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                  <text>0-1-The SUnday Times-Sentinel, &amp;lnday, July 17, 1977

More road
Cmtinued from Page A-1
('huffll Ku•d: Til 14ll, Douglas Road: TR
150, Bunker Hill Road : TR 204 , Murray
Road: TR 226, Colburn ROlld; TR 232,
Chase Road; TR 250, Cherry Ridge Road :
TR 253, Arnold Road, TR ~7, Holley Road.
CHESTER - TR 79, Crew Road, TR
81, Lovers' Lane Road; TR 82, Wickham
' Road; TR 13, Skinner Road; TR 222,
•· Spencer Road· TR ~7. Seldom Seen Road ;
TR 262, Lickskillet Road; TR 289, Osborn
Road; TR 309, Stethem Road ; TR 423,
Burlte Road; TR 425, Green-up Lane; TR
429, Young. Road.
LEBANON - TR 144, Hayman Road,
CR 31 to TR 139; TR ·a4, Perry Run
Road, TR 139 to TR 138; TR 144, Dewits
Run Road, TR 138 to SR 124.
'
OLIVE - TR 157, Craft Road; TR 264,
Osborn -Road; TR 267, Barton Road; TR
276, Sovel Road; TR 289W, Hickory Lake
Road; TR 312, Brooks Road, Northeast off
SR 681 ; TR 312, Dodderer Road, East off
SR 7; TR 313, Rice Run Road, Northeast
off SR 681 ; TR 313, Lydia Road, East off
TR 315.
ORANGE - TR 158, Bentz Cemetery
Road; TR 239, Henderson Road; TR 250;
Cherry Ridge Road; TR 2Jfl, .Marcinko
Road; TR 289W, Hickory Lake Road ; TR
295, Christy Road; TR 305, Guthrie Road;
TR 628, Keller Street.
SALEM - TR lA, Mine Road; TR 15;
Buck Run Road; TR 22W, Earl Wright
Road; TR 24, Tower Road; TR 1110, Cleland
Hill Road; TR 363, SUo Road ; TR 373,
Wells Lane.
SCIPIO - TR 52, Mudforl\ Road; TR
54, Townsend Road; TR 73, Jeffers Road ;
TR 148, Douglas Road; TR 177, Dye Road;
TR 253, Arnold Road ; TR 'l!J7, Holley
Road; TR 618, Frederick Road.

••

THE Mll..l'I'ARY GRAVESTONE of Cpl. D. M. Carter,Civil War veteran, has

been erected in Bethesda cemetery on SR 775, b)ll his body is notlhere. ~dmg
are his granddaughter, Mrs. Gle1111 (Maye) Roush; her great-nephew, Dav1d M.
Carter, and Eugene Carter, her bro.ther aod grandson oftbe soldier.

Gravestone stands,
but without a body

..

GALLIPOLIS ·- The body of a Civil
War veteran- Cpl: Darius Maxon Carter
- is lost, but his military gravestone
stands In Irethel cemetery. His widow's
body Is there, moved from the old Chick
cemetery atop a hill on Hannan Trace
road. The Chick &lt;;emetery has been
abandoned.
Unconfirmed is a family belief that
Cpl. Carter moved to Missouri, and died
either there or enroute back. Monteal
Spencer of the probate division of Gallia
County Common Pleas court confirms that
there is no record of the corporal's death in
the 20 years after 1867.
However, there is a record that his
widow, Mary E. Wiseman, was appointed
guardian of her daughter Ollie, in 1887, by
Probate Judge John J. Thomas. Cpl.
Carter, therefore, died in or before 1887, it
was pointed out. Ollie married Whitt
Wiseman and they had three children,
Mrs. Maye Caiter Houck Roush, granddaughter of the Civil War veteran says.

Her brother, Eugene Carter, will be 85
on July 25. Mrs. Roush, the wife of Gle1111
Roush lives at 651 Third avenue; she is 78.
A brother, Vern Carter, 71, lives In Circleville.
Her father, Morgan Carter, received
the government monument lor Cpl. Carter
in 1900, l)ut,' she says, l)e did nothing about
placing it, perhaps 'waiting until his
father 's body could be brought to Gallla
county.
The corporal was with Co. G, l!Hth
Ohio Volunteer Infantry.
LIKES TO FISH
GALLIPOUS - A thief, who also
likely is an angler, stole $100 worth of
fishing equipment from the Ohio Valley
Laundry, 121 State st., Frjday, accordmg
to Gallipolis police. Police said this was
the second such theft within a month, also
from the laundry. The first was $300 worth
of fishing equipment.
'

E-R unit busy in Pomeroy
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered four calls Friday
eve~ing and early Saturday
mornmg: .
' •• p.m.,
·
th. e squad
AI ,,..,
went 'to West Main St., for
Clifford Decker, .Syracuse,
who was ill. He was taken to
Veterans MemoriaJ .Hospital
where he was admitted. At
11:34 p.m. the squad went to a
traffic accident near the Tall
Timbers Nile Club on Rt. 7
where Pauline Taylor was
injured. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:10 a.m. Saturday, the
squad went to 156 Mulberry
for John Bacon, 10, who was
running a high temperature.

He was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital. At 6:06a.m.
the squad went to the fire
· station where Robert Eason
had been br.ought by private
vehicle .from his Rt. 3,
: Pomeroy home. Eason, follnd
to have suffered acute indigestion , was taken to
Holzer Medical Center.
PARMAN KILLED
DUNKIRK, N. Y. (UP!) State police said Jack Hom·
sby, 53, of Parma Heights,
Ohio, was killed Friday near
the Dunkirk interchange on
the New York Thruway when
. his car was struck from
behind by a tour bus.

Summer Time Sale of Fine

Fum~ure

FLEXSTEEL FINE FURNITURE
BEGINS ON THE INSIDE TO ASSURE
QUAUTY, COMi=ofrr, BEAUTY AND DURABIUTY

-·-,

st\T CUSIIIaiS 11111 !UPOIOI
~I.ITIJ-

1111 MUll IIIISIIl .
I'IIIIURUIIIIll rooM IIIMill
• PGlliSTII Alii

Vandals bum tractor
GALLIPOLIS - V~ndals last Wednesday burned up a $600 garden tractor
near Vinton, according to Deputy Sheriff
Sid Vance.
Owner of the 836 Dynamark machine
said that its value was $600. He is Stanley
W. Pendleton, Rt. 2, Vinton. He reported
the loss Friday.

I

MANNIE JOHNSON

WEST

COLUMBIA

Nannie Johnson, 93, of West
Columbia, passed away on

Friday.
She was a member of ofthe
West Columbia United
Methodist Church .
Born Nov . 26, 1883 at West
Columbia, she was the
daughter of the late Jess aM
Cassandro Lewis Stewart.
Her husband. Harry
Johnso~. died In 19~2 .
Survivors Include a sister.
Mrs. Joy Foreman, Mason ;
three brothers, Guy Stewart,
Diamond. W. Va.; lawrence
Stewart. Chester. 0 .: Henry
Stewart, Point Pleasant, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
held Monday at 1; 30 p.m: at
· the Foglesong Funeral J:lome.
with Rev. 0 . B. .Hatcher.
olficiating .
Burial will be in Suncresf
Memor ial Park in Point
Pleasant.
Friends may .call at the
funeral home Sunday 2· 4 p.m.
and 7•9 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Joe R.
Herron pleaded innocent
Friday in Ga!lia County
Municipal court to a charge
of assaulting Emma Herron,
and trial was set for July 19
under bond of $121.95.
. forfeited
Mark D. GrifflD
bond of $32 on a charge of
disorderly.
Judge Roberts. Betz fined
ElbiP E. Burgess, 24,
Clevc.and,$100 lllld costs on a
charge of expired license.
The judge acquitted
"'eal, 23 ,
Elizabeth R . .-u..
Gallipolis, on a charge of no
valid operator's license.
Two drivers cha rged with
DWI were Terence L.
Johnson, 21, Patriot Star
route, Gallipolis, who will ·
ASK TOWED
have his hearing July 18,
POMEROY - Marriage
under bond of $312.75, and licenses were issued to
Brian L. DOnley, 16, Rt. 2, Theodore Riley, Sr., 72,
Vinton, forfeited $312.7S.
Mason, and Mildred Sisson,
Other bOnd forfeitures :
60, Middleport; Max Edison
Sherri L. Davis, 25, Rt. 3, Folmer, Sr., 61, Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, reckless and Mary Orlena Thompson,
operation, $37; Robert M. 42 Long Bottom ; Earley
Shiflet, !8, Gallipolis, open H~yt Casto, 73, Ripley, and
flask, $32; Melvin L. Brown, Opal Ruih Hollon, 52, Long
39, Rt. 1, Ewington, in&amp;ecure Bottom.
load, $32.
Speeders who forfeited
more than the $22 minimum ·
bond wer.e Keith A. Lemley, Bidwell; Daniel R. Simp23, Gallipolis, . $27 ; Sandra kins, 22, Wayne, W. Va.;
SueHe0 ry,JS, GaUipolis, $37; Robert E. Gordon, 20, Rt. l,
James A. Houck, 22, Lima, Gallltiolis; Gene A. Arm·
$32.
.
strong, 32, BldwellN; Donbkld
AU these speeders forfeited R. Berry, 22,
ewar ;
the minimum bonds of $22 Woodrow H. Justus, 27,
each; Lawrence M. Hen- Columbus;
Larry
R.
derson, 25, Rt. I, Piketon ; McKenzie, 32, Rt. 3, Oak Hill;
Donald R. Laney, 34, Inkster, Edward H. Christian, 43, Rt.
. h.; Ronald L. Aldrt'ch , 3S , 2, Jackson and Kevin R.
Mtc
Beaver ; James J . Smith •.31, Roach, 20, Gallipolis.

MRS. GENE PAUL
MIDD LE PORT - Mrs .
Gene (Vaude Vancel Paul
passed away recenily at

Cadillac
Hospital
In
l&lt;.lchlond, Wash . at the age of

69

8orn at Middleport RD.
INs. Paul was preceded In
&lt;loath by one brother, Dow :

and her parenfs, Mr. and
Mrs. c~ancey Vance. She Is

survived by her

~usband,

three- sisters, Mrs. Leah
Whitlock, Mrs. William

Yeaug,r, Kent; and INs.
Raymond (Della Mae )

Sommers.

Ravenna . and

severl cousins In the area..
Funeral services for Mrs.

Paul will be

~eld

at Eanlens'

Funera1 Home ln R ichland,

POMEROY - The regular
meeting of the Drew Webster
American Legion Post will
begin at 7:3CJ p.m. Tuesday
instead of 8 p.m. due to the
All-Star baseball game. All
members are urged to come
and watch the game at the
Legion home.

..
•
..
..••

. .•.

....
.

. FLEXSTEEL
ftNIR! tJI"IIULif'I'DU';I) II'URNrM! K~

CHANCES GOOD
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Senate Democratic Leader
Robert Byrd said Satu,rday
chances are good this
Congress
will
enact ·
legislation calling for
sweeping revision of the
govemment'soffshore oil and
gas leasing program.
The
West
VIrginia
Democrat told reporters a
Senate-passed bill caUing for
major changes in the rules
under · which oU companies
tap the publicly owned
resource
would
face
"problems" in the House. But
he said growing awareness of
energy nt!eds · should help
overcome those problema.
"The chances are enhanced ·
for ultimate enact.Jnent," he
said.

Mr. and Mn. Paul Simon entertained meD\bel'l of lbe
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce and lbeir guests wllb a
buffet dlnller Suoday on the spacious lawu of lbeir home

on SR 7 at Five Points.
Approllimately 80 persons attended the event. Mn.

.

~"" · ~..,.;" &lt;,~

VOL. XXVIII

.

,· ·«

~k

,..,.. • .,

..,,......_

..
"HOPE FOR A BETTER TOMORROW" was
· Inscribed on a cake lbat Mrs. Simon had prepared for the
occasion Sunday. Shown holding the cake are Mr. and
Mrs. Simon wbo hosted the event.

WASffiNGTON .;._CLIMAXING A SERIES OF visits from
Mideast leaders, Israel's new Prime Minister Menahem Be~in
arrives today to discuss peace proposals Tuesday wtth
President Carter and, Sources say, to request more U. S.
military Aid. Begin, who led the conservative Llkud party to
upset vic(Qry in recent pational elections, is now the k~y figure
in Carter's effort to orchestrate an Arab-Israeli peace
settlement. He also is the unknown quantity for Carter.
U. S. officials J:A!blicly challenged some of Begin's early
policy declarations on occupied Arab territories, but in recent ·
weeks the two leaders have been trying to patch things up with
conciliatory statements · in anticipation of the tw~-day
Washingtoo conference. Begin flew to New York Frtday,
disclosing as he left ]srael tha\ he was ·:bearing concrete
. proposals for the pear;e-making process." ·

that everyone wants in a recliner •.
No space worries with the
Wallaways.

~~~
I~
I~

SEOUL SOUTH KOREA - FLAG-draped aluminum
coffins ~ing the remains of three American soldler~ _shot
down over North Korea were loaded aboard a ·CJ30 nulitary
transport plane for the long trip borne. The three bodie:? left
Kimpo International Airport at 1:25 a.m. EDT for the trip to
Travis Air Force Base; Calif., with a 2~our intermediall;_ stop
at Yokota air base in Japan.
The three Am.ericans were killed Thursday when North
K;..ean troops opened fire on their unarmed CH47 helicopter,
which violated Communist air space while on a supply run
the demilitarized zone.
·
One American aboard the Chinook helicopter survived and
was captured by the North Koreans, who released him and tbe
bodies Saturday atlhe truce village of Panniumjom, about 30
miles north of Seoul. Gen. John W. Vessey Jr., cqmmander of ·
the United Nations Command and U.S. forces in South Kor,ea,
.pinned Purple Hearts on the American flags covering the
coffins whUemoW"ners and an honor guard looked on.

Lounging T.V. vt. . tng Full reclin•
Easy room arranging since chair may
be placed just 1 w· from the wall.
Will not touch wall in any postion . A
great space saver!
· ·

neat

SPECIAL
GROUP TABLES

ClnCAGO- THE REV. DONALD Wildmon, organizer of
the National Federation for Decency, planned demonstrations
in 11 cities today to try to reduce sex and violence on television.
Each of the demohstrations will be outside ABC-television
ouUeta, he said.
·
Wildmon said he personally will picket WlS-TV in Chicago
to protest a program called "Soap," ~ spoof of daytime soap
operas. "Soap" is the product of stck minds ... intent on
promoting · their sickness," he said. "If is time that tbe
networks got .the message that we are f~ up with tbe sick
minds respoosible £(1' their programs," Wildmon sa1d.

Maple or pine finishes - Formica tops. Choose
coffee tables, round lamp tables. hex tables or
step tables.

AOfiTA, ITALY- THREE ITALIAN mounlain climbers
tumbled about! 838 feet down the icy slopes of the 13,323 feetlllgh MI. Grand 'Paradiso Sunday and survived, officials said.
One climber 21-year-old Gabriel Simonetti, suffered a
broken leg·and a;..., but the other two had only light bruises,
they said. An official~! the a~ea. near the Italian, F~ench', and
Swilll hocders, called the· incident a "miracle."
CATANIA, SICILY ...:. MT. ETNA, ERUROPE_'S tallest
volcano, Is providing a new fireworks displaY, for tourlSts. Etna
began belching clouds of dense, acrtd smOke and ~pewing
.fiaining lava Sunday in what scientists "'id was Its most
violent activity in 18 mo~:~ths .
Esperll at the Catania Institute of Volcanology said lava
Don from the volcano's noctheast crater stretched more than
a half-fltlle down the moWitain's treeless slopes but posed no
danger to Inhabited areas.

'

StORE HOURS:
r.

Main store and Mechanic Street
warehouse.
Open Friday9:30a.m.to8p.m.
Other week da.ys including Thursday 9: 30 a.m. to 5 p.m. ·

'

COURSES OFFERED
· Rto Grande College •
Conununlty Callege will offer
two t.W. clenes July 11 to
Aq. 11. OM clau will be held
from 8 until 8 p.m. on Monda)'l and Wednesdays and

,
J

NO. 65

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JULY 18, 1977

Influence mess mushrooms

·
By United Press Infernaftonal
NO BREAK IS IN SIGHT FOR OIDO 'S continuing hot and
. hwnid weather. A few thundershowers were reported Sunday
in northeastern and east central Ohio, but that precipitation
ended during the evening .
Skies were clear over most of Ohio overnight.
Temperatures early today were generally in the upper 6115 or
the lower 7011. A ridge of high pressure over the southeastern
states is feeding hot and humid air into the Ohio Valley and
.
Great Lakes area .
The National Weather Service says no change in that
weather pattern is likely during the next several days.

REGULAR PRICES $20S00-$21S00-$22400 -$23400 .
Super-soft foam cusllioning witll
00
clotll or vinyl upllolstering gives
SALE
'166
,
tllese recliners luxurious c·o mfort

he lorgotten tomorrow.
After all, It was lbe bost couple lbat led a cleanup
drive of the river front Ibis spring prior to lbe regatta
aimo~t slugle bandedly.
More pictures are on page z.

'

jNews . . .in BriefsJ

WALLA WAY RECLINERS

Simon had p~pared a cake wllb the Inscription, "Hope for
a Better Tomorrow."
,
The Inscription, obviously an expression of lbe
Simons' feeling about the community In which they live
and do busini'Ss In, was more lhaajnst another •logan to

en tine

SQUAD CALLED'
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy ER Squad was
called Saturday at 12:22 p.m.
to the Kroger Store in
. Pomeroy for Velma Brown
who had fallen and sustained
a possible broken ankle. She
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
·
NOW YOU KNOW
Chop Suey dld not originate
in China, but in a California
mining camp where a
Chinese cook threw leftovers
into .a pot and called them
"Chop Suey" - a phonetic
. rendering of the Mandarin
"tsu sui," meaning, roughly,
~~ various things."

Buffet dinner given chamber of commerce

•

LEGION TO MEET

SALEI BERKLINE and KROEHLER

...

TED REED chats with the hostess, Mrs. Simon.

delicious meal prepared and served by Mr. and Mrs. Simon.
·'

speed.

&lt; ••

MEMBERS- AND GUESTS as they enjoyed the

Wa;h . Tuesday ·at.ternoon .

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

Continued · cloudy, warm
and humid, with a chance of
thl!ndersh 0 wers today,
tonight and Monday. Highs
today and Monday will be In
the mid 90s and lows tonight
will be in the mid 70s.

costs, speeding; Karen Sue
Hart, Rt. 1, Rutland, $5 and
costs, defective exhaust;
Harold Whittekind, Pomeroy,
$5 and costs, (aulty muffler;
Mary Fowler, Coolville, $150
and costs, three days con·
finement , 90 days probation,
driving while intoxicated; .
William Hayes, Middleport,
$l50 and eosts, six days
confinement, three days
suspended, 90 !lays probation,
driving while intoxicated;
Ellis McMillan, Rt. 1, Racine,
$100 and costs, possession of
marijuana.
Forfeiting bonds were
Clifford Bay, Marietta, and
Donald Riffle, Lucasville,
$353, driving while in·
toxicated; John D. Mankin,
Belpre, $107.50, reckless
operation; Mary Jane White,
Wellston, $80.50, disorderly
conduct; Richard Craig
Lyons, Columbus, Charles
Montgomery, New Albany,
Charles Colburn, Guysville,
George F. Deetz III,
James
L.
Coshocton,
Woodridge, Rt, 1, Bidwell,
Ronald F. Bullock, MiUield
and Mihcael Lee Roach,
Mason, $30.50, speeding;
Richard Salser, Minersville,
$34.50, speeding; Kenneth
Mitchell, Langsville, $30.50,
unsafe vehicle; David
Triplett, Pittsburgh, $35.50,
speeding; Charles Ray
Farris, Parkersburg, $30,50,
red light; Wilford C. Hill, Rt.
· 1, Rutland, $25.50, unsafe
vehicle; Thomas M. Gillilan,
Chester, $30.50, excessive

! Area Deaths

~=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::*::;:•:::::::;:::::_;:::::::.:::::::~:~:::::::::!:!:!:!:.'%:::::::::::::::::.-s::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Weather

Court fines 16,
takes 17 ·bonds
POMEROY - Sixteen
defendants were fined and 17 ·
others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Friday.
Fined by Judge E. Buck
were :carroll R. Nelson,
Middleport, and Paul D.
Milliron, Rt. 2, Racine, $5 and
costs each, unsafe vehicle;
Noreena Mash, Rt. 1, Middleport,
and
Donald
Vaughan, Pomeroy, $11 and
costs each, speeding; James
C. Cot~rili, Syracuse and Carl .
Hall, Pomeroy, $10 and costs .
each, speeding; Thomas
Newhouse, Athens, $10 and
costs, stop sign; Roger
Dillard, Jr., Pomeroy, $80
and costs, eight days confinement, 90 days probation,
driving while intoxicated;
Jeffrey Marcinko, Tuppers
Plains, $20 and costs,
reckless operation; Linda
Hysell, Rt. 1, Middleport, $5
and costs, no muffler; Jay D.
Spencer, Glouster, $12 and

.

-·

Trial date
is set for . .
July 19th

-------------------- ------ -1

WASIDNGTON (UP!) - . special prosecutor to follows the resignation of the
President Carter ·has "no substitute for the ongoing committee's chief counsel,
plans" to appoint a special investigation by the House Philip Lacovara. A former
prosecutor to investigate Ethics Committee.
member of tbe Watergate
charges of South Korean
"I have' no· plans to," prosecutor's staff, Lacovara
influence buying on Capitol Carter said.
resigned from the Korean
Hill, despite fresh demands
Key Senate and House investigation Friday, saying
for an independent probe.
R,lpublicans have called for Chairman John Flynt, D-Ga.,
Returning to the White appoin bnent .of a special . was
slowing
the
House from a weekend at the prosecutor, as have 25 Demo- investigation.
presidential retreat in Camp cratic junior congressmen.
Lacovara is in England
David, Md:, Carter was asked
Pressure
for
an vacationing.
whether he would appoint a independent investigation
In a report from England,

Nationwide comes
in for no-fault
WASHINGTON (UP!)
An official of · Nationwide

Mutual Insurance Co.
testified todaY that passage
of a federal no-lault auto
insurance bill ''would, at long
last, permit the ehtsive
promise of effective auto
insurance reform to become
a reality."
Robert C. Quinn, research
officer for Nationwide, the
fourth largest auto insurer in
the United States, made the
statement in remarks
prepared foc delivery at a
hearing on,no-fault Insurance
before the U.S. Senate
Commerce ·eommittee.
· The bill provides for
$100,000
medical
and
rehabllitaion coverage for
inj.W'ed auto acci!lent victims
and limits lawsuits to only the
most serious injury cases.
"Too long have we
permitted no-fault auto
insurance reform to elude
us, '.' Quinn said . "As
evidence is accumulated .on
the merits of no-fault
insurance everyone will
wooder why it took so IQug to
adopt a system that would
assure
adequate
compensation for all auto

accident victims."

"The ultimate test of. nofault insW'ance is how well it
benefits the consumer," said
Quinn. "Arecent study by the
U.S.
Department
of
Transjx&gt;rtation shows that
the no-fault concept meets
that test with very high
marks.''
Pointing to what he called
the slowness, inefficiency,
inadequacy and unfairness of
the present system, Quinn
said SQciety is facing a car
insurance crisis that can be
solved hest by passage of thl!
feder11l bill.
"In conlrast to the topsylike growth of the fault
system, which has clogged
the
auto
reparation
procedure, we have reached
a time when we can make a
rational choice for an orderly
plan that will respond
effectively to societal needs,"
Quinn said.
"Instead of the lincertain
possiblity of a jackpot
rfC9very akin to the lottery
win, which is the· case under
the fault system, the no-fault
system assures all accident
viclims recovery for their
economic loss," said Qui1111.

LAST DAY: 20TH
To avoid 10 per cent
penalty )"bleb Is required
by law on second half 1976
real estate taxes, t'bey
must be paid no later than 4
p.m. July · 20, 1977.
· Books will be elllfled at
~ that lime so the county
auditor can add a peaalty
to unpaid June !lilies.
Books will he reopened any
time after August 1 for
payment of delinquent
taxes, Couuty Treasurer,
George ·M. Collins, said.

School budget
approved by·'
Meigs board
The Meigs Local Board of
Education met Friday and
approved the budget for 1978.
AnticiP,ated revenue was
set at $3,476,719.55; expenditures are expected to
total $3,464,182. Those expenses have been ·broken
down into $148,650 for administration costs; $2,005,902
for Instruction; $297,000 for
transportation, including bus
drivers and maintenance;
and $344,200 to be used for
custodians and operation of
school plant. ·

ABC radlo Sunday said it
learned from an unnamed
source close to the
investigation that House
Speaker Thcxnas P. O'Neill
and House Democratic
Leader James Wright
personally have "reason to be
concerned" about the
investigation of Korean
influence-bl!ying.
The network quoted its
source as saying "it appears
to be true" that O'Neill put
pressure on !lie House Ethics
Corrunittee to slow its probe
of South Korean favors,
contributions and gifts to
congressmen over the last
several years.
Flynt, O'Neill and Wright
vehemently denied the

TAIPEI, Taiwan (UPI) _
A Chinese pilot who defected
to Taiwan earlier this month
said today the Peking
government has instituted a
policy of production
rather
tha
Volut. that •- totally
"'
n re to IOn
contrary
the teachings
of
the late Chairman Mao Tsetung.
·
Fan Yuan-yen, a former
squadron leader in the
Community air force 'who
flew his MJg-19 to Taiwan
early this month, alsO said in
an exclusive interview with
UPI that he was ·surprised
that tbe people outside China
knew ' so little of the
''miserable life" the Chinese
are leading under the
Communist rule.
Fan, 41, smartly dressed in
a uniform of the Nationalist
Chinese Air Force - . into
which be was Inducted as a
lieutenant colonellast Friday

unother class will be held
from 10 a.m: until noon . on
Tuesdays lind Thursdays.
Reglstratlon ·is open through
Tuesday, July 19. ·For more - said the Peking regftime
changes Its policies so o en
information, call 245-5353.
and to such extremes that the

people are. usually confused.
In Shan'ghal, he said,
"Right now," he said, "the factory workers are now
people there are being taught working more hours a day
to increase their production producing goodsanddevoting
in whatever field they are less and less time to learning
working."
Mao's
thoughts
and
.
"ln Ming Shen Ch an -teachings.
meaning to sacrifice life to
Fan said he believe d th at'
P
· not going to
"
prod11ce is t he new sIogan,
ek'lllll •s poI'1cy 11
.
'""· Fan said.
'
work )VeU. u=a,use the peopIe
He said the Chinese people have lost confidence in the
all remember that "the government an d because
theory of production first" they are living so poorly most
was condemned as ''the road do not have enough! to eart.
F. an recetv
· ed 5,000 Qunces
to capitalism " undet Mao•s
rule.
•
· of gold - equivalent to more
"There had been changes than f100,000- for defecting,
before in this policy but most under a standing Taiwanese
of the time we were told that offer to Chinese pilots.
we should place revolution
Fan spoke in a hoarse foice,
ancf class struggle above the result of constant
production, which enjoyed debriefings and interviews
only a secondary priority." wllb government officials.
But he said in the last Doctors treating him say he
political classes he attended is allergic to modern
commissars said that this medication because while in
was no longer the policy. He China he was given herbal
said all factories have been medicine and rarely any
ordered to set new production Western drugs.
,
When , questioned about
"•oals.

and malicious lie."

"I have ·never interfered
with the progress of tbe
commlttee's· investigation,
either to speed it up or to slow
it down," an aide quoted
O'Neill as saying.
·O'Neill has repeatedly told
newsmen that he never took
money from South Korean
businessman Tonsung Park
and that he may have

attended "two or three
parties that Park hosted." An
aide said O'Neill reported
these parties to the Ethics
Coounittee.
The report came amid new
disclosures
by
the
Washington Post that federal
investigators have turned up
several "little black boOks"
belonging to Park, a central
figure in the alleged bribery
scheme who also is in
England .
The
books
contained money figures
alongside the names of
former congressmen.
ABC reported it was
,Flynt's refusal to subpoena
the black books from the
Justice Department that led
to Lacovara's resignation.

·Escapee apprehended
Sheriff James J . Proffitt make an apprehension and
disclosed today a new . recovery of a stolen auto
procedure at the county jail from Florida. This incident
has resulted in · the ap- occurred within 12 hours of
prehension ·of an escapee tlie installation of the comfrom the London Corr"ectional puter the last part of May.
Institution. The staff, upon
. Charges had been filed for
checking on the LEADS the stolen auto - required
computer of all the inmates before an entry can be made
booked in the jail, learned in NCIC but were dropped in
Friday· that Timothy Brian Florida after the owner of the
Shrider, 22, Zanesville, was stolen auto learned the
wanted as an escapee . from . identity of the ·persons
·the London 'Correc.tional arrested. Therefore the inFarm at London, Ohio. dividuals held at Meigs
Shrider had been lodged in CoWIIY were released by
jail by the Ohio State Patrol
for disorderly conduct. He
had first given a false name.
Upon learning his correct
name and social security
number his record was found.
.He is being held for the Adult
Parole Authorities.
The Plaintiff in a damage
Sheriff Proffitt also
·
action
concluded Friday in
reported that the computer,
Meigs
County
Common Pleas
using its link to the NCIC
Court
$17,500
by
a jury . .
(National Crime Information
The amount was awarded
Center) in Washington, D. C.
enabled his department to Clayton Schartiger, 72,
Chester, adminiStrator of the
estate of Cora Schartiger, 62,
his wife, who was killed in an
auto accident Sept. 9, 1976 on
SR 7 at Tuppers Plains. The
accident involved a Landmark Co. truck and an
Eastern Local School District
bus. Schartiger's suit asked

authority of the Florida of·
ficlals.
Deputies are investigating
the entry of an outbuilding ·
and theft of chalnsaw and
tools valued at $850. The theft
is belieVed to have occurred
the evening of July 11 or early
morning of the 12th, but not
detected until Saturday
morning. Entry was gained
by removing an unlocked
padlock from the hasp. Leo . ·
Hannon, Rt. I, Rutland, is
the owner.

Plaintiff awarded sum
of $17,500 in damages

Hunger, tyranny grip China
~
d
.
1
il
t
says detecte a.·1rp ane. P. o
e

report.
In Georgia, Flynt told ABCTV news "neither the speaker
or the majority leader have
ever at any time .. . put
pressure on me about the
conduct ofthis
investigation.''
"It's a danm' li"e," Wright
told UP!. "Thill is an absolute

for $250,000 filed against Jan
Vannoy, driver of the truck
and Otto Marcinko, ..bus
.driver.
Bernard Fultz was the
attorney for the plaintiff with
·Judge John C. Bacon
presiding .
The
jury
deliberated about five hours
before returnln~ its verdict.

Weather

. ~~:~er:~w:rs.cha~c:in~
afternoon and evening,

·
ld
th
Mao's ~eachings, he sa th ~
·"
.
.
cotnm1ssars rep1Y
a
revolution
an d ed : 1ass
struggles were P1ac a 00 ve
production because Mao's
E R Sq d
teachings
hatl
been
The Middleport ·
ua
-"distorted.'.._
made five r!lnS over the
.
He sat'd Premier' Hua Kuo- weekend; t
E ·
feng, Mao's .successor as RSaturday
a h.6:d54f ·11
p.m. ssle
·
h
h
1 er
cha'-an
of the party, has
usse11 'wNo a S a end aA
u...
announced ·to the people home on dorthb thecon dve.,
treateat ,Y ae.m.
squa
newspapers
t hrough
th t h hand was
.
Sunday
after. .a
53
1
11
1
1
po !tea c asses a e as a traffic accident occurred
"three-year production
sh
plan."
·
near
Jones
Boys,
Ell
Bu
H
d
d Hild 'M ,
· "He told us that ~e WOI!Id . art 1or • aq_
a csee 'preliminary results' In Causland, Pomt Pleasant,
the first year and then 'big were taken to VMH.
results' 'a t the end of three . At 1:56 p.m. a f~y on its
years." Fan said.
way to Holzer Medical Ce~ter
He said the Slime policy with their infant son,:!llllam
also is bjling carried out in the Grueser • stop~ at oty hall
military. He said military for the squads assistance
commanders used to attach and the squad tr~sported the
primary importance to chtld to the hospttal . .
revolutionary activities but
At 4:11 p.m. they were
now are reversing this policy. called to the · Ray Darst
"Political officers in our air restdence for Irene Darst who
force regiment first read to was taken 1? Veterans.
8)
M
ial Hospttal
(Conlin
. ued on pqe .
· emor
·

Partly. cloudy, wann and

FI'"e runs made through
:liighs
today in theTuesday.
upper 80s and
low
. . th
?Os
1
by E•R squad :'J
~~~~~~: ine tl::low
to mid 90s.
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy ER -Squad
was called Sunday at 7:16
p.m. for Louise · Hines,
Hemlock Grove; who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 7:•3 they were
called to Vale Street for Tom
Ables who had a g\1f~Shot
wound to his hand. He was
cleaning a gun when it apparently discharged accidentally it was reported.
MEETING MOVED
The regular meeting ol the
Pomeroy Drew Weblter P.o!t
of the American Legion will
be held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday ·
iJIStead of 8 p.m. due to the
All-star Baseball game. All
members are urged to come
and watch the game l!t the
pas\ borne.

�..•.

2-The DllilySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July18,1!177

~'nle Dally~J, Mlddleport.P«netoy,o.: Monday, July 1a,urn

'
••

Lemongellow finds lucky star
CINCINNATI (UP!) After tile Cincinnati Reda last
defeated
him,
Mark
Lemongellow wandered
lbrouch tbe city 111reeta for
houn "looking for a lucky

star."

But on SUnday, it was good
m LetnongeUow'a

()ltdlb!ll

•
HOST OOUPLE -Dr. and Mrs. Ray Pickens ("Doc"
and Mary) were hosts Friday night to some ~ Rotarians,
their iamllles, and guests at the annual July picnic olthe
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club.

: Birdie putt was

•

worth thousands

&lt;:

DUBLIN, Ohio {UPI)
JoAnne Carner didn't know
how impcrtant that putt waa
that llbe made on the 17th bole
.... &amp;mday.
••
Carner calmly rapped ln
the !our.foot birdie putt to go
nine under par ln the final
::. round of the $80,000 Borden·
:: LPGA Classic and felt abe
. had first place locked up.
But, abe didn't know that
• ·ooly moments before, tour
~ rookie Pat Meyers had
·- birdied lhe 18th- rolling In a
• ![&gt;.footer - to pull into a
- momentary tie with her.
:
"I didn't know Pat &gt;l&gt;ad
~ made her birdie," said
·; Carner, who picked up her
~ second victory oflhe year. "l
- did know that nobody could
::. · catch me at nine under par. I
• knew I needed that putt at 17
,. to wrap It up. I really tried
, • .hard on it. I didn't want a
playoff."
,
Camer finished lhe day
.• wilh a on~H~Dder-par 71 oo the
-.. 6,333-yard, par-72 Riviera
·- Country Club course, giving
..., her a 54-bole · tlllal of 2111.
, Meyers' 208 total was her
-"' second runnerup finlsh in the
::! last two weeka, while veteran
·' Kathy Whitworth and third·
year pros Laura Baugh and
Dot
tied for third
• placeGennain
-~
at 209.
....
Susan O'Connor, who
'
bogeyed the final hole, and
: • the defending champ, Judy
. : t Rankin, were nen with 2118,
• - with Carol Mann at 211, and
Pat Hay111, whose 67 was the
• low score of 1he day, at 212.
::_
'lbe victory and $12,0110
-• prize pushed Carner past
Rankin to lhe top of the year's
•

GOOD FOOD AND RECREATION - These four young ladies enjoyed the "potluck"
supper provided by Rotary wives but could hardly wait to relax with a dip in the Pickens'
pool. At left, l.r, Janet HorkY, Sheila Horky, Lori Kloes, and Lynn Kloes savor their food
before plunging in, at right, for an after-dinner swim. Sheila and Janet are the daughters of
Rotarian and Mrs. Carl Horky, and.Lori and Lynn are the granddaughters of Rotarian afl!l
Mrs. Paul Smart and daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes. All are of Middleport.

Rotarians dine and swim
Memoors of the Middleport
·Pomeroy Rotary Club, their
families and guests enjoyed a
potluck supper provided by
the Rotary wives and
swbnming at the. Pomeroy
home of Dr. and Mrs. Ray
Pickens Friday evening on
Lincoln Hill Point.
Attending the picnic, an
annual Rotary event, were

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horky,
Sheila and Janet; Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Riggs and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Cbet Tannehill,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Owen,
Judy and Dick; John Will,
Lee McComas, Mr. and Mrs.
Edison Baker, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles
Downie
and
daughters, Mr. · and Mrs.
Bernard Fultz, Fumiko
Iwasaki, Mr. and Mrs. Paul

Smart and granddaughters
Lori and Lynn Kloes, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Blakeslee; Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Sheets and
sons; Mr. and Mrs. John Rice
and children; Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Buck, Jenny and Julie;
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Dutton,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Mullen,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack !Wbson
and Phil McCauley, a visiting
.Rotarian from Madison, Ind.

Smooth talks wanted
WASHINGTON (UPI ) ground work, that it is administration, including
President Carter, on the eve placing a special signi!ical)ce Midge Costanza, who handles
of a crucial round of meetings on the first meeting ootween White House liaison with the
public, were working today
with Israeli Prime Minister Carter and Begin.
MRS. PAUL SIMON, left, hostess, and Mrs. Fred Crow, right, and other eu"''~ enjoyed
Menahem Begin, is trying to
If the
new Israeli oo a memorandum opposing
just relaxin~ at the buffet dinner.
make ceriain the talks go government i~ to be the President's position on
smoothly, according to convinced to go along with limiting · the use of federal
officials on both sides.
some of the concessions · funds for abortions.
The group, moslly highSecretary of State Cyrus sought by the Arabs,
. VETERANS MEMORIAL
Vance was set to conduct a Washington will have to ranking women in the
Saturday Sadmissions foreign policy briefing at the prove that its support of the · administration, initially
Opal Taylor, Gallipolis; White House tonight for high- Jewish stale will remain discussed the i&amp;sue Friday
Belva · Nelson, Rutland; level staff memoors and their finn.
and now is formulating its
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Marie Roy, Racine; Martin families, including the PresiSome of that effort position before presenting
Wilt,Tuppers Plains ; Hubert dent and First Lady Rosalynn Wldoubtedly will 1!\! tied to Carter with its arguments.
Stewart, Midd!{!port.
The President once again
Carter.
discussions on U.S. anns
Saturday Dikharges Much of Carter's efforts for sales and the extent to which will be keeping a close eye on
.,. Mark Brown, Opal Taylor, a Middle East peace the .administration will help developments this week in
Dorsel Randolph, Jr., Lena settlement hinge on the talks Israel build up its weapons' Congress, where portions of
his energy conservation
DEAR DR. LAMB -1 have That is whv the diet and also Heilman, Ida Radaker, with Begin, which begin arsenal.
James
Reynolds.
Tuesday with a formal · The President and his program will be taken up
diaootes mellitus and I have the physical activity haS to 1!\!
Sunday
Admissions
John
welcoming ceremoriy.
family
returned
·to along with his proposal for
lost my job because of a regulated. When phys.ical ~c­
Cbimey,
Minersville;
Bar·
"Obviously, we want things Washington Sunday night univ.ersal voter registration.
gradual
deter.ioration tivity is expected to increase
On Thursday he travels to
physically; Every Ume I tried it is usually necessary to bara James, Pomeroy; to go smoothly," a White after Spending the weekend
Arnold Johnson, Middleport; House official said. " It is at Camp David in the .nearby South Carolina for a speech
to put in a gOO!I day's work 1 decrease the insulin.
oolore a group of Southern
bad a reaction from either
1 would suggest that you George Harris, Pomeroy; important I&lt;&gt; come out of this Maryland moWltains.
Russell
Cullums,
Pomeroy
;
governors and then on to
with
a
sense
of
Carter
invited
Army
Lt.
low blood sugar or insulin I avoid any of the foods that
\nn
Carswell,
Pomeroy;
accomplisltmeqt."
Col.
Cecil
Reed
Sunday
io
Mississippifor
another "town
had taken. The amount of In· release glucose rapidly,
~illicent
Darst,
Middleport
;
ball"
type
meeting
in Yazoo
Members of too Israeli deliver an informal religious
sulin ·was decided that morn· specifically all concentrated
Hayman,
Middleport.
;hirley
City.
'lbe
next
day
he
goes to
delegation
in
Washington
say
service
for
about
30
people
al
ing on the basis of a Clinitest sweets. You should try to ln·
Sunday
Discharges
New·()rteans and to visit an
the administration has made ·the camp.
tablet and urine sample.
crease the uncooked
Because of the loss of vegetables in yooc diet. There Charles Hilton, Woodrow it clear, throngh the advance . Some members of Carter's oil rig off the Louisiana &lt;:Oast.
weight and a general weaken- is evidence that uncooked Zwilling, Euiah Evans,
ed condition I have increased foods are better for diaootics William Morris, John
my diet and insulin intake since they dec~ease · the in- .Chaney, Ben Petrel, Clara
which seems to work if I have sulin needs and smooth out Lavender, f!ub\!rt Stewart.
complete freedom to adjust the peaks and valleys of blood
physical activity according to sugar. Be sure to have plenty
ST. CLAIRSVIU..E, Ohio of swimming pools and , Haggard, Tom T. Han and
PLEASANT VAU..EY
each day's needs. ·
of bulk in your meals.
(UPI
) -There were tubs of swanned the 175-acre ,Brush the Blue Ridge Quartet.
Discharges - Mrs. Bobby
I have no other choice but
There are studies in pro- Kinnaird, Southside; Gladys beer instead of pot, and Run Park for the firstever
Workers passed out salt
to accept the fact that this is gress on using continuously Smithson, Point Pleasant; Johnny Cash instead of bard outdoor country music pills, and volunteer firemen
not going to change, which is monitored ·or sensed blood Carroll Church, Point rock, and middle America festival.
used their hoses to shower the
difficult. The fact that I have ·sugar levels and releasing in- Pleasant ; Harry Walker, Jr., loved every humid minute of
Despite the heat, the two- heat~stricken goers. Still,
always expected to work for a sulin in relation to the level at Point Pleasant ; Irene Wise, it.
day show was a success, with about-.411 were hospitalized
As many as 25,000 such Nashville superstars as with heat prostration and 700
living has served as a mental that moment. This should 1!\! Point Pleasant; Mrs. Rooort
block to reality. I am only 48 an important advance when it Walter, Gallipolis; Teresa abandoned the cool retreats Tammy Wynette , Merle others passed through a
years old. The financial situa· is available. By providing Luikart, Leon; Kenneth Ashspecial medical tent.
(Births, JUly 15)
Wickline, Mickey Williams,
lion will not let me forget that more constant control of the worth, Ashton; Emma McBilled as the Jamboree ln
Mr. and Mrs. James Bird, Helen Yinger.
blood glucose levels it may Carty, Henderson ; Lucindil
either.
the Hills, the show was
·
(Births, July 16)
Why isn't diaootes mellitus prevent diabetic neuropathy Nicholson, Evan$; Mrs. daughter, New Haven. Mr.
dubbed "a redneck version of
and
Mrs.
Robert
Spaun,
a
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Donald
given a different distinction and eye changes.
Woodstock" by one obeerver,
Danny Adkins, . Henderson.
son,
Racine.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Stapleton,
a
daughter,
from more manageable
Also there is hope that
and
more than one drew a
Norman Lemaster, Mason ;
Coleman,
a Ironton. Mr. and Mrs. Max comparsion between the two.
diabetes and why aren't peo- transplanted islets of Miranda Bates, · Point Michael
Langerhans where insulin is Pleasant; James Ashworth, daughter, Bidwell. Mr. and Drertner, a son, Pomeroy. Police, for example, were
ple more informed?
I would also like to know produced will soon be possi; Point Pleasant ; Robert Mrs. John Hankla, a son, Mr. and Mrs. Terry quick to note that · only one
more about a pilssible lm· ble. When that technique - Baker, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Rutland. Mr. and Mrs. James F erguson,a son, Pliny, W. Va . arrest was made- for drunk
Mr. and Mrs. Jack StegeR, a and disorderly conduct.
provement in blood sugar now used experimentany in William · Bemesderfer, Kemper, Sr., a son, Kerr.
(Discharges,
July
16)
so
monitoring. I think it is refer· dogs- is perfected for hwnan Mason ;
No problems developed be·
n, Gallipolis .
Julia
Kirby,
'William Arthur, Ida
(Discharges, July 17)
red to as continuous monitor- ·use it would provide a means Gallipolis; Vivian Mayes,
cause Ule crowd was uone of
Doris Adams, Mrs. Kevin the best behaved we've ever
of curing diabetes entirely.
ing.
Point Pleasant ; Carl A&lt;lkins, Bachner, Warren Campb\!11,
DEAR READER
Dr. Lamb will answer Point Pleasant; Stephanie Cleo Caudill, Gamet Click, Dkins and daughter, Clyde run into," said ooe of several
Diab\!tes mellitus is diabetes representative letters of Parson , Henderson; Mrs. Frank Dearfield, Karen Cox, Mrs. Larry Cundiff and deputies from nine eastern
mellitus whetj!er it is mild or general interest in his col· Eva Knopp, Mason ; Mrs. Ebersbach; Mary Erwin, son, Wilifred Greenlyee, Ohio counties.
severe. . Diabetes mellitus umn.
A New Yorker who
Ronald Johnson , Letart; Beulah Eskew, Virgil Gahm, Jessyca Hatfield, Harold
may occur .early in life in
John
Morrow ,
Point Virginia Gahin, John Geiger, Mercer, George Miller, Lena . attended the celebrated
BOOSTERS MEET
some people and much late.r
Pleasant; Nicky Kerwood; Mary George, Jennie Hud· Thomas, Mary Tilley, Cloyd Woodstock rock event mused,
The Meigs Band Boosters Point Pleasant; Matthew son, Mrs. Johnny Kuhn and Wiggins.
""It's been good hete. I had a
in others as the natural
(Births, July 17)
problem with sunstroke. But I
course of disease in different will meet Tuesday, July 19 at . Fisher, Letart; Margarette daughter, Laura Mathias,
people. That is one reason 7:30p. m. Final plans will be Legg, Robertsburg ; Okey Mrs. Rooort McCarty and
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky came to the doctor and was
why it is hard to determine made for the Fair and aU
:Oush, Letart; Henry Plantz, son, Gladys Moore, Linda J ohnso n, a son , B•"dweU. Mr . treated wen.
"They took care of people
the hereditary pattern of parents are ."'"ge~ !O attend . . .'oint Pleasant.
Jerry
Ring, and Mrs . John Oiler, a
Northup,
better-umnat·· Woodstock:''
dfalietes.-- '
Kathryn Rood; .Rita Rose;-- -aaug!iter, Vinton. Mr. and
Fans
from
Canada
to Texas
Holzer Medical Center
I am sending you two issues
Theodore . Taborn, Edna Mrs. Charles Nance, a son,
.
111E
DAlLY
SENTINEl.
of ·The Health Letter,
(Jillscharges, July 15)
· Taylor, Jerry Taylor, Nor- . Northup. Mr. and Mrs. David fined up area hotels and
DEVOO'EO TO TilE
others bedded down In
mun~rs 3-10, (Diaootes : The
INTEREST OF .
· .((a!"f11 Blakenman, Blanche man Van Matre, Mary Van Baker, a son, Rutland.
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Ca~y,
Owen Cordell, Sickle, Bonnie Varian, Helen
campers for the two.,day
Sweet SickneSs l and 3-11
CHESTERL TANNEHILL
Minnie Cyrus, Sandra
(Diabetes : Diagnosis,
Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Prevention and ManageDobbins, Tamale Donley,
Cltr. Editor
ment. ) It will help you wjth
Published daLly t:XL"epl Salllrday 1
some of your questions.
by The Ohio V.alley Publlsllin" Com-,
~y_. Ill Court St., Pomer-oy, Ohio
Gilkison , Edna Halley,
Others who want these two
4S'lg,l. BWJiness Office Phone 992No ·one was Injured in five private drive striking . a Gallipolis, pulled in a
·
lsadote Harris, Tressie
issues can send 50 cenll for
2156. Editorial Phone 992-2151.
Second
class
postage
po~id
at
minor
traffic accidents in· vehicle operated by Edwin K. driveway off Ingles Rd., two
Hendricks, Macil Hollingseach with a long, stamped,
Pomen~y., Ohic.J.
and seven tenths miles south
head, Ralph Jeffers, Richard vestigated over the weekend Cleland, 23, Middleport.
self-addressed envelope for
N.aficnml advertising represenof
SR 141. His car struck the
A
second
accident
occurred
mailing to P.O. Box 1551, , tative Wart! • Griffith Company•. Maier, Eric Miller, John by the Gallia-Meigs l?ost
Inc .. BoUindli and Ga llagher Div.,
rear
of a parked auto owned
at
11:47
a.
m.
on
US
35
at
Mulford, Keith Nicholas II, State Highway Patrol.
Radio City Sllltion, New
'151 Third Avt!., New York, N.Y.
by
Elias
R. Lear, 31, Eureka
Michael L. Coleman, 20, Rt. Spring Valley Green where
William
Potter,
Mrs.
York, NY 10019.
18017.
Subscription rp les: Delivered b)
Lawrence Rosenb\!rger and I, Vinton, was cited to an unidentified vehicle Star Rt. There was minor
The natural production of carri..-r
where .~:~va il a blco 75 n:&gt;nt&lt;~ ~lol'r
daughter, Nina Russell, Roy Municipal Court for failure to flipped a stone that broke the damage.
in' •lin by a nonnal person is
week. By Motor Route wlwn: t:aiTicl
Vaughn J. French, 55;
service not Bvailable, One m011tll,
Sayre, Truman Souders, yield the rigbt of way from a windshield in a car operated
sueh thai more insulin is 13.25.
By mail in Ohio and W. Va.,
Addlaon,
was cited for failure
by
James
H.
Hanson,
55,
Burma Spencer, Harold private drive doUowing an
released when the blood (.he Year, m .OO; Si:J: months,
to
yield
the right of way
Gallipolis.
Thomas, Freda Walker, accident at 3:05p.m. on SR
sugar gets too higb and less 111.50; Three months, $1.00 ;
Ellewhtre $26.00 year; SIX months
following
an
ae&lt;:ident Sunday
In the final accident
Zelma Walker, Mrs. Wilbur 325, five tenths of a mile east
when it faUa. There Is no way tl3 .50; Threet . months, $7 .50.
morning
on
SR
7 at US 35.
wanace and son, Maryland of SR 160. The patrol said · Saturday, an auto driven by .
you can reaUy duplicate this Subs&lt;..Tiption vrice includes Sunday
J:im~llll.
.
The patrol said French's
Coleman's car pulled into th&lt;· Rickly L. Syrus, 21,
Wilfong, Julia Wright.
with Insulin medications.

Hospital News

HEALTH

Try new diet tack

.

...

THAT'S COLD!- Jenny Buck, duaghter of Rotarian
and !drs. Bob Buck and Aaroo Sheets, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jlm Sheets, find edging into a pool a chilling eJPOrience.
Slowly but surely, however, Jenny and Aaron made their
way into the water and had quite a fWl time along with
other memb\!rs of the younger set.
·

Nation baking
in heat wave
Fire fighters battled two 1,400 acres of sagebrush. But
major brush and grass fires forest service officials said
in the West Sunday but Sunday night that high winds
firemen in Ohio turned their had diminished mrtoo fire
hoses on thousands of country was expected to be contained .
music fans who flbclt:ed to "a · today. The blaze kllled three
redneck
version
of men Saturday.
Some 300 firemen fought a
Woodstock."
major
\lrass fire near
Millions also crowded EaSt
Missoula,
Mont., that forced
Coast beaches to escape the
the
evacuation
of 250 persons
· lingering heat wave and
farmers ln drought...tricken · and destroyed five homes.
u-gia hired a rainmaker to 'lbe fire seared more than '
try to save dying peanut and 2,000 acres and Gov. Thomas
Judge declared it a disaster
soybean crops.
area,
warning residents not
Utah fire fighters battled a
to
return
to their homes until
blaze in the tinder-dry Ashley
the
flames
were brought
National Forest that gutted
under control.
A voliUiteer firet~~en from
St. Clairsville, Ohio, provided
free showers for many of the
25,1MIO country music lovers
who turned out in oo.degree
event.
Some favored the sultry heat to applaud such
weather, among them singer headliners as Johnny Cash;
Freddie
Fender, who Barbara Mandrell and Tom
explained, "l'm from south T. Hail. At least 40 persons
Texas, and the hotter it Is, the were treated for heat
prostratloo and ·officials said
better it is:"
Cash was joined by his 700 others were treated at a
Wife, June, and the Carter special medical tent.
. One observer dubbed the
Family, for a lively concert
that sent the crowd jumping oudoor ,festival "a redneck
. and dancing and surging version of.Woodstock."
Farmers and businessman
forth with small cameras to
get souverur· snapsltols.
at Dawson, Ga. - about 20
President
"It's been nice,". said miles from
Ronald RandaU, who made Carter's hometown of Plains,
the trip with his wife and Ga. - hiJ:ed a rainmaker for
another couple, Mr. and Mrs. :25,000a month to seed clouda
John Fennlmore, aU from
lith silver iodide.
"lthlnk we're getting some
Pendleton, N.J.
"We're all making plans moisture," said Bobby
for next year," he said.
Locke,
a
farmer"It's better than ·]thought, businessman. "lt rained
bull like rock music better," pretty hard in ooe area where
commented his niece, Janet we seeded today."
Danser. "Led Zeppelin is my
On the East Coast, stifling
favorite group.''
heal sent residents swanning
Two women arrived from to beaches for relief. More
New York and New Jersey than 2 million people crowded
for the sole reason of. catching New York area beaches to
a gllmpae of their favorite beat 97-degree temperatures.
A citywide water alert
Ernest Tubb.
Wearing picture buttons of ret~~~ined in effect in New
their favorite stars, the York because of dangerously
festival goers drank-beer and low watl!r IX'e-s!llli'e. soda and snacked on
Police at Old ·orchard
hamburgers, hot dogs, Beach, Maine, said thoussnda
spareribS, chicken and Polish of vacationing Canadians
sausage.
flocked to New Englancl
beaches during the weekend
from their hcmes in Ontario
and Qtiebec.
ln Boston, "" fU"e officials
installed tamper"{lrOOf caps
vehicle pulled into the path·of on 140 fire hydtanta · to
an auto operated by Dana H. prevenl attempts by city
llalfhiU, 11, Rt. 1, Cbemlre. residenls to ll8e the hydrants
There
was
moderate to cool off.
damage.
,(
The National Weather
A final ·weekend' accident Service utended its air
occurred at SR 7, five tenths stagnation advisory for tbe
of a mile north of GaWpolis District of Columbia,
where an auto driv,en by Virginia and Maryland for
Betty J. Singer, 48, the third day. Baltimore
Chesapeake, was forced off reported an afternoon
the right -de of the highway temperature of 100 and lt
by an unknown vehicle.
reached IH in lhe nation •a
capital.

·25,000 prefer .beer for pot
~

~~~YEik~~i;~nT~:r~~

.

No one h
. urt m
• 5
ff•
•
ak
. · tra lC mist es

part and home runs by
Houston Astro teammates
Bob Wal.!lon and Enos CabeU
and not luck - that
eubled Lemoogellow to beat
the Reds, 3-1.
The
21-year-old
LemongeUow brought a 1·11
record into the game, but

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$88,~.

Carner, who claims abe Is a
"bad leader," got off to a fast
start when llhe roUed in a 2().
foot birdie on the firot bole to
lreak a lie with Baugh.
But, she hooked her drive
out of bounds Qll the second
hold, taking a double bogey,
and spent much of the nen 10
holes flying to catch up.
Birdies on 12 and 13 gave
Carner the lead for good,
· except for the momentary lie
with Meyers.
Baugh, one of the LPGA
glamour girls who is still
looking for her firot tour
victory, held the lead until
she double bogeyed the
seventh hole.
Gerrnaljt, also in her third
year and also seeking her
firot win, also held the lead
for a short time. But her nine
pars on the back side were
not good enough to hold off
Carner's three-under-par ·33.
So, It's off to the U.S. Open
at Chaska. Minn., for earner
and many of the LPGA
players.
"The Open is always
special to me," said Carner.
"It's not just a putting
contest. You have to 1!\! good
oo trouble shots. I guess
!hat's why I usually play well
in the Open. Up and down is a
very good part of my game."
Meyers picked up $8,0110 for
second place, while Gennain,
Whitworth and Baugh each
collected ${,454, O'Connor
and Rankin got $2,11110 each,
and Mann received $2,400.

&amp;mday mea.. the end of the
bad luck lilllt Ill!" plagued
him this aeasoo.
"But," he lllid laughingly,
"if I keep winning dQn't be
~ to see me wearing
lhe same clothes l!ve got on
now the next lime you see

me."

A double

~
BASEBAll
M•lor LUI" Standints
Natloftal League

By United PrnJ lntef'nationo~l
l!ast
W. L Pet. GB
53 35 .60'2 Chicago
52 38 .511

Phil II

by

Champ

&amp;muners .and a single by

so 42

Plttsbgh

now.''

.543

2
5·
8

47 45 .S11
.., 47 .A7.2 11 112

St . l..OUIS
Montreal
Newvork

31 5.&lt; .lifT l1 'h
Danny Driesee~~ In the nrot
West
inning accounted for the only
W. L Pe-t. GB
5~ 33 .6.tl Red riUI off LemongeUow, Los Ang
~8 41 .539
91h
who yielded siz hils before his Clncl
Houston
43 SO .462 16'h
departure after six innings. San Fran
43 51 ..457 17
Diego
40 55 •.421 · 20IJ2
Niekro blanked the Reds San
Atlanta
3-4 57 .31" 24'12
with two hill the last three .
. Saturday's Results
innings to gain his fifth save Chicago 9, Phllldelphlll 8
New York 5 Pittsburgh 3
of lhe season.
Houston a, Cincinnati o
Watson's homer, his 12th of San Francisco 4, Atlanta 0
3, St. Louis 0
the seuon, came with two out Montrebl
Los Angetes 1, San Diego 0
in the fourth inning and tied
Sunday's Resuns
3, New York. 1, l:st
the game, and Cab\!ll's blast Pittsburgh
New York , 9, Pittsburgh 3, 2nd
in the si:llh put Houston oo Philadelphia •· Chicago 2
Montreal a, Sf. Louis 7
lop.
11 , Sen Franc.Jsco 10
A single by Joe Ferguson, Atlanta
Houston 3. Cincinnati 1
an infield out, and a single by Los Angeles 4 San Diego 3
Monday's Games
Julio Gonzalez gave the
(No games scheduled )
Astros a third and final run
Tuesday's: Gamt
All -Stars at Yankee Stad ium ,
off Jack Billlnghalil, who night
·
pitched the last three Innings
American Leagu~
for the Reds.
East
1

BY LARRY FISHER
and Hamilton scored when
The Meigs American Brent Johnson was safe on an
Legion team traveled to error.
Ashland, Ky. to lose a double
The winning pitcher for
header Sunday, 12·2 and 13-2. Ashland wasEUawickand the
In the fU"St game Ashland losing pitcher was Baird.
won 12·2 when Ashland
In the third inning Tlm
scored runs in aU but the first Hood injured himself and was
imlng and the only score for forced to leave the game
Meigs was in the third iming. when he attempted to catch a
That was when Hood scored home-run baU hit by Martin
on a Brian Hamilton single and ran into the fence. Then

Rally fell short
against C-Kenova

1

The · Meigs American
Legion came from behind
Saturday to send CeredoKenova into extra innings
1!\!fore bowing to the visitors
W. L Pet. GB • 7-5 in ten imlngs. C-K took a
, Baltimre
53 39 .576
2-0 lead in the first on a
Boston
Sl 38 .513
an error and a double
so 42 .543 J double,
New York
by Rowe. 'lbey increased
41 47 .466 10
Clevelnd
41 49 .456 11
Milw
their lead to 3-0 in the second
41 so .451 11 1/~
Detroit
Toronto
34 sa .310 ~~ with two walks and a runWest
scoring single.
W. L
Pet. G8
Meigs had a golden opChicago
54 36 .600
Kan City
51 38 .573 2'h portunity ln the third when
Minn
SO 42 .543 5
Tlm Eb\!rsbach, R. Johnson
.,._In
•
•
A'
11:
Te.cas
46 4A .511 8
and Chuck Kennedy drew
• ., s .-., s -.:
cant
42 •• .A17 11
Larry Hisle hit his 21st Oakland
39 51 .433 15
lead-off
walks.
Brian
homer and Rod Carew had an seattle
41 54 .m 151/:! Hamilton's single scored
.
. -5.Jturday's .Resul1s:
RBI single ·to spark the Detroit 11, Toronto 3
Eoorsbach, but then a basesnightcap victory. ln the Oakland 81 Minnesota 2
loaded
squeeze play back·
-'•••rd . Texas 5, Cleveland 4
opener • Paul Tbonn~
Kansas City 5 New York 1
fired. Mike· Wayland missed
pitchedasi.:lbitter to raise his Boston 4, Chicago 3
the bunt, and Johnson was out
record!&lt;&gt; 7-11 Rod Carew bad Baltimore 5, Milwaukee 0
at the plate. Kennedy was
•
•
California 5, seeltle 4
Uor-5 on the day, upping hiS
Sundoy'o Results
also out at third while
average a point to 394
Toronto, 3, Detroit 2, 1st
Hamilton went to second.
•
•
Det 7, Toronto 6, 2nd, 11 inns .
Iadlalut I, Ralfien 1:
Minnesota 4, Oakland 1, 1st
Wayland then cracked a
FredKendaUstrokedapair Minnesota 9, Oakland s, 2nd
single
wl1h Hamllton stop· g1es d p uJ na•- Chicago 3, Boaton 2
of RBI S1ll
an . a
ua:::
Kansas City 8. New York A
ping at third. The throw to
added a rWl-6Cocmg double. Milwaukee 3, Baltimore 2
home was cut off as they
Charlie Spikes and Larvell seattle e. California 1
attempted
to catch Wayland
. .
Cleveland 6, Texas 1
Blanks 8 !so had RBI hill 1D ~
Monday's Games
going to second, but the throw
four-run ninth as Wayne Gar(No games scheduled!
was late. Hamilton tried to
Tue_s day's Game
1and went the dlstance to
Ali-Stars at Yankee Stadium, score, however, and he waS
n1ght
impr9ve his record to 7~.

Spencer belts
14th home run
By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago White Sox' Jlm
Spencer asked teammate
Richie Zisk if he could borrow
some of his bals and after
Zlsk generously agreed,
Spencer has been hitting
homers lille they're going put
of style.
"I wish I had it aU season,''
said Spencer, after driving in
two riUIS with a double and
his 14th homer to beat the
Red Sox, 3-2, .Sunday. "I'd
probably have 20 hcmers by

opposition 25 in 2 games

"'

1

Chicubs wilt in heat

Sport f'arade

·m o•e

teams move
un ln meet

in the fourth a second home
run for Ashland was hit by
Williams.
Hitters for Meigs were
Hamilton , Wayland ,
Davenport and Smith.
M
0020110-2 42
A
014 223-12 11 1
In the second contest
Meigs' i3-2 loss was in .only
41'. imlngs of play.
Meigs got ita only two runs
in the firot · iming when
Hamilton hit the first pitch of
the game over the center field
fence ror a home run and then
one out later Brent Johnson
added another home run ..
Ashland did most of its
hitting in the 2nd inning by
scoring eight runs on three
Meigs pitchers. The winning
pitcher for Ashland was
Skaggs and the losing pitcher
was B. Johnson. Meigs now
has a won and loss record of
14 wins and 19 losses.
M
20001l-262
A
280 3x-13 14 1
The next game is at
Syracuse Ball Park Wed·
nesday evening at 7:30
against Logan.

tagged for the third out.
Ceredo-Kenova picked up
single runs in the fourth and
fifth, but reliever Terry ·Wall
shut the visitors out until the
tenth.
Meigs battled back with a
single run in the sixth when
WaU tripled and scored as the
throw got through the third
baseman. They got another in
the seventh when Homer
Smith socked a plmch·hit
single with Hamilton and
Wayland following with
walks. Mick Davenport then
ooat out an infield hit with
Smith scoring .
In the eighth Meigs tied the
game with Smith getting
another important hit.
Starting pitcher John Sayre
walked and was sacrified to
second by Mark Mitch. Smith
followed with a run-scoring
single.
For the winning inning,
Rowe walked and Steve Baird
replaced wan on the mound.
Thompson got on with a ·free
pass and Sbnmons singled for
a run. On a double steal,
Thompson plated the ·second
run .
wan led the hitting with his
triple and two ·sln~les .
Hamilton and Smith each had
two singles, and Wayland,
Davenport, and Baird each
bad one hit. Meigs pitchers
fanned three but gave up
eight walks while CeredoKenova hurlers struck out ten
and walked nine. Meigs went
to Ashland, .Kentucky Sunday
for a double-header.
c
210 110 000 2.:...7· 8 2
M
001 101 110 ~ 10 3
Rutland, Jones (&amp;; WP) and ·
Thompson·. Sayre, WaU (4,
LP), Baird (10) and Eoorshach, R. Johnson (7).

"He (Spelieer) told me I
came six or seven years too
late ln his career,'' said a
'
laughing Zisk.
Steve Stone struck .out nine
Red Sox altogether 1!\!fore ·
leaving the game after the
eighth with a cut on his
in American League games.
been brutal."
pitching hand.
By FRED MeMANE
lt was so uncomfortably hot Dodgers 4, Padres 3:
"Ain't too many guys who UPI Sporta Writer
Ron Cey 's twMun homer
oo
the field at Veterans
i::an give our club just three
By too end of the summer,
highlighted a three-run fifth
Stadium
Saturday
too
game
hits," said Bostoo Manager the Chicago Cubs may be
iming which enabled the
Don Zimmer. "When we give cursing the day tlleir late · WIIS halted for 12 minutes, in Dodgers to defeat the Padres.
a team four runs we can owner Phil Wrigley decided the last of the sixth inning, and boost their NL West ·
usually win, bUt off Stone not to installlighls at Wrigley when home plate umpire Division lead over Cincinnati
Doug Harvey was f&lt;reed to
today we were lucky to get F1eld.
·
leave
the game because of the to 9.,.. games. Dusty Baker
two."
The first-piace Cuba wilted
also homered for Los Angeles
. In other American League under· the intense heat at heat.
SWlday's heat, abnost as in helping Doug Rau to his
games, Seattle edged Califor- Philadelphia this past
By MILTON RI&lt;JIMAN
lith triumph in 12 decisions.
nia, 8-7, Detroit and Toronto weekend, dropping three of bad as Saturday's, didn't l§pos 8, Cardlnalll 7:
UPI Sporta Etll1or
split, the Blue Jays winning four game&amp; to the second· ·seem to bother Carlton
The Expos rallied for five
checked
the
NEW YORK (UPl)- Some of the players at the Mels' Old- the opener, 3-2, and t~ place Phlllles who have now as · he
runs
in the last of the ninth
Timers' niunioowere talking about 1he problems the Yankees Tigers taking the nightcap, 7- crawled to within two games Cubs on 111ly four hill before mnmg to defeat the
keep having and someone asked Joe DiMaggio whether he bad 6, in 11 innings, Ka!isaa City of 1he East Division leaders. giving way to Tug McGrB"W in Cardinals. Warren Cromartie
the ninth. The victory
ever been chewed out by a manager in his 13 active big league dumped New York. 8-4,
The Phlllles, succumbed to enabled
Carlton to 1!\!corne had a solo homer for
seasons.
Milwaukee t .ripped the 130-degree heat in loSing
Montreal.
"Only once," he said, flashing that old familiar Joe Dgrin he Baltimore, 3-2, Minnesqta to the Cubs, 9-8, Saturday, but the National League's first Braves 11, Glanls 10:
fi'equently displays when he starts teiUng·a stOry on himself. swept Oakland, 4-1 and 9-5, boWlced bac1ttowin Sunday's 13-gilme winner.
Rod Gilbreath scored the
In Other NL games, Los
"It was early lnmy career and Joe McCarthy, ow: maliager, and Cleveland battered contest, 4-2, behirid Steve
winning run ln tile ninth
Angeleil
downed
San
Diego,
4Carlton's pitChing and a pair
ran a pretty tight ship. Things are a helluva lot more lenient Texas, 8-1.
iming on Willie Montanez'
of solo · homers by · Jay . 3, Houston topped Cincinnati, groWlderto give the Braves a
now than they were then. Now you have many players who are Miuiners 8, Angelll 7: .
3-1, . Montreal nipped St. ·
Dave Collins smaslted a Johnstone.
non-confonntsts. We all conformed then.
victory"aver the Giants. San
"We were playing a game in Detroit, a guy by too name .of two-run homer in the eighth
"The Cubs have good LouiS, S.7, Atlanta edged San Francisco scored five rWlS in
11-10, and
Gill (George Gill) was pitching for them and be ran lhe count and Bill Stein added a solo pitching with a great reliever Francisco,
Pittaburgh
beat
New York, 3- the eighth and three in the
to lhree-and.flOthing on me. Art Fletcher, coaching at third shot for the Mariners. Dan in Bruce Sutter, but 1 still
ninth to tie the score only to
.
base, gave me 1he sign to hit ·away. At least that's what I Meyer cootributed three lilts think playing an day games '1, then ·lost, 9;1.
Kansas City topped New lose it when first baseman
thought he· did.
and three RBI and Lee might hurt them," said
York,
8-4, Seattle edged Gary Thomas8on was imable
"I wentaheadandswungandpopped 1he ball up. We lost the stanton bad a twD..run single shortstop Larry Bowa. "The
handle
Montanez'
California,
, 8-7, Toronto to
game, and when I walked into the clubhouse McCarthy said to to pace a 14-hlt attack, giving last two days in this heat have downed Detroit,
grounder ln time to complete
3-2,
then
lost,
me, 'Hey, Joe,! wanna see you ln my office. •
Mike Kekich his fifth win ln
6-7, in .11 innings, Milwaukee what would have been an
"'When Fletcher gives you the sign, that's the lJI!IIlO u if it six decisions.
nipped Baltimore, 3-2, inning l!llding double piay.
carnefrqm me,'heaald. 'He gave you the take sign and you hit Tigers Z..7, Blue Jays u:
Th~ee
Minnesota swept Oakland, 4-1 Jeff Burroughs homered for
away.' Then MCCarthy proceeded to lay, into me. I honestly
Milt May's pinch-hit homer.
, ,
, ,
and 9-5, Chicago squeezed Atlanta while Thomasson and ·
thought Fletcher had given me the sign to swing away but I · in !he lith inning gave the
. past Boston, 3-2, and Willie McCovey c'1"nected for
wasn't gotng to argue with McCarthy. I took the browbeating Tigers the nighlap' and a
San Franc~o.
Cleveland topped Texas, 6-1, Pirates 3-3, Meta 1-!1:
from him. Right up to this very day I still believe I was given Split as John Hiller got out of
the hit sign."
a bases-loaded, nooe-out jam
Jolui Candelaria won his
"Everything was ·different in those days," DiMaggio went in the ninth to get the win in
lOth game ln the opener as he
111. "We were taught to have reapecl for the·maqager from the relief. In the opener, ,Jesse
combined with Kem Tekulve
flrstdaywewBlkedlntotbatYankeeclubhouse.AUtheplayers Jefferson threw a five-hitter
and Rich Gossage on a sixpulled for each other. There .,.as a tremendous feeling of and benefitted from ~stly
'Y
TWO CHARGED
hitter. Candelaria, however,
friendallp 811lUlg an of ua, a real sense of togetherness. The errors by AureUo Rodriguez
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Tw~ relnjured his shoulder In the
ClnclnnatlRedsoflodaysaytheyhavelhesamethingontheir and Tilo Fuentes.
Three more teams ad- young men from the suburb sixth inning and will be
club, but they stole the line from ua."
Royals 8, Yankees 4:
. vanced in the 19th annual of Falnnount are charged forced to miss Tuesday
Ralph Terry, who pitched for the Yankees in the late '$011 and
Darren Porter hit a two-run Kyger Creek Uttle League with aggravated murder in night's All.Star game. ln the
early '6011, a1ao was. on hand for the Old-Timers get-together homer and Amos ·oos drove base ball tournament connectioo with the death of nightcap, rookie Steve
lh1a pasl weekend. He said lhe prtsent Yankees "would be in three runs as the Royals . Saturday evening.
•
Clara Wopperer, 88, ln her Henderson drove in five runs
better off If they played in obeCurlty."
·
swept a three-game series . In the , first game, ·Mason home July 10 In suburban with a sacrifice fly and . a
"'lbey got.too much attention and you know how that works, from the Yanks. Reggie County Insurance won by Fainilount.
·
· grand-slam homer to gain the
It puts preasure on them,'' alild Terry, an assistant golf pro at Jackson hit his 18th hcmer forfeit over the Pt. Pleasant
Charged Saturday night Mels a split.
·
Latourette, Staten Island, here tn New York. .
but couldn't prevent Andy Jaycees, who failed to sltow were Darrel Davis, IB and
"I know all the guys on the Yankees now and they aren't a Hassler from raising his up for the contest.
Sanford Ervin, 19, both of
bad bwlch. I think Reggie Jackson 18 a good guy and so ts record to 6-2.
In the second tilt, !Iannan Falnnount.
'lburmanMWIIOII.TheyweregetUngalongfine,andlhenthat Brewe~ 3,0rlolea Z:
Trace downed the Rutland
Pollee said the woman's ·
week's .
article came out tn sportmagnlne and lt stlrredl!verythlng - Rookie Edgardo~Rcmero.---- Dodgers, 1-1-11.
---c-home_bad been broken into
up."
· replacing injured Robi.n
Final till Saturday fol!lld and she was strangled. The
. Hank Bauer played with both DIMaggio and Terry when .he Yount, had three hill and hiS . the New Haven Cubs ousting lreaklng and entering was
special
.
was with the Ya'*ees and after he was finished playing, he first career ~I to lead the the Gallipolis Padres, 10-6. the eighth lime the woman's .
lllllll8lle!i KarBa:s City, Baltimore and Oakland. Now 00 runs a Brewers to victory. M?"se · Tonight, the Racine entry home had been broken in!Q
liquor lltore in Pralri• Village, Kan., having retired from Haas tossed a three-hitter takes on Pl. Pleasant NAPA since June of 1973.
buebaU m years ago.
, over eight innings to even his at 7 and the Pomeroy
"Idon'tml.salt,'' he said. "I lhink I got out at the right time. record at 11-11.
Yankees battle the Pomeroy
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) 1wu saying to D&lt;ll Lanen lh1a morning, how do you manage a
.Giants at 8:30 p.m.
Dick
Allen is finished plilying
$3 mii)IOn ballplayer? That's not easy. I'm out of baseball now
LAKE FOREST, IU. (UPI)
In the Rutland-fiT contest,
baseball
Ibis season.
and what'• going 111 with the Yankees Ia none of my business, _ Veteran Ollcago Bears' Bolin and Gardner burled for
as~
The
36-year
old first basebut all that big DlOIIey that was paid out muat have something nmning backs Mike Adamle the losers. R. James and M.
to do wtlh aU of buebsil's problems.
and Larry Schreiber and Beaver pitcher for the win- man-outfielder, in a letter
received by nakland A's
·~uaeebpll can't blame the players for that. It was the owners rookie defensive lineman ners.
·wbo pve out the IIIGIIeY, not lhe players. I know some of the Dennla Btedcuer failed to
Willford had three hits for owner Charlie Finley on
lmlble yoa hear of ammg lhe ...yen today never would've pau physical examinations the ro.era. R. James had a Saturday, lllid he no longer
....~to play lhls aeaaon but •
l•ppotwd wben I waa around. Somebody would've punched &amp;mday, Bears olflclall said. double for the winners.
llllllebodYellelntbenoeeandsald, 'Wilke up I'"
The three will be IDler the
ln the nightcap, GIIUiand left open biB plans for 1978.
Allen, who previously
Mickey Malle, who alao partlclpated In the Old-Timers: _care of the club's training . and Weaver hurlecl for the
walked
out
on · the
event, preferred not to get Into the Yankees' internal iltalf until the
Cubs. Haner and T. Tawney
Philadelphia Philllea, was
~q~~~~bbletlat .n: He II me of Billy Martin's best friends•and if 'l!iavemy.utoy .:!~kar. hurled for the Pa~.
.)'011 11mw anytling about Mickey Mantle, then you know be
d th 1r
h 1 1s
Gilliland had two doubles suspended by Finley last
iln'tevei'IOing to abandon a buddy,especlaUy when the going palle
•
P ya ca · for the wlnnen u did Greer. mooth ~ taking a shower ·
leU roqb
.
Twlc.Hida:r Jll'lctlces were c. camden had a double for while the A's were playing a
Locust Street
'1 J•
BUiy Itaya 111 and dOes good," said ManUe. ~~~ ":'~ the Padres as did pn\e against the Chicago
White SoL
'"J'b!tl'llllll C1117 lhlall bave to NJ about tbe altualion." ,
DIClemente.

-u

mooey winning Ust. Carner
has woo $119,268, Rankin,

teamed with Joe Nleltro to ·
limit the Reds to eight hill.
The
victory
was
Lemongellow's firot since he
beat the Pittsburgh Pirates
May 13.
"'lbat," aald the 21-yearllld pitcher, "was Friday,
May 13."
Hesaldhewasso desperate
for another win, he took to
carrying a rabbit's fool, and
after retilemberlng that he
compiled a 3-1last year after
joining the Astros as a rookie,
he aslted for his old unifonn
from last year back.
"I even sent home for the
glove 1 used last year," he
said.
But In the end, lt was the
homers by Wal.!lon and Cabell
that changed his luck.
The homers were two of
just three hits Doug Capilla
yielded in six imings. But
they were enough to tag the
rookie lefty with his first loss.
in three decisions since his
acquisition from the St. Louis
Cardinals June 15.
LemongeUow's reaDy not
convinced that his victory

Legion scores four 1-uns,

SONOMA, Calif. (UPI) Kenny Roberts, Modesto,
Calif., captured the AMA·
Camel Pro Series national
championship motorcycle
race Sunday after starting
from the last position at the
Sears Point International
Raceway.
A last-to-first dash bad
never
before
been
accomplished in lhe history
of the race. Rooorts pocketed
nearly $13,000- $4,960 out of
the Sonoma Motorcycle
Classic race purse and
adding $8,000 in Camel Pre
Series prize money as the
firsthaU champion.
Skip Aksland, Manteca,
Calif., placed second while
Dale Singleton, Dalton, Ga.,
was third. Gene Romero, San
Luis Obispo, Calif., took the

DEADLINE TONIGHT
Deadline for elgulng up
for the 1977 Gallipolis Day
Basketball Camp Is 8 p.m.
today accordlug to C8ach
Jim Osborne, d.lrector.
Osborne may oo reacbed at
bome by phone, 4~.
Unless more register, the
camp will not oo held this
summer.

NEW YORK ( UPI) -New
York Yankees' coaches
Elston Howard and Dick
Howser will pitch batting
practice for the American
League squad ln the 48th AUStar Game Tuesday night at
Yankee Stadium, it was
announced Sunday by
American League President
Lee MacPhail.
Jeff Torborg, recently
named manager of the
Cleveland Indians, will be the
batting practice catcher.
Gene Monahan of the Yankees and Texas' Bill Zeigler
\fill be the American League
,trainers. ·
CAMBluDGE JUNCTION,
Mich. (UPI) -Danny Ongais
streaked away from Gordon
Johncock when the green flag
came back out f&lt;r the final
lap Sunday to become the
surprise winner of the
championllbip car half of the
Norton Twin 200 at Michigan
International Speedway.
It was the firot victory ln an
Indy car for Ongals, who
whe.eled
his
Parnellf:
Cosworth to the fastest race
lap in Indianapolis 500 history
earlier this year.
Johnny Rutherford finished
third and Tom Sneva was
fourth.

CRISISLINE

CALL
992-5554

fourth spot.

This

\\atnbUtl

fteatb fnes·

,.,

.!
•

~
~

.

be.-

.

-~

~

'

992-52~

Mlddleport,•Ohlo

�•

~The llailySentinel,Mlddleport·Pnmo:roy, O.,

Monday, July18, 1m

-Health edUcation workshop
to be held at Athens

Slaton, Gross
are selected
NEW YORK (UP!) - MiJ.
waukee pitcher Jim Slalm·
and Oakland third ba~n
Wayne Gross were named to
the A.rnerican League AllStar team Sunday night as
replacements for injured
teanunates.
Scratched from the squad
tbal will play the National

Stearns . W- Candelaria , 10-3. L

- Matlac k , 4-12.
burgh , · Robinson
YorkJ Mazz ill i (2).
(2nd game)
Pttsbgh '
N.Y.

HRs- Pftts (10 ). New

200 000 lOD- 3 4 2
21000060x- 9 84

;ttflh1e:-1

League Tuesday night at
Yankee Stadium were
Oakland pitcher Vida Blue
[sore
shoulder )
and
Milwaukee infleldeo Don
Money l bad back). Slaton has
a 7-8 record while Gross was
batting .237 through games of
Friday night.

Chi ego

000 000 020- 2 5 0
101 001 lOx- • 10 0
Burr is, Hernandez (7 ), Moore
{8 ) and MitterWald; Carlton,
McGr~w
(9) and McCarver,
Boone (9 ). W-Carlton, 13-... L
- Burris, 9-9. HRs ~ Philadel ­
phia, Johnstone 2 (6 }.

Philo

Houston
000 101 1oo- 3 6 2
Clnci
100 000 ooo- 1 8 0
Lemongello. Niekro (7) and
Ferguson ; Capilla-, Billingham
(7) .and Bench . W-Lemongello,
2-ll. L- Capl lla , . 2-1. HRsHouston , Wal$on (12), Cabell

(81.

12nd o•me, 11 fnhlnvsl
Det
002 003 100 01 - 7 11 1
Tor
200 001 03(1 oo- 6 12 0
Wi lCox. Grilli (8 ). Crawford
(8), Hiller (8) and Wockenfuss ;
Lemanczyk, vucko\'ich (11 ) and
Ashby . W- Hiller , 5-9. l Lemanczyk, 8-8 . HR5- 0etr-oit,
LeFlore (S), May (9 l. Toronto,
Fair"ly PJ l .

~-

MIDDLEPORT CUBS j&gt;Ef; WEE TEAM - First row,
1-r, Robbie Cundiff, Wendy Barker, Kim Stewart, Donal&lt;!
Stein; second row, Donnie Bunce, George Justis, Trent
Nash, John Epple, ~~ McKinley, Jay Martin, Tim

(1st vame)'

(2nd game)

WEDDING PLANNED

LONG BOTToM - The
engag'1JI!ent of Albert E.
Roseberry, Long Bottom, and
Della J . Caughey, Route I,
Tuppers Plains, is being
· announced. Plans for the
wedding to be held Oct. 9 are
incomplete.
SERVICES SET
ALBANY -The Rev. John
Elswick
will conduct
evangelistic services for the
fifth consecutive year at the
Albany Riding Club grounds
from Wednesday through
Sunday. Services will be at
7:30 each evening and at 3
p.m. oo.Sunday. A number of
vocal groups will he on hand
to present music for the
services. The p~blic is invited.

Boston
001 100 ooo- 2 A 1
Chicgo
020 001 OOx- 3 6 3
Cleveland , Hernandez (7) ,
Campbell (8 ) and Fisk ; Stone,
LaGrow (9) a·nd Downing. WStone , 10-7, L- Cieveland, 7· 6.
HR - Ch lcago, Spencer 04).

to beat Jack by I
when Floyd went from one
problem to another on the
hole and finished with a
double bogey six. Nicklaus,
meanwhile, near!~ chipped in
his third shot on the 18th hole
for an eagle before settling
for a birdie that gave liim . a
final round of 67 and a 12under-par total of 272 for the
tournament.
The steady Floyd ignored
the pressure and hit five solid
shots on the final hole to
finish his round With a 69 and
gain his second tournament
victory of the year.
But after finishing with his
one stroke win, Floyd said,
"If I heat Jack every week I'd
he a hell of a player." The
second place finish, his 42nd
since joining the tour in 1962,
vaulted Nicklaus' career
eamfngs to $3,051,053.

, ana Garden· Clubs; cooking
the beans, Hal Evans, Joe
Blazer and Harry Brough·
man; serving the beans, Shift
!, ~ George Northup and
Homer Brannon, shift 2, Carl
Winters and Charles Baker,
shift 3, Luther Tracy. and ·
College leaders.
' ·
Preparation of kettles,
tables, etc., Dan and Mickey
Morgan, Marlin Wedemeyer,
Jim Skaggs, Ray Davis,
Wendell Evans, Curt Ramey;
purchase of supplies, Buzz ,
Call, Joe Blazer, .Art Lanham
and Bernie Murphy; clean-up
crew, Sam Smith and
helpers; distance
Richard S8yre am! GallipoliS
Areawide Striders; con·
cessions, Bob Leith; program
and publicity, Bob Leith, Sam
Smith, Charles Lusher,
George Wolfe.
·
1n 1MG, Pt stfdeot Franklin ·
D. Roolevelt was nunlnated
unanimolllly for a third tenn
with Henry W.U.ce as hill
running mate. 'ftJey won ln.
November. r-

race

missing.

One fhlng

yo~

can do

Is

to

programs

support

providing stiffer. penallles

for

wrongdoers

and

propo:sals for strengthened

crime Investigation efforts.

You can also make It
tougher for crooks. Use
good, slrong locks. Mark
possessions with your
social security number.

Our

agency provldt;ts
financial protection and
service when crime losses
occur ... but many can be

prevented . That's why we
say ~ prevention Is the
best !&gt;Olley.

DALE C. WERNER
INS.
m·214J

102 W. Moin

pomeroy

•
••
••
•

••
•
•

~

-""
•

•

J

THIRD PLACE WINNERS - The Meigs Inn Girls'
Softball team took third place honors in a loornament at
Gallipolis sponsored by Robie Truck and Tire. Front, 1-r,
Connie Williams, Donna Rose, Mindy Hill ; back, Joyce
Quillen, Kay Proffitt, Donna Larkins, Vickie Proffitt,

*
••••

Cheryl Larkins, Danielle Smith and Ronnie Quillen,
coach . Absent were Karen Guinther, Ruby Bryant and
Lisa Allen, team members and Joe Proffitt, Don Rose and
Rodney Allen, assistanrcoacnes.

~

Eastern had an easy time
with visiting Rutland 9·3.
Greg Wigal got the win with
relief help from Danny
Spencer. Together they
fanned eight and walked only
two. Steve Lil\le led the
hitting with a triple and
single and Brian. Bissell,
Spencer, and Robbie Smith
each had two singles. Joe
Boyles, Wigal and Roger

single. Elkins had a triple,
and Dave Hysell and Terry
Wayland had two singles: ,
Mike Miller and Steve Fife
had the other two hits,
singles.
Dale Teaford took the loss,
. striking out four and walking
six. Kent Wolfe led the hitting
with a double and two singles
while Bob Lee had a single.
1000010-24
R
M
210 ·124 x-10 10

•

Middleport upped its Pony
· League record to 12.0 by
taking a 3-1 win over· host
Eastern and a 10-2 win over
visiting Racine. In the
Eastern contest, Billy Elkins
got the win, fanning eleven
and walking five. Roger
Carson led the hitters with a
triple and Mike Miller, Terry
Gardner, Britt Dodson, and
Terry Wayland each got a
single.
Danny Spencer went all the
way for Eastern to take the
loss. Spencer got a double,
Steve Little two singles, and
Greg Wigal a single to round
out the hitting.
M
000 021 0-3 5
E
000 010 0-1 4

Syracuse upset host Mason
4-3 as Mason committed six
errors. Chris Hupp got the
win, fanning five and walking
two while cracking a triple.
Steve Riffle went three for
three with three singles and
Mike Nance had a double and
single. Jack Duffy had a
triple and David Nance,
Mark Davis and· C. T.
Chapman each had a slpgle.
Shawn Fields took the loss,
striking out seven and
walking four·. Grant Hysell
had two triples and a double
and Fields had a double and
single. Billy Joe Weiss tripled
and David Burton doubled.
Estel Lavender, Bodie Davis,
John Bond, Shawn Paugh and
Todd Kitchen each singled.
s
100 001 2~ 10 2
100 010 1--3 12 6
M
Meigs-Masoo
PooyLeague
W. L.
Middleport
12 0
Pomeroy Royals
9 3
Mason
9 4
Eastern
8 4
Syracuse
4 ·7
Racine
4 8
Rutland
2 9

Britt Dodson picked up the
win over Racine, fanning four
and walking a like number.
Roger Carson led the hitting
with a triple, double and

Sports. transactions
By

Uniied Press lnternati.on~l

Sunday

Joe . Owens on waivers. and
released Rocky Thom~n
Buffalo - Signed thll11 -round

·.

Football
New Erigtand ~ ---s~ gnea -draft ~ cho i CI!! ~urtis _ Brown~offieroy A'S
1 12
ta ckles Tommy Nel ville and runn.ing back. M•ssoun
Tbls week's schedule
Shelby Jordan and seVen draft
choi ces : Don Hasselbeck, tight
S€HOOL NOTED
Tuesday
.

end
trom Colorado ; , Sidney
Brown, defen's lve back from

OklahOma : Ray costict,"'~ lir:"~e -

·

RACINE ..:. ·Bible school
with the

theme,

"Lord Jesus,

Pomei;'OY Royals pt M.idd.leport

backer from M;ssissippi State; Teach Me" will he held at the
Rutland at Racine
Jerry
Vogele,
linebacker
from
Ract'ne
FI
"rst
Bapt'tst
Church
Mason at Pomeroy A's
M ich igan ; Brad Benson , guard
from Penn state ; w;de rece;ver from Aug. 1 throughAug. 12
Eastern at Syracuse
Ken sm ;th, Arkansas Slote; from 6 to 8 p.m. each week
Friday
and ru'nn ing back Dave Preston , BowHng Green. Also day. · Beverly Cunningham
Pomeroy
Royals
at
pl ':' k:ed up Jim Pietrzak and end will serve 85. dir~or.
Eastern
l."UNTRAcr , APPROVED
Rutland at Middleport.
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) Members of the Dayton
HILP WANTID
Public Service Union Local
101 have a new two-year
contract today.
They
approved an offer from the
Prompt settlement. 26 terminals,
city Saturday.
The contract covers nearly
1;200 workers.
13 state1. Personal Insurance
The city's clerical workers
·approved a contract iri May
at fleet dlscount1.
and the city is still
negotiating with unions
Call Coli. 304-273-9396
representing tbe police and
firefighters.
·1

Owner Operaton Needed

••

.-

II ROCP,;;LABTIC

c•MIJNT
____
_
____ _
----------··
----------------. ---·-,.-...-

•

,,,_,

-

-...

.: I
:I

-·- -· ~ ·-

~··

nmM

!§iii!

h#Jfpl

PLASnc

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ALUMINUM ROOFING

ROOf CEMENT

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roof,
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mobile homes. Ideo! for .... '"'
travel troilen "'-1001

SELF-SEALING

ASPHALT
SHINGLES
Neot, attroctive asphalt roofing shingles ·
with self·Seoling adhesive thot bonds the
overlapping shingles for wind ond stohT!·
tight 5nugness. Save during Oil' Summer
Solei
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HAIIDI-PATCH

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SALE
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147

ROll

1

8

MONDAY
Lucy
Thomas,
ac·
MEIGS COUNTY Churches
Marys. Pennington, Oscar
companied
by
her
daughter,
Dear Helen:
of Christ Men's Fellowship
'J..
J'
J . Pennington to Bernard R.
Nancy Amoonand daughters,
My htllband and I have a 2--year-&lt;&gt;ld son. We love hlm 7:30 p.m. Monday at Bradcan do. Crochet or knit a Pennington, Parcels, Orange.
Bernice Bede Osol who
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Is here from Florida,
tremendouslybutidoo'twantanotherchild! We can give little ford Church ol Christ."
Manning D. Webster, Mary
DEAR POLLY- I have a square that the foot wiU fit on
spent Sunday in Colwnbus
Mark 10 much more if he doesn't have brothers or sisters. And 'POTLUCK dinner for
with Mrs. Thomas' sister,
we'll all ha~e a better time.
·
members and families of the new white sweater that has =n
such
a
terrible
odor
but
I
hate
Amy Caldwell and her
But I feel so guilty. My In-laws think we should have Middleport Business and
squares. Crochet or sew the Lots, Pomeroy·,
lolRr&gt;nfl..r!lr.,m
to
throw
it
away.
l
have
washdaughter
and family, Mr. and
several. They aay Mark wUl be spoiled, lonesome, and won'! Profesaional Women's Club
granny square to the top cor·
Gilbert M. Zwilling to ,
l!IUlJUWl!.Jt.!JV
edit
and
used
fabric
softener
Mrs
.
John
Kimes.
.
have neal childhood memories. Hokwn! I had an older sister Monday 6:30p.m. on westside
ner; on bot~ sides, of the the Carroll W. Jolmson, Mildred
but
nothing
has
helped,
so
!
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ted
Miller
and younger brother. The only neat memories I can come up . roadside park on U.S. 33
Jul,- 11, 1i77
big diagonal one. Brmg the K. ·Johnson, Lots, Pomeroy.
with were when I play~ alone around th&amp; trees iJ1 the dirt of north of Pomeroy. AU are to hope someone can help with .side corners up and attach ' Nelle Ohlinger to Trustees Be palient this coming ye ar if and Mr . and Mrs. Bob
yOu·' rE!J involved in an enterp)'ise Schoonover aQd ·children, ·
our back yard. We kida shared nothing but ilislike for each bring oim table ser'vice, food suggestions.-BLANCHE.
them
to
the
remaining
·sides
of
First
.Baptist·
Church,
DEAR BLANCHE - You
th at gets off to a q uick start and Caledonia,
have spent
other though we're friends now.
·
and beverage. For additional
of the granny squares. If one Middleport, Ohio, Lots, promises a fast return. It may several days here with Mr.
1:ve also heard that many geniuses were only children. So information call Wanda Eblin · failed to say what yolir stops here they have a scuff Middleport.
develop more slowly than you and Mrs. William Miller and
sweater is made of: wool, cot·
why (wlth these good argwnents) do I feel inadequate? My in· ·992.-2272.
thought, bu t it will pan o ut.
or
the
second
granny
square
Delphin
Harry
Wehrung,
family.
taws have seven grandkida already. I'm not &lt;!epriving them. ' RACINE FFA officers ton or synthetic threads. I can he attached to the other dec. to Louis S. Wehrung,'
CANCER (June 21·July 22) A
have
never
been
able
to
get
a
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, .·
My huSband isn't ezactly mourning for another baby either. meeting, 8 p.m. Monday. On
friend you 've known only socially local, and their daughter,
sides o(,the side corners leav- Cert. for Trans.
real
solution
from
those
I
Am I pula? Or is it nori;Il8lto he happy will! one man, one Tuesday, regular scheduled
ing the two remaining sides
Russell Van Meter, Daisy may ap p r oach you w ith a
Mae Wiseman,
sweet little hoy and-- NO MORE
PTA meeting, 7:30p.m. at the have questioned about the unattached so that leaves a Van Meter to RusseU Van business proposition tod ay. It Wilda
odor in some synthetics. My
Harrisonville,
attended the
vocational agriculture room only suggestion would he to flap on top. Attach the third Meter, DaisyVanMeter,5A., may be good. buJ don't go Into It
wilhout
extensive
study.
To
find
at Lake
Rupe
Reunion
[)ear N.M.:
of Southern High School. All put the sweater in an air tight square to the two sides left at ' Lebanon.
out
more
of
wh
at
lies
ahead
for
Snowden near Albany on
One child is plenty -- if one is all you and your husband lndlviduals who are planning
the back of the sole and you
Dana H. Bailey, Lois G. you send for your copy ot Astra- Sunday.
want. Mark won't be" spoiled or lonelY if you raise him right - to participate in the county hox or drawer with a fe•: have a slipper.-RANDI.
Bailey to Steven A. Giglio, Graph Letter. Mall ·so ·cents for
pieces of charcoal or a lot of
Mr. and Mrs . Walter
and when you consider his total cost over the years may fair should attend.
DEAR POLLY - When Christine G. Giglio, 6Hl A., each and a long, self-addressed. Jordan and Josbua , ac·
crumpled newspaper. Do he
~sceed $100,000, tbe question rises: can you afford several? .
stam ped en\lelope to Astr o·
sure neither of these touch washing unbleached muslin Colwnbia.
11JESDAY
Gr~:~ph . P.O. Bo)( 489. Radio Ci ty companied by Mr. and Mrs.
Don't letln~aw hints get to you. They're Into the negative
~foreusingitforanyproject
Andy Doczi Jr., Charlene Station . N.Y. 10019. Be sure to Nonnan Shaner and Jody,
the
sweater.
It
could
he
lai&lt;!
CHESTER
COUNCii.
323,
"only child'' syndrome which probably originated back when
use a fabric softener in the ~i to Henry Cameron, specify your birth sign. ,
Athens
Rt. ,
recently
people had no close neighbors and needed numerous kids for Daughters of America, will between sheets of waxed rinse water .. This leaves the . Right of way, Rutland.
paper
or
tissue
paper
but
not
meet
alB
p.m.
Tuesday
at
the
LEO
(July
23-Aug.
22)
You're
an
Kings
Island
vacationed
at
. fann work. -- H.
muslin with a soft feel and it
Viola Rumfield, Mary impulse buyer today, and could near Cincinnati, went to the
wrapped
in
it.
If
any
of
the
haU.
There
will
he
a
silent
p .S.: We have four children, and loved every minute (weD,
wrinkles less when drying.- Buck, Bury! E. White, Evelyn experience some remorse soon Cincinnati ZOO and stopped
almost) of their time wlth us. But never let it be said I preach auction. Refreshments will readers have found a better DOROTHY.
White to Henry Cameron R· alter you pay for a purchase. by the Cincinnati College of
~~cure" I am sure they will
be served.
what I practlce. - H.
Don 't worr y. you'll enjoy it.
Polly
will
send
you
one
of
Way, Rutland.
share with us.-POLLY
FRIDAY
Mortuary Science to see
+++
her signed thank-you
Adrian A. Carson, Rose YIROO (Aug. 23·Sapt. 22) I' " OU improvements made there
DEAR
POLLY
A
little
MEIGS
County
Humane
Dear Helen :
·
newspaper coupon clippers if Ellen Carson to Henry have a seri ous matter to dis.... uss
I felt for the woman whose husband would allow no birth Society picnic, 6:30 p.m. Fri· baking soda added to the dish she uses your favorite Cameron, R·Way, Rutland. with a palloday, be imaginative. recently.
Mr. and · Mrs . Harold
Use ·terms that make your point
cootrol methods in hill house. But there's another way (outside day at the home of Ret. Major water makes dishwashing a
Pointer,
Peeve
o.r
Problem
\'
J
Harold
E.
Sauer,
Fay
Sauer
breeze.
Also
baking
soda
in
a
wilh
o
ut
endangering
P1e
Joyce
Miller
and
Miss
Marion
Gillogly,
VIcky and Bruce,
of sneaking The Pill).
friendship.
her
colwnn.
Wnte
POLLYS
to
Henry
Cameron,
Right
of
Snlall
amount
of
water
local,
and
his sister, Bernice
Crawford
at
Athena
Acres.
They should contact ''The Couple to Couple League," P. 0.
.
P
OINTERS
'II
care
of
this
way,
Rutland.
washes
dried
bugs
off
the
Pla!Uied
for
members
and
McKnight,
Colwnbus, have
LIBRA
(Sop!.
23·Dct.
23)
Using
Box 11084 Cincinnati, Ohio, 45211, which teaches natural
)lewspaper.
Clyde
0.
Harrison,
Nancy
of
the
car.-ELVIE.
your
logical
instincts
plus
intuifront
from
a vacation trlp
returned
guests.
Those
attending
to
family ph.nning vla the "symptl).!herma system:" This
tion , a c alcul~ted risk might 1be In into the western states wh~re
DEAR
POLLY
••
M.y
take
a
covered
dish,
dessert
S.
Harrison
to
Henry
method is based .on temperature taking, vaginal mucus
IN THE COURT
today to gain somet hing they viewed the sights of
Cameron, Meter Site Agree., order
OF COMMON PLEAS,
observation changes in the cervix and other forms of body or salad and their oWl) table Pointer is for ihe reader who
vou want .
'
' MEIGS COUNTY, OH IQ .
Glacier National Park in
Rutland.
·
awareness. 'When properly taught and used, NFP claims an service. Beverages and meat wanted to know what she ADA
YVONNE
TAC
K
ETT
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24·Nov.
221
could
do
with
billiard
balls.
Montana,
Yellowstone
· Henry Cameron. , Vlrol";"
to be furnished .
efficiency comparable to the pill and the IUD.
R uti and , Ohio
People are willing to help yo ~ atGlue
them
together
like
you
Camer~n
to
Joseph
A.
National Park, Jackson Hale
Plaintiff ,
We're using it, and feel safe in more ways than one. tain goals you seek todar .
No . 15,844 · Gormley, Eric 0 .' Johnson,
would
set
them
up,
triangle
Cody Museum in
provided you approach them '" and
JULIE
- vs and all if you like, and hang FRED
Right of ways, Rutland.
a friendly and forthright manner . Wyoming, Roosevelt
TACKETT
them on the wall as a great c -o Anna Welch
Roberta Parker, Sidney. SAGITTARIUS [Nov. 23·Dec • National Park, North Dakota
Dear Helen:
A thought for. tbe day: decoration for a game room. Middleport , Ohio,
John
Parker to Martha Mays, 21) In competitive situalions to- and Mt. Rushmore, South
Defendant.
I'm one of the 43,000,000 adult single (including divorced or Novelist WUliam Thackeray
They
could
also
be
glued
to
by
Notice
day you make out better with ad- Dakota, as well as many
2.096
acres, Colwnbia ..
widowed) people in the U.s. and I want to stay that way! Since said, "Women like not only to
Publica1ion
bases
to
make
paper
weights
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Zelda vanced methods. Conventionali- interesting places visited
you mentioned in your column that a good way for hopeful conquer,
To Fred Tackett , whose
but
to be for pool fans. My nieces used
last known address was c -o
M. Hobstetter, Fred W. Crow, ty w!ll lessen the measure of your
women to meet unmarried q~en was at the .park o~ w~kends (!(Rlquered.''
to set up plastic milk bottles · Anna Welch , M i ddleport. Jr., Eleanor K: Crow to Jerry success .
(where they congregate to commune wtth thetr ktda), I
you are hereby not ified
and play duck pins w...u!l
· them. · Ohio.
R. Van lnwagen, Linda M. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·J•"· 11)
that you have been na~ed
naven't had a peaceful Sunday! These dames actually "si.c"
If friends' conver~ation is bright
Defendant
in
a
legal
act1on
I save an~~:of yam
. Van lnwagen, 1.075 acres, 8nd
their offspring on my child, so the parents will meet.
breezy today , fOII6w suit 1 l.f
entitled
Ada
YVonne
Ta
ckett.
1n 1951, Joseplj "Jersey that are over siX mches long, Plaintiff, vs .' Fred Tac:k.e tt, Chester.
Shame on you, Helen! ~ VlcroR WHO MAY BE
you're with those of a serious
Joe" Walcott woo tbe world tie them together and roll into Defendant . This act,on has
Monty R. Proffitt, Vickl.·K. bent. act accordingly.
VANQUlSHED
assigned case NQ . 15,844
heavyweight bo'xing · a ball. Such .balls have come been
Proffitt
to Robert Durst, AQUARiUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) A
and iS pending in the Cour~ of
in very handy for making Common F'lea .s of Me1gs MaXine Durst, 1.522 acres, quick
championship
by
knocking
decision called for today il
Dear Vic:
'
· ·
County , PQmeroy ,. OhH&gt; ,
you expect to get a bargain or
Lebanon.
Sorry, !ella, but we wome.n m~l stick_together : I'm duly· out Ezzard Olarles In the ponchos, scarves, slippers, 45769 .
.
pot holders and for tieing
seventh round.
John Floyd Thomas, Mabel make a profit. Hesitation will CQSt
The ob·tect of the complamt
bound to share a good suggestion With my sisters. --H.
boxes. The multi-colors make Is for" divorc,e care , custody , I. Thomas to Danny B. you the item or the ret~rn .
For 21 years I have fined
and control of the minor
the articles go with children
hearing
aids
always
PISCES
(Fob.
20·Morch
20)
Howard,
Eva
S.
Howard,
45
of the part ies , and
everything. They can also be' other relief.
•
acres, 137.50 acres, 17.50 Your mate may have some very combining quality product
You are required to answer
good suggestions today. His or
and professional service
used to teach the little Qnes
acres, Scipio.
the compla int within 28 days
her way may be a bit more difhow to knit or crochet and after the last pub li cation of
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee fiCult , but the results will be with rusonable cost. While
we will continue to serve
with no worry about wasted this notice. which w ill be to Ted Richard Trotter, much better.
published on.ce each week .for
those who c.innot come to
yam.
Brenda K. Trotter, 1.069 ARIES [March 21-Aprll 11) In· our office we will now
siJC. successive weeks . The
I have a great way to make last publication will be made acres, SUtton.
reward those who can 'by
noVate if necessary and use
on Aug . 22, 1917 , and the 28
slippers that even children days
John T. Wolfe, Exec., progressive methods today. By fixing the price at $275.00
for answer will com mence on t·hat date .
Creed Janes, dec. to Peter all means, however . prot~cl for the best known
111 case of your failure to
made and individual tined
Elicker, Doris Elicker, Satish yourself . Don't go too far out.
or otherwi$e respond
n;ovement' is running out of answer
hearing
aids.
Prior
as
reQuired
by
'
~he
.Ohlo_Rules
C.
Manaktala,
Mira
TAURUS
(April
20·May
20)
without dark glasses.
ads that add up to putdown
By Patricia McCormack
steam?
medical
and
audiological
of Civil Procedure , d1Vorce
Take
tinie
today
to
stop
and
chat
Manaktala, 100 acres, L11t
Uolted Prell Iotematiooal
" ... and, gee whiz/' I said for a woman.
Ms. Carbine and · Ms . will be granted .
examination encouraged .
with someone you may only have
169, Lebanon. ·
.It took five years but I to the next person I met on
MS. also ran stories for
If you have a question or
a
nodding
acquaintance
with,
Steinem rejected any notion Dated : Ma~ 24, 1977
Kathleen 0. Cecil to Ber· You could find the basis for a wish an appointment call
finally learned Gloria the birthday ship, ''Gloria children!
of
falling
strength
in
tbe
nard V. Fultz, Lot·, Mid· solid friendship.
Stelnem's secret for sta)'ing Steinem has brown eyes.
Most everyone in the
Larry Spencer
me at 592-6238.
movement.
Clerk of Courts
Steinem stopped wearing ·magazine world predicted women's
dleport
.
thin.
GEMINI (Mer 21.June 20) Early
Meigs County
"But we are confronting
Bernard V. Fultz, Betty J . ·today you'll view things the
The ferlllnlst leader and the dark glasses after her that MS. would not make it. grim realities," Steinem
Common Pleas Court
'300.00
Fultz to Kathleen 0. Cecil, youngsters do objectively . Later ,
"! give MS. magazine five said. "The biggest one is that
president of MS. Magazine famous ones broke.
less ~5.00
"I sat on them or some- months," Harry Reasoner no gain can be taken for (7) 18, 25 (8) 1. 8, IS, 22 , 6tc Homer E. Cecil, Lot, Mid· you could react with conhailed It down to four warda
siderably
less
tolerance.
dleport.
told his television viewers
when I asked her how she thing," she said.
Cash-Discount
·
Jimmie Dean Allman,
, · C«itinued thin through all the
steinem was not the only when he saw the preview granted.
.
\
"To secure gains takes onUnda Lou Allman to Nathan Leona M. Hubbard, Lot L,
·. thick of the women's move- celebrity on the ship. Her co· Issue In 1971.
.
going efforts and energy and
Lynn Brady, Mary Marte Quillen's Add., Syracuse.
host
Patricia
Carbine;
MS.
Biit
the
magazine
caught
, ment.
. of
Carpenter
that is no less of a commit· : Bi!tty Friedan, itlOther
Braoy, 1.003 acres, Collliilbia. · Farmers Home Adm. to
vic~ president and a on. Even Harry Reasoner ment.
: women's liberation, loses her maverick In the magazine wislu!d MS. magazine happy
Cliarles W. Hayes, Dollie Marcelene Betty Wilson,
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Smith,
''! am an optimist. One way
walstline,'then fights to get it world, was there greeting birthday the. other day, to measure tbe importance of Johnstown, Ohio, visited their Hayes to Oris A. Hubbard. Esther F. Fowler (Life
Estate), Lot, Middleport.
back Then loses and fights other important persons.
"happy" to be' proven Wf011g. a movement is to look at the aunts and uncles, Mr. and
Edward Earl Hossler,
Carolyn Reed, head of the
The preview issue was resistance. That is a way of Mrs·. Reed J elfers, Mr. and
sam~ more. Bella Almig's
PUB.LIC NOTICE
Debra Elaine Hossler to
weight also goes up and Household. Technicians (a supposed to last two mmths ratifying the depth an&lt;! Mrs. WUliam Cheadle and TO Opal Richards
known address
Richard E. Weaver, Mary M.
union movement for people on the newstand. It sold out in seriousness and extent of a Mrs. Metta Fisher, all local. NoYou
down.
.
are hereby notified .
Weaver, 1.1 acre, Rutland.
Karen De Crow, immediate who make their living eight days.
that
you
have
been
named
' movement.' ·
Defendant in a legal action
Mary A. Wolfe to Clell B.
In the beginning, MS.
past president of the National cleaning other people's
"Initially we were not
entltl~d Leroy
Richards ,
Wood,
Dora B. Wood, Lot,
· Organization for Women,- houses) was there. So were operated out of two rooms ~ taken seriously. We were met
Plaint i ff ,
- vs opal
Richards,
Detendant
;·
that
Syracuse.
Mary
Ann
Krupsak, one on one floor, one on the with ridicule, a fad,
seeme naturally pudgy.
cause has been assigned
-- The Ayn Rand Free this
Kate Millett, feminist lieutenant governqr of New . floor above. The two were · trivialized, made · fun of case No. 16,443, and is pend double tlreat - sculptor and York·· Bella Abzug, the connected by a· metal spiral treated as the original hula Enterprise Award goes to ... lno in the Common Pleas
court of Meigs County, Ohio,
Phyllls Schlafiy, who, in 1977, Pomeroy,
• writer - has settled into the form~r congresswoman staircase in the office
Ohio , A5769 . The
hoap.
the obiectolthis Complaint is for
· roundness of m\ddle age. She running for niayor of New building.
;,The extent to which we supported
"THAi MODf.L. n\'ERE GETS
division of property
YorkCity.
.
Cardboard
boxes now are taken seriously decriminalization of baby· di\'Orte,
seems comfQfleble there.
and other· proper relief .
.Lf5 f'i\IL.ES PE'R c;A\.LON. ••
And Kate Millett, president overOowed with manuscripts reflects the movements selling. "What's so wrong
Only Gloria Steinem rivals
You are required to answer
within
twenty
-eight
d8!YS
about
that,"
she
asked
on
her
of
National
Organization
for
from
women
who
felt
Jackie Onassi&amp; in the
importance, Its &lt;!epth and its
lhe last publication of
nationwide CBS radio after
"forever thin" department. Women; Ellie Smeal from compelled to ..pte tbe stories irreversibility,"
thiS notice, once each week
column.
tor six successive weeks . The
I saw Steinem on a ship full Pittsburgh, Lucinda Franks, of tbeir lives, their pains,
"There is no turning back."
~"A hand-painted plastic last publication w111 be on
the Pulitzer prlze-wlnnlng their hopes and dreams.
of feminiats the other night MS. acc(Dlplishmenls in· statuette of Justice Burger Aug _. 22, 1977 and the twenty MS. Magazjne now has a
cruising t~e New York journalist and dozens of
eight days will commence on
·
goes tq . . . The Alabama. that date .
full floor in that buildingb' In elude:
.Harbor in celelration of MS. others.
A Celebration of Women
In case of your failure to
Ms. Stelnem, Phi Bela New York City. Ms. Car me Composers concert, Supreme Court for ruling that answer. or
Magazine's fiflh birthday.
olherwise
Kappa
graduate of Smi~ has a corner office. It still cooducted by the renowned a woman may not sell 11er respond, as required by the
We were circling Ms.
Rules
of
Civll
Uberty- as the folks at MS. College and Toledo, Ohio s overOows with manuscripts. Sarah Caldwell at her debut own property without her Ohio
Procedure, judgment by
consent."
default w i tt be rendered
Magazine call the Statue of gift to the women's But there are books in neat with
the · New York husband's
against you for the relief
-The
prize
for the "Other demanded
· · Uberty - when I asked movement talked about the cases and her baseball glove Philharmonic Orchestra; a
in this claim.
: Steinem how she kept herself status of the. women's is displayed prominently board game called Herstory People's Revolutions" goes to
lARRY E . SPENCER,
movement, a few days later instead of being kept in a desk and soon to come, a national the new leaders of the
forever thin.
•
Clerk of courts
People's Republic of China
drawer.
"Gorge and then starve," in her magazine' offices.
Meigs County
radio show called "MS. On
Common Pleas court
who accused Mao Tse.tung's
She was joined by Ms.
MS. Magazine's staff is in a The Air."
she saki.
Carbine, fonner- inanaging. sometimes league. tha.Lpig.~
Four little warda.
MS. Foundation was set up widow of ••nagging l!im to (7) 18. 25 (8! 1. 8. 1·5, 22, ~l c
editor
of
Look
magazine
and
one
magazine
.staff
against
,.
Years ago, when Ms.
to support women's projects, death!"
another,
• Steinem was wearing former editor of McCall's.
produced will! Marlo Th~as
Ms. Carbine wears a · "We played · 'Psychology a collection of stories, poems
~ · sldntlght,denims, turtlenecks
" and avlallir.type 81111B'-1 • cmtinuous smile. She fixes Today' the last time around," and songs called "Fr!!e to Be.
~ Joolr..elllw popped . out of vlsltorawlthhappyblueeyes. Ms. Carbine said. She,holds
You and Me."
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
every feminlll audience and She delights ln having down first base...
First a long.p,laying record,
DR. A. J . STAEHLI
OR. G. J. STOMBAUGH
proved
all
the
experts
wrong
"How
do
we
look
now?"
she
; demmstralioo.
"Free to Be. . . " became a
OR. C W BE"-L
'
y~ li!!We&lt;merl to the from the start in the MS. asked, remembering the way bestselling book, an Emmy
movement worked at looking venture. But her real delight I had to be let Into her office Award-winning television
One or two day full denture
• like Steinem. It was easy to 1s 1n knowing that she has . practlcally with a !lhoehorn special an educational film
service, partial dentures, ·
the first time - during the and mo:rt recently·, a leamin~
' keep the hair long, tbe way been helping women.
Most magazines, for vulmne one days.
SteJnem doee. It. was easy to
relines, repairs
mo&lt;!ule
designed
for
'example,
operate
In
the
red
"Arrived,"
1
said
.
classroom uee.
~ It ... bard to ltay (don't malle lillY money) for
But to Ms. Carbine and Ms.
The anniversat}&gt; issue of
neither
MS. MS. Magazine features "The
Stelnem
one the flnt th!'ee years. MS. Steinem
FOR PRICES CALLI
n.
magazine hal been In the Magazine nor the women's MS. Flrllt Annual Awards For
BOX SPRINGS &amp;QUILTED MATTRESS
OHIO TO.LL FREE "
U"
puty on the sblp black (llllklng money) from movement has arrived Yet. Surreaism In Every&lt;!ay
MS. Magazine looks to
drc1JnC MI. UbertY IIIIIIIY the lint )'11111' on. And It has
Ufe."
limes aa.o featured Ms. doubled llllnltlal clrculatlm. continued growth. And the
FOR ONLY
Some of the winners:
_ "The Even When
•• lteloem,ooeoftbe OO.•ns, Advertlslnll revenues women's movement?
' without .... 111ft ....... CIUil* uplld.
With ._., on the abort!':; They're Down They're Up
1be
DMIIMJne
aiiO
baa
rlghiB
front and the Equ
ltyle !!piCI. •
Award goes to . . The
RIVIERE ."""'""'
efltlblllhed
•
lllllque
Image.
Rights
Amendment In Coounlltee to Reelect the
Sba bid 111 c~
!M9 E. Livingston Ave., Columbus
tbe women's Presldent.Afle.-Watergate ..
- . 1D .U lbe , _ . of It accepts no uzlst trouble,
Weekdays 8:30 A.M. to 6:30 P.M.
Middleport, Ohio
advdalnl.
.
mqvement doean't ·~~.~ . . this Committee still has $1.3
106 N. 2nd Ave.
No IU llltllln adll. No good to veteran feuw .... s. million left over.'~.
:.
tJjla was the
had Stelnem "Daddy's utt1e Girl" adl. No Does lt mean d!e women's
"

Odors .from s1m.thetic 11am

ASTRO•GRAPH

e
0b

..-...• staying_thin by Steinem
"'
'

II

spen

-- Secrets revealed for
~

Royals improve record
Gaul each had one single.
Loser Guy Schuler and
reliever Danny Edwards
combined to strike out two
and walk one. Rick
Williamson led the hitting
with a triple and single while
Craig Nicinsky had two
singles. Getting one single
each were Matt Weaver, Paul
Michaels and Schuler.
R
.
003 000 lh'l 7
214 110 x- 9 11
E·

By Helen Bottel

Carpenter Personals ·
Meigs
M
d Mrs Thomas iiOUih , especially enjoying
r .l Aanda
t'
kend Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Casse •
•
wee
M nd Mrs Reed Jeffers
with her parents, Mr. wer!· ~ Some~set and New
POLLY'S POINTERS Property )lere
and Mrs. Cla.y Jordan.
ls Lexington where they called
Mr. and Mrs. Denn 'at the homes or relatives
Polly Cramer
.
M Julia
Facemeyer and children In 1 din
. k'
tlon ·mUle
c u g a n1ece,
r .
Transfers spent
a wee svaca
Gorby Allen, New Lexington.
'::..0:: ~,!na~~a::O~ ~:~~~Ja"ry~~~!~k!:

.....•..

1n Pony League .action last
week the visiting Pomeroy
· Royals bettered their .record
to 8-3 by dumping the host
Pomeroy A's 22·1 on a two·
hitter by David Kennedy.
Kennedy also led the hitting
with three singles while Steve
Ohlinger had two doubles and
a single.
Chris Taylor had a triple
and single, and Tom Owens
· had a double and single. Cliff
Kennedy had a double, and
Ron Collums and Chris
Woods had two singles each.
Getting a single each were
Ricky Smith and Brian King.
For the losers, Chris Allen,
Rick Allen and Har,
vey Whitlatch combined
to fan six and walk
ten . The only lilts were
singles by Rick Allen and Ray
Stewart .
1090 012-22 17
R
001 00- 1 2
A

Bean dinner volunteers
assigned various duties
The Rio Grande Bean
Dlrtner,
scheduled for
Saturday, August ,18 at the
Bob Evans Shelter House
- area;11alnl fJne·program and
plenty of good food in store
for everyone Interested in
this traditional patriotic
event tha~ began in 1870.
This aU-community effort,
coordinated by th• Rio
Grande
Memorial
Association, asks aq people of
Ill• area to assist in · some
Upec1 of the daY's activity.
Volunteer leaders wUl meet
next TUeaday, July 19, at
Lyne Center at 7:30p.m. for a
l!l"U81'f:lll report and begin the
i'lnal canvass filr helpers.
, : Volunteers· tiave already
bHn lloign&lt;ed to lead In these
area: Traffic alii! parting
,control, Bob Sbaw, Ray
Roberti and Jbn Oliver;
ticketa, pi ,ijp am dla&amp;rtbutlon,
' Don Call, Cl1de Evans;
preparltlon of beanl lllld
· onloaa, Audre1 Wletllne,
. ' Irwe ar-, DlaDe lAitb
and members of tile Women

Durst; third row, Larry Bunce, coach. Absent were Steve
Crow, Darin Wolfe, Njck Bush and Teresa Burnside, team
members and Harold Stewart, assistant coach.

Minn
400 102 101- 9 1 1 1
Oaklnd
100 210 1oo- s 1 3 .
Schueler. Zahn ( .5), T. John'-"
sen (1) and Wynegar; Coleman,
Bair (1) , Lacey (6) , Giusti (7)
and Newman . W-Zahn (9-7l. L
- Coleman , 1-1. HR- Minnesota ,
HISle (21) .

San Fm
000 020 OSJ- 10 15 2 N.Y .
00011011Q-A AO
Atlanta
320 000 321 - 11 13 1 Kan City
020 204 OOx- 9 7 4
Barr, Williams U), Heaverlo
Clay, Tidrow (4) and Healy ;
(61 , curtis 181. Moffitt (8l. Hassler , Littell (7), Mingori (8)
McGlothen (9) ' and Alexander ; and Porter . W- Hassler, 6-2. L
Capra, Camp {6), Campbell (8) , - Clay , 0-3. HRs-New York,
Hargan (8), Leon (9) and Jackson 061 ; Kansas City,
Pocoroba. W- Leon, _. .J. LPorter (9~ .
McGiothen, 2-7. HRs-Atlanta,
Burroughs (22) , Montanez (13) . Bolt
000 000 002- 2 5 o
San Francisco, Thomasson (12) , Mllw .
100 000 01x- 3 12 0
McCo\'ey {l4L
0 . Martinez , T. Martinez U)
and Skaggs, Criscione ( 8 );
St.L
uo 000 002- 7 12 1 Haas, McClure (9), Castro (9)
Mntrol
010 200 005- 8 12 0 and Haney. W-Haas, 6-6. LRasmussen. Eastwick (9 }, 0 . Maartinez, 8-6 .
Carroll (9) and Rader ; Tw(tch elt. Stanhouse (2), Alca·fa 13), Seattle
102 021 ()20-- a 14 3
Kerrigan (5}, McEnaney (8), Calif
010 300 JOQ- 1 13 1
Atkinson [8) and Carter . WWheelock, Abbott (.5 ) , Romo
Atkinson, 6-2. L- Eastwick, A'-6 . (7) , Kek ich (7) and · CO)I { ·
HR-Montreai , Cromartie (2) .
Hartzell. Miller lSI, LaRoche
(7)
and Etchebarre-n . W L.A.
010 030 ooo- A 11 1 Kekl ch, 5-l. L-LaRoche, 6-3.
San Dgo
020 000 OlD- 3 12 1 HRs- Seattle, Stein (10 ), Collins
RG~U , Hooton (6) and Yeager ;
13) .
• Shirley, Sawyer (S) , Spillner
(6), Griffin (8) and Tenace . W Cleve
110 000 004- 6 10 t
- Rau , 11 -1. L- Shirtey, 6-11 . Texas
010 000 ooo-- 1 5o
HRs-Los Angeles, Baker {19 ),
Garland And Kendall ; Ellis .
Cey C18L San Diego, Tenace Devine (9) , Briles (9 ) and
(10) .
Sundberg . W- Garland, 7 -9 . L EI1is.
5-9.
American League
(1st game&gt;
Det
- 000 001 I DO- 2 5 ,2
Tronto ,
oo1 101 oo• ~ 3 10 1

SUTTON, Mw. (UPI) Ray Floyd endured a double
bogey on the 17th hole in a
patented late charge by Jack
Nicklaus Sunday to grab a
one stroke victory in the
$250,000 Pieasant Valley
·
Classic.
Tile $so,ooo first prize
pushed Floyd's career .earnings over the $1 million
• mark, mak.lng him the 15th
man to reach the milestone.
Floyd, who broke the
tournament record by four
strokes with a 13-under11"r
271, strolled to the 17th tee
With a five stroke lead over
Nicklau~. But the 1976
Masters champion hit his
drive into the woods along the
right side of the fairway while
Nicklaus was holing a birdie
putt on the 17th green.
The match tightened up

....

.. il

US • • •

Social
Calendar

11 0"" Ollld Enouglt Today?

CRIME ''OSSES

Arroyo and May ; JeHerson
•nd Wh itt . W- Jefferson, 6-9. L
- Arroyc, 5-9.
HR- Oelroit ,
Rodriguez {o4 l.

Floyd hangs on

~

best policy • • •
fOR aJRBING

Minn
000 031 ooo----: .(II 0
(7). Tekulve (7}, Jones (7) and Oaklnd
000 000 01o- 1 6 0
Ott ; Koosman, Lockwood (8)
· Thormodsgard and Wynegar ;
and Grote. W-Koosman. 7-10. Langford, Lacey (5), Torrealba
L- Fonter, 2-'3. HRs- Pit ts. ·( 7) and Sanguillen , Newman
,burgh, Ha trslon ( 2) . New York , (7). W- Thermodsgard, 7-6 . LHenderson {5) .
Langford, 7-9.

For$ter , Gossage (7 1, Jac:kson

~

The Corporation for Health rip~:::;.._:~·
Education in Appalachia
18!JU1GUII IS
Ohio Is sponsoring a twtHiay
patient education conference
for
health care ad·
minlstrators, inservice
educators and nursing personnel at Morton HaU, Ohio
University, Athens. Guest
I.J
speaker is' Elizabeth Lee, You can help cut down on
R.N., MS, staff special for crime losses ... losses that
health education, American i!Tr&amp;ctty a fled . you,
Hospital Associati~n . whcfher they happen to you
.or not .
ChlcQgo.
This workshop will focus oil
the crime of arson.
• building the organizational ' Take
You ' re
paying
on
skills needed to plan, lm· IncreaSingly heavy subsidy
plement and evaluate a tor deliberately set fires
hospital or clinic patient through your Insurance
education program. For premium$.
more information about the Insurance cos1s are
conference, please contact adversely allected by
Barbara Roselyn at (614) 439- burglaries, robberies and
6641 or (614) 4J9.4Mll.
car theffs .. . plus lhe
countless CB radios and
bicycles that turn up

llesuJis,lbne scores
Major League R•sulfS ·
By Un"ited Prtn International
Niitionill League
Clst game )
Pltsbgh
002 100 ooo-- 3 5 1
N.Y.
OOOOOOOlQ-1 6 1
Candel ar ia , Tekutve (6), Gos.
sage ( 8 ) and Dyer ; Matlac k,
TOdd {1), Siebert 181 and

5-The Daily Sentinel. Mkldleport.Pameroy, 0 ., Mmday, July 11, 1m

(CASII &amp; CAllY)

I" 1IG' WHII'E

•••••• ,....
.............
5UYTII

..... . . . .. .... fll- tiGM.

'

2"' I r I 10' wttn't

=
-·

AUIIIIIAIM
DOWGOUT

:~"':".:t:-:
SALE PIIICI

Pomeroy Cement
Block Co.
The DeJMrfment Store.
'
of Buildiltg Sinee 1915

... ENTU

..

............,.
-am-

•,= . ··-·

8-0 282 .6411

Bemco Mattress.Sale

$11995 sn
INGELS FURNITURE

�~

• • - - - . . - · - · - - · • - · - · · - - • a.

~--~~,..,~,

A"-f ..... .

THE SEW N' SEW Outlet Store
located in the former Post Of.
fie• building in RociM hot.
pQ,Iyetter double knits, Sl.95
and S2 .98 'jord. These fobrics
ore high quality millends,
regvlor prked from S4 Ia S6 per
yard . Open Mo~y thru Satur·
day. 9 till .... Owned and
operated by O.nise Snodgrass ._

us

......

ln memory, Card CJI'fiwnU and
ClbtU&amp;.Jry : I L-enliJ per wurd. 13.00

r-----:-------.,
utsr.ucnoN

· omm...,_,.,,.,..vwt.__..

,..-. Mil....,. - . . . - - , . -1
....,

$18 300 ·

POinenJ P.tiy

Mobile H4;11ne Sollle!l and Yli.r(halt'$
Mrt acceplt"&lt;1 uiily wtl~ t:a~ Wlllt

order. 2S l'ft\l d101.rge fur adl:i elm'·
ing 8uK. Nwnber In Care of The Scil:-

Shop

tin~l.

Tlw Publblher rer;erve~:~~ 11~ rit:hl
~ ~ ur rejed any ~:~~lis deemef,L,ol; .
Jt!l..'llm8l. The Publisht•r w1ll not be
~!Sible for lll(lre than one ml'Vrrec.:t inserdotl.

Cl.o sed For Vacation

JULY 17th

PhoneW2-2156

RE-OPEN

NOTICE

JULY 31st

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

Gi\IE -A -WAY RED plums. Phone

99'2·2021.
FREE SCRAP Metol for cleaning up
around. • Body shop. Phone

949·2789.

•M1.1nclay
Noon ooSa~~W.:y

.._•

EXCAVATING, BACKHOE, do%er,
trencher, Low Boy , dump truck
trucks . septic systems. Bill
Pullins, phone 992·2,.78 day or
night . .

thed.ay Uefufe publication
SUJtthly

4P.M.
Friday aflenn.Mlll
ORDINANCE 48~
BE IT ORDAINED by the
Councfl of the Village of
Pomeroy,
all
members .
thereto concUrring :
Sec . 1. That the office of the
VIllage Treasurer of the
Village of Pomeroy and the
Office of the Village Cl erk of
the VIWage of Pomeroy s~all
be combined into one office to
be known as . the ClerK Treasurer .
Sec. 2. Tf\at the salary of
the Clerk -Treasurer shal be
$3 ,600.00 per year , ancl in
addition thereto the Clerk Treasurer shall be entitled to
all other benefits provided
any other employees of the ·
village of Pomeroy under its
Insurance programs . ·
Sec. 3. That a copy of this
Ordinance shall immediately
be certified to the Board of
EleCtions of Meigs County ,
Ohio, notifying ~aid Board of
the said combination of said
Offices to be known as the
Clerk -Treasurer .
Sec . 4. That the Clerk ·
Treasurer shall be elected tor
a term of four years com mencing .January 1st. 1980.
. Sec . 5. That the said Board
of Elections is hereby notified
that the ' office of. Clerk Treasurer shall be placed on
the ballot for the primary
election in 1979 as provided
by law .
Sec. 6. That ·the Clerk.·
Treasurer shall perform the
duties pr~vailed by law for
the Clerk of the Village of
Pomeroy and the Treasurer
of the Village of Pomeroy . All
laws pertaining to the Clerk
and to the Treasurer shall be
construed to apply to the
Clerk -Treasurer. ~Sec . 7. That this Ol'diliance
is hereby declared to be an
emergency
ordinance
neCessary for the immediate
preser11ation of the public
safety In said vi llage of
Pomeroy and shall go into
immediate effect .

IL 18, 2tc

bROOM &amp; BATH Trailer for sale.
Phone2,.7-2252 .

Rig." We ere • Privote Training
School ood if voo meet our
qualificoliona, wilt be trail&gt;ed by Prof f anal lnstf].lC-

tofs on moderTt · ~ipment.

Train on a Part Tme basis ISat.
&amp; Sun .I .,d ~ \'OUf jab, a&lt;
mend our 3 WW FuH Time
Resident Training.

r .......,,rll...
PARkERSBURG ·
422-4

•·- r~- r,..,.

EARN MONEY fer your Christmas
enjoyment .
Oomonstrote
guaranteed toys and gihs for
Friendly Home Parties. no collecting or delivering . Coli
9.t9-2B03 or 992· 2703. Also,
booking porties .

(ll )

I, 8, 15, 5tc

·~ iiiiiiiiii

YARD SALE. ues . &amp; Wed . at
692 Plum 51. , Middleporr.
We have lots of clothing,
good jeans. rugs , curtains ,
dishes, lawn mowers .

•MAE's MR. AMERil:A
SANTA MONICA, Calif.
· (UPI) - SUltry 83-year.&lt;Jld
Mile West once again thrilled
the big bo)'ll when she walked
mlltaleto crown the new Mr.
., America, probalim officer
Dllvid Joo1111, 31, ot Los

Angeles.
"'11111 guy baa got it all,"
Mill Welt CGOed about Ule
fta ... Mr. CallfCI'IIIa, whole
.' IJ)IIICidar figure , . . dad
· ' only In a

t.thlng ault.

'

skimpy nylon

Instructor Needed
At

New
Hallen
Swimming Pool

and used merchondiS;a ,
River Auction In Meigs
409 Pearl St., Middleport ,
Phone {30•) 773·5... 71 .

s6oo.

50 LB . BAG Num . 2 potatoes, .---::f:-:O=R;..:.,S,...A"'""L""E,....:....,
$3.00
b . Delbert lawson or , New Co -Op Willer SOf ·
De 1 ert Potta r~an , Great
fenert , mQdel VC-SVI • .
~d.Ohi?. - - - - - - OnlyU79.9S
HALF·RUNNER BEANS , $4 .00
bushel . Bring conloinars , pick
your ~wn . Delbert Lowion ,
PortlonCI, OHio . Pri~• Forrn ,
Stop ot Charles Harris Produce
for information.
BEANS, 11t RUNNERs and bunch
beans. Phone 843 -235J,.:.·_ _
MEXICAN POTTERY and figurines.
_ 493 Bro~way St ., Middleport .
base, 3 months old , used very
little for more information , call

. 949·2202. 5100.
1973 HONDA 70 Molorcvclft . e~t·
cellent condition . New engine
and ligt1ting. Coll742-'1804 after
12 noon.

MEN's FACTORY Damaged boots ,

$1.1).4 per mont . Phone992-77'11.
Equal housing opporlunity,
TRAILER SPACE fof' rent. 5 miles
from Pomeroy and Middleport.
Phone 99'1-5858.

TWO DOGS LOST on Rt. 3J near
Darwin , One Germon Shortkoir
Pointer, block ond white
speckled. other Other port
Shepherd. Both wearing flea
collars .
REWARD. Phene

2 BEDROOM TRAILER, Adults on992-5848.
. ly . Phone9Cn-3324 .
·
.
· LOST - LARGE Grey cat on County
BUSINESS BUILDING in New
Road 25 near Chester. Answers
Hoven , W.Va., '10 x 45 main
to the (K)me of Egypt or
business l::orner. Phone (614 )
SITIO~ey. Cai19B5-3875.

742 ·2255 .
5 RINGS MISSING from residens;e ,
TUPPERS PLAINS, OH Ne,... 2
one pearl Otld 4 opals. Anyone
bedroom , ftJrnished 'or unfurnished apartment , $170 un · ·
fur ., $190 fur . plus electric, flO

pels. Phone(614) 667·3349.

6 RMS . BATH , Basement, one
ckild accep ted , no pets or
drums . Deposit. Also. furnished opt. 3 rooms . bath, 1 or 2
adults , no pets. Deposit. John
Sheets J 'It mile soulh Middleport, Rt . 7.

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Notice Is hereby given that
sealed proposals shall be
received at the office of tl\e
Board of Meigs county
Commissioners at the Court house in Pomeroy , Ohio, until
4 oo p M
A
2 1977 lth
:
· · on ug . •
w
bids to be opened at 7:00 on
• that date , for the following
descr ibed County work :
Furnish all materials ,
labor ,
and
appliances

CASH paid f~r oil makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone oreo code 614-423-9531 .

i-----------.
CB .SPECIAL
ROBYN WV-23

'

CB Mobile Transceiver
complete with weather
proof PA speaker , 2 way
base loaded CB antenna,
tor roof top or I run k 'lnount .
Power cord, coax , antenna
cable and all hardware
included .

Mary Hobstetter ,
Clerk
(7) 18, 25, 2tc
t

m .s. .

Pomeroy Landmn

~·~~ack w. Carstv. Mg~

~

Phone992 -2111

. ._

--

·-- --

- - - ... -·-

Co11'1'12·2428.

one screened in , goroge and
carport. Walk ing distance to
'Elementary School O'ld town.
Forced oir furnoce . Located of
304 Wetzgoll St. , Pomeroy. call
offer 5, 99'2
~·34
::88~·----·

TEAFORD[B·
REALTOR

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
NEW LISTING - S room
frame house with · block
garage a'i1d level lot.
house

and

IIIII I IIIIIIDIIS
~.

,

iltoDil )UMmit
Rl. 1

MlddUiport, 0
992-5724
plele
Sales
and
I ' Sen•ico ond Supplits.

3 acres
and

2

In the

gas, city water, good shape
near sto.-es .

INCOME- 4 room house ,
bath, gas turn. , city water ,
2 car block garage and
trailer scace .

bed . Cal l 992·7 494 .

r

COAL NUMBER 6. STOKER OR
· LUMP DELIVERED. Call (614)

LISTING

3

bedrooms, bath , natural
gas F . A. furnace, wrap

around porch, basemen!,
garage and Jt. acre.
SlO,OOO.OO - 4 room frame
house, bath, natural gas,
city wat~r and ext~a lot.

BIG

HOUSE

Big

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration
300 Main St.
Pomeray, Ohio

REV!lRT TO
YOUR. OLD
STATUS JIJST
'CAUS! DAD!lY'S
I!&gt;ACK!

. 10:€»-PIIo1 "Husbands

shop.
QUICK

city

Young's
Route ~·

"The Originators
Imitators~~

2-23-1 rna.

·FRONT END
ALIGNMENT

Continuous

one

REASONABlE

RATfS

DAVID BRICKLES
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

piece

guttors. We hang It, or do it
yourself. $peclal prlcts to
·builders.
Phone 949.-28.14
9 a.m. to 5 p'.m.

RACINE CARPET
SHOP
"T16· 1 mo. ,

R..,te2
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769
Kitchen Cabinets · Roofing
Patios
Cortcre!e
Sidewalks
New
Cons!ruc!lon
&amp;
Remodeling.
Ph. 992-7119 or 696-1055
Estimates applied to ti&gt;li.
6-27-1 mo. pd.

HOMESITES for sola , 1 ocre ond STARCRAFT 10tk anniversary sole
up. Middleport , neor Rutland.
on mini·motors, !railers, and
Coll992-7481.
folddowns . Travel5tor 25 h .
$.......00.00: 20 ft. mini-motor
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
$10,850.00. We sell service and
oil elec., 't acre, Middlfif)ort,
quality . Comp Conley Starcroft
dose to Rutland . Ptlone 992Soles , Rt . 62 nor1h ol Pt . Plea7481.
sant .
SMALL form for sola , 10•4 down,
· owner financed . Monroe Coun· · JAYCO CAMPING Trailer,,

ty . W. Vo. Phone (304) 772:

custom modo SWISS COLONY .

3102 or (30.t) 772·3227.

small

people

should

'Inquire .

Books shown on request.

CAl! 99Z·2259
2. STORY 3 bedroom frome

house, ~ . A . lurnoc•. storm: win ·
dows, · firepioce in Middleport .

completed 3 bedroom kouse,
Iorge
living
room with
fireplo(:e , large corner lot . Butt
now and cnoose you own colors
of carpet, etc. $36,000. Phone

(614) 667·3349.
--·-- -LARGE 3 BEDROOM nome . ~ yrs.
--~--~-

old. Family room h&lt;ls stone
fireplace. li'ling room with Bow
window. fully equipped lo:it·
chen . carpeting, 2'1, boths ,
central air, 2 car garage, rl . 7
N. of Pomeroy .• Shown by op·
pointment, 992.2996.

Maple . Leaf .

Rental , Service. Supplies :
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bashon .
Owner Robert Codner . Long

$1 ,000 down. call (304) 772· .,.:B"'o:::llc:;o:m".O
::C.:
hi~o:C.=-:-- - : - 3102or(30&lt;)772-3227.
:-:

LIKE NEW . 19'!2 28 ft . Carriage.
o ir conditioned, tub and
shower . owning, forced oil'
heat plus elect. heal , many
features . Con be seen ot
.t1 RM . HOUSE on Rt. 124 just off Rt .
Hickory: Lakes Campground ,
Tupper Plolns. Q.hio or call
7 lowords Rutland . Phone
VA -FHA, 30 yr. financing . Ireland
Mortgage, 77 E. State , Athens ,
phone (614) 592-3051.

742·2174.

(614) 667·3349.
1976 "HOLIDAY RAMBLER" 32 ft .

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

{5.000 series) full size bolh with
shower , air conditioning , awn Ings, looded with extras. Like
new. James ln~els, Mason.

W.Vo. Ph~ne(304) n3-Si61.

MAIN
POMEROY, O.
JUST LISTED- About 3'12
acres, nice 1 story frame
with
basement 1
just

remodeled, 2 bedrooms.
bath, parch, storage bldg.
512,500.00.
NEW HOME- 1 'master 2
regular bedrooms wl!h 2
bo!hs . double closets.
lovely kitchen wl!h dining

,. BEDROOM 2 story brick home.
Forced air fumace , Middleport.
Phone 992-3457.

Will be sold and partially
financed to r~liable party
or parties. Only interesled

tandems

COONER'S CAMPERS , Sales,

COUNTRY farmland with secluded woods, water ond good OC·
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .

basement, centr;al air and

A-1 BUSINESS
and BUILDING

rJ

PARTS· lABOR
GUARANTEED

wheel
Ali1Jnment,
c
tune-up,
balancing,
...
brake · work, minor I
repair.
'
Behind Rutland Grede
School. Evening work by
Reedsville, 0 . Plt.37U250
appointment. Ph. 742-2105. '
5·27-TFC
6-5-1 mo. Pd.

GUTIER SERVICE

bar, formal dining, very

lois . Call99'l·51!69 or 985·3595.

1· REQUE

Automatic
Transmission Service

IHOLURYj
IIQ

THAT 1 WAS DEAD,
Eli? THE BOMBER

WE WERE. ON ""'S

l051-· WE HAD A

large living, u!llify, full
heat, double garage and
workshop. JUST $31,000.00
WIFE'S PRIDE .kiTCHEN

10 FT. BLUE WHITE Stutz Bearcol
camper for pkkup truck. Sink.
stove, refrigerator, small
restroom , clean, read., to go.
Call 985-J815 or see ot Rex
Bailey's, Chester, Ohio.
1965 SHASTA. 16ft. aleeps, 6. Partable potty , good condilian.
Linley Hart , Vine S.t. Racine.

OH 9•9·2384.

t 964 CHEVROlET,
Phone 992-3625.

forn;t,al

dining~

lovely

carpeting, full wldlh front
porch • .other lea!ures.
524,000.00.
.
EXACTLY wlia! you have
1-bo~,-looking - for, 12 acf~
close In,
home 4
bedrooms. bath. utility,
porches, basement, frul!

trees,

buildings.

nice

Saturday's

~-

RABBI

JAUNTY

Remembers 33.
7:3~Hollywood Squares

3,4; Lei's Deal Wl!h I! 6 ;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; $25.000 Pyram ld 10;
Wild Kingdom 13; Music Cl!y 15.
8:1»-Joe Garaglolo 3.~ .15; Happy Days 6,13 ; Dr .
Seuss 8, 10; About Us: A Deep South Par!ralt 20,33.
8: 15-Baseball All-Star Gary1e 3,4, 15.
8:JO-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Plio! "Best Friends''

lires- TREAD FOR YOUR "BREAD"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

BORN LOSER

Of~~
1-1 K~ Blmlb

L{OU OO!JT

FCOR ,

HE:RS ...

FIWli&lt;l.'l, ~ 00
r, sur L().J"v'!; tor
TO 61\ie; IT Otol&amp;
THI~ ...

g

!i
~

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

1

Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
small appliances. Lawn mower,
next to State Highway .Garage
• on Route 7. Phone (61-4) 985-

•

·i

. ~

. 3825.

~

REMODELING , Plumbing, heating
and all typtn ot general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yean ex perience. Phone 992-2.o9.

~
Q

SEWING MACHINE ~epairs , service, all makes, 992·228.4 . The
Fabric
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.

ACR~

39 Under sail

1 Cartoonist

40 Evaluates
41 Sea gull
DOWN

Addams
5 Sanctify
1 Title wilmer
10 "Roads
2
Title word
scholar"
3 Residence
11 Medium's
4 Nativestate
5 Hatch
1% Ere long
6 Fond du
13 Clwrch
-,Wis.
official
7
Beg
14 Up to date, ·
8
"Theof
for short
God":
15EilaAttila
Morse
9 "Porgy
16 Poe's

8,10.

Yesterday's Alllwer ·

18 Wan .
21 Sapient
22 Italian
marble city
23 Circus
performer
and Bess''
24
Newspaper
character
section
11 BW Walton
25 Alias
· is one
15 West African
"Mary
republic
Hartman"

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo.boys lor hire; will haul
fill dirt, to soil , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef :
fers , day phone 992-7089,

' night phone 99'2·3525 or
5232.

FRIEZE

Answer: Whal you expect when you buy a set ol good

9:1»-Movie "Love Story" 6.13 ; Mash, a, 10; PJay of!he
Month 20; Opera Theater 33.
9 : 3~ne Day a! a Time 8,10.
10 : ~Julle : My Favorite Things 8; Age of Un·
certainly. 9; Koiak 10; News 20; Piccadilly Circus
33.
ll:DO-News 3t4,6,8,10,13,1S.
11 : 3~Johnny ' Carson 3.4,15; Movie "Only with
Married Men" 6,13; McMillan &amp; Wife 8; Mary
Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
12:(1()-&lt;Movle "Desperate ·Mission" 10; Janak! 33.
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 1Q-News 13.

28 Props for
fops
29 Hoist.
30 Presbyter
31 Type
of
fort
38 Ending
for
treat ·
:n "Krazy _ .. _M_o_n_d_a.:.y.:.,J.:.u_l:_y_I.:.B_-::-=---=---=----------

,.-+..-+-. When

m.

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
and dltcher . Charles R. Hotfield , Bock Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio . Phone 742·2(X)8,

WEST

7~2-2348.

flooring , ceiling,
paneling . Phone 992-2759.

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec.,
plumbing and neatlng. Phone

EK·

covatlng, septic systems,
dozer, backhoe. ,d ump truck,
limestone, grovel, blacktop
paving , Rt. t-43 . Phone l {61 ... )

698-7331.

West

North Ea11

Pass
Pass

l•
Pass
2 N .T . Pass

Pass

Pass

Soutb

I.

One letter simply stands for another. In thia sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
hints. Each day the code leiters are different. ·
Jim : "After several weeks
of
articles on play it might be
CRYPTOQUOTES
a good idea to get back .to bid·
ding for a while." ·
XRBURIK
M
SMAGUA
UJUR
Oswald : "Way back ill the
very early days of contract, I
J3L WLMS, PU TUBK HC XR BXGU produced something called
'The rule of the ace and king.'
UMAWN
KBMAB. It was primarily for slam bidBL
TUB
MR
ding, but it also works for
UlTMA . PLEU
deciding between stopping at
Satarda)''l Cryptoquote: QNLY ·THOSE WHO GET INTO a part score •. inviting a game·
SCRAPES WITH THEIR EYES OPEN CAN FIND THE SAFE and actually bidding a game ."
Jim : "For below game pur·
WAY OUT.- LOGAN P . SMITH
poses
i\ comes down to
f:) 181'r Ja-. PeatUHS Syodtc&amp;t;e.Jnc:.

II

rei. needs light body · work .
till 10. Closed Mando)oa,
Gold. with --white strlpe-acrou
wrecker aervice, tire repqir ,
rear of car. $250. osk for Jim .
Phone 7.42-9575 or 7•2·2081.
_P_ho
_
n_
o_
24_7_·3_7_
94...;·-~~-- . WILL DO light housekeeping in
even in~. Phone 992-5n8.

0

WELL, 1!w.iK GOODNESS
'VtlU'RE &amp;EITl.ED IN YOUR

.•• AND'AUNin
BE991E1&amp; &amp;ETTLED
IN HE!&lt; JOOJ

FRIDAY Tit 5
.

"

.

aNN

NICHATCH. GROUND!
I.{OlJ'RE DOING A
GOOO JOB!

I NEVER REALIZED

T~E GROUND WA5

ON OUR .SIDE ...

CIIJII SIL At 5 P.M.

..

,

Pass

xs

I THINK ltl FIX

kitchen.

I N.T.
3N.T.

Oswald: "North only has

ten high-card points, but eil!hl
are in aces and be holds a ten ·
and two nines. So, be can af·
ford to raise South from one to
two notrump. South continues
to game because he likes the
looks of his jack·ten of

spades."
Jim : . "The game makes
easily . East's jack of
diamonds fallll to South's king .
He goes right alter spades and
is sure of three spades, three
diamond&amp;, one heart and two
clubs ."

Opening lead -It

318. V-8 o-m; fm rodio and tape
player , 34,000 miles. St"l PIANO TUNING, lane Daniels . 12
belted radial tires. Phone
yeors of · service. Phone

985·3577.
992-2082.
1972 CHEV NOVA 307
1 WATER WELL drilling. Phone
' p.s ., 0 r,
William P. Grant al 742- 40'T
~
·
good condition, $1600. Phone
742-2~8.
aflor6p .m.
·
1969 DODGE SWINGER 340 4 bar· PENNZOIL RUTLAND open dolly

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

responder should make some
move to .game with eleven or
twelve points or even ten good
ones since a normal minimum
response is seven points while
with thirteen he should inailt

on game."

EAST

•k72
•A65
• K 104
9 J 32
tQ8542
tJ3
•QI
"J8762
SOUTH IDI
• J' IO
9AQ965
t K 96
"K 10 3
North-South vulner.abl•ei

CARPENTE~ .

MARTIN

' 18

NORTH
.Q9843
• 87
t A 107
"A 95

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

992-5858.
HOWERY AND

to push,to game

1974 PLYMOUTH GOLD OUSTER

517.000.00

992-2259-fiS-411~

Jumbles: DADDY

~-~;It'

Inc.

SU,OOO.OO.

All CASH FOR YOUR
HOME- LI!T US SELL IT
FOR YOU.
H£NRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kallly &amp; Leona
Cleland
Auocllftl

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It;

CHEAPIE - 2 re,p1odelecl
bedrooms, bath, 21ots. nice
neighborhood. real nice,
just 54.800.00.
SMALL HOUSE - small
yard, small price, tust see
thi5 one, 4 rooms, Nth,
storago bldg. 55,400.10
ALMOST NEW- double
wide, 6 acres ground,
garage, building, selling
due !o Ill health. 2
bedrooms, bath/ dining,
very

good.

r I I 11 I 1 IJ

· 1:00-Gang Show 3; All My Children 6,13
1:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13; News 8;
Young &amp; !he REstless 10; Not For Women Only 15&gt;
Masterpiece Theatre 33.
·
1:JO-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8.10.
.
2:1»-520,000 Pyramid 6,13; Leonard Bernstein
Conducts 33.
2:3Q-Dodors 3,4,15; One Life !o ·Live 6,13; Guiding
Llgh! 8.10.2:1»-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13; Leonard
Bernstein Conducts 33.
2:JO-Doc!ors 3,4,15; One Life !oLive 6,13 .
3:1»-Ano!her World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Consumer Survival Kl! 20; Whal's Cooking? 33.
3:15-Generol Hospl!al 6,13.
3:3Q-Ma!ch Game B,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20; Antiques 33.
4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge of Nigh! 4; Gong Show
15; New Mickey Mouse Club 6; Gilligan's Is. 8;
Sesame S!. 20,33; Movie "The Las! Rebel" 10;
Dinah 13.
4 ' 3~My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
61 Andy Grlffl!h 8; Hogan's Heroes 15 5:1»-Big
Valley 3; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh·
barhood 20,33; Emergency One 131 Mission : Impossible 15.
5 : 3~Adam·12 4; News 6; Family Affair B; Elec. Co.
20,33.
6:oo-News3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20; ABC News6; Bill
Mayers' Journal 33.
6:3D-NBC News 3.4.15; ABC News 13; And). Griffith 6;
Vegetable Soup 20 . .
7:00-Trulh or Cons. 3; Las! of the Wild 4; Liar's Club
6; Country Carnival 8; News 10; To Tell !he Truth
13; Anyone tor Tennyson 20; Lowell Thomas

HARRISON'S T.V, R•poir, Service
1970 FORO ECONOLINE Von, 6
I
276 Sycamore , St .. Midcyl . automatic Radio, deluJC
Phone '1'12·2522.
trim . Phone cloys , 992-629B,
evenings, 992-3'131.

-This on~ has everything ,

tus! see it. Southern style
home, 2 modern balhs and
2 bedrooms on firs! floor,

runs

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, es aug·
gested by lhe abOve cartoon .

(Answers tomorrow)

BISSEll SIDING

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Complete Serv~a . Phone 949-2487
or 9.49-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Bradford.

DON'1" DO"THIN0S'
e,y HALVES.

I

Answer here:

A1LANTIC··

ACCOMMODAiiONSo
FO~ "TH05E W80

I I

UTTLEORPHANA~E

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Professionals . I

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Esllrnatts
No Sunday cells Please
6-13-1 mo.

1

TARMIN

&amp;tl OF A SWIM
'THE. tiORTli

Associate Realtors

ONE ACRE to S aq~s , bu ild ing

Uns~amble these tour Jumbles,
one leHer to eacfl square, to form
tour ordinary words.

SWAIN'S

DUGAN'S

Pomeroy, 0.

Not The

.......

1t'i1\lNfffi';l

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME
~ ~ ~~®
byHenriArnoldand8Qblee

6-15-1 ma.

~rpeting

Carpet &amp; Upl\ol,stery
Phone Mike Young
At
992.2206 or 992-7630

Braun J. ;

Phone 992-2291

Superior
Steam Extraction

Owner

Gordon B. and
Helen L. Ttaford,

8,10; News- 20;

'

Main S.troet
Just Btlowtht Jonts
Boys' In Pomeroy, Ohio

water and

SALE -

and ·Wives"

Austin City Limits 33. ·
10 : 3~Biock Perspective on fhe News 20.
ll :oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13,15; Monty Python's Flying
Circus 20; Black Jounlol 33.

804 Wut

Phone 992-6282
BA.M. lo4:311 P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
6-23-1 mo. Pd .

large lot. Natural gas F.A.
furnace .

Phone 992·3457.
JOHN DEERE •20 live power, 3 TUPPERS PLAINS. Oh. Nearly

APPLES, FITZPATRICK Orchard,
St. Rt. 689. Phone (bl,.)

na.

10:DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,.(, 15i Dlnah6 ; Here' s Lucy 8,10;
Mike Douglas 13; STudio See 33.
10 : 3~Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Price Is Righi B,IO;
Jeon Shepherd's America 33.
)l :oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Community of Living Things 33; 11 ; 3~Biography
' 33.
.
11 :3o-J!'s·Anybody' s Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8.10; .1 145-Measureme!rlc 33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Flxl! 10.
12 :00-News 3.4,6, 10; Shoot for ihe Slors 15; Divorce
Court B; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12 : 3~C~ico &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan's H- 6,13; Bob

6,13; Kojak 8; Mary Hortman 10; ABC News39.
11':1»-Movle "Incident In San ran cisco" 10; Janakl33.
12:4~ Tom a 6, 13; Movie "Stairway !o Heaven" 8.
1 :00-Tomorrow 3,4; I :50-News 13 .

CRAFTY IJDIES
HANDICRAFT

bedroom and 3 others.
1
• Family room , 2 full baths,
1basement , garage and

384 _2814 .

point hitch. John Deer No. 5
mower . 7 pt. cut. John oe.,. 2
row cultivator Ford . two .... in.

~OWHY
~HOV~P 'ltJU

IT! AS VO~ TOP
HAS PROtfEO &gt;IS
CAN HAIIOLI?
&amp;I!*ER JO&amp;!i
THAN PAPPY
SVE~ GAVE~~M~

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTIST
SUPP.UES.
CLASSES OFFERED. IN
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
OPEN. DAYS A WEEk,
10:00 to 5:00

trailer

RIGHT
NEAT
3
bedrooms, 2 baths . natural

NEW

669·3785.

PLUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

5 ROOM HOUSE, both , 2 parches,

$69 .95

Pomeroy landmark
9-. _JackPhone
W . Carsey, Mgr.
.Ail.
P92-2181

---·-" .

6 : 30--Focus on Columbus 4; News 6; Concerns &amp;

Comments 10.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13; 6 :55-Good ......,nlng, Tri S!a!e 13.
7:00-Tod&lt;ty 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13;
CBSNews 8; Chuck Wlte Roports 10; 7:05-Porky
P ig 10; 7:JO-Schoolles 10.
.
B:oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33.
B:J0-81g Volley 6; 9:oo-&lt;:ross-Wits 3; Phil Donahue
4,13.15; Andy · Griffith B; Mike Douglas 10;
Biography 33.
9 :3n-A.M. 3; Edge of Nigh! 6; American Herl!age 33

11 :3o-Johnny Cprson 3,.&amp;, 15; Streets of San Francisco

CARTER'S

country . 4 room house with
bath and 2 outbuildings.

DOGGIE BEAUTY Parlor, oil
breeds styled the woy you like.
No drugs used. Call for ap·
painfment, 7•2·3162.
_ bOt!~P~~~ ~a1.1_2,.7-2l!~
_____...
__._ ----~ · YELLOW FREESTONE c&lt;lnning
FREE PUPS and kiHens . James Hill
peaches now in season .
Farms, Letart Falls.
:...:::::.___
Available at any quanities .
TWO FEMAlE puppies. short hair ,
Plecue bring containers. Mid·
· mixed breed: good peh for
WO'( Mkt . Pomeroy . 992-2582or
kids. Phone 992-7085.
Sob's Market . Moson . 773-5721 .
ONE FEMAlE Kitten, 9 weeks old.
Must find home immediately .

6·22· 1 mo.

Good
Used
Refrigerators, S2.00 each_.

wants to leave the state . 2
bedrooms, . bath, cl!y
CASH!!. Junk cars, Fry's Truck &amp; ASHLEY .STOVE Oeolers , Running
Special Summer ' Sole . Lorge
A1,1fa , Rutland . Phone 7... 2-2081
water, natural gas _and
C60 . $300 .. Blowers, $40 . Call
or 7"'2-9575. Closed Mondays .
large garden .
mornings . {61,. } 6'98· 7191 .
NEW LISTING
4
NO ITEM TOO Larg8 or too small .
.bedroom modern home
Will buy 1 piece or complete WALNUT . LOGS . Jack Spires
residence, Danville. OH .
,w ith lots of 'closet space,
household. New, used, or anti eat.fn
kitchen,
ques . Martin's Furniture, 20 N . TWOGRAVELYtroctors . One J968... Large
natural gas furnace, on
2nd St ., Middleport. Phone
modeL Ccll985-3880 .
corner lot .
992-637"------~ CANNING TOMATOES , Bring your
IF YOU HAVE TRIED
own container . Harry Hill form .
SELLING IT YOURSELF,
·Phone 2.47-21.t2.
THEN TRY US.

MEIGS COUNTY' Humane Scciety
Animal Coraline, m :7680; or
after6p.m.,
21.

ffl-5291

Bob Hoef llch

( 2)

Newly · fenced
bedroon1 trailer.
23!, ACRES -

pocket watches and chains , REFRIGERATOR , 18 cu, ft.
frostfree. Top freez'e r, avocado
silver and gold . We need 1964
green . $200 . Phone 992 ·7,.9.o4 .
ond older s•lvef''coins. Buy . self.
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley , USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
742·2331 .
Timberjack Skidder 'lOOGS;
Fronkline 13:2 AXL .. Detroit
OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes , brass
Diesel Engine; Morbork 636
beds ,
etc .,
complete
Oeborker w -20· infeed ond 20 '
households. Write M. 0 . Miller .
outfeed table: Contact Dennis
Rt . ... . Pomeroy , Ohio or coli
Smurr , phone (61 ... ) 838-SJ-45 .
992-776().

367·7112.

Weddings
Portraits
Passports
Anniversaries
Specia I. OCcasions

I lioi Slniul

I

Dryer
$10.00'
1 Gaod Used G . l!"'. Dr'(tr Sl}

ONLY

w.

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

Pomeroy

SSO

on Rt . l l in Athens County.

· ~Pomeror Landinarll I

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS

SJIW

PIIU'r
..,.,..

109 High St.

1 Good used Unico

hookup.
NEW LISTING -

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER7

becomes a performance Bond
to Contractor
recehtina
award . All other bonds will be
returned to bidders after
award of Contract .
All employees shall be
covered by the Oh / o ~s Work ·
men 'l Compensation. Your
risk number shall be fur nished In your bid .
THe County Comm iss loners
reserve the right to accept or
relect any and all bids.

c

·
125 .00 Discount
Now In stock , complete lineot bulk garden seeds .
1 Good McCullough Chain
Saw
SU
1 Good Uud Poulan Chlln

room

necessary to complete In a
sa tisfactory
manner ,
scraping or wire brushhing ,
· t·
1 1
h
pa in •ng , reg az ng w ere
needed,
caulk
between
frames and brick.. apply one
ONE HORSE olr compressor runs
(1} coa l
acrylic masonry
IF YOU have a service to offer ,
on 110 volts. only 3 months old .
white
J)alnt
(She rw in
wont to buy or sell something ,
. Will sell re&lt;lsonobly. Excellent
Williams or equal) to the
oe looking for work . . . Of'
condition. wm operate 2 spray
following exterior areas of
whatever .. . you 'll get results
guns.,. at some time. Phone
the Meigs County court .
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
house :
992-J7U.
Co11'192 ·2156.
All af the front of the
building facing Second Street
YARD
SALE , Monday, Tuesda)
In the V Illage of Pomeroy .
and
Weds
. at 3613 East Main,
Approximately ~o teet on the
Pomeroy.
West side to what Is known as
the " New Addition ." AP ·
YARD SALE , Monday, Tues.,
proximately 25 feet on the
Weds. 'h mile from Gulf StaEast side to wh
Is k.nc,wn
tion , Rt . 33 near Enterprise, 9' : Let Pomeroy Landmark
the "New Addl
.soften &amp; condition vour '
t~l4.
•
be included In
coat of Gold
~ water and a Ca-op water
plied to the
jsoflener, Model UC-XVI.
Meigs County Cotiriliou.se.
Now Onl¥[•279.95
.paint ·.shall
ied ~bY--"
brush only .
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
j L~:t
us test your water
work shall begin not more
1 ..o
o d
than 10 days after awardin_g
n,..oor- ut oor runs. grooming
Free.
of contract, and completed
oil breeds. clean sanitary
With i n ' JO calendar days,
facUJtiesoe367·7112.Cheshire .
weather permitting . Penalty
PhOne (614) 367-0292.
- • Jack
Clrsey, Mgr.
beyond spec ified time shall
HOOF HOlLOW . Buw . $ell. trade
,_
Phonet91-2181
be sso.oo per day .
·
'
All bids must be ac or troin hora•s . RUTH REEVES
com pan ied by a Bond signed
1roiner. Phone (614) 698·3'190 . .
by two Sureties appro11ed by
AKC SHETLAND sheep dogs~ HANGING BASKETS, pots , ond
the CotJnly Commissioners,
geraniums .
Cleland ' s
In the amount Of $2,000.00, for
(Min .) Collies, 2 females , 7
Greenhouse ,
Geraldine
the faithful performance of
weeks old . Shots a~ wormed .
Cleland , Racine , Ohio .
· this contract . Bond reten-ed • Phone (61,.) 367-0292 or ~

to Is o Bidders ·Bond OC ·
componylng bid. wh ich

new

I

,-----------1

lHE· punlo
riU

TUESDAY, JULY It, 1t77
6:oo-PTL Club B; Summer Semester 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13; 6 : ~Not for Women Only 13;

6:1»-New• 3.U.I.IO.l3. 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Austin Cl!y Limits 33.
6:30-NBC News3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup ~ ·
7:1»-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell !he rulh • ; Liar's Club
6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; To Tell the Tnrth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Amerlcano 20; Montage 33.
7:JO-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; In Search ot 4 '
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show B; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33; Price Is Right 10; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville on lhe Road 15.
•
8:1»-LII!Ie House on !he Prairie 3,4, 15; Pilot "The
•• four af Us" 6. 13; Jeffersons 8, 10; Movie " Dying"
20; Once Upon o Classic 33.
·
8:30-Shleld• &amp; Yarnell8.10; Jean Shepherd's America
33.
· 9:1»-Movle " The Hunchback at Notre Dame" 3,4, 15;
Movie "The Effod of Gamma Rays on Man. ln·fhe.
Moon Marigolds" 6,13; Maude B,10; Alo Guthrie 33.
9:JO-AII's. Fair 8,10.

Business Seroices

NEW LISTING- 8'1&gt; acres
of land in Athens County. 4

TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro- TRUCK ~EO , 1976 Chevrolet Fleet ·
side , os new w ilt trode for 1969
ducts . Top price for standing
to 1972 CheVrolet Bed in good
sawtimber . Call 992-5965 or
condition or will pay ca$h for
Kent Hanby , 1-446-8570.

COINS . CURRENCY, tokens, old

on

UD .GO

Hotpoint Refrigerator .
1 New 20 tuhlc fr.
Chnt Freezer

--

with if!formation concerning
ony of tkem, please phone
992-3489. Reward offered.

' ARM. AND BATH fumi~hed aportm,..nt for rent . Phone 992 ·5908.

S•ve

limited supply. Sp4!Cial price,
l&lt;ld•ts boat shoes . Bailey's, SPRING GARDEN Supplies, Cab~~iddleport .
bage, coulillower, broccoli ,
and
heod leltuoe 'plonts ,
THE BEST in wood and cool burnyellow , wl'lite. and red onion
ing ltoves , ranges ond
sets, on ion plonts , Kennebec ,
fireplace-stoves . ZION HEAT
cobbler , Katahd in , Rod Pontiac
COMPANY,INC . Shade. OH
and Red lasodo se-ed potatoes .
45776 (61 4) 6'16· 11B7, 593 -6894 .
Bulk garden seeds , potting soil,
357 MAGNUM Smith-Wes~on. · p&amp;at moss. fr~it trees ond rose
$200. 3 month old slate top pool
bushes . Midwdy Morkat ,
table , $.450. Phone99'1-7...61 .
Pomeroy , Ohio . · 992 ·2582 ,
ltoob ·s Moricet, Mason , W Vo .
2 '1,
YR. THOROBRED-Morgon
stallion, 5 yr . Arobion , vary
(304 ) 773 -~721 ~- - - - gentle. Coll992-3436 after 4 ·30.
ECONOMY TRACTOR w ith oil ot ~lochments. like new , ask ing
LIVE CATFISH lor sole to stock
$2250. Phono (6U) b98·3290.
lakes, ponds, etc. Phone
~
7•2-3167 or 9... 9-2545.

FRIENOL V TOY Porties has open· . REDUCE SAFE &amp; Fast wi th GoBese
ings for m·anogers and
Tablets and E-Vap "water pills '
demonstrators .
Demonstrate
· N&amp;ison Drug .
guronteed toyS and gifts . No
cosh investment - no collecting ONE ORGANTONE Adaptor, like
new . Originally $225 lor $75 .
or delivering, no service
141 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy ,
charge. Cor &amp; 1elaphone
OH .
necessary . Call collect.to Carol
3 AND ... RM . lurn•shed and unDay {518) 489-8395 or write ONE 275 GAL . fuel oil tonk , $35 .
furnished opt$ . Phone 992Friendly Toy Parties , 20
One set of mattress springs lor
5434 .
R&lt;lilrood Ave ., Albany, N.Y.
double bed , $5. Re5fauronl
12205.
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt.
dishes . pots, pons , water and
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy.
beer glossas . 141 BtJtternut.
Lorge loh with concrete pc:rtios ,
Pomeroy , OH .
sidewalks. runners q_nd oft_
6 OIL FILTERS for Corvair , $5. Utili·
street perking. Phone99'2-7J.79,
'*~~~
ty trailer and hitch , $100;.
FURNISHED APT. Adults on"ly , no LOST · BILLFOLD ol Royal Ooh
Panason ic Am -Fm clock. S35; 4
pets . Phone 992-387.4 , MidPark, owned by Kelly Haym&lt;ln ,.
~hite spoke wheels , $75; one
dleport.
Ra cine. JUst retvrn billfold and
coffee table , $10 : ' I'MB
Plymouth Fury II , $225. Take
important Morine papers ,· no
AVAILABLE ot Village Menor
trades . Phone 742-2376.
questions Mked. Return to
Apartments- ! bedroom fully
Pomeroy Police Dept. ,or Daily 1
carpeted whh kilchen apSentinel office, 949-2875.
pliances, furnished. Starting ot

NOTICE Of YEAR

(71 18, 25

Swimming

AUCTION , EVERY Friday, 7 p.m.
. New
Ohio
Plaza
Ohio.

COAL. hmestone, ond colclum
HAlF RUNNBER Beans , 4 bushel.
chloride and cokltJm brin• for
Pkk your own. James Hill . dust eontrol ond spedol mb:ing
salt tor formers , Ewcelslor Solt
• forms .
JOHN DEERE Crawler Bockhoe
Work•. Moin Str. . t, Pomeroy ,
endlooder and dump truck . ..f ~hioor ~hone_m-3891. ~_.
Phone99.2·7... 7'9.
CAMPER~
Also, horse ·
S...Ct&lt;HOE DUMP truck and trailer
trailer, $.&lt;150. Phone- (6U) 698 3'190.
for sale. Phone 7... 2-2...51 .

23 CHANNEL CB Regency, CR ·I•2

Call (304) 882-2634
and ( 304'1 882-2245

SMALL APARTMENT, suitable for
one. Call 992-526'1 .
By virtue of the order Qf
~... sale duly issued out of the
, Court of Common Pleas , in
•• the c.ase of Raclne Hme
~rt. NaTional Bank vs . Harold E .
.. • Wolfe , et al. , being the
,,. judgment entry rendered in
Case No . 16,.t18.. I Will offer at
• l
public sale at the door of the
Court House of Meigs County ,
,.. · Ohio. on the 19th day of
AUgust, 1977, at 10 o'clock A .
.: ' M ., the following lands and
.,., . tenements :
.
.;-.
Situate in the Townsh ip of
Lebanon , County of Meigs
...:. and State of Ohio , to-wit:
..~ , Being w ]thin Section No . 10,
'"" · Township No. 2, and Range
• ' No . 11.ofthe Ohio Company's
' · Pure ha se ,
bounded
and
described as follows : Being
111 "lJ · on State Route No . 12 .. , be. ; tween Groundhog Creek and
•·' Portland , and commenc ing at
~ a point in center of State
,,, 1 Route
No . 124, said point
being on Frank Allen 's North
..J'
line: thence North along
: • center Of State Route No . 12,.,
a distance of UO feet; thence
west 312 feet Ia an iron pin ;
thence south 140 feet to an
:: iron pin on Frank Allen's
• Norfh line ; thence east along
~. Frank Allen's N'o rth llne 312
feet to the place Of beginning ,
" ' containing one acre, more or
less .
The real estate is appraised
at S15,DOO .OO
...; ...
Terms of· sale are cash on ·
.. ., hand on day ~of sale .
; ,, :
JAMES J . PROFFITT
.
Sheriff of
---~ ~S County,QJ:!.IO ,__

._.,__,.m...,.

-

~tP .M .

Attest :
Jane Walton
Clerk

,.,;.

IH,. . ., ..._,,
11115,

be ...with •
JOB - f'W&gt; NOW for o f'n&gt;.
lessional .,.,.., OrMng • "Big

TOIISday
tlU'U Fridily

Clarence An·drews
Mayor

f
u.s..

• ~.,..,.

o;,., joB

nwumwn. Cash in IH.IvartCe.

Passed : 7-6 -17

Television log

SEE WHAT YOU CAN
DO WITH A Sp()Ri"~
OUTFIT.

For Sale

Eat-h word over the mmlmwn 15
wonk b • c.:~nts per word per daly.
Adl nwung ot.her tJ~o~n consa.11bvt!
dilya will be t.-hlrtj,al at tht· l day

,,

DTCK TRAI..'Y

,

15 Wunis Of Under
CUI!
Cha ....
100
1.%$
1.00
1.10
1.25
1.1111

· (7)

7-TbeDally~linel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July ta,tm

•

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Item·s Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

&gt;.00

_.,,._..,J•""'I

A BATCH OF

MY

BODACIOUS SNUFFY
.STEW FER
SUPPER,
MAW r(j

An Oregon reader wants to
know the correct opening bid
with :
• 9 8 5 n • A K 10 7 6 t A K" 2
The correct opening bid is
ons spade. You plan to bid
hearts later on unless your
partner raises you in spades.
In that case the ·ace-king of
hearts will stili be tricks for
you .
(For a copy of JACOBY
•MODERN. s•nd $1 to; "Win at
Bridge," c/o rhis newapaper,
P.O. Box 489, Rodio City Sllfion, .
Now York, N. Y. 10019)

GOODY~- "'E CAN

USE MV
; 1 HONEV·POT

/ · 16

(

••

'

�8--Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July II, tm

~-----A~~~-De;th~~---! Marriages helped

Bunger
(Colltlllutd mat pqt I)

us the announcements put out I
.
WILLIAM JOHNSON
by Peking, then explained to
W
illiam
J
Johnson,
1
•, a
us that revolution can be resident ot Rt. 1, Ew ington,
advanced only through died al 5 a m. Sunday a! his
production.
home. He was a r et ired
employee

" The commissa rs kn ew
well It was they who had

Rose Ann J.ohn.son
He ma rried Myra Johnson

In Speight, Ky .

6n Aug. l l.
1922 She survives along with
silt sons and four daughters
Elm er .
Eugen e
and

Everett

'Some

not good enough in criticizing
themselves and they lost
their jobs and were sent to
work on fanns .''

He said food Shortages
exist on the China mainland
to such an extent that many
people a.re half starving.
When officers and men in
his unit were having a meal, a
group of children and old
folks- would gather around to
wait for leftovers, he said.
0ur mess hall comrades

1

would put all the left overs in
several buckets and the kids
and old men and women
would fight to get a Share of
it.
.
' 'Sometimes we used the

teft6vers and some rotten
food to feed pigs we raised in
our barracks. The children
even fought the pigs for the
food which we knew was unfit
for human beings. "

J oh nson,

a ll of

Taylor,
M ich ;
Mart i n
John son , Col umbus ; Gene
Johnson, Ca nton ; W il li am
John son . Newark ; Mrs .
Mag ll ne
~ ls w ic k ,
Mrs .
K~ thl een Pepper and Mrs.
Bertha Me 1nke. all of Taylor,
Mich., and Mr!!. Erma Duffy,
Columbus One son and one
daughter preceded him In

deal h.
Thlrly.slx grand, 10 greal·
gr andchlldren and one greaf
gr eat . gr andchil d sur vive
Two brot hers and five
si sters survi ve.
He was a member of f he

Belhley Church of Christ at

Dundas, Oh io.
Funera I
arrangements

were completed by !he Me·

Co y-Moore Funeral Hom e.
Funera l send ces w fl l be at
the Jones and Son Funeral
Home , V i rg 1e, Ky 1 on

Tuesday.

SAMUEL G. MARRS
Samuel G. Marrs, 82. a
resident of Rl. 1. Bidwell ,
died at 10: 30 a .m. Saturda y in
Hoi zer Medica I Center
He was born Aug . 11. 1894,
10 Tazwell County, Va . son of

fhe late Will iam and Molly
Burress Marrs.
He marned the former
Grace Witson at Alto, W. Va .
She surv i ves, along with one
son and one daughter· Rex
Marris, West Lafayette , Ind .
an d
Mrs .
Geraldine

ll ofh acker, Wooden Hills.
Calif Two brothers an~ lhree
sJsters surv i ve : Robert.
Princeton, W. Va .; Rufus,

Canebreak, W Va .; Mrs.

Blanche Brown and Mrs.
Grace Carter, Princeton :

Millions may

Mrs Lee Snyder. Jolo. W. Va .
He was a member of the

Berwind Lodge No. 141 of
Berwind, W. Va. and !he

be lost to fund

Shrine Lodge of Charleston
Funeral services will be

WASillNGTON (UP! )
Some federal officials fear as
much as half the $.4 billion
Teamsters Central States
Pension Fund may have been
lost to bad investments,
according to Sen. Charles
Percy.
The nhnois Republican
said Sunday the Temsters
fund hilS a reputation for
making loans to Las Vegas
casinos, dog tracks and risky
real estate developments.
The ventures returned a
profit of only 4.9 per cent between 1960 and 1974, he said.
.

MASON DR. IN

held 10 a.m. Tuesday al !he

McCoy -Moore Funeral Home

1n Vinton with Rev. Elmer
Geiser officiating . Burial will
be in Greenwood Cemetery In
Racine
•
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7 until 9

p .nl

~

Braitford Keeton. Sr.

Brallford Myles Keelon,
Sr .• a res1dent of 7535 Mentor
Ave , Mentor , Ohio, d1ed
unexpectedly Sunday.
He was born h\arch 21 ,

1933, al Mud Fork. W Va .,
son of !he lafe Charles Keeton

and Ola Keeton , who survives
and resides at Rt . 1,
Ewlngton .
In addition to h1s mother,
he is survived by two sons.
Brallford, Jr., Charleston.
and David Keeton, Tampa,

Fla . Two brothers and lwo

sisters survi ve :

Keelon, Rl

sat . thru Tue
July 16·11-18-19

Stewart

1, Ewtnglon ;

Frank Ke e ton , Manetta ;

Mrs . Sue

Melz .

Soulh

Charleston, W. Va .; Mrs.
Glon a Westfall , N1tro, W Va .
Mr . Keeton was a self.
emp l oyed
appl i a n ce
repairman and a veteran of
the Korean Confltct .
Funeral 'Serv1ces will be
held 2 p m. Tuesday at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
with Rev . Jerry Neal of .
ficiating Burial will be In

Double Future

Program

"THUNDER &amp;

LIGHTNING "
MR . BILLION

By LeROY POPE
UP! Buslnen Writer
NEW YORK (UPI ) - A
lucky marriage often leads to
success m bu.siness but it
happened in a most unusual ·
way ror numas H. Thomson
and Michael E. Halleck of
Longmont, Colo.
Both are yoWig engineers,
married
to
physical
therapists. Thomson, a
mechanical engineer, headed
a finn engaged in research,
de si gn , development,
!nanufacturing and marketing of medical equipment.

son of the late Hu mphr ey and

We all knew ll's a farce.

.

for acute pain

the J . M .

An

DAN WORKMAN

ele ctrical

engineer ,

Halleck had a finn doing
The adjutant of the New
similar
work ·on electronic
Haven Amer ican Leg ioF1.
Daniel E Workman, 62, d ied products for the medical,
Su nday eveni ng at Holzer
Medical Center .
Mr. Workmen . a res ident of
New Haven , wa s bor n
November 13, 1914, In Cabin

Creek to !he lale George

Wash ington Workman and
Mrs . Floren ce Goodnite
Workman. who surv1ves and
res ides In New Haven .
Other surv i vors include
h•s w ife, Mary :.Valker Work.
ma n, New Haven ; a son,
Danny Joe Workman, New
Haven , two step sons, M 1ke
Mason ;
and
Redmond ,
Robert Redmond ,
Ne w
Haven ; a grandson, and a
sist er , Mrs . Pauline Sm 1t h ~
New Haven .
Besides b e ing post adjutant. he was also t he
manager and trustee of the

Sm ith.Capeharl Posl 140 of

the American legion . He was
aveteranofWorldWar II and
a member o1 the Labor Local
543 of Hunllnglon
Funeral serv tces will be

held

at

the

Fogelsong

Funeral Home Wednesday at
1 JO p.m. Rev. Geor~e
Weinck wdl offic1ate. Bunal
will follow in the Evergreen
Cemetery , Letart.
Friends may ca ll after 3
pAm . Tuesday .
Military serv ices will be
conducted
the
Sm ith-

Capeharl Pos l 140

LETTIE L: MEREDITH
WESTERVILLE - Mr.s
Lellle L. Meredith, 89, of 84
Norlh Vine St , Weslervi lle,
d ied
Sunday at K 1mes
Convalescent Center , Athens.
Mrs.,Nteredith was born m

Meigs Counly, Ihe daughter
of I he late Am I and Ida Can

Clief Ridenour . She was a lso
pre&lt;:eded m death by a s ister .

Letha

Koblentz

and

a

brother, Irvin Ridenour .
She was employed at the
Oh io Industrial Comm i ssion,
Columbus,
unt il
her
retirement in n59 She was a
member of the Broad Street
Chur€h ol Christ, Columbus

and television

mdustrial

industries.
Their wives, through their
mterest as therapists in tbe
need for a sunple, easy to use
device to block acute and
chronic pain, sparked the
founding or a successful
company manufacturing a
mmiaturized transcutaneous
. electronic nerve stimulator,
or TENS.
Such a device relieves pain
by electronically preventing
transmission of the pain message from the area that hurts
to the brain.
The TENS is being used
rather widely and is cutting
down significanUy on the use
of opiates, barbiturates and
other strong pain-killing
·drugs in hospitals and by
patients at home, Thomson
said in an interview. '
" In one rather extreme

case, a lady who had suffered
pain for years after an
automobile accident had
reached a condition where
her physician's fees and
prescriptions were running
$300 a month. The use of one
or our devices cut this cost to
under $20 a month." Thomson
said .
A TENS doesn 't work with
all patients, arxl can't be used
department . He had been in

Il l heallh for !he las! lwo

years.
He ma rned . Ruth Anne
Camden on May 18, 1957 at
Angola . Ind . She survives
along with the following
ch i ldren : WilmaR ., at home ;
Mrs . Michael Baird of

Gallipolis, and William IL at

home ;

step - children ~

three

and D of A Lodge, Chesler . Louise Franklin of GaiiiP&lt;&gt;Iis;
She is survived by a son and : Mrs . Richard (Cindy) Sexlon.
daughler.l n-law. Paul D. and Gallipolis ; Mrs . Ronald
Wanda Meredith, Wester - (Paula) Halfield. Gallipolis;
ville ; one granddaughter , three granddaughters. one
Mrs . Rtchard IMar.ha ) brolher , Robert D. of
Selzer,

Westerville ;

one

sister, Mable Swartz/ Athens,
and lrvm C. Mered1th, Ft

Myers, Fla .

Funeral services wil l be
held Wednesday at 10 a m . at
the Hughes Funeral Home,
Athens with I he Rev . George
Franklin Pickens officiating .
Bvnal will be 1n Chester

Cemetery.

Friends mav can at the
funeral home t odSJy from 7 to
9 p.m and on Tuesday after 4

p.m .

WILLIAM R . GUNNELL

Wilham R . Gunnell, 49, a
resi dent of Route l , Cheshire .
died at Pleasant Valley
Hospital In Po j nt Pleasant at
9 .55 p m Sunday. Born April
1, 1928 In Emma. Ky. lo the
late John Layne and Gladys
Meritt Gunnell who survive ,
he was an emeloyee of the
Ohio Valley tledric Corporat ion m me mamtenance

"'

Block mvente
.
d 1 -::~'""~~~..~t-t~e::!~:!:~~~ 1

loday.

15, 1902, In Pike Counly, Ky ..

of m y ror m er
comrades were considered

'

funera l home from 7p9 p.m.

M r. Johnson was bor n Sept.

But we all had to sa y
something like we were
•stupid and fooliSh' in being
misguided. And now we know
we were wrong and we hav~
to correct ourselves.
1

:

Jad&lt;son Lvm bl'r Co., Wilkes·
ville

taught otherw ise. But
nevertheless each of us was
ordered in every meeting
recently to do some 'self
criticizing' and to admit why
we had believed revolution
was more important than
prodUction and the advancing
m our mibtary training.
11

trom

Vi nlon Memorial Pa r ~.
Friends may call a l !he

::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-:=:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:=:·:::.:::::::::::::=:::?;-;:;;:;.:-::::::::.::z.:::;:-s.::::t;;:;:::,;-;:."9.:::::::::r,..;.:;m:;o;-.:~-:w.®'$::?,~m;::
·.m..'i-l.mmAAMfl'ji

Ashland, Ky , and one stster,

Mrs Harvey (Margaret)
Bays ol Prestonsburg, Ky.

One brother preceded him 1n
death. He was a veteran of
the Korean Confllct and a
member of !he Odd Fellows
and a sher iff 1S deputy .and the
Gallia County Emergency

Squad . !he FOP and !he Eno
Grange .

Mllilary riles will be

conducted at the cemetery by
Posl 4&lt;164 . and I he fam ily
requests that In Heu of
flowers , contributions be sent

lo

the

Gallla

County

County

Cancer

Emergency

Gallia

So&lt;:iely

Squad or the

Funeral servlces will

be

held al 1 p.m. Wednesday al

the Willis Funeral Home with
Rev John Jeffrey officiating .

Burial will follow allhe Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens .

Friends may call Tuesday
from 2to ~and 7to 9 p.m.

.--Ad mira

Freezers·

under certain circumstances
- in the presence of a cardiac
pacemaker , for instance.
Thomson and his wife
produced a dossier of medical
reports to prove it works with
most.
'"The principle of the TENS
was koown before 1910,"
Thomson explained, "but the
electronic technology and
materials to make a compact
and relatively foolproof unit
took a long time developing.
Also, some early producers of
TENS made unjustified
claims for them that
' backfired."
Dr. Richard L. Steig of the
Department of Neurology of
the University of Colorado ,
who conducted a lengthy
clinical investigation with 120
patients of tbe ThomsonHalleck TENS, called
Staodyn, wrote that despite
the fact the physiological
basis for tbe success of the
- TENS "is poorly understood
at this titne," it works. He
cited
''adequate' '
to
"excellent" pain relief fa- 60
to 80 per cent in large groups
or patients in addition to the
group he worked with.
The Staodyn TENS is a
device the size of a cigarette
pack, weighing six .ounces,.
which can be concealed
easily. It costs $3SO to $450
and can lie bought or rented

~.'.:!.: It is the 25th year of the House Ethico others who haw held the reins dutii1C
.... Committee' s helidloog investigation of these difficult, lr)'inl! years. ·•
:::: Korean influence buying on Capitol Hill.
"We all know they were under
Rep. J . Trimble Crasllb&lt;re, the fourth tremendous pressure to bring this
chairman to have the wlliP hand sinre the investigation to a ho!ad before everyone In
.... dynamir Inquiry began, is presiding at the Congresa at the time it began had either
:::: coounittee"s bienniel meeting.
retired, been defeated or died in offlre.
~=:
Crashbore : ''GenUemen, today is a red
''Their COW' age and delennination to
~~ letter milestone in our relenUess pursuit of press forward with the Inquiry fur a
suspected bribery of members of Congress dequarxls~ of century has now paid dlvi"' by the former goverMlenl or South
.
::~ Korean .
Crasllbore : ''IthankthegenUeman,and
"I have just been informed that the last may I just add that 'we could never have
:.:'.!·.:.: remaining congressman who was serving
persevere&lt;~ · with a hard-bitting quest of
in this body at the time of the alleged this nature without the dedlc:lltion and
bribery attempts passed away last allegiance and, yes, the stamina of
::;: evening. ·
everyone, living and dead, who bas served
:·:·
''This means that no present member m the ccmmittee."
could possibly have accepted cash
McBoSh : "[ wiab to associate my3elf
contributions or other favors from Korean with the chairman's remarluJ. Although I
officials seeklng to influence the Congress was a mere child when the inquiry began, I
prior to 1977." (Applause and cheers)
·recall reading insinuations in the press
Vice Chainnan MeBosh: "That is good that the conunlttee would never get to the
news indeed, Mr . Chainnan, for it sustains bottom of this mat1er. Cynics were
our faith in the basic integrity of the poedlcing a cove~W « a whitewash.
conscientious public servants who make
"How gratifying it is to have had a part
up the legislative branch of our in proving them wrong."
·:·. govenunent.
CraShbore: "Well said, sir. I believe we
::=:
" I move that the cmnmittee now f!le a have now convinced even our severest
!'!' final report Showing that our dogged probe
critics that members of Congress are
or every aspect of these scurrilous charges capable of Investigating each other
has produced no evidence of corruption without pulling any punches and letting the
among our colleagues." ·
chips fall where they may.
!'.!'. Rep. O'Biither, ranking minority "Given eoough time, the trull) will
member : "I secmd that motion. And finally come to light"
',.';:··;·:.'!.:..

f

t

l!\

.:f·:'!.:···',::.
·!.:

~.alizr rh.tr your v&lt;'liu.Wif'"' .ue Solfrgu.1rd~c1 do'l y Jn.· d.' Y oor f!' W!ry
d.ly of lf'lt' ~&lt;'~r r T~ c::os.r1-. ~~ n~ lic..-n rty srf\o'H .....,en you C::omp.lre

if

wirtr fhlr= tt pl.lte;mt!.,,

~ c::.tn be re~ed'

~r.due

o ! yo~o~r

~st s~ rOM

if lndt't'd rtw-y

We wllllx- Mppy ro arrt~ng~ lor cMe renl&lt;\1 o f a be:.
with you W~ you'" MoNO ~k o'IUOul our orfo.er ~ri/ICes

Farmers Bank
I'OMERO\. OH 10
' t •

t

1

$40,000 MaKimum Insurance F01 Each Deposrtllf
Mem ber Federal IJeposrl lhsurance CorporatiOn

'.

See the fu II lint of these fino Admiral Frttltrs from I
to 2! cubic fl. sizes.

HU.O TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Sunday . to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alsaka and HawaU, was 113
degrees at Blythe, Calif.
Today' slow was41 degrees in
Olympia, Wash.

On this day in history:
In the year 64 A.D., Nero Is
said to have fiddled while
Rmle burned.
In 1938, DoUglas Corrigan
earned the nickname "Wrong
Way" when he landed in
Ireland Instead of California
after a flight from New York.

~

f&gt;.&gt;

;:;:

f:~

'ili

:;.,

~~

~i

~i

~::

~!l

;:i
::;:
~
~~

:!~
::~

:;:;
:;:;

:;~

!f:l
;:;:

m:

:;:;
~~
::::

REVIVAL SET
There will be a revival at
the Chester Church of God
July 18throughJuly24 at 7:30
p.m. nighUy. The public Is
invited to attend and hear the
Rev. James E. Lamb and his
wife Juanita. The Rev.
Michael Southard is pastor.
SAXBE PRACI1CJNG
COLUMBUS (UPI) Former U.S. Attorney
General William B. Saxbe, 61,
pia ns to join the new
Columbus Jaw firm of
Chester, Same, Hoffman and
Willcox Allg. l .
Saxbe, a one4ime U.S.
ambassadcr to India, said
Saturday he would not keep
regular hOURI in Columbus
because he will be traveling a
lot on legal business, making
speeches and spending time
at the .finn's Mechanicsburg
office.
Saxbe, who lives In Mechanicsburg al\cl earlier tlils
lll&lt;llth resigned from a WaShington law finn, said he does
rot Intend to be a Republican
candidate fer governor.
Mrs. McDade spent the night
with her motber, Mrs. Ina
Roush arid Mrs. Gladys
Shields.
Jeff Miller of Middleport
visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Miller.
Mr. and Mril. Clarence
Hepler of Wampun, Pa., were
Fourth of July weekend
guests of Mrs. Feme B.
Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Fo:r and
son David spent Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Orville Harpold
at Belpre.

MEN'S DRESS'·SLACKS-

Sizes 29 to 48 waist - mostly double knit pol; 1 His in
solid colors and patterns. Selected froni our regular s1oct

Men's •10.95 Slacks ......................... •5.48
Men's '11.95 Slacks ......................... '5.91
Men's '12.95 Slacks .......................... '6.48
Men's "13.95 Slacks ......................... '6.91

· Elberfelds In Pomeroy .

•

~~
~l!
~~

IN HOSPITAL
Sharon Smith, Pomeroy, is
a medical patient In the
University
Hospital,
Columbus. Her room nwllber
is Room 255.

July Clearance
Sale
.

Model CF866 8.2 cu. ft.
Compact Freezer
Walnui-Grain Color Lid
DeluKe Zero-Guard freezer
assures beller ma intenance
of lrue-zero cold . Countertop
hetghtl Features slid ing 1111out baskel, mtenor light,
counter-balanced lid.

J
~
~:;:::

Sayre and son, Robbie
Rawlings, left in late June to
return to Germany . after
spending three weeks leave
here . with friends and
realllves. Taking them1o the
airport In Columbus were
Mrs. Mulne Dorst, mother of
Mrs, Sayre, brothers, Donald
Harttmg and Michael Dorst, .
and Larry Sayre, brother of
SP5 Sayre.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

lhel'f1' ~I'P m&lt;~ny COf'l\irnc.ing rt'.'I SOn!t lor ,, ~~~ Cl~poSrr bo• Bu r rhtbnl onr we know ~ rht&gt; c.orhf}terr- ~ Me ol ITIII"d •r s~s you ro

~~

ll:: : : : : : : : : : : : : : -:·: :·:-: : ~= =~=: : ·: :·: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :·: : :·:·:·:·:;:w.~::::=. : ::s::::::: : ~: .~~:*:::::=: :=: : : : : :;s::::~~::::~=:::=~:-:::::::z::::::;;::::::::=~-=~-=J.
RETURN TO EUROPE
SP5 and Mro. Brady E.
Apple Grove News Notes

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Butch Wilson,
Mr. and Mrs . Carroll Chery,1 Rob'In; Mrs . Enna
Balser, Mr.andMrs. Thom~~S Wilson, Mrs. KathrYn Hunt,
Balser, and Tom Balser of Mr. and Mrs. William
Mansfield spent Wednesday Wickline and sons Scott and
and Thursday with Mrs. Alice Kyle, spent the Fourth of July
Balser.
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Vicki
Ables
of
Canal
Charles
Burri of Bolivar
only
on · a
doctor's Winchester spent the Fourth D
am.
prescription . Its use requires of July weekend with her
Calling on Mr. and Mrs.
oo surgery and there are said
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Gerald Hayman Sunday
to be oo side effecll! .
afternoon were Mro. Frances
Basically, it applies Ables and Paul.
Mrs.
Florence
Smith
acStover
and Evelyn Berry of
electrical current through
companied
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Columbus.
They also visited
electrodes secured to the skin
Harvey
Koch
of
Syracuse
to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wallie Stover
at poinll! which will block
Lancaster
where
they
ate
and
Mrs.
Bertha
Robinson.
transmission
of
pain.
School
for
Ministers
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lester
Little
tended
Although
used
most
of Hocking Port visited Mr.
frequently for headaches, Friday and Saturday.
Fourth
or
July
weekend
and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
backaches, arthntic pains
guests
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Elmer
Saturday.
and post and pre-operative
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Foster
pain, 11 also is proving use~l Pickens were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul
Meeks,
son
Henry,
Mr.
andtwochlldrenofColumbus
in rehevmg some chrome
cancer pain, Thomson said. and Mrs. Jim Sabo and · were weekend guests of Mr.
"We firmly believe the daughter, Mary Ann, of Etna and Mrs. Alex Wheeler and
TENS ulitimately will greaUy Green, Ind.; Mamie Warner Mr&amp; Georgia Wolfe.
Mrs. Henry Stewart, Mrs.
reduce the danger of narcotic of AU!ance, Daisy Pauley of
addiction, side reactions and Deerfield, Mabel Pickens of Jim Hupp and sons Billy and
the high cost of prescription Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy, were at Charleston
pain-killing drugs for many of Chuck Anderson and children Sunday to visit Henry
Stewart
at
Memorial
the 20 to 40 million Americans of Mason.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clarence
Hospital.
who have serious pain
Mrs. Dolly Shane, Mrs.
problems, '' the Thomsons Roush of Winfield, · W. Va.,
wereovernightguestso!Mrs.
Maxine
Kirby of Vienna, W.
said.
Till
Webb
Sunday.
Enroute
to
Va.,
Melba
Icenhower,
Staodynamics, Inc., still is
hake
lor
a
.
vacation
M
w
v
Cedar
ason,
.
a., Wild a
small - $1.7 million in 1976 .
sales - but it has grown they called on Mrs. Dorsa Blessing of Albany visited
rapidly and already has Parsons Monday. Other their brother, Henry Stewart
brought out a second product, guests of the Parsons were at Charleston Memorial
a TENS tailored for Mr. and Mrs. Bob RUssell, Hospital where he will unMr. and Mrs. Steve Hagey, dergo surgery for a tumor on
biofeedback technology.
Stephanie and Brad, Mr. and the brain.
Mrs. Don Russell, all of
Mrs. Lillie Hart, Beth Ann
Wolfpen. .
and Brice, visited Mr. and
PROD PROMISED
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell and Mrs. Gerald Hayman SunCOLUMBUS (UPI)'- U. daughter Lorna visited Mr. da y.
S. Sen. Howard Met- and Mrs. Paul Ervin, BaShan
Mr. and Mrs . Philip
:z:enbaum, Gov. .lames A. Rd., the Fourth of July.
Bosstmg of Millvale, Pa.,
Rhodes and Ohio House
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman ' visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe and childreri were Fourth of Smith Sr. Thursday.
pledged today to work even July weekend guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley
more closely together Ia and Mrs. Gerald Hayman. On and children of Columbus
securlag more federal Monday they all attended a spent the weekend with Mr.
cookout at the home of Mr. and Mro. Russell Findley and
dollars for Ohio.
Tbe three met privately and Mrs. Robert Hart at• assisted Mr. and Mrs. Roger
for about an hour today Ia Racine. Others attending Roush in picking tomatoes
Rhodes' orflce. After tbe · were Mrs. Linda Jewell and Monday.
meeting, Melzeubaum daughter Barbara, Letart, W.
Mrs. Gls.dyll Shields, Mrs.
pledged to be a "geaUe Va.; Gloria Whitlach and Bob Hill Mrs. Debbie Gates
prod at the washington
Denie of The Plains; Mrs. and son' Ricky visited Mrs.
level."
Mindy Seymore, two sons, of Faye Lampen at Portsmouth,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. who is confined to PortsAllen Cunningham and mouth Hospital.
daughter, Racine, and Susie
Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mrs.
8ellers.
Edna Roush Racine, Mrs.
Cyclists given
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Debbie Gat~ and son Ricky
Hayman and son Keith spent of Wheelersburg, called on
injury treatment
a recent weekend at Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush.
Walter McDade, Troy, was
NEW HAVEN A Mrs. Ted Hayman's at
Westerville
and
enjoyed
a
Sunday
night guest of Mr.
Pomeroy man and woman
camping
at
Cedar
Point.
and
Mrs.
Herbert Roush.
riding on a motorcycle
coUided with an automobile
on USR 33 near here Sunday
afternoon. No one was
seriously injured.
The Mason County sheriff's
department said John L.
Warner, 19, driving the cycle
with Celia McCoy, 25, his
passenger collided witi. ji;"
automob!le driven
u~
Nicholas R. Pieraccinni, 42,
Uma, Ohio. Warner was
charged with failing to
maintain control. Both were
treated and released from an
Atbens hospital.

Health
•
testmg
underway

-·

Testing began Monday at •
the public multiphasic health
dlnic being held at the Meigs
Junior High School in Middleport.
Registration for the Health
Screening clinic which is free
of charge has now reached
400. Sessions wlll be' today
through Wednesday from 9
a.m. to noon and I to 4 p.m.
and Thursday from I to 4 p.m.
and 5 to 8 p.m.
The heahh program is open
to aU Meigs County residents
of all ages. The only charge
would be for optional blood
tests If desire~ . for the
minimal charge of $6.50.
other tests, aU free of
charge, are: blood preS.ure,
vision, Dental Hearing and
Speech, Scoliosis (curvatur~
of the spine), urinalysis, and
tuberculosis. Fac!Uties are
available to give children
innoculations. Innoculation
histories must he brought to
the clinic. On Thursday a
Podiatrist (foot doctor) will
consult persons with foot
problems.
·The program is not a
substitution for a complete
physical ex.aminatlon by any
family doctor, but will allow
many major health problems
to be discovered.
Persons with problems will
be referred to a personal
physician or appropriate
specialist. Appointments
must be made for each
person. Appointments may
be made by calling 992-7886.

-·

RECEMNG COUNSELING is Unda Carpenter with son Randy on her lap from Paul Haput a medical student
at Ohio Uhiversity.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thuroday through
Saturday, a chance of
thundershowers Thursday
and Friday and fair
Saturday. Coutblued hot
oud humid,- with blghs Ia
the low or mid 90s and lows
Ia the upper 60s or lower
70s.
:::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::: ::::::::: ::: ::::: : :: ::·

Weather
Hazy, hot and humid today,
tonight and Wednesday, with
a chance or afternoon or
evening thundershowers.
Highs Wednesday in the mid
90s and tows tohight to mid
70s.
Probability
of
precipitation 30 per cent
today, tonight and Wed- ·
nesday.,

I

•

a1 y

entine

_________________________________ ______________________________
VOL XXVIII

NO. 66

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JULY 19, 1977

INews. . . in Briefsi

Kt. 33 due to the Silver Bridge
being closed. He said weight
limit signs should be placed
on the highway.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
pointed out, however, that
U.S. 33 is maintained by the
State Highway Department
and goes through Pomeroy
and . across the PomeroyMason Bridge. He said he has
asked for financial assistance

to have Route 33 resurfaced
in 1978, and that Pomeroy can
not place load limit signs on
Route 33.
Council felt that trucks
shOuld not use village owned
streets but to stay on state
maintained highways.
In other busmess council
approved an estimated
budget for 1978 to be submitted to the budget com-

Staff hired by board
Arthur Arnold was hired as
Vocational Agriculture Instructor for the coming year
to replace Alan Holter who
resigned, as did Lois Ohba, a
teacher. Arnold was hired by
two-thirds Meigs Local vote
and one-third Eastern Local
vote for the joint vocational
program.
ln other business the board
voted to @lve the clerk permission to request an advance draw of $250,000 fo•
investment purposes, and to
enlarge Blue Cross Coverage
to
include
maternity
benefits to single policy
holders.

mission and designated the Columbus and Southern Ohio
Fanners Bank and Savings Electric Co. in regard to its
Co. depository for inactive contract witlt the village
funds and the Pomeroy which exp1red July 4. A
· National Bank for active representative of the electric
funds, both for a two year company will meet with
period.
council on Aug. 1 to discuss a
The resignation of Carl D. new contract. The letter
Hysell as extra duty warned that rates wm be
policeman was accepted. increased Council asked that
Hysell in a letter to council the village solicitor, Fred
stated 'that he is leaving the Crow, be at the Aug. I
area and bas accepted em- meeting.
ployment in the state of
A letter was also read from
Maryland. Hysell is also the Crow, Cro:w, · and Porter,
juvenile - probation officer in attorneys, in regard to the
Meigs County.
Tracy Whaley res1dence on
A letter was read from the Uncoln Hill. The letter stated

Letters from the Manpower
Training agency adv1s1ng
that funds for the adult
mining classes would be
terminated within the comng
year and from Rio Grande
College Community College
thanking the school district .
for its cooperation with
classes held at Meigs Jr. High
School
were
also
·acknowledged. The Clerk was
authorized to advertise for
bids on tires, gasoline, rue!
oil,

CO&amp;l,

1

milk, bread, and

lunchroom supplies.
Basketball coach Ronald
Logan was authorized to
attend an OWE Coordinators
. workShop to prepare a course
·, of study for the coming year
and the board acted on a
request from Randy Hunt,
high school band director, to
take the hand to D1sney
a youth may become unruly World in Florida sometime
with his or her parents and next sununer. Approval was
seek shelter elsewhere. given fot the trip and forfund
Recently three persons in- raising projects to be carried
volved in three different out by band members to
incidents resulted in arrest finance the trip.
_
by the juvenile officer for
The board also heard from
contributing to the unruliness a parent of a high school
of minors, Hysell reported . student on policies carried
Hysell asks that if there is out by a certain high school
any question in regard to a teacher. It was recomyouth having parental con- mended by District Supt.
sent to stay at another Dowler that a conference be
resident the parents should arranged with High Principal
be contacted. If they cannot · Principal James Diehl and
be reached the juvenile or- the concerned parties within
ficer or police Should be the next week.
notified of the youth's
Discussion on granting bus
whereabouts, Hysell said.
(Continued on page 10)

Juveniles sent up

' EAST MEIGS
The
Eastern Local Board of
Education adopted a budget
for the next school year at a
meeting July 15, but according to John Riebel,
looked ahead to add contingencies because school
might not be open.
.
The budget anticipates
receipts of $1,104,497.27, and
total
expenditures
of
$1,112,106.65.
Breakdown of the budget :
administration, $5!,000 ;
instruction, $565,000;

coor-

dinate ·activities, $9,500;
libraries, $17,000; transportation of pupils, $129,500;
other auxiliary agencies;
$158,000; operation of school
plant, $145,000; maintenance
of school plant, $18,100.65 ;
debt service, $19,000.
ln other business the board
named Clifford Longenette,
Rt. I, Reedsville, as a
member of the board
replacing Dave Smith who
resigned in June.
other transactions were :
Approved
Mrs.
Pat
Shriver's request to transfer
from the Title I Reading
Program to the ·third grade
teacher at Riverview; approved the transfer of funds
from some appropriations

Norwegiaitized Oeveland girl
visi~s regularly in ;Bend area

CINCINNATI - THE FOLGER (l)FFEE CO., THE
NATION'S second largest roaster, Monday cut the wholesale
price lor vacuum coffee by ll cents a pound arxl decreased its
instant coffee by 2 cents an ounce.
BY JUDY OWEN
The pricing action, effective immediately, reduced the list&gt; Mr. and Mrs. Everett 0.
price for vacuun\Folger's to $3.48 a ~d i'"a a-llk&gt;unce jar Rail, Mason, W. Va., who own
of instant to $$.25.
"-.?
.
and operate Rail's Ben
Franklin in Middreport,
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT CARTER'S .White House recently · had two special
lias U8ed goverrunent planes far less frequently than has his guests in their home, Mrs.
111011t recent predeceS80rs, according to spokesman Jody Ole-Jorgon (Kathy) Gilbo,
Powell.
and 11er two year old son, Tor
Powell said Monday that in ll)e five ll}bnths Since Jan. 20 Erik, of Norway.
there were 119 flights aboard Air Force One or other
These visitors from "the
authcrlzed presidential military aircraft, includlilg trips taken land of the midnight sun" are
by the Presklent and VIce President Walter Mondale and their members of an "infamilies, ccmpared to (IQO..«JJ fllihts by the preVious ternational" family and cloae
admlnlllratkll In the ll8lllt! time period.
friendll of the Ralls'. Kathy, a
native of Clevelarxl, met her
roLUMBUS - BrATE AUDITOR TIIOMAS Ferguson Norwegian husband while he
lllld 'Tv-'aJ that ui per1011s have been named as suspecta in was rooming with the Ralls'
11M II' pi ..-lpl of over $1 mllllon In Aid to Dependent' son, Tom, at Kent State
&lt;lllldraiiMDIII.tl.
.
University. Ole visited with
Feraa- lllld the names come fnm mlltch-ups or names Mr. and Mrs. Rail often in
of pet..., GD county AiJC roles and thoae paying into Ohio's those days, as weekend
PUblle Employea Retlrement System and the SchOol Employes jaunts home to Norway were
Rellranlnl SYI!Om. Audit reporl.l for counties released not euctly practical. He
~ wbere no r 'fiN were follld ~ ADeo, Athens, came to think of thl!lll as his
3 I I, Nwl,a, O.wfard, ar-, GuerlliiJ, Hancock, "American parents.''
f,apa, Marlon, ~r. Milml, Morpn,
Today, after living in
Ollaaa, MDiile, FwrrJ, Plb, PQtnlm, t lSS, Tuacltrawaa, Van Norway for more than five

years, Ole and Kathy, with
~ son Erik and four- year oi&lt;L
daughter Christine, an
adopted Korean child, stop by
the Ralls whenever they
come to the States to visit
Kathy's parents in the West
Cleveland
suburb
of
Lakewood.
Kathy came alone with the
two children this trip, leavmg
Ole In· the Norwegian
"gentle" mountains on a
biking expedition, as he like
many of his countrymen,
lovea the outdoors. He hopes
to come lliQOg next year,
however.
The Oslo resident, still an
'American citizen, had many
interesting-epics to tell about
life in Norway. She said
tha!, "'Because we like both
countries equally well," the
decision for her and her
-husband, a Rank Xerox
(European division of Xeroxl
employee, to choose Norway

over America as home for several large cases of
them and their children was Pampers _through customs
not easy.
' ~:Which almost dido 't pass
Ole had been in the U.S. for mspect10n.
seven years 'nd after they .. Ther~ a;~e oth~r American
were married decided to
good1es
wh1ch Kathy
return home . What was stocks up on during her visits
planned as a year long visit .as well. Arriving with several
turned into a permanent empty smtcases, they are
venture.
carried back packed with
Since living in Norway, the staples such as Jello and
Gilbos have conie to America chocolate chip cook1es, a real
nearly every year for a visit

that there was a d~ect in the
roadway which Whaley
contends should be repaired
before additional damage is
done. Council will take the
matter under advisement.
Mayor Andrews reported
that complaints have heen
lodged about road conditions
on Pleasant Ridge, Union
Heights and Uberty Lane.
The mayor informed council
that the county grader will be '
used to grade the roads
mentioned.
Councilman Harry Davis
reported that 10 inch tile is
(Continued on page 10)

Eastern budget approved

a different way of life

a ... .,.._.,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

....._

Pomeroy asks levy renewal

Pomeroy Council Monday
night voted to place on tbe
ballot a two mill renewal tax
levy for current expenses for
five years. It was emphastzed
that the two mills are· a
renewal and will he used for
·~:::::::::::::::::o:.":=:::::::;:;:::;;;:;:.:"&lt;:·:·:·:·!·!•!·!·;;:::.:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~
»
~
the general operation of the
v1Uago.
Councilman Harold Brown
brought
up the problem about
....
By United PresslnteruaUooal
I
heavy
truck
traff1c on U.S.
LONDON -ANDREW YOUNG, THE U. S. ambassador to
the United Nations, today said Rhodesia's decisiOn to hold new
parliamentary elections WIIS a "desperate move" on the part
of Premier Iaii Smith. "It is just another confused lan,Smith
reaction," Yo~U~g said, of the Rhodesian leader's
announcement lie would call elections two years early in hopes
•
of achieving an internal setUement with black moderates.
The Meigs Local School
"It is still the same unpredictable, unreliable Ian Smith
making another desperate move. I am afraid that it is much Board, meeting in regular
too dangerous_and much too late for that kind of action." (See session Tuesday night, hired
Smith's llcheme, Page 2) .
severa l persons on one-year
contracts, accepted the
YOUNGSTOWN, ORIO -A SECOND ABANDONED mine resignations of two others,
air shaft opened Monday, swallowing the front lawn of a and designated the Pomeroy
ilouthwest side resident .. Nation~! Bank as depository
aty officials said a hole about 30 feet wide and 60 feet deep for the coming year's payroll..
was dlscovere(l in the front lawn of the Mary Davis residence.
Hired were Harold White
No one was injured. The cave-in OC\.'IIITed ex.actly five weeks and Jean Wood as bus drivers
after the floor Of a garage belonging to Joyce Tanner, who lives for the 1977-78 school year
in the south side about five miles from Ms. Davis, fell into and upon recommendation
another mine Shaft.
from Supt. Charles Dowler,
Wylie Evans, an Ohio
WASHINGTON- THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMEN'f University graduate from
has stiffened rules covering teSting or cattle imported from Lancaster, was given the post
Canada to protect American herds from a costly disease, or Assistant Band Director
brucellosis. Dr. Francis Mulhern, head of the department's for one year.
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, said new
regulations include stronger herd-health certification
requirements, new vaccination standards, tighter Shipping
rules and unHorm herd and individual brucellosis test rules for
imported Canadian cattle.
The. new rilles were adopted after recent outbreaks of
brucellosis - particularly in New York and Pennsylvania Juvenile officers Carl R.
were traced back to cattle from Canada. AgricultW'e Hysell and Janet Morris
Secretary Bob Bergland liaid recently that Canadian officials removed three young people
were anxious to COOPerate in stamping out the disease.
to th,e Ohio Youth Commission today afier comUNITED NATIONS - THE SECURITY COUNCIL'S mittment by the juvenile
approval of Vietnam's application to join the United Nations is court for unruliness, violation
assured with the United Nations is assured with the United or probation, and delinquent
States, its enemy during the bitter Irxlochina War, agreeing lQ acts. ·
drop its veto.
A fourth ymi'th is being held
At least 23 countries, including the United States, have In
detention
pending
asked to speak m behalf of Vietnam at a Security CoWICU placement by the O.Y.C.
meeting today, U. N. source,s said Monday. The vote on
Officer Hysell issued the
Vietnam's membership was not expected until late afternoon.' following warning:
"Any person who permits
WASillNGTON - AGRICULnJRE SECRETARY Bob persons under 18 y~ars or age
Bergland has asked House members to adopt' a pepding $11 to stay overnight at their
biUion farm and food stamp bill with no increases in Its major home should first be sure the
fann support and food aid provisions, a congressional source youth has parental consent.
said today.
Hysell explained that often
The House today scheduled debate on tbe legislation which
Includes comparatively moderate hikes over existing farm
supports and a sweeping overhaul of the stamp program.
Leaders hope to pass the measure by.Wednesday or Thursday.
Some farm belt Democrats have condemned the bill which
emerged from the Houae Agriculture Committee as too weak
to belp fanners suffering from grain surpluses and low prices.

wep. w-. Wayne m1 Wood.

'

COORDINATOR for the free health clinic is Joyce Miller, left, who is sliawn with Mrs.
Raymond Teaford at the clinic Monday .The clinic will be held now through Thursday.

Americ~n "Delicacy,h to

and in 1973 were located in Norweg~ans.
Washington, D. c. as part of a
The language was no
Xerox exchange program. barrier to the Kent State grad
During that time they who now teaches It as well as
adopted Christine then six • English to men and women
months old, an&lt;l. 'Erik was from all walks of life, from
born.
ambassadors to school
"(Ole and I) came alone children. What was a surprise
and returned to Norway two was that while attending the
·years later with two children University of Oslo, working
and aU that went with them," towards degrees in both
Kathy said, laughing, languages, Kathy had to take
recalling that because EngliSh along w1th the rest of
disposable·diapers aren~ the the students and found it just
sa111~ in Norway she hauled ·
(Continued on page 10)

.;

with balances to other ap- retirement for the months or
propriations to balance ac- 'July and August as required
counts.
by law; authorized the clerk
Also, authorized Mrs . to request an advanced draw
Boston, clerk, to pay teachers
(ConUnued on page 10)

.

Help to repair
roads expected
ffiONTON, Ohio (UP! )- It said there is a lack of coalwas on to West Virginia today hauling cars.'
·
for an 18-member U.S.
"It's possible we may be
De pa r t m e n t
o f able to get federal grants for
Transportation task force private companies to
which is lhspectifig roads in a increase the production of
four...tate region with an eye coal cars," said Sullivan.
towards upgrading the coal- "We have to provide them,
hauling system.
that's for sure."
The task force mem,Rers
With the group earlier
toured Consolidation Coal Monday in Penns~lvania
Co . • s G e o r g e t o w n • were Sen. H. John Heinz, R- .
preparation plant near Cadiz Pa., Rep. John Murtha, Din Harrison County Monday P a . , Penn sy Iva ni a
afternoon before going on to Transportation Secreta.ry
Ironton for the evening.
James Wilson, and several
Transportation Secretary state legislators and - local
Brock Adams instructed the officials . They toured 90
task force to inspect coal miles of coal-use roads in
trasportation facilities in Somerset and Cambsrla
' light of President Carter's counties in Pennsylvania.
plans_ for increased coal
At one point along the way,
produciion in the U.S.
Murtha suggested that $75
Consolidation officials ex- million Should he provided to
plained how the preparation communities nationwide by
plant operates and noted that the federal government to
27 million tons of coal pay for coal-use roads, and
produced from seven mines Sullivan commented that the
in Belmont and Harrison figure was a ''modest" one.
counties have been Shipped
The caravan stopped
from it since 1967.
severaltimes, arxl once many
"This operation is quite of its members picked up
impress!Ve ," said Leslie pieces of broken !llgh.,.ay.
"When you can pick the
Lamm, executive director of
the
federal
highway roads apart with your bare
administration . "The coal hands, it's clear that a coal
can be produced. We have truck laden with 37 !Ons of
seen !bat. What we have to do coal Is going to be much
Is see that it is brought to the ~ tougher on'tl!e-rollds;" noted
consumer at a reasonable Heinz.
cost. "
Heinz advocated a joint
Ohio officials told Lamm effort by energy officials, the
that it could cost $110 million Labor Department ani! the
or
toupgradetheroadsinOhio Department
so they could harxlle the Transportation.
anticipated increase in coalTransportation Secretary
rellited traffic. Lamm said be Brock Adams was to join the
expects the cost could go even task .force Tuesday night In
higher than that if the area is Hazard, Ky., to address a
to increase production as dinner given by Kentucky
Carter wants.
Gov. Julian Carroll. Also
The federal officials said expected were Govs. John
they expect to issue their Rockefeller of West Virginia,
report in September and it Milton
Shapp
of
will probably call for Pennsylvania and Ray
widening existing roads and Blanton of Tepnessee, and
reinforcing them.
Sens. Walter Huddleston and
"The roads appear to be Wendell Ford of KentuciCy.
available, but need a great
Adams plans to advise
deal of improvement," said President arxl Congress on
Lamm.
steps to "Insure that
Jack Stillivan, federal rail- adequate transportation
road administrator, noted capacity will be in place to
that the rall lines jn the area move coal when neede&lt;l."
appear to. be sufficient but

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