
e Jll'l¥iOOW I states .Meigs County Sheriff's tilled. Damage to the Wells ,amage was tg to e
adOpt unlforrnlawsto combat Depariment.
vehicle was minor and there Campbell auto and moderate
Uled car dealers who roll
The department report"~~ was no citaUon
to the Hinshaw vehicle.
back odometen.
that William Marlon Wells,
·
At 3' 05 p.m . on Rt. 7• two
''I am propoling that all 68, Tuppers Plains was
•
miles north of County Rd. 15•
states adopt a law which not traveling at 8 a.m. on the . Three JUtJKments
a truck driven by Ron Foose,
20 • Ravenswood, W. Va.,
only probiblts odometer roll· Arhaugh Addition Road when
backa rut requires that the the accident occurred. The .in suit filed
backed from a parking lot
odometer record of any au- driver said that be observed
and struck an unatteilded
tomoblle
become
a
th
h·
parked vehicle owned by
.......,_ent part of the title ano er , ve tcle coming
Three judgments were J
H 'It
L
..-·l&lt;lward him on the wrong side
ames ami on, ower
..... _ of that a tomobll "
Monday in Meigs River Rd · Tbere were no
·
-•
u
e, and that to avoid an accident entered
--'d
Jlro
County
Common
Pleas Court. 1' nj ur 1•es. Damage was
..,
wn.
be went off the road on the
"H you sell ~ il8ed car, the left. The vehicle struck
In the case of Wal~r R. modera~ w the Hamilton
a CrookS, Middleport vs. Joe E. vehicle. There were no
Bowland and Polly Bowland, citation.
,.,....,...._ __.:.
Buckeye Lake, Judge John C.
The third accident was
· dgm t f
Bacon gave a JU
ent 1o reportedatS:lOp.m.in Meigs
. .M 64
t 'ght
.,..,.,.. a et
percen n· County on Twp. Rd. l:IJl, south
~rest to O'ooks.
. 1 of County Rd. 3.2.
The Pomeroy Nattona
The patrol said a vehicle
·
t'
· · t
Ba nk m
an ac ton agams driven north by Corbet 0.
Amy K. Jones, JackSon and Cleek, 48, Racine, and one
Rona ld Thomas of the All
.d driven south by Luke s.
Wea ther Har dware, Ma • McDaniel, 23, l&lt;Jng Botl&lt;Jm,
· tded $1 368
dieport was awa
, · collided in a sharp curve.
A default judgment entry poth vehicles had moderate .
against Thomas , and All damage. There were no ·
Wea ther ·m the amoun t of citations or Injuries.
$2,736.24 was made in favor of
Apex Feed and Supply, Inc .,
l'";j;---...__________:::._.;__:__ __, .Marietta.
By wESLEY. G, PIPPERT

that what Y0\1 did is right. A
pardon means tha.t what you
did-right or wrong- is
forgiven."
.
Saying he believed in patri·
otism, Carter said that hun·
dreds of thousands of
Viell)am veterans met the
same 'bitter reception. at
home as did his son, Jack. ile
added, "I believe very
strongly that those scenes
and the national mood they
reflected amount Ill nothing
less than an American
tragedy."
Carter Ia in the third day of
a t!Jree.day West. ~ trip
before the for.mal start of the
presidential campaign on
Labor Day.
Carter &lt;;ited three ways to
maintain "adequate military
strength" lor the nation-by .
a committment to necessary
military expenditures; by

One driver
cited in

=:~~nml~

3 accidents

Odometer laws needed in all states--Brown

there

Accident is inves.;n-ated.

.
ey'll
OQ
It Every Time
Th

..-•

pwpose."

. .

In Boston and Louisville,

the Commission said, 1118JlY
of the problems related to
desegregation can be traced
to the failure of publlc
officials
to
exercise
leadership in support of court
O·r d e.r e d s c h o o 1
desegregation .
"Perhaps the
most
important ingredient in
successful school
desegregation is leader!hip,
both at the cmununity level
and in the schools," the
commission said.
II also said that while many
school districts have put

FRESH FRYING CHICKENS

Dal1as schools opened peacefully
Ualted l'nN Jaler.llolllll
Dallal ~ebooll opeDed peacefdJ folollday Qllder a eaut«dertd balbll
plan to acblew deupoepdoa bal uappeall eoan deell*allpblldlal a LaaJ1.
.We, Ky., buala&amp; pllll could caue pnbleml wileD ICbooll opeD !ben aes1
week. BlactlllldeiiiiiD Loallillll'l Rapkll Parllb boJcoUed palllle ICMoia le
proteat aaotller baalq order.
Dallas -the udoa'a eleblb lartett )llblie ICbool .,.tem - peleellll,.
lmplemeat.ed the CW't"rdered bulDI of 11,100 bladl, wbtte ud Mellen·
Amerieaa lltudenll 111 ~fad• fw tbroqb e.bl. 111e plaa .aimed le bl'llll
llludeaU popiJ[atloaa ID ap[II'Qidlllate ptuporil011 1!1 tile Nelal &lt;COIIIeat of
systemwide earollmellt - 3U per ceat wlllte, IU per ceal bladluct 1L7 per
cent Mezlcaa·American.
Additional IO,IIGO llllldeats wen wlallriiJ baled to e~~~rlated
mapet higllllcllools or under alber volalllar)'
plaal. Olllu Sebo*
Superbltendeat ,Nolu Eltes penoaally drove oae baJ _. predicted
· unparalleled com!Danll)' support ollbe buiiDf pin waald llllke It a model for
the patlon.

••
••

''

'.;

QUANTITIES RIGHTS RESERV£0

'I

'.

Open Eves. Til9:00.

lnl....,..

desegregation plans into
effect, "numerous others
remain segregated." Figures
from 1974, the most r001nt
avaUable, show that 4 of
every 10 black students and 3
of every 10 Hispanic heritage
students attend schools with a
90 per cent minority
enrollment.
Recommendations :
- Leaders at all levels,
inchKiing the national, "must
accept the fact that
desegregation the nation's

schoolll Ia a constitutional
imperative."
- 'lbe federal govemment
-must strengthen ml exp8nd
JI'OIJ'BmS designed to eue
the desegreg&amp;Uon pracea,
particularly through
increasing lll(lley for 'nUe IV
of the Civil Rights Act
[I'Oviding tecllllc.ai. 11111181·
ance for deset~regating I!Chool
diJtrlcts.
- Then must be vigorous
enforcement of laws which
contribute
to
tbe

We Accept·Federal Food Stamps

I -

' '

desegregation process, with
both the president and '
Qnsr- ma1t1nt1 a cmcerted
effort
to
facilitating •
metropolitan residential
dellegregatlon.
•
- A inajor invellment"of'
time and money needs to be·
made "to deal with the
miaconce~ relative to
deaegregatlon ," particularly
miaconcepLion concerned
with. what Ia constitutionally;
required by llw and the role ·
of white !tight.
.
·•

FAMILY
. KEEILER

PAK

:· HONEY
,,
.GRAHAMS

Utilities back group

LB.

'

";

•

'

LEGS &amp; THIGHSLB.

fighting ballot issues
PubUc Utilities Commission
of Ohio and eaae legal
requirements to get initiative
and nferendiUil issues on the
statewide ballot.
OUR will likely fall short of
the 307,201 valid petition
signatures needed to qualify
for the ballot, said AsSistant
Ohto Secretar.y of State
James Marsh. He said he
expects to know by Friday or
Moodsy how many additional
names the gro~ will need to
meet the requlranent.
· Even if OUR c.an collect the
needed names, it still faces a
industry.
.
legal challenge from GSLCE,
which
last Friday quietly
Conservative Republicans,
filed
suit
against Secretary ~
the group was told, are
State
Ted
W. Brown in the
considered to be on the side of
Supreme
Court
of &lt;lllo.
the utility induatry In the
a&gt;LCE
asked
the court to
potential fight. As a result,
mooey, media and llllqlOWer rrevent the issues from being
will be directed at the state's put on the baDot because
liberal
~mocrats . to , Ba:own allegedly violated the
cmvihce them to vote against law in proeelllling petltiOIIJ.
the four issues, if they win The high court ill ezpecled to
places on the Nov. 2 ballot. act on the request after Se~.
Former state Democratic 7.
party Ol8irman Eugene P.
O'Grady, ezecutive director
of a;LCE, is !~ding the liglt
to woo Democratic voters.
The issues would provide
strieier cootrola for the cmstructi.on and operation rA
ruclear power plants, require
minimum amounts of
electricity and natural gu at
the lowest rates to help the
poor and elderly, create a
residential ctrmmer group
to figbt rate hikes before the

LB.

COLUMBUS (UP!) Scripps-Howard Newspapers
said today that liberal Democrats will be tbe target o! a
utlllty-initiated group's U
milUon fight against .four
proposed statewide ballot
issues being pushed by a
coosurner coalititrl known as
Obloans for Utillty Reform
(OUR).
The neWspaper chain cited
a JX'ivate, day-l!Xlg meeting
of 57 Citizens for Safe, l&lt;Jwer
Cost Electricity (all.CE ),
nearly one-third ci whom
come from the utility

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VeterBIIII Memorial Hospital
.ADMITTED - Harold
King, Pomeroy; Ruby Smith,
Middleport;
Margaret
Hayden, Pomeroy; Arnold
Bush, Point Pleasant; Uoyd
Williams, Clifton, W. Va.;
Luther Friend, Long Bottom;
Nancy Neutzling, Syracuse;
Patsy Oiler, Middleport·
Virginia Lee, Pomeroy; Paul
Burns, Pomeroy; Clyde
Sayre, Racine; Carolyn
Gilmore, Rutland; Gladys
Rumfield, Pomeroy.
D IS C H A R G E D
M
argaret Barrett; Bill
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Avery Searles.

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CHUCK STEAK

Holzer Medical Ceater

Cl!D~Kharges,Aug.Z3)

arence .Barcua, Archie
Bond, William Curfman,
John Faulkner, RDsa Griffith,
Mrs. Albert Harmon and
daughter, Charlotte Hub·
bard, George Knox, Dean
Markin, ·Ada Ohtinger, Roxy
Oiler, Averill Robinson, John
Sigman, Jr., Virginia Swain,
James H. Walker, Dorothy
Watson.
!Birtb, Aug. 23)
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Proffitt,
son, Jackson.

~--------------~ ~
•.:IGS HIGH SCHOOL IS
IN NEED OF MULCH .

,......a...~

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ASK TOWED
Cecil Dwight Frye, 22, ,
Route I, Rutland, and Vic·
For seeding new athletic facilities
torla June · Donahue, 21,
near the school, any one having
Route 1, Rutland; Roger Dale
Arix, . 18, Harr.laonviUe, and
straw or hay to give away or sell is
Sharon Lynn Haning, 16,
asked to call 742-3051 or contact
Albany; Ronald Wayne
school authorities.
McCarty, 27, Route 2,
Cheshire, and Sarah Ellen
l&gt;unn, 36, Middleport..
. ..,...
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�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 24,1976

:

OPEN SUNDAYS- 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M•

Desegregation works says U. S. Commission
•
difficult witll such an
emotional issue as busing.
"On balance, however, this
school desegregation works report makes lt. clear that
- but only when community substanital progress Ia being
leaders and elected officials made in the desegregation of
at aU levels of government our schools," concluded the
report . The
act positively , the U.S. 315 -page
Commission on Civil ·Rights commlaslon also said that
while some school dlatricts
said IDday.
It fails, as it did in Bostoo "have experienced a
and l&lt;Ju!Jlville, when local significant decline In white
officials do no.t exercise , enrollment, evidence 1\oes not
support the widely held belie!
enough leadership
som e times po ii tica ll y
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - In
the vast majority of cases,

that
urban
school
desegregation causes
masaive white !tight."
However, the commisaion
criticized President Ford and
meJllberS of Congress who It
said seek to curb the power of
the courts in the school
integration proctss.
"Such efforts undermine
the desegregation process
and jeopardize the rights of
minority students, " the
commission said .
" Furthermore , these

•

attempts cootrlbute to the "Fulfilling the Letter and
position of aome indlviduals Spirit of the Law that desegregation can be Desegregation of the Nation's
avoided."
Public Schools" was based on
The cornmisaion said it 10 months of hearings and
''lakes issue" with Ford's open meetings in eight cities,
pr o p o s e d
S c h o o 1 including vola We Boston !llld
Des e greg a ti on a n d l&lt;Juisvllle, plus case studles
AssistanCe Act which "seeks of . 29 other school dlatricts
both to narrow the definition and a survey of 1,300 school .
of illegal segregation and to districts.
"Desegregation works "
restrict the scope of remedles
available w the courts."
· said the commission, addfug
The Commission reP&lt;&gt;rt, that It was working "In the
vast. majority of schools In
Boston and l&lt;JulsviUe, In
spite of the detennlnatlon of
some citizens and their
leaders to thwart its

Dole talks in Carter's tracks
By JOHN MllliiE
billion could he cut from the
United Press International
billion Pentagon budget
President Ford apparently request now pending before
. has appointed his Republican Congress.
vice presidential running
Dole follows Carter
mate, Robert Dole, as a one· Wednesday with his own·
man "ll'uth squad," and sent Speech to the Legionnaires.
him after his ~mocratic Carter will be in Des Moines,
opponent, Jimmy Carter.
Iowa, Wednesday to detiver
Carter speaks today before what is billed as a major
an
American
Legion agricultural policy speech
conv~ntion in Seattle where
Wednesday morning at tbe
he is expected to restate his. Iowa State Fair.
position in favor of a military
The Kansas senator plans
thllt is strong but not l&lt;J follow Carter again In the
wasteful; he has said Hawkeye slate.
between $5 billlon and $7
Meeting with reporters

'113

Monday in Washingl&lt;Jn, Dole
said : ''I might he attacking
Carter's positions. We'd llke
to keep him honest.."
Carter worked his way up
the West Coast Mooday. He
met with 50 HollywOod stars
at a morning party aiTanged
by actor Warren Beatty .
Among those attending were
Carroll O'Connor , Louise
Lasser, Sidney Poitier, Faye
Dunaway, Diana Ross, Nell
Simon, Lee Grant apd George
Peppard.
Displaying some of the
most intense emotion of his
c.arnpalgn so far, Carter told

Carter would forgive, no.t
forget Viet draft evaders

the bejeweled audlence :
"Public servants ... have a
special responsibility to
bypass the big shots,
including you and people like
you ... and make a concerted
effort to understand people
who are poor, black, speak a
foreign language, who 'are not
well educated, who are
inarticulate, who are timid,
who have some monummtal
JrOblem.''
With the Carter campaign
off and running, Ford is still
in the planning stages at his
VaU, Colo., retreat. He Ia
meeting with campaign aides
between rounds of golf and
parties. Aides said the
PreSident planned to spend a
few days each week
campaigning.
" The'
PreSident is not a man to stay
in the Oval Office," one
said.
Back in Washington,
another former Georgia
governor announced his
candidacy lor president,
seeking the liclitlnation of the
conservative group · that
meets this week in Ollcago.
Lester Maddox, who won
fame as a segregationist,
· appeai'edina tiny hotel room
wearing a star~gled, red·
white-and-blue tie.
He quoted a publication of
the right wing Uberty Lobby
that linked Carter with rock
musicians and producers "people dealing in drugs and
pornography," he said.

equivalency" in direct
milit$ry
stre!lgth and in
SEATI'LE (uPf) ~Jimmy
strategic
nuclear
fcrces.
Carter told the American
"Yet, as we seek an
Legion today ihat, as
adequate defense, we must
president, he would grant a
face the fact that the very
blanket pardon- for draft
words 'national security'
evaders to end ''the damage,
have fallen into disrepote . 1
hatred and divisiveness of the
want to • hear those wcrds
.Viebiam war."
spokim
with respect once
Carter also said he would
again."
·
maintain adequate U.S. mill·
Carter
said
"whatever the
tary strength through a
pice
and
whatever
the pressdefenae that is " lean,
w-es,"
the
presidmt
must
· muscular and flezible."
Insist on a natlCIIal .defense
In remark! prepared for
"that is lean . and muscular
the Legion's national
and flezible."
"
· coovention in Seattle, Carter
Carter
proposed
cutting
said the pardon issue was
down on military ·transfers,
''about the single hardest
Increasing
the number of
· deci8ion I have had !I) make
students
per military
during tbe campaign."
instructors,
and
halting cost
"I think it Ia time for the ·
overruns - which he said
damage, hatred and divisivewould save billlons.
lies!! of the VIetnam War to he
Car·t er was critical of
119er," the Demucratlc presi·
President Ford dwing his
dential I!O!Da... 'said. "I do
atop in Los Angeles Mcmday
rot favor a biu*et •J!IN!IIy,
before the Town Hall Forum.
rut 1or ~ who violated
Selective Service laws, I new weapms; ml by "a He called for a "tearing down
One driver was cited in
intend to grant a blanket mutual search for peace" of the wall between the
three
area aulD accidents
president
....
Congress
and
with
armament
reduction
perdlm.
probed
Monday ,by the Gallia·
among
the
nations.
between
the
govemmmt
and
"To me, tbere Ia a
Meigs
Post, Staie Highway
the
people."
Carter called for ''rough
diffaeutoe. Amnesty means
Patrol.
Anita E. Campbell, 16,
frown City, was cited to
CINCINNATI (UPI) odometer reading of that car for Olno to adopt its own laws juvenile court for failure Ill
Ohio Attorney General. should be permanently if neighboring states do not yield the righklf-way in an
William ·J. Brown said recorded on that title," said have similar controlll. He accident , at 4:45 p.m. on
Mmday the problem of car Brown. "That way, anybody said cars with rolled back County Rd: a2 and Ti'IT."IIit.
dealers who roll back interested in buying that used . odometers could still be :IJl.
odometers had "reached car can ll'ace the title to moved into Ohio for sale and
AcCording to the patrol,
epidemic proportions in determine the true mileage conswners would not know Miss Campbell pulled from
&lt;lllo" beceuse
are tiot history of the car."
the mileage history of the Twp. Rd. :IJl, onto eounty Rd.
enougb laws to control
Brown said it was useless car.
52, as Greg E. Hinshaw, 17,
dllbmat U1led car .dealers.
Huntington, was north bound
Brown made the statement
on Road.S2. As be came upon
in remarks prepared for
the Campbell vehicle, Hln·.
delivery to tbe Midwest
"'"fliil'
shaw applied his brakes and
Regional Conference of. the
Arninorone-caraccidentat fenceandhedgeontheAgnes Campstidinbe~ thehi 1rear of the
National Association of Tuppers Plains was in- Hill property. Driver of the
ve c e. . . .
~tomeyH~lhaberaDe. .
vestigated Monday by the other ·vehicle was not iden: I DTbere were sl~ohtmJurtthes.
e Jll'l¥iOOW I states .Meigs County Sheriff's tilled. Damage to the Wells ,amage was tg to e
adOpt unlforrnlawsto combat Depariment.
vehicle was minor and there Campbell auto and moderate
Uled car dealers who roll
The department report"~~ was no citaUon
to the Hinshaw vehicle.
back odometen.
that William Marlon Wells,
·
At 3' 05 p.m . on Rt. 7• two
''I am propoling that all 68, Tuppers Plains was
•
miles north of County Rd. 15•
states adopt a law which not traveling at 8 a.m. on the . Three JUtJKments
a truck driven by Ron Foose,
20 • Ravenswood, W. Va.,
only probiblts odometer roll· Arhaugh Addition Road when
backa rut requires that the the accident occurred. The .in suit filed
backed from a parking lot
odometer record of any au- driver said that be observed
and struck an unatteilded
tomoblle
become
a
th
h·
parked vehicle owned by
.......,_ent part of the title ano er , ve tcle coming
Three judgments were J
H 'It
L
..-·l&lt;lward him on the wrong side
ames ami on, ower
..... _ of that a tomobll "
Monday in Meigs River Rd · Tbere were no
·
-•
u
e, and that to avoid an accident entered
--'d
Jlro
County
Common
Pleas Court. 1' nj ur 1•es. Damage was
..,
wn.
be went off the road on the
"H you sell ~ il8ed car, the left. The vehicle struck
In the case of Wal~r R. modera~ w the Hamilton
a CrookS, Middleport vs. Joe E. vehicle. There were no
Bowland and Polly Bowland, citation.
,.,....,...._ __.:.
Buckeye Lake, Judge John C.
The third accident was
· dgm t f
Bacon gave a JU
ent 1o reportedatS:lOp.m.in Meigs
. .M 64
t 'ght
.,..,.,.. a et
percen n· County on Twp. Rd. l:IJl, south
~rest to O'ooks.
. 1 of County Rd. 3.2.
The Pomeroy Nattona
The patrol said a vehicle
·
t'
· · t
Ba nk m
an ac ton agams driven north by Corbet 0.
Amy K. Jones, JackSon and Cleek, 48, Racine, and one
Rona ld Thomas of the All
.d driven south by Luke s.
Wea ther Har dware, Ma • McDaniel, 23, l&lt;Jng Botl&lt;Jm,
· tded $1 368
dieport was awa
, · collided in a sharp curve.
A default judgment entry poth vehicles had moderate .
against Thomas , and All damage. There were no ·
Wea ther ·m the amoun t of citations or Injuries.
$2,736.24 was made in favor of
Apex Feed and Supply, Inc .,
l'";j;---...__________:::._.;__:__ __, .Marietta.
By wESLEY. G, PIPPERT

that what Y0\1 did is right. A
pardon means tha.t what you
did-right or wrong- is
forgiven."
.
Saying he believed in patri·
otism, Carter said that hun·
dreds of thousands of
Viell)am veterans met the
same 'bitter reception. at
home as did his son, Jack. ile
added, "I believe very
strongly that those scenes
and the national mood they
reflected amount Ill nothing
less than an American
tragedy."
Carter Ia in the third day of
a t!Jree.day West. ~ trip
before the for.mal start of the
presidential campaign on
Labor Day.
Carter &lt;;ited three ways to
maintain "adequate military
strength" lor the nation-by .
a committment to necessary
military expenditures; by

One driver
cited in

=:~~nml~

3 accidents

Odometer laws needed in all states--Brown

there

Accident is inves.;n-ated.

.
ey'll
OQ
It Every Time
Th

..-•

pwpose."

. .

In Boston and Louisville,

the Commission said, 1118JlY
of the problems related to
desegregation can be traced
to the failure of publlc
officials
to
exercise
leadership in support of court
O·r d e.r e d s c h o o 1
desegregation .
"Perhaps the
most
important ingredient in
successful school
desegregation is leader!hip,
both at the cmununity level
and in the schools," the
commission said.
II also said that while many
school districts have put

FRESH FRYING CHICKENS

Dal1as schools opened peacefully
Ualted l'nN Jaler.llolllll
Dallal ~ebooll opeDed peacefdJ folollday Qllder a eaut«dertd balbll
plan to acblew deupoepdoa bal uappeall eoan deell*allpblldlal a LaaJ1.
.We, Ky., buala&amp; pllll could caue pnbleml wileD ICbooll opeD !ben aes1
week. BlactlllldeiiiiiD Loallillll'l Rapkll Parllb boJcoUed palllle ICMoia le
proteat aaotller baalq order.
Dallas -the udoa'a eleblb lartett )llblie ICbool .,.tem - peleellll,.
lmplemeat.ed the CW't"rdered bulDI of 11,100 bladl, wbtte ud Mellen·
Amerieaa lltudenll 111 ~fad• fw tbroqb e.bl. 111e plaa .aimed le bl'llll
llludeaU popiJ[atloaa ID ap[II'Qidlllate ptuporil011 1!1 tile Nelal &lt;COIIIeat of
systemwide earollmellt - 3U per ceat wlllte, IU per ceal bladluct 1L7 per
cent Mezlcaa·American.
Additional IO,IIGO llllldeats wen wlallriiJ baled to e~~~rlated
mapet higllllcllools or under alber volalllar)'
plaal. Olllu Sebo*
Superbltendeat ,Nolu Eltes penoaally drove oae baJ _. predicted
· unparalleled com!Danll)' support ollbe buiiDf pin waald llllke It a model for
the patlon.

••
••

''

'.;

QUANTITIES RIGHTS RESERV£0

'I

'.

Open Eves. Til9:00.

lnl....,..

desegregation plans into
effect, "numerous others
remain segregated." Figures
from 1974, the most r001nt
avaUable, show that 4 of
every 10 black students and 3
of every 10 Hispanic heritage
students attend schools with a
90 per cent minority
enrollment.
Recommendations :
- Leaders at all levels,
inchKiing the national, "must
accept the fact that
desegregation the nation's

schoolll Ia a constitutional
imperative."
- 'lbe federal govemment
-must strengthen ml exp8nd
JI'OIJ'BmS designed to eue
the desegreg&amp;Uon pracea,
particularly through
increasing lll(lley for 'nUe IV
of the Civil Rights Act
[I'Oviding tecllllc.ai. 11111181·
ance for deset~regating I!Chool
diJtrlcts.
- Then must be vigorous
enforcement of laws which
contribute
to
tbe

We Accept·Federal Food Stamps

I -

' '

desegregation process, with
both the president and '
Qnsr- ma1t1nt1 a cmcerted
effort
to
facilitating •
metropolitan residential
dellegregatlon.
•
- A inajor invellment"of'
time and money needs to be·
made "to deal with the
miaconce~ relative to
deaegregatlon ," particularly
miaconcepLion concerned
with. what Ia constitutionally;
required by llw and the role ·
of white !tight.
.
·•

FAMILY
. KEEILER

PAK

:· HONEY
,,
.GRAHAMS

Utilities back group

LB.

'

";

•

'

LEGS &amp; THIGHSLB.

fighting ballot issues
PubUc Utilities Commission
of Ohio and eaae legal
requirements to get initiative
and nferendiUil issues on the
statewide ballot.
OUR will likely fall short of
the 307,201 valid petition
signatures needed to qualify
for the ballot, said AsSistant
Ohto Secretar.y of State
James Marsh. He said he
expects to know by Friday or
Moodsy how many additional
names the gro~ will need to
meet the requlranent.
· Even if OUR c.an collect the
needed names, it still faces a
industry.
.
legal challenge from GSLCE,
which
last Friday quietly
Conservative Republicans,
filed
suit
against Secretary ~
the group was told, are
State
Ted
W. Brown in the
considered to be on the side of
Supreme
Court
of &lt;lllo.
the utility induatry In the
a&gt;LCE
asked
the court to
potential fight. As a result,
mooey, media and llllqlOWer rrevent the issues from being
will be directed at the state's put on the baDot because
liberal
~mocrats . to , Ba:own allegedly violated the
cmvihce them to vote against law in proeelllling petltiOIIJ.
the four issues, if they win The high court ill ezpecled to
places on the Nov. 2 ballot. act on the request after Se~.
Former state Democratic 7.
party Ol8irman Eugene P.
O'Grady, ezecutive director
of a;LCE, is !~ding the liglt
to woo Democratic voters.
The issues would provide
strieier cootrola for the cmstructi.on and operation rA
ruclear power plants, require
minimum amounts of
electricity and natural gu at
the lowest rates to help the
poor and elderly, create a
residential ctrmmer group
to figbt rate hikes before the

LB.

COLUMBUS (UP!) Scripps-Howard Newspapers
said today that liberal Democrats will be tbe target o! a
utlllty-initiated group's U
milUon fight against .four
proposed statewide ballot
issues being pushed by a
coosurner coalititrl known as
Obloans for Utillty Reform
(OUR).
The neWspaper chain cited
a JX'ivate, day-l!Xlg meeting
of 57 Citizens for Safe, l&lt;Jwer
Cost Electricity (all.CE ),
nearly one-third ci whom
come from the utility

FRESH - MEAlY

BOX
17

Frost Proof ·

INSTANT .

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$399~95*

-

TEA

...... ......···-·"''

ewr-a.-,.---- ...... --lo.o.......nlothoti.IL
trNt illl .,. IICH ..rt1t tht ..... ltri ..,. •II p yow a 11111 trocM h'l Ofl
II pf M ..., lhil wil lte .... eff lUI' , . . lOw pnc..

BREASTS

LB.

WINGS

LB.

NESTE A

"·ft.

voui

LB.

BACKS &amp; NECKS

'I'H'IIt I7S...Af..._.t

READY FOR BARBECUING

3 oz.
JAR

SPLIT. FRYERS

TEEN QUEEN .

.BUnER .BASTED
4-9 LB. AVERAGE

TURKEYS

Hospital News

LB.

USDA CHOICE

1-LB.

VeterBIIII Memorial Hospital
.ADMITTED - Harold
King, Pomeroy; Ruby Smith,
Middleport;
Margaret
Hayden, Pomeroy; Arnold
Bush, Point Pleasant; Uoyd
Williams, Clifton, W. Va.;
Luther Friend, Long Bottom;
Nancy Neutzling, Syracuse;
Patsy Oiler, Middleport·
Virginia Lee, Pomeroy; Paul
Burns, Pomeroy; Clyde
Sayre, Racine; Carolyn
Gilmore, Rutland; Gladys
Rumfield, Pomeroy.
D IS C H A R G E D
M
argaret Barrett; Bill
Queen, Gladys Goulding ,
Avery Searles.

LB.

• PKG.

CHUCK STEAK

Holzer Medical Ceater

Cl!D~Kharges,Aug.Z3)

arence .Barcua, Archie
Bond, William Curfman,
John Faulkner, RDsa Griffith,
Mrs. Albert Harmon and
daughter, Charlotte Hub·
bard, George Knox, Dean
Markin, ·Ada Ohtinger, Roxy
Oiler, Averill Robinson, John
Sigman, Jr., Virginia Swain,
James H. Walker, Dorothy
Watson.
!Birtb, Aug. 23)
Mr. and Mrs. Tony Proffitt,
son, Jackson.

~--------------~ ~
•.:IGS HIGH SCHOOL IS
IN NEED OF MULCH .

,......a...~

PRICES EFFECTIVE AUGUST 24 THRU 28

ASK TOWED
Cecil Dwight Frye, 22, ,
Route I, Rutland, and Vic·
For seeding new athletic facilities
torla June · Donahue, 21,
near the school, any one having
Route 1, Rutland; Roger Dale
Arix, . 18, Harr.laonviUe, and
straw or hay to give away or sell is
Sharon Lynn Haning, 16,
asked to call 742-3051 or contact
Albany; Ronald Wayne
school authorities.
McCarty, 27, Route 2,
Cheshire, and Sarah Ellen
l&gt;unn, 36, Middleport..
. ..,...
, ---------------'

COUPON

CRYSTAL WHITE

SKIPPY

'LIQUID
48 .oz. Bn.

6g~

125' E. Main Street ~~2171
Pomeroy. Olio
Luo,..Ju $15.000 lh,.;,,h Til&lt; t11y Luori

,.

Com pony . ·

......'

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,.' .

PEANUT BUllER

FOR DISHES

WIC

79¢

NO. 105
18 OZ. JAR

'.

Expires 8-28-76 '
Twin City Gateway

NO. 105
12 OZ. SIZE

W/C

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ALL GRINDS

1-l.B.CAN
NO. 155
Expires 8-28-76

·Expires 8-28-76
Twin City Gateway

. . . . . .' . . . . . . .

COUPON

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10

-~DaUySenUMI,Wd~~::~{;;;;,~;:~ur.u;;or
Astro.L'
Graph•
Th t

Regl6nal Manpower

Ser"ice Council , Ar&lt;l

inc.ludes

Hocking ,

Berntce 8ede O•ol
For~•dn••d•y, ~ug. 25, 1171

ARIES (March 21 -Aprtl 1f)
There are eaceptionat career
opportun ities around you to·
day, but you' ll have to ferret
them oul. Your imagination Is a
great asset.

Ptrrv,

Noble ,

8,

which

Morgan ,

INFORMATION

Wash i ngton , Athens, and
Meigs counties , has anounccd
ils plans for FV ' 77 for Title I ,

DEADLINES
s
P .M .
Oay
Before
Pl.fbllcltlon .

fu n d ~d througr. the Com
prehen~ f ve Employment and

CancellatJons,

tun
GEMIN I (May 21 -Juno 20) A
major cha11ge is In store for
you It wi ll develop qu1te
su ddenly and will work out as If
you' d plan ned It'

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Some good news could ca use
you to do an abou t-face on
you r plans Have the engine
runnmg. Travel may be 1n ~
valved

Pomeroy
OF
QUALI'rY; Motor Co.

""d un(lerer')'lployed , Inc luding
heads of hOuseholds . ~eterens .
youth t'nd young adults ,
hand !ca pped
and
older
workers. Progra m activities
Inc lude Classroom tra ining
( rnst l t utional c lassroom
train in g ,
less .tha n -clan .
! r aining
ln
private
in SIJtut l ons ). on -the - lob
training , Work E~&lt;per i en ce.
and serv ices to enroll ees
(outrea c h recru it ment. in ,
take, assessmen t, orientation. ,
couns eli n g, coach lpg . job
development and p lacemen t,
and e m ergency a1d ) . The
follow i ng support ive services
were fo und to be In ne ed : I )
transportation ; 2) health ; 3)
ct1ild care , and , &lt;I ) Legal

insertion

RATES

For W~nt Ad Servin
5 cents Ptr word one
insertion
Minimum Charge 11 .00 ,
14 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions .
16 cen ts p!r word she
consecutive Insertio ns .
25 Per Cent Discount on
pa i d ads ·and ads pa id
within 10 days .

1968 Chevy Belair 307 Automati C, LOCUST POSTS , round or $pli t.
n&amp;w tires. low mileage, e~t ·
Phone 9A~ · 277 •
cellen t cond ition Best offer
cOAL . limes tone and colcium
Colt 992-570'1.
chloride ond c.olc1um bnne for
1967 Chevy , one-half ton pk kup·
dvst control and speCial mix ing
new poin t jOb no rust , runs
soli for formers Motn Street ,

NOTICES

ATTN . !!

ALL HOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales, Rummage .
Porc l'l and Base ment Porch
and Basement Sales, etc .
must be paid In advlnte .
Get yours in early by
stoppin g by our office a t
Ttle Daily Sent inel , 111
&lt;;ourt Sl or wrillnq Bo ,.,
129 , Pomeroy , Ol'l ro &lt;~5 769
with your remittance

good . Phone 7,.2·3081.

~·IOJj ~~~~
IN Memory ot Morr Ebhn

God watcned yov whle you suf fered .
And He knew ou h od your ' hare,
He tenderly closed your weary

eyel
And took you in Hls c. ore
De-or God, pleose to'ke t:hts

menoge
To our loved one upobove,
Tell G randma how muc.h we miss

And grve het"" al l our lo"e
k tty, Crystal and J~~! ~all

~~Jnlalt

airliner.
"At first we planned to
marry In tbe Olamellllandl,
where we 1re going now,"

Tool, a nicbtcltj) perfcnuer,
said. "Bat we had to cancel
that beca111e you have to be
remdent f« at least 1~ days.
We dldn't want to wait that
long."

.

I! aiUCK'S PLAN
· McLEAN, Va. (UPI) -

Lyndon Jolutlon's son-in-law,
Cbarles S. Robb, wiD work for

l

Democrall in the fall
electlona and then decide
whether to run for lieutenant
governor- of VIrginia In the
1977 race.
"I have done nothing to
form
a
camps!gn
«ganizatlon or staff and I
have not solicited support
from anyone," Robb aald. "A
I1UII1ber of people, bOWllver,
have said lf I run they would
\ Uke to help me. I'm keeJ)ing
track of thoee people."
' Robb, '11, who married
;; Lynda Johnaon In 1967, ill a

-----

-

·-·

Deed Records.

Sa i d pet Itlon will be for
hear ino on th e 21st day of
september , 1976 , et t he
Common Pleas Courtroom at
Pomeroy , Oh io.
Clifford Jacobs
Otto Lohn
Ernest Powell
Robert Barton
Gerald Pullins ·
Kathy Pullins
Trustees Laurel CtiH Fr~
M ethoidst Church , Inc .
(8) 24, 31. (91 7.,.

furnitur•~ Ice

bo)les , bron

beds, woll

telephones and
ports, or complee households.
Write M 0 Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeror, onio. Coii~~7 ~6C2_
CASH po1d for all makes ond
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614·•23-9531 .

2270.
WtLl CAR~ el derly women in

c. "'I ~orne _.f:hone '192·7314.

NOTIC£5: Kltlens, contocf Freddie
Houdo~;helt,

today recuperating
from a three-week bolpltal
home

llay for IW'IIei'Y to replace
her rllht blp.
1 A IJII)btPNn llid the 1MI

~oOldiiC!I!WIWU reJeued

Grande
Cotlege - Community Colleg•
Fall Registration, Sept. 13, 197b
Allen Hall , 9a _m. 9p m .

-

lOANS available. 520 up to any
amount Phone Subramon,on,

play and movie "~.·.•
l llldenent lht ~~qery Ill
MJect a chronic artl!rltlc
. cmdltion.

I

'

•

Farms

Clelpnd

Roci ne,

AT 949-2801

OhiO.

HoNDA CL·•SO. 12,000

miles , msy bar , crash bors,
pull boc.k handle bars, new tire
and seols , Sc.rombler s1de

--

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

NORTH

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

llfMDIIIIT

8oK21·A
Rutland, Olllo 4!775
""'(6141742-24119
We Dtllvtr
7·28-4 mos .

SIOIIJC.IGfFIIT

BORN LOSElR '

... !.{OU'REO OOT

AS 'SMPfJ AS
NAY~T 1

pipes. S650. Coil 9"·2•80.

--

SWIMMING
POOU

Cons1ructlon Progress
- complete School S.nlce
u neltrtr•~u•te &amp;
Elltmtnluy
School P.ck19t Plclurn
Senioti&amp; Yearbook

Above anti below gt'llunol
pool kill tor lha do-lt·
yourstH man.
'
All pool suppllas available,

- W•d•tngl-

KEN GROVER

94'· 2860

PhOfOfrlphy

8·9·761 month

•

Nobkl Summit Rd ..
Mtddltpor1
PHONE 992-5724
7·21-1 mo.

Chuter. Ohio
8·18 ·1 mo

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
LITTLE

-......--·~---

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Aeriol-lnduslrial

--

IN DAsH 23 chonnel C8, om ·fmmpx rodro , 3 frock stereo Coli

American
Auto Sales

Construction Progress

-Compklte School Service
Undergraduale &amp; ·
Elementary
School Pack19a Pic!ures
Seniors &amp; Yul'book
- Wedcllngs-

----

Even ings .

KEN GROVER

ONE Trotwood camper 1ra1ler, 16 18 FT seobr;--;; ~ith 4sh~
ft . s. lee,p~ 6 , gas electric,
Chrysler engine , troller ond ski
refr1gerotor, new !ires , oc·dc
accessOrieS good condition
lights , spore tire, very c.leon .
$900 00 Phone I lOA -675 2~15
See lo opreoofe, phone 949·
K£NNEMC wmter porotos . Coli
2714.

Photography
915-4155
Chestec, Ohto
7-14-1 mo.

----·---

Revive the
of y9ur rugs.
your bwn home
by Von Schrader
dry·foam method.
No muss. No fuss.
No odor. Use the
same daY·
All work

Winshleld Replacement
Free Eslima!es
On BodyWork
Expert Painting
lnsuranco Work
We Ieoine
St. R! . 7 ,
Coolville, Ohio
667.3127
7·29·1 mo.

paranleltl.

Abbott.
WELL , IF MV

Lorge lots w1th concrete pohos,

s•dewalks, runners ond

off

... s~eet ~r_k_1ng. P~~992 · 717~9

3 Room lurnrshed house w1th
both. Adults only. Phone f/92.
~S3~ .

-

------apartments

ot

for $10-4 monthly plus ele&lt; or
$130 includ ing electric . LOWE~

$500 REWMD

RATES

FO~

SENIOR CITIZENS.

Convenient to shoppi ng on
Th1rd ond Mill Streets in M 1d·

dleJX&gt;rt 8•ond now h1gh quol1·

For the arrest and
convfclion oll!t~ person or
persons who illegally shol
my rabbit dogs. N.y """
MVing intormallon. plea"'
call the sheriH's oKlee.
Pomeroy, Ohio

fy oporlments . See ti'le
mohoger of Apt, 16, or coil

m -7721.
AvAIL ABLE ot Riverside._l\port·
menls , 1 bedroom a!)Orl·
ments, $100 per month : 2
bedroom apartments, $133 per
month One pr1ce lor oil . Phone

992·3273

Elga Bar1imus
3

~ -iflr
~
LOST: A month old nanny goot,
brown and whlte Lost 1n Forest
Run area. Phone m.-272i. .

------·

room furn ished oportment,
uhliheli furnished. Cell 9'92·

3129.

FORRENT:

two bedr_o_o_
m-s.""'b oth,
country lo cc tion .
neor

good body .

run ~

good

Phone992-7797.

$250

i,

Ville~e . Phone 992 -7365.
--:------:-:MAYTAG automot1c washer AS Unin.. 41 more units under con· BUILDING , remodeling , and
repo1rs . Quality work., efficient
good ~hope, S3S Phone 99'2·
struction . lntludes 19 mobile
serv1ce. Jene Rodman, phone
7797
nomes. 2 apartments, I seve.1
9'12·5980.
room frame home oil rented
MARliN 22 lever ac l1on w1th KA
Off•c• and doublewide owners DOZER work and welding Con·
scope o{l d sfing .J Phone 99'2·
tact James Parsons , Rt I,
res1dence Wash house, shop,
5210
Racine, on Carmel Rood ,
storage
sheds
ond
supply
-27o
H:-o-;:11-on-cd;-;boler. N;;t-deo
trorler Appro~t:lmoely 15 ocres INTERIOR ond e~&lt;terior polntiJli
hary 'ondit1oner Both m good
fronting on EOst Morn and Carr
ond roof pointing by hour or
shope . Coil 843 2272 after S
St .. State Rt . 93, ~bl ocks from
contract, e~t:cellent references.
pm ------....._._
downtown , 2 blocks from Ap·
Phone 992 -601 i..
polcx:hion Highwoy, 2 biO&lt;ks
from shoppi ng center, 20 m1les
trom Pike Co . Atomic Plant
(which IS being doubled in
size). Must be seen to be ap1 Onl'f - Ntw Lawn t;.Ciger.
Reg . SlOI.II
precJoted . Must sell due to
Close Out Price SIO.
poor health and other reasons . HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. Mtddleport, near Rutfond .
1 Only - Power GlrdenIf interested coil . oreo code
Call992-7481.
Ofch.ud Spr.1yer . Reg .
(6U ) 286-2832 for oppo1ntment ,
Si.OJ .i.2 Clost Out Price SJ-40.
or stop by o ffi ce ot of55 Carr Sf . NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
22" Self· PropetteCI Power
or 730 E. Morn St. , Jackson ,
all elec., I acre, Middleport ,
Mowers
tri991 &amp;
Ohio
45640
close to Rutland Phone 992·
StraHon Eng l l'le . Reg .
UBI
111 9.ts
Close Out Price
1 Oi, Acre lot for ; le , one·fourtll
$9U5
mile off Rt 7 a t Five Points on SMALL form for sole, 10% down ,
blacktop •ood. Coll i '(:JQ.I ) 773·
owner financed . Monra. Coun ·

- --

___

. .:.====c.::.-----

r---,.--------,
lawn &amp;Garden Sale

PometiiJ Landmark

•

S490.

Jack W1 (IIttY. Mgr.
Phone ft1·2111

Pom.-oy. Phone 992·7666, ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
9'12·7133 or992·2318.
2-Bedroo,;';;;btle home, Oe~t;;

2 new 3 bedroom homes for
sate on acre lrJc ts, one with
buement , on e withOut Call

992 ·J4S4 ot !6W "" 9568
Lee Constructio n

-:-::~

tv• Work

ct home , no 8K·
penence net es1ary ex ·
cellent pay . Wri te Amer1can
Service, 6950 Woy:ota Blvd ,
Suite 132, Mlnneopolis . MN

55.&lt;26
DEMONSTRATORS

AND

MANAGER needed lo work
with the oldest Toy &amp; Gift Shop
ParJy Pion tn the co untry.
Hi9hest commlssionl · No In·
vestment , Call or wri te todoy ,
SANTA's Parties , Avon, Conn .

$.f71 30

married

Army

Call

C(l llect

2 Bedroom tro ller, $28 per mon th
all utrlil•es paid Phone 992·
332•

2

payments . Phone (6li.) 667·

3817.

Fot~~;.~:,~f~;f~~TRuMPET.

saxophone ,
bedroom furnitur e , J. .V .. miJs t
go, moving. Phone 992 2622 .

tenor

sAL~--;;;;;dt~i.·s. col.;;
593·3022-385-6318.·---c-- FOR
ond block and white Horrison'a

----

see790MopleSt,, M1dd ~

WANTED· -4 tlousewlve$ , i. hours
per clay, 4 days p ... week, $.4 .00
per hour. Call for appointment:

m -2'127, 919-2803 or 949·2786.

------.-·-----

TV Service, 276 Sycamore St. ,
Mtddleporf, Oh1o. Phone 992-

2522.
·-----........,HAV and straw for

sole . Lorge
round bales and square bale•
Will load . Iorge boles at form.
Royal Oak Form, Rt. 3.
Pomeroy , Ohio Phone (6U)

985-3341..
Wlll DO ddd jobs ,

roof~ng ,

poin.
ling , hauling, tree work , and
mow1ng. Phon&amp;992·7409.

__._....._.,

yARD Sole ,
Wednesday ,
Thursday, Frldoy and Scturday .

- ··-

~-

t2Park Sl , Middi!J&gt;.ort, Oh~
2 Family Yard Sole, Thursday ,
Auoust 26th fro m 9 till 5 p m PlEASURE horses and ponies .
on Route 12A, one-half mile
Also, will do training. Phone
east of .utlond , City Um1ts.
(611) 698·3290, Rurh Roe""' ·
---·-----·Doyle T, HudsO'l residence.
5 Female Shepherd puppies to b.
_ 91.':~Y · Phone 742· 23~-'­

-

-·

MALE , 13 weeks old , poodle.
Phone742·22S9 after 4 p.m.
G;O.RAGE Sot.. . dorhes . boby
AKC
clothes , new fabric matenol, BRITT ANY Sponlel

---

-------

Registered, mole, 11 months
old, tro lnabl• for huntmg
~eo son Phone 992·3493 .

f

TEAFORD

2 yr . old Quarter
Phone
-7A2·'2274
- __.
COLLEGIHEE

Trumpet , very
reosonoble . Phone 992· 7163 .

- ··---- ---,---

LARGE Frigidaire refngerator
with free1wr ocross top. $SO,
Frigidaire electric stot/e, $7S.

Phone'192·5551 Both 9oad
. ·---.

......

!rollers. ont and two
bedroom . all 8 wide, good
shape. Conodoy Troller Court,

USf:D

NEW LISTING-11\odern 4
bedroom home, 2'1• bolhs, 2
family rooms, one with
wood burning fireplace ,
fTlod . ~II . with dl&gt;hwasher,
cook and bake units, dining
area . Formal dining r m ..
large Ioyer, hot water heat,
2 car garage. $51 ,500.
NEW LISTING 4
bedroom mod . home . Nice
kll . with dbl. sink ,
dishwasher, built-In range,
and centra I vacuum
system . Family room,
garage. and near 3 acres.
$46,000.
t2 ACRES - Good 3
bedroom hom•, closets,
mod . bath, nice kit .,
carpeting ,
not .
gas
furnace . and 2 ~rches.
Only $29,500.
12 ROOMS - Old fashion
home used as a 2 family.
U ve In one &amp; rent the other
to help with !he payments.
Only $19.000.
IN THE COUNTRY - 1
rooms, nice bath, mod«n
kitchen with range, F.A. oil

1900 Chestnut St., Gallipolis,
Ohio n.or Sm1th Buick . Phone

(614) 446·1391.
·- -·-....- -

1970 Dodge Stotior1 Wagon , S500.
Guernsey milk cow, excellent

producer , $315. Phone 742·
246()

furnace and

new

2

car

~rage .

t!5

LeveJ ·iot. $17,000.
ACRES Fenced

wnn came now running . 25
K&lt;"es of bottom on Shade
River, large barn, all
minerals with Income from
gas well - free ~·· Only
$30,000
WE HAVE THE MUSCLE
TO SELL •. TRY US ONE
TIME .

,

ty , W. Vo . Phone (304) 772·
3102or (J04)772·3227 .
COUNTRY lormlond with •ocluded woods, wotor ond good oc ·

cess in Monroe County. W. Vo

$1 ,000 down, coil (Jo;) 772·
3102or (:JQ.I)772·3277. 1

,_

I'm sil\4,

1 quess...

nu•IJC,,1
IIAJ!lrnr.
BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com-

to

create

plete Service. Phone 949·2481
or 949-2000 Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

somethinq
that
II be

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR .._
SwHpwrs, toasters , irons, ci_ll
small appllonces . lown mower ,
ned to State H1ghway Garage

on Route 7. Phone (61~) 98S·
3825.
' '
REMODELING, Plurilbln9, hooll ~g

I'm

•*·

porlon ce . Insured tree
estlmoltt. Coli 992·2384 or
(614 )698·7257 Albany.

()one!
"

~

[U~L;:~~::::::::~T}~~i}.~~~ltlA5CFLE;J.5~Ir~~~~~~A'~~~~IzJ~l ~entaJ

SEwiNG MACHINE Repairs, . , .
vice, all mokos, '192·2284. T~o

Fob•!&lt;

Shop ,

., bUt 1 don't want mLj
tombstone to read ...
"Nina
housew\fe !" ~~IT:~u~n

b-+-+--t-

when

and oil types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years
perlence. Phone 992·2•09.
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 yoaro •• ·

or 992·7667 .

HoUsE-~t.:.or~so":l-e ,-:3:-b:-e-d""room-,-.~
oll

'

___ _

Horse fdli e
...,

l'h. tl2·2174

Pomeroy .

Authorized Stngtr Soles ond
Servlte. W,e shorpen Sclstors.

POMEROY - Mulberry
Ave . 2'12 story brick. Upper
has 3 bedrooms , bath, very
nice kitchen, lovely lo live
ln . Lower hos 2 furnished
apts. (always rented) for
good Income . In good
condition. $20,000.00
LOVE(. Y
2
STORY
FRAME
3 Iorge
bedrooms wllh closets .
R.
Large forrral
Nice
k lich en.
carpeting. paneling. ·~:~:
full bal&lt;l!menl with go
ASKING ONLY
GROCERY S
Buildings , ground
stock at a very good oru:e. 1
Beer\ es!abllshed tor manv I
y~ars . An excellent lnc1om,ol
at a very good
(OWNER RETI
WE HAVE 3
BUSINESS FOR
CALL IF INTERESTED.
ABOUT 3
- Cli&gt;se
to Rutland.
bedrooms, bath. Exi:81illftl I
kitchen . Carpeting,
paneling, lull banment.
Fuel Oil F.A. heat. New
steel siding . ASKING
528,000.00
ASK ABOUT OUR OTHER
FINE PROPERTtU- TO
SELL LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER-APPRAISER
-CONSULTANT992·22Sfor ff2-2MI

backhoe work : dump tru~k1

ond fo.boys lor hlro: will houl

Family room fullv
fill dirt, to soil, llmo1tone and
carpeted with waod·burnlng
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fireploce, lorijtlot with storage
fers, day phone 992-7089,
building ond garden space.
night phone 992 ·352S or 992·
ftuslic Hlll1, Syrocu te. Phon• -:;5';;2:7'
32 .:-::;-;:::- -;---;--:-:--

992·7836.

'

' eXCAVATING, do10r, backhoe
8 room house for sale of 126
ond dltoher. Charles R. HotLaurel St., Pomeroy. Phone

field ,

Bock

Ho1

Unstramblr these four JumbltS.

&gt;;;;--+-t--t--1 one letter to e~ch square, to•'"'f:

1:;;--+-+---t-; form

•'"•' ·•· -• ' ·-

..._.,__,__~ L~:...:._;.~~~l7""':1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
Is

THATo FUNNY...
THERE'&amp; NOONE

INSIDE!

licensed

ln1taller. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742 ·2~.

9•9·2154.
SEMIC .TANKS cleaned. Modern
FIVE yoor old four bedroom all
SOn Ilotion . '1'12 ·~ or 992·

LONGFELLOW

One letler s1 mply stands for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoSirophes, the length and focmali?n of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dllferent.

OAN

AMY

ON

GAMEMGQPE

FMD;

AP

SY

, •*trlc home, one lh botht,

242l!l.
garage, a nice lot on Rt. 7 In Will do roofmg , conttructlon,

Tuppers Plains. Would consider

plumbing ond healing. No lob

trade ,

too lora• or too IRJOII. Phone

low

SlOt,

Phone

61 4-667·3'156.

742 ·~.

DNQ

DSGNIMY

.

HEAR NEWS FIRST

..

QASDK . -

GAMFLNEQ

(C) 1916 Kine FraLurts Syndict1.e. Inc.)

I'VE HAD IT
RIGHT UPTO
HERE DOll\)' 1
ELVINE'I '5 '

I

WMPOAM·FM

DADBURN
HOUSEWORK!!

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

8 A.M., The Noon hport,

r

M

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT'S ALWAYS EMBA~ING
TO RUN UNEXPECI'EDLY INTO A GIRL YOU USED TO BE
ENGAGED TO. - P.G. WODEHOUSE

ON

and 5 P.M.

M

'

;

SY

I

..

RIGHT OP

TO HERE!!

I

:•:. _-r

1·1I ~~

~1 -,:;.1';

~

+

1 ,- "" ,, , '
{_L;:'f r,_ _., · I \;

:,;_ c;!!~,. :"'t!;}

'

~-·

--- ·:. fi·· ,._.
__:,- [ / &amp;::!'

\t
~;j ~.._\\.

WHAT T HE 15RAVE
IJU!.l.FI&lt;!&gt;HTER WILL.
DOAN17THEi

RIGDIF

II

CRYPTOQUOTES
AP

b.1

-.1 .,

~~
~~
' ·;..: f..)

AXYDLBAAXR
I GUES:&gt; WHOEVER
WAS DRIVING TH E
CAR HA&amp;00NE
OFF IN &amp;EARCH
OF HELP !

7

four ordrnary words. ·

l...

Service,

'192-5741 .
Rutland, Ohla. Phone 742-2008.
2 bedroom, Iorge modern kll· GIIEG'S Cl SALES, locotod ot Er·
chen, forced olr furnace, Ll;,.
wln's Gulf Service, Mid ·
colnHts. hono992·5737.
dfepc&gt;rl, Ohto. Phone 9'12·
438
'::'".-=-~--,-.,-,-,--,FARM for sole, 46 acres , Jackson c·
• :;;2:;
Coun ty, Wost Virginia, pr)&lt;od SEPTIC Systems lnstallod by
an Inspection . Harrison Smith,
Roclna, Ohio ~5771 . Pha~o

t-trf&gt;jnl AnNOI IJ , .,,.,~~ ' Ill 1 II

35 Camera
stand
'11 Vedic fire
god
38 Early
Jewish
ascetic

ele&lt;trlc.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

r-t--t--t JJl]JWJ]l~ ; lka/"'•gwi'J
.-J..-''V

Levin

buy lor $8.000. Phone '192·3S78, eXCAVATING, dozer, loader and

Phon~ 9'12· 337~

t9?3- 12x60 Vind~;-fraller ,
brtdi- ooms .
Toke
ovtr

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

3 bedroom hou•• for sole at S20
S~como(e St .. MiddlepOrt , good

Virgil B. Sr .. Relllor ,
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0 .
MOBILE home for so le or rent. 3
b~rooms , ol ul111t1et pa id
Phone m -n51 .

........

...,.. s,a~~s~---' I

;e-;

Phone 992 5858

ADDRESSERS wanted IMMEDIATE·

CA LCULATIONS
ARE
COR~T ..

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
SOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2178 DAY
roomli and both in Chester
OR NIGHT.

·,

~HI'*~;e(

fOR SALE a t COff .pnce, rtdmg
mowers; lawn mowers , garden
t11ler McMurray s Supply Com·
FURNISHED, 2 bf!'d~m . oportmen1 ,
pony , Mason, W. Vo . Phone HOUSE l or sole , 3 bedrooms , all
adults only , In Middleport .
electrrc. fully carpeted , fam ily
~J.?.~~m
-:"·Phone992-387• .
room , with t 1reploco, 2 baths ,
Iq?3 Dodge Poloro Custom, all
g AND 4 RM. furn•shed and u n·
stove, refngeratar and drapes
power including fa ctory orr ,
furnished opts , Phone 9'92·
goes w•th h(luse Phone 7A2
goad shope. $1950. Also . 1965
5.&lt;34.
2595 for fu~ther inf(lrmolion .
Chevelle 6 cyl standard ~hilt ,

-----

ORPHAN

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

Chorle s R t-loms , Portland .
Ohio , Ph011e843 2693

.4

''

D.. Bum_prdner

915·41 u

PLEASE

but if you do, remember I
don 't have two aces or
anythmg !hat looks like an
openmg bid."
North's jump to four spades
was a trifle weak lor !his bid ,
but from South's stand~intlt
wa s just what the doctor
ordered He used Blackwood
to check for aces North did
not need an ace for hts JUmp
bid When North showed one
ace, South could btd six with
every expectation of success
There was no!hmg to !he
play Soulh ruffed !he second
club , drew trumps and claim·

•'

lao.

OR

Romagnolls' Table :ZO; American Issues Forum 33.
7:36-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares ~ ~
Let's Deol With II 6; Malch G.me PM t; Prl~ Is
Rlghl JO; To Tell The Truth 13; Nashville on the
Road 15; Robert MocNell Report 20,33.
8:01l-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy DIYI 6,13; Pop! 8,10;
Music Prolecl Pre"""b 33; AI The Top 20.
B· 36-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6. 13; Good Times 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33
9·()()-Movle "The New C~nturlons" 3,4,15; Pilot 6,13;
M-A-S·H 8. 10; Evening 11 Pops 33; Men Who Malle
the Movies :zo.
9.36-PIIot 6,13; Pilot 8.10.
tO .DO-PIIot6,13; Sandy Duncan B; Swllch 10; News 20:
Olympiad 33.
JO .36-Biack Perspective on the News :ZO.
11 ·DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
II :36-Johnny Carson 3.~. 15; Mystery of the Week
6, 13; Movie " Night of the Lepus" I ; Mary Hlrl·
man , Mary Hariman 10: Janak! 33.
12 :DO-Movle " Banyan" 10.
! :DO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

WEDNESDAY, AUGU$T2S, 1976
6:QO-Summer
Semester 10.
·
¥ 75
6:15-Farm
Report
13.
• J 811
6:»-The Story 13.
.
2
6:30-Columbus Today 4 ; News 6; Summer Semesler
8; Christopher Closeup 10.
WEST
EAST
6:45-Mornlng
Report 3.
•
• 10
• J
6·
50-Good
Mornln&lt;;j
.
Weot
Virginia
13.
¥ J82
¥10 93
7:oo-Today 3.~,15 ; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
t K 10 9 3
t Q 6~ 2
News 8, Chuck While Reporls 10.
·
AW V.:Ofl'T St. Fa&lt;
...KQ J73
. A 10965
7
.os-Bugs
Bunny
&amp;
Fr
iends
10.
·
SOUTII IDI
~ OR 1\10 " ~---/1
1 36-Schoolles 10.
.K8 1653
B:DO-Jeft' s Collie 6; Capt. Kangoroo 8,10; Sesame St.
~MRS
¥ AKQ64
33.
t A
8·36-Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4. 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
East-West vulnerab le
Douglas 10; Morning wllh D.J. 13; Mister Rogtrl
West North East South
33.
1•
9:3D-Cross.Wlls 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattleloles 8;
Pass 4 •
Pass 4 NT.
&gt;
Mike Douglas 13; Villa Alegre 33.
Pass 5 t
Pass 6 .
lO:DO-Sonlord
&amp; Son 3,4, lS; Price Is Right 8, 10; Wild
An Arizona reader wants to
Pass Pass Pa ss
&lt;
West
VIrginia
33.
know wha t percentag e of
Openmg lead - K "'
10: l~eneral Hospital 6
Amerrca's top players play
tO . 3D-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 4, 15; Lilias. Yogo &amp;
sta ndard Amerrcan.
'
~ L-~~~--~~~~
You 33.
The answer ts that prac11 :DO-Wheel of Forlune 3, 15; Weekday ~ ; Edge of
tically all of them u~e a
Night 6; Gambll 8,1 0; Former's Daughler 13.
system ba sed on stan dard
t1 .3o-Hollywood Squares 3,~.15. Happy bays 6,13;
Amencan principles , but
Love of Lite B, 10&gt; Biography 33.
every one of them has his own
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Ms Fl&gt;ll 10.
gadgets and spectal bids
12 :DO-Fun Factory 3,t5; Hot Seat 13; Bob Broun 4;
(For a copy of JACOBY
News 6,8, 10; Sesame St. 13.
MODERN, send $ 1 to " Win
12.3D-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13 ; Search
at Br~dge ," cl o th• s
tor Tomorrow 8,10 .
newspaper P 0 Box 489,
12:55-NBC News 3,l5.
Rad;o C1fy Sfat10n , t lew York.
1:DO-NBC' News
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahahue 8;
N Y 1001 9)
Young &amp; lhe Reslless 10; Not For Women Only 15:
Elec. Co 33 .
'
1 3D-Days of our Lives 3,4,15; Famllv. Feud 6,13: As
The World Turns 8,1 0; Evening at Pops 33.
2·00...:s:zo.ooo Pyramid 13 ; Dinah 6.
2.3o-Doclors 3,4,15, One Llle to Live 13 ; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Soundstage 33.
J:DO-A nolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Romagnolls' Table 20.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3· 15-General Hospital 13.
3:36-Bewltched 6; Match Game 8.10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
ACROSS
39 Climb
You :ZO; Ourstory 33 .
1 Out of
40 Become
4 DO-Misler Carloon 3; Merv Grlflin 4. Somerset IS;
danger
complex
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
5 Tread
41 Copy
20,33; Movie " Crack 1n the World" 10; Dinah 13.
4·Jo-Bewrtched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
11 Fragrance
edltor's
Sesame Sl. 20,33; Fllntstones 15
1% Making its
word
S·DO-FBI
3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible
' debut
DOWN
15.
13 Trotsky
1 Sturdy
S:JO.:.Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6; Family Altair 8; Elec.
U AbstracZ "Die
Co. 20,33
tionist,
FlederYesterday's ADIWer
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10.13.15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
for one
maus" maid
6.3o-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflilh6;
8 Sherwood
24 Gear shift
15 Ailing
3 State of
CBS News 8, 10. Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Book Beat
play
%5 Chronolli Links
self4eceit
33.
( 2 wds.)
og!Ze
7.DO-Melgs Counly Fair Highlights lcl 5; Truth or C
instructor
( 2 wds.)
s LOathe
n Awkwanl
ons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling for Dollars 6;
..----:--::--:--:-;-- -;---..11 Poetic
4 Sea eagle
Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10 ; Wild Kingdom
10
EnroDed
31
Kovacs
or
"reveal"
5 Wisen13; Family Affair 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20;
16 Stilt
Pyle
18 Autocrat
&amp; =~;
Tourisls Are Coming 33
19 DiscUS&amp;ion 31 Contaminate
20
7:3o-Last
of lhe Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Motch
33
InDection
group
of po1
Game PM 6; S25 ,000 Pyramid 8;; The Judge 10; To
20 Paris' river 36 Vigor
7 Slower
faced
Tell lhe Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Rober!
23 Mapped out '11 Onager
Z2 Abstract
(mus.)
MacNeil Reporl 20,33
s :DO-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,J5; Bionic Woman
being
13, Slate Fair Preview 4; World at War 6; Berl
23 Hoisting
Convy
8, 10; Nova 20,33
device
a·Jo-Frankle
Avalon 8.10.
%5 Ebbed and
9.DO-Doc1ors Hospital 3,4, 15 ; Baretta 6,13 : Movie
flowed
" The Graduate" 8,10; Greal Performances 33;
26 RDU call
Upstair~. Downstaa lrs :ZO.
answer
lO:DO-NBC News Speclal3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
27 Somme·
New s 20; Where lhe Twisted Laurel Grows 33.
lier's
10.3D-Aimanac 20.
JJ :DO-News 3,4,6,13,1S; ABC News 33 .
concern
11 : 15-News 8, 10.
28 Grandn ·3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " The Public Eye"
6,13: Janak I 33.
Z9 Western
11 :45-Movie " Don' t Make Waves" 8; Mary Hartman.
Spamsh
Mary Hartman 10.
3% Blushing
r1· ts-Movle "S .O.S. Pacific" tO
33 Ballerina'si:=-+--1- T-! .DO-Tomorrow 3,4.
mainstay
1·05-News 13
34 Author

,.. a

IIIIIIOIIS

COMM!RCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Aerlal - lnll'ustrlat

24

• AQ942

!IIIIDOl!SloOoM

NO SUNDAY CALLS

overhauled, w1th mower and

VILLAGE MANOR ln Middlepcnl

sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby , WOMAN needed to work or l1~e
m my home . Phone '992· ~36 or
I ·416·8570.

m•s~ .. across Ch•ster Grade
School , 10 o m. till "' p m
Wtds. and Thursday .

Cleland

GLEN R. BISSELl.

sulky . S300. Phone 992·7205.

oNe bedroom

1312) '12'1·•129

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts lop price for stonding

- Call992·2156.
---- __

peppe"

-

R ~o

Recru1t1ng .

· frrln UCLA Medica' Center
•l Monday IIIII wiD J!lldtrlo I
' 1englby ' ee..,alicln period YARo--s;;i;," . w-;d;,· thr;;.,gh
I It hGme.
Fridoy, Augu•t 25 , 26. 77. 1128
I
¥1M RusaeB, belt Jmown
Ea!~Molrt ~''!!~~~roy.

I for her perfll'l!lllncett In the

M1ddleport

YOURSElf ! I

Rutland.

IF YOU hove a ttr"J ice to otfer,
wont to buy or Mtll lomethmg ,
oe looking for work
.. or
whatever , , . you'll ge1 resulls
foster witt! a Senltnel Wont Ad.

CONTACT

1614) '185· WINTER potatoes and peoches.

----LOOI&lt;ING FOR A LOW·RISK IN COuNTRY Mob1le Home Park , Rt
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
' VEST MEN f ... ? INVEST IN

06001 . Phone 1 1200) 673·3455.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
SSca5hS$ tor junked o~ to, Frye's GuARANTEED JOBS: Locotion .
Starting poy $361 .20 single;
Trude Auto Ports.
Phon•1"'2-2081 .

FREE ESTIMATES!

9'12·3965
.
•ng, powe,r btokes , o1r condJ·
horung E..-cellent condttion
c;RAVELYtroctor , 76hp 2speed
Phone "''9-2'302.
transmiss i on,
r ecently

430 Of th e M• lgs counry

"'' lawyer.
• , WOME
LOS ANGELES (UPI}
' • ' Actnlll Roea1lnd Ruuell was
llacll at her Beverly HIIJI

$3300 Coli
3582_of1e! S p ~ ·

You can ..va hundrtcls
even thousands ot dolt.n
with aluminum or vinyl
siding.

-

Geroid•ne

1971

1975 Olds Storflre, V·6, power
s tee r i n g,
ond
bfokes ,
cutomolic, Coli I S-4800 new, w1ll

----- J97e, fot'ld Gronoda , power stee-r ·

NOW occ~ ting ptano litudents l
beginner~ . intermedrate , ad·
vonced students Call 992 ·

Deed Records ; thence south 1-4
deg . 3-4 min . SA sec. west 50
teet to an iron pin : thence
~outh 75 deg 25 min . 06 sec.
east U0.25 teet to an Iron prn ;
!hence north u deg . JA mi n. 54
sec. ent 50 feet to the point of
beg i nning , containi ng . 161
a c re ~ and being part of a I 06
aae trac tdescnbedas Trac t 1 .
In Vol 65 page .uo of th e Meigs
County Deed Records .
Being par t of the same real
estate con veyed to sald church
by deed recorded In Vol um e
239 page 971 Meigs county

OLD

ON£ 1965DodgeP•ckup: one 1971
Ford p•ckup Oor"J Houdoshelt .
Syracuse Oh lO.

.ell tor

llllllltlllt Senlc•
Fitlaoctoc AWWio
...,lttlttllllls Utttcs

John P&lt;~pe . 949·2213 - -:-;:-

eJ11ineer

cooducted by 1
Sydney jtllllce II lbe peace In
lbe first-class ~(Junge of 1

991·2100

lf70 AMC Horne1 2• MPG , S350.
Phone992·7211

WE would lrke to expre~s our
he-artfelt thanks, w1th deepest
&lt;lppre&lt;:rafion and e¥edos.hng
gratitude to oil that helped a nd
cored in Qur time crof need. The
proyer~ a nd beoutrfu ' floral
fri butes given m memory ol
R1dly Ke1th Rowe w11f never be
forgo !len. The Rowe f.omdy.

-

--

her

Birthday

Clll't!llllllY

3!1'11 .
1971 Ford Ranger , p1cltup, one.,_.
holl ton , aluminum mog CANNING peoches now reody
wheelt wrd&lt;e oval trres, 302 3
thru August, Several varieties
speed, Phooe 7.42 ·3008.
by the bushel , 1h bvshel or
pec:k , Please bring own con·
I'M8 Bu1ck Wild cot , outo;,otic,
tc:uner . 2 con-wen1eM locations
power steering . Phone 992·
Midway Mark e t, Pomeroy,
3580.
992 ·2582: Bob's Market , Mason.
19n AMC Hornet six cylinder
n3 .572 1
~
outomotrc , good body , iood
CANNING tom o toe~ ond sweep
running 'ond1hon , $650. Phone

~P6Rf!

WIN AT BRIDGE
One bid that's universal

Pomeroy , Oh•o or phone 992 ·

--

·--~---::'::"~.::;I::::""'-=~..:::"::.-

Al. TROMM CONST
Rutt.nd
742·2lll
All Work Guaran!HCI _
Froe Esllmatts
o.ll-2 mo

Pl.AS~T:IJ~~~~~lfl~,~·~~-'--/

.f'l. Plallsant
Pit.

OH,OH! l00K5 liKE '
WE'VE GOT COMPANY,

AH, OF COURSE: THE YOUNG
LAD Y KNOWN A5 '' R051E" !

....

Remodeling Service
For Your Home

For Sale

IT$ TH!;

8·22·1 mo.

The Complete

~Your

married on a l.mdon-bound
747 jet alrUner ~ mi1e8
above AiiStralla Mooday.
Toni Stenrul, 32, and Jim
Mclean, 24, were married In a

941·1124 8·22·1 m~.

CAPI'AIN EASY

DIRE~ f!!'s~JAW

992-7320 Evanlngs

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

Noon saturday .
Phone today 992 -21.56

lot

11111.
Vtlvoh, nylon ,rlnh,
lltrcvlans, vinyl nlkh, anol
fancy prtnts, acc"aorlts.

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

Dav id Parsons. owner

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR.
SliU
Good tirO$, cleon Interior, rodlo, red finish , good
eeonomy.

OFFICE HOURS

~-

Conlinvoul one p1tct
fUitars. Walltnt It, ar do It
rourseH. S,.clal prlc" to
bVIIdtrs.

$quart Yard Installed

BLIND ADS

8· 30 e .m . to 5 00 p .m .
Da ily , 8 :10 am to 12 00

GUTTER SERVICE.

•6.95

for
80
worcr
m inimum .
Eech add itiona l word J
cents .

the mi ddle of two seemingl y Guernsey , Monroe , Noble
unrelated 1ncl dents and come CAC , Washington, Morgan
out sm elling like a rose , hnan- CA O, Me1gs CAC. Athens,
P&amp;rry CAP , H&lt;:Jckii"Jg Coun ty
CIO II y
Com m Iss 1oner s ; 21 In -School
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) - Washington -Morgan CAO .
Don't t;e alrald to th tnk big to· Me igs CAC . Athens , Perry
CAP, Guer ns.ev . Monroe ,
day There's a spot reserved Nob!~ CAC. Hocking County
for you at the top. Lady Luck Is Commiss ioners . 31 Adult Gu ernsey, Noble , Monroe
on your slde.
CAC , Washington , M organ
LIB RA (Sopl. 23·0ct. 23) You CAO , Meigs CAC. Lead i ng
have only to drop a few words Creek conservancy Distr ict,
~o the r1ght people today and Athens . Perry CAP , Athens
Comm i ss1oners .
they· 11 get you r message . Counfy
Hocking
County
Com
Others are wa1tmg to go to bat missiontrs . Copies Of the p lan
tor you.
are a v ailable for lnspec tioh
Cave Bookman , F1eld
SCORPIO (Oct ZA·Nov. 22) from
Representat i ve , 117 Nor t h
Take advantage of any oppor- Pleasant
Stree t ,
New
Oh i o
,. 37 6&lt;1
tunitY to meet new people to- Lexin gton ,
day. You could make an ac- Comments m ay be made to
quaintance who'll be an enor· the acldress listed above or to
lhe U S Depa rtment of
mou s asset In the future
L abor , Employment and
Tr a1n 1ng Admin ls tra1 1on , 230
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Doc. Sou
t h Dearborn, Ch ic ago ,
21) Goals you once thought 1m· Ill inois
6060&lt;~
p ortanl Will be replaced by 18) 2•
more SIQnlltcant ones Yo ur
reasons for change will be un·
LEGAL NOTICE
u sual
NOiiCe !S hereby gi ven th at
CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan. Cli fford Jacobs. Otto Lohn ,
19) Oon 'l clase your mtnd to· Ernes t F'owell. Robe rt Bar ton ,
day to proposals o.f friends, no Georalcl Pulli ns and Kathy
Pull ins, as trustees of the
matter how oullandtsh the y Lcwrel Cliff Fr ee MethOdist
sound A secane' Jock could Church , Inc have file-d their
pe1 it ion i n th e common P leu
show they make good sense
court al legin g that the
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. 1t) follow ing descr ibed re a r
Opporlumties 1or profit could es t ate is no longer needed tor
cOme today in unexpected Church purposes and request
a11t hority to transfer seid rea l
ways It could be a business t1p estate
. wh tch real estate Is
or a chance tor a good buy
descr i bed as follows , to -w 1t.
Situated
tn
Salisbury
PISCES !Fob. 20-March 20) A Townsh
i p , Me i gs Co unty ,
sudden turn at events will draw Ohio, i n Fractron NO 30, Town
you closer to someone you've 2 N. Range 13 W and more
known, but have never been sl· parl i cul~r l y descr ibed as
lracted to This person's depth follows ·
Commenc in g at th e north
w•ll surpri se you
eas. t corner Of Frac ti on 30 .
thence north 87 deg 00 min
wes 1 367 36 tee I to a point .
thence south &lt;1 deg A9 min . 16
sec . e. sf 48~ . 45 teet to a point ,
thence south 8-.t deg •o min .,.,.
sec wes1 131 feet to a poi of ,
Aug. 25, 1976
thence sout h -4 deg. &lt;19 min , 16
sec east (passing a concrete
Th1s year holds great promise monument at 165 teen for 1
for you. but you can"l afford to total d tstMce of 119 feet to a
c.&lt;:~ast M!lny 1mportanr. plea· po1nt in the centerline of Old
sant and profitable changes S.R . 7 an&lt;l 12, , thence along
the c~terline of sai d hiQhway ,
could be in the oHtng .
s .u deg . MJ m in . ,. ·sec west .
119 21 feet to a po int ; thence
al ong: the east li ne of Laurel
C&amp;itf Free Mathoctist ChUrch
land , N . lAdeg . 3~ min . sc sec.
east 363. 66 feet to a conc rete
monument and th e tr ue point
of beg i nnmg for the tot1ow 1ng
descr l b~d tract ; thence north
Aballt PeGple
deg . 25 min ~ 06 sec . wes t
Pretl 75
B)'
Uailed
{passing
a
concre1e
monument at 6 25 feet and a
llll.tmaditaal
sp ike In the cen terlint of T R.
AIRLINER WEDDING
No. 205) tor a total dist ance of
SYDNEY, Auatcalla ( UPI) 1.0.25 fetl to a double Elm
tree at the northwest corner of
- An lrilll
and an Tract
1 des cribed in Vol . 6S
pag~

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

S2 00

Ad dillone l 25c Charge
per Advertisemen t.

Engllsb comedienne were

R1clne, Ohio

S169.
1973 VEGA ST. WAGON
Local. 1 owner, ~utomat lc lrl'lns ., power sl eerlng,
rodlo, red fin ish, good !Ires. really cl•an.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

a ssis t a nce
Ap pr ove d
LEO (July 23·AUfl- 22) Today, program
operators tor FY ' 71
you coul d prt&gt;Ject you~se lf mto

V

CARPET SHOP

1974 CHEVY NOVA4 DOOR
m•s
Local low mileage car, \1.8 engine. automollc power
steering and brakes , radio, tires show little wear, gold
finish . Sharp and nice.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 24. 1976
5:DO-FBI ) ; Partridge Fam ily 8; Mission: Impossible
13.
5.36-Adam .12 ~ ~ News 6; Family Affair B: Electric
Company 20 ,33; Adom 12 13 .
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC news 6; Zoom :ZO;
Crockelt 's Vlclory Garden 33.
6·3D-NBC News 3.13, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grllfllh
6; CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias,
Yoga and You 33
.
7:DO-Trulh or Consequences 3; To Tell The lrulh • :
Bowling tor Dollars 6; Let's go lo the Races 8;
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Family Affair 15;

.•'

'

RACINE

Television log for easy viewing

_______.~----~------------------,

Business Services

2 SIGNS·

correc

The PubliSher res,rves
the right to I!!CHf or r l!!ject
any ads dttmed ob
Jectlonal . The publ isher
will not be responsible for
more than one Incorrect

Include : H Out of School -

-

,uw

publleatlon .
REGULATIONS

Econom ically d!Sid'¥antaged .
Including head of household .
veterans, youth and voung
adul ts , handicapped, older

~

1
••

!Ions acctpttd first diY of

Tra in ing Act Two client
groups will be served ; ' l

a,.t.. Sales

Auto:. .Sales"--

WANT ADS

Monroe ,

TAURUS (April 20·M•y 20) worke rs , and, 2) unemployed
There ls somethi!lQ exciting
brewing on th e soci al scene.
Fresh acq uamtances could
lead you mto a brrght world of

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classified.

I

AREAl

11- T1tli OellySentlnei,Mlddleport.Pcmeroy,0 ., Tuel!day, Aug . 24, 1976
Jt&lt;..l\ 'l'KAC'I'

NARLAC~

I

I.

V
t,

T IMI D ONE DID.

V \j
f.,_

...1

I

Now IUTIU\fle Lhe eln:led Iottto form the surpriae _,..,, •
o unt~ttd by th• above..-

~~Pliii::::I:III: :_S:~7.:
IMISI UISW!I
~IIII!=;-\--''1'[ I I

x J-r x1 J"

(.U.wen to......,.._,

J•••"'•• QUEER

l'e11er.l•y'•

I

POPPY ALKALI SLOUCH

;\n 11 w~r1 llmc th r opt:rtJ 1wprann mnnogf'd to gcol lh f'

tole• dtr" '1 aUt11fio11-SHE SPOt&lt;E ''UP"

RIGHT

UPIO

HERE~!
N16/oiT

SCHOOL?

THAT'S A 6RE,.\T IDEA ...
THEI(E ARE ALL SORTS
OF COURSES THAT WOULD
6E GOOD FO~ 'I'OU...

THE'i HAVE OBEDIENCE
T~AINiN6 AND 6UMD
DOG CLASSES ... THOSE

WOO"D 8E 6000

ACTUALL'f'. I WA5
THINKIN6 OF M/Jl.RAME !

�...
10

-~DaUySenUMI,Wd~~::~{;;;;,~;:~ur.u;;or
Astro.L'
Graph•
Th t

Regl6nal Manpower

Ser"ice Council , Ar&lt;l

inc.ludes

Hocking ,

Berntce 8ede O•ol
For~•dn••d•y, ~ug. 25, 1171

ARIES (March 21 -Aprtl 1f)
There are eaceptionat career
opportun ities around you to·
day, but you' ll have to ferret
them oul. Your imagination Is a
great asset.

Ptrrv,

Noble ,

8,

which

Morgan ,

INFORMATION

Wash i ngton , Athens, and
Meigs counties , has anounccd
ils plans for FV ' 77 for Title I ,

DEADLINES
s
P .M .
Oay
Before
Pl.fbllcltlon .

fu n d ~d througr. the Com
prehen~ f ve Employment and

CancellatJons,

tun
GEMIN I (May 21 -Juno 20) A
major cha11ge is In store for
you It wi ll develop qu1te
su ddenly and will work out as If
you' d plan ned It'

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Some good news could ca use
you to do an abou t-face on
you r plans Have the engine
runnmg. Travel may be 1n ~
valved

Pomeroy
OF
QUALI'rY; Motor Co.

""d un(lerer')'lployed , Inc luding
heads of hOuseholds . ~eterens .
youth t'nd young adults ,
hand !ca pped
and
older
workers. Progra m activities
Inc lude Classroom tra ining
( rnst l t utional c lassroom
train in g ,
less .tha n -clan .
! r aining
ln
private
in SIJtut l ons ). on -the - lob
training , Work E~&lt;per i en ce.
and serv ices to enroll ees
(outrea c h recru it ment. in ,
take, assessmen t, orientation. ,
couns eli n g, coach lpg . job
development and p lacemen t,
and e m ergency a1d ) . The
follow i ng support ive services
were fo und to be In ne ed : I )
transportation ; 2) health ; 3)
ct1ild care , and , &lt;I ) Legal

insertion

RATES

For W~nt Ad Servin
5 cents Ptr word one
insertion
Minimum Charge 11 .00 ,
14 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions .
16 cen ts p!r word she
consecutive Insertio ns .
25 Per Cent Discount on
pa i d ads ·and ads pa id
within 10 days .

1968 Chevy Belair 307 Automati C, LOCUST POSTS , round or $pli t.
n&amp;w tires. low mileage, e~t ·
Phone 9A~ · 277 •
cellen t cond ition Best offer
cOAL . limes tone and colcium
Colt 992-570'1.
chloride ond c.olc1um bnne for
1967 Chevy , one-half ton pk kup·
dvst control and speCial mix ing
new poin t jOb no rust , runs
soli for formers Motn Street ,

NOTICES

ATTN . !!

ALL HOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales, Rummage .
Porc l'l and Base ment Porch
and Basement Sales, etc .
must be paid In advlnte .
Get yours in early by
stoppin g by our office a t
Ttle Daily Sent inel , 111
&lt;;ourt Sl or wrillnq Bo ,.,
129 , Pomeroy , Ol'l ro &lt;~5 769
with your remittance

good . Phone 7,.2·3081.

~·IOJj ~~~~
IN Memory ot Morr Ebhn

God watcned yov whle you suf fered .
And He knew ou h od your ' hare,
He tenderly closed your weary

eyel
And took you in Hls c. ore
De-or God, pleose to'ke t:hts

menoge
To our loved one upobove,
Tell G randma how muc.h we miss

And grve het"" al l our lo"e
k tty, Crystal and J~~! ~all

~~Jnlalt

airliner.
"At first we planned to
marry In tbe Olamellllandl,
where we 1re going now,"

Tool, a nicbtcltj) perfcnuer,
said. "Bat we had to cancel
that beca111e you have to be
remdent f« at least 1~ days.
We dldn't want to wait that
long."

.

I! aiUCK'S PLAN
· McLEAN, Va. (UPI) -

Lyndon Jolutlon's son-in-law,
Cbarles S. Robb, wiD work for

l

Democrall in the fall
electlona and then decide
whether to run for lieutenant
governor- of VIrginia In the
1977 race.
"I have done nothing to
form
a
camps!gn
«ganizatlon or staff and I
have not solicited support
from anyone," Robb aald. "A
I1UII1ber of people, bOWllver,
have said lf I run they would
\ Uke to help me. I'm keeJ)ing
track of thoee people."
' Robb, '11, who married
;; Lynda Johnaon In 1967, ill a

-----

-

·-·

Deed Records.

Sa i d pet Itlon will be for
hear ino on th e 21st day of
september , 1976 , et t he
Common Pleas Courtroom at
Pomeroy , Oh io.
Clifford Jacobs
Otto Lohn
Ernest Powell
Robert Barton
Gerald Pullins ·
Kathy Pullins
Trustees Laurel CtiH Fr~
M ethoidst Church , Inc .
(8) 24, 31. (91 7.,.

furnitur•~ Ice

bo)les , bron

beds, woll

telephones and
ports, or complee households.
Write M 0 Miller, Rt. 4,
Pomeror, onio. Coii~~7 ~6C2_
CASH po1d for all makes ond
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614·•23-9531 .

2270.
WtLl CAR~ el derly women in

c. "'I ~orne _.f:hone '192·7314.

NOTIC£5: Kltlens, contocf Freddie
Houdo~;helt,

today recuperating
from a three-week bolpltal
home

llay for IW'IIei'Y to replace
her rllht blp.
1 A IJII)btPNn llid the 1MI

~oOldiiC!I!WIWU reJeued

Grande
Cotlege - Community Colleg•
Fall Registration, Sept. 13, 197b
Allen Hall , 9a _m. 9p m .

-

lOANS available. 520 up to any
amount Phone Subramon,on,

play and movie "~.·.•
l llldenent lht ~~qery Ill
MJect a chronic artl!rltlc
. cmdltion.

I

'

•

Farms

Clelpnd

Roci ne,

AT 949-2801

OhiO.

HoNDA CL·•SO. 12,000

miles , msy bar , crash bors,
pull boc.k handle bars, new tire
and seols , Sc.rombler s1de

--

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

NORTH

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

llfMDIIIIT

8oK21·A
Rutland, Olllo 4!775
""'(6141742-24119
We Dtllvtr
7·28-4 mos .

SIOIIJC.IGfFIIT

BORN LOSElR '

... !.{OU'REO OOT

AS 'SMPfJ AS
NAY~T 1

pipes. S650. Coil 9"·2•80.

--

SWIMMING
POOU

Cons1ructlon Progress
- complete School S.nlce
u neltrtr•~u•te &amp;
Elltmtnluy
School P.ck19t Plclurn
Senioti&amp; Yearbook

Above anti below gt'llunol
pool kill tor lha do-lt·
yourstH man.
'
All pool suppllas available,

- W•d•tngl-

KEN GROVER

94'· 2860

PhOfOfrlphy

8·9·761 month

•

Nobkl Summit Rd ..
Mtddltpor1
PHONE 992-5724
7·21-1 mo.

Chuter. Ohio
8·18 ·1 mo

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE
LITTLE

-......--·~---

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Aeriol-lnduslrial

--

IN DAsH 23 chonnel C8, om ·fmmpx rodro , 3 frock stereo Coli

American
Auto Sales

Construction Progress

-Compklte School Service
Undergraduale &amp; ·
Elementary
School Pack19a Pic!ures
Seniors &amp; Yul'book
- Wedcllngs-

----

Even ings .

KEN GROVER

ONE Trotwood camper 1ra1ler, 16 18 FT seobr;--;; ~ith 4sh~
ft . s. lee,p~ 6 , gas electric,
Chrysler engine , troller ond ski
refr1gerotor, new !ires , oc·dc
accessOrieS good condition
lights , spore tire, very c.leon .
$900 00 Phone I lOA -675 2~15
See lo opreoofe, phone 949·
K£NNEMC wmter porotos . Coli
2714.

Photography
915-4155
Chestec, Ohto
7-14-1 mo.

----·---

Revive the
of y9ur rugs.
your bwn home
by Von Schrader
dry·foam method.
No muss. No fuss.
No odor. Use the
same daY·
All work

Winshleld Replacement
Free Eslima!es
On BodyWork
Expert Painting
lnsuranco Work
We Ieoine
St. R! . 7 ,
Coolville, Ohio
667.3127
7·29·1 mo.

paranleltl.

Abbott.
WELL , IF MV

Lorge lots w1th concrete pohos,

s•dewalks, runners ond

off

... s~eet ~r_k_1ng. P~~992 · 717~9

3 Room lurnrshed house w1th
both. Adults only. Phone f/92.
~S3~ .

-

------apartments

ot

for $10-4 monthly plus ele&lt; or
$130 includ ing electric . LOWE~

$500 REWMD

RATES

FO~

SENIOR CITIZENS.

Convenient to shoppi ng on
Th1rd ond Mill Streets in M 1d·

dleJX&gt;rt 8•ond now h1gh quol1·

For the arrest and
convfclion oll!t~ person or
persons who illegally shol
my rabbit dogs. N.y """
MVing intormallon. plea"'
call the sheriH's oKlee.
Pomeroy, Ohio

fy oporlments . See ti'le
mohoger of Apt, 16, or coil

m -7721.
AvAIL ABLE ot Riverside._l\port·
menls , 1 bedroom a!)Orl·
ments, $100 per month : 2
bedroom apartments, $133 per
month One pr1ce lor oil . Phone

992·3273

Elga Bar1imus
3

~ -iflr
~
LOST: A month old nanny goot,
brown and whlte Lost 1n Forest
Run area. Phone m.-272i. .

------·

room furn ished oportment,
uhliheli furnished. Cell 9'92·

3129.

FORRENT:

two bedr_o_o_
m-s.""'b oth,
country lo cc tion .
neor

good body .

run ~

good

Phone992-7797.

$250

i,

Ville~e . Phone 992 -7365.
--:------:-:MAYTAG automot1c washer AS Unin.. 41 more units under con· BUILDING , remodeling , and
repo1rs . Quality work., efficient
good ~hope, S3S Phone 99'2·
struction . lntludes 19 mobile
serv1ce. Jene Rodman, phone
7797
nomes. 2 apartments, I seve.1
9'12·5980.
room frame home oil rented
MARliN 22 lever ac l1on w1th KA
Off•c• and doublewide owners DOZER work and welding Con·
scope o{l d sfing .J Phone 99'2·
tact James Parsons , Rt I,
res1dence Wash house, shop,
5210
Racine, on Carmel Rood ,
storage
sheds
ond
supply
-27o
H:-o-;:11-on-cd;-;boler. N;;t-deo
trorler Appro~t:lmoely 15 ocres INTERIOR ond e~&lt;terior polntiJli
hary 'ondit1oner Both m good
fronting on EOst Morn and Carr
ond roof pointing by hour or
shope . Coil 843 2272 after S
St .. State Rt . 93, ~bl ocks from
contract, e~t:cellent references.
pm ------....._._
downtown , 2 blocks from Ap·
Phone 992 -601 i..
polcx:hion Highwoy, 2 biO&lt;ks
from shoppi ng center, 20 m1les
trom Pike Co . Atomic Plant
(which IS being doubled in
size). Must be seen to be ap1 Onl'f - Ntw Lawn t;.Ciger.
Reg . SlOI.II
precJoted . Must sell due to
Close Out Price SIO.
poor health and other reasons . HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and
up. Mtddleport, near Rutfond .
1 Only - Power GlrdenIf interested coil . oreo code
Call992-7481.
Ofch.ud Spr.1yer . Reg .
(6U ) 286-2832 for oppo1ntment ,
Si.OJ .i.2 Clost Out Price SJ-40.
or stop by o ffi ce ot of55 Carr Sf . NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
22" Self· PropetteCI Power
or 730 E. Morn St. , Jackson ,
all elec., I acre, Middleport ,
Mowers
tri991 &amp;
Ohio
45640
close to Rutland Phone 992·
StraHon Eng l l'le . Reg .
UBI
111 9.ts
Close Out Price
1 Oi, Acre lot for ; le , one·fourtll
$9U5
mile off Rt 7 a t Five Points on SMALL form for sole, 10% down ,
blacktop •ood. Coll i '(:JQ.I ) 773·
owner financed . Monra. Coun ·

- --

___

. .:.====c.::.-----

r---,.--------,
lawn &amp;Garden Sale

PometiiJ Landmark

•

S490.

Jack W1 (IIttY. Mgr.
Phone ft1·2111

Pom.-oy. Phone 992·7666, ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
9'12·7133 or992·2318.
2-Bedroo,;';;;btle home, Oe~t;;

2 new 3 bedroom homes for
sate on acre lrJc ts, one with
buement , on e withOut Call

992 ·J4S4 ot !6W "" 9568
Lee Constructio n

-:-::~

tv• Work

ct home , no 8K·
penence net es1ary ex ·
cellent pay . Wri te Amer1can
Service, 6950 Woy:ota Blvd ,
Suite 132, Mlnneopolis . MN

55.&lt;26
DEMONSTRATORS

AND

MANAGER needed lo work
with the oldest Toy &amp; Gift Shop
ParJy Pion tn the co untry.
Hi9hest commlssionl · No In·
vestment , Call or wri te todoy ,
SANTA's Parties , Avon, Conn .

$.f71 30

married

Army

Call

C(l llect

2 Bedroom tro ller, $28 per mon th
all utrlil•es paid Phone 992·
332•

2

payments . Phone (6li.) 667·

3817.

Fot~~;.~:,~f~;f~~TRuMPET.

saxophone ,
bedroom furnitur e , J. .V .. miJs t
go, moving. Phone 992 2622 .

tenor

sAL~--;;;;;dt~i.·s. col.;;
593·3022-385-6318.·---c-- FOR
ond block and white Horrison'a

----

see790MopleSt,, M1dd ~

WANTED· -4 tlousewlve$ , i. hours
per clay, 4 days p ... week, $.4 .00
per hour. Call for appointment:

m -2'127, 919-2803 or 949·2786.

------.-·-----

TV Service, 276 Sycamore St. ,
Mtddleporf, Oh1o. Phone 992-

2522.
·-----........,HAV and straw for

sole . Lorge
round bales and square bale•
Will load . Iorge boles at form.
Royal Oak Form, Rt. 3.
Pomeroy , Ohio Phone (6U)

985-3341..
Wlll DO ddd jobs ,

roof~ng ,

poin.
ling , hauling, tree work , and
mow1ng. Phon&amp;992·7409.

__._....._.,

yARD Sole ,
Wednesday ,
Thursday, Frldoy and Scturday .

- ··-

~-

t2Park Sl , Middi!J&gt;.ort, Oh~
2 Family Yard Sole, Thursday ,
Auoust 26th fro m 9 till 5 p m PlEASURE horses and ponies .
on Route 12A, one-half mile
Also, will do training. Phone
east of .utlond , City Um1ts.
(611) 698·3290, Rurh Roe""' ·
---·-----·Doyle T, HudsO'l residence.
5 Female Shepherd puppies to b.
_ 91.':~Y · Phone 742· 23~-'­

-

-·

MALE , 13 weeks old , poodle.
Phone742·22S9 after 4 p.m.
G;O.RAGE Sot.. . dorhes . boby
AKC
clothes , new fabric matenol, BRITT ANY Sponlel

---

-------

Registered, mole, 11 months
old, tro lnabl• for huntmg
~eo son Phone 992·3493 .

f

TEAFORD

2 yr . old Quarter
Phone
-7A2·'2274
- __.
COLLEGIHEE

Trumpet , very
reosonoble . Phone 992· 7163 .

- ··---- ---,---

LARGE Frigidaire refngerator
with free1wr ocross top. $SO,
Frigidaire electric stot/e, $7S.

Phone'192·5551 Both 9oad
. ·---.

......

!rollers. ont and two
bedroom . all 8 wide, good
shape. Conodoy Troller Court,

USf:D

NEW LISTING-11\odern 4
bedroom home, 2'1• bolhs, 2
family rooms, one with
wood burning fireplace ,
fTlod . ~II . with dl&gt;hwasher,
cook and bake units, dining
area . Formal dining r m ..
large Ioyer, hot water heat,
2 car garage. $51 ,500.
NEW LISTING 4
bedroom mod . home . Nice
kll . with dbl. sink ,
dishwasher, built-In range,
and centra I vacuum
system . Family room,
garage. and near 3 acres.
$46,000.
t2 ACRES - Good 3
bedroom hom•, closets,
mod . bath, nice kit .,
carpeting ,
not .
gas
furnace . and 2 ~rches.
Only $29,500.
12 ROOMS - Old fashion
home used as a 2 family.
U ve In one &amp; rent the other
to help with !he payments.
Only $19.000.
IN THE COUNTRY - 1
rooms, nice bath, mod«n
kitchen with range, F.A. oil

1900 Chestnut St., Gallipolis,
Ohio n.or Sm1th Buick . Phone

(614) 446·1391.
·- -·-....- -

1970 Dodge Stotior1 Wagon , S500.
Guernsey milk cow, excellent

producer , $315. Phone 742·
246()

furnace and

new

2

car

~rage .

t!5

LeveJ ·iot. $17,000.
ACRES Fenced

wnn came now running . 25
K&lt;"es of bottom on Shade
River, large barn, all
minerals with Income from
gas well - free ~·· Only
$30,000
WE HAVE THE MUSCLE
TO SELL •. TRY US ONE
TIME .

,

ty , W. Vo . Phone (304) 772·
3102or (J04)772·3227 .
COUNTRY lormlond with •ocluded woods, wotor ond good oc ·

cess in Monroe County. W. Vo

$1 ,000 down, coil (Jo;) 772·
3102or (:JQ.I)772·3277. 1

,_

I'm sil\4,

1 quess...

nu•IJC,,1
IIAJ!lrnr.
BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com-

to

create

plete Service. Phone 949·2481
or 949-2000 Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

somethinq
that
II be

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR .._
SwHpwrs, toasters , irons, ci_ll
small appllonces . lown mower ,
ned to State H1ghway Garage

on Route 7. Phone (61~) 98S·
3825.
' '
REMODELING, Plurilbln9, hooll ~g

I'm

•*·

porlon ce . Insured tree
estlmoltt. Coli 992·2384 or
(614 )698·7257 Albany.

()one!
"

~

[U~L;:~~::::::::~T}~~i}.~~~ltlA5CFLE;J.5~Ir~~~~~~A'~~~~IzJ~l ~entaJ

SEwiNG MACHINE Repairs, . , .
vice, all mokos, '192·2284. T~o

Fob•!&lt;

Shop ,

., bUt 1 don't want mLj
tombstone to read ...
"Nina
housew\fe !" ~~IT:~u~n

b-+-+--t-

when

and oil types of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years
perlence. Phone 992·2•09.
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 yoaro •• ·

or 992·7667 .

HoUsE-~t.:.or~so":l-e ,-:3:-b:-e-d""room-,-.~
oll

'

___ _

Horse fdli e
...,

l'h. tl2·2174

Pomeroy .

Authorized Stngtr Soles ond
Servlte. W,e shorpen Sclstors.

POMEROY - Mulberry
Ave . 2'12 story brick. Upper
has 3 bedrooms , bath, very
nice kitchen, lovely lo live
ln . Lower hos 2 furnished
apts. (always rented) for
good Income . In good
condition. $20,000.00
LOVE(. Y
2
STORY
FRAME
3 Iorge
bedrooms wllh closets .
R.
Large forrral
Nice
k lich en.
carpeting. paneling. ·~:~:
full bal&lt;l!menl with go
ASKING ONLY
GROCERY S
Buildings , ground
stock at a very good oru:e. 1
Beer\ es!abllshed tor manv I
y~ars . An excellent lnc1om,ol
at a very good
(OWNER RETI
WE HAVE 3
BUSINESS FOR
CALL IF INTERESTED.
ABOUT 3
- Cli&gt;se
to Rutland.
bedrooms, bath. Exi:81illftl I
kitchen . Carpeting,
paneling, lull banment.
Fuel Oil F.A. heat. New
steel siding . ASKING
528,000.00
ASK ABOUT OUR OTHER
FINE PROPERTtU- TO
SELL LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER-APPRAISER
-CONSULTANT992·22Sfor ff2-2MI

backhoe work : dump tru~k1

ond fo.boys lor hlro: will houl

Family room fullv
fill dirt, to soil, llmo1tone and
carpeted with waod·burnlng
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fireploce, lorijtlot with storage
fers, day phone 992-7089,
building ond garden space.
night phone 992 ·352S or 992·
ftuslic Hlll1, Syrocu te. Phon• -:;5';;2:7'
32 .:-::;-;:::- -;---;--:-:--

992·7836.

'

' eXCAVATING, do10r, backhoe
8 room house for sale of 126
ond dltoher. Charles R. HotLaurel St., Pomeroy. Phone

field ,

Bock

Ho1

Unstramblr these four JumbltS.

&gt;;;;--+-t--t--1 one letter to e~ch square, to•'"'f:

1:;;--+-+---t-; form

•'"•' ·•· -• ' ·-

..._.,__,__~ L~:...:._;.~~~l7""':1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :
Is

THATo FUNNY...
THERE'&amp; NOONE

INSIDE!

licensed

ln1taller. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742 ·2~.

9•9·2154.
SEMIC .TANKS cleaned. Modern
FIVE yoor old four bedroom all
SOn Ilotion . '1'12 ·~ or 992·

LONGFELLOW

One letler s1 mply stands for another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoSirophes, the length and focmali?n of the words are all
hmts Each day the code letters are dllferent.

OAN

AMY

ON

GAMEMGQPE

FMD;

AP

SY

, •*trlc home, one lh botht,

242l!l.
garage, a nice lot on Rt. 7 In Will do roofmg , conttructlon,

Tuppers Plains. Would consider

plumbing ond healing. No lob

trade ,

too lora• or too IRJOII. Phone

low

SlOt,

Phone

61 4-667·3'156.

742 ·~.

DNQ

DSGNIMY

.

HEAR NEWS FIRST

..

QASDK . -

GAMFLNEQ

(C) 1916 Kine FraLurts Syndict1.e. Inc.)

I'VE HAD IT
RIGHT UPTO
HERE DOll\)' 1
ELVINE'I '5 '

I

WMPOAM·FM

DADBURN
HOUSEWORK!!

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

8 A.M., The Noon hport,

r

M

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: IT'S ALWAYS EMBA~ING
TO RUN UNEXPECI'EDLY INTO A GIRL YOU USED TO BE
ENGAGED TO. - P.G. WODEHOUSE

ON

and 5 P.M.

M

'

;

SY

I

..

RIGHT OP

TO HERE!!

I

:•:. _-r

1·1I ~~

~1 -,:;.1';

~

+

1 ,- "" ,, , '
{_L;:'f r,_ _., · I \;

:,;_ c;!!~,. :"'t!;}

'

~-·

--- ·:. fi·· ,._.
__:,- [ / &amp;::!'

\t
~;j ~.._\\.

WHAT T HE 15RAVE
IJU!.l.FI&lt;!&gt;HTER WILL.
DOAN17THEi

RIGDIF

II

CRYPTOQUOTES
AP

b.1

-.1 .,

~~
~~
' ·;..: f..)

AXYDLBAAXR
I GUES:&gt; WHOEVER
WAS DRIVING TH E
CAR HA&amp;00NE
OFF IN &amp;EARCH
OF HELP !

7

four ordrnary words. ·

l...

Service,

'192-5741 .
Rutland, Ohla. Phone 742-2008.
2 bedroom, Iorge modern kll· GIIEG'S Cl SALES, locotod ot Er·
chen, forced olr furnace, Ll;,.
wln's Gulf Service, Mid ·
colnHts. hono992·5737.
dfepc&gt;rl, Ohto. Phone 9'12·
438
'::'".-=-~--,-.,-,-,--,FARM for sole, 46 acres , Jackson c·
• :;;2:;
Coun ty, Wost Virginia, pr)&lt;od SEPTIC Systems lnstallod by
an Inspection . Harrison Smith,
Roclna, Ohio ~5771 . Pha~o

t-trf&gt;jnl AnNOI IJ , .,,.,~~ ' Ill 1 II

35 Camera
stand
'11 Vedic fire
god
38 Early
Jewish
ascetic

ele&lt;trlc.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

r-t--t--t JJl]JWJ]l~ ; lka/"'•gwi'J
.-J..-''V

Levin

buy lor $8.000. Phone '192·3S78, eXCAVATING, dozer, loader and

Phon~ 9'12· 337~

t9?3- 12x60 Vind~;-fraller ,
brtdi- ooms .
Toke
ovtr

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

3 bedroom hou•• for sole at S20
S~como(e St .. MiddlepOrt , good

Virgil B. Sr .. Relllor ,
110 Mechanic Pomeroy, 0 .
MOBILE home for so le or rent. 3
b~rooms , ol ul111t1et pa id
Phone m -n51 .

........

...,.. s,a~~s~---' I

;e-;

Phone 992 5858

ADDRESSERS wanted IMMEDIATE·

CA LCULATIONS
ARE
COR~T ..

EXCAVATING. BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTALLED. LOW
SOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. BILL
PULLINS, PHONE 992·2178 DAY
roomli and both in Chester
OR NIGHT.

·,

~HI'*~;e(

fOR SALE a t COff .pnce, rtdmg
mowers; lawn mowers , garden
t11ler McMurray s Supply Com·
FURNISHED, 2 bf!'d~m . oportmen1 ,
pony , Mason, W. Vo . Phone HOUSE l or sole , 3 bedrooms , all
adults only , In Middleport .
electrrc. fully carpeted , fam ily
~J.?.~~m
-:"·Phone992-387• .
room , with t 1reploco, 2 baths ,
Iq?3 Dodge Poloro Custom, all
g AND 4 RM. furn•shed and u n·
stove, refngeratar and drapes
power including fa ctory orr ,
furnished opts , Phone 9'92·
goes w•th h(luse Phone 7A2
goad shope. $1950. Also . 1965
5.&lt;34.
2595 for fu~ther inf(lrmolion .
Chevelle 6 cyl standard ~hilt ,

-----

ORPHAN

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

Chorle s R t-loms , Portland .
Ohio , Ph011e843 2693

.4

''

D.. Bum_prdner

915·41 u

PLEASE

but if you do, remember I
don 't have two aces or
anythmg !hat looks like an
openmg bid."
North's jump to four spades
was a trifle weak lor !his bid ,
but from South's stand~intlt
wa s just what the doctor
ordered He used Blackwood
to check for aces North did
not need an ace for hts JUmp
bid When North showed one
ace, South could btd six with
every expectation of success
There was no!hmg to !he
play Soulh ruffed !he second
club , drew trumps and claim·

•'

lao.

OR

Romagnolls' Table :ZO; American Issues Forum 33.
7:36-Hollywood Squares 3; Hollywood Squares ~ ~
Let's Deol With II 6; Malch G.me PM t; Prl~ Is
Rlghl JO; To Tell The Truth 13; Nashville on the
Road 15; Robert MocNell Report 20,33.
8:01l-Movln' On 3,4,15; Happy DIYI 6,13; Pop! 8,10;
Music Prolecl Pre"""b 33; AI The Top 20.
B· 36-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6. 13; Good Times 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 33
9·()()-Movle "The New C~nturlons" 3,4,15; Pilot 6,13;
M-A-S·H 8. 10; Evening 11 Pops 33; Men Who Malle
the Movies :zo.
9.36-PIIot 6,13; Pilot 8.10.
tO .DO-PIIot6,13; Sandy Duncan B; Swllch 10; News 20:
Olympiad 33.
JO .36-Biack Perspective on the News :ZO.
11 ·DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 33.
II :36-Johnny Carson 3.~. 15; Mystery of the Week
6, 13; Movie " Night of the Lepus" I ; Mary Hlrl·
man , Mary Hariman 10: Janak! 33.
12 :DO-Movle " Banyan" 10.
! :DO-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

WEDNESDAY, AUGU$T2S, 1976
6:QO-Summer
Semester 10.
·
¥ 75
6:15-Farm
Report
13.
• J 811
6:»-The Story 13.
.
2
6:30-Columbus Today 4 ; News 6; Summer Semesler
8; Christopher Closeup 10.
WEST
EAST
6:45-Mornlng
Report 3.
•
• 10
• J
6·
50-Good
Mornln&lt;;j
.
Weot
Virginia
13.
¥ J82
¥10 93
7:oo-Today 3.~,15 ; Good Morning, America 6,13; CBS
t K 10 9 3
t Q 6~ 2
News 8, Chuck While Reporls 10.
·
AW V.:Ofl'T St. Fa&lt;
...KQ J73
. A 10965
7
.os-Bugs
Bunny
&amp;
Fr
iends
10.
·
SOUTII IDI
~ OR 1\10 " ~---/1
1 36-Schoolles 10.
.K8 1653
B:DO-Jeft' s Collie 6; Capt. Kangoroo 8,10; Sesame St.
~MRS
¥ AKQ64
33.
t A
8·36-Big Valley 6.
9:DO-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4. 15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
East-West vulnerab le
Douglas 10; Morning wllh D.J. 13; Mister Rogtrl
West North East South
33.
1•
9:3D-Cross.Wlls 3; One Life to Live 6; Tattleloles 8;
Pass 4 •
Pass 4 NT.
&gt;
Mike Douglas 13; Villa Alegre 33.
Pass 5 t
Pass 6 .
lO:DO-Sonlord
&amp; Son 3,4, lS; Price Is Right 8, 10; Wild
An Arizona reader wants to
Pass Pass Pa ss
&lt;
West
VIrginia
33.
know wha t percentag e of
Openmg lead - K "'
10: l~eneral Hospital 6
Amerrca's top players play
tO . 3D-Celebrity Sweepstakes 3, 4, 15; Lilias. Yogo &amp;
sta ndard Amerrcan.
'
~ L-~~~--~~~~
You 33.
The answer ts that prac11 :DO-Wheel of Forlune 3, 15; Weekday ~ ; Edge of
tically all of them u~e a
Night 6; Gambll 8,1 0; Former's Daughler 13.
system ba sed on stan dard
t1 .3o-Hollywood Squares 3,~.15. Happy bays 6,13;
Amencan principles , but
Love of Lite B, 10&gt; Biography 33.
every one of them has his own
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Ms Fl&gt;ll 10.
gadgets and spectal bids
12 :DO-Fun Factory 3,t5; Hot Seat 13; Bob Broun 4;
(For a copy of JACOBY
News 6,8, 10; Sesame St. 13.
MODERN, send $ 1 to " Win
12.3D-Gong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13 ; Search
at Br~dge ," cl o th• s
tor Tomorrow 8,10 .
newspaper P 0 Box 489,
12:55-NBC News 3,l5.
Rad;o C1fy Sfat10n , t lew York.
1:DO-NBC' News
1:DO-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahahue 8;
N Y 1001 9)
Young &amp; lhe Reslless 10; Not For Women Only 15:
Elec. Co 33 .
'
1 3D-Days of our Lives 3,4,15; Famllv. Feud 6,13: As
The World Turns 8,1 0; Evening at Pops 33.
2·00...:s:zo.ooo Pyramid 13 ; Dinah 6.
2.3o-Doclors 3,4,15, One Llle to Live 13 ; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Soundstage 33.
J:DO-A nolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Romagnolls' Table 20.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3· 15-General Hospital 13.
3:36-Bewltched 6; Match Game 8.10; Lilias Yoga &amp;
ACROSS
39 Climb
You :ZO; Ourstory 33 .
1 Out of
40 Become
4 DO-Misler Carloon 3; Merv Grlflin 4. Somerset IS;
danger
complex
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
5 Tread
41 Copy
20,33; Movie " Crack 1n the World" 10; Dinah 13.
4·Jo-Bewrtched 3; Mod Squad 6; Andy Griffith 8;
11 Fragrance
edltor's
Sesame Sl. 20,33; Fllntstones 15
1% Making its
word
S·DO-FBI
3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible
' debut
DOWN
15.
13 Trotsky
1 Sturdy
S:JO.:.Adam-12 4,13 ; News 6; Family Altair 8; Elec.
U AbstracZ "Die
Co. 20,33
tionist,
FlederYesterday's ADIWer
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10.13.15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
for one
maus" maid
6.3o-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflilh6;
8 Sherwood
24 Gear shift
15 Ailing
3 State of
CBS News 8, 10. Hodgepodge Lodge 20: Book Beat
play
%5 Chronolli Links
self4eceit
33.
( 2 wds.)
og!Ze
7.DO-Melgs Counly Fair Highlights lcl 5; Truth or C
instructor
( 2 wds.)
s LOathe
n Awkwanl
ons . 3; To Tell the Truth 4, Bowling for Dollars 6;
..----:--::--:--:-;-- -;---..11 Poetic
4 Sea eagle
Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10 ; Wild Kingdom
10
EnroDed
31
Kovacs
or
"reveal"
5 Wisen13; Family Affair 15; Consumer Survival Kit 20;
16 Stilt
Pyle
18 Autocrat
&amp; =~;
Tourisls Are Coming 33
19 DiscUS&amp;ion 31 Contaminate
20
7:3o-Last
of lhe Wild 3; Name That Tune 4; Motch
33
InDection
group
of po1
Game PM 6; S25 ,000 Pyramid 8;; The Judge 10; To
20 Paris' river 36 Vigor
7 Slower
faced
Tell lhe Truth 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Rober!
23 Mapped out '11 Onager
Z2 Abstract
(mus.)
MacNeil Reporl 20,33
s :DO-LIItle House on the Prairie 3,J5; Bionic Woman
being
13, Slate Fair Preview 4; World at War 6; Berl
23 Hoisting
Convy
8, 10; Nova 20,33
device
a·Jo-Frankle
Avalon 8.10.
%5 Ebbed and
9.DO-Doc1ors Hospital 3,4, 15 ; Baretta 6,13 : Movie
flowed
" The Graduate" 8,10; Greal Performances 33;
26 RDU call
Upstair~. Downstaa lrs :ZO.
answer
lO:DO-NBC News Speclal3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
27 Somme·
New s 20; Where lhe Twisted Laurel Grows 33.
lier's
10.3D-Aimanac 20.
JJ :DO-News 3,4,6,13,1S; ABC News 33 .
concern
11 : 15-News 8, 10.
28 Grandn ·3o-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Movie " The Public Eye"
6,13: Janak I 33.
Z9 Western
11 :45-Movie " Don' t Make Waves" 8; Mary Hartman.
Spamsh
Mary Hartman 10.
3% Blushing
r1· ts-Movle "S .O.S. Pacific" tO
33 Ballerina'si:=-+--1- T-! .DO-Tomorrow 3,4.
mainstay
1·05-News 13
34 Author

,.. a

IIIIIIOIIS

COMM!RCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
- Aerlal - lnll'ustrlat

24

• AQ942

!IIIIDOl!SloOoM

NO SUNDAY CALLS

overhauled, w1th mower and

VILLAGE MANOR ln Middlepcnl

sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby , WOMAN needed to work or l1~e
m my home . Phone '992· ~36 or
I ·416·8570.

m•s~ .. across Ch•ster Grade
School , 10 o m. till "' p m
Wtds. and Thursday .

Cleland

GLEN R. BISSELl.

sulky . S300. Phone 992·7205.

oNe bedroom

1312) '12'1·•129

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts lop price for stonding

- Call992·2156.
---- __

peppe"

-

R ~o

Recru1t1ng .

· frrln UCLA Medica' Center
•l Monday IIIII wiD J!lldtrlo I
' 1englby ' ee..,alicln period YARo--s;;i;," . w-;d;,· thr;;.,gh
I It hGme.
Fridoy, Augu•t 25 , 26. 77. 1128
I
¥1M RusaeB, belt Jmown
Ea!~Molrt ~''!!~~~roy.

I for her perfll'l!lllncett In the

M1ddleport

YOURSElf ! I

Rutland.

IF YOU hove a ttr"J ice to otfer,
wont to buy or Mtll lomethmg ,
oe looking for work
.. or
whatever , , . you'll ge1 resulls
foster witt! a Senltnel Wont Ad.

CONTACT

1614) '185· WINTER potatoes and peoches.

----LOOI&lt;ING FOR A LOW·RISK IN COuNTRY Mob1le Home Park , Rt
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy
' VEST MEN f ... ? INVEST IN

06001 . Phone 1 1200) 673·3455.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
SSca5hS$ tor junked o~ to, Frye's GuARANTEED JOBS: Locotion .
Starting poy $361 .20 single;
Trude Auto Ports.
Phon•1"'2-2081 .

FREE ESTIMATES!

9'12·3965
.
•ng, powe,r btokes , o1r condJ·
horung E..-cellent condttion
c;RAVELYtroctor , 76hp 2speed
Phone "''9-2'302.
transmiss i on,
r ecently

430 Of th e M• lgs counry

"'' lawyer.
• , WOME
LOS ANGELES (UPI}
' • ' Actnlll Roea1lnd Ruuell was
llacll at her Beverly HIIJI

$3300 Coli
3582_of1e! S p ~ ·

You can ..va hundrtcls
even thousands ot dolt.n
with aluminum or vinyl
siding.

-

Geroid•ne

1971

1975 Olds Storflre, V·6, power
s tee r i n g,
ond
bfokes ,
cutomolic, Coli I S-4800 new, w1ll

----- J97e, fot'ld Gronoda , power stee-r ·

NOW occ~ ting ptano litudents l
beginner~ . intermedrate , ad·
vonced students Call 992 ·

Deed Records ; thence south 1-4
deg . 3-4 min . SA sec. west 50
teet to an iron pin : thence
~outh 75 deg 25 min . 06 sec.
east U0.25 teet to an Iron prn ;
!hence north u deg . JA mi n. 54
sec. ent 50 feet to the point of
beg i nning , containi ng . 161
a c re ~ and being part of a I 06
aae trac tdescnbedas Trac t 1 .
In Vol 65 page .uo of th e Meigs
County Deed Records .
Being par t of the same real
estate con veyed to sald church
by deed recorded In Vol um e
239 page 971 Meigs county

OLD

ON£ 1965DodgeP•ckup: one 1971
Ford p•ckup Oor"J Houdoshelt .
Syracuse Oh lO.

.ell tor

llllllltlllt Senlc•
Fitlaoctoc AWWio
...,lttlttllllls Utttcs

John P&lt;~pe . 949·2213 - -:-;:-

eJ11ineer

cooducted by 1
Sydney jtllllce II lbe peace In
lbe first-class ~(Junge of 1

991·2100

lf70 AMC Horne1 2• MPG , S350.
Phone992·7211

WE would lrke to expre~s our
he-artfelt thanks, w1th deepest
&lt;lppre&lt;:rafion and e¥edos.hng
gratitude to oil that helped a nd
cored in Qur time crof need. The
proyer~ a nd beoutrfu ' floral
fri butes given m memory ol
R1dly Ke1th Rowe w11f never be
forgo !len. The Rowe f.omdy.

-

--

her

Birthday

Clll't!llllllY

3!1'11 .
1971 Ford Ranger , p1cltup, one.,_.
holl ton , aluminum mog CANNING peoches now reody
wheelt wrd&lt;e oval trres, 302 3
thru August, Several varieties
speed, Phooe 7.42 ·3008.
by the bushel , 1h bvshel or
pec:k , Please bring own con·
I'M8 Bu1ck Wild cot , outo;,otic,
tc:uner . 2 con-wen1eM locations
power steering . Phone 992·
Midway Mark e t, Pomeroy,
3580.
992 ·2582: Bob's Market , Mason.
19n AMC Hornet six cylinder
n3 .572 1
~
outomotrc , good body , iood
CANNING tom o toe~ ond sweep
running 'ond1hon , $650. Phone

~P6Rf!

WIN AT BRIDGE
One bid that's universal

Pomeroy , Oh•o or phone 992 ·

--

·--~---::'::"~.::;I::::""'-=~..:::"::.-

Al. TROMM CONST
Rutt.nd
742·2lll
All Work Guaran!HCI _
Froe Esllmatts
o.ll-2 mo

Pl.AS~T:IJ~~~~~lfl~,~·~~-'--/

.f'l. Plallsant
Pit.

OH,OH! l00K5 liKE '
WE'VE GOT COMPANY,

AH, OF COURSE: THE YOUNG
LAD Y KNOWN A5 '' R051E" !

....

Remodeling Service
For Your Home

For Sale

IT$ TH!;

8·22·1 mo.

The Complete

~Your

married on a l.mdon-bound
747 jet alrUner ~ mi1e8
above AiiStralla Mooday.
Toni Stenrul, 32, and Jim
Mclean, 24, were married In a

941·1124 8·22·1 m~.

CAPI'AIN EASY

DIRE~ f!!'s~JAW

992-7320 Evanlngs

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and Repair

Noon saturday .
Phone today 992 -21.56

lot

11111.
Vtlvoh, nylon ,rlnh,
lltrcvlans, vinyl nlkh, anol
fancy prtnts, acc"aorlts.

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

Dav id Parsons. owner

1972 VOLKSWAGEN 2 DR.
SliU
Good tirO$, cleon Interior, rodlo, red finish , good
eeonomy.

OFFICE HOURS

~-

Conlinvoul one p1tct
fUitars. Walltnt It, ar do It
rourseH. S,.clal prlc" to
bVIIdtrs.

$quart Yard Installed

BLIND ADS

8· 30 e .m . to 5 00 p .m .
Da ily , 8 :10 am to 12 00

GUTTER SERVICE.

•6.95

for
80
worcr
m inimum .
Eech add itiona l word J
cents .

the mi ddle of two seemingl y Guernsey , Monroe , Noble
unrelated 1ncl dents and come CAC , Washington, Morgan
out sm elling like a rose , hnan- CA O, Me1gs CAC. Athens,
P&amp;rry CAP , H&lt;:Jckii"Jg Coun ty
CIO II y
Com m Iss 1oner s ; 21 In -School
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) - Washington -Morgan CAO .
Don't t;e alrald to th tnk big to· Me igs CAC . Athens , Perry
CAP, Guer ns.ev . Monroe ,
day There's a spot reserved Nob!~ CAC. Hocking County
for you at the top. Lady Luck Is Commiss ioners . 31 Adult Gu ernsey, Noble , Monroe
on your slde.
CAC , Washington , M organ
LIB RA (Sopl. 23·0ct. 23) You CAO , Meigs CAC. Lead i ng
have only to drop a few words Creek conservancy Distr ict,
~o the r1ght people today and Athens . Perry CAP , Athens
Comm i ss1oners .
they· 11 get you r message . Counfy
Hocking
County
Com
Others are wa1tmg to go to bat missiontrs . Copies Of the p lan
tor you.
are a v ailable for lnspec tioh
Cave Bookman , F1eld
SCORPIO (Oct ZA·Nov. 22) from
Representat i ve , 117 Nor t h
Take advantage of any oppor- Pleasant
Stree t ,
New
Oh i o
,. 37 6&lt;1
tunitY to meet new people to- Lexin gton ,
day. You could make an ac- Comments m ay be made to
quaintance who'll be an enor· the acldress listed above or to
lhe U S Depa rtment of
mou s asset In the future
L abor , Employment and
Tr a1n 1ng Admin ls tra1 1on , 230
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·Doc. Sou
t h Dearborn, Ch ic ago ,
21) Goals you once thought 1m· Ill inois
6060&lt;~
p ortanl Will be replaced by 18) 2•
more SIQnlltcant ones Yo ur
reasons for change will be un·
LEGAL NOTICE
u sual
NOiiCe !S hereby gi ven th at
CAPRICORN IDee . 22-Jan. Cli fford Jacobs. Otto Lohn ,
19) Oon 'l clase your mtnd to· Ernes t F'owell. Robe rt Bar ton ,
day to proposals o.f friends, no Georalcl Pulli ns and Kathy
Pull ins, as trustees of the
matter how oullandtsh the y Lcwrel Cliff Fr ee MethOdist
sound A secane' Jock could Church , Inc have file-d their
pe1 it ion i n th e common P leu
show they make good sense
court al legin g that the
AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob. 1t) follow ing descr ibed re a r
Opporlumties 1or profit could es t ate is no longer needed tor
cOme today in unexpected Church purposes and request
a11t hority to transfer seid rea l
ways It could be a business t1p estate
. wh tch real estate Is
or a chance tor a good buy
descr i bed as follows , to -w 1t.
Situated
tn
Salisbury
PISCES !Fob. 20-March 20) A Townsh
i p , Me i gs Co unty ,
sudden turn at events will draw Ohio, i n Fractron NO 30, Town
you closer to someone you've 2 N. Range 13 W and more
known, but have never been sl· parl i cul~r l y descr ibed as
lracted to This person's depth follows ·
Commenc in g at th e north
w•ll surpri se you
eas. t corner Of Frac ti on 30 .
thence north 87 deg 00 min
wes 1 367 36 tee I to a point .
thence south &lt;1 deg A9 min . 16
sec . e. sf 48~ . 45 teet to a point ,
thence south 8-.t deg •o min .,.,.
sec wes1 131 feet to a poi of ,
Aug. 25, 1976
thence sout h -4 deg. &lt;19 min , 16
sec east (passing a concrete
Th1s year holds great promise monument at 165 teen for 1
for you. but you can"l afford to total d tstMce of 119 feet to a
c.&lt;:~ast M!lny 1mportanr. plea· po1nt in the centerline of Old
sant and profitable changes S.R . 7 an&lt;l 12, , thence along
the c~terline of sai d hiQhway ,
could be in the oHtng .
s .u deg . MJ m in . ,. ·sec west .
119 21 feet to a po int ; thence
al ong: the east li ne of Laurel
C&amp;itf Free Mathoctist ChUrch
land , N . lAdeg . 3~ min . sc sec.
east 363. 66 feet to a conc rete
monument and th e tr ue point
of beg i nnmg for the tot1ow 1ng
descr l b~d tract ; thence north
Aballt PeGple
deg . 25 min ~ 06 sec . wes t
Pretl 75
B)'
Uailed
{passing
a
concre1e
monument at 6 25 feet and a
llll.tmaditaal
sp ike In the cen terlint of T R.
AIRLINER WEDDING
No. 205) tor a total dist ance of
SYDNEY, Auatcalla ( UPI) 1.0.25 fetl to a double Elm
tree at the northwest corner of
- An lrilll
and an Tract
1 des cribed in Vol . 6S
pag~

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

S2 00

Ad dillone l 25c Charge
per Advertisemen t.

Engllsb comedienne were

R1clne, Ohio

S169.
1973 VEGA ST. WAGON
Local. 1 owner, ~utomat lc lrl'lns ., power sl eerlng,
rodlo, red fin ish, good !Ires. really cl•an.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

a ssis t a nce
Ap pr ove d
LEO (July 23·AUfl- 22) Today, program
operators tor FY ' 71
you coul d prt&gt;Ject you~se lf mto

V

CARPET SHOP

1974 CHEVY NOVA4 DOOR
m•s
Local low mileage car, \1.8 engine. automollc power
steering and brakes , radio, tires show little wear, gold
finish . Sharp and nice.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 24. 1976
5:DO-FBI ) ; Partridge Fam ily 8; Mission: Impossible
13.
5.36-Adam .12 ~ ~ News 6; Family Affair B: Electric
Company 20 ,33; Adom 12 13 .
6:DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,1 5; ABC news 6; Zoom :ZO;
Crockelt 's Vlclory Garden 33.
6·3D-NBC News 3.13, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grllfllh
6; CBS News 8, 10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias,
Yoga and You 33
.
7:DO-Trulh or Consequences 3; To Tell The lrulh • :
Bowling tor Dollars 6; Let's go lo the Races 8;
News 10; Name That Tune 13; Family Affair 15;

.•'

'

RACINE

Television log for easy viewing

_______.~----~------------------,

Business Services

2 SIGNS·

correc

The PubliSher res,rves
the right to I!!CHf or r l!!ject
any ads dttmed ob
Jectlonal . The publ isher
will not be responsible for
more than one Incorrect

Include : H Out of School -

-

,uw

publleatlon .
REGULATIONS

Econom ically d!Sid'¥antaged .
Including head of household .
veterans, youth and voung
adul ts , handicapped, older

~

1
••

!Ions acctpttd first diY of

Tra in ing Act Two client
groups will be served ; ' l

a,.t.. Sales

Auto:. .Sales"--

WANT ADS

Monroe ,

TAURUS (April 20·M•y 20) worke rs , and, 2) unemployed
There ls somethi!lQ exciting
brewing on th e soci al scene.
Fresh acq uamtances could
lead you mto a brrght world of

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classified.

I

AREAl

11- T1tli OellySentlnei,Mlddleport.Pcmeroy,0 ., Tuel!day, Aug . 24, 1976
Jt&lt;..l\ 'l'KAC'I'

NARLAC~

I

I.

V
t,

T IMI D ONE DID.

V \j
f.,_

...1

I

Now IUTIU\fle Lhe eln:led Iottto form the surpriae _,..,, •
o unt~ttd by th• above..-

~~Pliii::::I:III: :_S:~7.:
IMISI UISW!I
~IIII!=;-\--''1'[ I I

x J-r x1 J"

(.U.wen to......,.._,

J•••"'•• QUEER

l'e11er.l•y'•

I

POPPY ALKALI SLOUCH

;\n 11 w~r1 llmc th r opt:rtJ 1wprann mnnogf'd to gcol lh f'

tole• dtr" '1 aUt11fio11-SHE SPOt&lt;E ''UP"

RIGHT

UPIO

HERE~!
N16/oiT

SCHOOL?

THAT'S A 6RE,.\T IDEA ...
THEI(E ARE ALL SORTS
OF COURSES THAT WOULD
6E GOOD FO~ 'I'OU...

THE'i HAVE OBEDIENCE
T~AINiN6 AND 6UMD
DOG CLASSES ... THOSE

WOO"D 8E 6000

ACTUALL'f'. I WA5
THINKIN6 OF M/Jl.RAME !

�12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 24, 1976

..
•
State rests ItS

Ca~e

Joseph Maples
died on Monday

Seven lottery employes sus.pended

Today's

CLEVELAND (UPI ) - ~~~~~.. Blrlllrd Olbr, cbarl• .. .,.... tilt
(ConUnued from page I)
Seven
lottery employee _ , IUII*ded lor two diJI commllllon ltMif lllot&amp;ld
Joseph D. Maples, 47, a
neighbor aero$! the road from the Hendricks home.
for
failure
to perfGrm a bulc ~.
l1llplllded
Moodly
.by
Ohio
'
Sle told of being with Mrs. Hendricks at th~ home of reSident of Rt. I, GaUipolls,
job t.Mk on cme Ol,. . .
Lottery
Director
Gerald
another neighbor, Wilma Jean Buckley, shortly before the died in University Hospital
.laiDel 1:. 11«11, Roblrt E.
Patronlte, four for lallifylnR occMion.
shooUng took plJice. She went home to do her supper dishes but Monday evening following
Cuyahoga
County
job IP!)ilcatlcnl.
Nell littler WUllam
could not set any time that elapsed from the Ume she left Mrs. Injuries received in an
Plwecutor
JCIIm
T.
CorrlpD
The
suspensions
follow
B!otdw
and Rldlard H. '
automobile accident near
Jlendricks untll the shooUng took place.
recently
deelilled
to
Finan.
chargee
made
earUw
this
By
MILTON
RlaDIAN
Another neighbor Wilma Jean Buckley, was the next Wilkesville earlier this
Huffman'•
~~~~;mth by fo~r Repii!Ucan lnveatigate
UPI 8pat1a F..diiGr
.prosecuUon witness. Sbe told of the visit by Mrs. Hendricks month.
state IecLslatora and Miami
t
Mr. Maples owned the Blue
and Mrs. Ellis to her home. She told of Mrs.
County
Proaecutor
Robert
J.
NEW YORK (UP! )- Whitey Henog knows CharHe Finley.
Hendricks arriving home about 3,30 p.m. on June I and Devils Barber Shop on Rt.
He
probably knows hlm better than any ol the 14 managers Huffman tbat lottery
160,
and
was
also
a
coal
miner
carrying what she said slle believed, was beer. Mrs. Buckley
employee were coocealing
said that'Mrs. Hendricks came to her home and told her "I've at the Meigs County mines. Finley has bed. Herwg once worked for Finley as a coach and felony and mlldemeanor
He was born Dec. 7, 1929, in turned down a chance to manage the A'•· That's how weU be
shot Buddy". Mrs. Hendricks was blood "ali over.'' She asked
C(llvicdona.
By Berl1la Parker
Kentucky,
son of the Ia~ knows Finley.
that help be caUed and alJio used the bathroom to wash off
Huffman said be had run a
Whitey
Henog
has
his
Ka!1888
Oty
Royals
well
out
in
front
in
Sunday
School
attendance
Attendance
at the Free
E;rnesl
and
Essie
WhiiA!d
sop1e of the blood Mrs. Buckley said. Mrs. Buckley said that
superficiallnve.t4!ation
of
63.
the
American
League
West
and
he
knows
Olarlle
Finley's
on
Auguat
15
was
57,
and
the
Methodllt
Chun:b
Aug. 22
Mrs. Hendricks' daughter, Ruth, notified-of the shooting via Maples, who survives. He is
of
the
lottery's
'Zl1
employes
habits
arid
methods
so
well
that
he
didn't
hsve
too
much
offering
f,l7.00.
Attendance
at
wu
12$.
survived by the following
telepbooe from the Buckley home.
in Cuyahoaa County and
Rev . &gt;'Eugene Muaaer
The next prosecution witness, Sheriff Robert Hartenbach children: Mrs. Bill (Carolyn) reaction recenUy when ooe of Finley's st.ltements wu called "found seven with aerloua Worship Service&amp; waa 32.
Rev. Richard 1bomas was delivered the ~erman Suntla)'
told of being called to the Hendricks home on June I by the Nicholson, Rt, I, Gallipolis; to hls attention .
crime recorda and another 12 the speaker with "Religion evening.
Finley
said
the
Royals
were
going
to
choke
and
the
.
A
's
were
Debbie
Maples,
at
home;
one
Syracuse Emergency Squad. He said that be noted some
with ties ol one kind or
Mr.. and Mrs. Clerence
troken beer botUes along the sidewalk leading to the kitchen of grandchild : these brothers going to catch the!ll and win In the West for the sixth straight another to people Involved, by Proxy" the sermon tiUe.
year.
Henog
knew
Finley
had
said
what
he
did
hoping
to
upset
Wednesday
evening
prayer
Kilrr,
MlUerspori, visited Mr.
and
sisters,
Darus
Maples
the Hendricks' heme.
with criminal activity In services were well attended and Mrs. Dick Karr recenUy.
the
Royals
and
cut
down
the
distance
between
them
and
the
and
Ernest
M
aples,
Jr.,
both
Sheriff Harten bach described finding Hendricks' body on
Cuyalu~a County."
last week. This week's leader
Mr. Vern Story, his mother,
the floor of the kitchen. Emphasized during the sheriff's . of Lexington, Ky .; Mrs. second11Iace A's.
Patronlte announced the will be Edith Harper of the Mrs.
·
·
''They'Ye
been
tallt:in8
all
year,"
says
Herzog.
"We've
kept
Mildred
Story,
Law
rence
(Joy)
Wolford,
testlmooy and introduced into evidence were exhibits of a
suspensions
.
In
a
terse
our
mouths
shut
and
played.
So
far,
we've
won
75
games
..
Our
Tuppers
Plain!
church.
Colum~.
~nl
the
weekend
single cigaret, a pack of cigarets an~ a cigaret lighter. The . Ypsilanti, Mich .: Mrs .
statement that did not
Mr. and Mrs. Chaa. · D. with Mrs. Vem Story and 110n
witness said the cigaret lighter was m Hendricks' hand; the Lawrence (!Ietty) Heilman, goal Is to win 95-fll. Uwedo that, we don't hive to pay attention elJiborate on the charges
to
what
anybody
says.
Last
year
we
won
91
games,
which
Woode and Nina Roblnaon John.
'
.
single cigaret was between his legs and the package IJiy near Holly, Mich ., and Mrs.
against the employes.
wasn't
too
bad.
When
I
got
here
a
year
ago,
we
were
11
games
attended
the
hymn
sing
at
the
Mr.
,
P
)Iul
Archer,
Everett
(Margaret)
Hatfield,
an outstretched arm. Several photographs of the body were
The lour suspended for North Bethel Church, Columbus, !!iJent Saturday
back.
We
got
within~
and
finished
7
back."
Orlando,
Fla.
admitted to evidence. Describing the wounds that Hendricks
The Royals now in Cleveland, are in the middle of their !alslfylng their orllinal job Saturday, August 14.
with Mr;IArcber's mother,.
He was a member of the
received, · the Sheriff testified that it was found upon
appUcatlons were Martin Kll·
Ioogest
road
trlp,
and
their
moat
important
ooe.
They're
8»
Mrs.
Eva
Bt~
·
has
beet~
'
Mrs. otorgla Diehl, nd
Chapel
Hill
Church
of
Olrist
examination, He!ldricks had been shot in the knuckle of the left
bane, a storekeeper; Anthony Ul at her home here.
games
lip
on
the
A's
and
if
they
can
gel
back
home
Sept.
3
with
·
Charles
Diehl.
•.
and
007,
Morning
Dawn
forefinger before that hole In his chest near which were several
Marcellino, a validation
1111ywhere
near
the
same
kind
of
lead
they
have
now,
they
can
The
UMW
will
have
their
Mr.
Alston
Tracy,
Lodge.
smaller wounds.
·
clerk: and Sam Papalardo regular monthly .meeting at Columbus, spent the weekend
Funeral services will be start making p]Jiyoff plans.
Bertha thorla, who married Mrs. Hendricks' son on June
Mindful of how close Kansas Oty came (o surprising every· and Harry Presser, field the church Tueatlay, Aug. 17. witll his mo~, Mrs. Ne!Ue
12 was the next witness. Mrs. ThorlJI, who, according to the held 2 p.m. Thursda~ at the
rep..-ntadves.
Several local people at- Tracy.
co~ proceeding, had given details of the incident. earlier In Willis Funeral Home, body last year, only to faU back in the flnitl weeks, Herzog feels
Two
other
employes,
that
experience
automadcaliy
makes
his
ball
club
stronger
tended the Athens County , Mrs. Mary ·Edna Sweeny,
the office of Prosecutor Fultz and to a grand jury, satd that she Gallipolis. with Evangelist
Thcmas Stanton, Region I Falr last week.
Cleveland, and Mrs. Willlam .
could remember very little when she .was questioned on William B. Kughn officiating. this time around.
manager, and Walter Smith,
"We're
loose,
but
we're
not
overconfident,"
he
says.
"We've
,
Webb, Cpa! Grove, visited
Burial
will
follow
in
Ohio
several aspects of the case.
.
.
.
regional llason, were.
got
nine
more
games
left
oo
this
road
lrlp.
Every
ooe
Is
mighty
Valley
Memory
Gardens.
"--'d
t
...
#recently,
witb Mr. and Mrs.
Prosecutor Fultz asked: "Do you mean that those four
In 1950• n""' en norry Norman ·Schaefer
suspended for failure to
important
to
us.
When
Finley
said
we
were
gonna
choke,
we
.
Masonic
services
will
be
words which you told the jury today Is all that you
report lnformatioo prompUy Trwnan ordered government , Mr ~a Karr Ill much
were
7
games
ahead.
Yeah,
we
ali
saw
what
he
had
1.o
say
in
held
at
the
funeral
home
7:30
remember?''
to management. Region 1 seizure , of
American lmpr~ed from her ·recent
"I know I told you more but Its been two m~ths and I just p.m. Wednesday . Friends the papers, but we didn 't make a big issue d. it. !f we win our covers parts of northeast and
ralltoadstopreventageneral l.llneas. Her daughter, Mrs.
may ca tl at U!f funeral home share of ball games, what ~lie Finley says IS!l't going to
cail't remember", Mrs. Thor!a replied.
northwest
Qhlo.
make
a
whole
lot
ol
d~rence:"
·
·
strike.
Polly Mathew, Huron, Is
Over the objection of the defense, Mrs. ThorlJi was from ·2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Wed·
The
sll&lt; were suspended
Win
or
lo&amp;e,
the
blond,
44-yllar~ld
Herzog
has
done
an
nesday.
dismissed, subject to recall by .the prosecution.
Athought lor the day: Fifth staying this week · with her
outstanding job with the Royals this year especially until the Ohio Lottery
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
· - After ouUining hls qualifications, Herman D. Henry,
considering he lost three o1 hls top pitchetl, Steve Busby, Paul Commission's next meeting American President James Karr.
investigator of the Burllllu of Criminal Investigation, told of his
Splittorff and Doug Bird, .but he reali!es if the Royals should Aug, 31, when !urther actioo Monroe said, "Nadonal honor
Mrs. Jenevle Ward,
visit to the Hendricks home on the night of the June I shooting
Ill .natiooal !)!'operty of the
may 9e taken.
stumble
and
btU
to
win,
the
season
would
be
considered
a
Columbus,
attended Sunday
and of the various items of evidence he took during the evening
GREEN BAY, Wis. (UP!)
A seventh man, field re- highest value."
disaster.
morning
services
at the local
for e•aminatlon of the London laboratory. Included in the - The Green S.y Packers
Bird, the-6-4 right-hander with the good fastball and slider
church
.
items were the slurts and blouse Mrs. Hendricks was Monday cut five players and
was the club's top reliever the ·past three -sons but
bu
wearing at the tlme of the shooting.
.
deactivated three players, in- who
converted intll a regular starter this year ,Is the oo1y one of the plJiyoffs: The Yankees' pitching would give them an·ed&amp;e t
"'·
Several photographs and slides laken by Henry were eluding quarterback Don tllree back in actioo among the three pitchers who were you know how that goes, anything can happen in a short series
admitted in evieence. These included an enlargement of Milan and . linebacker Jim · sidelined with injuries. "I don't know what other ball club has , and nobody believes that more than Herzog.
injurlestothelefthand of the deceased, the wound in the chest Carter.
BRIDGE REOPENED
lost three pitchers like Busby, Splilf«ff and Bird," says
"We played them 12 games this year and all of them went
(l"tloinches) thepositlonofthelegsandasecondslideshowlng
The Packers cut running Hermg, who can be thankful Dennis I.eooard, AI Fitzmorris right down to the last out, the last pitch, eu:ept one," he says.
WILLIAMSTOWN, W. Va.
the position 'or the single dgaret lying by ooe of the legs. The back Terry Wella, llefensive andMvty Pattin lookup some of the slack among the starters "Only one game was lopsided, and we won II, S.2. In the 12 - The Ohio River bridge
photos along with those taken by the sheriff were displayed end Drew Taylor, linebacker
connecting the downtown.
we played the Yankees, we woo7 and iolll5."
and explJiined to the jury by Heilry and by Sheriff Hartenbach. Tom Hull and wide receim'S and Mark Littell and Steve Mingori some of it among the games
Whitey Herzog keeps drawing a great deal of praise tltesel' sections of WUUamitown and
Roo Mayo and Nat Hawkins.
Theslldeswereshownooawallinthecourtroom.
also can be grateful he has had hitters like Hal days, and he always makes sure to chamel It back to hia Marietta, Ohio, was reopened
On the stand Monday afternoon alJio was Dr. R. R.
Aspokesman said the team
Monday. The span has been
Pickens Meigs Co1Dity Clrooer, who ewnlned the bo4y at the would have to release three McRae, George Brett and Amos Otis available all year, and he ~'yiersgot. good players,;; he says. ''Not -'." good players, but closed since early spring for
McRae and Brett are running 1·% for the American League
&amp;._
w...,.
Hendricks hoine and at the EWing Funeral Heme as did Henry. more players by Tuesday., the Is.
batting Iitle and althOugh o~· · average doesn't matcll theirs, . gCJO!:I guys. Just because yolD' team Is ~ doesn'.t .make repairs, . Traffic has
Dr. Pickens also outliiled details d. the Injuries and the poaltioo ' day all NatiCIIal Football he has had a good year all around.
· you a good manager. I juat happened to step into a Situation routed over the Interstate 77
of the body.
.
League teams are required to
Right now, it looks as if Herzog will be managing against a wherethematerialalready was there. It's the ballplayers who bridge on the outskirts of the·
Court was recessed at 3:30p.m. and was to be resumed at 9 have no mere than 49players.
two towns.
loog.tlme buddy of hls, Billy Martin, in the American League win the ball games, not the manager."
a.m. this morning.
The
third
player
deacdvated for two games or
NORTHRIDGE , Calif. 16 days waa safety Jlm
(UPI) - P•ulJI Kim of Burrow. The Packers alJio
Inglewood, Calif., shot a two- said wide receiver Gerald
overiJBI' 72 Monday .to lead Tinker W1S placed 00 the '
amateur qualifying for the injured ~rve llat.
CLOSED
$315,000 Carlton, the richest
Aug . 14 ltlru Aug. 16
tournament in LPGA history.
The ether live qualifiers at
the
Porter Valley Country
August 27-U.2t
Club
were Vicki Fergon, E1
Mother Jugs &amp; Speed
(COntinued from page 1)
Cajon,
Calif., and Kay
Bill COsby, Raquel Welch,
Harvey KeiteL Allen McMahon, Playa del Rey, base, ditching and sloping
Garfield, Bruce
Calif., 7411; Tome Carr, Half work on C.1 north (school lotDavison.
PG Moon Bay, Calif., 77: Diane Athens County line) from
Harsh, Be.llflower, Calif., 78, Junction of State Route 143 to
Sllow starts at 7 p.m.
'and Susan Stanley, Vista,. the' Athens County line, a
length of 2.7 miles. Work is to
Calif., 79.
be started Immediately.
The Commissioners · alJio
approved an animal clJilm
payment to Robert Darst, Rl.
2, Cheshire. Attending were
Wells, Ours and Bernard
Gilkey, commissioners,
County Engineer Buehl, and
.Martha Chambers, clerk.

ncM,.

Sport Parade

The,_ ...................
a.

Laurel Qiff
News Notes

AI/red

Social Note.

~=·

been

MEIGS THEATRE

'No school

'

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OUR EXPERTS ARE
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So if you need perso nal financial assistance of any kind, see
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a lot of experience and we
might be abl e to hel p you as
we have many others. See
us today.
'

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TILLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
lwnber federal Deposit Insurance Corporatiar.
- ~~Po.ITS
I

•

INSURED TO '40,00C'

Mayor
(COnUnued fl'lllll page I)
Bumgarner performed much
of the work for the Marietta
office and the collllilisaion in
regard to the update which
will be beneficial in putting
· Middleport in a position to
apply for federal grants on
va~ious projects.
Council agreed to increase
the payment for meals served
to prisoners by Miss Martha
Howell from $1 a meal to $1.50
and repair of holes in several
streets was discussed.
Council agreed also to
cooperate
in
hauling
limestone from Albany Into
Middleport for ci tlzens to be
used on their private
property. The work In hauling
in the limestone w!U be done
during slow periods in the
regular work week and the
limestone will be available to
any resldent at $6 a ton.
Residents may order small
amounts which will , be
combined so that a truck
going to Albany w!U return
with a full load. The residents
placing orders will be billed
at the . $6 a ton rate. If
payments are not made by
those placing orders or If the
service Is abuaed in any way,
it wtU be discontinued, of.
ficlals said.
Attending the meeUng were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk·
Treasurer Gene Grate,
Councilmen George
Meinhart, Marvin Kelly, Carl
Horky, wuuam Walters and
James Brewer and Rev .
Dwight Zavitz who gave
prayer preceeding the
meeting.

I,

GM prices on 1977
models up by $269 .
DETROrr UP! - General Moton corp., Ute -auto
lndulltey'l pricltlg leader, IIUIOUDced today Utat Ita 1977
model can wiU carry price t.liJ that average '119 higher
thaa CIUHIII prices.
The 5.8 per cent booitt ~·· Ute ftnt prlc• chan&amp;e by
GM 1lace the average $208 (U percent) lncreaoe when It
Introduced 111'11 model can: II wa1 allRbUy below the
average I per cent lacreue talked about earner this
tummer.
There wu DO lmmedbtte word from Ford, Cbrysler or
Amerlcaa Motori ua their 1977·model pricing pla1111. 1be
auiOmakeri had Informed dealen In July that they could
begin laking orden lor the 1977 models with the assurance
Utat prices would aotlncreue by more than I per cent.
· With the excepdon of "allo~~ew" models, GM had
given de1len permJJIIon to begin seWng largely
111Changed subcompact, compact and mldtlzed model
can.lt'a holdlq back Ill completely rede•lgned smaller,
"•tandard.-tlze" cm untU the end of September.
(Continued on page 16)

rs •
By Bob Hoeflich
Mary VIrginia Hendricks,
61, Minersville, was found
guilty Tuesday of murdering
her husband, Floyd Eugene
(Buddy) Hendricks, 50, atlhe
couple 's Welshlown Hill
home on June I ending a two
day trial in lhe Meigs County
Common Pleas Court .
Following one hour and 50
minutes of deliberation , a
jury of seven women and five .
men returned th e guilly
verdict at 4:35p.m. Tuesday .
The trial began Monday
morning.
Mrs. Hendri cks was
charged wt'lh murdering her
husband on Tuesday, June I,
when she shot him at their
home and hsd been confined
to the Meigs County .)ail since
that time . .Following the
verdi ct, during which Mrs.
Hendricks showed no reac·
lion, Mrs. Hendricks was
re.manded to the custody of

•

.en ric s

the sheriff's department until
at 9 a.m. Saturday. Murder carries a sentence of 15. years to life.
What appeared to be
unusual, as the trial unfolded
Tuesday, at least to laymen
untrained in the law , was the
fact lha l Mrs. Hendricks was
the only witness for her
defense . Tbere were a
number of ~sons wailing in
the courtroom foyer when
court reconvened after lunch
and it is believed that most of
them were lo have been
witnesses for ·Mrs. Hendricks. However, none was
called.
Judge John C. Bacon, who
presided over the trial, said
the testimony of the witnesses would have bee n
pertinent to self defense as
claimed by Mrs. Hendricks,
but their testimony would not
have pertained lo the holiday
weekend , lhe Memorial Day
sen~ncing

weekend, over which the trial
period covered.
Judge Bacon commented
!hal there would have been .
objections to the testimony,
whi ch would have been
sustained, and so the attorney
for th e plainltff, James
Bennett of Gallipolis, had
agreed not to call the wil·
nesses. However, the gist of
their lcslimony was put into
the· record in case an appea l
is filed in the case, the judge
sta IA!d .
On the stand Tuesday, Mrs.
Hendricks recounted the long
Memorial Day weekend with
the shooting occuring on· the
Tuesday evening following.
She told of going to the
Kyger area with her husband
on Saturday evening before
the shooting where Hend ri cks
joined a group to play music
for a square dance. He drank
21 cans of beer duri ng the
evening and stopped at a cafe

at y
POMEROY·MIDDLE PORT, OHIO

~ .,..&lt;.;..,

",· ,. &lt;j·;h .
, , (..r&gt;

"·•..li .,

LATEST THING In amphibious assault ships Is the
USS Tarawa. The 820-foot long, 40,~on vessel can
embark, deploy and land a fully equipped Marine assault
force by helicopter or landing craft, performing functions
previously requiring four ships.

By United Press International
COLUMBUS - THE TENTATIVE AGREEMENT of a
$2.04 per hour increase over three years between United
Rubber Workers and the Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. in a new
contract may pave the way toward setUement of the 127-day
strike agamst the Big Four of the tire industry .
·
Goodyear nd URW negotiators reached agreement
Tuesday during negotiations in Columbus while URW
President Peter Bomarito continued talks with the Firestone
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. in Clevelll.nd. "An agreement with
Firestone is very close," a URW spokesman said.
The URW struck Goodyear, Firestone, B. F. Goodrich and
Uniroyal at the expiration of the old three-year contract April
21. Negotiations wi,th the rubber companies were held at
several locations, including ancinnati, Columbus, Dayton,
Akron, Washington, D.C., and Cleveland.

PHILADELPIDA, (UPilDespite assurances by city
officials that the mysterious
"legionnaire's Disease" outbreak appears to be over, the
dty lost another big
convention today and a hotel
manager and bartender were

hospitalized with symptoms
of the illness.
Jacque Menke, St. Louis
County magistrate court
clerk, informed city officials
of the cancellation of the
"November ccnvention of the
National Association for

Co ur t Administration
scheduled for the ill-fated
Bellvue-stratford Hotel.
The hotel was the sile of a
state American Legion
convention last month .
Twenty -s ix persons
connected
with
the

Ford delays decisions
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While Housr Reporter
VAIL, Colo. (UP[) - Presi·
dent Ford, who chsllenged
Jimmy Carter to lour debates
beginning Labor Day week,
says he will make final
decisions on his autumn campaign style by this weekend .
Ford summoned hls top
political advisors to anothe&gt;
strategy session today at his
vacation home . Sen. Robert
A. Dole, his running male,
1will arrive Thursday evening .
White
House
aides
indicated Ford grabbed the
initiative on the timing of the
debates to keep his post

nat ional convention
momentum going and to try
to catch Carter off balance.
They said Ford's two years
in office prepared him to
confriont Carter and "put
hlm on the. defense" on the
suggested issues of a national
defense, domesti c policy,
economic policy and foreign
policy.
White
House
Press
Secretary Ron Nessen,
watching Carter respond to
the · debate question on
national television, vowed

drawn in a day or so after
Ford and Carter negotiate the
format, the dates and places
of the debates.
Both plan to attend a
meeting Thursday of the
League of Women Voters
which pushed for the debates.
" It is my very strong
conviction ths t the American
people hsve a right to know
where I stand on the i8sues
and where my opponent
stands on the issues," Ford
told reporters in his first
meeting with the press since
'~we ' re goiQg to beat him'' . . before the GOP national
The batUe lines will be conven lion .

Soviets recess trial

COLUMBUS - OHIO'S RURAL COUNTIES continued to
lead the state fu unemployment rate percentages during July , By HOWARD A. TYNER
to Ohio Bureau of Employmeni Services reported today.
MOSCOW (UPI) - A
· Scioto County had an unemployment rate of 12.5 per cent Soviet court today heard
while Seneca County had a rate of )0.7, Adams County 10.6 and evidence of a $2 million drugPortage t:;ounty 10.5 compared to the state average of 7 per smuggling attempt by three
cent, the bureau said. Acount~ -by-county. breakdown included Americans, called for their
Meigs 5.8, Galla 7.9, Athens 8.6, Jackson 8.5, Lawrence 7.3, U.S. medical records and
Vinton 7.4, and Washington 8.2.
recessed the trial until
Thursday.
LONDON - THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT, batlling
Th~ee judges, in their
rising unemployment and the worst drollght in 250 years, has second day of tile trial that
promised water priority for industry to keep factories open. could send the men to jail for
After meeting with senior ministers Tuesday, Prime Minister .1 maximum 10 years each,
James Callaghan appointed Sports Minister Denis Howell to also examined suitcases with
coordin~te relief efforts as the 15-month drought showed no secret compartments which
sign of end~.
the defendants admitted tbey
It has not rained In London since July 20 and the city's water used to bring in 62 one-pound
supply Is down to 90 days. With the unemployment situation packages of heroin from
clearly in mind, Howell said families must cut water Malaysia .
consumption by half to keep factories open.
The men have pleaded ·
The unemployment figures for mid-August topped 1.5 guilty to transporting
mUUon for the first tlme since the start of World War II and ·
showed 8.4 per cent of the labor force is jobless - a higher
percen\llge than for several of Britain's Common Market
partners. West Germany hss 4.4 per cent unemployed, France
5.4 per ven The Netherlan4s 5 per cent.
·
DETROIT - THE FORD MOTOR CO. IS the strike target

By LEWIS LORD
United Press International
with an industry-pacing settlement or face a nationwide strike.
Jimmy Carter is finding
The UAW selected Ford as its target Tuesday. Bargaining in boos as well as cheers on the
the automotive industry calls for the 1Diion and the target to presidential campaign trail .
work out the basics of an agreement covering 680,000 workers
The Democratic nomin ~
which would then be submitted, with a demand lor "frosting ," · drew heavy
applausE
to the three other major auto companies.
Tuesday night when he told
Both union and company executives said there was ample farmers in Des Moines, Iowa,
Ume to reach an agreement covering 160,000 Ford workers that President Ford had
before the midnight, Sept. 14, deadline. It would them be up to vetoed four times as many
General Motors, Chrysler and American Motors to follow suit. billa as hsd Richard Nixon.
UAW President Leonard Woodcock said Ford was selected
"Anybody who is four times
because It has not been the target since 1967, when It was hit by as negative as Richard
a 66-day strike, and because there were no compelling reason Nixon, I think he has stayed
to go pick GM or Chrysler.
there too long," Carter sald.
·. There also had been plenty
of applause during Carter's
LO'ITERY SALES UP
Sales have averaged speech earlier Tuesday to the
CLEVELAND(UPI) - Ge- $7li,OOO more per week this American Legion's national
rald J. Patronlte, director of year than last year, Patronite convention in Seattle - until
the Ohio Lottery, says the said Tuesday; and figures he paused and said:
game brought in more than show that Ohioans endorse
"! want you to listen
$144 million In the past the idea of a state lottery.
carefully for I want you to
year.
In two years, the lottery understand what I say. I do
Patronlte said lottery sales has brought in more than $100 not favor a blJinket amnesty,
from August of Jl,lst year to milllon for illle in the state's but for those who violated
Augtlst,
1976,
total GeneralFund,andmorethsn . Selective Service laws I
$144,661,000, almost $38 $112.5 mllllon has been given intend to grant a blanket
million more than was to winners.
pardon.''
collected from August of 1974 • Nine Ohioanshsvewon top-I_"No!No!"shoutedmanyof
to August, 1975, the lottery's prize of $1 m!Uion.
the Legionnaires. Boos went
first year of operation.
on for three minutes before
of the United Auto Workers and has just 21 days to come up

'·'

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-:pOKttcocd"s. ··!

'

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Credting the new image for any fashion scene. Fun-loving coqts
taking a new direction. Wear one and you're right in the swing!

New Fall ·Coats Arriving
Daiiy
.
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MISSES·JUNIORS-HALF SIZES
USE OUR OONVENIENT LAYAWAY SYSTEM COAT DEPARTMENT - .SECOND FLOOR
'

ELBERFELD$ IN POM'EROY

en tine

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 25, 1976

0

RICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Legionnaire's disease hits again

narcotics and said they were
taking the drugs from Kuala
Lumpur to Amsterdam for a
Chinese network operating in
the Dutch ~ity .
Prosecutors asked Soviet
court doctors to answer ques-

Weather
Partly cloudy thr oug h
Thursday, a chance of
showers or thundershowers
this afternoon, tonight and
Thursday . Lows tonight in the
upper 60s and low 70s. Highs
Thursday in the mid 80s.
Probability of rain 30 per cent
today , 40 per cent tonight and
50 per cent Thursday.

lions on the mental and
physical health of one of the
. men -a
self-confessed
addict- and chief judge Lev.
K.
Mirov
ordered
transla tions of all their
records for consideration by
the ccurt.
The three are the first U.S.
citizens to stand trial in the
soviet Union since 1966 .
:::::::::::;:::;:::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTLOO K
Oulluok Friday thro ugh
Sunday, mostly fair. Highs
in the mid and upper 80s.
Lows in the 60s.

Boos, cheers greet ·Carter

Ga.metlme

in lhe Harrisonville Road most of Monday al their and cigarets. She stated that
area and purchased a case of home .
her husband had asked her to
beer and two bottles on the
On the day following do this when he was drinking
way home, she said. Mrs . Memorial Day,, Mrs. Hen· because of fear of catChing
Hendricks stated that when dricks said she learned her somethin~ on fire . She
they got home she prepared· husband had not gone to his ~stifled thst he had earlier
food and that she and her empl oyment . She said she burned her, bed clothing, a
husband wen t to bed about look her flowers to the horne chair and a rug.
3:30 in the morning.
of a neighbor because she
Going Into the kitchen, Mrs.
Continuing, Mrs. Hendri cks was planning lo have a talk Hendricks said she found
told of her activities during with her husband when he beer in the refrigerator,
the weekend and the con- arrived home and if things brought home by her husband
sumption of the beer by .her couldn't be worked out, she when he returned with his
husband . .On SUnday, Mrs. thought it would be better to son. She took the beer from
Hendricks said she went to leave.
·
the refrigerator, threw it on
Ra cine and Antiquity and
Mrs . Hendricks said her the sidewalk outside where
returned home about 6 p.m. husband arri ved home about the botlles broke.
She said her husband was in 3:15p.m. with his son, Joe,
After visiting a neighbor,
bed asleep. Later, she driving the car which had two Mrs. Virginia Ellis, Mrs.
prepared food for the two of other occupants. She said Hendricks said she returned
them.
Hendricks went into the to her home and the bedroom
On Monday morning, Mrs. house and she got into the car where her husband slept. A
Hendri cks said t\er husbe nd and took the three occ upants . ~nile arid some change had
continued drinking beer and to Racine, She said when she cfropped fr om his pocket, She
wen t lo a Pomeroy cafe returned to her home Hen- put them in her purse and
where he purchased two dricks was asleep and she returned to the bedroom.
m'ore eight packs: She said went into the bedroom where
Al this point, Mrs . Henshe and her husband spen t • he was and too k his li gh ter
(Coritinued on page 16)

•

VOL XXVIII NO. 91

ty

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Legion Commander Harry
Weils gaveled the meeting to
order .
But at the end of the talk, in
which Carter advocated a
strong military posture and a
possible resUillption of the
draft, the former submarine
commander got a standing
ovation.
President Ford, at his
mountain retreat in Vall,
Colo., proposed the debate
planned between him and
Carter contain four rounds.
Shortly after Labor Day, he
said, they should de)la te
defense and later have
deba(!!s on domestic, foreign
and economic policy - in that
order.
Carter has yet to outline the
type of format he favors
except to say he would like 'to
hsve a cross examination by
each candidate and by
reporters. Representatives of
the two candidates will meet
in Washington Thursday to
discuss a format.
Two federal agencies and
ConRress must ·decide legal

questions about the debate,
including whether they ca n
be televised and who can pay
lor them.
The Federal Election Com·
mission will determine
whether the debat es, if
sponsored as proposed by a
group like the League of
Women Voters, can be
financed with private money.
The new federal election law
calls for the election
campaign to be fina nced
solely with federal funds.
Equal lime provisions of
federal broadcast regulations
prohibit netw orks from ·
staging and televising
debates.
In Hartford , for mer Sen .
Eugene
McCa rthy
of
Minnesota said he doesn't
care whether his independent
campaign for the presidency
hurts Carter 's bid .
"I can't think of a recent
electillil ill which I'd be less ·
concerned as to whether I
would swing the election thsn
I am in this one,'' McCarthy
said.

co nve ntio n died after hospitalized today with
con tracting the. ailment, and symptoms of the illness.
at least another 149 were
Rogers, who attended a
made ill .
civic club luneheon at the
Officials at Burlington BeUvueStratford during the
County, N.J., Memorial legion convention, was listed
Hospital said that Daniel in critical condition. He also
Burns, sa, Philadelphia, a had eaten at the hotel twice
bartender. at the Bellvue· since then. Burns was in
Stratford, and J. Bruce · satisfactory condition. .. ·
· Rogers , 60 , Moorestown,
To show his ccnfidence that .
N.J., manager of a Holiday the illness outbreak is over,
Inn in Philadelphia, were Gov. Milton J. Shapp dined
and spent the night Monday
at the Beilvue,Stratford .
Afterwards, he said he felt no
qualms about staying there
and felt fine.
Medical experts say. the
disease· remains a mystery.

Ford to
battle
for South Rh . d ·
VAIL , Colo . UP! President Ford will not
concede the South to Jimmy
Carier and par ticu larly
believes tha t Texas will vote
for him in November , a top

Whi le House aide sa id today.
Asked about reports that
Ford aides said the y .were
conceding Texas and the
so·ulh to Carter, Assistant
Press Secretary John Carlson
told UP!, "I guarantee the
President is not going to wri te
off Texas and the South. "
''Texas is a conserva ti ve

city hall
is bombed
MT. VERNON, Ohio (UP!)
- A bomb exploded in the
rear of City Hail in MI.
Vernon early today, police
said.
Police Capt . Rober t
Brinnihg said an "explosive
device" was placed between
the air conditioning unit and
the wall of the building.
He said damage was
estimated at $10,000.
Briiming said the blast
blew out 15 of 18 windows in
the rear of the building and
broke
windows
in
surrounding buildings .
There were no injuries.
Brinning said the only
person in the building was a
police dispacher who was in
the front of the building.

MR. NOT MRS.
In the tuesday edition
account of the murder trial of
Virginia Hendricks, it stated
that Mrs. Wilma • Jean
Buckley testified to seeing
Mrs. Hendricks arrive home
about 3:30 p.m. on June 1
carrying·whal she believed lo
be beer : This is erroneous.
Mrs. Buckley testified to
seeing her husband, Mr .
Hendricks, arriv ing home at
that hnur carrying what she
believed to be b·:•t·.

~otten

locally

Gallia County will be
unable to contjnue school
Immunizations lor Meigs
· County children, a ~cordlng
to Dr. Kemp of the Gallla
County Health Com·
mission.
lmmunlzalions may be
obllned by arranging an
appointment with the
Meigs County Health Dept.
or by receiving the shots at
school.

.
.
0 es VISI1S
fair grounds

BY J .R. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Gov .
James A. Rhodes told
members of his cabinet today
to "put everything aside for
the next 12 days and enjoy the
Ohio State Fair."
Rhodes led his cabinet
members on a one-hour tour
. of the Ohio State Fairgrounds
sla te, and when people see and said thst what he saw
and realize lhc programs . was " impossible to go
adv oca led by Carter, they through in less than two
will support the President, " days.''
he said.
Before the tour, hosted by
fair manager John Evans,
Rhodes was entertained by
the All.Ohlo chorus and band
- both 300 members strong.
And he even took a turn at the

Mt. Vernon

Immunizations

podium to co nduct the
chorus.
Conductor Glenville
Thomas
of
Zanesvile
surrendered his baton and let
Rhodes conduct the high
school chorus in a portion of
the ·Battle Hymn of the
Republic.
"There will be 10 events all
important to any one person
all going on at the same
time, " said Rhodes, calling
the Ohio State Fa ir the
"greatest free entertairunent
show" on earth .
Rhodes and his cabinet
made brief stops at the horse,
sheep, and catUe pavillions.
He wished Amy Baird, 9, of
Liberty Center, good luck as
s)te was abou t to lead her
STEERING LOCKED
pony into the show ring.
Heavy damages were in -Rhodes will officaUy open
clurred to a car and its driver the state fa ir Thursda y at 6
was cited to mayor's court on a.m. with ribb on cutting
a rec kless operation charge ceremonies .
in an acciden t on West Main
The fair will feature live
St. at 1:57 a.m. Wednesday . grandstand entertairunent
Pomeroy police said Daniel with such attractions as Bob
Rairden, 16 Hartford, was Hope, Red Skel ton, the Fifth
traveling west on.West Main Dimension, John Davidson,
Sl. when he went to the lefl J ohnny Cash and Telly
and struck a utility pole . He Savalas .
to ld off icers his steer ing
locked . He was uninjured.
TWO INHOLZ ER
RACINE - The Ra ci ne E·
R squad was called this
BOARD TO MEET
morning
at 1:57 a.m. for
The Meigs Local Board of
Annie
Nease
, 44, Racine and
Ed ucation will meet in
at
4
a.
m.
for
Fern Hayman,
special session Thursday at 9
RD,
Ra
cine.
Both
were taken
p.m. in the superi ntendent's
to
Holzer
Medical
Center .
office at South Third Avenue,
Middleport to discuss the
current status of negoti ations
BOOSTERS TO MEET
with
th e
Teacher's.
A
special meeting of the
Assoc ia lion. to accept
resignati ons, and to employ Meigs Band Boosters will be
held this evening, August 25
personnel.
in the band room at 7:30p.m.
The report on the fair booth
TRUDEAU. TOUR
an~ plans for the coming fall
AMMAN, Jordan (UPI) marching season will be
Ca nadian Prime Minister discussed.
Pierre Trudeau and his wife,
Margaret, Tuesday touroo
the .Jordan Valley area near
the cease-fire line between
BONDS FORFEITED
Jordan and Israel on the
Three defendants forfeited
seccnd day of their three-day .bonds in the court of Pon •eroy
private visit.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
The
couple
was Tuesday ni ght , all on
accompanied by Crown speeding charges. '!" '" qre
Prince Hassan who gave a Victor Roush, Mh : u~...:t-~vt i:,
detailed guide of Jordan's · $25; Larry Snyder, Chester,
lalesl development plans for $:!0, and Kenneth Hartley,
the fertile region .
Pomeroy, $43 .

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