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                  <text>8- The DaU;r Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 14,1976

News •. in Briefs
(·

(Cootlnued from paae 11
family Sunday . 1-at, his bride of two months , has stayed at the
hospital with hlrn since his admission Thursday, sleeping in
another bed in the two-bed hospit.ai room.

COLUMBUS - BECKY MARTONE , 16, OF Columbus
Whetstone 'High School, is running against Ruth Page, 17, of
&amp;mbury Big Walnut High School , for the Nallonalist party
gubernatorial nomination Tuesday when the Buckeye Girls'
State election is held.
Buckeye Girls' state, an exercise in democracy sponsored
annll8lly by the American Legion Auxiliary, opened at Capital
University Saturday when 1,290 Ohio high school seniors
checked ln . The two girls won party endorsements at Sunday's
mock political caucus which considered the tO-member field .
Endorsed by the Federalist party was its main candidates
for governor for the Tuesday primary were Jennifer Tasnik of
Warren and Marsha Lineback of Newcomerstown.

•

REHEARSAL SET
Meigs High sChool band
members will hold practice
sessions Wednesday and
Thursday at the high school
band room at 5 p.m. in
preparation for the Big Bend
Regatta. Band camp music
will also be distribu ted
Dwight Goins, director ,
announced today.

.MEIGS THEATRE
Tonightthru Thursday
Jun' 14 thru June 14
NOT OPEN

Fri.-Sat.-Sun.
June 21-26 -27
Walt otsney 1s
BLACKBEARD'S GHOST
Dean Jones. Peter Ustinov ,

Susanne

Pleshette, Elsa

Lanchester. Joby Baker.
Elliott Reid.
!GI

Show Starts 7 p.m.

Udall

Denials

(Continued !rem ..ae I)

(Continued from pa1e I)
th e scene under false
pretenses and that he was
"obviously !he target of some
trap or set up to make it
appear I was doing
something wrong."
Police released a transcr ipt
of the conversation , which
was tape recorded. It showed
Howe initiating the exchange,
describing the type of sex he
wanted and how much he was
willing to pay.
He offered $20 for oral sex
and intercourse.
Hays, the original congressional figure in the scandal,
remained hospi talized In
Ba rnesville, Ohio, after
taki ng an overdose of
sleeping pills. His physician
said it was up to Hays to say
whether the overdose was an
accident.
Ha ys was listed in
satisfactory co ndition. He
was expected to -stay in the
hospital for at least another
week and then spend seven to
10
days
at
home
recuperating.
Seymour Feiz, a lawyer
handling Miss !lay's literary

AUTO WRECKED
POINT PLEASANT - The
Mason County She riff 's
Department investigated a
one car accident early this
morning nea r Ash to n.
According to Deputy Delner
Roush IJI, John C. Hensley,
Tuppers Plains, apparently
fell asleep, ran off the road on
llie left side, crossed the
highway , and went over an
embankment on the right
side. Hensley was not injured business, said 600,000 cOpies
or cited. Estimated damage of her book on Washington
have been "disposed of" and
to his car wa s $500.
that a second printing of
perhaps one million copies
has been ordered.
ASK TOWED
The book, "The Washington
Marriage licenses were
Fringe
Benefit," will be pubissued to Robert Ernes t
lished
in
the fall.
Thorl a, 22 , Racine, and
Bertha Inez Morrlo;, 18, Rl. 3,
Racine, and Stephen Hiller
Nease, 1 8 ~ Minersv ille, and
Jeannie Dianna Sellers, 19,
MASON - WiUiam Junior
Portland .
Jacobs, 69, Ma son, W. Va.,
died early Sunday morning
while at work at the Meigs
· Inn In Pomeroy . The
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the Inn about
7: 15a.m. but Mr. Jacobs was
dead upon the squad's
• arrival. Death was attributed
to a hear t attack.
Mr . Jacobs was born Feb.
19, 1907 in Meigs Coun ty, the
son of the Ia le Clish and
Myrtle Adams Jacobs. He is
survived by his wife, Willia ;
two step-sons Arthur Roush,

Ohio
crops
need
•
ram

Ford returned to the White
House la te Sunday from
Camp David, the presidential
retreat in the nearby Catoctin
Mountains.
Reagan said in a UPI
interview Carter's big lead
was a plus for him because
Carter would be unable to
attack the Washington
establishment if Reagan
were heading the GOP ticket.
"The Republicans are the
party of fiscal
re sponsiblli ty," he said .
"How do we defend in the last
22 months the grea test
_defi&amp;its in our nation's hisiory?"
Carter led prayers - "let
By JOHN T. KADY
there be no disharmony
United Press Inlemallooal
among us" - al his
The
executive vice
hometown church Sunday, president of the Ohio Farni
and later issued a s\atemenl Bureau Federatio n said
reaffirming his support for today farmers in the Buckeye
the
Equal
Rights Stale "need rain in a lot of
Amendment.
places in a matter of days" or
He announced crea tion of a they will face som~ real
special women's committee problems with their crops.
to advise his staff on women 's
" It 's bad," C. William
issues and to seek qualified Swank said. "We need rain in
women to serve in his a lot of places in a matter of
administration.
days just to bring on a crop.
" As president, I intend to We don't say it's critical at
see passage of the Equal this point but it is looking bad.
Rights Amendment," Carter
"We have a phrase in
said, reca lling he had worked agriculture, 'no rain no
unsuccessfully for the grain','' he said. " And that
amendment's approval in the just about sizes it up.
Georgia legislature while he
"The wheat crop is pretty
was governor ,
well made and it seems

shorter in size," he said .

"Whatit (lack of rain) will do
to yields, I don't know , It
doesn't appear to be the size
Mason, and Harry Roush, thai would make a bumper
Minersville; a sister, Mrs. crop.
"When yo~ get into the
Mae Van lnwagen, Pomeroy,
other
crops we have ail kinds
and several nieces and
of
conditions,
" said Swank.
nephews.
"
We
have
some
In the
. Mr. Jacobs was a member
northwest
where
.there
is
of the Clifton United
apparently
enough
rain
.
Methodist Church.
Some
in
the
southweest
Funeral services will be
held at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday at where rain is going to make
the Foglesong Funeral Home all the difference in a matter
with the Rev . 0 . B. Hatcher of days.
"We have some places
officiating. Burial will be in
where
they need rain jus! to
Lone Oak Cemetery at Point
get
the
crop out of the
Pleasant. Friends may call at
ground,"
he said. " Just
the funeral home at any lime.
getting the crops going is
going to be a major factor.
"Everything is dry," he
said . "Right around the
ColumbuS area we are
especially dry.
Pontiac, Ill.; four sisters,
"We have got problems,"
Mrs. Ernestine Folden, he said. "Even a good
Rutland ; Mrs. Virginia thundershow er helps. II
Faudree and Mrs. Laura keeps you going while you
Mill, both of Mason and Mrs. wait for a soaker. When
Marjorie McDaniel, Clifton; farmcrsarehurtingforrain a
a brother, William, Mason; heavy dew is a welcome
two step-sons, Jim Hall, lliing ."
Mason; Woodrow Hall,
The National Wea ther
Summersville, W. Va.; two Service said today early
step~aughters, Mrs. UlUan morning
temperatur es
Tucker, Rocky Mountain, ranged from 73 at Toledo and
Va.; Mrs. Dandra Patterson, Cincinnati to 64 at Marietta.
Letart Falls ; a grandson,
The NWS said humid and
Nathan Reginold , and a warm weather
would
granddaughter, Erica Elias. continue throughout Ohio into
Funeral services will be Tuesday and a few
held atl0:30 a.m. Tuesady at lliundershowers may develop
the Foglesong Funeral Home over the northern part of the
with the Rev. James Lewis stale later today and tonight.
and the Rev. George Hoschar
More widespread thunderofficiating. Burial will be in shower activity is likely. on
the Graham Cemetery . Tuesday.
Friends may call at the · Temperatures were
fun eral home at any time.
expected to top the 90 degree
mark aga in today over much
of
the state with another
BOOSTERS TO MEKT
warm,
sticky night In store
SYRACUSE
The
tonight.
Syracuse - Minersville
Cloudiness and showers
baseball boosters will meet
will
probably
keep
Tuesday evening at8 p.m. at
temperatures
in
the
mid
and
the Syr acuse Municipal
upper
80s
over
most
of
the
Building.
state on Tuesday.
The extended outlook for
CAlLED TO INN
Wednesday through Friday
The Pomeroy Emergency calls for a chance of showers
Squad answered a call to'lhe each day with highs In the 80s
Meigs Inn at 7:10 J.m. and upper 70s with lows
Sunday for Bill Jacobs who mostly in tbe 60s. •
was dead upon the squad's
arrival.

Wi11iam Jacobs died Saturday

John Elias Jr. died Saturday
MASON - John (Poodle)
Elias, Jr., 51, Mason, died
Saturday evening at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
During World War II, Mr .
Elias was a merchant
seaman and a coal miner

following his service years.
He was born July 16, 1924 in
Mason, son of the late John
and Ethel Fox Elias.
SUfvlving are his wife,
Margaret ; a son, John,
Middleport; three daughters,
Mrs . Tammie Childress,
Columbus ; Mrs.
Kim
Reginald, an&lt;j Bambi Elias,

,,.,,.,

on the complete line of HIGHLV EFFICIENT,
QUIET AND DEPENDABLE

A

ROOM AIR CONDITIONERS
7.0 EER (Energy Effi ciency Rating) . Amana
control panel gives full
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humidity and ai r movement. Vi b rat ion s reduced for quieter operation . A real value!

Mod~:~ l

6-SPMW

,t,.,,..,, 6,000 BTU

·"'

- usually
" Summer vacation

puts the kids in the pink
and Daddy in the red ."
If yo u' re spendlng your
vaca tion at hom ~ th is
year , why not ta ck le one of

Easy insta llation with
Amana Instant Moun t.
Amana Electro-coa tin g
finish gives up to 3
times more prote ction
than ordinary Flo-coat
systems. 6.6 EE R (Energy Efficiency Rating).

those jobs you've been
putt ing
off ?
The
" FRIENDLY ONES" will
be happy to suppl y you with
both the materials and th e
.know-how .
Mode l 8-SPMW

Am""" 8,000 BTU

?OMEROY CEMENl
BLOCK
The Department Store of
Builttin

Since 191S.

Case No . 21,8lO
Estate
of
MARCIA
I.
HARRISON , Deceased .
Notice is hereby given that
Ch a r lolle A. Brown , of 342

Beech Street , Middleport ,

Ohio , has been duly appointed
E xec utri l( of the E slat e of
Mar c ia I . Harr is on , d ece ased ,
late of Meigs Co unty , Ohio .

Cre ditors ar e req uired to
fil e their cla im s w ilh sa id
f ictuciarv within lhr(c months .
Date d thi s Jrd day of Ju ne
1976 .
Mil n ning

o . Webster

!61 7.

Model 21 6-JSPW

Play it oafe anti: mre
It ma ( be time to
hove your preeent•
policy updated,

Let'• folic Soon .

INGELS FURNITURE

DALE C. WMNER

MIDDLEPORT

992 -2143
102 W.

(

Drs.' Enjoy DOllars ran the

u
six furlongs
in I •:10 3-5 to pick
Court of Common Pleas,,
.
Pr obate Division Up the ftrst priZe of $9,615,
and paid $14.60. The 1-10-7
14. 2 1, ltc
trifecta returned $5,803.80:
The 2-9 daily double of High
Eyes and Sale Action paid
$1,490. The 6,310 fans bet .

Stop in today .and see th e complete line of
Anlana highly efficient room air conditioners.

192-2635

EDGE VICI'ORY
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UPI ) - Drs.' Enjoy Dollars,
a 4-year-old who won two
sta kes races recently at
Hazel Park, nipped Strike the
Anvil, the favorite, in the 16th
running of the $16,025
Flintstone Stakes Sunday at
Thistledown.

J dg •

PRO!ECTMN
YOU NEED,t,.,,.. 18,000 BTU

'
Holler Medical Cuter
(Blrtlls, JUlie II)
Mr . and Mrs . Gerald
Cal dwell , daughter,
WeUaton ; Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Pavls, daughter, Langsville;
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Shaffer,
son, Minersville ; Mr. and
Mrs .
Junior
Tucker,
daughter, Grimms Landing,
W.Va.
( Blrllts, JUile 1%)
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Gay, son, Gallipolis.
(Birllta, JUile 13)
Mr . and Mrs . Victor
Counts, daughter, Racine ;
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Mont-gomery, Jr., daughter,
Crown .a ty.

Pomerof ; Betty Hamons:
Reedsvile ; James Sean,
Middleport; Marlin Cunningham, Racine ; James
Hamlon, Letart, W. Va.;
Brenda
Templeton,
Pomeroy ; Wealey Clark,
Racine ; Robert BlaaeU, Long
Bottom; Norman St. Clair,
Reedsville.
Saturday Dlschargea Lee Rhodes, Ralph Parcell,
John Hudak, Mildred Arnold,

Vlnton ,

Corporations hit by 12 letter bombs
By United Preas International
Alleut 12'1etter bmtba one of which exploded and injured 4

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Mrs .
John McClure, Leon; Lamont
Hanshaw, Lakin; Mrs. James
McCarthy, Ewlngton ~ 0 .;
Mrs. William Zuspan,
Mason; Tammy Morrison,
Glen-Daniels, W. Va.; Troy
Bonecutter , Leon; Mrs.
George Stobert, daughter ,
Racine; Christopher Terry
arid Kelly Angel, New Haven;
Mrs. David Varian, Point
Pleasant; Mrs . James
Randolph, Henderson;
Harold Smithson, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Rex Wears,
daughter, Henderson; Gerald
Northup, Gallipolis Ferry ;
Robert Smith, Henderson;
Mrs. Ronda! Cornell, West
Columbia; Mrs. William
North, Henderson; Mrs .
Roberr Shamblin, Hen ders on ; Charles Jeffers,
Mason ; Mrs. Lewis White,
Reedsville, 0 .; Mia Ran·
dolph, Leon; Micrnoel Taylor,
N:ew Haven ; Andrey Lee.
Point Pleasant;
Mrs .
Garland Bostic, Gallipolis
Ferry ; Connie Marlin ,
Henderson; Gay Young ,
Chillicothe, 0 .; Vinton
Cossin, Leon; Mrs. Homer
Ray, Point Pleasant; Shirly
Lanier, Gallipolis ; William
Hunt, New Haven; Charles
Rogers, Point Pleasant ;
Margaret McComas, Ashton;
Mrs. Homer Sowards ,
Hurricane ; Mrs . Beulah
McCom~. s,

Karen Sutherland, Ro!Ue
Sayre, Hiram Pauli:;,
Randall McMillen.
Sunday Admlulou Meclla' Schoorlover, Rutland;
Justin Molden, RuUand ;
Sampson Hall, Syracue ;
Marie Wallon, Polneroy ;,
Kimberly Conrad, Muon ~
Ann e II e Lambe r I ,Harrlaonvllle; HallleBarrlnger, Middlepart.
Sunday Dlachar1e1 .!!Edith McCoy, Ava Gilkey,
Emma Searles, Marla
Wagner.
•

-

BY UNrrED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
WOLFSBURG, WEST GERMANY - VOI..KS9iAGEN Is
waiting for New Stanton, Pa ., to accept its conditions lnclwllng f30 million in new highways and railroads - before
a~reelng to locate lt.. first U. S. assembly plant in an unused
Chrysler Corp. plant there.
Company chief Toni Sclunuecker Monday assured a
meeting of the Foreign Press Association 'that New Stanton
was the first choice for the site, but stressed that the _f11111l
decision depended on Pennsylvartla 's acceptance of an
incentive package. "The conditions to be met are on the level
of Infrastructure," Scbmuecker, a former manager at Ford,
said. "We are asking for a railroad line and a new highway."

Jump into
Summer

Main

Pomeroy

$669,248. '

CONRAD'S SON HIT
AVAWN , Calif. (UPI ) Christopher Conrad, 19-yearold son of actor William
Conrad, was hit by a. tractor
at a weekend alumni party
for the Catalina Island
School.
He was reported in good
condition today with a
dislocated hip and cuts and
bruises.
Officials said Conrad, who
graduated from the school
last v•ar, fell under the
tractor while kidding around
with friends Saturday night.
(

e
VOL XXVIII

" NO. {1

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

- TUESDAY, JUNE 1?. 1976

Sure-to-get•.noticed jumpsuit plays it cool with conceale~
front zip. Toni Todd turns it out in rounds of bicolor-tobright stripes of polyester doublo knit. Wide 'self-sash.
Machine wash-dry. Black or Navy with Bright.. 8-18.
'·
DRESS DEPARTMENT, SECOND FLOOR ·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

WASHINGTON - REP.ALLENHOWE'S colleagues were
urging him to leave politics today and the Utah Democrat at the· center of Waahmgton's&lt;latfttt sa &amp;eandal - was
exp!cted to withdraw as ~ candidate for re-election. Howe, 49,
was arrested in ,Salt Lake City Saturday night for allegedly
soliciting a police decoy prostitute.
Sen. Frank Mpss, O.Utah, met for 90 minutes Monday
afternoon wiUt Howe, his wife and Utah's other congressman,
Rep. Gtmn McKay. Moss later told reporters he would not
s~port Howe for renomination .
LAS VEGAS, NOV. - TEAMSTERS UNION President
Frank Fitzsimmons is emphatic in his refusal to make
concessions to dissidents and reformers who are accusing him
of corruption.
'Go to hell," he told them Monday.
Fitzsimmons and other Teamster leaders said these
dissidents, acting in concert with news media, are trying to
destroy the nation's largest labor union. "For those who says it
Is time to refonn this union, who say it is lime for the officers
to atop selling out the members, I say to them - go to hell,"
Fiwlmmons·said In a speech to open a four-day Teamster
convention .

A piece of the energy puzzle.

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT

SEA ISLAND, Ga . (UPI) Democrat Jimmy Carter, in a
wide-ranging conversation,
says llie South ought to be
given credit for the progress
it has made In human rights.
The Democrats' front running
pr esi dential
candidate also says he would
approach the presidency with
confidence and a sense of
serenity about the hazards of
tl)e office.
Standing In the aisle of his
chartered ·airliner and
wearing a shirt with sleeves
rolled up, Carter Monday
night talked to reporters
accompanying hlrn on a flight
from Dalla.s to Sea Island
where he will vacation for the
next few days.
Carter said that as
president he would start work

'

· REGATTA QUEEN TROPHIES - There will be five trophies awarded the candidates
for Regatta QUeen at this year 's Regatta which will kick-off with the parade Friday, June
18, at6 p.m., beginning in Middleport and proceeding through Pomeroy. The Regatta Queen.
will be crowned at Meigs Junior High In Middleport, prior to the Bicentennial Pageant.
There will be a trophy for Regatta Queen, first runner-up, second runner-up, third runnerup and Miss Congeniality. The queen's crown was given by City Loan and the first runner-up
by Athens County Savings and Loan. The trophies were provided by the Pmeroy Chamber of
Commerce. Shown with the trophies are 1-r, Ton'ya Davis, Regatta Queen chainnan; Cathy
Osborne, 1975 Regatta Queen, and Ken Gilkey, pardfte chairman.

By DALE ROTHGEB
p!Jriient the program the
A sharp exchange of board has started. We are
opinion between Architect concerned with community
George Walter of Dayton and Involvement, curriculum
board member James V. development , in -service
Blevins highlighted Monday's educational programming,
marathon session of the staff evaluation, school
Gallla County Local Board of organization, facility planEducation.
· · nlng , -school enrollments ,
The "flare-up" followed a commWlity support, teacherpresentation by three employee concerns, studentmembers of the Architectural staff relationships, and other
finn of Sowtlk-Eller·Martin, phases of the educational
Columbus, Ohio and Parkers- program."
burg,
W. Va. The finn had
Mr. Sounlk said the firm Is
SAN FRANCISCO - THE DEATH OF U. S. DISTRicr
Court Judie Oliver Carter, who presided over the trial of been Invited 'to Ute meeting •:willing to come In and work
l'alrlcla Hearst, will delay the newr~•per heiress' sentencing by Blevinll.
·with other architects or
on bank robbery charges for some time.
. Chuck Stanley, a native of provide the necessary serCarter's replacement will have to study millions 111 words Melgs County and former vices for the entire building
d trial testimony and psychiatric and probation reports before athletic coach and teacher of program.
reachinla decision on her sentence. Carter, 85, died of a heart Pomeroy, now an eduOn the district's proposed
· attack Monday alter his second seizure since Miss Hearst's cational~ommunlty planner, $13,500,000 building program
trial ended In April. He sentenced Miss Hearst to 35 years In and two of his associates, (a new high school, three new
federal prison after her jury conviction on charges of bank presented a brief program elementary buildings, and
robbery and using a weapon in lbe commission ~fa felony.
using slldea and models of renovation of existing high
Uteir buildings.
schools and two elementary
Stanley said:
buildings), the firm of
"We are here to com-

--Francia H. Andrews, Long

•

. . . . . . . . . .~--~. . . . . . . . ~M~GAB . .

r

Due to lack of a quorum, a
regular meeting of Middleport VUiage Council was
not convened Monday night.
!'resent to meet with
council were. Harry L.

Sounlk-EIIer-Marlln ollered
to do the work for 5.61 pel. of
Ute costs, or approximately,
$662,000.
·
That .percentage Is less
than the seven pel. the board
agreed to pay Architect
Walter, a. native of Gallla
Colin ty, hired to perform
· architectural duties on a
lulltime basis during the
second meeting of fl)e consolldated board in February,
1974.
After the Columbus linn's
representatives left, Blevins
asked the board to consider
their presentation.
At that point, Walter asked
for . and was granted permission to speak.
He stated : "That proposal
Is out of order. Bringing In
other architect firms at this
time Is wrong. You have an
obligation lo me. I was employed 2¥.. years ago lor the

Bumgarner and Jeff Burt of
the Buckeye Hills - Hocking
Valley Regional Development District. Even though
there was no official session
the representatives
presented copies of an update
of the comprehensive plan for

House approves
$7 hilli~n top
on U. S. debts

Bottom, Monday petitioned
·the Meigs County Com~on for Ill help In trans&gt;lerttng CR t8 In the Long
Bottom area ol Olive
Township from the cowtly
bllhWay system to State
Highway Department
rapOIIIiblllt)'.
The cmpnlatoners agree
lbat the decllloo will be up to
llie State.
'lbe COillllllalooers lllreed
to · advertlae lor bids to
replace a bridle over Shade
Rlvw on TR 112 In &lt;lleater
Twp. Bid&amp; mut be 111t.Ditted
by 8:30 •
J111e 28.
C. E. ~lee dilclllled
with ll)e COIIIIIluion the
cwerlll pill II tile ReciGIIII

81.

I

Planning Commission- .and
whether Ute county wants to
develop its own Overall
Economic Development
Program (OED!'. A declsoln
will be made later. ·
Meeting with the commissioners was Harold L.
Buchanan , Architects &amp;
Planners , Columbus, who
wanted his linn conaldered
when the senior citizens
bulldlna Is built. 11te com·
minioners Informed
BtiChanan that no decision
will be made unW Ute grant
lor the building is received.
Attendln&amp; were ·Henry
WeUa and Bernard Gilkey,
commissioners, Martha
Chambers, clerk, and Wesley
Buehl, county engineer.

By ELIZABETH WHARTON
United Pren Ioternatlonal
Jimmy Carter is so close to
having enough Democratic
convention delegates thlf' he
Is calling lor party unity and
taking a vacation.
But on the Republican side ,
President Ford and Ronald
Reagan were still tussling for
delegatk
Ford
was
maintaining a lead of slightly
over 100 commitments.
By UPrs tally, Carter now
has 1,381 of the 1,505 he needs
- but the delegate switches
were pouring In so fast as the
other candidates withdrew
that his total could be even
higher.
President Ford had 990 to
Reagan's 882.
'
In Washington, with no
~oo test remainln~ for a can-

dictate, Democrats reverted
to form and did traditional
.battle over the language of
the party's policy platfonn .
Across the nation, a
Republi can plalforn;]
committee
held
a
preliminary hearing to solicit
views In Los Angeles.
Only California Gov .
Edmund G. Brown Jr. was
still going through the
motions of contesting Carter
for' delegates. Both, togeUter
with Morria Udall, solicited
the big 274-vote New York
'delegation Monday.
More than one-third of the
New Yorkers are piP.dged to
Henry Jackson as a result of
the state primary: But
Jackson has indicated he will
release all those committed
to him AM endnr"" r :&gt;rl.er

the
Supreme
Court,
governors of, I guei!S, every
state .in the cQuntry, all
accepted racial segregation
... It's easy for people to look
back 011 the war In Vlelnam
tllld say, •n1a t was a 'terrible
war, we shoold never have
been there.' It 's easy for
people to look back on the
South and the rest or the
nation and say, 'We should
never hav e had racial
discrimination and blacks
should always have been able
to vole.'
"Somebody came out the
ot~er day tllld talked to my
mother and 1111ked her , 'How
does It feel to have been
married to a racist 7' . Well,
you know, II my Daddy was
still living, he would be part
of the modern, enllghtenl)(l
. (Continued on page 10)

Middleport. The district Is
working with the Middleport
Planning Commlsalon on the
project.
Bumgarner explained that
the update of the comprehensive plan could be
helpful to the town In
securing federal gran Is. Most
federal funding agencies
.-.quire planning by a community before grants are
Biven. The updale covers
areas
of
population,
ecoriomy, el)lploymenl,
housing, Income, transportation.
Burt said there Is 01\j! more
chapter to add to the updated
plan which will be done
following a meeting Wednesday, June 23, when the
publlc Is Invited to town hall
to hear and· review ihe plan.

building program and have
done my work."
WASHINGTON (UPI) Mr. Blevins then In com- The national debt is once
paring the two architect again raising llie roof .
linns, said : "Sounlk-EIIerThe House voted 184 to 177
Martin has a fine rating from Monday to Increase the
Dwm &amp; Bradstreet.
celllng to $700 billion In three
• Walter asked him how he stages through Sept. 30, 1977.
knew so much ahoul their
The blll now goes to the
firm, adding, "I have been in
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
f"lenate.
.
business a lot longer than
Thursday lhrou1b
The current $627 billion
they have, apd have done ceiling expires June 30.
Sllllrday, lair Thursday
many more school buildings,
The debt ceiling bill allows and a chance of sbowen
even though · we have less ·the government to continue to Friday and Saturday.
employees."
borrow money to pay Its Hl1b1 will ranee !rom the
Blevins returned : "I think debts. Under the bill, the debt upper 70s to the mid IIh and
It's a mistake that we don't limit would rise to $636 billion lows will be In the upper 50a
consider other firms" .
Utrough Sept. 30 of llils year, to the Ms.
Board president J . E. lD $662 bUlion through March
Q-emeerut slopped Ute ex- 31, 1977, and to $700 billion
change but gave the opinion through Sept. 30, 1977.
that II looked llke an oUter
The bill also allows the
architect firm was under Treasury to Increase from $12
Cloudy, chance of thunbidding for the job after It billion to $17 billion the
derstorms
today, tonllhl and
found out what Walter was amount of long-term bonds 11
Wednesday.
Warm and
asking.
may Issue with Interest rates humid, lows tonight in upper
Other biiSiness was routine . in· excess of 4¥. per cent.
1Mb. Not as warm Wednesday,
highs In lower
80s .
Probability of rain 50 per cent
today and tonight, 40 per cent
Wednesday.
TWO DISSOLVED
Two marriages were
After the Texas dinner ,' dwolved and a divorce was
next week.
Carter
returned to Sea granted In Meigs County
·The former. Georgia
Island,
Ga.,
to rejoin his Conunon Pleas Court. The
governor also won a kind of
limited support from Udall, family for a week 's vacation . marriages of Jennifer
who has not released his . Neither Ford nor Reagan Berkhimer and Lewla
delegates but has given could afford time off. Both Berkhimer and Charles W.
Carter a free 1\and to solicit were sald to be conferring Baer and Barbara J. Baer
with slralegbts - and were dissolved, and Bea
them .
'
WASHINGTON - Cong.
From New York, Carter talking to leaders of Douglas was granted a
flew to Dallas where he told a delegations with divorce from Ray Douglas. Clarence E. Miller and Ute
Appalachian
Realonal
fundraising dinner the party uncommitted votes - arowtd
Commlislon today ' an. is "harmonloiiS" thl.tJ year for the Country.
After a nonpolitical speech
' nounced approval Of a ff2,675
the first lil)le in a decade.
grant for Melp County,
"We came out of tbe many on moral leadership to a
Baptist
convention
In
The grant will be used for
primaries unscathed," he
Norfolk,
Va.,
today,
Ford
and
Initial
funding lor the
SQUAD CALLED
said. "I don't believe there
establlahment
Of a 'primary
his
aides
were
to
-confer
on
are any open wounds left."
SYRACUSE
The
Earlier In the day he had strategy and travel plans to Syracuse ER Squad was care center to be conducted In
won the endQfsemerit of the ensure the nomlnaUon.
called to the Syracuse cooperation with the National
Here are the states where Nursing Home Monday at Health Service Corps. The
only candidate who defeated
hlrn in four primaries - all or some delegates are still 1:3i p.m. lor Nora Gorham center will be loeated at
Frank Church - who said he to be selected :
who was taken to Veterans Veterans' Memorial Hospital.
believed Ca rter "will be a· The Democratic calendar Memorial Hospital and ad- The -National Health Service
Corp. will recruit nhvllirlono
great president.''
mitted.
fConUnnf'fl nn M~e 101

Weather

·Petitioners ask
Carter calling for unity,. takes vacation
change in CR 46

Its to the point.
Yo u he.r us talk • lot abou t the natural gas shortage. But we're
datng mu ch more than just talking about it.
Case in point: Cove Point, Maryland. Columbia Gas is building
a deep-water terminal there to bring in liquefied natural gas- LNG
- from overseas. It's a 300 million dollar project.
And that'? just part of the cost of getting vitally needed gas from
abroad. The liquefy ing plant in llgeria will cost over half a billion
doll.m! Special tankers to carry the liquid gas cost 100 million dollars
etldt. And there wil l be nine of them.
But we need all the gas we can get ,- to warm our homes, cook
our me.1l s, and fuel our industry. LNG won't be cheap but it's less
expensive than alternate sources of energy.
'
By the end of 1977, natural gas from overseas will be added to
Columbia's supply at a rate of 300 million cubic feet a day. That's
wha t our customers need.
Not just talk.

Immediately on welfare
reform and national health
insur ance and study lax
reform and governmental
reorganization durlng the
first year of his administration .
The conversation, which
observers said was one of the
moSt insightful he has taken
part In, came at the end of a
day In which he got the
support of top Democrats in
New York state, a promise
from Morris Udall that his
delegates would be free to
cast ballots for Carter and a
$230,000 lundralslng
reception In Dallas.
During the hour-long chat,
Carter touched on numerous '
subjects, Including the days
of segregation :
"You have to remember·
that the ·congreu, the

Planners present review .

New architects offer bid on
new Gallia school buildings

WASHINGTON - CAN TAX SHELTERS BE CLOSED
without Iiurtlng housing and other Industries? Should working ·
parents 1et bigger child care tax breaks? Should those who
Insulate their homes be rewarded with a lax credit? How
should tax cut.. be extended?
These and hundreds of other quesliflllS faced the Senate
today as II prepared for days or even weeks of debate on a
major tax "reform" bill, the first significant effort at lax
revision since 1969. The bill Is 1,5!l6 pages long and weighs ·
l1llll'8 than five pounds, not counting dozens of amendments
added by the Senate Finance Committee. A similar but
tougher bill has passed the Hoose.

Cove Point.

·PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Candidate has
no fears of office

all .

.TONI TODD

en tine

at y

WASHINGTON - THE SUPREME COURT WILL not
review a federal judge's decision requiring the busing of 21,000
students in Boston, an order that has spawned. two years of
racial tunnoll in the city's scbool system.
The decision, offered Monday without explanation, leaves
Bostvn's desegregation controversy in tbe hands of U. S.
District Judge W. ArthUr Garrity Jr., who issued the busing
orders. An antibusing leader said in Boston people may "turn
to other ways" to settle the issue . Massachusetts Gov. Michael
Dukalds urged citizens to "unite behind" quality education by

0 .;

DUFEK ACCEPTS
ALLENDALE, Mich .
&lt; UPI) - Don Dufek, athletic
director at Grand Valley
Slate Colleges, has accepted
the post of athletic director at
Kent State and will leave
Michigan for Ohio in AuJU~Sl.

extortionists had the executives under close survellance, the wrong address.
-Cargill Inc., headquarters In Minneapolis.
FBI source said.
-Cargill offices In surburban Wayzata, Minn.
However; the source said the photo with the letter. to pne . ~ The residence off a Carglll executive In suburban Mincompany- the Gallo Wine Corp. - was known to have been neapolis.
All of· the bombs were apparently mailed from Teurkana ,
taken from a picture published In a magazine .
Tex
., and the ~earby town or Atlanta, Tex., about 25 miles
All but one of the corporations that received the extortion
away.
letter had received letter bombs by Monday . The one exceptlon
"You have to work on the assumption that they'.-. from the
was the Occidental Petroleum Corp. In Los Angeles.
During the day, letter bombs which either failed to go off, or same person or group because they're from tbe same stale,
they arrived on the same day and they all look alike,'' said
were defused, were also discovered at :
·- McDonald's Systems, Inc ., headquarters of the New York City bomb squad Lt. KeMeth O'Neil.
The extortion letters demanded prompt payment of cash Into
hamburger chain, In Oakbrook, Ill.
a specified account, the so ur~e said. The amounts were not
- bupont ,Co. headquarters In Wilmington, Del.
disclosed.
- The Marathon 011 Co., In .Findly, Ohio.
The bombs were contained In large manila envelopes, stiff·
- Bung Corp. offices In New York.
ened by cardboard of the type used by laundries In men's
- Eoon Corp offices In New York.
shirts, with explosives wired to nine-volt batteries, authorities
- The residence of a Bunge Corp. executive In New York.
- A residence In Chicago's South Side, probably sent to the said.

COLUMBUS - THE ROAD INFORMATION Program of
Washington, D. c. has advised Ohio to begin modernizing its
obsolete roads "In the interest of public safety." The program
conducted a survey for the Ohio Constractors Association
which was released Monday.
. It found that obsolete roads cause an average of 79,400
traffic accidents a year at a cost of $471.9 million in hospital
costs, property damage and payments to accident victimS and
. survivors. A total of; 13,519 miles of roads and streets in the
slate are -too narrow for safe passing by large trucks, school
~ and other bulky vehicles traveling at posted speeds
wldle another 7,182 miles of roads are hazardous because of
sharp curves, dips and rises and other extremes in road
design, the study said.

Frances Parsons, Gallipolis.
Birth: June II , a daughter
to Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Byerly, Gallipolis.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Randall McMillan, Hartford,
W. · Va.; Errol Follrod.

pert1111181n New York, hav~ been mailed to corporations around
the COIIIItry by extortionists who warned corporate officers to
pay or be killed, FBI sources said today.
The letter bombe, mailed from east Texas followed
extortion letters received earlier that included ' photos of
Individual businessmen marked as target...
.
"We llhall kick corporate asses until there Is nothing left to
kick," wdeu money was deposited in a specified account one
ol the not• warned, aecordlng to an FBI source.
'
There was no Immediate indication of whether an individual
~ group w• Involved.
One of the bombs eiJiloded Monday In the Merrill Lynch
Pierce, Fenner andSmiUt brokerage house In New York.
'
A mallroom exploye, Mlleta Philips, 50, was hospitalized 1n
satlalaclory condilon with severe cuts on her arms. Three
coworkers standing nearby suffered minor cuts police said.
The New York City PQJice Department warned' the public to

"be on the alert for bulky manlla4ype envelopes 8 1~ by 11
inches in si2e, postmarked from Texas."
The other letter bombs either faUed to exploded or were
• defused.
FlU headquarters In Washington warned all 59 field offices
to be alert for the bombs.
"The FBI is conducting an active investigation regarding
these mailings," said FBI Director Clarence KeU,ey .
Kelley sai~ he was "not at Uberty to comment oolite number
of letter bombs sent or the number of cities involved, but he
revealed that all the individuals who received the bQmbs were
assoCiated with corporations1
One FBI source said, however, there were more than 10
devices found.
The extortion letters rep()l'ledly contained pictures of high
rank~ . executives of the COI')lOfations. They included
warnmgs such as, "This pigeon Is one of your offiCers."
The letters also claimed that the pictures were taken with
sophisticated camera · equipment! suggesting that the

"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTM E N T

. FOR THE - ~1
7.1 EER (Energy Eff iciency Rating). Au to matic controls, set the desired temperature and
just use th e on /off
switch . Large cooling
capacity and 2· s peed
fan lor maximum co mfort.

HOSPITAL NEWS

First funding

announced for
care center

'\

~

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 15,1976

l-Tbe DallySenttnei,Mlddleport·Pcmeroy, 0., Tuesday , June 15, 1976

GOP sticking with Chairman McGough
.

BJ LEE LJ!IONARD

UPI Stl....e Reponer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Republican leaders,
confronted with I lot of Wlll'k
to do In bellllf of President
Ford lh1a year, have decided
10 llltt with the man who bas
carried them lhil far - Kent
B. McGough of Uma.
. McGough, who loat IU seat
Clll the Republlcan State Com·
mltt.ee in the June 8 election,
was re-elected Mooday as
chalnnan by the 4knember
c:ommlttee.
He said he believes Reagan
will give Ford a batUe for the
Republican presidential
nomination "right .d.own to
the wire In August· at the
coovenUon in Kansas City."
McGough added he would
wort · just
as hard
for Reagen If he Is
the ncminee as be WOIIId
wort for Ford, adiflilg he
believes the President should
choose a moderate candidate
with broad appeal, such as
Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller or Sen. Howard
Baker of TeMessee, for a

~~ sala his own
record during the last two

years has been a good one no co••resslonai losses in
•.., the defeat of an
1974, and

incumbent

Democratic

governor·
He promised to do even
· a
better th Is year, predlctlng
"
f
t
"goo d chance o ak'mg
control of the Ohio House and
making "substantial gains"
in the Senate.

Hesaidtherulechangewas
"long overdue" and broadens
tile choice for leadersblp.
"This means to me that the
mainstream
of
the
Repub1lean party 1n Ohio
feels satisfied with the
present leadership," said
McGough In amounclng hls
own re~t~uon at a news
~"
conference following the
Closed conunltt.ee meeUng.
Also re-elected were
Martha C. Moore of

t.e'"t!:~n~~~~~~~ ~~r~!dgec.vlceE~~i

beat Democratic Reps.
Charles J. Carney of
Youngstown, Thomas L.
Ashley of Toledo and Wayne
L. Hays of Flushing "if he Is
stlllthe nominee."
McGough said the Ohio
Republican party's early endorsement of Ford "is
probably the best thing we
have ever done ... it kept this
state from becoming a major
battleground."
McGough's re-election foJ.
lowed a change In the party's
rules malting it possible for a
nonmember to be an officer
of the committee.

TOM TIEDE

ClnclnnaU, treasurer; Louise
R. Farr of Cleveland Helgbls,
secretary: and C. Lee ManUe
of Painesville, assistant se·
cretary.
McGough, a strong
supporter of Ford, was
defeated by Miami County
prosecutor Robert J.
Huffman of Ludlow Falls In
hls bid for re-election to biB
lth congressional district
seaton the committee, a seat
he has held since 11169.
Huffman, legal counsel' to
Ronald Reagan's Ohio campsign staff, threatened to

fig)lt McGough's atlempt to
keep the chairmanship,
which he said was engineered
by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
McGough said the party
rules change was adopU!d by
about 34 to 8 after "lengthy
debate." After that, he said,
he was the unanimous choice
for chairman in the absence
of another
nominee.
·
dismissed
McGough
suggestions of dlrunlty within

the party. " I never
characterize a unanimous

vo~~s a bplit!~ ~e ~:·

oug sal e
eves
he lost the race for central
conunitt.eeman because. . of
Huffman's name recogmllon
In the district and "I probably
should have worked harder."·
H 'd he
b
'd too
e 881
h tte may
ti ave
to h'palstate
muc
a •ndonu· •-~·
LS
chairma
n s u es u0~ad of
·
• jb
lo his cormmtt.eeman s o .

RACINE
Thomas
Fruler, St. Albams, W. Va.,
w11 employed as the new
instrumental music and
marching band director for

the new school year by the
Southern Local Board of
Education Monday night.
The board employed John
Costanzo as nventh and
eighth grade Science teacher

Judgments of
$48,789 asked

a

DR. LAMB

for regular
• •
commission
•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Air Force Capt. Edward M.
Brown, son of Mrs. Frances
Ohlinger, ~16 First Street, Ia
one of nine officers at
Laughlin AFB, Tezas who
has been selecU!d to receive a
regular conunlssion in the
1 UniU!d States Air Force. The
majOrity of the non..academy
officers entering the services
are commissioned as
"reserve" officers and only a
.CAPT. ED BROWN
and assistant football coach, small percentage are tenand Larry Wolfe as head dered regular conunlsalons.
teacher
at
Portland Brown was in competition several additional dulles
Elementary School.
with ~ officers eligible for Including Squadron Jn.
The board adopU!d school selection. Less than one In formation Officer . In this
bus safety rules to be five were chosen.
capacity he briefs parents,
distributed to students In the
Capt. Brown entered the friends , and
visiting
fall and approved the ob· . Air Force in 1972 following dignitaries during graduation
servance of holidays which commissioning
and ceremohies and Is frequenUy
fall on Saturday or Sunday on graduation from Ohio called on to speak to civic and
the day preceding or University from which he business groups in the Del
following by employes.
holds four degrees. He Rio community.
. Arepresentative of Eesl,ey, completed Undergraduate . Active
in
clvlc
Lee, Vargo and Cassady, a Pilot Training in 1973 and was organizations, Brown serves
Marietta architectural firm, retained at Laughlin as an as commander of the
met with the board to discuss instructor pilot. While at· Laughlin Composite Squad·
drawing up plans for an tending Pilot Insturctor ron,
Civil
Air
Pl!f
addition to the high school. Training at Randolph AFB, trol ; member, Laugh•
Voters of the district ap· Texas, be was chosen as the lin
Del Rio Base:
proved a bond Issue for the "Top Graduate" In his class. Community · Council !
project in the June 8 election. In 1974 he was selected as the treasurer, Luaghlin Junia(
The board approved par· Operations Division Out- Office Council, and com!
tlclpatlon in the Title I standing Junior Officer of the mitt.eeman, Troop 280, Bo,.
.77 .
Year .
Scouts of America. He alsci
program for 197..
Attending were board
Capt. Brown, assigned lo holds memberships anll
members, Jack Bostick, the 47th Student Squadron at elecU!d offices in sever4!
Robert Sayre, Denny Evans, Laughlin as an academic fraternal organizations in•
Roger Adams and Dallas instructor, teaches In· eluding Val Verde Lodge 6~
lilli, Superintendent Bobby sii'\UIIent procedures, applied AF&amp;AM.
;..,
Ord, clerk Jane Wagner, aerodynamics, and T-38
Brown Is married to till
head teachers James systems operation. In ad· former Dottle Wilcoxen lit
Wickline, Larry Wolfe and dltion to tejlchlng and flying Racine. They have 'one SOil'!'
Charles Baer and athletic with American and Allied Teddy, age two months, an~,
dlreclor Carl Wolfe.
studenls, Brown serves .J,p reside in Del Rio.
:

d

By Grec Bailey
back to the pitcher, Steve
SYRACUSE - The Meigs Baird. Baird threw to home
American Legion team for a force out, and Bill
continued on its winning ways Me1211er relayed to first for
: Monday evening here, raising the second out. Brian
Its r~ to 1-3 by downing Hamilton's throw back to the
· Parlrersbll'g North 4-3. It was plate was just a second late to
a tight game, decided when nab the r~ner scoring from
ahortstop Mlclt Davenport second. Dadisman then bit a
singled In the wiMlng run m ground-rule double to knock
the bottom of the !eventh.
in the last run.
Meigs jumped off to a 1.0
Meigs tied It In the bottom
lead In the bottom of the of the inning . Mike
aecond when Greg James Nessebroad and Davenport
tripled and acOI'ed on Calvin led off with walks and Jame~
.. Minnia' ground out. James singled In one run. He
was the leadin11 hitter of the promptly stole second,
·" ntgbt as be socked two singles putUng two men In scoring
" · besides his triple In three position. Then John Sayre
.w oflctal at bats.
laid down a perfect squeeze
: . That lead held up until the
sWh when the visitors took
·~" the lead, 3-1. The letd-()f!
: ' batter singled and the next
' two men walked. After one
.. , run bad scored, Meigs nearly
, pulled off a triple play. With
the bases loaded, the
·. Parkersburg batter hit a shot
"
Terry Wayland hurled the
Middleport
Braves to their
GALLIPOLIS
sixth straight league victory,
WED~ JUNE 16
a 19-8 lOin over the, Rutland
Reds at Rutland. He picked
6 &amp; 8 PM
ap silt strikeouts, walked two,
County Fairgrounds, Rt. 35
and hit one batter. Chris

Braves in
sixth win,
no losses

M

Contract stand reaffirmed ·~

Wage ultimatum

given to schools

Ithe SCOREBOARD mr,; I

.

bunt to tie the score.
In the seventh, Hamilton
reached on an error by the
shortstop and advanced
when the calc: her dropped the
third strike on the next
batter. Then came Daven·
port's single and the ball
game was over.
Winning pitcher Baird
fanned six and walked four
whUe loser Swar.tz struck out
three and walked five.
Besides James' three hils and
Davenport's one, Blli Metz·
ner singled.
Osk Hlll has dropped its
Legion program, so Meigs
next game is Saturday when
they host Ashland in a double·
header. Sunday they travel to
Glouster for. a twin bill.
p
OliO 003 0-3 5 4
M
. 010 002 1-4 5 2
Swartz and Farley. Baird
and Souls by, Me1211er (5) ..

Management. It will tell you
more about the relationship
between diet and Insulin.
Other readers can get this
Information by forwarding 50
cents and a long, stamped,
aelf-addre~ envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me in care of this news·
paper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.
When a person has a heart
condition that will ldU bini
and needs to lose weight to
control It you wouldn't think
people would urge food on
him, but they do. considering
the fact that heavy cigarette
smoking will shorten a man's
life by as much as nine years
on the average you wouldn 'I
tiUnk his friends would try to
keep him from stopping
smoking, but they do. One of
my patients had succeeded in
stopping smoking for the
critical first two weeks so his
non-fillloldng wife ran out and
bought him a package of
cigarettes.
Have you ever nuticed that
'

.. ,

....

the ninth inning that gave the
Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory
over the Chicago Cubs,
Dave Concepcion, who
homered off Cub starter Joe
Coleman in the third Inning
for the first run or the game '
bounced a bad hop single off
the chest of Cub third
baseman Bill Madlock 1o

tcuch off the winning rally In with homers at Riverfront foul and I was leaning with
the ninth and give Gary Stadium.
it," said Foster. " I sure
,
Nolan his s ixth victory
Perez has accompliShed didn't want to hit a ball that
against three losses.
the feat twice.
far and have it go fou l."
A sacrifice bunt by pinch
Bailey thinks Foster IIUIY
Foster was asked what type
Armbr ister hit a lew more into the red of pitch be hit.
hitter E'd
"I don't know what type of
advanced Concepcion to seats before he calls it quits
second . And, after Cub relief as an active player.
bail Coleman threw me,"
pitcher Oscar Zamora issued ' " Remember," said Bailey, deadpanned Foster. "But
an Intentional walk to Pete "I'm the one who said Foster after the ball (lOt up there, it
Rose, he was replaced by was the best right4•anded was a lopsid'!d Spalding."
Concepcion's homer was
lefty Buddy Schultz, who was hitter in the league. And thai
was
over
a
month
ago
before
hill
fourth of the season, the
greeted by Griffey's game
he really got hot with the bat. first or his three hils In !he
winning hit.
Foster's homer, caught by
"Just a couple of weeks game, and gave Ute Reds a I·
ago/
' continued Bailey, 1 0 lead in the third .
a fan sitting in the first row of
said
it wouldn't be too long
A single by Steve Swisher
.the red seats in the top tier of
Riverfront Stadium, came before Foster hit one into and a double by Rosello
next spring he won the with two out In the sixth those red seats, And, I'm preceded Monday's double In
Masters, but he bas been Inning and tied the score after predicting, too, that within a the fifth as the Cubs went
Rick Monday 's two-run couple of years George will ahead 2-1 to set the stage for
mainly on a downhill slide double in the top of the fifth hit four homers In one Foster's game-tying h11ner In
since then.
the sixth.
Jack Nicklaus, the man had sent the Cubs ailead, 2·1. game."
Foster 's homer off
.
" II 's not too often a fan
favored Ill WID the Op,en, was sitting in that section gets a Coleman, making his second
a&lt;:;heduled to . return today · souvenir bali," said Nolan. start for the Cubs since his
Nicklaus, hopiDg to be&lt;'Ome ' Tony Perez, Bob Bailey and acqutsitlon from the Detroit MU..IAN GETS AWARD
only the fourth golfer t~ wiD now Foster are the only Tigers, landed a few feet
PALM BEACH, ~'Ia . ( UPI)
the Open four limes • players in the teague who Inside the foul pole.
- Emilio Millan , news
pracllced on the course three have reached the red seats
"I thought the ball might go dire ctor of Miami radio
days last week.
station WQBA, who lost his
The par·70, 7,015-yard high·
legs in a terrorist bombing,
lands course has drawn
has received the "Freedom
mixed reviews from the Open
Fighter" 'award from the
entrants.
Florida Association of
Hale Irwin, the 1974 Open
Broadcasters.
champ and this year 's No. 2
Millan, stlll hospitalized,
_
1
money winner at more than
was
honored for a series of
$175,000, contends that U.S.
editorials
against terrorism
Opens should never be played
in
Miami's
Cuban
scored on Hendersan 's bloop
in the Deep South in mid.June By JACK SAUNDERS
community.
Be
was
only
the
single In the third and Chaney
because
of
weather UPI Sports Writer
SCl'Ond
person
to
re&lt;.
o
elve
\be
doubled
home
Henderson,
conditions and their effect on
Andy Messersmith' s
honor.
who
also
doubled,
in
the
sixth
courses , especially the milllondollar right arm
The award was accepted by
greens, which need heavy finally felt like a million for the Braves' other runs.
Herbert
l..e vln, general
rbi
Jerry
Mumprhrey's
watering.
dollars Monday night.
manager
Qf
WQBA, who sold
single
in
the
fifth
for
St.
Louis
Lou Graham, the 1975 Open
"It's been a long, long
champ, disagrees. Graham, road, " said the 30.year-()ld broke Messersmith's string 'Millan was expected to be out
of the hospital and back to
from NaShville, Tenn., says Atlanta Braves' pitcher, after . of 22 shutout innings.
Elsewhere In the National work in about six weeks.
be doesn't "see any reason he evened his record at 5-5
that they can't have an open· with a 5-2 victory uver the St. League, Cincinnati edged
Chi cago, 3-2; Pittsburgh
type course down here. If the Louis Cardinals.
USGA says this is the course
Messersmith, a 19-game nipped Houston , ·2·1, and
we're playing on, then it's an winner with Los Angeles last Montreal shut out San Diego;
Opentype golf course."
year, became a free agent 3.0.
VALU•
South Africa 's Gary and signed a , $1 million Pirates 2, Astros I : ·
"AT.D
Player, who bas set his sights contract with the Braves in · AI Oliver slammed a
,,
on winning here this week to April. But, missing all of fourthlnnlng solo home run
become the only other golfer spring training as a result of . and Jerry Reuss fired a six·
USED
besides Nicklaus to have won his legal perambulalions, he hitter tc lead Pittsburgh to its
all four of the so-&lt;:alled lost his first four decisions fourth straight win, moving
11
major" tournaments at before winning five or his last the Pirates within 6'h games
least twice each, says it seven starts.
of East·leadlng Philadelphia
really boils down to the type
He allowed the Cards seven and· handing Houston Its
of golfer who is critiquing the hits and helped his own cause fourth successive loss. Reuss,
course.
with a pair of singles and his 7·5, struck out five and
"Good golfers like good golf first two runs batted in this walked one.
·
Two door, 6 cyl ., aulo.
courses," said Player. "The season. Batting a minuscule Ell(los 3, Padres 0:
Irons .• , r~d!o .
tougher the course, the more .007 and with just two hits,
Barry Foote hit a two-run
likely that the better golfer Messersmith kept a twiH'un, homer · and Don Stanhouse
will win. And that's really second-inning rally going pitched a three-lilt shutout as
what a U.S. Open Is all with a suicide squeeze bunt, Montreal broke a three-game
about- trying to pick the very scoring Ken Henderson from losing streak . Stanhouse, 4-2,
best golfer around."
third base with the game's struck out two and walked
Young Ben Crenshaw rates (irst run, and drove in the three in going all the way for
as a contender for this week 's final Braves' run with a his first major league
You'(( Like Our Quality··
Open because the long, single in the sixth .
Way of Doing Buslneu.
shutcut. Foote extended his
GMAC FINANCING
narrow, tree-lined course is
Roland Office had a run· hitting streak to five games
Pomoroy
regarded tailor-made for his scoring single In the second, with his fourth homer in the "1-5)42 . :
Open EYinlngs 'IIU:OO •
game.
Dave May doubled and sixth inning.
TU s •.m. Sat.

1976 U. S. Open
• · Th.. d·a y
hegms
urs

on· Me:.g's' 9

Give yoqr Dad a ·
of Tlianks ••• Byy him a

.....

11

Messersmith
•
wrns 5th tilt

'®

$2295

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

/Il l
,,.,

Last Friday In Meigs . but to no avail. Terry Gard·
Mason Pony League action, ner and Roger Carson had
Middleport fell to the hands of two singles each, whlld Greg
Visiting Pomeroy Royals, 12- Becker and Mlke Miller each
4, and Eastern blut.ed the bad a single. Pomeroy raised
host Pomeroy A's, 19-2.
their record lo 3-0 and Mid·
Winning pitc:her Rsy An· dleport Is now at G-2.
clrews pitched and hit his
EASTERN HAD AN easy
Royals to their victory as he time of It with the A's as
f111ned seven, gave up six Rusty Wigal pitched and hit
bits, and walked only one his team to their win.
At last! Here's the char that has
• FITS WITHIN 1" OF WALL
white blasting a triple for
Wigal blasU!d a home run,
everything. Now you C8l1 sink back
SAVES SPACE.
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chipped In with two singles. lead the attack. Danny
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GetUng singles were: Jeff Spencer and Randy Marshall
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RELAXAT~ON.
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Losing pitcher Mike lllndy singles were · Brian Bissell
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1ame for Middleport as he Griffin, Joe Boyles, and Steve
lOCked a homer and triple, Uttle, each had a single.
Eutem Is now 2-I.
Todd Smith took the loss,
iannlng two and walking five.
ONLY
Ray Stewart, Todd Smith, ·
and Keith Musser each bad a
single to account for
Pomeroy's three hits. Their
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'

CINCINNATI I UP! ) George Foster became a
member of the exclusive
"Red Seat Club" when he
unloaded his 12th homer of
tile season Monday night.
But it was a ground ball
single to centerfield off the
handle of Ken Griffey's bat
with one out in the bottom of

• t pUtS
Pom
}4.;.8 ·}OSS

Diabetic must watch diet
By Lawreaee E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
father is 8S and has diabetes.
He uses insulin. He has no
will power, but when my step
mother filed his diet he stays
pretty much on it. The
problem is when he visits his
friends. They give him candy
and cake, etc:., things that
they know be shouldn't have
and then uy, "a UtUe won't
burt him." This worries me
because I want him to stay
well. Could you please put
acmetbing in your column for
tllem to read. I feel lh1a will
help.
DEAR READER - Doc·
ton see lh1a problem all the
Ume. Well meaning friends
are often a pel'lon's worst
enemlea. The amount of
inlulln a di.lbeUc takes II
regulated to hll diet and dally
ac:Uvilles. When thele are
lll«ed the inlu1lD d01111e II
not accurate. Of cOUI'Ie they
lhould not pre~~ food on blm.
I'm llelldlng you The Health
Letter
number
3-11,
Dlabetn: Diagnosis,
Prevention
and

Ken Griffey's ninth inning
single sinks Chicubs, 3-2

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
DULUTH, Ga. (UP! )
The U.S. Open is being played
this week in Tommy Aaron's
backyard.
Normally, that would delight ,
him. But A~ron has P.layed so
poorly since winning the
Masters here in his nallve
stllte three years ago, he
faces the posslbiUty of being
embar-rrassed before' the
home folks.
The Open, which begins
k · fi st
Thursday,
rna
es Its at the
r
Deep South appearance
Burdette came on in the
Atlanta Athletic Club, 25
'fourth and allowed one run,
In indepimdent · action miles northeast of downtown
striking out two and walking Sunday, it was the batUe of Atlanta. Aaron is from
two. He got Into difficulty and the unbeatens when Syracuse Gainesville, only 45 minutes
waa relived by Jeff Wayland and Pt. Pleasant met at nor.th of here.
who put out the rally by Point.
"When 1 first learned back
fanning tbe last batter.
·After falling behind 11-ll in '72 where the Open would
Jim Boyer blasted a homer after five innings, the visitors be played this year, I was
for the Braves, Tim Justis hit juslct!uldn'trecover and took really pleased," said Aaron .
a triple and single, Dave the long ride borne thinking "I was at the peak of my
Meadows had a double, Ricky about their 14·8 loss. · game at the time and the
Ebersbach had two singled, Syracuse battled back, but prospect of being a contender
· and T. Wayland, Burdette, just ·ran out of time.
ina tournament Uke the Open
and Dave Demoskey .each
Losing pitcher Eddie sa close to home was a thrill."
had a single.
VanMatre, In his first start,
Aaron, who won the Atlanta
For the Reds , Mike gave up the eleven runs, but Golf Classic in 1970, had his
Willford led the way with a only one of them was earned best overall year in 1972,
triple and single, Troy as the Syracuse nine gave up winning nearly $120.000. The
Durham socked a triple, and a big nine errors. Jim HemsDavid .vance and Chucky ley led the losers at the plate
RathbiD'n each had a single. with two hits, one a home run,
SYRACUSE WINS
With the win over the Reds, and Amos Moore collected
Recent
Peewee action saw
the Braves are still hanging · two singles. George Glaze
Syracuse
defeat Letart IU.
on to first place in the Mid· had a double.
Pitcher
Mike
Chancey led the
dleport Youth Baseball
Miller and Gardner blasted
hitting
with
1\vo triples, a
League with an unblemished home runs for the hosts.
double,
and
home
runs while
record. But the Rutland Mlller went four for five on
batterymate
G.
Nease
socked
Dodgers are breathing down the afternoon, and Rice and
two
homers
and
a
double
. B.
their necks only one game Doeflnger had twp hits
back. The only loss for the apiece. Syracuae Is now 5-J on Connally had a single. For
Dodgers came at the hands of the year while Point Pleasant · Letart, Scott had a home run
the ·Braves, a close 8-8 loss. Is sUD ~beaten at S.O. Next and triple.
The t:v;o .teams mel Monday sunday Syracuse plays L
070 I()- 8
evening at Middleport.
Letart at Racine.
S
.
443 lx-12
M
612 J().-19 9 s
Wlckbne, Allen, and
0110 005 111_ 8 8 9
R
0'10 1- 8 5 p
30xlf
Jarrell.
Chancey and Nease.
003 620
14 1

--

Mining stopped
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
temporary restraining order
has been issued to prevent
three defendants from
· swface mining sarid and
gravel without a Ucense, the
first legal action under the
Ohio Strip Mine Law.
The state natural resources
department said Monday its
Division of Reclamation requested the order Friday
from Fairfield County
Conunon Pleas Court Judge
Merlin Parent under the law
which requires reclamation

Parkersburg North is
4-3 victim of Legion

up

A f43,788.97 damage suit by his employer.
The complaint further
bas been filed In Gallla
County Common Pleas Court states that as a result of the
u a result of a traffic ac· accident, Mrs. Stidham
cldentAug.27,1974on Rt. 7 at suffered a whiplash-type
Addison.
injury to her spine, recurrent
Dante! Stidham and Phyllis · muscle spasms radiating Into
Stidham, Rt. I, Gallipolis, the shoulders and arms,
filed the suit against Mark E. chronic headaches and
Dillard, Pomeroy, and the osteoarthritis of the dorsel
GalUpoUs Motor Company, spine.
What happened then, ac· Gallipolis.
As a result of her injuries,
cording to Patterson's ac·
According to the petition, Mrs.
Stidham
was
count, was singularly Mrs. Stidham was slowing hospitalized and Is still under
bizarre. The sergeant said her car lo make a left turn a doctor's care. Sle seeks
the trooper tried to handcuff Into lllll's Market at Addison , judgment of $35,0110.
him and at the same time when her auto was struck In
Her husband asks '13,788.97
pulled out his .357 magnum the rear by a vhlcle driven by for medical and trans·
pistol. Patterson says he Dillard, an employee of portation expenses incurred
reacted lnsUnctively for fear GaiUpoUs Motor Company. plus the loss of his wife's
of getUng shot, and wrestled At the time of the accident, he services and consortium.
the officer for the weapon: was driving a vehicle owned they demand a jury trial.
During the altercation the
•
sergeant's wife and baby
Following a public hearing, contract, but the board"bad cleanliness around tiie fur~
were knocked to the floor.
the Gallia County Local decided not to renew the nace area after being:
Then another policeman
Buard of Education Monday contract during its executive counseled in that area;
joined the fracas. In the end
night reaffinned its earlier session prior ,to the vote taken several times. Scarberry said:
both officers were shot dead,
coal and aahes were per~
decision not to renew the on April 23.
Patterson insisting it was
Supt. Bradbury reporU!d he mitU!d to build up against the:
contract of Earl Bennett,
accidental and beyond his
and Assistant Superintendent furnaces causing a fire:
Vinton school custodian.
control.
Bennett, working on a one· Dennis Murdock bad been hazard and a cleanliness;
A jury did not beUeve the
year contract, received called to the school to check problem.
sergeant. Marine Corps
Other reasons lisU!d were::
notice of his non-renewal out Mr. Bennett's work but he
evidence was introduced that
Failure
to put a wire screen:
The .Ga!Ua County Local Labor can file a suit against following the April 23 board was gone the day they were
indicaU!d Patterson had "no Buard of Education Monday the board for back pay or the meeting. He requested a there. He said he had toured . over a drain in furnace room:
apparent tendency toward
:
employees can file for double bearing, which was held the building on another OC· after beilig counseled.
violence." Defense lawyers night received an ultimatum the amount due them.
Failure
to
clean
furnaces
:
casion
though.
Mr.
Murdock
during Monday's regular
tried to explain the matter from Jim Blaschak, Wage
properly
or
constantly.
said
the
building·
had
not
been
"We don't make the laws, meeting. Bemett asked why
and Hour Division, U. S.
Failure to clean Ught fix-:
was precipitated by the Department of Labor, we just enforce them. We are he was not given a new cleaned the day he was there.
aggressive trooper, that all
.
lures
in cafeteria-kitchen and:
Principal
Scarberty
said
contract.
Board
president
J
.
regarding the payment of dealing with state and federal
the sergeant was trying to do
failure
to clean cobwebs from ;
his
recommendation
for
nonE.
Cremeens
said,
"We
(the
laws," Blaschak stated.
originally was take a trip . '64,434.39 In back wages
corner
of gym after ordered •
renewal
was
based
upon
six
board)
acted
upon
the
Board President J . E.
owed up )o 12
to
do
so.
·
.:
with his family, and all he allegedly
major
reasons.
recommendation
of
Principal
Cremeens said the board was
tried to do in the end was custodians or their spouses. not going to pay anything AI Scarberry and Superin· They were : Bennett's
Principal Scarberry saiil"
Blaschak .told the board
protect them. Had Patterson
failure to maintain general Mr. Bennett's work was "up
until advlsell to do so by Its tendent Bradbury."
that
if
action
is
not
taken
one
been white and the trooper
At that point, Supt. cleanliness of the buildings, and down." "Sometimes he
attorney.
black, said the defense, the way or the other by Wed·
Bradbury
said he had classrooms, and hallways. did a good job for which I
Cremeeu
polnU!d
out
tbat
matter would not have been ·nesday, June 23, he was tllree or fom of lbe penoul recommended a one-year
(Continued on page 10)
Failure to maintain ~eneral
l!rought to trial. The finding : turning his Investigation file oamed in lbe investigative
over to other branches in the
guilty. The sentence: Ufe.
report are ool employed by t;~::;:;::::::::::«:::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::~:::::::~::::;:;:;:::::::~;:;:;::::~=::-:::::::::::~:::::~:!:::::::::::::=::»:~::'{!}W.~~::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::!;::!:!:!;:;:::z::::~
U. S. Labor Deparbnent.
According to Blaschak, the lbe board, but came In to help
board failed to pay Its lbelr s)IOille. Bluehak 118id
custodians for overtime that did not matter, they
worked from March 22, 1974 worked tbe required hours
whlcb eotlllu tlem to and
to March 12, 1976.
Ol iver, Pit
50 202 31 70 .344
Oeklend (Blue 6-6}, 11 p .m .
of surface mining areas
Major League Standings
The labor officials said his quaUfles them for baekpay.
McBr ide, St .L 40 151 23 52 .3AA
Milwaukee (Colborn 3-JJ at
By
United
Press
International
where minerals other than Investigation beaan in
Board member James
55 208 51 70 .337
California (Ryan 4-7), 10 :30 Griffey , Cin
National League
Foster, Cin
55 215 32 12 .335
~I are extracU!d.
P·fTl ·
February, and nothing has Blevins accUsed Blaschak of
East
Rose, Cin
60 24.4 S4 81 .332
Wednesday's Games
Named in the order were been done by the board even trying to "ripoff" the school
W. . L.. Pet. GB
Morgan, Cln 52 169 .46 56 .331
Clevel.!nd
at
Texas,
n
ight
38
17
.691
Ph iladelphia
Louis Nance, of Lancaster, though he has met with them, board.
Cey , LA 57 209 33 69 .330
33 25 .569 6"~h New York at Minnesota, nigh t
Pittsburgh
CroWfrd,
St.
L
51 173 25 57 .329
Baltimore
at
Chicago,
night
DeLuth ·Construction of Superintendent C. Comer
"You are trying to yank New York
30 32 &lt;184 11 %
Boone , Phil
48 152 2A 50 379
26 32 .448 131h Kansas City at Detroi t. night
Columbus and Chip and Dew Bradbury and the board's f64,434 from the board for Chicago
American League
Boslon at Oakland. n ight
25 34 .424 15
St.
Louis
G. AB. R. H. Pel
M I I w a u k e eat California,
Excavating and Grading, legal advisor William people who do not deserve Montrea l
20 32 .385 16'h
McRae, KC
56 211 38 76 .360
night
West
Carroll.
any
additional
money.
They
Brett, KC
56 229 36 81 .:154
Eachus.
W .. L.. Pet. GB
The order directed the
Lynn, Bos
45 171 25 58 .139
He said the board was knew their working hours Cinclnnal i
38 22 .6JJ Major Laague ·Ruults
LeFlore, Del 49 19'1 33 67 .337
defendants, their agents and obligated to pay the back when they were employed," Los Angeles 35 25 .583 3
By United Press International
Bostock, Min 38 1A2 21 47 .331
san Otego
31 27 .534 6
National League
their employes to stop wages and wiiJ'IIed that If It Blevins staU!d.
Carty, Cle
51 179 26 57 . ~IB
Houston
29 33 .468 10 , Chicago
000 020 ooo- 2 7 1 Carew, Min
54 212 32 67 .316
surface mining opera lions In failed to do so, the matter
Blevins said of the district's Atlanta
23 Jd .404 131!, Cincinnati
001 001 001 - 3 10 0 Bel l, Cle
206 33 65 .316
Greenfield ToWO$,hlp at a site would end up In court. assistant superintendent San Francisco 23 38 .377 15 1/i Coleman. Knowles (7), Zamo - Munson , NV 54
53 221 28 69 ·.m
.
.
Monday's
Cames
ra (8 ), Schultz (9) and Swisher ; Staub , Del
54 189 23 59 . ~12
about four miles north of Blaschak, advised that under Dennts MID'docli (who Is In Cln clnnatl3 Chicago 2
Nolan (6 -3) and Bench . LPHome
Runs
Lancaster just off u.s. 33.
SSt . louis 2
Zemora {3-2). HRs- Cinclnnatl,
Section 16 A the Secretary of charge of persomel), "Our . Atlanta
Nation1l Leegue: Kingman ,
Pittsburgh
2
Houston
1
concepcion
{4},
Foster
(12)
.
NV 22; Schmidt, Phil l6 ;
\
personnel director, who gets Montreal 3 San OJego o
Foster, Cln 17; Mondllly, ChL
(Only games scheduled }
almost UO,OOO per year,
Atlanta
021 002 ooo-- s' 11 0 Morgan, Cin and Cey, LA 11 .
Today•s Probable Pitcners
Sl. Louis
ooo 010 Ollr- 2 7 1 American League: Yastrzem .
ahould know the law regar(All Tim eo EDT)
Messersmith (5-5) and Wil - ski , 8os and Otis, KC 11 ;
ding overtime to employees.
Atlanta (Ruttwen 6-6) at St. l iams ; McGlothen, Solomon 191
Banda , Oak 10 ; May, Bait and
I Denny 2 · ~1. 7:30p.m.
and Simmons . LP- McGiothen Ford, Mlnn 9.
We abould not be Involved In Louis
.
Chicago
(Renko 2-21
et 15·6) .
Runs Batted In
•
something Uke this."
Cincinnati (Gullett 5-21, 8: 05
National League: Foster, Cln
p
.ni
.
~lltsburgh
000
100
Ollr2
51
The board will discuss the
54 ; Perez, Cln 50; Kingman,
Pittsburgh (Medtch 4-5) at Houston
000 000 001 - 1 6 0 NY 48; Morgan, Cln and
wage issue again during a Hou!lton
!Rondon 2-ll , 8:35p .m.
Reuss (7-5) and Sangulllen ; Schmidt , Phil 46.
Montreal (Carrithers 2-4) at Richerd , Siebert (8) , Forsch (9).
special meeUng at 7:30 p.m.
AmerIca n Leatue: BorSan Diego (Foster 1-JJ, 10 p m. and Jutze, Herrmann (8). LPMonday, June 21.
Los Angeles ( Rau S-3) at New R.Ichard (7 -6 ) . HR- Ptttsburgh, roughs, Tex d6 ; Chsmbl iss, ,.._Y .
41 ; Mayberry and Otis , K.C 38 ;
when a · person Is trying to There actually are people
York (Koosman 6-4), 8:05p .m . Oliver 191 .
Yastrzemskl. Bos, Munson, N·Y
San
Francisco
(Hlllic:kl
d-9)
at
lose weight how some of his with operable cancer who
and Rudl, Oak 37.
·
Philadelphia (Culton S - JL Montrea l
000 200 Ollr- 3 5 1
Stolen Bases
..
best friends will try to Induce don't want to have the
10:35 p .m .
S,an Diego
000 000 ()()()- 0 3 2
ATHENS LIVESTOCK
National League: . Cedeno,
Wednesday's Games
Stanhouse (4-2) anct Foole :
him to go off an otherwise necessary surgeikry for. fdfearlr ~
Hou 25 ; Moroan, Cin 2&lt;2,·
SALES, INC.
Atlanta at St . LOUIS, nigh t
(8)
and Griffey , Cln 17 ; Lopes, LA t;;
Strom,
Reynolds
successful diet. Peaple 'are it "spreading 1· e Wl1 e
Ch icago at Cincinnat i
Saturday, Jue J%,18'71
Kendaii . LP - Strom f6-S) . HR.1
Brock, St.L u.
Pittsburgh at Houston. night
Montreal , Foote (4 1.
complex, often irrational but once the air ~its it.
7otHEAD
Amerlnn Leatue: Patek, KC'
MontrNI at San Diego
34 ; North, Oak 30; Carew, Mlnn
lovable creatures. You need
1 don't know how or where
Feeder Steers (401J.8l0 tbs.) Los Angeles at New York, night
&lt;On ly games scheduled )
21 ; Baylor. Oak 25 ; Cam .
to learn to protect yourself this myth originated, but I do 22.50-38.75, Feeder Heifers San Fran at Philadelphia, night
American Ltague
panerls, Oak 23 .
Boston
020
030
ooo-5
B
o
from them. Your dad may 'know you could do a great (400-700 lbs.) 21}.32, Slaugher
Pitching
Minnesota
000 000 ooo-- o 1 1
Most Victories
Amencan League
need to stay away from his service by explaining to a Bulls (over 1,0110 lbs.) 27.50Wise
is.J)
and
Flok
;
De&lt;ker,
Natlonal League: Jones, SO
Ea&amp;t
Burgmeier (5). Campbell 17), 12·2;
friends who cannot help him mlalnformed multitude that 34.90, Feeder Bulls (~
W.. L.. Pel. Ga
Lonborg , Phil 1·3 ; Hough,
Luebber (9) and Wynegar . LP LA and
Matlack, NY 7 - ~ :
31 22 .585 New Vork
stay well by refraining from there Is no truth in lhil.
- Decker (2 -6).
lbs.) 2G-35.50.
Chr istenson, Phil 7-3; Fryman.
27 27 .500 ~ '1.
Cleveland
trying to get him to hirm
Mtl 7-A; Reuss, ' Pitt l!l"d
26 27 · 491 5
DEAR READER - I
Slaughter Cows - Utility Boston
California
100 001 ooo- 2 6 o
SF 7-5; Rlchar.p,
himself with forbidden foods. supplose that . peaple have 22.50·29.25, Canner-Cutter Delrolt
2~ 30 · "~ 7'h Milwaukee 005 210 OOx- s 10 l Montefusco,
Hou 7-6.
.,
Baltimore
2• 3 1 -•36 8
Tanana , Hassler (7) and
Incidentally I have found seen patients with advanced 18.50-22.50.
Milwaukee
-Amerle~n Ltatue : Flizmor .
22 29 .43l 8
Etchebarrtn , Garrett (71 ;
that it often helps a persbn cancer that has already . Veals (cholc·pFime) 41).
rls, KC 8-2; Tlant, sos and
West
Augustine , Frisella (6) and
Slaton, Mil 8-3 ; Tan,ana, Cel •8·
lose weight if he avoids spread, have surgery, and die "50 Hots (N I) "I "2 So
~i'
{9·
~~
Moore. WP - Augu•llne 12·21.
.... '
o. • ..., ' ws ~=~::sClty 32 21 ·60" 311 LP- Tenana (8.51. HRs- MII - 5; Bird, KC 7.1; Compball,
seeing peaple or being around soon afterward. Of cour!lf ...
Mlnn 7-2: Travers, Mil 7-:3 ;
w.: 40.75-42.10, Pigs (by the bead) Chlcago
27 26 ·509 81/ waukee , Aaron (3), Sutherland
people or situations that cancer has already spread to 25 45
Umbarger, TeJC 7.A; Oob~,
Minnesota
27 28 :491 91/~ (1), Money £9).
Clev 7-5; Hunter, NY 7-4.
"
Induces them to eat. Many a the point that It could not be · · ·
Oakland
27 31 .&lt;66 II
Kon•a• Clly 000 200 211r- 5 8 1
Earntd Run Aver~ge "
diet Is sabotaged by removed entirely at IIUI'gery.
Collforn lo
,'11- 37 .393 15'12 Detroll
001 000 IOQ- 2 10 3
( bosod on 54 Innings pltclttd~
Natfonll LIIIUt: Zachry, C n
•
Mondly ' ~· Resutts
,Fitzmorris, M lngorl (7J, Pat socializing, even In a small
In any case you are ab1.93 ; Jones, SO 2.10; Mattac ,
Boston S Minnesota 0
't in 191. Hall (9) and Stinson .
way.
solutely right, there iB no
NV Ul ; Messersmith, All 1.641 ;
Milwaukee I California 2
MacCormack ( Q. n , Crawtord
Montefusco, SF 2.66.
..
Kansas City s Detroit 2
£7) and wockenfuu . WPDEAR DR. LAMB - I am connection between ~ad of
NOW YOU KNOW
Amerlctn LNtUt: Tr•ver\,
(Only ~ames schfduled)
F'itzmorrls (8-2). LP- MacCor amazed at the number of cancer In the body and
Although the Idea of
TOd'y 1 Problblt Pitchers
meek (0-1}
Mil 1.76• Brown, Clev 2.16 ;
(All Tlmos EDT I
'
Wood, Chi 2.25; Umbarger, Tex
people who believe thai ~ootact of the cancer tlslues America u a place where
Cleveland (Kern 6-2 or Hood
10 1
2.35; GOSSigt, Chi 2.31.
cancer spreads when it with alr. Most akin cancers many nationalities blend l ·A) at Texa! (Perry 6·4) , 9:05
n V games scheduled)
Strikeouts
National Logue: Seaver, NY
comes in C(lllact with alr.
are the slowest spreading dates at least to the lath p.m.
New York (Ellis 5-4l at
Malor league Leaders
88 ; Richard, Hou 75 ; Montefus1 have been employed by a cancers (except th~.e from century, the term "melting Minnesota
(Redfern 1·2), 9 p.m . By United Press International
co, SF 72 ; Messersmith, At147 ;
Baltimore {Palmer 6-7l at
surgeon and it's most sur· moles which are very pot" was coined in 1908 by an
Niekro, Ali 63.
I•Hing
(Gossage S-31. 9 p.m .
American Ltltlll : . Tanana,
I baltd on 121 at 111111
prising how many Intelligent dangerous) and skin cancers English writer, Israel Zang· Chicago
Kansas City (Splittorff 5-61 at
Cai 123 ; Ryan. Cal 103 ;
National ltlllll
will,
as
the
title
of
a
play
set
people truly beUeve this. are constantly exposed to air.
Detroit (Lemanczyk 0-0), 8 p m .
G. AI. R. H. Pet Blylevoen, To 17 ; Hunter, NY
1Jf2'nklns S-61
at Robinson, Pit ~2 142 22 50 .352 73; L-lf'd, KC 6&gt;1.
Boston
in the United States.

glimpse of the past
by the cop to "shut your
mouth.''
The cop, it should be
mentioned, was not in good
humor. But then, according
to the views of some who
knew him, he seldom was
when confronting the colored.
He was a heavy drinker and
allegedly tended toward
excesaive zeal in his pollee
responsibilities. He once got
drunk with a fellow
patrolman and was shot with
the other man's revolver.
·Another time, reportedly, he
arrested a black citizen ,
smashed him In the teeth and
threw him in his patrol car
with the warning: "If you
bleed one drop on my seats
I'll blow your bead off."
What his character, the
trooper eventually felt that a
faulty taillight was an
arrestable offense in the case
of Roy Patterson's brother.
He took him· lo the jail for
what he said would be an
lntoximeter test . . Sgt. Pal·
terson followed, and at the
lockup was told again to keep
his mouth shut. Feeling be·
tween the sergeant and the
trooper became heaU!d, the
Marine finally saying he was
going to get a. lawyer for his
brother- and a scuffle began,
soon after that.

WILLIAMSBURG, Va.,
Tile Vlrjglnla
convnllon named com·
misslouen to rent tbe lands
of the departed Royal
Governor, Lord DWIIIIore,
at Williamsburg and
ouUying couotlea aud to
sell bflalavea ~d penooal
property with the pro&lt;:eeds
golnl Into tbe colonial
treasury.

laDe U -

Music instructor employe

. South's disreputable ·
By TOiil Tiede
PLAINS, Ga . - If
AUanta is a look at the future
of the South, Jimmy Carter
Country is in some
disreputable ways a glimpse
of the past. Andersonville Is
here. So are stains on the
earth where the slave iluc·
lions slood. If one listens
there are echoes from guns
and whips and weeping
children. This Is Southwest
Georgia, Perhaps the birth·
place of the .next president of
the Union.
II can be said the region has
only selecUvely kept pace
with the progress of America.
It has acconunodaU!d color
TV and fast food service, but
there has been less In the way
of adapUon of the soul. Folks
who 'praise be' in Carter's
church still don't like
niggermen looking at their
daughters. Black youths can
be free in a way, but their
fathers dare lesa. Prejudice
remains tile reason of fools
here. Justice ·for the darldes
still often resembles the
machinations of trolls.
One example Is lllustratlve.
Two years ago a man
named Roy Patterson was
engaged In the pursuit of
upward mobility in Albany,
Ga., a town to the south of
Plains. He was married, had
a chlld, and was a Marine
Corps sergeant with fine
record of servlee. He was,
however, black, and as it has
for so many of his people in
this area biB color was to
becll!le his undoing.
One day the sergeant accompanied his mother and
brother on an innocent trip to
Cordele, Ga., a conununlty 1o
the west of Plains. There, at
a fU1Ing station, a state
trooper began questioning
Patterson's brother about a
defectlve taillight on his
automobile. The sergeant
joined the conversation to see
if there was anything he could
do, and waa reportedly told

Dateline 1776 : Brown

SIMPLE.! J lf.oT MULTi·
PLIED DE HYPOTENlf.o BY

DE OOLONGOTTA ,AC(ENTIJ·
ATE DE PoSITiVE UN Ell ·
MINATE DE NEGATIVE.

Bullt~ ln magazine pouCh,
choice of -4 rich colors .
Sl.lnt&gt;tam {g Old) , Poplar
(avacado) . Bacon (brown)
or Blackbird (black). 41 "

high K 33n wide. See lhli
todav. 1390

THE FURNIT.URE HOUSE
VINTON, OHIO

PHONE 388 8123

DOWNINGatllDS MiENCY INC.·

Middleport', Olllo
992-2341

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 15,1976

l-Tbe DallySenttnei,Mlddleport·Pcmeroy, 0., Tuesday , June 15, 1976

GOP sticking with Chairman McGough
.

BJ LEE LJ!IONARD

UPI Stl....e Reponer
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Republican leaders,
confronted with I lot of Wlll'k
to do In bellllf of President
Ford lh1a year, have decided
10 llltt with the man who bas
carried them lhil far - Kent
B. McGough of Uma.
. McGough, who loat IU seat
Clll the Republlcan State Com·
mltt.ee in the June 8 election,
was re-elected Mooday as
chalnnan by the 4knember
c:ommlttee.
He said he believes Reagan
will give Ford a batUe for the
Republican presidential
nomination "right .d.own to
the wire In August· at the
coovenUon in Kansas City."
McGough added he would
wort · just
as hard
for Reagen If he Is
the ncminee as be WOIIId
wort for Ford, adiflilg he
believes the President should
choose a moderate candidate
with broad appeal, such as
Vice President Nelson
Rockefeller or Sen. Howard
Baker of TeMessee, for a

~~ sala his own
record during the last two

years has been a good one no co••resslonai losses in
•.., the defeat of an
1974, and

incumbent

Democratic

governor·
He promised to do even
· a
better th Is year, predlctlng
"
f
t
"goo d chance o ak'mg
control of the Ohio House and
making "substantial gains"
in the Senate.

Hesaidtherulechangewas
"long overdue" and broadens
tile choice for leadersblp.
"This means to me that the
mainstream
of
the
Repub1lean party 1n Ohio
feels satisfied with the
present leadership," said
McGough In amounclng hls
own re~t~uon at a news
~"
conference following the
Closed conunltt.ee meeUng.
Also re-elected were
Martha C. Moore of

t.e'"t!:~n~~~~~~~ ~~r~!dgec.vlceE~~i

beat Democratic Reps.
Charles J. Carney of
Youngstown, Thomas L.
Ashley of Toledo and Wayne
L. Hays of Flushing "if he Is
stlllthe nominee."
McGough said the Ohio
Republican party's early endorsement of Ford "is
probably the best thing we
have ever done ... it kept this
state from becoming a major
battleground."
McGough's re-election foJ.
lowed a change In the party's
rules malting it possible for a
nonmember to be an officer
of the committee.

TOM TIEDE

ClnclnnaU, treasurer; Louise
R. Farr of Cleveland Helgbls,
secretary: and C. Lee ManUe
of Painesville, assistant se·
cretary.
McGough, a strong
supporter of Ford, was
defeated by Miami County
prosecutor Robert J.
Huffman of Ludlow Falls In
hls bid for re-election to biB
lth congressional district
seaton the committee, a seat
he has held since 11169.
Huffman, legal counsel' to
Ronald Reagan's Ohio campsign staff, threatened to

fig)lt McGough's atlempt to
keep the chairmanship,
which he said was engineered
by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
McGough said the party
rules change was adopU!d by
about 34 to 8 after "lengthy
debate." After that, he said,
he was the unanimous choice
for chairman in the absence
of another
nominee.
·
dismissed
McGough
suggestions of dlrunlty within

the party. " I never
characterize a unanimous

vo~~s a bplit!~ ~e ~:·

oug sal e
eves
he lost the race for central
conunitt.eeman because. . of
Huffman's name recogmllon
In the district and "I probably
should have worked harder."·
H 'd he
b
'd too
e 881
h tte may
ti ave
to h'palstate
muc
a •ndonu· •-~·
LS
chairma
n s u es u0~ad of
·
• jb
lo his cormmtt.eeman s o .

RACINE
Thomas
Fruler, St. Albams, W. Va.,
w11 employed as the new
instrumental music and
marching band director for

the new school year by the
Southern Local Board of
Education Monday night.
The board employed John
Costanzo as nventh and
eighth grade Science teacher

Judgments of
$48,789 asked

a

DR. LAMB

for regular
• •
commission
•

NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Air Force Capt. Edward M.
Brown, son of Mrs. Frances
Ohlinger, ~16 First Street, Ia
one of nine officers at
Laughlin AFB, Tezas who
has been selecU!d to receive a
regular conunlssion in the
1 UniU!d States Air Force. The
majOrity of the non..academy
officers entering the services
are commissioned as
"reserve" officers and only a
.CAPT. ED BROWN
and assistant football coach, small percentage are tenand Larry Wolfe as head dered regular conunlsalons.
teacher
at
Portland Brown was in competition several additional dulles
Elementary School.
with ~ officers eligible for Including Squadron Jn.
The board adopU!d school selection. Less than one In formation Officer . In this
bus safety rules to be five were chosen.
capacity he briefs parents,
distributed to students In the
Capt. Brown entered the friends , and
visiting
fall and approved the ob· . Air Force in 1972 following dignitaries during graduation
servance of holidays which commissioning
and ceremohies and Is frequenUy
fall on Saturday or Sunday on graduation from Ohio called on to speak to civic and
the day preceding or University from which he business groups in the Del
following by employes.
holds four degrees. He Rio community.
. Arepresentative of Eesl,ey, completed Undergraduate . Active
in
clvlc
Lee, Vargo and Cassady, a Pilot Training in 1973 and was organizations, Brown serves
Marietta architectural firm, retained at Laughlin as an as commander of the
met with the board to discuss instructor pilot. While at· Laughlin Composite Squad·
drawing up plans for an tending Pilot Insturctor ron,
Civil
Air
Pl!f
addition to the high school. Training at Randolph AFB, trol ; member, Laugh•
Voters of the district ap· Texas, be was chosen as the lin
Del Rio Base:
proved a bond Issue for the "Top Graduate" In his class. Community · Council !
project in the June 8 election. In 1974 he was selected as the treasurer, Luaghlin Junia(
The board approved par· Operations Division Out- Office Council, and com!
tlclpatlon in the Title I standing Junior Officer of the mitt.eeman, Troop 280, Bo,.
.77 .
Year .
Scouts of America. He alsci
program for 197..
Attending were board
Capt. Brown, assigned lo holds memberships anll
members, Jack Bostick, the 47th Student Squadron at elecU!d offices in sever4!
Robert Sayre, Denny Evans, Laughlin as an academic fraternal organizations in•
Roger Adams and Dallas instructor, teaches In· eluding Val Verde Lodge 6~
lilli, Superintendent Bobby sii'\UIIent procedures, applied AF&amp;AM.
;..,
Ord, clerk Jane Wagner, aerodynamics, and T-38
Brown Is married to till
head teachers James systems operation. In ad· former Dottle Wilcoxen lit
Wickline, Larry Wolfe and dltion to tejlchlng and flying Racine. They have 'one SOil'!'
Charles Baer and athletic with American and Allied Teddy, age two months, an~,
dlreclor Carl Wolfe.
studenls, Brown serves .J,p reside in Del Rio.
:

d

By Grec Bailey
back to the pitcher, Steve
SYRACUSE - The Meigs Baird. Baird threw to home
American Legion team for a force out, and Bill
continued on its winning ways Me1211er relayed to first for
: Monday evening here, raising the second out. Brian
Its r~ to 1-3 by downing Hamilton's throw back to the
· Parlrersbll'g North 4-3. It was plate was just a second late to
a tight game, decided when nab the r~ner scoring from
ahortstop Mlclt Davenport second. Dadisman then bit a
singled In the wiMlng run m ground-rule double to knock
the bottom of the !eventh.
in the last run.
Meigs jumped off to a 1.0
Meigs tied It In the bottom
lead In the bottom of the of the inning . Mike
aecond when Greg James Nessebroad and Davenport
tripled and acOI'ed on Calvin led off with walks and Jame~
.. Minnia' ground out. James singled In one run. He
was the leadin11 hitter of the promptly stole second,
·" ntgbt as be socked two singles putUng two men In scoring
" · besides his triple In three position. Then John Sayre
.w oflctal at bats.
laid down a perfect squeeze
: . That lead held up until the
sWh when the visitors took
·~" the lead, 3-1. The letd-()f!
: ' batter singled and the next
' two men walked. After one
.. , run bad scored, Meigs nearly
, pulled off a triple play. With
the bases loaded, the
·. Parkersburg batter hit a shot
"
Terry Wayland hurled the
Middleport
Braves to their
GALLIPOLIS
sixth straight league victory,
WED~ JUNE 16
a 19-8 lOin over the, Rutland
Reds at Rutland. He picked
6 &amp; 8 PM
ap silt strikeouts, walked two,
County Fairgrounds, Rt. 35
and hit one batter. Chris

Braves in
sixth win,
no losses

M

Contract stand reaffirmed ·~

Wage ultimatum

given to schools

Ithe SCOREBOARD mr,; I

.

bunt to tie the score.
In the seventh, Hamilton
reached on an error by the
shortstop and advanced
when the calc: her dropped the
third strike on the next
batter. Then came Daven·
port's single and the ball
game was over.
Winning pitcher Baird
fanned six and walked four
whUe loser Swar.tz struck out
three and walked five.
Besides James' three hils and
Davenport's one, Blli Metz·
ner singled.
Osk Hlll has dropped its
Legion program, so Meigs
next game is Saturday when
they host Ashland in a double·
header. Sunday they travel to
Glouster for. a twin bill.
p
OliO 003 0-3 5 4
M
. 010 002 1-4 5 2
Swartz and Farley. Baird
and Souls by, Me1211er (5) ..

Management. It will tell you
more about the relationship
between diet and Insulin.
Other readers can get this
Information by forwarding 50
cents and a long, stamped,
aelf-addre~ envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me in care of this news·
paper, P. 0. Box 1551, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.
When a person has a heart
condition that will ldU bini
and needs to lose weight to
control It you wouldn't think
people would urge food on
him, but they do. considering
the fact that heavy cigarette
smoking will shorten a man's
life by as much as nine years
on the average you wouldn 'I
tiUnk his friends would try to
keep him from stopping
smoking, but they do. One of
my patients had succeeded in
stopping smoking for the
critical first two weeks so his
non-fillloldng wife ran out and
bought him a package of
cigarettes.
Have you ever nuticed that
'

.. ,

....

the ninth inning that gave the
Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory
over the Chicago Cubs,
Dave Concepcion, who
homered off Cub starter Joe
Coleman in the third Inning
for the first run or the game '
bounced a bad hop single off
the chest of Cub third
baseman Bill Madlock 1o

tcuch off the winning rally In with homers at Riverfront foul and I was leaning with
the ninth and give Gary Stadium.
it," said Foster. " I sure
,
Nolan his s ixth victory
Perez has accompliShed didn't want to hit a ball that
against three losses.
the feat twice.
far and have it go fou l."
A sacrifice bunt by pinch
Bailey thinks Foster IIUIY
Foster was asked what type
Armbr ister hit a lew more into the red of pitch be hit.
hitter E'd
"I don't know what type of
advanced Concepcion to seats before he calls it quits
second . And, after Cub relief as an active player.
bail Coleman threw me,"
pitcher Oscar Zamora issued ' " Remember," said Bailey, deadpanned Foster. "But
an Intentional walk to Pete "I'm the one who said Foster after the ball (lOt up there, it
Rose, he was replaced by was the best right4•anded was a lopsid'!d Spalding."
Concepcion's homer was
lefty Buddy Schultz, who was hitter in the league. And thai
was
over
a
month
ago
before
hill
fourth of the season, the
greeted by Griffey's game
he really got hot with the bat. first or his three hils In !he
winning hit.
Foster's homer, caught by
"Just a couple of weeks game, and gave Ute Reds a I·
ago/
' continued Bailey, 1 0 lead in the third .
a fan sitting in the first row of
said
it wouldn't be too long
A single by Steve Swisher
.the red seats in the top tier of
Riverfront Stadium, came before Foster hit one into and a double by Rosello
next spring he won the with two out In the sixth those red seats, And, I'm preceded Monday's double In
Masters, but he bas been Inning and tied the score after predicting, too, that within a the fifth as the Cubs went
Rick Monday 's two-run couple of years George will ahead 2-1 to set the stage for
mainly on a downhill slide double in the top of the fifth hit four homers In one Foster's game-tying h11ner In
since then.
the sixth.
Jack Nicklaus, the man had sent the Cubs ailead, 2·1. game."
Foster 's homer off
.
" II 's not too often a fan
favored Ill WID the Op,en, was sitting in that section gets a Coleman, making his second
a&lt;:;heduled to . return today · souvenir bali," said Nolan. start for the Cubs since his
Nicklaus, hopiDg to be&lt;'Ome ' Tony Perez, Bob Bailey and acqutsitlon from the Detroit MU..IAN GETS AWARD
only the fourth golfer t~ wiD now Foster are the only Tigers, landed a few feet
PALM BEACH, ~'Ia . ( UPI)
the Open four limes • players in the teague who Inside the foul pole.
- Emilio Millan , news
pracllced on the course three have reached the red seats
"I thought the ball might go dire ctor of Miami radio
days last week.
station WQBA, who lost his
The par·70, 7,015-yard high·
legs in a terrorist bombing,
lands course has drawn
has received the "Freedom
mixed reviews from the Open
Fighter" 'award from the
entrants.
Florida Association of
Hale Irwin, the 1974 Open
Broadcasters.
champ and this year 's No. 2
Millan, stlll hospitalized,
_
1
money winner at more than
was
honored for a series of
$175,000, contends that U.S.
editorials
against terrorism
Opens should never be played
in
Miami's
Cuban
scored on Hendersan 's bloop
in the Deep South in mid.June By JACK SAUNDERS
community.
Be
was
only
the
single In the third and Chaney
because
of
weather UPI Sports Writer
SCl'Ond
person
to
re&lt;.
o
elve
\be
doubled
home
Henderson,
conditions and their effect on
Andy Messersmith' s
honor.
who
also
doubled,
in
the
sixth
courses , especially the milllondollar right arm
The award was accepted by
greens, which need heavy finally felt like a million for the Braves' other runs.
Herbert
l..e vln, general
rbi
Jerry
Mumprhrey's
watering.
dollars Monday night.
manager
Qf
WQBA, who sold
single
in
the
fifth
for
St.
Louis
Lou Graham, the 1975 Open
"It's been a long, long
champ, disagrees. Graham, road, " said the 30.year-()ld broke Messersmith's string 'Millan was expected to be out
of the hospital and back to
from NaShville, Tenn., says Atlanta Braves' pitcher, after . of 22 shutout innings.
Elsewhere In the National work in about six weeks.
be doesn't "see any reason he evened his record at 5-5
that they can't have an open· with a 5-2 victory uver the St. League, Cincinnati edged
Chi cago, 3-2; Pittsburgh
type course down here. If the Louis Cardinals.
USGA says this is the course
Messersmith, a 19-game nipped Houston , ·2·1, and
we're playing on, then it's an winner with Los Angeles last Montreal shut out San Diego;
Opentype golf course."
year, became a free agent 3.0.
VALU•
South Africa 's Gary and signed a , $1 million Pirates 2, Astros I : ·
"AT.D
Player, who bas set his sights contract with the Braves in · AI Oliver slammed a
,,
on winning here this week to April. But, missing all of fourthlnnlng solo home run
become the only other golfer spring training as a result of . and Jerry Reuss fired a six·
USED
besides Nicklaus to have won his legal perambulalions, he hitter tc lead Pittsburgh to its
all four of the so-&lt;:alled lost his first four decisions fourth straight win, moving
11
major" tournaments at before winning five or his last the Pirates within 6'h games
least twice each, says it seven starts.
of East·leadlng Philadelphia
really boils down to the type
He allowed the Cards seven and· handing Houston Its
of golfer who is critiquing the hits and helped his own cause fourth successive loss. Reuss,
course.
with a pair of singles and his 7·5, struck out five and
"Good golfers like good golf first two runs batted in this walked one.
·
Two door, 6 cyl ., aulo.
courses," said Player. "The season. Batting a minuscule Ell(los 3, Padres 0:
Irons .• , r~d!o .
tougher the course, the more .007 and with just two hits,
Barry Foote hit a two-run
likely that the better golfer Messersmith kept a twiH'un, homer · and Don Stanhouse
will win. And that's really second-inning rally going pitched a three-lilt shutout as
what a U.S. Open Is all with a suicide squeeze bunt, Montreal broke a three-game
about- trying to pick the very scoring Ken Henderson from losing streak . Stanhouse, 4-2,
best golfer around."
third base with the game's struck out two and walked
Young Ben Crenshaw rates (irst run, and drove in the three in going all the way for
as a contender for this week 's final Braves' run with a his first major league
You'(( Like Our Quality··
Open because the long, single in the sixth .
Way of Doing Buslneu.
shutcut. Foote extended his
GMAC FINANCING
narrow, tree-lined course is
Roland Office had a run· hitting streak to five games
Pomoroy
regarded tailor-made for his scoring single In the second, with his fourth homer in the "1-5)42 . :
Open EYinlngs 'IIU:OO •
game.
Dave May doubled and sixth inning.
TU s •.m. Sat.

1976 U. S. Open
• · Th.. d·a y
hegms
urs

on· Me:.g's' 9

Give yoqr Dad a ·
of Tlianks ••• Byy him a

.....

11

Messersmith
•
wrns 5th tilt

'®

$2295

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

/Il l
,,.,

Last Friday In Meigs . but to no avail. Terry Gard·
Mason Pony League action, ner and Roger Carson had
Middleport fell to the hands of two singles each, whlld Greg
Visiting Pomeroy Royals, 12- Becker and Mlke Miller each
4, and Eastern blut.ed the bad a single. Pomeroy raised
host Pomeroy A's, 19-2.
their record lo 3-0 and Mid·
Winning pitc:her Rsy An· dleport Is now at G-2.
clrews pitched and hit his
EASTERN HAD AN easy
Royals to their victory as he time of It with the A's as
f111ned seven, gave up six Rusty Wigal pitched and hit
bits, and walked only one his team to their win.
At last! Here's the char that has
• FITS WITHIN 1" OF WALL
white blasting a triple for
Wigal blasU!d a home run,
everything. Now you C8l1 sink back
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chipped In with two singles. lead the attack. Danny
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GetUng singles were: Jeff Spencer and Randy Marshall
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RELAXAT~ON.
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COLORS
Losing pitcher Mike lllndy singles were · Brian Bissell
did his best to salvage the and Jeff Goebel while Ernie
1ame for Middleport as he Griffin, Joe Boyles, and Steve
lOCked a homer and triple, Uttle, each had a single.
Eutem Is now 2-I.
Todd Smith took the loss,
iannlng two and walking five.
ONLY
Ray Stewart, Todd Smith, ·
and Keith Musser each bad a
single to account for
Pomeroy's three hits. Their
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'

CINCINNATI I UP! ) George Foster became a
member of the exclusive
"Red Seat Club" when he
unloaded his 12th homer of
tile season Monday night.
But it was a ground ball
single to centerfield off the
handle of Ken Griffey's bat
with one out in the bottom of

• t pUtS
Pom
}4.;.8 ·}OSS

Diabetic must watch diet
By Lawreaee E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
father is 8S and has diabetes.
He uses insulin. He has no
will power, but when my step
mother filed his diet he stays
pretty much on it. The
problem is when he visits his
friends. They give him candy
and cake, etc:., things that
they know be shouldn't have
and then uy, "a UtUe won't
burt him." This worries me
because I want him to stay
well. Could you please put
acmetbing in your column for
tllem to read. I feel lh1a will
help.
DEAR READER - Doc·
ton see lh1a problem all the
Ume. Well meaning friends
are often a pel'lon's worst
enemlea. The amount of
inlulln a di.lbeUc takes II
regulated to hll diet and dally
ac:Uvilles. When thele are
lll«ed the inlu1lD d01111e II
not accurate. Of cOUI'Ie they
lhould not pre~~ food on blm.
I'm llelldlng you The Health
Letter
number
3-11,
Dlabetn: Diagnosis,
Prevention
and

Ken Griffey's ninth inning
single sinks Chicubs, 3-2

By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI Sports Writer
DULUTH, Ga. (UP! )
The U.S. Open is being played
this week in Tommy Aaron's
backyard.
Normally, that would delight ,
him. But A~ron has P.layed so
poorly since winning the
Masters here in his nallve
stllte three years ago, he
faces the posslbiUty of being
embar-rrassed before' the
home folks.
The Open, which begins
k · fi st
Thursday,
rna
es Its at the
r
Deep South appearance
Burdette came on in the
Atlanta Athletic Club, 25
'fourth and allowed one run,
In indepimdent · action miles northeast of downtown
striking out two and walking Sunday, it was the batUe of Atlanta. Aaron is from
two. He got Into difficulty and the unbeatens when Syracuse Gainesville, only 45 minutes
waa relived by Jeff Wayland and Pt. Pleasant met at nor.th of here.
who put out the rally by Point.
"When 1 first learned back
fanning tbe last batter.
·After falling behind 11-ll in '72 where the Open would
Jim Boyer blasted a homer after five innings, the visitors be played this year, I was
for the Braves, Tim Justis hit juslct!uldn'trecover and took really pleased," said Aaron .
a triple and single, Dave the long ride borne thinking "I was at the peak of my
Meadows had a double, Ricky about their 14·8 loss. · game at the time and the
Ebersbach had two singled, Syracuse battled back, but prospect of being a contender
· and T. Wayland, Burdette, just ·ran out of time.
ina tournament Uke the Open
and Dave Demoskey .each
Losing pitcher Eddie sa close to home was a thrill."
had a single.
VanMatre, In his first start,
Aaron, who won the Atlanta
For the Reds , Mike gave up the eleven runs, but Golf Classic in 1970, had his
Willford led the way with a only one of them was earned best overall year in 1972,
triple and single, Troy as the Syracuse nine gave up winning nearly $120.000. The
Durham socked a triple, and a big nine errors. Jim HemsDavid .vance and Chucky ley led the losers at the plate
RathbiD'n each had a single. with two hits, one a home run,
SYRACUSE WINS
With the win over the Reds, and Amos Moore collected
Recent
Peewee action saw
the Braves are still hanging · two singles. George Glaze
Syracuse
defeat Letart IU.
on to first place in the Mid· had a double.
Pitcher
Mike
Chancey led the
dleport Youth Baseball
Miller and Gardner blasted
hitting
with
1\vo triples, a
League with an unblemished home runs for the hosts.
double,
and
home
runs while
record. But the Rutland Mlller went four for five on
batterymate
G.
Nease
socked
Dodgers are breathing down the afternoon, and Rice and
two
homers
and
a
double
. B.
their necks only one game Doeflnger had twp hits
back. The only loss for the apiece. Syracuae Is now 5-J on Connally had a single. For
Dodgers came at the hands of the year while Point Pleasant · Letart, Scott had a home run
the ·Braves, a close 8-8 loss. Is sUD ~beaten at S.O. Next and triple.
The t:v;o .teams mel Monday sunday Syracuse plays L
070 I()- 8
evening at Middleport.
Letart at Racine.
S
.
443 lx-12
M
612 J().-19 9 s
Wlckbne, Allen, and
0110 005 111_ 8 8 9
R
0'10 1- 8 5 p
30xlf
Jarrell.
Chancey and Nease.
003 620
14 1

--

Mining stopped
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
temporary restraining order
has been issued to prevent
three defendants from
· swface mining sarid and
gravel without a Ucense, the
first legal action under the
Ohio Strip Mine Law.
The state natural resources
department said Monday its
Division of Reclamation requested the order Friday
from Fairfield County
Conunon Pleas Court Judge
Merlin Parent under the law
which requires reclamation

Parkersburg North is
4-3 victim of Legion

up

A f43,788.97 damage suit by his employer.
The complaint further
bas been filed In Gallla
County Common Pleas Court states that as a result of the
u a result of a traffic ac· accident, Mrs. Stidham
cldentAug.27,1974on Rt. 7 at suffered a whiplash-type
Addison.
injury to her spine, recurrent
Dante! Stidham and Phyllis · muscle spasms radiating Into
Stidham, Rt. I, Gallipolis, the shoulders and arms,
filed the suit against Mark E. chronic headaches and
Dillard, Pomeroy, and the osteoarthritis of the dorsel
GalUpoUs Motor Company, spine.
What happened then, ac· Gallipolis.
As a result of her injuries,
cording to Patterson's ac·
According to the petition, Mrs.
Stidham
was
count, was singularly Mrs. Stidham was slowing hospitalized and Is still under
bizarre. The sergeant said her car lo make a left turn a doctor's care. Sle seeks
the trooper tried to handcuff Into lllll's Market at Addison , judgment of $35,0110.
him and at the same time when her auto was struck In
Her husband asks '13,788.97
pulled out his .357 magnum the rear by a vhlcle driven by for medical and trans·
pistol. Patterson says he Dillard, an employee of portation expenses incurred
reacted lnsUnctively for fear GaiUpoUs Motor Company. plus the loss of his wife's
of getUng shot, and wrestled At the time of the accident, he services and consortium.
the officer for the weapon: was driving a vehicle owned they demand a jury trial.
During the altercation the
•
sergeant's wife and baby
Following a public hearing, contract, but the board"bad cleanliness around tiie fur~
were knocked to the floor.
the Gallia County Local decided not to renew the nace area after being:
Then another policeman
Buard of Education Monday contract during its executive counseled in that area;
joined the fracas. In the end
night reaffinned its earlier session prior ,to the vote taken several times. Scarberry said:
both officers were shot dead,
coal and aahes were per~
decision not to renew the on April 23.
Patterson insisting it was
Supt. Bradbury reporU!d he mitU!d to build up against the:
contract of Earl Bennett,
accidental and beyond his
and Assistant Superintendent furnaces causing a fire:
Vinton school custodian.
control.
Bennett, working on a one· Dennis Murdock bad been hazard and a cleanliness;
A jury did not beUeve the
year contract, received called to the school to check problem.
sergeant. Marine Corps
Other reasons lisU!d were::
notice of his non-renewal out Mr. Bennett's work but he
evidence was introduced that
Failure
to put a wire screen:
The .Ga!Ua County Local Labor can file a suit against following the April 23 board was gone the day they were
indicaU!d Patterson had "no Buard of Education Monday the board for back pay or the meeting. He requested a there. He said he had toured . over a drain in furnace room:
apparent tendency toward
:
employees can file for double bearing, which was held the building on another OC· after beilig counseled.
violence." Defense lawyers night received an ultimatum the amount due them.
Failure
to
clean
furnaces
:
casion
though.
Mr.
Murdock
during Monday's regular
tried to explain the matter from Jim Blaschak, Wage
properly
or
constantly.
said
the
building·
had
not
been
"We don't make the laws, meeting. Bemett asked why
and Hour Division, U. S.
Failure to clean Ught fix-:
was precipitated by the Department of Labor, we just enforce them. We are he was not given a new cleaned the day he was there.
aggressive trooper, that all
.
lures
in cafeteria-kitchen and:
Principal
Scarberty
said
contract.
Board
president
J
.
regarding the payment of dealing with state and federal
the sergeant was trying to do
failure
to clean cobwebs from ;
his
recommendation
for
nonE.
Cremeens
said,
"We
(the
laws," Blaschak stated.
originally was take a trip . '64,434.39 In back wages
corner
of gym after ordered •
renewal
was
based
upon
six
board)
acted
upon
the
Board President J . E.
owed up )o 12
to
do
so.
·
.:
with his family, and all he allegedly
major
reasons.
recommendation
of
Principal
Cremeens said the board was
tried to do in the end was custodians or their spouses. not going to pay anything AI Scarberry and Superin· They were : Bennett's
Principal Scarberry saiil"
Blaschak .told the board
protect them. Had Patterson
failure to maintain general Mr. Bennett's work was "up
until advlsell to do so by Its tendent Bradbury."
that
if
action
is
not
taken
one
been white and the trooper
At that point, Supt. cleanliness of the buildings, and down." "Sometimes he
attorney.
black, said the defense, the way or the other by Wed·
Bradbury
said he had classrooms, and hallways. did a good job for which I
Cremeeu
polnU!d
out
tbat
matter would not have been ·nesday, June 23, he was tllree or fom of lbe penoul recommended a one-year
(Continued on page 10)
Failure to maintain ~eneral
l!rought to trial. The finding : turning his Investigation file oamed in lbe investigative
over to other branches in the
guilty. The sentence: Ufe.
report are ool employed by t;~::;:;::::::::::«:::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::~:::::::~::::;:;:;:::::::~;:;:;::::~=::-:::::::::::~:::::~:!:::::::::::::=::»:~::'{!}W.~~::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::!;::!:!:!;:;:::z::::~
U. S. Labor Deparbnent.
According to Blaschak, the lbe board, but came In to help
board failed to pay Its lbelr s)IOille. Bluehak 118id
custodians for overtime that did not matter, they
worked from March 22, 1974 worked tbe required hours
whlcb eotlllu tlem to and
to March 12, 1976.
Ol iver, Pit
50 202 31 70 .344
Oeklend (Blue 6-6}, 11 p .m .
of surface mining areas
Major League Standings
The labor officials said his quaUfles them for baekpay.
McBr ide, St .L 40 151 23 52 .3AA
Milwaukee (Colborn 3-JJ at
By
United
Press
International
where minerals other than Investigation beaan in
Board member James
55 208 51 70 .337
California (Ryan 4-7), 10 :30 Griffey , Cin
National League
Foster, Cin
55 215 32 12 .335
~I are extracU!d.
P·fTl ·
February, and nothing has Blevins accUsed Blaschak of
East
Rose, Cin
60 24.4 S4 81 .332
Wednesday's Games
Named in the order were been done by the board even trying to "ripoff" the school
W. . L.. Pet. GB
Morgan, Cln 52 169 .46 56 .331
Clevel.!nd
at
Texas,
n
ight
38
17
.691
Ph iladelphia
Louis Nance, of Lancaster, though he has met with them, board.
Cey , LA 57 209 33 69 .330
33 25 .569 6"~h New York at Minnesota, nigh t
Pittsburgh
CroWfrd,
St.
L
51 173 25 57 .329
Baltimore
at
Chicago,
night
DeLuth ·Construction of Superintendent C. Comer
"You are trying to yank New York
30 32 &lt;184 11 %
Boone , Phil
48 152 2A 50 379
26 32 .448 131h Kansas City at Detroi t. night
Columbus and Chip and Dew Bradbury and the board's f64,434 from the board for Chicago
American League
Boslon at Oakland. n ight
25 34 .424 15
St.
Louis
G. AB. R. H. Pel
M I I w a u k e eat California,
Excavating and Grading, legal advisor William people who do not deserve Montrea l
20 32 .385 16'h
McRae, KC
56 211 38 76 .360
night
West
Carroll.
any
additional
money.
They
Brett, KC
56 229 36 81 .:154
Eachus.
W .. L.. Pet. GB
The order directed the
Lynn, Bos
45 171 25 58 .139
He said the board was knew their working hours Cinclnnal i
38 22 .6JJ Major Laague ·Ruults
LeFlore, Del 49 19'1 33 67 .337
defendants, their agents and obligated to pay the back when they were employed," Los Angeles 35 25 .583 3
By United Press International
Bostock, Min 38 1A2 21 47 .331
san Otego
31 27 .534 6
National League
their employes to stop wages and wiiJ'IIed that If It Blevins staU!d.
Carty, Cle
51 179 26 57 . ~IB
Houston
29 33 .468 10 , Chicago
000 020 ooo- 2 7 1 Carew, Min
54 212 32 67 .316
surface mining opera lions In failed to do so, the matter
Blevins said of the district's Atlanta
23 Jd .404 131!, Cincinnati
001 001 001 - 3 10 0 Bel l, Cle
206 33 65 .316
Greenfield ToWO$,hlp at a site would end up In court. assistant superintendent San Francisco 23 38 .377 15 1/i Coleman. Knowles (7), Zamo - Munson , NV 54
53 221 28 69 ·.m
.
.
Monday's
Cames
ra (8 ), Schultz (9) and Swisher ; Staub , Del
54 189 23 59 . ~12
about four miles north of Blaschak, advised that under Dennts MID'docli (who Is In Cln clnnatl3 Chicago 2
Nolan (6 -3) and Bench . LPHome
Runs
Lancaster just off u.s. 33.
SSt . louis 2
Zemora {3-2). HRs- Cinclnnatl,
Section 16 A the Secretary of charge of persomel), "Our . Atlanta
Nation1l Leegue: Kingman ,
Pittsburgh
2
Houston
1
concepcion
{4},
Foster
(12)
.
NV 22; Schmidt, Phil l6 ;
\
personnel director, who gets Montreal 3 San OJego o
Foster, Cln 17; Mondllly, ChL
(Only games scheduled }
almost UO,OOO per year,
Atlanta
021 002 ooo-- s' 11 0 Morgan, Cin and Cey, LA 11 .
Today•s Probable Pitcners
Sl. Louis
ooo 010 Ollr- 2 7 1 American League: Yastrzem .
ahould know the law regar(All Tim eo EDT)
Messersmith (5-5) and Wil - ski , 8os and Otis, KC 11 ;
ding overtime to employees.
Atlanta (Ruttwen 6-6) at St. l iams ; McGlothen, Solomon 191
Banda , Oak 10 ; May, Bait and
I Denny 2 · ~1. 7:30p.m.
and Simmons . LP- McGiothen Ford, Mlnn 9.
We abould not be Involved In Louis
.
Chicago
(Renko 2-21
et 15·6) .
Runs Batted In
•
something Uke this."
Cincinnati (Gullett 5-21, 8: 05
National League: Foster, Cln
p
.ni
.
~lltsburgh
000
100
Ollr2
51
The board will discuss the
54 ; Perez, Cln 50; Kingman,
Pittsburgh (Medtch 4-5) at Houston
000 000 001 - 1 6 0 NY 48; Morgan, Cln and
wage issue again during a Hou!lton
!Rondon 2-ll , 8:35p .m.
Reuss (7-5) and Sangulllen ; Schmidt , Phil 46.
Montreal (Carrithers 2-4) at Richerd , Siebert (8) , Forsch (9).
special meeUng at 7:30 p.m.
AmerIca n Leatue: BorSan Diego (Foster 1-JJ, 10 p m. and Jutze, Herrmann (8). LPMonday, June 21.
Los Angeles ( Rau S-3) at New R.Ichard (7 -6 ) . HR- Ptttsburgh, roughs, Tex d6 ; Chsmbl iss, ,.._Y .
41 ; Mayberry and Otis , K.C 38 ;
when a · person Is trying to There actually are people
York (Koosman 6-4), 8:05p .m . Oliver 191 .
Yastrzemskl. Bos, Munson, N·Y
San
Francisco
(Hlllic:kl
d-9)
at
lose weight how some of his with operable cancer who
and Rudl, Oak 37.
·
Philadelphia (Culton S - JL Montrea l
000 200 Ollr- 3 5 1
Stolen Bases
..
best friends will try to Induce don't want to have the
10:35 p .m .
S,an Diego
000 000 ()()()- 0 3 2
ATHENS LIVESTOCK
National League: . Cedeno,
Wednesday's Games
Stanhouse (4-2) anct Foole :
him to go off an otherwise necessary surgeikry for. fdfearlr ~
Hou 25 ; Moroan, Cin 2&lt;2,·
SALES, INC.
Atlanta at St . LOUIS, nigh t
(8)
and Griffey , Cln 17 ; Lopes, LA t;;
Strom,
Reynolds
successful diet. Peaple 'are it "spreading 1· e Wl1 e
Ch icago at Cincinnat i
Saturday, Jue J%,18'71
Kendaii . LP - Strom f6-S) . HR.1
Brock, St.L u.
Pittsburgh at Houston. night
Montreal , Foote (4 1.
complex, often irrational but once the air ~its it.
7otHEAD
Amerlnn Leatue: Patek, KC'
MontrNI at San Diego
34 ; North, Oak 30; Carew, Mlnn
lovable creatures. You need
1 don't know how or where
Feeder Steers (401J.8l0 tbs.) Los Angeles at New York, night
&lt;On ly games scheduled )
21 ; Baylor. Oak 25 ; Cam .
to learn to protect yourself this myth originated, but I do 22.50-38.75, Feeder Heifers San Fran at Philadelphia, night
American Ltague
panerls, Oak 23 .
Boston
020
030
ooo-5
B
o
from them. Your dad may 'know you could do a great (400-700 lbs.) 21}.32, Slaugher
Pitching
Minnesota
000 000 ooo-- o 1 1
Most Victories
Amencan League
need to stay away from his service by explaining to a Bulls (over 1,0110 lbs.) 27.50Wise
is.J)
and
Flok
;
De&lt;ker,
Natlonal League: Jones, SO
Ea&amp;t
Burgmeier (5). Campbell 17), 12·2;
friends who cannot help him mlalnformed multitude that 34.90, Feeder Bulls (~
W.. L.. Pel. Ga
Lonborg , Phil 1·3 ; Hough,
Luebber (9) and Wynegar . LP LA and
Matlack, NY 7 - ~ :
31 22 .585 New Vork
stay well by refraining from there Is no truth in lhil.
- Decker (2 -6).
lbs.) 2G-35.50.
Chr istenson, Phil 7-3; Fryman.
27 27 .500 ~ '1.
Cleveland
trying to get him to hirm
Mtl 7-A; Reuss, ' Pitt l!l"d
26 27 · 491 5
DEAR READER - I
Slaughter Cows - Utility Boston
California
100 001 ooo- 2 6 o
SF 7-5; Rlchar.p,
himself with forbidden foods. supplose that . peaple have 22.50·29.25, Canner-Cutter Delrolt
2~ 30 · "~ 7'h Milwaukee 005 210 OOx- s 10 l Montefusco,
Hou 7-6.
.,
Baltimore
2• 3 1 -•36 8
Tanana , Hassler (7) and
Incidentally I have found seen patients with advanced 18.50-22.50.
Milwaukee
-Amerle~n Ltatue : Flizmor .
22 29 .43l 8
Etchebarrtn , Garrett (71 ;
that it often helps a persbn cancer that has already . Veals (cholc·pFime) 41).
rls, KC 8-2; Tlant, sos and
West
Augustine , Frisella (6) and
Slaton, Mil 8-3 ; Tan,ana, Cel •8·
lose weight if he avoids spread, have surgery, and die "50 Hots (N I) "I "2 So
~i'
{9·
~~
Moore. WP - Augu•llne 12·21.
.... '
o. • ..., ' ws ~=~::sClty 32 21 ·60" 311 LP- Tenana (8.51. HRs- MII - 5; Bird, KC 7.1; Compball,
seeing peaple or being around soon afterward. Of cour!lf ...
Mlnn 7-2: Travers, Mil 7-:3 ;
w.: 40.75-42.10, Pigs (by the bead) Chlcago
27 26 ·509 81/ waukee , Aaron (3), Sutherland
people or situations that cancer has already spread to 25 45
Umbarger, TeJC 7.A; Oob~,
Minnesota
27 28 :491 91/~ (1), Money £9).
Clev 7-5; Hunter, NY 7-4.
"
Induces them to eat. Many a the point that It could not be · · ·
Oakland
27 31 .&lt;66 II
Kon•a• Clly 000 200 211r- 5 8 1
Earntd Run Aver~ge "
diet Is sabotaged by removed entirely at IIUI'gery.
Collforn lo
,'11- 37 .393 15'12 Detroll
001 000 IOQ- 2 10 3
( bosod on 54 Innings pltclttd~
Natfonll LIIIUt: Zachry, C n
•
Mondly ' ~· Resutts
,Fitzmorris, M lngorl (7J, Pat socializing, even In a small
In any case you are ab1.93 ; Jones, SO 2.10; Mattac ,
Boston S Minnesota 0
't in 191. Hall (9) and Stinson .
way.
solutely right, there iB no
NV Ul ; Messersmith, All 1.641 ;
Milwaukee I California 2
MacCormack ( Q. n , Crawtord
Montefusco, SF 2.66.
..
Kansas City s Detroit 2
£7) and wockenfuu . WPDEAR DR. LAMB - I am connection between ~ad of
NOW YOU KNOW
Amerlctn LNtUt: Tr•ver\,
(Only ~ames schfduled)
F'itzmorrls (8-2). LP- MacCor amazed at the number of cancer In the body and
Although the Idea of
TOd'y 1 Problblt Pitchers
meek (0-1}
Mil 1.76• Brown, Clev 2.16 ;
(All Tlmos EDT I
'
Wood, Chi 2.25; Umbarger, Tex
people who believe thai ~ootact of the cancer tlslues America u a place where
Cleveland (Kern 6-2 or Hood
10 1
2.35; GOSSigt, Chi 2.31.
cancer spreads when it with alr. Most akin cancers many nationalities blend l ·A) at Texa! (Perry 6·4) , 9:05
n V games scheduled)
Strikeouts
National Logue: Seaver, NY
comes in C(lllact with alr.
are the slowest spreading dates at least to the lath p.m.
New York (Ellis 5-4l at
Malor league Leaders
88 ; Richard, Hou 75 ; Montefus1 have been employed by a cancers (except th~.e from century, the term "melting Minnesota
(Redfern 1·2), 9 p.m . By United Press International
co, SF 72 ; Messersmith, At147 ;
Baltimore {Palmer 6-7l at
surgeon and it's most sur· moles which are very pot" was coined in 1908 by an
Niekro, Ali 63.
I•Hing
(Gossage S-31. 9 p.m .
American Ltltlll : . Tanana,
I baltd on 121 at 111111
prising how many Intelligent dangerous) and skin cancers English writer, Israel Zang· Chicago
Kansas City (Splittorff 5-61 at
Cai 123 ; Ryan. Cal 103 ;
National ltlllll
will,
as
the
title
of
a
play
set
people truly beUeve this. are constantly exposed to air.
Detroit (Lemanczyk 0-0), 8 p m .
G. AI. R. H. Pet Blylevoen, To 17 ; Hunter, NY
1Jf2'nklns S-61
at Robinson, Pit ~2 142 22 50 .352 73; L-lf'd, KC 6&gt;1.
Boston
in the United States.

glimpse of the past
by the cop to "shut your
mouth.''
The cop, it should be
mentioned, was not in good
humor. But then, according
to the views of some who
knew him, he seldom was
when confronting the colored.
He was a heavy drinker and
allegedly tended toward
excesaive zeal in his pollee
responsibilities. He once got
drunk with a fellow
patrolman and was shot with
the other man's revolver.
·Another time, reportedly, he
arrested a black citizen ,
smashed him In the teeth and
threw him in his patrol car
with the warning: "If you
bleed one drop on my seats
I'll blow your bead off."
What his character, the
trooper eventually felt that a
faulty taillight was an
arrestable offense in the case
of Roy Patterson's brother.
He took him· lo the jail for
what he said would be an
lntoximeter test . . Sgt. Pal·
terson followed, and at the
lockup was told again to keep
his mouth shut. Feeling be·
tween the sergeant and the
trooper became heaU!d, the
Marine finally saying he was
going to get a. lawyer for his
brother- and a scuffle began,
soon after that.

WILLIAMSBURG, Va.,
Tile Vlrjglnla
convnllon named com·
misslouen to rent tbe lands
of the departed Royal
Governor, Lord DWIIIIore,
at Williamsburg and
ouUying couotlea aud to
sell bflalavea ~d penooal
property with the pro&lt;:eeds
golnl Into tbe colonial
treasury.

laDe U -

Music instructor employe

. South's disreputable ·
By TOiil Tiede
PLAINS, Ga . - If
AUanta is a look at the future
of the South, Jimmy Carter
Country is in some
disreputable ways a glimpse
of the past. Andersonville Is
here. So are stains on the
earth where the slave iluc·
lions slood. If one listens
there are echoes from guns
and whips and weeping
children. This Is Southwest
Georgia, Perhaps the birth·
place of the .next president of
the Union.
II can be said the region has
only selecUvely kept pace
with the progress of America.
It has acconunodaU!d color
TV and fast food service, but
there has been less In the way
of adapUon of the soul. Folks
who 'praise be' in Carter's
church still don't like
niggermen looking at their
daughters. Black youths can
be free in a way, but their
fathers dare lesa. Prejudice
remains tile reason of fools
here. Justice ·for the darldes
still often resembles the
machinations of trolls.
One example Is lllustratlve.
Two years ago a man
named Roy Patterson was
engaged In the pursuit of
upward mobility in Albany,
Ga., a town to the south of
Plains. He was married, had
a chlld, and was a Marine
Corps sergeant with fine
record of servlee. He was,
however, black, and as it has
for so many of his people in
this area biB color was to
becll!le his undoing.
One day the sergeant accompanied his mother and
brother on an innocent trip to
Cordele, Ga., a conununlty 1o
the west of Plains. There, at
a fU1Ing station, a state
trooper began questioning
Patterson's brother about a
defectlve taillight on his
automobile. The sergeant
joined the conversation to see
if there was anything he could
do, and waa reportedly told

Dateline 1776 : Brown

SIMPLE.! J lf.oT MULTi·
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S 1'he D•ily sentinel, MiddleP.rt-Pomeroy , 0., Thesday, June 1~ 11175

GOLDEN ISLE

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The

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Mr. and Mrs. Don Burns

Nuptial vows read
in May ceremony

CHUCK STEAK
CHUCK ROAST

POINT ROCK - Tina
Radekin, daughter of Mr. and ·
Mrs. G. A. Radekin, Albany,
Rt. 3, and Don Burns, soo of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burns,
Radcliffe were united In
·marriage on May 8 at 6:30
p.m. at the Columbia Chapel
Christian Church.
The Rev. Charles Russell
officiated at the double ring
ceremony which was
preceded by a half hoilr of
nuptial music presented by
Rachel Coen. During the
ceremony Miss Coen sang
"The Wedding Song" and

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gowns of light blue witp navy,
nylon sheer capes in slipover
style decorated with hand
painted flowers . They wore
identical pale blue pictw-e
hats and carried white
baskets of mixed flowers.
Miss Amy Jo Radekin , the
bride's niece, served as
flower girl. Her natural crepe
dress with tiny blue floral
print featured short puffed
sleeves with a drawstring
neck and shirred bodice ·
above a high waistline. She
carried a basket of while rose
petals tipped in blue.

22 GAL
CAN

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NOT AS SHOWN

REALISTIC
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Bur n s ,
Columbus, served as best
man for his brother. Ushers
were Gary Holliday, nephew
of the bride and Mike Burns,
brother of the groom. Jimmie
Burns, also a brother of the
groom, was ringbearer and
carried a heart-shaped white
sali~ pillow trimmed in lace.
Thet all wore while carnation
boutonnieres.
Miss Judy Holliday, niece
of th.e bride, presided at the
guest register . She was attired In a full length lime
green halter gown with a
triangular shawl of identical
shade. Miss Kathy Cheadle
wore a blue floral print
double knit gown and served
as floor hostess.
The bride's mother chose a
cognac A-line floor length
dress with a rose corsage of
matching shade. The groom's
mother was In a light blue
gown with pink floral print.
Her corsage was geranium
pink roses.
Pale blue tulle favors filled
with rice and tied with ribbon
were distributed by Miss
Kathy Burns , sister of the
groom.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social room . The bride's table
was covered with a white
cloth and decorated with blue
and while bells. An antique
crystal pLflch bowl and silver
coffee service were used at
the ends of the table and
silver trays held mints and
nuts. The table was centered
wl th a three tiered wedding
cake, gift of the bride's aunt,
Mrs. Nellie Vale. The tiers
were separal!!&lt;l...!"ith Grecian
plllars and the cake was
topped with two large white
satin bells edged with pearls
and held together with a
white satin ribbon bow
centered with · Illy of the
valley. A small while
pedestal displayed replicas of
the engagement and wedding
rings. Two white doves sat on
a large heart background ..
Mrs. Cheryl Radekin and
Miss Judy Holliday served
the cake. Miss Mildred Grace
poured the punch , and Mrs.
Sue Long ·presided at. the
coffee service.
The bride was honored by
prenuptial showers given by
Miss Nancy Hartley, Mrs.
Sara Cheadle, Mrs. Jane
Bowles, Mrs . Martha
Chapman, Mrs. Nellie Vale
and Mrs. Wanetta Radekin.
Alter a weekend honeymoon, the couple resides In
Wilkesville.

:::
:. .·,:.
....

natiooal anthem and the 011
pledge was given by the
members.
A tour of the Johnson roae
garden was taken. Oueats
were Mrs . Edith Reed, Mra.
Alberta Grones of Nabby Lee
Ames Chapter, Athena ; Mn.
Robert Ashley, son, Keith,
and Emma English, Cool·
ville; Mrs. Elizabeth Cutler,
Dr. Kathryn Philson, Eleanor
Smith, Mrs. Pegsy Moore,
James Brewington, Emer1911
Jooes and Thereun Johnson.

Class to
raise funds
Several fund ralalng .
projects were planned dll'ing
the Friday night meeUng of
the Happy Harvesters Clau
of Trinity Church at the
chw-ch .
The class decided to continue the sale of convaleacent
and all-«:casion cards and to
hold a rummage sale In
August. Plans were completed for the annual potluck
to be.held In the church dining
room In July . Reported Ill
were Mrs'. Eva De.,.uer,
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center, and Mrs . Gladys
Cuckler, confined to Veterans
Memorial Hoapltal.
The meeting opened wtth
the hymns ln the G~den, 1 '

WOI\IEN HOME
Mrs. Beatrice . buck of
Pomeroy and Mrs . 'Pete
Dumolt; New Lexington ,
have retw-ned from a 10 day
visit In Florida with Mrs.
Dumolt 's
son,
Tom ,
Jacksonville. They atlended
the Grand Ole Opry In Nashvllle, Tenn . and visited
Disney World and returned
home by plane.

G
· - · · ····· ...............\:.:
eneration Rap .::_!~_~ and"TaketheNameofJesus
.
with You" In devollona by

J::::::::::~-=:::::::~::=:::::::::~:::x::~;;::;:..-;.~:_o.-.~::::-~~:s::::-:·:.:*::::~::~~=x:·:·:o::;::·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·.········''O:~

:;:;

11

By ~Jelen anaSue Hottel

::::

=~ Miss Erma Smith who also

read an article ·entitled
"God's Depth" by Margaret
Edwards, and prayer.
Members sang "Happy
Birthday" to Mrs. Fred Dully
and MIS! Smith. MIS! Dully
read two poems, "I Am an
Old Pensioner," and "Bad
Ear.s." She also served as
pianist for the meeUns.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Neva
Seyfried, Mrs . Ernestine
Burnell, Mrs. Dale Smith and
Mrs. PI\UIIp Meinhart. Mrs.
Rose Ginther and Mrs. Ada
Holter served refreahinenta
of Ice cream and cake with
strawberry topping. Floral
arrangement and green
tapers were used on the table.

,l .:.l.'

Usten to This Ruoaway's Plea!
Rap : .
.
My home is the kind you run away from or go batty. My
mother hits and screams, my stepfather guzzles beer and acts
like a pig. They don't want me. Aller I split the second time
Mom said f was "incorrigible" and I ended up In a stau;
training school.
I'm not bad.l just couldn't stand it at home , but I promised
to really try when my time wsa up at the school. (It was awful
there because of the gangs.)·
Well , I'm trying, because I don't want to be put aw•y
again. But why is It that people Uke me who haven't done
anything more wrong than trying to get out of a miserable
family life, should end up In "jail"?
Where are all those great foster homes I read about? RUNAWAY
Dear Runaway :
They're for the lucky teens who have the right social
worker ~nd come up before the right juvenile court judge.
Unfortunately, many aren't that lucky.
The National Council on Crime and Delinquency reports
that each year about 100,000 teenagers are sent to state
training schools for "status" offenses such as habitual
truancy, ruMing away from home, etc., noncrimes for which·
an adult would not be prosecuted.
A striking statistic here, says a recent Seventeen
magazine item, is that "of all juveniles Incarcerated this year,
93 per cent were held for status offenses - 70 per cent female
and 30 per cent male ... Females, often vlctinls of a double
standard of morality, are more likely than males to be
institutionalized for 'Immoral ' behavior."
However, there's hope, if not for you, at least for future
run!! ways .
Seventeen magazine continues, "One goal of the Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, passed by Congress
last year,ls to end all imprisonment of status offenders within
two years, replacing training schools with community
programs." Hopefully that means adequate foster homes If
situations indicate need for them. - HELEN AND SUE

Potluck enjoyed
RUTLAND - A potluck
dinner wsa held Swlday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett McClaskey.
Attending were. Mrs. Pearl
Brogdan, Mr . and Mr1 .
Bobby Gra!Jam, Mr . and Mrs.
Keith Sutherland, Mrs. Betty
Oliver, Vln~ent and Randy
Oliver, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Hutton, Stan,
Gary and David, Rt . 3,
Albany . Afternoon vial lora
were Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Nicholson, Middleport.

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
Dad Is five years older than Mom. But when I ask to go out
with a guy who is only four years older than me; you'd think the
sky had fallen.
I'm 15, he's 19 and much more respectful and trustable
than guys iny Ol\'!1 age. He doesn 't have sex on his mind
constantly like ninth-graders do .
Why can't parents understand? ·- DISTURBED
mENAGER

HOSPITALIZED
James !Jiggs) Blgs,ll6, of
Pomeroy was transferred
Friday from the Holzer
Medical Center to St. Mary1
Hospital, HooUngton, W. Va.
He Ia In Intensive ~are.

Dear Dis:
Parenl3 play the numbers game mainly beeause they don't
want their daughters getting too serious too soon - and they
figure a 19-year"'ld guy might, whereas a 1:&gt;-year-llld won't.
IWhich is pure wishful thinking, If l know my ninth-grad•
boys!)
Often an older man ·Is safer than they think . Since il
depends on the man, why don't you get him and your folk!
together'! He might win them over . - SUE

TERRARIUM
FOLIAGE PLANT

June 20th Give Dad A

Or

FOLIAGE GARDEN
For His Desk at
Home or Office

NOTE FROM HELEN t!ri:i-:s PARENTS : Give the 19president; Mrs. Susan year;,ld a chance! According to our mail, "older men" have a
Blaker, . secretary; Mrs. pretty gQOd track record·. Many teenage girls report they're
Janet Duffy, treasurer ·and not out to "break records" as are boys their own age.
Mrs. Judy Humphreys, · ·
+++
reporter.
Rap :
The pixie award presented
l can't understand why they put warnings on cigarette
to the outstanding member packages, when they don 't"on whiskey bottles. For that matter
each year went to Mrs. Helen how about "Warning: Contenl3 may be detrimental to your
Blackston. Mrs . Nancy waistline" on milkshake cartons? - NEEDS A REMINDER
Morris won the traveling
prize, and a white elephant
sale was held .
and daughter, Cathy, Mr. and
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Dan White, Mr. and
c
Mrs . Harold Blackston, Mrs. Mrs. Gene Houdashelt, son
JU
Susan Blaker and daughter Randy, Teresa Van Meter,
The annual Neigler reunion Teresa ; Mrs. 'Nancy Morris Judy, Tara, and Jay Hwnphwas held Sunday at Lake and daughter, Carol; Mr . and reys, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
, Alma. ·
Mrs. Dale Colbw-n, Jim and Harris, Ken and Dave, and
. Attending were Mr. and Fred; Mrs . Thelma Osborn Mrs. Bostic.
Mrs. Carrol Nelgler, Nola
/ '
and Karen, Phil Weaver, ·l'I~~~........~~-.!H+..4....H+..,...
David Duffy, Mr . and Mrs.
MASON fURNITURE
Don Harden and D. J.,
Dorothy Harden, Syracuse;
Earl Yates, Oak Hill ; Mr . and
STORE HOURS
. .
Mrs. Clyde Davis and Lisa,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs . Jim
Mon •• Tues •• Wed . &amp; Sat.,...,:30til S:OO
Smith, Melissa and Marty,
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
Dale Smith, Shelia1 Dale and
Drucy House of Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs . Junior Nelgler
and Peggy, Mr, and Mrs.
Kenny Neigler, Joy Neigler,
Sheila Crouch, Stan Davis,
Mr . and Mrs . Forr est
Nci~ler, and Mr. and Mrs.
773-5592
Mason, W. '1/a.
Herman Grate
Robert Harden, Pam. Ralph
and Sandy, ali of Racine.

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Mrs. Kathy Bostic, South
Central District Ohio Cl!Ud
Conservation League , In·
stalled the 19711-77 officers of
the Middleport CCL following
a family picnic recently at
the Route 33 roadside park.
Installed in the candlelight
ceremony were Mrs. Peggy
Harris , president; Mrs.
Peggy Schmoll,
vice

Each

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conuniltee will be meeting
soon to prepare next year's
programs and asked for
suggestions
from
the
membership.
Mr . A. K. Knight prepared
the program which was
presented by Mrs. McDaniel
and entlUed "Our Flag." She
described the various em·
blem~ which have been used
on nags In past clvllltallons
and gave a hlstcry of the
American flag, noting that
Benjamin Franklin was
chairman of a ·committee
appointed to design a flag .
She said that the American
flag symbolizes the principles
and Ideals of the American
people. In her paper, Mrs .
Knight also dlacussed the Rag
code arid concluded with the
poem, "The Flag Goes By."
Keith Ashley, a guest,
played for singing o( the

League installs officers

Reg.

C.B. RADIO

Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
In a guiana knit gown
fashioned with an empire
waist shirred just above an
inverted V panel with ·lace
overlay at the raised waistline. The bodice was
highlighted by a V neckline
with shadowing of polyester
lace ruffling at the edge. The
long bishop sleeves of silk
organza featured wide lace
Victorian cutis accented with
covered buttons. The paneled
A-line skirt was complimented by a chapel length
train . The gown was
fashioned by the bride's
mother. A Juliet cap was ·
worn by the brl'de and from it
fell a veil of silk organza
edg.ed in aiencon lace,
des1gned and stitched by Miss
Nancy Hartley , her maid of
hooor.
The bride carried a colonial
bouquet of daisies, white
roses arid baby's breath with
·blue ribbon streamers.
The vows were repeated
before an altar decorated
with two seven-branch
candelabra and baskets of
white daisies, blue iris, sweet
· rocket and greenery. ·
The bride's attendants
were Miss Hartley, maid of
honor , and Mrs. Avanel
Holliday, matron of hooor
and sister of the bride. The
honor attendants wore
sleeveless, princess line,

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Return Jonathan
Chapter decided
Friday to host a visit of the
Delta Queen at Washington's
monument near Long Bottom
oo the Dllughters of the
Ameri ca n Revolution
chartered trip from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati.
At the Flag Day picnic held
at the. home of'Mrs. Thereon
Johnson, regent, Friday ·
night, a letter was read from
Mrs . Norman DeMltt, stale
regent, asking the chapter to
have a progrma at the
monument when the Delta
Queen makes a two hour slop
there on Sept.!. Named to the
committee to prepare
something appropriate for
the occasion were Mrs .
James Brewington, Mrs .
Paul Elch, Mrs . Ptrick
Lochary , Mrs . Charles
McDaniel and Mrs. Emerson
Jones. The Delta Queen will
be stopping at all historical
places along the Ohio River .
Discussed at the meeting ·
was marking American'
Revolullnarysoldiers' graves
and plans will be made for
this at a later meeting.
Members were reminded that
reservations for the Wald·
schmidt House tow- must be
in by July 23. The tour will be
held on Aug . 4. Mrs . Etch
reported that the program
Mei ~s

�. ..

•

..

.

1 _._ The Di:llh. Scnlincl. Mrddlep:; rt·Pmn~r·u~ . 1) . Tllt'~'l:i f . .l unt·
. 15, Plili

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S 1'he D•ily sentinel, MiddleP.rt-Pomeroy , 0., Thesday, June 1~ 11175

GOLDEN ISLE

DAR to host Delta Queen ·
The

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Mr. and Mrs. Don Burns

Nuptial vows read
in May ceremony

CHUCK STEAK
CHUCK ROAST

POINT ROCK - Tina
Radekin, daughter of Mr. and ·
Mrs. G. A. Radekin, Albany,
Rt. 3, and Don Burns, soo of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burns,
Radcliffe were united In
·marriage on May 8 at 6:30
p.m. at the Columbia Chapel
Christian Church.
The Rev. Charles Russell
officiated at the double ring
ceremony which was
preceded by a half hoilr of
nuptial music presented by
Rachel Coen. During the
ceremony Miss Coen sang
"The Wedding Song" and

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gowns of light blue witp navy,
nylon sheer capes in slipover
style decorated with hand
painted flowers . They wore
identical pale blue pictw-e
hats and carried white
baskets of mixed flowers.
Miss Amy Jo Radekin , the
bride's niece, served as
flower girl. Her natural crepe
dress with tiny blue floral
print featured short puffed
sleeves with a drawstring
neck and shirred bodice ·
above a high waistline. She
carried a basket of while rose
petals tipped in blue.

22 GAL
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Bur n s ,
Columbus, served as best
man for his brother. Ushers
were Gary Holliday, nephew
of the bride and Mike Burns,
brother of the groom. Jimmie
Burns, also a brother of the
groom, was ringbearer and
carried a heart-shaped white
sali~ pillow trimmed in lace.
Thet all wore while carnation
boutonnieres.
Miss Judy Holliday, niece
of th.e bride, presided at the
guest register . She was attired In a full length lime
green halter gown with a
triangular shawl of identical
shade. Miss Kathy Cheadle
wore a blue floral print
double knit gown and served
as floor hostess.
The bride's mother chose a
cognac A-line floor length
dress with a rose corsage of
matching shade. The groom's
mother was In a light blue
gown with pink floral print.
Her corsage was geranium
pink roses.
Pale blue tulle favors filled
with rice and tied with ribbon
were distributed by Miss
Kathy Burns , sister of the
groom.
A reception honoring the
couple was held in the church
social room . The bride's table
was covered with a white
cloth and decorated with blue
and while bells. An antique
crystal pLflch bowl and silver
coffee service were used at
the ends of the table and
silver trays held mints and
nuts. The table was centered
wl th a three tiered wedding
cake, gift of the bride's aunt,
Mrs. Nellie Vale. The tiers
were separal!!&lt;l...!"ith Grecian
plllars and the cake was
topped with two large white
satin bells edged with pearls
and held together with a
white satin ribbon bow
centered with · Illy of the
valley. A small while
pedestal displayed replicas of
the engagement and wedding
rings. Two white doves sat on
a large heart background ..
Mrs. Cheryl Radekin and
Miss Judy Holliday served
the cake. Miss Mildred Grace
poured the punch , and Mrs.
Sue Long ·presided at. the
coffee service.
The bride was honored by
prenuptial showers given by
Miss Nancy Hartley, Mrs.
Sara Cheadle, Mrs. Jane
Bowles, Mrs . Martha
Chapman, Mrs. Nellie Vale
and Mrs. Wanetta Radekin.
Alter a weekend honeymoon, the couple resides In
Wilkesville.

:::
:. .·,:.
....

natiooal anthem and the 011
pledge was given by the
members.
A tour of the Johnson roae
garden was taken. Oueats
were Mrs . Edith Reed, Mra.
Alberta Grones of Nabby Lee
Ames Chapter, Athena ; Mn.
Robert Ashley, son, Keith,
and Emma English, Cool·
ville; Mrs. Elizabeth Cutler,
Dr. Kathryn Philson, Eleanor
Smith, Mrs. Pegsy Moore,
James Brewington, Emer1911
Jooes and Thereun Johnson.

Class to
raise funds
Several fund ralalng .
projects were planned dll'ing
the Friday night meeUng of
the Happy Harvesters Clau
of Trinity Church at the
chw-ch .
The class decided to continue the sale of convaleacent
and all-«:casion cards and to
hold a rummage sale In
August. Plans were completed for the annual potluck
to be.held In the church dining
room In July . Reported Ill
were Mrs'. Eva De.,.uer,
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center, and Mrs . Gladys
Cuckler, confined to Veterans
Memorial Hoapltal.
The meeting opened wtth
the hymns ln the G~den, 1 '

WOI\IEN HOME
Mrs. Beatrice . buck of
Pomeroy and Mrs . 'Pete
Dumolt; New Lexington ,
have retw-ned from a 10 day
visit In Florida with Mrs.
Dumolt 's
son,
Tom ,
Jacksonville. They atlended
the Grand Ole Opry In Nashvllle, Tenn . and visited
Disney World and returned
home by plane.

G
· - · · ····· ...............\:.:
eneration Rap .::_!~_~ and"TaketheNameofJesus
.
with You" In devollona by

J::::::::::~-=:::::::~::=:::::::::~:::x::~;;::;:..-;.~:_o.-.~::::-~~:s::::-:·:.:*::::~::~~=x:·:·:o::;::·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·.·.········''O:~

:;:;

11

By ~Jelen anaSue Hottel

::::

=~ Miss Erma Smith who also

read an article ·entitled
"God's Depth" by Margaret
Edwards, and prayer.
Members sang "Happy
Birthday" to Mrs. Fred Dully
and MIS! Smith. MIS! Dully
read two poems, "I Am an
Old Pensioner," and "Bad
Ear.s." She also served as
pianist for the meeUns.
Games were played with
prizes going to Mrs. Neva
Seyfried, Mrs . Ernestine
Burnell, Mrs. Dale Smith and
Mrs. PI\UIIp Meinhart. Mrs.
Rose Ginther and Mrs. Ada
Holter served refreahinenta
of Ice cream and cake with
strawberry topping. Floral
arrangement and green
tapers were used on the table.

,l .:.l.'

Usten to This Ruoaway's Plea!
Rap : .
.
My home is the kind you run away from or go batty. My
mother hits and screams, my stepfather guzzles beer and acts
like a pig. They don't want me. Aller I split the second time
Mom said f was "incorrigible" and I ended up In a stau;
training school.
I'm not bad.l just couldn't stand it at home , but I promised
to really try when my time wsa up at the school. (It was awful
there because of the gangs.)·
Well , I'm trying, because I don't want to be put aw•y
again. But why is It that people Uke me who haven't done
anything more wrong than trying to get out of a miserable
family life, should end up In "jail"?
Where are all those great foster homes I read about? RUNAWAY
Dear Runaway :
They're for the lucky teens who have the right social
worker ~nd come up before the right juvenile court judge.
Unfortunately, many aren't that lucky.
The National Council on Crime and Delinquency reports
that each year about 100,000 teenagers are sent to state
training schools for "status" offenses such as habitual
truancy, ruMing away from home, etc., noncrimes for which·
an adult would not be prosecuted.
A striking statistic here, says a recent Seventeen
magazine item, is that "of all juveniles Incarcerated this year,
93 per cent were held for status offenses - 70 per cent female
and 30 per cent male ... Females, often vlctinls of a double
standard of morality, are more likely than males to be
institutionalized for 'Immoral ' behavior."
However, there's hope, if not for you, at least for future
run!! ways .
Seventeen magazine continues, "One goal of the Juvenile
Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, passed by Congress
last year,ls to end all imprisonment of status offenders within
two years, replacing training schools with community
programs." Hopefully that means adequate foster homes If
situations indicate need for them. - HELEN AND SUE

Potluck enjoyed
RUTLAND - A potluck
dinner wsa held Swlday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Emmett McClaskey.
Attending were. Mrs. Pearl
Brogdan, Mr . and Mr1 .
Bobby Gra!Jam, Mr . and Mrs.
Keith Sutherland, Mrs. Betty
Oliver, Vln~ent and Randy
Oliver, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Everett Hutton, Stan,
Gary and David, Rt . 3,
Albany . Afternoon vial lora
were Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Nicholson, Middleport.

+++

Dear Helen and Sue :
Dad Is five years older than Mom. But when I ask to go out
with a guy who is only four years older than me; you'd think the
sky had fallen.
I'm 15, he's 19 and much more respectful and trustable
than guys iny Ol\'!1 age. He doesn 't have sex on his mind
constantly like ninth-graders do .
Why can't parents understand? ·- DISTURBED
mENAGER

HOSPITALIZED
James !Jiggs) Blgs,ll6, of
Pomeroy was transferred
Friday from the Holzer
Medical Center to St. Mary1
Hospital, HooUngton, W. Va.
He Ia In Intensive ~are.

Dear Dis:
Parenl3 play the numbers game mainly beeause they don't
want their daughters getting too serious too soon - and they
figure a 19-year"'ld guy might, whereas a 1:&gt;-year-llld won't.
IWhich is pure wishful thinking, If l know my ninth-grad•
boys!)
Often an older man ·Is safer than they think . Since il
depends on the man, why don't you get him and your folk!
together'! He might win them over . - SUE

TERRARIUM
FOLIAGE PLANT

June 20th Give Dad A

Or

FOLIAGE GARDEN
For His Desk at
Home or Office

NOTE FROM HELEN t!ri:i-:s PARENTS : Give the 19president; Mrs. Susan year;,ld a chance! According to our mail, "older men" have a
Blaker, . secretary; Mrs. pretty gQOd track record·. Many teenage girls report they're
Janet Duffy, treasurer ·and not out to "break records" as are boys their own age.
Mrs. Judy Humphreys, · ·
+++
reporter.
Rap :
The pixie award presented
l can't understand why they put warnings on cigarette
to the outstanding member packages, when they don 't"on whiskey bottles. For that matter
each year went to Mrs. Helen how about "Warning: Contenl3 may be detrimental to your
Blackston. Mrs . Nancy waistline" on milkshake cartons? - NEEDS A REMINDER
Morris won the traveling
prize, and a white elephant
sale was held .
and daughter, Cathy, Mr. and
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Dan White, Mr. and
c
Mrs . Harold Blackston, Mrs. Mrs. Gene Houdashelt, son
JU
Susan Blaker and daughter Randy, Teresa Van Meter,
The annual Neigler reunion Teresa ; Mrs. 'Nancy Morris Judy, Tara, and Jay Hwnphwas held Sunday at Lake and daughter, Carol; Mr . and reys, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
, Alma. ·
Mrs. Dale Colbw-n, Jim and Harris, Ken and Dave, and
. Attending were Mr. and Fred; Mrs . Thelma Osborn Mrs. Bostic.
Mrs. Carrol Nelgler, Nola
/ '
and Karen, Phil Weaver, ·l'I~~~........~~-.!H+..4....H+..,...
David Duffy, Mr . and Mrs.
MASON fURNITURE
Don Harden and D. J.,
Dorothy Harden, Syracuse;
Earl Yates, Oak Hill ; Mr . and
STORE HOURS
. .
Mrs. Clyde Davis and Lisa,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs . Jim
Mon •• Tues •• Wed . &amp; Sat.,...,:30til S:OO
Smith, Melissa and Marty,
Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON
Dale Smith, Shelia1 Dale and
Drucy House of Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs . Junior Nelgler
and Peggy, Mr, and Mrs.
Kenny Neigler, Joy Neigler,
Sheila Crouch, Stan Davis,
Mr . and Mrs . Forr est
Nci~ler, and Mr. and Mrs.
773-5592
Mason, W. '1/a.
Herman Grate
Robert Harden, Pam. Ralph
and Sandy, ali of Racine.

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Mrs. Kathy Bostic, South
Central District Ohio Cl!Ud
Conservation League , In·
stalled the 19711-77 officers of
the Middleport CCL following
a family picnic recently at
the Route 33 roadside park.
Installed in the candlelight
ceremony were Mrs. Peggy
Harris , president; Mrs.
Peggy Schmoll,
vice

Each

IN STOCK! REALISTIC'S
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'.

conuniltee will be meeting
soon to prepare next year's
programs and asked for
suggestions
from
the
membership.
Mr . A. K. Knight prepared
the program which was
presented by Mrs. McDaniel
and entlUed "Our Flag." She
described the various em·
blem~ which have been used
on nags In past clvllltallons
and gave a hlstcry of the
American flag, noting that
Benjamin Franklin was
chairman of a ·committee
appointed to design a flag .
She said that the American
flag symbolizes the principles
and Ideals of the American
people. In her paper, Mrs .
Knight also dlacussed the Rag
code arid concluded with the
poem, "The Flag Goes By."
Keith Ashley, a guest,
played for singing o( the

League installs officers

Reg.

C.B. RADIO

Given in marriage by her
father, the bride was attired
In a guiana knit gown
fashioned with an empire
waist shirred just above an
inverted V panel with ·lace
overlay at the raised waistline. The bodice was
highlighted by a V neckline
with shadowing of polyester
lace ruffling at the edge. The
long bishop sleeves of silk
organza featured wide lace
Victorian cutis accented with
covered buttons. The paneled
A-line skirt was complimented by a chapel length
train . The gown was
fashioned by the bride's
mother. A Juliet cap was ·
worn by the brl'de and from it
fell a veil of silk organza
edg.ed in aiencon lace,
des1gned and stitched by Miss
Nancy Hartley , her maid of
hooor.
The bride carried a colonial
bouquet of daisies, white
roses arid baby's breath with
·blue ribbon streamers.
The vows were repeated
before an altar decorated
with two seven-branch
candelabra and baskets of
white daisies, blue iris, sweet
· rocket and greenery. ·
The bride's attendants
were Miss Hartley, maid of
honor , and Mrs. Avanel
Holliday, matron of hooor
and sister of the bride. The
honor attendants wore
sleeveless, princess line,

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Return Jonathan
Chapter decided
Friday to host a visit of the
Delta Queen at Washington's
monument near Long Bottom
oo the Dllughters of the
Ameri ca n Revolution
chartered trip from Pittsburgh to Cincinnati.
At the Flag Day picnic held
at the. home of'Mrs. Thereon
Johnson, regent, Friday ·
night, a letter was read from
Mrs . Norman DeMltt, stale
regent, asking the chapter to
have a progrma at the
monument when the Delta
Queen makes a two hour slop
there on Sept.!. Named to the
committee to prepare
something appropriate for
the occasion were Mrs .
James Brewington, Mrs .
Paul Elch, Mrs . Ptrick
Lochary , Mrs . Charles
McDaniel and Mrs. Emerson
Jones. The Delta Queen will
be stopping at all historical
places along the Ohio River .
Discussed at the meeting ·
was marking American'
Revolullnarysoldiers' graves
and plans will be made for
this at a later meeting.
Members were reminded that
reservations for the Wald·
schmidt House tow- must be
in by July 23. The tour will be
held on Aug . 4. Mrs . Etch
reported that the program
Mei ~s

�6- The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. 'l'uesday. June 1 ~ . 1976

:-

.

Social
Calendar

Polly's Pointers

TUESDAY
GROUP
If,
Uni ted
P ~es b yteria n Chur c h,
Mtddleport, 7:30 Tuesday al
the home of Mrs. William
Morris. Mrs. Robert Woodward will be Mrs. Morris' cohos tess . Mrs. Myron Miller,
devo tional leader. Members
to take their . Bible study
books.
MEIGS COUNTY Cha pter,
Ameri can Can cer Society
meeting , 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at headquarters, S. Third
Ave., Middleport . Regular
and new members invir.,d.
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 Tuesday 7 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. All
masler masons are invi ted .
SYRACUSE - Minersville
baseball boosters Tuesday; a
p.m. at th e Syrac use
municipal building.

-

.
WEDNESDAY
ROSE GARDE N CLU B
annual picnfc Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Floyd Stout ,
5 p.m. for members and t11eir
families.
P AST PR E SID E NTS.
American Legion Auxili ary,
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30
Wednesday at the home of
Mrs . Grace Pra tt , Midcll enort .
BOSWORTH Co uncil 46 ,
Royal and Select Masters will ,
have a special meeting at 7 p.
m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
The royal and select master
degree will be conferred.
THURSDAY
MEIGS HIGH School band
prac tice session Wednesday
and Thursday at the high
school band room at 5 p.m.
for Regatta . Band camp
music
will
also be
distributed .
ROCK SPRINGS Beller
Health Club, home of Mrs.
Betty Co nkle, Cheshire .
Members to meet at the Rock
Springs Church at 12:30 to go
to t11e Conkle home . Mrs.
Helen Blackston will have the
program; Mrs. Teresa Abbott, the contest.

SERVICES HELD
Funeral )lervices for Emily
Hope Hall , 14-year-o ld
daugh ter of Mr . and Mrs.
Calvin Hall, and granddaughter of Mrs. Jessie
Houchins, Middleport, were
conducted Thursday at St.
Andrews United Methodist
Church at St. Albans, W. Va .
with the Rev . Melvin
Risinger officiating . Burial
was in the Cunningham
Memorial Park. Other local
survivors include Mrs . Vicki
Houchins and Mrs . Billy Jo
Krawsczyn , aunts of Emily
Hope.

ON DEAN'S l.IST
Ted Lehew , son of Mr . and
Mrs . William
Lehew ,
Pomeroy, was named to the
dean 's list of Capital
University for the second
semester, 1975-76, with a 3.75
average . Lehew recently
received his bachelor of
science degree in education
from Capital.

Janelle Kuhn is May bride

LET;&lt;I;RT, W. Va . - The
- - - - - - - - -- - - - - lawn of ilK! home of Mr. and
Mrs. Elroy Kaylor of .Letart,
W. Va ., before an assembly of
friends and relatives , was the
&amp;-ene · of the wedding of
Janelle Kuhn, daughter of
Bv l'otty Cramr1
Rev. and Mrs: Robert Kuhn
POLLY'S PROBLEM
not believe nine out of ten of Gallipolis, and Jack E.
DEA R POLLY - I hope
people ever hear what is told Kaylor, son of .Mr. and Mrs.
someone has a solution to my them. I am also guilty of this Elroy Kaylor of Letart May
problem. All win ler long our but am fighting it. Please, 14, at 6:30p.m.
cal sits on our polyester rug dear Polly, get this word to
They were united in.
from which she picks up a lot the unknowing. - O.S.W.
marriage hy her father.
of stallc. She hales to be
DEAR POLLY - A recent
Given in marriage by her
touched becal!5'! when we Pointer was misleading. Our parents, the bride was attired
stroke her (ur we both get a
son who is a fireman says one in a light blue polyester gown
shock. Is there any remedy ? should NEVER put any type \Yith white lace shaw collar.
My husband foxed up a
of waxed carton in the In her hair she wore a tiara of
doorbell for the cat by putting fireplace to bw-n. the wax blue baby 's breath . •Her
a buzzer on the porch with a
bUilds up on the Inside of the bouquet was of colonial
board propped on it. When the
fireplace and one day you design of blue and white
cat sleps on the board it could get a roaring fire that carnations with white
buzzed in the house . When her is several feet above the streamers.
friends come over they al!IO chimney . They have anThe matron of honor was
buzz the buzzer. I always look swered alarms because of Mrs. Shelly Woods of
forward to the column as It such a practice. - MRS. Gallipolis and best man 1\'aS
has helped me so during the W.J.K.
Michael Thompson of Letart.
years. - WILMA .
Her mother was attired in a
DEAR MRS. W.U.K. DEAR WILMA - lam sure Thank• to you and your pink and white polyester
some ol our readers with cats fireman son for bringing thlo gown with pink jacket and
wlll come forth with some lo our attention. - POLLY. white · accessories. Her
s uggestions lor you , was
peach
DEAR POLLY - Often I corsage
POLLY.
have needed a deeper and carnations.
The w~ding cake was
bigger cake pan but solved Mrs. Kaylor wore a multl
DEAR POLLy - I like the problem by cutting strips flora 1jersey gown with while baked and decorated by Mrs.
foam backed place mats for of wxed paper about one to accessories. Her corsage was Lois Reitmire who arranged
my table since they do not one and a half Inches wide yellow carnations.
the buffet with the help of
slip around as much as and long enough to go around
Following the ceremony a Mrs . Ethel Moore. Mrs.
others. But recently I had the inside of the cake pan.· reception was held in the Marjorie Walburn ,
trouble finding them, so I First grease and flow- the home. ·
Middleport, made the potato
bought a small plastic pan, put wxed paper strip
After the couple cut the salad.
tablecloth with a foam against inside of the rim, three tier wedding cake the
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
backing. With the pinking pour in the cake bailer and guests enjoyed a buffet of Michael Boggs, Richmond,
. shears I cut quite a few mats you have a deeper pan. The cold cuts, ham, cheeses , Va .; Mrs . Lillie Kaylor,
out of one d oth . Out of a 54- halter holds the waxed paper condiments, potato salad, Kirkersville, Ohio; Mrs .
inch by 54-inch cloth one can as the cake bakes. When punch, nuts, mints and cake. ·Charlene Dodd and Carmen,
cul8 to 10 mats . - GRACE. finished baking, let cake set
Morgantown, W. Va.; Mr.
DEAR READERS- I feel for a few minutes, flip out of
and Mrs. W. L. Sheppard
sure ·this would be quite a pan and remove waxed
and Clarke, Mrs. W. J .
Forbes of Charleston, W. Va .;
saving, too. - POLLY.
paper. The tim of the cake
Mr . and Mrs . A. J. Gould of Mr. and Mrs . James C.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet will be a bit rough but when
Peeve is with those who never cake is frosted this will not be Marietta spent Sunday with Ingles, Mr . and Mrs. Donnie
fail to be reminded of noticed. (Polly's nole - Be her parents, Mr . and Mrs . Woods, all of Gallipolis and
Tina Nieri.
something they must !ell you sw-e the strip is cut wide Francis Morris.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fred
Sayre
Mrs . Marjorie Walburn,
while you're speaking and enough to accomplish its
and
Eric
oi
Bowerston
and
Steve
and Jill Ann Walburn,
then they proceed to inr.,rrupt purpose.) - MARYS.
Mr.andMrs
.
MarkSharpand
Middleport
; Mr. and Mrs.
with this long tale of their
POLLY will send you one of two sons of Sherrodsville Benny Wolfe and Shawna of
own . More people do this than her "peachy" thank•you
realize it. Another is witlt the cards, Ideal for lramlog or spent Memorial Day weekend Rutland; Mrs . Bernice
person who interrupts afr.,r placing In your family with Mrs . Ethel Johnson and Dudley, David and Janet
. a. ; Ryan
u ey, Mason, WV
your second word, and then scrapbook, If she uses yonr family , andMr.andMrs. Roy Ddl
Dowell
and
family
and
also
Woods,
and
Mr.
and Mrs.
finally asks, "Now what did I favorite Pointer, Peeve or
inr.,rrupt?" I have learned to Problem In her column. Write visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim Russell Woods, Mrs, Amy
Humphries ; Charlotte
say "I am sorry but you made Polly's Pointers In care of Roush at Dexter.
Mr. and Mrs . Wiley Ours Edwards.
me completely forget it." I do this newspaper.
spent a weekend in Columbus
Bruce Adams, Mrs. Marie
with their son and family .
Roush, Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Miss Wilma Rose of Kaylor, Fred Kaylor, Keith
Columbus spent over two Powell, all of New Haven, w.
weeks of her vacation with Va .; Kim Sabo of Pomeroy;
Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Wolfe Cheryl Lewis of West
The vacation Bible school Jamie Pettit, Amy Beth
and
Mr . and Mrs . Ward Columbia; Mr. and Mrs.
of the Middleport First Metsger , Sieve and Heidi
Sayre.
Thomas Reitmire, Clifton.
Baptist Church concluded Caruthers, of the Nw-sery
Mrs.
Grella
Simpson
has
J.
Hughes
Price,
Sunday evening with a class; Mrs. Carol Granda!,
retw-ned
to
her
home
from
Gallipolis;
Mr.
and
Mrs .
program ' of Bible verses, Ieacher, and Cheryl Stevens,
Holzer
Medical
Center.
Howard
Roush,
Michael
songs and skits and a craft Usa Myers, Candy Daniels,
Mrs. Mary K. Yost, Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.
display for viewing by Susie Pullins, Chuckie
president
of the Bertha M. Randy Lieving , Mrs . Pauline
parents and friends.
Pullins, Eddie Williams, John Sayre Missionary Society Ueving, Mr . and Mrs. Alton
Theme of the Bible school Arderson and Randy Carwas "God's Love is Jesus' ' penter, beginners class; Mrs . was in charge Sunday Roush, Cecil Lyons, Pam
and the director was Mrs . Nola Swisher, teacher, and evening of the dedication of Williard, Stanley Blake, Mrs.
Lacey Barton . Each class Anita Smith, Christy Farley, the layelle to take to the Ethel Moore, Mrs. Lois
\\'omen's Conference · in · Reitmire and Mr. and Mrs.
participated in the program ·Eric Kessinger, Debbie
Columbus June 8-9-10. Mrs. Elroy Kaylor of Letart.
and members were presented Downie, Teresa l.ieving ,
For their honeymoon the
certificates . The tearing staff Mary Beth Brewer, Michelle Mildred Hart presented a
program
and
Rev
.
Earl
couple
took a camping trip to
was also reco gnized and Slevens, Carol Bailey and Joy
Shuler
delivered
the
sermon
Blackwater
Falls and other
presented certificates of Mowery, primary , and Bob in the absence of Rev. Walker
appreciation from Mrs . Parker, teacher, and Ronnie who went to Summersville,
Barton . Mrs . Janice Gibbs Denny, Jennifer Lieving , W. Va . to perform a wedding
was pianist. Following the Angela Farley, Lynn Kloes , ceremony.
program the deaconesses Craig Darst, Cindy Parker,
Mr . and Mrs . George
served refreshments .
Jayne Hoeflich, Paula Nelgler spent a few 'days at
On Salw-day evening the Swisher and Darla Wilcox, Arna, Ohio with their son-inSEASON CAMPSITES
Bible school children were junior class.
law and daughter, Mr. and
taken on the chw-ch bus to the
Other teachers and helpers Mrs. Philip Miller and their
AVAILABLE
country home of Mr . and Mrs . attending were Lori Kloes, new baby bern May .29. Mr.
DAY-WEEKLacy Barton for a wiener Trina Gibbs, Beverly Hoff. and Mrs . Neigler retw-ned
roast and party. Games were man, Jim Brewer, Jr ., the home accompanied by his
MONTHLY
played dw-ing the evening. Rev . Peter Granda!, Mrs . mother , Mrs. Howard
Under New
Attending were Mrs . AI wilda Fran Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Neigler, wl\o had spent a
Management
Werner , teacher, and Mary Kenneth Imboden and John week in Columbus with Mr.
Rl . t44
Hockingsport, Ohio
Byer, Heath er Hovatter, Werner.
and Mrs . Clyde Cross.
Phone 667-JSJO

Shocking wk of
a scaredy cat

Father's Day, June 20

Give Dad a pair of

SANDAlS
Good selection of
styles &amp; sizes . Also
.Exersole sandals.

:

:
points of interest In West
Virginia. They are now at
home to their friends at
Letart, W. Va .

11-

Hrs .: 10:00 A.M._Tilll;OO P.M. ~un.-Thurs.
10:00 A.M. T1112 :00 P.M. Frt. &amp; Sat.

** W. MAIN
.

m~~

:

*

•

POMI;ROY, 0 . :

-.:*****************************

Hartley's Shoes, Middle of Upper BlOc~ Pomeroy

COKE

Women's and Men's National~. Advertised Brands
.

Joyce ,

$}09

( I'

'

i

140Z.

·

Cover Girl , Viner

Values to $27.00

SALE

EACH

31
17 ll
H
31
1

s

6' ~

•so

7
81 J
9

• 116

9

456

Monday s Reliiu n s
Mem ph is 6 svrocuse S

·

athletic
d' ector
, ...

,LI.

Rhod e Isla nd 8 Chil r teston 7, '
10 lnn in 9 s
To le do 8 Ric h mond 1
T id e wat er 6 Roches ter 5

• Kt•:N T. Ohio t U,PI )
Pcndi n~ board of ti'UShl(l
npprovui , Dona ld J.:. Dufek,
46, luis hccrluumed nlhletlc
tfir ec lor at Kent Slnte
U lliV{1f.S it y.
t urrt.'l lll )l

Hlhl£1tit'

(Jii'N'IUI'

tlllllll'&lt;l lo SU!'I't-ed Mike l,udr,
wh o resig ned to hecomc
dircc t&lt;lf of lntcrr oii&lt;•nlu ti•
alhleties at U1e UuiV&lt;·t·silv of
Washiugton.
·
The appolutmcut will bo
dist· ussed a t iho• .Juh· 8
u·ustecs meeting .
t\t Gr:llld Vnllcy sirl!'t' 1972.
lluft•k prrviousl)• '"I'VL'i &lt;IS

frcslnnun, junior vnri~t~' : uu~
var·si ly bm·kfield &lt;'OHt'11 Jl li lu·

lluivcrsi ty of Mlcl ol!i:"' ln •111
1954 lu 1961i.
He is a grmluuil' tlf he
Uni\wsity 11f Mid1i~'"'·

.

Fresh and Lean

~ ~ ~ : We Accept Federal Food Stamps lf. ~ ~

, . .. .
.
~rner Mill and Second Sts.

SIDE BACON

PHONE 992-3480
We rese:ve the r~ht to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0:

lb. '119

FRESH AND LEAN

Fresh Baby Beef

PORK ROAST

LIVER
lb. 69~

DOG FOOD

HOME MADE

lb.
-BONE IN

bag

HAM SALAD
lb. 89~

BONELESS FRESH &amp;LEAN

$10 TO $20

LINERS
Values to $38.00
NOW SALE PRICED

Geisha Alaskain

HOME MADE PURE

PORK ROAST lb.$} 09

Scot Lad Trash Can

10 ct.

PORK SAUSAGE
lb. 99 ~

Fresh &amp;lean

pkg.

SUPERIORS ALL MEH

PORK STEAK

15 oz. can

lb.

WIENERS
lb. 79~

$}09

SUPERIORS

MACKEREL

RAI NBOW

.POLISH SAUSAGE
lb. . 89~

-Your opportunitY to Hve
tI

-Shop early for good
selection and sins

-All shoes displayed for
easy selection.

ALL SALES FINAL!

Sale· begins Wednesday, June 16, 9 a.m.
SUMMER BAGS
~ PRICE

Hartley 's Shoes

Remember the date
Wednesday,
June •
16th.
Your opporlunlly to save
was never greater .

69~

Middle of UPDtr 'Block
Pomeroy,O.
Open All Day lburlday.
Friday Nlght n11.
S.turdly' nls.

"Air Conditioned"

Hi Dri Paper ·

TOWELS

jumbo
roll

2% MILK

CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE

Quaker State Super Blend

GALLON$1.19

4 ROLL

qt.

MOTOR OIL
Candy Buy!

PACKAGE
BANQUET TV DINNERS

FAVORITE

10 pak

BREAD
LVS. $1 00

REESE CUPS
SpecialI

Pkgs.

for

lb.

,.

EACH

49e

..

.

oz.

ll

'

.

oz.

Jars

STOKELY'S

oz.

46

TOMATO
JUICE
.............................~~..
BES-PAK
.

.

59~

•
TRASH BAGS .................................;.k.~... 89
·
. 10

ct.

· Can

APPLE PIE FILLING ................... ~~~ ..

,

49~

FRENCH CITY SLICED

.

2 lb.

BOLOGNA ...............................~. '149
20 ct . , •

FRENCH CITY_

~IIENIEII!i ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••: ••
FREN~H CITY

.

, .

,

2
09 .

Day
16 oz.

EGGS

.·

ib.• , ••
BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
2% CHOCOLATE MILK, Valley Bell ............... ; •• eaL 1.49

t.

NON-RETURNABLE

LIVER PUDDING••••••••••• ~·······~~•~b;.. . 1
SLICED

COLA, ·ROOT BEER, ORANGE,
STRAWBERRY AND GRAPE

h gal.

Every

Our Ground Beef Fresh~ Prepared Several Times Oai~

SCOT LAD

1

Good

ANY AMOUNT

,

..
..

Price

'$

2 49·

69t
POT A TOE·S.........................................~~~..
2,
49$
MUSTARD......................................
WILDERNESS

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

25 lb.

Florsheim 1 Jarman, Rand

and Cobblers.

Can l9~

•

CUCUMBERS and
PEPPERS

To ledo
Ch a rles ton

26 S 19
2&amp; SIO
18 dl

Stu te

TGJOU

FOR THE MEN

Risque.

.maRBECUE

FRENCH'S INSTANT

FRENCH'S

Ri ch mond

18
H
16
16

Va ll ey

13~

Sunshine or Cash Saver

.

FOR THE LADIES

MACKEREL ......... ~ .............................. ~':.

I

Ta n;: nu his filt h s etb:~ ck
ugainst eig ht · victories .
Aaron's homer wus his third
this season and the 748th of
his majm· league car~r .
Jerry Augustine suffered the
~oss for the An~els.

Me mph is
Roc hes ter
Tid ewat er

a t Graud

flant es colle~rs in M lchi ~n n , Iw wus

- •.. M-M-M-M!

SURE-JEL.........................................

r{ i' r(

eighth game against two
losses for Kansas City with
the late inn ing relief help of
Steve Mingor i and Ma rty
Pattin: The Roya ls scored
two unearned runs in an
error-filled fourth innin g and
Fred Patek doubled home
two more in the seventh
Frank Ma cCormack, making
hii:; major league debut . was'

Spring and Summer Clearance Sale

MAKES THE PICNICI

JELLY TIME SOON

i ...

hiL homers in a !Q..11it atlack

Royal~ 5, Tigers 2:
th•t e11auleii t he Brewers to
AI ~' i tz m orri s won hi s hu1:d Cciliforn ia 's fo.,ntnk

KSU

Unltrd Prrn s tnternationil
W. L. P-et . GB
~tlod e l 'llc1nd ) 6 ·74
600
Sy ra cuse
31 15 SS 4 J

:

i ~~ -~~~ i
i Adolph's Dairy Valley i

Says:

COOKIES.............................................':~:?;.

.. . j

Minne sota hit , an infield
single in the third -inning.
The Kansas City Royals
defeated the Detroit Tigers,
5-2, and th e Milwauk ee
Brewers beat the Caliromia.
Angels , 8-2, in the only other
AI. names.
The Hed Sox gave. Wi_se a 2Olead tn the second mmng, on
a stngle by Carl Y~trzemski,
a lrtple by Jun Rtce and a
sac rifice fly by Carlton Fisk.
The Red Sox added three runs

~~e:·~d.;~!',~:rr:~~::·
Twins

ln t Prn.tt•on~l

Lutue s ran(S ings

.

FLOATS, SOFT DRINK, SANDWICHES .

•

SWEEPSTAKES

--

straightened out," said Wise
. after his onehitter enabled '
the Red Sox to defeat the
Minnesut a Twins, 5-0. " I
think we are now playing like
we did last year."
Despite all their problems
this season, the defending
American League champions
are only five games behind
the first-place New York
Yankees in the AL's Eastern
Division.
Jerry Terrell got the only

8, Angels ! :
fl ank
A&lt;1ron.
t: ary
.Sutherl:md and Don Money

• lWIST IC£ CREAM SUNDAES. SODAS, MALTS,

Phebe

.

D

By FRED DOWN
U~l Spb_rts Writer
Rtck Wtse, who has pitched
~ no.-~utt!"' ~nd lost h:vo others
In nmth m~mgs, shrugged off
the one-httler he pitch ed
Monday mght lor the Boston
Red Sox.
He had a more important
me~ge for the Red Sox '
~enc;an League rivals.
I thtnk the fact that we 've
won three in a row shows we
have
our
problems

k

ilw lu,;cr fur the Tigers.
Hrc wer~

,.~

C.C. BIGGS AND PECAN SANDIES

June 15-19
Right Reserved to Limit Quanllt&lt;es
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Slamps
....-· .. ~- .• ·.
Monday thru Friday
9: DOlo 7: 00
satiJrd&lt;tv 9 to 9

•

R ed ox contznue comebac

·
in the ftflh &lt;~I two walks and
singles by Doug Griffin, Bob

Middleport, Ohio

Bible school concludes

RIVERS BEND
CAMPG'ROUND

s

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PornProy 0 Tuesd J
15 1976
·
• ·•
ay, une •

heritage house

DELICIOUS STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE

Racine

PHEBE 'S STORE

8 PAK

MEETING TONIGHT
Cheiter Council 323,
Daughters of America, will
celebrate quarlerly birthdays
this evening at 8 at the hall.
PoUuck refreshments will be
served. All members are
ll'ged to attend to di~euss
Regatta float . _.

.i...........•.•..•.........•.

Mr. and Mrs. jack E. Kaylor

OUR
GOOD

16 oz. bollles

MAYOR''S FLAG STOLEN
FINDLAY, Ohio CUP! ) Somebody stole the flag right
off the pole of the mayor rl.
F1ag City, U.S.A.
Last week, while Mayor
Dooald S. Renninger was
talking to the local Elks
Club- about ~lag Day
naturally- the thle111!s ra11
down and ran away with his
own bamer.
In his fi111! months as mayor
of this northwestern Ohio
city, proclaimed Flag City
U.S.A. by Congress on
National Flag Dlly In 1968,
Fennln.ger hfls repeatedly
emphasized that people
should fly the flag .
About the theft, he said, "I
hope that whoever stole it will
l!S'! it and fly It on Flag Day
(today) and not desecrate it.''
he said.

8 PAK
::·:·:·:·:·

··.·::

doz.

49~

••
''

.

•

$
8
PAK

16 OUNCE
RETURNABLE BOffiES

DIET RITE $}19
16
o2.
bois.

8 PAK

�6- The Dllily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. 'l'uesday. June 1 ~ . 1976

:-

.

Social
Calendar

Polly's Pointers

TUESDAY
GROUP
If,
Uni ted
P ~es b yteria n Chur c h,
Mtddleport, 7:30 Tuesday al
the home of Mrs. William
Morris. Mrs. Robert Woodward will be Mrs. Morris' cohos tess . Mrs. Myron Miller,
devo tional leader. Members
to take their . Bible study
books.
MEIGS COUNTY Cha pter,
Ameri can Can cer Society
meeting , 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at headquarters, S. Third
Ave., Middleport . Regular
and new members invir.,d.
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 Tuesday 7 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. All
masler masons are invi ted .
SYRACUSE - Minersville
baseball boosters Tuesday; a
p.m. at th e Syrac use
municipal building.

-

.
WEDNESDAY
ROSE GARDE N CLU B
annual picnfc Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Floyd Stout ,
5 p.m. for members and t11eir
families.
P AST PR E SID E NTS.
American Legion Auxili ary,
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30
Wednesday at the home of
Mrs . Grace Pra tt , Midcll enort .
BOSWORTH Co uncil 46 ,
Royal and Select Masters will ,
have a special meeting at 7 p.
m. Wednesday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
The royal and select master
degree will be conferred.
THURSDAY
MEIGS HIGH School band
prac tice session Wednesday
and Thursday at the high
school band room at 5 p.m.
for Regatta . Band camp
music
will
also be
distributed .
ROCK SPRINGS Beller
Health Club, home of Mrs.
Betty Co nkle, Cheshire .
Members to meet at the Rock
Springs Church at 12:30 to go
to t11e Conkle home . Mrs.
Helen Blackston will have the
program; Mrs. Teresa Abbott, the contest.

SERVICES HELD
Funeral )lervices for Emily
Hope Hall , 14-year-o ld
daugh ter of Mr . and Mrs.
Calvin Hall, and granddaughter of Mrs. Jessie
Houchins, Middleport, were
conducted Thursday at St.
Andrews United Methodist
Church at St. Albans, W. Va .
with the Rev . Melvin
Risinger officiating . Burial
was in the Cunningham
Memorial Park. Other local
survivors include Mrs . Vicki
Houchins and Mrs . Billy Jo
Krawsczyn , aunts of Emily
Hope.

ON DEAN'S l.IST
Ted Lehew , son of Mr . and
Mrs . William
Lehew ,
Pomeroy, was named to the
dean 's list of Capital
University for the second
semester, 1975-76, with a 3.75
average . Lehew recently
received his bachelor of
science degree in education
from Capital.

Janelle Kuhn is May bride

LET;&lt;I;RT, W. Va . - The
- - - - - - - - -- - - - - lawn of ilK! home of Mr. and
Mrs. Elroy Kaylor of .Letart,
W. Va ., before an assembly of
friends and relatives , was the
&amp;-ene · of the wedding of
Janelle Kuhn, daughter of
Bv l'otty Cramr1
Rev. and Mrs: Robert Kuhn
POLLY'S PROBLEM
not believe nine out of ten of Gallipolis, and Jack E.
DEA R POLLY - I hope
people ever hear what is told Kaylor, son of .Mr. and Mrs.
someone has a solution to my them. I am also guilty of this Elroy Kaylor of Letart May
problem. All win ler long our but am fighting it. Please, 14, at 6:30p.m.
cal sits on our polyester rug dear Polly, get this word to
They were united in.
from which she picks up a lot the unknowing. - O.S.W.
marriage hy her father.
of stallc. She hales to be
DEAR POLLY - A recent
Given in marriage by her
touched becal!5'! when we Pointer was misleading. Our parents, the bride was attired
stroke her (ur we both get a
son who is a fireman says one in a light blue polyester gown
shock. Is there any remedy ? should NEVER put any type \Yith white lace shaw collar.
My husband foxed up a
of waxed carton in the In her hair she wore a tiara of
doorbell for the cat by putting fireplace to bw-n. the wax blue baby 's breath . •Her
a buzzer on the porch with a
bUilds up on the Inside of the bouquet was of colonial
board propped on it. When the
fireplace and one day you design of blue and white
cat sleps on the board it could get a roaring fire that carnations with white
buzzed in the house . When her is several feet above the streamers.
friends come over they al!IO chimney . They have anThe matron of honor was
buzz the buzzer. I always look swered alarms because of Mrs. Shelly Woods of
forward to the column as It such a practice. - MRS. Gallipolis and best man 1\'aS
has helped me so during the W.J.K.
Michael Thompson of Letart.
years. - WILMA .
Her mother was attired in a
DEAR MRS. W.U.K. DEAR WILMA - lam sure Thank• to you and your pink and white polyester
some ol our readers with cats fireman son for bringing thlo gown with pink jacket and
wlll come forth with some lo our attention. - POLLY. white · accessories. Her
s uggestions lor you , was
peach
DEAR POLLY - Often I corsage
POLLY.
have needed a deeper and carnations.
The w~ding cake was
bigger cake pan but solved Mrs. Kaylor wore a multl
DEAR POLLy - I like the problem by cutting strips flora 1jersey gown with while baked and decorated by Mrs.
foam backed place mats for of wxed paper about one to accessories. Her corsage was Lois Reitmire who arranged
my table since they do not one and a half Inches wide yellow carnations.
the buffet with the help of
slip around as much as and long enough to go around
Following the ceremony a Mrs . Ethel Moore. Mrs.
others. But recently I had the inside of the cake pan.· reception was held in the Marjorie Walburn ,
trouble finding them, so I First grease and flow- the home. ·
Middleport, made the potato
bought a small plastic pan, put wxed paper strip
After the couple cut the salad.
tablecloth with a foam against inside of the rim, three tier wedding cake the
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
backing. With the pinking pour in the cake bailer and guests enjoyed a buffet of Michael Boggs, Richmond,
. shears I cut quite a few mats you have a deeper pan. The cold cuts, ham, cheeses , Va .; Mrs . Lillie Kaylor,
out of one d oth . Out of a 54- halter holds the waxed paper condiments, potato salad, Kirkersville, Ohio; Mrs .
inch by 54-inch cloth one can as the cake bakes. When punch, nuts, mints and cake. ·Charlene Dodd and Carmen,
cul8 to 10 mats . - GRACE. finished baking, let cake set
Morgantown, W. Va.; Mr.
DEAR READERS- I feel for a few minutes, flip out of
and Mrs. W. L. Sheppard
sure ·this would be quite a pan and remove waxed
and Clarke, Mrs. W. J .
Forbes of Charleston, W. Va .;
saving, too. - POLLY.
paper. The tim of the cake
Mr . and Mrs . A. J. Gould of Mr. and Mrs . James C.
DEAR POLLY - My Pet will be a bit rough but when
Peeve is with those who never cake is frosted this will not be Marietta spent Sunday with Ingles, Mr . and Mrs. Donnie
fail to be reminded of noticed. (Polly's nole - Be her parents, Mr . and Mrs . Woods, all of Gallipolis and
Tina Nieri.
something they must !ell you sw-e the strip is cut wide Francis Morris.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fred
Sayre
Mrs . Marjorie Walburn,
while you're speaking and enough to accomplish its
and
Eric
oi
Bowerston
and
Steve
and Jill Ann Walburn,
then they proceed to inr.,rrupt purpose.) - MARYS.
Mr.andMrs
.
MarkSharpand
Middleport
; Mr. and Mrs.
with this long tale of their
POLLY will send you one of two sons of Sherrodsville Benny Wolfe and Shawna of
own . More people do this than her "peachy" thank•you
realize it. Another is witlt the cards, Ideal for lramlog or spent Memorial Day weekend Rutland; Mrs . Bernice
person who interrupts afr.,r placing In your family with Mrs . Ethel Johnson and Dudley, David and Janet
. a. ; Ryan
u ey, Mason, WV
your second word, and then scrapbook, If she uses yonr family , andMr.andMrs. Roy Ddl
Dowell
and
family
and
also
Woods,
and
Mr.
and Mrs.
finally asks, "Now what did I favorite Pointer, Peeve or
inr.,rrupt?" I have learned to Problem In her column. Write visited Mr. and Mrs. Jim Russell Woods, Mrs, Amy
Humphries ; Charlotte
say "I am sorry but you made Polly's Pointers In care of Roush at Dexter.
Mr. and Mrs . Wiley Ours Edwards.
me completely forget it." I do this newspaper.
spent a weekend in Columbus
Bruce Adams, Mrs. Marie
with their son and family .
Roush, Mr . and Mrs. Wendell
Miss Wilma Rose of Kaylor, Fred Kaylor, Keith
Columbus spent over two Powell, all of New Haven, w.
weeks of her vacation with Va .; Kim Sabo of Pomeroy;
Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Wolfe Cheryl Lewis of West
The vacation Bible school Jamie Pettit, Amy Beth
and
Mr . and Mrs . Ward Columbia; Mr. and Mrs.
of the Middleport First Metsger , Sieve and Heidi
Sayre.
Thomas Reitmire, Clifton.
Baptist Church concluded Caruthers, of the Nw-sery
Mrs.
Grella
Simpson
has
J.
Hughes
Price,
Sunday evening with a class; Mrs. Carol Granda!,
retw-ned
to
her
home
from
Gallipolis;
Mr.
and
Mrs .
program ' of Bible verses, Ieacher, and Cheryl Stevens,
Holzer
Medical
Center.
Howard
Roush,
Michael
songs and skits and a craft Usa Myers, Candy Daniels,
Mrs. Mary K. Yost, Thompson, Mr. and Mrs.
display for viewing by Susie Pullins, Chuckie
president
of the Bertha M. Randy Lieving , Mrs . Pauline
parents and friends.
Pullins, Eddie Williams, John Sayre Missionary Society Ueving, Mr . and Mrs. Alton
Theme of the Bible school Arderson and Randy Carwas "God's Love is Jesus' ' penter, beginners class; Mrs . was in charge Sunday Roush, Cecil Lyons, Pam
and the director was Mrs . Nola Swisher, teacher, and evening of the dedication of Williard, Stanley Blake, Mrs.
Lacey Barton . Each class Anita Smith, Christy Farley, the layelle to take to the Ethel Moore, Mrs. Lois
\\'omen's Conference · in · Reitmire and Mr. and Mrs.
participated in the program ·Eric Kessinger, Debbie
Columbus June 8-9-10. Mrs. Elroy Kaylor of Letart.
and members were presented Downie, Teresa l.ieving ,
For their honeymoon the
certificates . The tearing staff Mary Beth Brewer, Michelle Mildred Hart presented a
program
and
Rev
.
Earl
couple
took a camping trip to
was also reco gnized and Slevens, Carol Bailey and Joy
Shuler
delivered
the
sermon
Blackwater
Falls and other
presented certificates of Mowery, primary , and Bob in the absence of Rev. Walker
appreciation from Mrs . Parker, teacher, and Ronnie who went to Summersville,
Barton . Mrs . Janice Gibbs Denny, Jennifer Lieving , W. Va . to perform a wedding
was pianist. Following the Angela Farley, Lynn Kloes , ceremony.
program the deaconesses Craig Darst, Cindy Parker,
Mr . and Mrs . George
served refreshments .
Jayne Hoeflich, Paula Nelgler spent a few 'days at
On Salw-day evening the Swisher and Darla Wilcox, Arna, Ohio with their son-inSEASON CAMPSITES
Bible school children were junior class.
law and daughter, Mr. and
taken on the chw-ch bus to the
Other teachers and helpers Mrs. Philip Miller and their
AVAILABLE
country home of Mr . and Mrs . attending were Lori Kloes, new baby bern May .29. Mr.
DAY-WEEKLacy Barton for a wiener Trina Gibbs, Beverly Hoff. and Mrs . Neigler retw-ned
roast and party. Games were man, Jim Brewer, Jr ., the home accompanied by his
MONTHLY
played dw-ing the evening. Rev . Peter Granda!, Mrs . mother , Mrs. Howard
Under New
Attending were Mrs . AI wilda Fran Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Neigler, wl\o had spent a
Management
Werner , teacher, and Mary Kenneth Imboden and John week in Columbus with Mr.
Rl . t44
Hockingsport, Ohio
Byer, Heath er Hovatter, Werner.
and Mrs . Clyde Cross.
Phone 667-JSJO

Shocking wk of
a scaredy cat

Father's Day, June 20

Give Dad a pair of

SANDAlS
Good selection of
styles &amp; sizes . Also
.Exersole sandals.

:

:
points of interest In West
Virginia. They are now at
home to their friends at
Letart, W. Va .

11-

Hrs .: 10:00 A.M._Tilll;OO P.M. ~un.-Thurs.
10:00 A.M. T1112 :00 P.M. Frt. &amp; Sat.

** W. MAIN
.

m~~

:

*

•

POMI;ROY, 0 . :

-.:*****************************

Hartley's Shoes, Middle of Upper BlOc~ Pomeroy

COKE

Women's and Men's National~. Advertised Brands
.

Joyce ,

$}09

( I'

'

i

140Z.

·

Cover Girl , Viner

Values to $27.00

SALE

EACH

31
17 ll
H
31
1

s

6' ~

•so

7
81 J
9

• 116

9

456

Monday s Reliiu n s
Mem ph is 6 svrocuse S

·

athletic
d' ector
, ...

,LI.

Rhod e Isla nd 8 Chil r teston 7, '
10 lnn in 9 s
To le do 8 Ric h mond 1
T id e wat er 6 Roches ter 5

• Kt•:N T. Ohio t U,PI )
Pcndi n~ board of ti'UShl(l
npprovui , Dona ld J.:. Dufek,
46, luis hccrluumed nlhletlc
tfir ec lor at Kent Slnte
U lliV{1f.S it y.
t urrt.'l lll )l

Hlhl£1tit'

(Jii'N'IUI'

tlllllll'&lt;l lo SU!'I't-ed Mike l,udr,
wh o resig ned to hecomc
dircc t&lt;lf of lntcrr oii&lt;•nlu ti•
alhleties at U1e UuiV&lt;·t·silv of
Washiugton.
·
The appolutmcut will bo
dist· ussed a t iho• .Juh· 8
u·ustecs meeting .
t\t Gr:llld Vnllcy sirl!'t' 1972.
lluft•k prrviousl)• '"I'VL'i &lt;IS

frcslnnun, junior vnri~t~' : uu~
var·si ly bm·kfield &lt;'OHt'11 Jl li lu·

lluivcrsi ty of Mlcl ol!i:"' ln •111
1954 lu 1961i.
He is a grmluuil' tlf he
Uni\wsity 11f Mid1i~'"'·

.

Fresh and Lean

~ ~ ~ : We Accept Federal Food Stamps lf. ~ ~

, . .. .
.
~rner Mill and Second Sts.

SIDE BACON

PHONE 992-3480
We rese:ve the r~ht to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT, 0:

lb. '119

FRESH AND LEAN

Fresh Baby Beef

PORK ROAST

LIVER
lb. 69~

DOG FOOD

HOME MADE

lb.
-BONE IN

bag

HAM SALAD
lb. 89~

BONELESS FRESH &amp;LEAN

$10 TO $20

LINERS
Values to $38.00
NOW SALE PRICED

Geisha Alaskain

HOME MADE PURE

PORK ROAST lb.$} 09

Scot Lad Trash Can

10 ct.

PORK SAUSAGE
lb. 99 ~

Fresh &amp;lean

pkg.

SUPERIORS ALL MEH

PORK STEAK

15 oz. can

lb.

WIENERS
lb. 79~

$}09

SUPERIORS

MACKEREL

RAI NBOW

.POLISH SAUSAGE
lb. . 89~

-Your opportunitY to Hve
tI

-Shop early for good
selection and sins

-All shoes displayed for
easy selection.

ALL SALES FINAL!

Sale· begins Wednesday, June 16, 9 a.m.
SUMMER BAGS
~ PRICE

Hartley 's Shoes

Remember the date
Wednesday,
June •
16th.
Your opporlunlly to save
was never greater .

69~

Middle of UPDtr 'Block
Pomeroy,O.
Open All Day lburlday.
Friday Nlght n11.
S.turdly' nls.

"Air Conditioned"

Hi Dri Paper ·

TOWELS

jumbo
roll

2% MILK

CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE

Quaker State Super Blend

GALLON$1.19

4 ROLL

qt.

MOTOR OIL
Candy Buy!

PACKAGE
BANQUET TV DINNERS

FAVORITE

10 pak

BREAD
LVS. $1 00

REESE CUPS
SpecialI

Pkgs.

for

lb.

,.

EACH

49e

..

.

oz.

ll

'

.

oz.

Jars

STOKELY'S

oz.

46

TOMATO
JUICE
.............................~~..
BES-PAK
.

.

59~

•
TRASH BAGS .................................;.k.~... 89
·
. 10

ct.

· Can

APPLE PIE FILLING ................... ~~~ ..

,

49~

FRENCH CITY SLICED

.

2 lb.

BOLOGNA ...............................~. '149
20 ct . , •

FRENCH CITY_

~IIENIEII!i ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••: ••
FREN~H CITY

.

, .

,

2
09 .

Day
16 oz.

EGGS

.·

ib.• , ••
BOILED HAM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
2% CHOCOLATE MILK, Valley Bell ............... ; •• eaL 1.49

t.

NON-RETURNABLE

LIVER PUDDING••••••••••• ~·······~~•~b;.. . 1
SLICED

COLA, ·ROOT BEER, ORANGE,
STRAWBERRY AND GRAPE

h gal.

Every

Our Ground Beef Fresh~ Prepared Several Times Oai~

SCOT LAD

1

Good

ANY AMOUNT

,

..
..

Price

'$

2 49·

69t
POT A TOE·S.........................................~~~..
2,
49$
MUSTARD......................................
WILDERNESS

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10

25 lb.

Florsheim 1 Jarman, Rand

and Cobblers.

Can l9~

•

CUCUMBERS and
PEPPERS

To ledo
Ch a rles ton

26 S 19
2&amp; SIO
18 dl

Stu te

TGJOU

FOR THE MEN

Risque.

.maRBECUE

FRENCH'S INSTANT

FRENCH'S

Ri ch mond

18
H
16
16

Va ll ey

13~

Sunshine or Cash Saver

.

FOR THE LADIES

MACKEREL ......... ~ .............................. ~':.

I

Ta n;: nu his filt h s etb:~ ck
ugainst eig ht · victories .
Aaron's homer wus his third
this season and the 748th of
his majm· league car~r .
Jerry Augustine suffered the
~oss for the An~els.

Me mph is
Roc hes ter
Tid ewat er

a t Graud

flant es colle~rs in M lchi ~n n , Iw wus

- •.. M-M-M-M!

SURE-JEL.........................................

r{ i' r(

eighth game against two
losses for Kansas City with
the late inn ing relief help of
Steve Mingor i and Ma rty
Pattin: The Roya ls scored
two unearned runs in an
error-filled fourth innin g and
Fred Patek doubled home
two more in the seventh
Frank Ma cCormack, making
hii:; major league debut . was'

Spring and Summer Clearance Sale

MAKES THE PICNICI

JELLY TIME SOON

i ...

hiL homers in a !Q..11it atlack

Royal~ 5, Tigers 2:
th•t e11auleii t he Brewers to
AI ~' i tz m orri s won hi s hu1:d Cciliforn ia 's fo.,ntnk

KSU

Unltrd Prrn s tnternationil
W. L. P-et . GB
~tlod e l 'llc1nd ) 6 ·74
600
Sy ra cuse
31 15 SS 4 J

:

i ~~ -~~~ i
i Adolph's Dairy Valley i

Says:

COOKIES.............................................':~:?;.

.. . j

Minne sota hit , an infield
single in the third -inning.
The Kansas City Royals
defeated the Detroit Tigers,
5-2, and th e Milwauk ee
Brewers beat the Caliromia.
Angels , 8-2, in the only other
AI. names.
The Hed Sox gave. Wi_se a 2Olead tn the second mmng, on
a stngle by Carl Y~trzemski,
a lrtple by Jun Rtce and a
sac rifice fly by Carlton Fisk.
The Red Sox added three runs

~~e:·~d.;~!',~:rr:~~::·
Twins

ln t Prn.tt•on~l

Lutue s ran(S ings

.

FLOATS, SOFT DRINK, SANDWICHES .

•

SWEEPSTAKES

--

straightened out," said Wise
. after his onehitter enabled '
the Red Sox to defeat the
Minnesut a Twins, 5-0. " I
think we are now playing like
we did last year."
Despite all their problems
this season, the defending
American League champions
are only five games behind
the first-place New York
Yankees in the AL's Eastern
Division.
Jerry Terrell got the only

8, Angels ! :
fl ank
A&lt;1ron.
t: ary
.Sutherl:md and Don Money

• lWIST IC£ CREAM SUNDAES. SODAS, MALTS,

Phebe

.

D

By FRED DOWN
U~l Spb_rts Writer
Rtck Wtse, who has pitched
~ no.-~utt!"' ~nd lost h:vo others
In nmth m~mgs, shrugged off
the one-httler he pitch ed
Monday mght lor the Boston
Red Sox.
He had a more important
me~ge for the Red Sox '
~enc;an League rivals.
I thtnk the fact that we 've
won three in a row shows we
have
our
problems

k

ilw lu,;cr fur the Tigers.
Hrc wer~

,.~

C.C. BIGGS AND PECAN SANDIES

June 15-19
Right Reserved to Limit Quanllt&lt;es
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Slamps
....-· .. ~- .• ·.
Monday thru Friday
9: DOlo 7: 00
satiJrd&lt;tv 9 to 9

•

R ed ox contznue comebac

·
in the ftflh &lt;~I two walks and
singles by Doug Griffin, Bob

Middleport, Ohio

Bible school concludes

RIVERS BEND
CAMPG'ROUND

s

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-PornProy 0 Tuesd J
15 1976
·
• ·•
ay, une •

heritage house

DELICIOUS STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE

Racine

PHEBE 'S STORE

8 PAK

MEETING TONIGHT
Cheiter Council 323,
Daughters of America, will
celebrate quarlerly birthdays
this evening at 8 at the hall.
PoUuck refreshments will be
served. All members are
ll'ged to attend to di~euss
Regatta float . _.

.i...........•.•..•.........•.

Mr. and Mrs. jack E. Kaylor

OUR
GOOD

16 oz. bollles

MAYOR''S FLAG STOLEN
FINDLAY, Ohio CUP! ) Somebody stole the flag right
off the pole of the mayor rl.
F1ag City, U.S.A.
Last week, while Mayor
Dooald S. Renninger was
talking to the local Elks
Club- about ~lag Day
naturally- the thle111!s ra11
down and ran away with his
own bamer.
In his fi111! months as mayor
of this northwestern Ohio
city, proclaimed Flag City
U.S.A. by Congress on
National Flag Dlly In 1968,
Fennln.ger hfls repeatedly
emphasized that people
should fly the flag .
About the theft, he said, "I
hope that whoever stole it will
l!S'! it and fly It on Flag Day
(today) and not desecrate it.''
he said.

8 PAK
::·:·:·:·:·

··.·::

doz.

49~

••
''

.

•

$
8
PAK

16 OUNCE
RETURNABLE BOffiES

DIET RITE $}19
16
o2.
bois.

8 PAK

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday , June 1~. 1976
WANT ADS
IN,ORMATION
DEADLINES

5

P .M
Day
Publlutlon

Cancellat ions,

Before

correc

uons acc epted first day of
publication
~EOULATIONS

The Publisher rnerves

the righ t to edit or re l~c t
any ads deemed ob -

lectlonal The publisher
wltl not be respons ible for

more tr.an one Incorrect
insertion

RATES
For W1nt Ad Service
5 cents per word one
Inse r tion
M inimum Charg e Sl 00

u cenls per word tttree

consecut ive lnstrllons
26 cents per word s 1x
consecut ive- InsertiOn$
25 Per Ce nt Discount on
pa id eds and eds pa 1d
within 10 days
CARD DF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
word
$2 00
tor
80
minimum
Eactl additiona l word J
cents
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge
per Ad~ertlsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 10 a m to S 0() p m
Daily, 8 30 a m to 12 00
Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 2156

~~f~~~~~l:~;~~~~ For Fast Results- Use The Sentinel Classifieds

closed door sessiQn Saturday ,
the Bowling G r een Slate
University trustees appr oved
pay Increases averaging 8.4
per cent for faculty and
administrators.
Board chairman Charles
Shanklin said he called the
executive session to discuss
perso nal matters, one of
sever a l subjects public
agencies may discuss behlnd
closed doors under Ohio 's
s uns hine
law
which
enco ura ges
th e
open
meetings BGSU President
Holl1s Moore sa1d much of the
session dealt with explaining
procedures
used
m
de termining the amoWJt of
irxhv1duals raises

In MtiJIOIJ

1972 AMC HORNET
51995
Sport abou t Wagon , 6 cyl , automat1c trans, rad io,
good tires, while fm1sh , good economy.

I

tiW~-:

~-Equipmeot .·

Business Franchise

June 16, 1976

~

!

l

r hi s commq yeA r you may
become ln~OI"t~ed In an enter·
onse locnled some dr stance
from you It doesn I mesn you'll
movA but c ommu ttn ~ Is m&lt;1tCR ied ~

{6 ) 1. 8, 15

2')_ d i C

Pomeroy
QUALITY Motor Co.

You d1ed to sa-.e o stnf ul world
The pme you paid was h1gh
To cleanse and ma ke us whole
I om so !;!lad that 'fOu took me 1n

AstroGraph

Your
WBirthday

'@ zs:NS

1972 FORD MAV~RICK2 DR .
51895
302 V-8, automatic trans , P steer ing radio, clean
interior. blue fmrstl

Transfers

A

· '-~------.....---~----.,

wor iJ
And see 1t as lodoy 1he tears
would loll ,
Your chest would heave your
heart wo ld cry
My Lord I I know now why

th1nk so much of jOyS we
shored
NOTICE OF
And the so rrow too we bore,
PUBLIC SALE
In pursuan ce with the order And when I do I m1ss you so
of the Common Pl eas Cou r t. 8otl would not coli you bock
Pro bate On11S 10n
Me •gs
Cou nty , Oh10 , lhe
un
To suffer as of yore,
de rs1gned Adm tn1s trator De But hope some doy to see yo u
Bonr s Non ot the es tale of
sm•le
Cha rl es Hyatt , d eceased , w1!1
And clasp your hand
offe
r
for
sa
le
at
pub
l1c
auction
NOTICES
at th e front door of th e Court Where lo.,ed ones port no more
ATTN. · It
house 1n Pomeroy , Oh10 on Sadly m1ssed by h1s wife and
ALL HOUSEWIVES
the l Oth day of J un e 1976 a t
fam•ly lucy Gaul
All Ya rd S&amp;les , Rummage ,
10 00
0 Clock
AM
the
Porch and Basement Porch
foll
ow1ng
d esc r~b e d
r
ea
l
and Basement Sa les , etc
esra te, to w i!
must be paid m ll dva nce
Parcel No 1. Th e foll owi ng
Get YO'-lrS In early by
real cstal e S1luat ed In th e
stopping by our offi ce at
County of Meigs, In th e St ate RACINE ~1re Deportment wtll
Th e Da lly Sent in el. 111
hove o gun shoot Sal~;rdoy ot
Of
Oh10 , Md 1n th e V1ll ag e of
Court St or wri ll no Box
Mid
dl
eport
,
l'ln d bounded and
6
30 p rn at their new bulldmg
719 , Pomeroy Ohio 45769
des
cnbed
as
lollows
the
eas
t
olf
8ashon Road
with your remittance .
end of Lot Number F11ty ntn e
CHANGE
OF HOURS ..,.. Beglnn1ng
(591 on the plat of Coalport,
June 12 we will be closed Sotur
be1ng Sl)cty feet w1d e on the
str eet lymg eas l of sa 1d lot
days New hour~ w 11l be Man
and runn 1ng back towa rds
day through Fndoy , 9 a m tilt
the west end of sa•d lot
7 p rn Carolina Fobrrcs Rou te
fort y tee t, be1 ng s txty feet
7 one half m1le north of
wide north and so~; th and forty
Chester, Oh•o Henry and Ma ry
fee t dee p eas t and wes t, and
Hun ter owners
be1ng the same pr em1ses
for mer ly occ up red by Geoq:~e
Sherl oc k m his lif e lim e
Also the fo llowi ng r ea l
estate Si tua te m the Co unty of
Me1gs Stat e of Ohio , and 1n
the F1r s t Wa rd of Middl e port , DO YOU HA VE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
Oh10
artd bound ed and
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
des cnb ed as follows
Th e
tollowmg r eal es tate 1n Coal
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
pori now Mid d leport Ot11o,
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
Ira Morns , deed to Eldon bemg part of Lot No Fi ft y
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
nme
(59J
be•n
g
th
ir
ty
fee
t
Morns, Ma rgaret Yan- fron t and s txly tee t deep (30 ~&lt;
MENT NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVE RING CALL COLLECT TO
Cooney , Mary Hysell, Irene 60 fee t J bemg wes t of east
CAROL DAY 5t8 489-8)95 OR
Thomas. Ce rt. of Trans., forty fee t and east of wes t
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
th~rty feet and berng the same
Salisbury
prece of ground deeded to J A
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE
At8ANY N Y 12205
Jess1e Mom s, d eed to and D N Daughterly by Mary
Dawso n and John Dawso n ,
E ldon Morris, Margaret January 5th 189 8, ot record at HOUSEWIVES open th e door to
ex tra eorn1ngs Jotn the sue
YanCooney, Mary Hyse ll , Pome ro y, Ohio , m the Deed
Records for Me 1gs Cou ntv , 1n
cessful women who are mok
Irene' Thomas, Cert of Trans.,
Deed Book 82, Pag es 494 and
•ng good money 1n the ir spore
Salisbury.
'95
l 1me
No e)( per1en c e
Deed Re fer ence Volum e
Jess1e Moms, deed to
neces5ory no de ll 11ery no col
219 , Page 585 Meigs County
lecttng , no cosh Investment
Ralph L YanCooney, Cert. of
Deed Re cord s (App r aiSed
Call
now and get &amp;11 lro early
Va
lue
$3
,500
00
1
Trans., Salisbury.
benehts Phone 949 2803 or
Parcel No 2 : Th e lollow1ng
Clyde J Morlan , Ethel real es tate s• luated 1n th e
949 2786 Also bookmg par
Coun ty of Me 1Q S m !h e Slat e
Marie Morlan to Carl E
11es
Oh1 0, an d m the V1l lage of
Reed, lJQrothy J Reed, Lot of
Mt ddleport. and bounded and WANTED Bobys1thtr fo r 10 yoor
13, Hickory Acres , Orange
de sc r~bed as foll ows
All o f
old boy Syracuse Oh•o Phone
Lot No 58 ~ 1 n Coa lport , now
992 7163 of_te r 4 30 p m
Roy
Proffitt ,
Ltllian
Included 1n tt1 e corporat 1on ot
Proffitt to Charles H Cobb,
Middleport , Me1g s Countv LOSE we1g ht w!! h N9w Shape
Tableh ond Hyd re ~t Water P1lls
Sandra Cobb, I acre and 1 Oh10
Deed Re ference Volume
at Oul lon Drug -M1ddleport , and
acre, Sutton
11 9 Pag e 583 Me1gs Co unt y
~~I so~ Drug
Dee d Rec ords (Ap pra •se d
HELP wonted to travel w1th Cit
Value - 1.1.500 OO J
Parc el No l . The fot1 0w1ng
cus Apply to J1m Sil ¥erlake
rea l es tat e S1luated 1n th e
Hox1e Bros C~rcus Gollla
Coun t y of Mc1g s , m th e Stat e
County Fo1rground s at 8 00
of Oh10 , and •n tt1 e Vil lag e of
a m Weds June 16th
Midd lepo rt , and bounded and
desc rrb ed as follow s Lo t N o
51 , e~tcep t1n g a s trtp &lt;16feet off
o.t the east S1d e of Lot No 57
Also th e fo llowrn g desc r1bed
parcel ot r ea l es tat e srt uat c m WILL 00 odd 1obs roof1ng potn
a Bern1ce Bede Osol
Middleport , Me igs Co unt y,
tmg hoohng treework and
Oh•o Th e part of Lot No 66
mow mg Phone 992 H09
For Wednt~day, June 16, 1976
ly1ng west ot Lot No 66 17 02
of an acre on the ea s t s1de of Will do bUIIdrng and remodelmg
A~IES (Morch 21·Aprll 1t)
Lot No 66 a ll of Coalport , now
roofmg
plumb1ng, furna ce
Some good news a lr1end has
a part of th e V1 tl age of M1 d
repmr
gas
or ml or general
for you Will buoy up your sp1r11s
dtepor t
reparr Free estimates and
toda)l It has someth1ng to do
Deed Reference Ve lu m e
re asonable rates
Phone
With an even t ye t to happen
239, Pag e 181 , Me rgs Coun ty
Charles Smcla1r, {614 ) 985-41 21
Dee d Reco rd s (Ap pra 1sed
TAURUS (April 20·M•y 20)
or992 222 1
Va lue - SSOO 00 )
Cond itions should be to you r
Parcel No 4·
hkmg today both at work and
Tract No 1 Th e follOW ing WILL babysit 1n lupj)Qrs Ploms
where yO ur purse IS concernand Chesler area
have
real estate Situated 1n the
ed A good ltme to talk to the
ref erences Phone (614 ) 985
V•llag e ot Middleport , 1n the
County ot Meig s and m the
4245
boss about !hat ra1se '
St a te of Oh10 Be1 ng tha t part
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)
Crea t1ve end eavor IS an area m ot Lot No 60 rn the Vil lag e ot
Coalport now mcorporated
whtch yo u should shme today
1nlo the Vil lage of Middl eport ,
What vou produ ce will be very
Me 1gs Co unl y , Oh 10 , a nd
1nnova11ve
bo und ed apa des cri bed as OLD furniture , ICe boxes , brass
beds old wall teleph ones and
foll ows , to Wtl 30 tee t on
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
ports or co mplete households
and
60
fee
t
on
tt1
e
Third
Street
You re fortun ate Someof]e IS
ee t parall el with th e R 1v er
Wnte M D. Miller Rt 2
loo k1ng out for yoUr matena l str
Ro ad , a corner and a
Pomeroy Oh1o Col l992-77tJJ
mteres ts You may not need
pa r all e logram JO lee ! bv 60
CASH po1d for all makes and
h1 m Ieday bu t he s good to
feet
Tract No 2 The fOllOW ing
moclels of mob1le homes
rt ave aro und
real es tat e s rru ated 1n the
Phone area code 614 &lt;423 '9531
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Th&gt;S IS a
Vi llag e of M1ddl eport, In the
favorab le day to nego ttate ImCoun
t y of Merg s and '" the $$Cosh$$$ for 1un ked auto, Frye s
portant agreements or form
Truck Auto Parh, Ru tland
St ate of Oh 10 Be1ng tt1a t east
new alliances It cou ld be
partollo t No 61 on the plat of
Phone 7A2 2081
C'Jery th1ng all parties hoped
Coalport be mg 60 feet wide on
DEAlERS
m 1unk cars scrap 1ron
the front and r un nm g back 70
tdf'
metals
Phone 992-5468.
fee
t
to
a
s
ron
e
wa
ll
w1th
the
WAGO I Aug 23-Sepl 22)
house Situa te th ereon , C)C
Y.,ou II have more luck today
CoiNS
tokens
any fo;~ gold or
cept tn g therefrom a 40 foot
det&lt;~lmg w1th those at the top
51 i'ler 11welry, tpoont rlngt
str 1p off of the back ot satd lot
dental. Will trade Coli Roger
f hQ are Ill A POSIIIOil to grant
as co n., eved by Maud A Petitt
Joseph A P ett it to Bertha
Wamsley Rutland Ohro, 742·
tq•r w1 St1es S K1p m1ddle and
Lem ley Ward by deed datect
2331
i)'i£baQement
April 10 19A8 , and recorded in
~IJRA (11,1. 23·0cl. 23)
Vo l 160, Page 325, of th e Deed
~;ethmg ha ppening at a dts·
Re corct s of Meig s Co unty ,
It e today wil l ulttmately
Ohto , and further exce pt ing
from sa id parcel a 30 foot 1976 lmpgla . 27 foot self
b
ht you The news won't
1' 1 1" ,..,.. lror' '"f" on ~eco na
r h y..,u tmmedtately
contolned , tw1n bedt , tandem
A\lenue ent:J exte nding at that
S OIIPIO (Ocl. z•·N"". 22)
wheels , oir condrtloned, lots of
width ll distance of 30 tee-t
A cept thmgs as the)l happen
extras Seeony t1meot Hender
wester ly from Norrh Second
I av Don't be too amoous
Ave nue and being th e north
son Tro lor P ar~ Hende rson,
easterly co rn er of l ot No 61
a ou t the outcome The odds
W Va
on the plat of Coalport , con
' ~..' rn yOUI fo . u&lt;
'Yeyed tn /',\uud Avena l Petllt
GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
and Joseph A, P~! lt ll to
) In partnershtp s ltuattons
Lawrenc e Boyd and Htlen
IQday you d be better off to
Mar l ~ Boyd by deed dated
l ~ll..,.e the wheel1ng and deahng
Apnt 26 , 1955, and re co rded 1n
Vo l 18 2. Page 517 , Deed
111 '.'Our co hort Stay 111 the
RESPONSmLE
Re cords of Metgs ' County ,
h&lt;tC kQround
PERSON
Oh io
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
D~ed Reference
Vo lum e
W1nted to own 1nd opentt
1!). You r matenal prospec ts
232, Pag e 81, Me igs Cou nt y
cand't &amp; co nfection vending
CC\Irl l11i u1 ' to be ert couraglng
Dee d Reco rds (A pprarsed
route. M1191 Count~ 1nd
Value - SLOOO OOJ
111rroundin' 1r11 . Pltlltttt
p ;.;.ti Cll larl y wtlere yo u re g1vt ng
The nid prom 1Ses a r e
business. H gh prom Utms.
p,ogr ess a push lntens1ve efappra•sed at 56,500 00 and
CJn start part time . Att or
for t swells you r return
cannot be sol d for less than
eKptrlfJCI not imrortlnt.
A.OUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob 111)
1wo th1rds of the ap pra rsed
Aequir11 ur 1nd 149$ to
'Yll lue
A me mber of th e op pos tle sex
S47U cuh urvulmenl . For
l1nd s )nt tuqhl l" :1t 1,.,,.11 , tJ toSa1 d properll es will be ot
detllls write 1nd Include
fered for sate separattly tor
your phone number :
day Thp, zeal w1th whtch th at
!he in d iV idual appra1~ed
Dtplrtmtnt IVV
Rdm•rn11on •s expressed may
'Yalues as se t forth followmg
lfll Me.dowbrook Rd
su rpn se you
the des cnptron of the •n
Mtnnupolis, MN 55426
PISCES (Fob. 20-Mirch 20)
dlvidua i propert1es
Terrn s ol sa le Cash In hand
Lad y Luck has her eye on you
upon del1ve ry of deed
She may prompt another to do
somethtnQ nt ce lor you today
Bernara v· Fultz ,
tha t they wouldn 1 ordma rlly
Admrn ist ra tor
AVAILABLE
do
De Ban Is Non of
IMMEDIATELy
the E$1afe of
Charl es Hyafl deceased

Meigs
Property

Business Services
..

IN Lov1ng memory, o f Orrs Gaul

1f yov could look upon th1s

IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

For ag~resstve IndiVIdual
who IS wtlhng to work long
hours for good profits
AKC Male boxe r, II we~ks old
Smallmvestment rtqurred
Sl50 Phone (30&lt;)675- t353
_ _ ~~. liDO For details lnd
REGISTERED Beagle Pjjft 6 mo ' , inlerviow call Mr . Adams
tha old Phone 9&lt;9 ~3
-,.· ; • I-JOH75·4193 evoninta.

Pets for Sale

I

Siding Centa
Salts I Service
201l1oth Ave.
Pa rkersburg, W. Va .
304-415-0386
.14-423-..74
Aluminum-Vinyt.Sietl
Continuous Gutter
Replace men I
Windowsonct Doors
Free Estlmil'es
We rocommend and
SaiiQuallty
S-9·76

1971 FORD STA. WAGON
11495 '
' V 8. automattc , P steering , good tires, dea n tnfenor

RM:INE
CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
~teSaJes ·
19708ulck Rr v1era full power, ex
ce lle nt cond•t•on , $1200
Phone 742 2796
196-4 Cutlass convert1ble $300
Phone 949 2480 or 992 &amp;:112
1971 Ford LTD good cond1t1on
54000 m1les $1600 Phone
992 2704 .
1974 Ford o4 door hardtop power
steermg power brok&amp;s mr
condlllonmg, rad•ol t1res, n1ce
cor , $199S Phone (614) 985
3554

•· : ;·-_- ,-~, --;.~''L~,l~t
--· -FOf·s_lno

-~

VEGETABLE plants of alllonds , 10
d1fferen t 'IOrlelies of tomatoes ,
rnc lud1n g non -oc•d wh1te
tomato Very Iorge selectiOn of
bedd•ng plants
Al so
Geromums and other potted
plants
Hongrng baskets
Cle land Forms on1d Green house Geroldrn&amp; Cleland ,
Roc me
CoAL , limestone and oil types of
sal t and rock sclt fo r rce and
snow removal b:celsror Salt
Works East Ma1n St Pomeroy
Oh•o Phone 992-3891

1973Golax•e 500, p s p b good
cond1t1 on $1600 Phone 992 MAKE sprrng cleanmg profitable
2978
turn unwonted 1tems mto cosh
Ad'lertrse In the Won t Ads
lOCUST posts, round or split
Phone 9~9 - 2774
GRAPEFRUIT PILL w1th 01oda ~t
IF VOU ho ve o serv1ce to offer
plan more conven1ent thon
won t to buy or sell someth•ng
gropetru11s Eat sohsfr.ng
ore look1ng for work
or
mea ls and lose werght Ne son
whatever
you II gel results
Drug
fo ster w1 th o Senltnel Wont Ad
ONE d1nette set, excellent condr Coll992·2156
hon Two end tables motchng
YARD Sole, June 10 thru 13,
ont1que bed and buffet dresser.
LeMas te r res•dence near Oar
Phone 992 6092
w1n Stereo-TV console, krds
450 Prototype Kawasokt
clothes , books, new Queen 1973
motorcross good condrtron,
shetJts etc.Phone992-7119
$650 Phone 992 31143
YA RD SALE June IS 16 17 16 3 b1k Et mot orc ycla j,~,je; ' Call
10 am till 7 p m Furhrt~;re
9927110
drsh{ls good drape$ men and
women's dothmg blankets MODERN stereo console .(speed
lornps ut1lrty trade r Sole
changer, am fm rodro Balance
located on old Route 33 bet
S106 40 or terms Colt 992-3965
ween County Roads 18 ond 19
George Wh1te r&amp;sldence 1() sp b1cyde, lrke new" Phone
992 31BI or992·76.'19
Phone 992 - 19~
low
3 Fom1ly Yard Sole, by Sdl1sbury 1971 Hondo 500 -4 cyl
m•leo~e , $900 Ph~~e_!!~ 3~~~
School lues and Weds , June
• 15, and lb, 9 om ltll 6 p m 1976 16 It Trl Hull boot. 7S h.p
Wh1le um lorm and glassware
Chrysler motor, new t1lt trorler,
clothmg. toys , and m1sc
full canopy , all occessones
Phone 992-2280 .
YARD Sole Tues and Weds ol
Oonold Buchanon, fileedsv•lle 1972 135 Ferguson tractor, 300
Oh&gt;o B 30 t.ll ?
hrs , ltke new, $3500 Also 6ft
bush hog , $350 Howard Sayre
YARD Sal e, June 16, 17 312 Pearl
Syracuse Oh1o
St M1ddleport F1replace sod
dte , lots dothrng
FIRE ladder, back cho•rs, reftnrsh 9 Fom 11y Ya rd Sale on Broadway~ ed and coined Contact Lmcoln
St ofl Rt 124 In Racrne
RussellonRoute143
__ _
Thu rsday Fn and Saturday 1970 Hondo CC 350 2 motchmg
some ont1ques
furnrture
helmets , h1ghnse handlebars,
clothtng , etc
, block with whrte sfnpes exYARD Sole , l ibrary Table , 427 cellent candtflon $450. Phone
992 2272
Ford motor antiques old tools
cr oc k ~. buffet, many more tAPPEN Gos range $10, over
rtems on County Rood 32 Two
stuffed choir, SS 00, Sunbeom
m1 les off Rt 7 at Memar~al
elec curler set, SS 00 Phone
Ga rdens . J1mm1e Krng
992 5552
resrdence June 17 thru 20
· · -- - · ·
2 row corn cuhrvotor to fit Mossey
YARD Sole on larkms St
Harriss 44 tractor, SSO Phone
Rutland Tuesday thru Sotur·
(61&lt;) 965-~_1_ - - - --- -day, playpen , g1rls 20 mch
b1ke small wooden rocker 41(8 slate pool table w1th rack and
$200 Phone 992-2,.13
other pnces reduced Call 742· cues
. - - ----- . ---··2076
STEREO with AM·FM . good condiFOUR Fom 1ly Yard Sole , t•on , $75 m-~~ -~ -- -~- -Thursday , Fri day and Saturday , 3 month old automoltc washer
June 17 , 18 19 Clothing
cheap 1 yr old male St. Berhousehold rtems, mrsc. 882 na'd dog Coli 7~2 227 ~
logan Sl. Mrddlepor t Phone J971 tnte.rnot~~al C"'o"
992 3856
fw1n screw V-8 Cummrns
YARD Sale Weds and Thursday
eng1ne , 76,000 miles 13 spetd
from 9 to 4 30 Don Hannmg
overdr~ve good rubber, factory
res•den ce m Bradbury
mr , rodm shde· lfl frfth wheel
Phone Coolv1lle (6 U) 667 b355.
Con see ol Sohio Slolron Tup·
pers P~o in s
FIRST ca ll Hols tein -Heifer
freshened Call992-7871

4o70A

FURNISHED :1: bedrm. apartment, ALLIS Chalmers CA tractor, No 7
mowmg machine. Call after 7
odullo only, In Middleport
Phone 992-3BU
P·'!'· · 992·1232.
__
RIDING
lawn
tractor,
8
h.p
32
in
3 AND ~ RM furnished and un·
ch cut, 3 speed tron1m111ion,
furnished oph Phone 992.
Briggs and Stratten tngrne,
5•3•
elec
. starter and lights. real
cOUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt
good condition . Phone 742·
33, len mrles north of Pom•roy
2661
lorg• lot• w1th concret patios
S1dewalk1 runners and off
st reetparklng Phonem7.. 79
ONE bedroom ~;artmenf; at
VILLAG£ MANOR on Middleport
fo r $104 monthly plus elec or
$130 rncludrng eltclnc . lOWER
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS
Convement to shopping on
Thr rd and Mrll StreP.ts In Mid.
dleport Brand new h1gh quah
ty apartments See tt-te
monoger at Rrvert•d• Aport·
mtnh or colt 992·3273. Fur·
n11hed
apartments alto
ovoilable
One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur niShed opartmenh
Phone
992·3129oc992 5&lt;34

-

-·

TRAILER space for rent rn Mrd·
dleport Phone 992 5434

r--------FREEZER SALE!

Save up to $TOO on 20
cu. ft. Chest or 16 cu.
It. Upright.
Choice

$269'5

Television log for

HIL.E TR.a-:Y, ENGULFED IN PAINFUL FIRE,
HIMSELF INTO THE BRINY.

ea~y

viewing

i-----------'-......_____________.__~-'----.

Auto Salt$

who passed oway June 15
1966
And now ten yean ho..,.e poued
Smre you left 1h1s sottowing
world
Eoch year Jure takes 1ls toll
S1nce Maw feel s he has con trol

-

'

•POMEROY LAJIOMAIIK
••-J1ck W. C.I'M)', Mgr.
Ail . l'llone m-2111

·· ,===

FURNISHED 2 roo~ oportmanl
126 Mulberry Ave , adults and LARGE 3 bedroom house, 1300 tq
ft . tlrt tevtl on thrH·fourth ext
references Phone 992·2030
even mgso r9922167
lot IOOxJOO located on Rt 160
aero• from Norrh Golho HiSJh
2 Bedrm mobrle home Phone
School, len thon 2 years old
992-283&lt;
Must sell now, going west
Phono (61~) 388-8371 or (304)
LARGE 3 rm fu rn11h.d apt o~r
773-5B77
cond11loning, 12 mrle1 frorT!
Pomer oy on Rt. 33. A"'orloble
Ju11 e IS Phone 992·6161
HOME of lote Edward Hoofloch
314 Condor St , Pomero~ . Kif:
2 bedrm and 1 bed rm furms hed
chen, d•n laundry-storage,
aportmen 1 Phone 992 2288 or
first floor , two bed roomt , flvlng
9'12 23&lt;8
room both second tl oor Full
MOBilE home, adulfl only Phone
alf1&lt;, thret' parulis Phone
992-5535
992 5374 of lor 5 p m
3 roorn lurn1shed opt , utilrt1es 4 tooms ond both 2 Iorge lots In
po1d 356 Norlh foll rth MHf
Syracuse 53800 Phnne 992
dleport
3857 or 992 1&lt;9&lt;

•6.95
Square Yard Installed

David Parsons, OWner
949-2814
6-7·1 mo.

JUNE SPECIAL

6 CANS OF RC

Ph . 992·3993
11 101rho

Car Bodies .
Strap-Iron.

TIX
Wilh any
purchase
and litis ad. Good lhrough
6-30·76.

RIDERS SI.VAGE

DONEJ,U'S P12ZA

51. Rt. 114

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-5468

Lawn

MOWtnTIIItrtRIding
:-. ·=:=-;, ___ Tncton.
Pioneer,

saws, Bolen's

Merry
Mbwers

Tillers ,

491 Locust 51.
Moddleparl, Ohio 992-lC!l
5262mo .

VOU IDIOT!
KUI&lt;U5HII,IA
LEFT HEReWITH ORPER5
TO CONTA CT
A DAME ON

WAS DECODED

LA5T NI6HT-KVKU5HIMA'5
ALREIWY

C A$E!

8fltCON

WIN AT BRIDGE Tu•sday. June 15
Bad overcall costs 1400

STREET!

6-3· 1 month

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,..--.
Service

CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RtDOE
I aashan Area)

15

·-

• tO 8 5! l
• 10 6 5 3

.-. Qs 53

BORN LOSER

SALES &amp; RENTAL
Travel Trailers
OPEN
Days and evenings except
Tues. 1nd Wed. or bw
contacting R. Codner,
owntr.
5-21 I mo .

('.W i~JlAlFV~R ~llro TO
L{OJR fro'.\1$ TO Si.JI'ItRT ~
lf.l '\HB MAIJ~6R TO 1\JHIGH I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,._,r.rm
•-

·-

\UA:? kl:.OSTCW.W ~

too.

Truss Rafter Co.

Noble Summit Rd .•
Middle pori
PHONE 992-5724
6-13 1 mo

\\ esl Norlh
1•
Pass
DI.JI
Petss
Opcnmg lead

LITTLE ORPHAN AlfiUII:...;ftll DOll: llf'T BIILIII:'fll: I If
IT IS EvtDfHT IHVES11GATIONS
THAT CO/liE
THEY PlAHHfO
ro pt;gTROY AFTER THE
THE POWER
DISASTER
PlANT ARE ~T SO
GOOD -

ll'll PUi'UAB

FIIOM NOW 014
lET'S ~AVE A
LITTLE MORE
INVESTIGATION

AHD THE ASP

I WISI-i TO SEE

niEIVI HERE ·AT ONCE --

Of ntOS~
WE. TRUST-

SALVAGE

Rlcine, Ohio
Need ntw toot or old
'rtpllrtd? Houu, roof,
barn, shingles, build up,
pelntlng, electrical work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furn•ces, w1ter heattl"$,
water softners, installed &amp;
repaired, Sewage.
Call us at 949-2111
or tC9· 221l .

High prices for scrap
autos, motors and
other metals. Phone
992-2228. Monday thru
Friday 8-3, Saturday
8-12.
S-26-1 mo

t:ast South
2•
l•
P.1ss PC~ss
- Ace •

Dy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
If South had stayed out o f

LUCK •

Racine Plumbing
&amp;lleating

HALU

SOUTH
• K7
•AQ6 5l
t K 8 74

.J2

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

D. BUMGARDNER

Box 2B-A
Rulland, Ollio 4577S
Ph. (614) 74l-l409
We Delivor
613-761 mo.

tAQJ9 2
,._ A 96

North-Sou th vulnerable

pool kits for lhe do-llyourself man.
All pool supplies availabfo,

SoutheaStern Ohio

•10871

... K 10 7 4

Abovo and below groulld

26'- $18.72
28'- $20.16

EAST

•AQ.J96
• K J9 .1

SWIMMING
POOLS

4•12 Pitch
24'- $17.28

.4

II EST IDI

An Arkansas reader wa nts
the b1ddmg the chances are to know tf there IS a ny penally
that East and Wes t would for a revoke by dummy
have reached four hea rts and
No. th ere 1sn ·t Everyone IS
m ade 1t 1n sp1te of th e 5·0 lookmg r1ght at d umm y s
trump break On the other ca rds a nd It IS up to th e
han•l , they m1ght well have defende r s to correc t a revoke
1\0rked their way up to hve or 1f one 1 ~ made.
eve n s ix hearts We Will never
(For a copy of JACOBY
~ know , because good old South
I~ had the eq u1valent of a sound MODERN , send $1 lo " Wm
ar Bfldge . · .~ l o rh1s
opemng one-heart b1d
The fact that West s opemng n•wspaper, P 0 Box 489.
spa de b1d had cut down the Rad1o C11y S1a11on. / lew York,
value of h1s kmg of spatle&lt; .md NY 10079)

~IUIIlf"t~
38 Everlasting

ACROSS

I Identifying

(poet.)

37 Tunber

mark

3281mo J

5 Rose extract

tree
38 Prokofiev

or Kousse-

after them"
ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood 10 room brick , 2 fam1ly dwelling
frame , two bedrm. home
w1th basement, Iorge yard,
located between Coolv1lle qnd
redecorated on Brownell Avt.
Tuppers Plarns One acre lot..
on Moddloporl Phone (61&lt;)
two cor garage City water, gas
98S 3'17~
heat , hardwood
floors ,
corpetd lt'Ytng room , nrce view ,
~2~ ~-!'_~ on~ (61 ~ 667-3519.
6 room house, very well kept 3
bedrms , modern k1tchen, walt
to wall carpet H W. floor1 full
basement new gas furnace,
small lot ta mow, Ideal for
older couple or small family rn
good neighborhood 1n
Pomeroy. Call for appomtment.
Phone 992·3097,
LOVELY
16 ocres 3 bedrm. house near
Rut land $10,500. Phone 742
On 2 corner lois. Beaullful
2796
kllchon w-range. ref. ,
disposal,
dlshwasl&gt;er, other
HOUSE for sale In Chester area.
edras 5 BR , 2 ball&gt;s, N G.
Three year old , four bedroom,
not water neat . Part
bric k ranch on five ocrtl of
basement. $20,000
land Hat two baths, Iorge
RUTLAND- On Leading
rooms , finished basement w1th
Creek, 1.72 acres mostly In
frreploceln family room, Phone
(614) 985·3938 or contact Don
lawn. Excetlenl for home
Roush.
or lraller. This you must
-·--..... -----~... $3,300
OLDER remodeled all &amp;lee 3
HERE IS A BUY- 3 BR ..
bedrm. home, $12,500 Call
bath, dtn In kitchen w. 17ft.
992-5011
cab, double bowl S.S. slnl&lt; ,
LoT m Spnng Hill, flo t for sole
Large living R. 2 porcl&gt;es,
or trade, car, truck, Oh1o land
N.G. heat, slorage bldg.
anythrng of value . $2,500 or
S7,900
~~.!..Coli (61~) 667-307&lt;_. _ _
FARMS &amp; ACREAGE 3 bedroom house, bath and air
1- 30 A.• 1-151 A.. 1- 135
condilloning Colt
G M
A.
Please call
for
Freeland, 992·2646 for appointparllcutars.
ment
POMEROY - Large brick
&amp; block building, 2 story,
6 room home rn Middleport, ne)Ct
to school New shingle roof
lower has 3 rental rooms,
$5500 Phone 992-7275.
12 are rented) $6,800. A
good Investment.
DON'T LOSE MONEY LIST WITH US TODAY.
HENRY 1!. CL!LAND,
Virgil B. Sr., Reiflor
BIIOk!R
IIOMechantc Pomeroy,O.
m-mtorm-2UI
Phone 992·331&lt;
•

------

TEAFORD ,

/iJp!ff~RS PLAINS- Nice

3 brs , both, gas F.A.
furnace . Lot 100 • 375. On '4
acre Only $19,5110.
NEW LISJING - 2 brs ..
both , nat . gos, F A.
furnace . Full basement .
Just $5,500.
SOON THINGS WILL BE
BOOMING. IF YOU WANT
TO
ENJOY
PROSPERITY, JOIN US,

IA(ITJ! '(('liD DI\I('_D~.'!YV

~b:llGI!!~:c:
1968 Skylme lro•ler, 12~~:60 , ond
land. 3bedrm. very good tand t
lion. $8,000. Phono 992-5491
or992-5972.

1'16912xt&gt;O SchuTiE~;i,-;;;;;~c;;;;
model, large kolthon ond both,
2 l&gt;odroorno. air candllllonlng.
uoo&lt;1 condition Phono 742·
3018.
1:i mobllo homo;;;,, oolo~e;l,i;,
35 lo SO longlho. I ond 2
bedrooms, completely furnllh·
od, choop. Cossluo Canaday.
1900 Control $1 ., Gotllpollo .
Ohio. Phorlo (614) -4-46·1391
neor Smllh Iuick.
•

BRADFORD Auttione•r. Complete Servrce. Phone 94'9-2487
or 949-2000 Racine, Oh1o, Crill
Bradford.

ace-holder
3!1 Rind
12 - upon (love DOWN
to excess)
1 District
13 Famed
Ill
wizard
France
U Danube
! Convex
tributary
molding

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, rrons, all
smoll appliances lawn mower
next to State Htghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 9115·
3825

15 One Ill
Tolstoy

REMODELING. Plumb.ng heotlng
and all type1 of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perlenc• Phone 992·2_.09

3 Amateur

duo

actl!tg
group

county

(2

wds.J

"II Happened t Suffix
One
for
client

Ntcht" star
Sulllx for

SOn
guard

meteor

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. sor·
vice , oil makes, 992,2284. Tl1•
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized S1nger Soles and
Ser\•rce. We sl1orpel~ Sct!s~~
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work, dump truc~s
and lo·boys for h.re, w1ll J'aaul
fill dirt, top so1l , limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fen, day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 9925232.

WjLL do roofrn9. constructton~
plumbing and healing. No tob
too Iorge or too 1mall Phone
742-234B.
EXCAVATING, doz~~ --b;;~khoe
and dltcher. Chorl•s R. Hotf•eld
Bock Hoe Service,
Rutland. Ohoo Phone 7&lt;2·20118.
GREG~ CB SALES. locatod ot Er
wrn s Gulf Serv1ce, Mrd·
dleport, Oh1o Phone m .

a

11 SwediSh

0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 yean ••
perillnce . Insured free
estimates . Call 9'92·238-4 or
(614)698-7257 Alb!'nL .. ~ _

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonltotlon 992-3954 or 992·
242B.

vitzky

11 Gambler's

I Three

Ill the
Germanys
GordianOne

(prefix)

Yesterday's Auwer

7 Predict
(3 wda.)

23 One
kind of

1 Pilot
duck
I Milk-curdZt Tenant
ling subl!tance contracta
II Sprucely
25 French
dressed
river

15 see 20
%7 Dramatic
AcrotiS
segment
18 Ex-heavy·
Zl SpJichlly
weight champ !f Cause
21 Cud pme
aversion
22 Notched
M Enerll)' unit
like a AW
35 Weaken

direction

Edward of
the limerick
Comedian,

• Le"Letters in

TH' WHAMMY WILL

/F SHES /N ANY
/3LI/LDIN6 IN
NEW YORK-

' '

.

•

..

10 30---Biack Perspective on lhe News 20 ; Woman :13.
II :Oil-News 3,,,6,B, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33 .
11 ;30---Jol&gt;nny Carson 3,4, 15; Myslery of lhe Week
6, 13, Movie " The Feorless Vampire Killers" 8;
Movie "Get Yourself a Collego Girl" 10. Janak! 33.
! .DO-Tomorrow 3 , ~ / News 13.

"

'

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 16, 1976
6:-Summer Semester 10 .
6. 15- Farm Report 13
6· 20--The Story 13
6. »-Columbus Today 4. News 61 Summer Semester
B, Farmllme 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Repo r l 3
6 50-Good Morning , Wesl VIrginia 13
6: 55-CI&gt;uck While Re ports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13 .
7.-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7: 30-Schoolles 10
B -Lassie 6 ; Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
8·»-Big Valley 6.
9 .- A M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15, Lucy Show 8, Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with O.J 113.
9:»-Cron-WIIs 3; One Life lo Live 6; Tatttelales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
IO ·oo-Sonford &amp; Son 3,4,15 , Edge of Night 61 Price Is
Righi 8,10; 811 with Knit 33.
10. 30---Celebrlly Sweepslakes 3,.,15; Dinah 6; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
II :Oil-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Weekday 4; Gombll
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
II 30---Hollywood Squares 3.... 15, Happy Days 13;
Love of Life 8,10
""
'U I
II :55-Take Kerr B; Don Imel 's World 10.
12:011-Fun Factory 3,15; Let' s Make a Deal 13; Bob
Broun 4; News6, 8,10; Sesame St 33.
12· 30---Gong Show 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10
II • I
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 011-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 131 Phil Donahue 81
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only IS,
E leclrlc Company 33.
I 30---0oys of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
101 t
As tho World Turns 8, 10; Nova 33.
2:-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2· J0-0oc1ors 3,44,15; Brtlllk lne ank 6,13, Guiding
Llgl&gt;l 6,10; Evening at Symphony 33.
3:-Another World 3,4 .15; General Hospllat 6,13; All .... 1
In lhe Family B, 10; Kup's Show 20.
3 »-&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Malcl&gt; "
Game 8,10; Ours tory 33
4:-Mister Cartoon 3; Morv Griffin 4, Somersel 15;
Bewltcl&gt;ed 61 Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers "··
20.33; Movie "Escape trom Zahraln" 10; Dinan 13.
4:3o-Bowltcl&gt;ed 3; Mod quad 6, Andy Grlffltl&gt; 8;
Sesame 51 . 20,38; Fllntstones 15.
s ·-Bonanla 3; Parlrldge Family B; Mission : lm·
possible 15

...

5:30---Adam 12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam, 12 13.
6.011-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 2G,33.
6;3o-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 61
CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; YlllaAieore
33
7:» -Truth or Cons. 3; To Tetllho Trufh4; Bowling for "'
Dollars 6; News 10; Wild Kingdom 131 F'amlly " "
Affair 15 ; Book eat 20; Tourlslure Coming 33.

''"

7:»-Last of tl&gt;e Wild 3, Name Thet Tune 4, Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; Evening Edttlo '"'
with Marlin AGronsky 20; Tl&gt;e Judge 10; Wtcome to
Preslonsburg 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book blat 33. " '
8:-Movle "TI&gt;e REturn ofthe World's Greatest
Detecltlve" 3; Bionic Wom'an 6.13; . Movie "Spar.
tacua" 4; Jacksons 8,10; E choea Bright &amp; Clear 33!
""
Toe Annoonced 15; Mark of Jazz 20.
' B:30---Baseball15; Kelly Montelth8,10. Lowell Thomas
Remembers 20.
9.-Movle "The Only Gome In Town" 6, 13; Cannon ''"
8, 10, Tl&gt;eater In America 331 Olympiad 20.
9;3Q-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,A.
'
IO:OO-Hawk3,4; American Parade
8,10; News
20
11 :-News 3,.,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33.
II :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie "Murder or , .. ..
Mercy" 6, 13, Movie "The Sprltlls llllng" 8; Movie
"Fate Is tl&gt;e Hunter" 10; Janakl 33
" '
1:-Tomorrow 3.•; News 13
li l t I

.

~~Love

Tl-1 1 HELIPORT!-

7 30---Hollywood Squares 3; Movie " Sparlacus" 4,
Lei 's Deal will&gt; II 6; , Mott h Gome PM 8; Evening
Edlllon will&gt; Martin Agrons ky 20; Price Is R lgh110;
To Tell ll&gt;e Tru11&gt; 13; Nashvil le on the Road 15;
Family Thealre 33.
8:-Movln' On 3; Happy Oays6 .13; I' ve Got a Sacrel
8, 10; To Be Announced 15; Burglar Prootlng 20; .
8· »-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Beseball lS1 Good Times
8,10. Consumer Survlvel 20,33.
I
9:011-Pollce Woman 3,4,15: S WAT 13; CommanderH,
Mash 8,10; Evening at Symphony 20; Mysl&gt;kln :13.
9· :1()--()ne Day ol a T ime 8, 10
tO . OII-CIIyof Angels 3.A. Rookies 6.13, Dro\lo Julie 8,
Dance for Camera 33; Swllch tO; News 20.

...

by THOMAS JOSEPH

10 It "lives

MODERN - 3 brs, 2
batl&gt;s , nice kit.. full
basement , city water and
gu. 1.4 acres. $31,500.
ONE FLOOR - Mod. 3
brs , ball&gt;, kit. has stove,
refrlg. and bar with dining
room Level lot. 518,000.
DEXTER
Buslnus
bullau.y JO x; "'0, on-= fl oor
Asking only 55.5110 .
COUNTRY SETTING -II
beautiful acres, fenced
blue grass. garden, corn
palch , 4 br residence.
Spring water, large yard
for the cl&gt;lldren . NEW
LISTING at $29,000 be·
lween coal mines.
NEAT - 2 br. bungalow,
st. doors and windows,
cook units , nat. gas
furnace, basement, large
yard. Sl3,300 Owner wltl
help finance
RIVER VIEW
Lovely
kll with cook units, 3 brs ,
auto. steam lleot. Porcl&gt;os,
garage, and buement .

that East 's two-dtamond c-all
had s hown both d1amonds and
at le a st 19 or 11 h1gh-card
pmnts d1d not faze South H1 s
hand was worth a n openmg
btd Nobody was gomg to keep
him from overcalling a nd he
d1d btd two hearts
West doubled to end the blddmg South d1d gel sum ethm g
of a break Westd1dn 't hav e a
dmmond and dec1ded to lead
hiS a ce of spades lle con·
hnued w1th a low spade Eas t
ruffed a nd South 's km g or
spades had bitten th e du sl
South d1d manage to coll ect
lht ee tncks . but down 1400
was a lot to pay for th e
pleas ur e ol makm g a ba d
overca ll

NORTH

LONG BOTTOM

Eng.

Repair
Choln
S.wt-

CAPTAIN EASY
THI5 ME$$AGE

HANDLIN&amp; THE

Middleport, Ohio
m -6167
6-1-76-1 month

WILKINSON'S
II

1.-

Copper 3Sc

•1.00+
i-t.oo

Blown
Insulation Services

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

5 -Bonanze 3. Perlrldge Family B. Mission ImpOssible 15
s · »-Adam 12 &lt;; News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec Co
20,:13 ; Adam-12 13
6 -News 3.U. 10, 13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 » -NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grltflll&gt; 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Llllos Yoga
&amp; You 33
Trull&gt; or Cons. 3, To Tell ll&gt;e Truth' · Bowling for
Dollars 6; Counlry Place 8; News 10; Nome Thai
Tune 13; Family Affair IS. Romagnolls' Teblo 20;
Wild Wild World ot An imals 33 .

Junk &amp;.tteries $1.25
Motor CISt Clean
S3.50 Per Hundred

FREE ESTIMATES

Flnanttng A variable
Blown 1nto Walls &amp; Attru
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTE RS·AWNINGS

TUESDAY, JUNE IS, 197•

FIND

HERr

llftliNllj)ll ~-1.4J,:::!~...J=
'h-

~ ~ ~~® wen.,
Unocramb1o the so lour Jumble~
one letter to each square, to
form four ordln1ry word1.

--·----

2438.

EXCAVATING, BACKHOfS ~ND
DOZER, LA~G£ AND SMALL.
SI'PTIC TANKS INSTALLED. llll
PUll iNS, PHQNE 992- 2~78. DAY
OR NIGHT
SEPTIC Syolom&amp; inololled by
liCensed 10stotll!r Shepcwd
Controcton. Phuno/42-240?.
FOR lho
woll drillIng. Phono Loml"' Drilling
Compony, 7d·2003
HAULING. ·- ori;.woy
and llmt~tone or ;ravel, form
lomo Ph. Jr. Darot, 742 2850.

-"-...L-~1

'..L-~~!:::9:~:...:.~-=~=-~~
r-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.,---:-::--7'"-=-::--::-"c:--:--...II

On• letter simply stands for another. In tl&gt;is umple A 1s
used for the three L's, X for the lwo D's, etc Stng1e letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the ~ords aro all
hmts Ench day Ute &lt;ode letters ore different

bostk.-;.;;.,

,- ,;,;t;i;i

CRYPTOQUOTE

1 E N AT A

CAR~ENTER. floorlng~ -;-tiling~

il:I

ponollng. Phono 992-2759.

WILL trim or cut tre~~hfub
bery, phone 949-25~5 or 742,3167

-=

HJ

!' KHT

UA

HK

V J WE N A T

EN V E ' K
ENWUVK

YJ CT

0

U YJ
F HEN

F H E N-

I K
IMEEDAF , .

I

r]
tYFARC ~

SYSTEM TO
WHITEHE.\P

WHICH

tJ I

U A. -

PTWFJA

:JE~=~~;~~· ~]- MORE
Yesterday's Cryploquote: EACH
COMPLEX STRUCTURE

HEAR NEWS FIRST

HE

HUMAN BEING IS A
THAN ANY SOCIAL
BELONGS
ALFRED

(A..wt!" 1•....-re.,~

Yettutl• )' '•

Ju,.loh WAFER

LOFTY

TIPTOE INTACT

IAruwf'rl A ID W"lr
wit• 't efreld lht clftn t mf111d
&amp;ltltltf - PORTIA
lo~e

1CIIt71 lllns. PHiuno Srndlca\O,loc.)

'

.. '

.
'

ON

6000 LUCK,

· WMPO AM-FM

SNOOPft'!!

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

I A.M., The Noon Report,

ancl5

A X Y D L B A A X It
LONGFELLOW

P~.:
- ---- .J'

'

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Tuesday , June 1~. 1976
WANT ADS
IN,ORMATION
DEADLINES

5

P .M
Day
Publlutlon

Cancellat ions,

Before

correc

uons acc epted first day of
publication
~EOULATIONS

The Publisher rnerves

the righ t to edit or re l~c t
any ads deemed ob -

lectlonal The publisher
wltl not be respons ible for

more tr.an one Incorrect
insertion

RATES
For W1nt Ad Service
5 cents per word one
Inse r tion
M inimum Charg e Sl 00

u cenls per word tttree

consecut ive lnstrllons
26 cents per word s 1x
consecut ive- InsertiOn$
25 Per Ce nt Discount on
pa id eds and eds pa 1d
within 10 days
CARD DF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
word
$2 00
tor
80
minimum
Eactl additiona l word J
cents
BLIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge
per Ad~ertlsement
OFFICE HOURS
8 10 a m to S 0() p m
Daily, 8 30 a m to 12 00
Noon Saturday
Phone today 992 2156

~~f~~~~~l:~;~~~~ For Fast Results- Use The Sentinel Classifieds

closed door sessiQn Saturday ,
the Bowling G r een Slate
University trustees appr oved
pay Increases averaging 8.4
per cent for faculty and
administrators.
Board chairman Charles
Shanklin said he called the
executive session to discuss
perso nal matters, one of
sever a l subjects public
agencies may discuss behlnd
closed doors under Ohio 's
s uns hine
law
which
enco ura ges
th e
open
meetings BGSU President
Holl1s Moore sa1d much of the
session dealt with explaining
procedures
used
m
de termining the amoWJt of
irxhv1duals raises

In MtiJIOIJ

1972 AMC HORNET
51995
Sport abou t Wagon , 6 cyl , automat1c trans, rad io,
good tires, while fm1sh , good economy.

I

tiW~-:

~-Equipmeot .·

Business Franchise

June 16, 1976

~

!

l

r hi s commq yeA r you may
become ln~OI"t~ed In an enter·
onse locnled some dr stance
from you It doesn I mesn you'll
movA but c ommu ttn ~ Is m&lt;1tCR ied ~

{6 ) 1. 8, 15

2')_ d i C

Pomeroy
QUALITY Motor Co.

You d1ed to sa-.e o stnf ul world
The pme you paid was h1gh
To cleanse and ma ke us whole
I om so !;!lad that 'fOu took me 1n

AstroGraph

Your
WBirthday

'@ zs:NS

1972 FORD MAV~RICK2 DR .
51895
302 V-8, automatic trans , P steer ing radio, clean
interior. blue fmrstl

Transfers

A

· '-~------.....---~----.,

wor iJ
And see 1t as lodoy 1he tears
would loll ,
Your chest would heave your
heart wo ld cry
My Lord I I know now why

th1nk so much of jOyS we
shored
NOTICE OF
And the so rrow too we bore,
PUBLIC SALE
In pursuan ce with the order And when I do I m1ss you so
of the Common Pl eas Cou r t. 8otl would not coli you bock
Pro bate On11S 10n
Me •gs
Cou nty , Oh10 , lhe
un
To suffer as of yore,
de rs1gned Adm tn1s trator De But hope some doy to see yo u
Bonr s Non ot the es tale of
sm•le
Cha rl es Hyatt , d eceased , w1!1
And clasp your hand
offe
r
for
sa
le
at
pub
l1c
auction
NOTICES
at th e front door of th e Court Where lo.,ed ones port no more
ATTN. · It
house 1n Pomeroy , Oh10 on Sadly m1ssed by h1s wife and
ALL HOUSEWIVES
the l Oth day of J un e 1976 a t
fam•ly lucy Gaul
All Ya rd S&amp;les , Rummage ,
10 00
0 Clock
AM
the
Porch and Basement Porch
foll
ow1ng
d esc r~b e d
r
ea
l
and Basement Sa les , etc
esra te, to w i!
must be paid m ll dva nce
Parcel No 1. Th e foll owi ng
Get YO'-lrS In early by
real cstal e S1luat ed In th e
stopping by our offi ce at
County of Meigs, In th e St ate RACINE ~1re Deportment wtll
Th e Da lly Sent in el. 111
hove o gun shoot Sal~;rdoy ot
Of
Oh10 , Md 1n th e V1ll ag e of
Court St or wri ll no Box
Mid
dl
eport
,
l'ln d bounded and
6
30 p rn at their new bulldmg
719 , Pomeroy Ohio 45769
des
cnbed
as
lollows
the
eas
t
olf
8ashon Road
with your remittance .
end of Lot Number F11ty ntn e
CHANGE
OF HOURS ..,.. Beglnn1ng
(591 on the plat of Coalport,
June 12 we will be closed Sotur
be1ng Sl)cty feet w1d e on the
str eet lymg eas l of sa 1d lot
days New hour~ w 11l be Man
and runn 1ng back towa rds
day through Fndoy , 9 a m tilt
the west end of sa•d lot
7 p rn Carolina Fobrrcs Rou te
fort y tee t, be1 ng s txty feet
7 one half m1le north of
wide north and so~; th and forty
Chester, Oh•o Henry and Ma ry
fee t dee p eas t and wes t, and
Hun ter owners
be1ng the same pr em1ses
for mer ly occ up red by Geoq:~e
Sherl oc k m his lif e lim e
Also the fo llowi ng r ea l
estate Si tua te m the Co unty of
Me1gs Stat e of Ohio , and 1n
the F1r s t Wa rd of Middl e port , DO YOU HA VE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
Oh10
artd bound ed and
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
des cnb ed as follows
Th e
tollowmg r eal es tate 1n Coal
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
pori now Mid d leport Ot11o,
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
Ira Morns , deed to Eldon bemg part of Lot No Fi ft y
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
nme
(59J
be•n
g
th
ir
ty
fee
t
Morns, Ma rgaret Yan- fron t and s txly tee t deep (30 ~&lt;
MENT NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVE RING CALL COLLECT TO
Cooney , Mary Hysell, Irene 60 fee t J bemg wes t of east
CAROL DAY 5t8 489-8)95 OR
Thomas. Ce rt. of Trans., forty fee t and east of wes t
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
th~rty feet and berng the same
Salisbury
prece of ground deeded to J A
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE
At8ANY N Y 12205
Jess1e Mom s, d eed to and D N Daughterly by Mary
Dawso n and John Dawso n ,
E ldon Morris, Margaret January 5th 189 8, ot record at HOUSEWIVES open th e door to
ex tra eorn1ngs Jotn the sue
YanCooney, Mary Hyse ll , Pome ro y, Ohio , m the Deed
Records for Me 1gs Cou ntv , 1n
cessful women who are mok
Irene' Thomas, Cert of Trans.,
Deed Book 82, Pag es 494 and
•ng good money 1n the ir spore
Salisbury.
'95
l 1me
No e)( per1en c e
Deed Re fer ence Volum e
Jess1e Moms, deed to
neces5ory no de ll 11ery no col
219 , Page 585 Meigs County
lecttng , no cosh Investment
Ralph L YanCooney, Cert. of
Deed Re cord s (App r aiSed
Call
now and get &amp;11 lro early
Va
lue
$3
,500
00
1
Trans., Salisbury.
benehts Phone 949 2803 or
Parcel No 2 : Th e lollow1ng
Clyde J Morlan , Ethel real es tate s• luated 1n th e
949 2786 Also bookmg par
Coun ty of Me 1Q S m !h e Slat e
Marie Morlan to Carl E
11es
Oh1 0, an d m the V1l lage of
Reed, lJQrothy J Reed, Lot of
Mt ddleport. and bounded and WANTED Bobys1thtr fo r 10 yoor
13, Hickory Acres , Orange
de sc r~bed as foll ows
All o f
old boy Syracuse Oh•o Phone
Lot No 58 ~ 1 n Coa lport , now
992 7163 of_te r 4 30 p m
Roy
Proffitt ,
Ltllian
Included 1n tt1 e corporat 1on ot
Proffitt to Charles H Cobb,
Middleport , Me1g s Countv LOSE we1g ht w!! h N9w Shape
Tableh ond Hyd re ~t Water P1lls
Sandra Cobb, I acre and 1 Oh10
Deed Re ference Volume
at Oul lon Drug -M1ddleport , and
acre, Sutton
11 9 Pag e 583 Me1gs Co unt y
~~I so~ Drug
Dee d Rec ords (Ap pra •se d
HELP wonted to travel w1th Cit
Value - 1.1.500 OO J
Parc el No l . The fot1 0w1ng
cus Apply to J1m Sil ¥erlake
rea l es tat e S1luated 1n th e
Hox1e Bros C~rcus Gollla
Coun t y of Mc1g s , m th e Stat e
County Fo1rground s at 8 00
of Oh10 , and •n tt1 e Vil lag e of
a m Weds June 16th
Midd lepo rt , and bounded and
desc rrb ed as follow s Lo t N o
51 , e~tcep t1n g a s trtp &lt;16feet off
o.t the east S1d e of Lot No 57
Also th e fo llowrn g desc r1bed
parcel ot r ea l es tat e srt uat c m WILL 00 odd 1obs roof1ng potn
a Bern1ce Bede Osol
Middleport , Me igs Co unt y,
tmg hoohng treework and
Oh•o Th e part of Lot No 66
mow mg Phone 992 H09
For Wednt~day, June 16, 1976
ly1ng west ot Lot No 66 17 02
of an acre on the ea s t s1de of Will do bUIIdrng and remodelmg
A~IES (Morch 21·Aprll 1t)
Lot No 66 a ll of Coalport , now
roofmg
plumb1ng, furna ce
Some good news a lr1end has
a part of th e V1 tl age of M1 d
repmr
gas
or ml or general
for you Will buoy up your sp1r11s
dtepor t
reparr Free estimates and
toda)l It has someth1ng to do
Deed Reference Ve lu m e
re asonable rates
Phone
With an even t ye t to happen
239, Pag e 181 , Me rgs Coun ty
Charles Smcla1r, {614 ) 985-41 21
Dee d Reco rd s (Ap pra 1sed
TAURUS (April 20·M•y 20)
or992 222 1
Va lue - SSOO 00 )
Cond itions should be to you r
Parcel No 4·
hkmg today both at work and
Tract No 1 Th e follOW ing WILL babysit 1n lupj)Qrs Ploms
where yO ur purse IS concernand Chesler area
have
real estate Situated 1n the
ed A good ltme to talk to the
ref erences Phone (614 ) 985
V•llag e ot Middleport , 1n the
County ot Meig s and m the
4245
boss about !hat ra1se '
St a te of Oh10 Be1 ng tha t part
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 20)
Crea t1ve end eavor IS an area m ot Lot No 60 rn the Vil lag e ot
Coalport now mcorporated
whtch yo u should shme today
1nlo the Vil lage of Middl eport ,
What vou produ ce will be very
Me 1gs Co unl y , Oh 10 , a nd
1nnova11ve
bo und ed apa des cri bed as OLD furniture , ICe boxes , brass
beds old wall teleph ones and
foll ows , to Wtl 30 tee t on
CANCER (June 21·July 22)
ports or co mplete households
and
60
fee
t
on
tt1
e
Third
Street
You re fortun ate Someof]e IS
ee t parall el with th e R 1v er
Wnte M D. Miller Rt 2
loo k1ng out for yoUr matena l str
Ro ad , a corner and a
Pomeroy Oh1o Col l992-77tJJ
mteres ts You may not need
pa r all e logram JO lee ! bv 60
CASH po1d for all makes and
h1 m Ieday bu t he s good to
feet
Tract No 2 The fOllOW ing
moclels of mob1le homes
rt ave aro und
real es tat e s rru ated 1n the
Phone area code 614 &lt;423 '9531
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Th&gt;S IS a
Vi llag e of M1ddl eport, In the
favorab le day to nego ttate ImCoun
t y of Merg s and '" the $$Cosh$$$ for 1un ked auto, Frye s
portant agreements or form
Truck Auto Parh, Ru tland
St ate of Oh 10 Be1ng tt1a t east
new alliances It cou ld be
partollo t No 61 on the plat of
Phone 7A2 2081
C'Jery th1ng all parties hoped
Coalport be mg 60 feet wide on
DEAlERS
m 1unk cars scrap 1ron
the front and r un nm g back 70
tdf'
metals
Phone 992-5468.
fee
t
to
a
s
ron
e
wa
ll
w1th
the
WAGO I Aug 23-Sepl 22)
house Situa te th ereon , C)C
Y.,ou II have more luck today
CoiNS
tokens
any fo;~ gold or
cept tn g therefrom a 40 foot
det&lt;~lmg w1th those at the top
51 i'ler 11welry, tpoont rlngt
str 1p off of the back ot satd lot
dental. Will trade Coli Roger
f hQ are Ill A POSIIIOil to grant
as co n., eved by Maud A Petitt
Joseph A P ett it to Bertha
Wamsley Rutland Ohro, 742·
tq•r w1 St1es S K1p m1ddle and
Lem ley Ward by deed datect
2331
i)'i£baQement
April 10 19A8 , and recorded in
~IJRA (11,1. 23·0cl. 23)
Vo l 160, Page 325, of th e Deed
~;ethmg ha ppening at a dts·
Re corct s of Meig s Co unty ,
It e today wil l ulttmately
Ohto , and further exce pt ing
from sa id parcel a 30 foot 1976 lmpgla . 27 foot self
b
ht you The news won't
1' 1 1" ,..,.. lror' '"f" on ~eco na
r h y..,u tmmedtately
contolned , tw1n bedt , tandem
A\lenue ent:J exte nding at that
S OIIPIO (Ocl. z•·N"". 22)
wheels , oir condrtloned, lots of
width ll distance of 30 tee-t
A cept thmgs as the)l happen
extras Seeony t1meot Hender
wester ly from Norrh Second
I av Don't be too amoous
Ave nue and being th e north
son Tro lor P ar~ Hende rson,
easterly co rn er of l ot No 61
a ou t the outcome The odds
W Va
on the plat of Coalport , con
' ~..' rn yOUI fo . u&lt;
'Yeyed tn /',\uud Avena l Petllt
GITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.
and Joseph A, P~! lt ll to
) In partnershtp s ltuattons
Lawrenc e Boyd and Htlen
IQday you d be better off to
Mar l ~ Boyd by deed dated
l ~ll..,.e the wheel1ng and deahng
Apnt 26 , 1955, and re co rded 1n
Vo l 18 2. Page 517 , Deed
111 '.'Our co hort Stay 111 the
RESPONSmLE
Re cords of Metgs ' County ,
h&lt;tC kQround
PERSON
Oh io
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
D~ed Reference
Vo lum e
W1nted to own 1nd opentt
1!). You r matenal prospec ts
232, Pag e 81, Me igs Cou nt y
cand't &amp; co nfection vending
CC\Irl l11i u1 ' to be ert couraglng
Dee d Reco rds (A pprarsed
route. M1191 Count~ 1nd
Value - SLOOO OOJ
111rroundin' 1r11 . Pltlltttt
p ;.;.ti Cll larl y wtlere yo u re g1vt ng
The nid prom 1Ses a r e
business. H gh prom Utms.
p,ogr ess a push lntens1ve efappra•sed at 56,500 00 and
CJn start part time . Att or
for t swells you r return
cannot be sol d for less than
eKptrlfJCI not imrortlnt.
A.OUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob 111)
1wo th1rds of the ap pra rsed
Aequir11 ur 1nd 149$ to
'Yll lue
A me mber of th e op pos tle sex
S47U cuh urvulmenl . For
l1nd s )nt tuqhl l" :1t 1,.,,.11 , tJ toSa1 d properll es will be ot
detllls write 1nd Include
fered for sate separattly tor
your phone number :
day Thp, zeal w1th whtch th at
!he in d iV idual appra1~ed
Dtplrtmtnt IVV
Rdm•rn11on •s expressed may
'Yalues as se t forth followmg
lfll Me.dowbrook Rd
su rpn se you
the des cnptron of the •n
Mtnnupolis, MN 55426
PISCES (Fob. 20-Mirch 20)
dlvidua i propert1es
Terrn s ol sa le Cash In hand
Lad y Luck has her eye on you
upon del1ve ry of deed
She may prompt another to do
somethtnQ nt ce lor you today
Bernara v· Fultz ,
tha t they wouldn 1 ordma rlly
Admrn ist ra tor
AVAILABLE
do
De Ban Is Non of
IMMEDIATELy
the E$1afe of
Charl es Hyafl deceased

Meigs
Property

Business Services
..

IN Lov1ng memory, o f Orrs Gaul

1f yov could look upon th1s

IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

For ag~resstve IndiVIdual
who IS wtlhng to work long
hours for good profits
AKC Male boxe r, II we~ks old
Smallmvestment rtqurred
Sl50 Phone (30&lt;)675- t353
_ _ ~~. liDO For details lnd
REGISTERED Beagle Pjjft 6 mo ' , inlerviow call Mr . Adams
tha old Phone 9&lt;9 ~3
-,.· ; • I-JOH75·4193 evoninta.

Pets for Sale

I

Siding Centa
Salts I Service
201l1oth Ave.
Pa rkersburg, W. Va .
304-415-0386
.14-423-..74
Aluminum-Vinyt.Sietl
Continuous Gutter
Replace men I
Windowsonct Doors
Free Estlmil'es
We rocommend and
SaiiQuallty
S-9·76

1971 FORD STA. WAGON
11495 '
' V 8. automattc , P steering , good tires, dea n tnfenor

RM:INE
CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
~teSaJes ·
19708ulck Rr v1era full power, ex
ce lle nt cond•t•on , $1200
Phone 742 2796
196-4 Cutlass convert1ble $300
Phone 949 2480 or 992 &amp;:112
1971 Ford LTD good cond1t1on
54000 m1les $1600 Phone
992 2704 .
1974 Ford o4 door hardtop power
steermg power brok&amp;s mr
condlllonmg, rad•ol t1res, n1ce
cor , $199S Phone (614) 985
3554

•· : ;·-_- ,-~, --;.~''L~,l~t
--· -FOf·s_lno

-~

VEGETABLE plants of alllonds , 10
d1fferen t 'IOrlelies of tomatoes ,
rnc lud1n g non -oc•d wh1te
tomato Very Iorge selectiOn of
bedd•ng plants
Al so
Geromums and other potted
plants
Hongrng baskets
Cle land Forms on1d Green house Geroldrn&amp; Cleland ,
Roc me
CoAL , limestone and oil types of
sal t and rock sclt fo r rce and
snow removal b:celsror Salt
Works East Ma1n St Pomeroy
Oh•o Phone 992-3891

1973Golax•e 500, p s p b good
cond1t1 on $1600 Phone 992 MAKE sprrng cleanmg profitable
2978
turn unwonted 1tems mto cosh
Ad'lertrse In the Won t Ads
lOCUST posts, round or split
Phone 9~9 - 2774
GRAPEFRUIT PILL w1th 01oda ~t
IF VOU ho ve o serv1ce to offer
plan more conven1ent thon
won t to buy or sell someth•ng
gropetru11s Eat sohsfr.ng
ore look1ng for work
or
mea ls and lose werght Ne son
whatever
you II gel results
Drug
fo ster w1 th o Senltnel Wont Ad
ONE d1nette set, excellent condr Coll992·2156
hon Two end tables motchng
YARD Sole, June 10 thru 13,
ont1que bed and buffet dresser.
LeMas te r res•dence near Oar
Phone 992 6092
w1n Stereo-TV console, krds
450 Prototype Kawasokt
clothes , books, new Queen 1973
motorcross good condrtron,
shetJts etc.Phone992-7119
$650 Phone 992 31143
YA RD SALE June IS 16 17 16 3 b1k Et mot orc ycla j,~,je; ' Call
10 am till 7 p m Furhrt~;re
9927110
drsh{ls good drape$ men and
women's dothmg blankets MODERN stereo console .(speed
lornps ut1lrty trade r Sole
changer, am fm rodro Balance
located on old Route 33 bet
S106 40 or terms Colt 992-3965
ween County Roads 18 ond 19
George Wh1te r&amp;sldence 1() sp b1cyde, lrke new" Phone
992 31BI or992·76.'19
Phone 992 - 19~
low
3 Fom1ly Yard Sole, by Sdl1sbury 1971 Hondo 500 -4 cyl
m•leo~e , $900 Ph~~e_!!~ 3~~~
School lues and Weds , June
• 15, and lb, 9 om ltll 6 p m 1976 16 It Trl Hull boot. 7S h.p
Wh1le um lorm and glassware
Chrysler motor, new t1lt trorler,
clothmg. toys , and m1sc
full canopy , all occessones
Phone 992-2280 .
YARD Sole Tues and Weds ol
Oonold Buchanon, fileedsv•lle 1972 135 Ferguson tractor, 300
Oh&gt;o B 30 t.ll ?
hrs , ltke new, $3500 Also 6ft
bush hog , $350 Howard Sayre
YARD Sal e, June 16, 17 312 Pearl
Syracuse Oh1o
St M1ddleport F1replace sod
dte , lots dothrng
FIRE ladder, back cho•rs, reftnrsh 9 Fom 11y Ya rd Sale on Broadway~ ed and coined Contact Lmcoln
St ofl Rt 124 In Racrne
RussellonRoute143
__ _
Thu rsday Fn and Saturday 1970 Hondo CC 350 2 motchmg
some ont1ques
furnrture
helmets , h1ghnse handlebars,
clothtng , etc
, block with whrte sfnpes exYARD Sole , l ibrary Table , 427 cellent candtflon $450. Phone
992 2272
Ford motor antiques old tools
cr oc k ~. buffet, many more tAPPEN Gos range $10, over
rtems on County Rood 32 Two
stuffed choir, SS 00, Sunbeom
m1 les off Rt 7 at Memar~al
elec curler set, SS 00 Phone
Ga rdens . J1mm1e Krng
992 5552
resrdence June 17 thru 20
· · -- - · ·
2 row corn cuhrvotor to fit Mossey
YARD Sole on larkms St
Harriss 44 tractor, SSO Phone
Rutland Tuesday thru Sotur·
(61&lt;) 965-~_1_ - - - --- -day, playpen , g1rls 20 mch
b1ke small wooden rocker 41(8 slate pool table w1th rack and
$200 Phone 992-2,.13
other pnces reduced Call 742· cues
. - - ----- . ---··2076
STEREO with AM·FM . good condiFOUR Fom 1ly Yard Sole , t•on , $75 m-~~ -~ -- -~- -Thursday , Fri day and Saturday , 3 month old automoltc washer
June 17 , 18 19 Clothing
cheap 1 yr old male St. Berhousehold rtems, mrsc. 882 na'd dog Coli 7~2 227 ~
logan Sl. Mrddlepor t Phone J971 tnte.rnot~~al C"'o"
992 3856
fw1n screw V-8 Cummrns
YARD Sale Weds and Thursday
eng1ne , 76,000 miles 13 spetd
from 9 to 4 30 Don Hannmg
overdr~ve good rubber, factory
res•den ce m Bradbury
mr , rodm shde· lfl frfth wheel
Phone Coolv1lle (6 U) 667 b355.
Con see ol Sohio Slolron Tup·
pers P~o in s
FIRST ca ll Hols tein -Heifer
freshened Call992-7871

4o70A

FURNISHED :1: bedrm. apartment, ALLIS Chalmers CA tractor, No 7
mowmg machine. Call after 7
odullo only, In Middleport
Phone 992-3BU
P·'!'· · 992·1232.
__
RIDING
lawn
tractor,
8
h.p
32
in
3 AND ~ RM furnished and un·
ch cut, 3 speed tron1m111ion,
furnished oph Phone 992.
Briggs and Stratten tngrne,
5•3•
elec
. starter and lights. real
cOUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt
good condition . Phone 742·
33, len mrles north of Pom•roy
2661
lorg• lot• w1th concret patios
S1dewalk1 runners and off
st reetparklng Phonem7.. 79
ONE bedroom ~;artmenf; at
VILLAG£ MANOR on Middleport
fo r $104 monthly plus elec or
$130 rncludrng eltclnc . lOWER
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS
Convement to shopping on
Thr rd and Mrll StreP.ts In Mid.
dleport Brand new h1gh quah
ty apartments See tt-te
monoger at Rrvert•d• Aport·
mtnh or colt 992·3273. Fur·
n11hed
apartments alto
ovoilable
One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur niShed opartmenh
Phone
992·3129oc992 5&lt;34

-

-·

TRAILER space for rent rn Mrd·
dleport Phone 992 5434

r--------FREEZER SALE!

Save up to $TOO on 20
cu. ft. Chest or 16 cu.
It. Upright.
Choice

$269'5

Television log for

HIL.E TR.a-:Y, ENGULFED IN PAINFUL FIRE,
HIMSELF INTO THE BRINY.

ea~y

viewing

i-----------'-......_____________.__~-'----.

Auto Salt$

who passed oway June 15
1966
And now ten yean ho..,.e poued
Smre you left 1h1s sottowing
world
Eoch year Jure takes 1ls toll
S1nce Maw feel s he has con trol

-

'

•POMEROY LAJIOMAIIK
••-J1ck W. C.I'M)', Mgr.
Ail . l'llone m-2111

·· ,===

FURNISHED 2 roo~ oportmanl
126 Mulberry Ave , adults and LARGE 3 bedroom house, 1300 tq
ft . tlrt tevtl on thrH·fourth ext
references Phone 992·2030
even mgso r9922167
lot IOOxJOO located on Rt 160
aero• from Norrh Golho HiSJh
2 Bedrm mobrle home Phone
School, len thon 2 years old
992-283&lt;
Must sell now, going west
Phono (61~) 388-8371 or (304)
LARGE 3 rm fu rn11h.d apt o~r
773-5B77
cond11loning, 12 mrle1 frorT!
Pomer oy on Rt. 33. A"'orloble
Ju11 e IS Phone 992·6161
HOME of lote Edward Hoofloch
314 Condor St , Pomero~ . Kif:
2 bedrm and 1 bed rm furms hed
chen, d•n laundry-storage,
aportmen 1 Phone 992 2288 or
first floor , two bed roomt , flvlng
9'12 23&lt;8
room both second tl oor Full
MOBilE home, adulfl only Phone
alf1&lt;, thret' parulis Phone
992-5535
992 5374 of lor 5 p m
3 roorn lurn1shed opt , utilrt1es 4 tooms ond both 2 Iorge lots In
po1d 356 Norlh foll rth MHf
Syracuse 53800 Phnne 992
dleport
3857 or 992 1&lt;9&lt;

•6.95
Square Yard Installed

David Parsons, OWner
949-2814
6-7·1 mo.

JUNE SPECIAL

6 CANS OF RC

Ph . 992·3993
11 101rho

Car Bodies .
Strap-Iron.

TIX
Wilh any
purchase
and litis ad. Good lhrough
6-30·76.

RIDERS SI.VAGE

DONEJ,U'S P12ZA

51. Rt. 114

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-5468

Lawn

MOWtnTIIItrtRIding
:-. ·=:=-;, ___ Tncton.
Pioneer,

saws, Bolen's

Merry
Mbwers

Tillers ,

491 Locust 51.
Moddleparl, Ohio 992-lC!l
5262mo .

VOU IDIOT!
KUI&lt;U5HII,IA
LEFT HEReWITH ORPER5
TO CONTA CT
A DAME ON

WAS DECODED

LA5T NI6HT-KVKU5HIMA'5
ALREIWY

C A$E!

8fltCON

WIN AT BRIDGE Tu•sday. June 15
Bad overcall costs 1400

STREET!

6-3· 1 month

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,..--.
Service

CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RtDOE
I aashan Area)

15

·-

• tO 8 5! l
• 10 6 5 3

.-. Qs 53

BORN LOSER

SALES &amp; RENTAL
Travel Trailers
OPEN
Days and evenings except
Tues. 1nd Wed. or bw
contacting R. Codner,
owntr.
5-21 I mo .

('.W i~JlAlFV~R ~llro TO
L{OJR fro'.\1$ TO Si.JI'ItRT ~
lf.l '\HB MAIJ~6R TO 1\JHIGH I

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
,._,r.rm
•-

·-

\UA:? kl:.OSTCW.W ~

too.

Truss Rafter Co.

Noble Summit Rd .•
Middle pori
PHONE 992-5724
6-13 1 mo

\\ esl Norlh
1•
Pass
DI.JI
Petss
Opcnmg lead

LITTLE ORPHAN AlfiUII:...;ftll DOll: llf'T BIILIII:'fll: I If
IT IS EvtDfHT IHVES11GATIONS
THAT CO/liE
THEY PlAHHfO
ro pt;gTROY AFTER THE
THE POWER
DISASTER
PlANT ARE ~T SO
GOOD -

ll'll PUi'UAB

FIIOM NOW 014
lET'S ~AVE A
LITTLE MORE
INVESTIGATION

AHD THE ASP

I WISI-i TO SEE

niEIVI HERE ·AT ONCE --

Of ntOS~
WE. TRUST-

SALVAGE

Rlcine, Ohio
Need ntw toot or old
'rtpllrtd? Houu, roof,
barn, shingles, build up,
pelntlng, electrical work,
gutters &amp; downspouts,
furn•ces, w1ter heattl"$,
water softners, installed &amp;
repaired, Sewage.
Call us at 949-2111
or tC9· 221l .

High prices for scrap
autos, motors and
other metals. Phone
992-2228. Monday thru
Friday 8-3, Saturday
8-12.
S-26-1 mo

t:ast South
2•
l•
P.1ss PC~ss
- Ace •

Dy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
If South had stayed out o f

LUCK •

Racine Plumbing
&amp;lleating

HALU

SOUTH
• K7
•AQ6 5l
t K 8 74

.J2

LI'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

D. BUMGARDNER

Box 2B-A
Rulland, Ollio 4577S
Ph. (614) 74l-l409
We Delivor
613-761 mo.

tAQJ9 2
,._ A 96

North-Sou th vulnerable

pool kits for lhe do-llyourself man.
All pool supplies availabfo,

SoutheaStern Ohio

•10871

... K 10 7 4

Abovo and below groulld

26'- $18.72
28'- $20.16

EAST

•AQ.J96
• K J9 .1

SWIMMING
POOLS

4•12 Pitch
24'- $17.28

.4

II EST IDI

An Arkansas reader wa nts
the b1ddmg the chances are to know tf there IS a ny penally
that East and Wes t would for a revoke by dummy
have reached four hea rts and
No. th ere 1sn ·t Everyone IS
m ade 1t 1n sp1te of th e 5·0 lookmg r1ght at d umm y s
trump break On the other ca rds a nd It IS up to th e
han•l , they m1ght well have defende r s to correc t a revoke
1\0rked their way up to hve or 1f one 1 ~ made.
eve n s ix hearts We Will never
(For a copy of JACOBY
~ know , because good old South
I~ had the eq u1valent of a sound MODERN , send $1 lo " Wm
ar Bfldge . · .~ l o rh1s
opemng one-heart b1d
The fact that West s opemng n•wspaper, P 0 Box 489.
spa de b1d had cut down the Rad1o C11y S1a11on. / lew York,
value of h1s kmg of spatle&lt; .md NY 10079)

~IUIIlf"t~
38 Everlasting

ACROSS

I Identifying

(poet.)

37 Tunber

mark

3281mo J

5 Rose extract

tree
38 Prokofiev

or Kousse-

after them"
ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood 10 room brick , 2 fam1ly dwelling
frame , two bedrm. home
w1th basement, Iorge yard,
located between Coolv1lle qnd
redecorated on Brownell Avt.
Tuppers Plarns One acre lot..
on Moddloporl Phone (61&lt;)
two cor garage City water, gas
98S 3'17~
heat , hardwood
floors ,
corpetd lt'Ytng room , nrce view ,
~2~ ~-!'_~ on~ (61 ~ 667-3519.
6 room house, very well kept 3
bedrms , modern k1tchen, walt
to wall carpet H W. floor1 full
basement new gas furnace,
small lot ta mow, Ideal for
older couple or small family rn
good neighborhood 1n
Pomeroy. Call for appomtment.
Phone 992·3097,
LOVELY
16 ocres 3 bedrm. house near
Rut land $10,500. Phone 742
On 2 corner lois. Beaullful
2796
kllchon w-range. ref. ,
disposal,
dlshwasl&gt;er, other
HOUSE for sale In Chester area.
edras 5 BR , 2 ball&gt;s, N G.
Three year old , four bedroom,
not water neat . Part
bric k ranch on five ocrtl of
basement. $20,000
land Hat two baths, Iorge
RUTLAND- On Leading
rooms , finished basement w1th
Creek, 1.72 acres mostly In
frreploceln family room, Phone
(614) 985·3938 or contact Don
lawn. Excetlenl for home
Roush.
or lraller. This you must
-·--..... -----~... $3,300
OLDER remodeled all &amp;lee 3
HERE IS A BUY- 3 BR ..
bedrm. home, $12,500 Call
bath, dtn In kitchen w. 17ft.
992-5011
cab, double bowl S.S. slnl&lt; ,
LoT m Spnng Hill, flo t for sole
Large living R. 2 porcl&gt;es,
or trade, car, truck, Oh1o land
N.G. heat, slorage bldg.
anythrng of value . $2,500 or
S7,900
~~.!..Coli (61~) 667-307&lt;_. _ _
FARMS &amp; ACREAGE 3 bedroom house, bath and air
1- 30 A.• 1-151 A.. 1- 135
condilloning Colt
G M
A.
Please call
for
Freeland, 992·2646 for appointparllcutars.
ment
POMEROY - Large brick
&amp; block building, 2 story,
6 room home rn Middleport, ne)Ct
to school New shingle roof
lower has 3 rental rooms,
$5500 Phone 992-7275.
12 are rented) $6,800. A
good Investment.
DON'T LOSE MONEY LIST WITH US TODAY.
HENRY 1!. CL!LAND,
Virgil B. Sr., Reiflor
BIIOk!R
IIOMechantc Pomeroy,O.
m-mtorm-2UI
Phone 992·331&lt;
•

------

TEAFORD ,

/iJp!ff~RS PLAINS- Nice

3 brs , both, gas F.A.
furnace . Lot 100 • 375. On '4
acre Only $19,5110.
NEW LISJING - 2 brs ..
both , nat . gos, F A.
furnace . Full basement .
Just $5,500.
SOON THINGS WILL BE
BOOMING. IF YOU WANT
TO
ENJOY
PROSPERITY, JOIN US,

IA(ITJ! '(('liD DI\I('_D~.'!YV

~b:llGI!!~:c:
1968 Skylme lro•ler, 12~~:60 , ond
land. 3bedrm. very good tand t
lion. $8,000. Phono 992-5491
or992-5972.

1'16912xt&gt;O SchuTiE~;i,-;;;;;~c;;;;
model, large kolthon ond both,
2 l&gt;odroorno. air candllllonlng.
uoo&lt;1 condition Phono 742·
3018.
1:i mobllo homo;;;,, oolo~e;l,i;,
35 lo SO longlho. I ond 2
bedrooms, completely furnllh·
od, choop. Cossluo Canaday.
1900 Control $1 ., Gotllpollo .
Ohio. Phorlo (614) -4-46·1391
neor Smllh Iuick.
•

BRADFORD Auttione•r. Complete Servrce. Phone 94'9-2487
or 949-2000 Racine, Oh1o, Crill
Bradford.

ace-holder
3!1 Rind
12 - upon (love DOWN
to excess)
1 District
13 Famed
Ill
wizard
France
U Danube
! Convex
tributary
molding

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toasters, rrons, all
smoll appliances lawn mower
next to State Htghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 9115·
3825

15 One Ill
Tolstoy

REMODELING. Plumb.ng heotlng
and all type1 of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perlenc• Phone 992·2_.09

3 Amateur

duo

actl!tg
group

county

(2

wds.J

"II Happened t Suffix
One
for
client

Ntcht" star
Sulllx for

SOn
guard

meteor

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. sor·
vice , oil makes, 992,2284. Tl1•
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy
Authorized S1nger Soles and
Ser\•rce. We sl1orpel~ Sct!s~~
EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
backhoe work, dump truc~s
and lo·boys for h.re, w1ll J'aaul
fill dirt, top so1l , limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fen, day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 9925232.

WjLL do roofrn9. constructton~
plumbing and healing. No tob
too Iorge or too 1mall Phone
742-234B.
EXCAVATING, doz~~ --b;;~khoe
and dltcher. Chorl•s R. Hotf•eld
Bock Hoe Service,
Rutland. Ohoo Phone 7&lt;2·20118.
GREG~ CB SALES. locatod ot Er
wrn s Gulf Serv1ce, Mrd·
dleport, Oh1o Phone m .

a

11 SwediSh

0&amp;0 TREE Trimming, 20 yean ••
perillnce . Insured free
estimates . Call 9'92·238-4 or
(614)698-7257 Alb!'nL .. ~ _

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Sonltotlon 992-3954 or 992·
242B.

vitzky

11 Gambler's

I Three

Ill the
Germanys
GordianOne

(prefix)

Yesterday's Auwer

7 Predict
(3 wda.)

23 One
kind of

1 Pilot
duck
I Milk-curdZt Tenant
ling subl!tance contracta
II Sprucely
25 French
dressed
river

15 see 20
%7 Dramatic
AcrotiS
segment
18 Ex-heavy·
Zl SpJichlly
weight champ !f Cause
21 Cud pme
aversion
22 Notched
M Enerll)' unit
like a AW
35 Weaken

direction

Edward of
the limerick
Comedian,

• Le"Letters in

TH' WHAMMY WILL

/F SHES /N ANY
/3LI/LDIN6 IN
NEW YORK-

' '

.

•

..

10 30---Biack Perspective on lhe News 20 ; Woman :13.
II :Oil-News 3,,,6,B, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33 .
11 ;30---Jol&gt;nny Carson 3,4, 15; Myslery of lhe Week
6, 13, Movie " The Feorless Vampire Killers" 8;
Movie "Get Yourself a Collego Girl" 10. Janak! 33.
! .DO-Tomorrow 3 , ~ / News 13.

"

'

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 16, 1976
6:-Summer Semester 10 .
6. 15- Farm Report 13
6· 20--The Story 13
6. »-Columbus Today 4. News 61 Summer Semester
B, Farmllme 10.
6: 45-Mornlng Repo r l 3
6 50-Good Morning , Wesl VIrginia 13
6: 55-CI&gt;uck While Re ports 10; Good Morning, Trl
Slate 13 .
7.-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7: 30-Schoolles 10
B -Lassie 6 ; Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St . 33.
8·»-Big Valley 6.
9 .- A M 3; Phil Donahue 4, 15, Lucy Show 8, Mike
Douglas 10; Morning with O.J 113.
9:»-Cron-WIIs 3; One Life lo Live 6; Tatttelales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
IO ·oo-Sonford &amp; Son 3,4,15 , Edge of Night 61 Price Is
Righi 8,10; 811 with Knit 33.
10. 30---Celebrlly Sweepslakes 3,.,15; Dinah 6; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
II :Oil-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Weekday 4; Gombll
8, 10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
II 30---Hollywood Squares 3.... 15, Happy Days 13;
Love of Life 8,10
""
'U I
II :55-Take Kerr B; Don Imel 's World 10.
12:011-Fun Factory 3,15; Let' s Make a Deal 13; Bob
Broun 4; News6, 8,10; Sesame St 33.
12· 30---Gong Show 3, 15; All My Children 6, 13; Search
for Tomorrow 8, 10
II • I
12 55-NBC News 3,15
1 011-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 131 Phil Donahue 81
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only IS,
E leclrlc Company 33.
I 30---0oys of Our Lives 3,4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13;
101 t
As tho World Turns 8, 10; Nova 33.
2:-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13.
2· J0-0oc1ors 3,44,15; Brtlllk lne ank 6,13, Guiding
Llgl&gt;l 6,10; Evening at Symphony 33.
3:-Another World 3,4 .15; General Hospllat 6,13; All .... 1
In lhe Family B, 10; Kup's Show 20.
3 »-&lt;lne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Malcl&gt; "
Game 8,10; Ours tory 33
4:-Mister Cartoon 3; Morv Griffin 4, Somersel 15;
Bewltcl&gt;ed 61 Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers "··
20.33; Movie "Escape trom Zahraln" 10; Dinan 13.
4:3o-Bowltcl&gt;ed 3; Mod quad 6, Andy Grlffltl&gt; 8;
Sesame 51 . 20,38; Fllntstones 15.
s ·-Bonanla 3; Parlrldge Family B; Mission : lm·
possible 15

...

5:30---Adam 12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam, 12 13.
6.011-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 2G,33.
6;3o-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 61
CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; YlllaAieore
33
7:» -Truth or Cons. 3; To Tetllho Trufh4; Bowling for "'
Dollars 6; News 10; Wild Kingdom 131 F'amlly " "
Affair 15 ; Book eat 20; Tourlslure Coming 33.

''"

7:»-Last of tl&gt;e Wild 3, Name Thet Tune 4, Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; Evening Edttlo '"'
with Marlin AGronsky 20; Tl&gt;e Judge 10; Wtcome to
Preslonsburg 13; Wild Kingdom 15; Book blat 33. " '
8:-Movle "TI&gt;e REturn ofthe World's Greatest
Detecltlve" 3; Bionic Wom'an 6.13; . Movie "Spar.
tacua" 4; Jacksons 8,10; E choea Bright &amp; Clear 33!
""
Toe Annoonced 15; Mark of Jazz 20.
' B:30---Baseball15; Kelly Montelth8,10. Lowell Thomas
Remembers 20.
9.-Movle "The Only Gome In Town" 6, 13; Cannon ''"
8, 10, Tl&gt;eater In America 331 Olympiad 20.
9;3Q-Chlco &amp; the Man 3,A.
'
IO:OO-Hawk3,4; American Parade
8,10; News
20
11 :-News 3,.,6,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 33.
II :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15, Movie "Murder or , .. ..
Mercy" 6, 13, Movie "The Sprltlls llllng" 8; Movie
"Fate Is tl&gt;e Hunter" 10; Janakl 33
" '
1:-Tomorrow 3.•; News 13
li l t I

.

~~Love

Tl-1 1 HELIPORT!-

7 30---Hollywood Squares 3; Movie " Sparlacus" 4,
Lei 's Deal will&gt; II 6; , Mott h Gome PM 8; Evening
Edlllon will&gt; Martin Agrons ky 20; Price Is R lgh110;
To Tell ll&gt;e Tru11&gt; 13; Nashvil le on the Road 15;
Family Thealre 33.
8:-Movln' On 3; Happy Oays6 .13; I' ve Got a Sacrel
8, 10; To Be Announced 15; Burglar Prootlng 20; .
8· »-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Beseball lS1 Good Times
8,10. Consumer Survlvel 20,33.
I
9:011-Pollce Woman 3,4,15: S WAT 13; CommanderH,
Mash 8,10; Evening at Symphony 20; Mysl&gt;kln :13.
9· :1()--()ne Day ol a T ime 8, 10
tO . OII-CIIyof Angels 3.A. Rookies 6.13, Dro\lo Julie 8,
Dance for Camera 33; Swllch tO; News 20.

...

by THOMAS JOSEPH

10 It "lives

MODERN - 3 brs, 2
batl&gt;s , nice kit.. full
basement , city water and
gu. 1.4 acres. $31,500.
ONE FLOOR - Mod. 3
brs , ball&gt;, kit. has stove,
refrlg. and bar with dining
room Level lot. 518,000.
DEXTER
Buslnus
bullau.y JO x; "'0, on-= fl oor
Asking only 55.5110 .
COUNTRY SETTING -II
beautiful acres, fenced
blue grass. garden, corn
palch , 4 br residence.
Spring water, large yard
for the cl&gt;lldren . NEW
LISTING at $29,000 be·
lween coal mines.
NEAT - 2 br. bungalow,
st. doors and windows,
cook units , nat. gas
furnace, basement, large
yard. Sl3,300 Owner wltl
help finance
RIVER VIEW
Lovely
kll with cook units, 3 brs ,
auto. steam lleot. Porcl&gt;os,
garage, and buement .

that East 's two-dtamond c-all
had s hown both d1amonds and
at le a st 19 or 11 h1gh-card
pmnts d1d not faze South H1 s
hand was worth a n openmg
btd Nobody was gomg to keep
him from overcalling a nd he
d1d btd two hearts
West doubled to end the blddmg South d1d gel sum ethm g
of a break Westd1dn 't hav e a
dmmond and dec1ded to lead
hiS a ce of spades lle con·
hnued w1th a low spade Eas t
ruffed a nd South 's km g or
spades had bitten th e du sl
South d1d manage to coll ect
lht ee tncks . but down 1400
was a lot to pay for th e
pleas ur e ol makm g a ba d
overca ll

NORTH

LONG BOTTOM

Eng.

Repair
Choln
S.wt-

CAPTAIN EASY
THI5 ME$$AGE

HANDLIN&amp; THE

Middleport, Ohio
m -6167
6-1-76-1 month

WILKINSON'S
II

1.-

Copper 3Sc

•1.00+
i-t.oo

Blown
Insulation Services

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio

5 -Bonanze 3. Perlrldge Family B. Mission ImpOssible 15
s · »-Adam 12 &lt;; News 6; Family Affair 8, Elec Co
20,:13 ; Adam-12 13
6 -News 3.U. 10, 13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 » -NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grltflll&gt; 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20. Llllos Yoga
&amp; You 33
Trull&gt; or Cons. 3, To Tell ll&gt;e Truth' · Bowling for
Dollars 6; Counlry Place 8; News 10; Nome Thai
Tune 13; Family Affair IS. Romagnolls' Teblo 20;
Wild Wild World ot An imals 33 .

Junk &amp;.tteries $1.25
Motor CISt Clean
S3.50 Per Hundred

FREE ESTIMATES

Flnanttng A variable
Blown 1nto Walls &amp; Attru
STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTE RS·AWNINGS

TUESDAY, JUNE IS, 197•

FIND

HERr

llftliNllj)ll ~-1.4J,:::!~...J=
'h-

~ ~ ~~® wen.,
Unocramb1o the so lour Jumble~
one letter to each square, to
form four ordln1ry word1.

--·----

2438.

EXCAVATING, BACKHOfS ~ND
DOZER, LA~G£ AND SMALL.
SI'PTIC TANKS INSTALLED. llll
PUll iNS, PHQNE 992- 2~78. DAY
OR NIGHT
SEPTIC Syolom&amp; inololled by
liCensed 10stotll!r Shepcwd
Controcton. Phuno/42-240?.
FOR lho
woll drillIng. Phono Loml"' Drilling
Compony, 7d·2003
HAULING. ·- ori;.woy
and llmt~tone or ;ravel, form
lomo Ph. Jr. Darot, 742 2850.

-"-...L-~1

'..L-~~!:::9:~:...:.~-=~=-~~
r-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.,---:-::--7'"-=-::--::-"c:--:--...II

On• letter simply stands for another. In tl&gt;is umple A 1s
used for the three L's, X for the lwo D's, etc Stng1e letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the ~ords aro all
hmts Ench day Ute &lt;ode letters ore different

bostk.-;.;;.,

,- ,;,;t;i;i

CRYPTOQUOTE

1 E N AT A

CAR~ENTER. floorlng~ -;-tiling~

il:I

ponollng. Phono 992-2759.

WILL trim or cut tre~~hfub
bery, phone 949-25~5 or 742,3167

-=

HJ

!' KHT

UA

HK

V J WE N A T

EN V E ' K
ENWUVK

YJ CT

0

U YJ
F HEN

F H E N-

I K
IMEEDAF , .

I

r]
tYFARC ~

SYSTEM TO
WHITEHE.\P

WHICH

tJ I

U A. -

PTWFJA

:JE~=~~;~~· ~]- MORE
Yesterday's Cryploquote: EACH
COMPLEX STRUCTURE

HEAR NEWS FIRST

HE

HUMAN BEING IS A
THAN ANY SOCIAL
BELONGS
ALFRED

(A..wt!" 1•....-re.,~

Yettutl• )' '•

Ju,.loh WAFER

LOFTY

TIPTOE INTACT

IAruwf'rl A ID W"lr
wit• 't efreld lht clftn t mf111d
&amp;ltltltf - PORTIA
lo~e

1CIIt71 lllns. PHiuno Srndlca\O,loc.)

'

.. '

.
'

ON

6000 LUCK,

· WMPO AM-FM

SNOOPft'!!

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

I A.M., The Noon Report,

ancl5

A X Y D L B A A X It
LONGFELLOW

P~.:
- ---- .J'

'

�.10 - The Dally Sentinel, Mlddlenort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 15, 1976

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

Two drivers cited after auto mishap
)!oth drivers were charged
following a traffic accident at
8:05 p.m. Monday on
Township Rd. 308, eight
tenth! ot a mlle west of Rt. 7
In Meigs County.
The Gallla - Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
cars driven by Terry
Stephen, 22, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
and Carl Parker, 17, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, co!Uded on a curve.
There was minor damage.
They were charged with
failure to register their
vehicles,·

Contract
Continued from page 2
praised him, and sometimes
he did badly, for which I let
him know about it too,"
Scarlrerry said.
A big Issue brought to light
·by Bennett's wife, Judy,
pertained to the recent wagehour investigation conducted by Jim Blaschak of
the U. S. Deparlment of
.Labor.
·
Mrs. Bennett accused the
board o[ dismissing her
husband because he had
called Blaschuk to make a
check of custodians' hours.
Supt. Bradbury flatly
denied the allegation, stating
neither ·lie nor the board was
aware that Bennett had
contacted Blaschak.

Randall Justice, 20, Rt. I,
Bidwell , was cited to
Municipal Court for driving
left of center following an
accident at 3:23p .m. at the
junction of the Floyd Clark
and Frederick Roads.
The patrol said Justice 's
struck the left rear of an auto
operated by Sidoey Smith, 31,

Jackson .
There
was
moderate damage.
,
An early morning accident
occurred on Rt. 553, one and
three tenths miles north of
Rt. 7where an WJknown truck
sideswiped a vehicle driven
by Golden Canaday , 75, Rl. 1,
Northup , then contlnued on .
There was minor damage.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterana Memorial Hospital
Admissions - John Parsons·, Middleport ; Leona
Karr , Pomeroy; Myrtl e
Thomas, Pomeroy ; Mazi e
Hannahs, Pomeroy; Barbara
Smith, Middleport ; Nora
Gorham, Syracuse ; Amanda
Hawk , Pomeroy ; Roger
Reynolds, MlddleP9rt; Ottie
Boston, Racine ; Eva Lee
Richards, Racine.
Discharges
Mary
Chapman Violet McDonald.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - Kimberley
Fisher, Ripley; Ann Smith,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Roy
Allen, Point Pleasant;
Rodney King , U!tart ; Norman
Shan ton,
Point
Pleasant;
Mrs .
Ked
Markham, Ashton .
Birth, a son to Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Deskins, Albany.

Holzer Medical Ceuter
I Discharg'", Ju11e II)
Connie· Barnett , Harry
Clark, Mrs. Fred Davis and
daughter, James Davis, Irvin
Faulkner, Teddie Hanna,
Clifford Icenhower, Mrs .
Roger Kemper and daughter ,
Betty Kyger , Mary Lambert,
Charl otte Little, · Maude
Merrill , James Messer ,
Martha Milbourn, Robert
Neider , Gregory O'Brien,
Michelle Ra cer, Carol
Swaney, Mrs. Junior Tucker
and daughter, Amy Wells,.
Clifton
Estil Whaley,
Williams, Etta Wright.
1Births, June 14)
Mr , and Mrs . Rober t
Nelson, son, Reedsville; Mr.
and Mrs . John Jen kin s,
dauhter , Syracuse ; Mr. and
Mrs . James Smith , so n,
Henderson, W. Va.

''I recommended a one-

year contract, but the board
CLASS TO MEET
made its own decision,"
The Willing Workers Class
Bradbury stated.
Enterprise
United
Board members, William of
Methodist
Church
will
meet
Carter and Cremeens both
stated they knew nothing Thursday, JWJe 17, at 7:30
about Bennett contacting the p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl
Moore·.
Labor Deparlment.
Board member James
Blevins asked Principal
Scarberry to explain his
CLUB WILL MEET
recommendation.
The Meigs CoWl ty Better
After his explanation, the
board went into an executive Beef Livestock 4-H Club will
session. Attending that meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday '
session were Scarberry, at Royal Oak Farm . All
Bradbury ,
and
Asst. members are asked to attend.
Superintendent Murdock.
Upon returning , board ;:;:::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:·
memlrer Carter moved that
the board's decision reaf·
CLINIC DATES SET
firm ed. Blevins seconded the
Three
free cancer clinics
motion. The vote was 4-0.
for
Meigs
County women
Board member Bruce Stout
will
be
held
In July at
was absent.
Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Dates of the cllnlc are
July Z, 16 and 30 and al&gt;'
Tonight fhru Thursday
polntments are being Ia ken
June 14thru June24
for the three clinics.
NOT OPEN
Women wishing to make an
Fri.-Saf..Sun.
appointment for the clinics
June 25-26-27
may call the cancer office
Walt Disney's
In Middleport, 1 to Cp.m. on ·
' BLACK BEARD'S GHOST
Tuesday or Thursday; lm·
Dean Jones, Pe ter Ust inov,
3382,
9 o.m. to I p.m.; or
Susanne Pfeshefte, Elsa
99:!·5832
In the evenlngs.
Lanchester , Joby Bak er ,
Elllolf Reid.
!GI :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::;:;:·
Show Starfo 7 p.m .

MEIGS THEATRE

SUNDAY, JUNE 20th

DIVORCES FILED
Three divorces were fil ed
in the Meigs Coon ty Common
Pleas Court. Betty Jean
Blake, Pomeroy, filed suit
against Odell Golden Blake,
Pomeroy; Shirley Evans, Rt.
2, Racine; Louella King , Rt .
4 Pomeroy against Frank
King, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Filing
for dissolution ·of marriage
were Sarah A. !ngles, Athens,
and Earl E. Ingles, Middleport.

Carter
(Continued from page 1)
shows 'i'eKas JWJe 19, Ui&lt;th
June 18-19, North Dakota
June 24-26, and Colorado June
26.
Republicans still have
Washington June 18, Iowa
June 18-19, Delaware June 19,
Minnesota June 24-26 ,
Montana and New Mexico
June 26, Colorado July 9-10,
North Dakota July 10,
Connecticut July 16-17, and
New Mexico June :W.

TO MEET MONDA V
J. B. Vanity, Jr., Chairman
INSIDE TODA \' :
The annual Big Bend of the Areawide Riverview
Regatta tabloid, a "Special Committee of Ohio Valley
Bicentennial" edition this Health Services Foundation,
year, is found today Inside Inc., has annoWJced that the
The Dally Sentinel. committee will hold a
The cover offers a pic- meeting Monday, June 21 at
ture of Cathy Osborne, who the Coach House in Wellston.
reigns as Regatta Queen The general business session
until a new queen Is will begin at 7 p.m. and is
crowned Friday night In open to the public . . Th e
agenda
includes conMiddleport.
sideration
of
an application
·::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:·:::::::::::::;:;::::
fo r reimbursements
eligibility of expenses related
to capital expenditures for a
proposed 50 bed nursing
home facility in Wellston. The
name of the proposed facility
is The Four Winds.

Spencer fund

contributors

are announced

LONG
BOTTOM
Donations to Cathy and Tom
Spencer on their bill at the
Holzer Medical Center In the
amoWJt of $2,250 have been
received.
Mrs. Spencer is afflicted
with a rare blood disease and
was seriously ill in March.
Mr. Spencer was in the
process of changing jobs and
had no ho8pitalization in·
surance due to that situation.
The Chester YoWJg Wives
Club instigated a fund drive
on behalf of the Spencers.
The Spencers reside at
Route I, Long .Bottom. Mrs .
Spencer is the daughter of
Mr . and Mrs. Harliss Frank,
also of Route 1, Long Bottom.
Coniiibutors to the fWld, all
of whom have been extended
thanks by the family, include:

•'

Psychiatric
hot line is
given $76,954

An " emergency mental
health 24-hour crisis service
covering 1,200 square miles in
three counties has been
fWlded by a grant of f/6,954 .
The Community Mental
Health and Mental Retardation "648" Board of Gallla,
Jackson and Meigs Counties
learned from Cong. Clarence
Miller's office that the service has been funded by the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission, Washington, D.
C., through the Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation,
!nc.
SHOELESS BANKERS
Maxine S. Plummer,
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - A
gunman made off with an Executive Director of the
WJdetermined amount of loot Board, said services will be
from the Mid-American Bank adonlnistered and operated
branch on the city's west side by the Gallia.Jiickson-Meigs
Monday, leaving behind three Community Mental Health
shoeless ... and ga ping bank Center, under the clinical
supervision of Dr. George B.
employes.
Police said the gurunan Grreaves, Clinical Director
forced the three workers inio of the Center. Malcolin B.
a back room,made them take Orebaugh , Center Ad·
will
be
off their shoes, then spread a ministrator ,
bunch of nails in front of responsible for . Its administrative management.
them.
The funds were requested
He then scooped up money
from a te ller's drawer and from ARC to establish a
Ocd on foot when customers psychiatric emergency
entered the bank , police sa id. services program including
an unlimited " toll-free"
service to cover the entire
1,200 square mile, three
UNITCALLED
county area providing
The Pomeroy Emerg ency"' professional coWJseling and
Squad was called at 1:30 p.m. consultatl~n services on a 24Monday to assist May Hawk hour bas1s to the 77,000
of Wol!pen Rd . She was taken residents of the Mental
to Veterans Memorial Health catchment area, and
Hospital.
other health care providers.
Establishing
of
the
Emergency
Services
Program will be the next step
ASK TOWED
A marriage license was in the development of an
iss ued to Chris Edward integrated program of
Neece, 19, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, · comprehensive mental health
and Terry Jean Whaley, 17, services, supplementing the
existing
out
patient
Rt. I, Shade.
diagnostic and treatment
services land new in-patient
Mrs . Harold Brann on , Mrs .
mental health services now
Flor ence Myers , Mr . and
being initiated for the new
Mrs . Larry Be i tey , M r . an d
Mrs . Dorhman Reed , Ed
Comprehensive Mental
Roush and Ed Jones .
Health Center being conA tso, Mr . and Mrs . R usse ll
structed i" Gallipolis.
Ba i ley, Mr . and Mrs . D enn is

Mr . and Mrs . Roy Hannu m,
Mrs . Est ner F . Wrig nt , Mr .
itnd M r s. Ga te M cC ain, Mrs .
Fran ces Re~d . Mrs . Mae
Sp ence r aM Vance , Mr . and
Mrs . Gale Ca in , M r , and Mrs .
Ezra Sh eets, M r s. Jean
Sheets ana Cassie, Mr . and
M rs . John H ,;~yes , Long
Bollom Un i ted M . E . Cliur ch,
Ree dsv ill e Chu r ch o f Chris t,
Ree dsv i ll e Un ite d M . E .
Chur ch, "M r and Mr s. Paul
Karr , M r . and Mrs Wa ller
Brow n, M r and Mrs . Charles
Pickens , Mr
a nd Mrs .
Ronald Osborne , Mr . and
Mrs . Sammy Raird en, Keno
Churc h of Cliri st , Mrs . Go ld ie
Fr ed er ic k , M r . and Mrs . Joe
Bi sse ll. Mrs . Ne l lie Par ker ,
. Mr
and Mrs . W illiam
Thomas . and You n g Adu !l
Class of Ree ds vill e M .E .
Church .
Also . M r . and Mrs. Rex
Bailey , Mr . and Mrs . A lber!
Fran k, M r . and Mrs . waid
Spencer , H ymn S in g at
Reedsvi ll e M . E . enur e~ . Con ce ll i, Mr . and Mrs Dan
Bake Sa le at Hills Depa rt - Fl inner , Mr . and Mrs .
me n t Store . Sou th Bethel La wr ence D eG root. Mr . and
United M E Chu r ch, Success Mrs. Rog er Epple , Tuppers
Chur ch of Ch r ist, Mr . and
Pl ains. Ch r is tian Church , M r .
Mrs . Ste ve Reed ; Mr . and Md Mrs . H aro ld Sa uer . Mr .
Mrs . A l vi n Reed , Mr . JOhn
and Mrs . Ernest Wh i tehead .
Gib son , Mr . and M r s. Gene
Mr . and
Mrs
D env er
R iggs , Mr . and Mrs . Marvin
Webe r , Mr . an d Mr s. Bill
Keeb augh , Mr . and Mrs. Ja ck Mered it h , Mr . and Mrs .
Farrar , Mr . and M rs . Jake Wa rr en P ickens, Mr . and
Gaul , Mrs . e e·nha Rando lph
Mr s. Meig s Bened u m , Mr .
and Clarasteen . Hazel Hawk , and M r s . Wavne Upton ,
Mrs . Ada Morr is , Mrs . Don
North Bethel United M .E .
She ets , Mrs . Linda Bent z, Chvrch ,
Long
Bottom
Mrs . Ru th Anne Ba lderson , Churc h es
S. S . C l asses ,
Mr . and Mrs . Paul Andrews , Ch ester
U .M .
Chu r ch ,
Mr. and Mrs . Victor Bahr ,
Pomer oy U .M . Churc h, So uth
Mrs. Ada Va nM ete r , Mr . and
Bethel U .M . Ch urch .
Mrs . C. 0 . Newland . Mr . and

LUNCHEON SET
The Meigs County Humane
Society will hold a regatta
public luncheon at noon on
Friday and Saturday at the
society building. According to
plans small tables will be
placed in front of the building
to provide eating locations for
customers.

Candidate
fl'GIIl Plie i)

Retired nune,
teAcher, dies
PORTLAND- Mill orPaynter, U,
retired

(Continued
conaclollll!less between black
and white people. He died In
1953. Even the bladt people
1
who lived at home never realltered nll'te and public
thought about equallty and ICboola leacber, clled Mllnday
riding In the front of the bua night
at Veter1111 Memorial
and going to ll)e same IIChool !bpital.
as whites.
llle wu preeeded In duth
"It's not right to stigmatize
by
her parenll, DIIJ:Iea R.
people Into generic groups or
and Martha Fry l'l)'llfer;
as imividuabi becauae of the five brothers, and three
tliftes they lived In and wheu liltera.
they got their reputation that
Mill Paynter Ia IIII'VIved
shaped their pollllcal Image
by three brothen, Jolm E.
"The point I'm making Ia Newark; Roy H., Steuberithat the South, Including vWe, and ()key E., l'llrtqnd;
Georgia, has moved forward a niece, and eight n~.
primarily because they
Miss Paynter attended
haven't been put into the Ohio University, taught
position of having to reno111ce achool In Wnt Vqlnla and
themselves. You've got to · Ohio from 1910 to 1127,
give people credit for the whereupoo ahe tiD'Olled Iii the
progress they make and their Crouse-Erving Hospital
change In attitude. It would , School of Nll'aing, SyriCUie,
be easy to sit up In BostOn and N. Y. from wbere she·
say, 'look at those terrible sraduated In 1928; Sbe
people In Georgia that won't practiced public · llealth
bus tbeir children to school.' nuratns w.tll redrement.
That doesn't do any good ... "
Mlu Paynter Ia a member
A reporter asked, "What Ia
of the Oui.ltjan Oturch In
" good ole boy?"
" A good ole boy is Steubenville and attended the
somebody who's compatible United Methodist Church
with the group·. I feel just as here. Graveside services wW
much at home around Billy's be conducted at 2p.m. Thurs(Carter's brother) filling day at the Browning
station as I do In a black CA!metery here, the Rev.
Baptist church as with a big- George Oller officlattns. The
shot Texas businessman. I body la at Ewin~'s Funeral
don't feel quite as much at Home untll time of servlcn.
borne, say, with the ADA
(Americans for Democratic
Action, a liberal group).
Q - Does the presidency
SQUADCAU.ED
frighten you ?
The
Middleport
A- "No, it doesn't frighten
Emergency
Squad was called
me. But it's a sobering
at
1:28
p.m.
Monday to 188
thought. There are a lot of
Walnut
St.,
Middleport,
ror
uncertainties about the future
Fred
Hibbs,
who
was
·el... When I compare myself to
the White House and the perlenclng difficulty In
presidency, I feel inadequate. breathlns. He was taken to
When I compare myself to Holzer Medical CA!nter. The
other people who mlght be aquad was called at 5:40p.m.
there instead of me, I feel Monday to assist Paul
adequate ... but I don't fear Dobson of Mlddlport. He was
the job. I certainly respect it taken to the Holzer Medical
and know how much work It's Center.
going to take to do a good job.
I would like to be a great
·
••aln."
president."
..,
Q - Do you ever think
Q -' Do you ever think
about the hazard of being aliout II If not worry aboutlt?
president, of something
A - "Sometimes. The
happening to you?
Secret Service people every
A _ "I recognize the now and then tell me ahout a
possibility of something thrl'l!t."
happening to me, yes. Well, . Q- Is that re~glous or a
it's something that 1accepted part of your fellg~on?
a long time ago it's exactly
A - "No, I don't have a
the
patte;n of thought fear of death. I don't think
when I volunteered to serve I'm going to die. I'd much
in the 811bmarine service. I rather live. I don't have any
knew tbere was a certain fear of death at all."
chance I could be killed. Once
Q- What about your wife?
1 accepted that chance I
A - "Sbe lias the same
never worried about' It attilude I do."

same

our
man
an
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--

·ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Remember Father's Day is
Sunday, June 20th.

A FLAG DONATED by the Reuter family in memory of Guy Reuter wns presented by
Rhonda Reuter, center, and Cherie Reuter to Bill Young, president of the Jaycees, to fly
over the Pomeroy mini-park. Participating in the dedication ceremony last night were
Mayor Clarence Andrews, Mrs. Grace Pratt, president of the American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post, and Raymond Jewell, post commander, left to right.

Flag and pole dedicated

ROY REUTER, left, and Ed Vanlnwagen raise the
flag over the Pomeroy mlnlilllrk.

at Pomeroy's mini-park
EIGHTEEN TROPHIES WILL BE awarded at Saturday night's frog jump In the Meigs
· Stadium, Pomeroy: Grand Croaker Earl Ingela and his small son, Bryan, display two of the
. trophies which will be awarded in the junior and senior division of the jumps, the prince and
princess contest, the interstate jumps, the fire department's jum~ff, and the frog races.
The event sponsored by the Ohio Society for the Promotion of Bull Frogs, Inc. gets
underway at 6 p.m.

•

a1 y

e
VOL XXVIII

NO. 42

B\' CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dedication ceremonies for
a new flag pole and flag at the
Pomeroy mini-park were
conducted by the American
Legion and Auxiliary of Drew

POMEROV-M IODLEPORl, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16,

•
Brze
. 1+.sB~ Envoy
·;~~T
1 ,ews • . •zn
1

COLUMBUS - A LETTER BOMB that "should have"
exploded did not, much to the relief of the employes of tbe
Combined Insurance Co. of America In suburban Worthington.
The two-story offices of the company were evacuated Tuesday
when an employe opened the dajl's mall and found the letter
bomb.
The homb was similar to about a dozen others mailed to
corporations througbout tbe United States, The letter was
opened, pollee said, but the bomb did not explode. The bomb
was In a 13 inch by 10 Inch manila envelope and contained a
blasting cap in a match box, a nine-volt battery such as tbe
type used In transistor radios and ammonia nitrate and was
mailed from texarkana, Tex. It was postmarked June 11.
All ol the bombs maned throughout the U. S. were maned
from the same area of Texas. "The bsttery was hooked with
wires to the blasting cap," said·Alex.
CLEVELAND - LEGISLATION AlLOWING women to
be ordained as priests In tbe Episcopal O.urch will be
Introduced by 67 bishops at the church's aMual national
convention Sept. 11-23 In Mlrmeapolls, Minn., It was revealed
Tuesday.
The bishops spon~~Qrlng the legislation aald the proposed
change in church canon law would permit the ordination of
women to all three orders of the ministry-bishops, priests and
deacons. "Tbese fl, wben joined by 15 other nonsponsortng
·bishops wbo have also Indicated they wUI vote for women's
(Continued on page 16)

lly L.,;WJlS WRD
Unlled Press International
A nationwide survey shows
Jimmy Carier now has 20
more that\ the 1,505 national
convention delegates he
needs to win the Democratic
presidential nomination on
1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS the first ballot.
Carter 'l'uesday passed ihe
nark needed in UPI's poll of
delegates, which put the
' ' fij former
Georgia i!overnor's
total at 1,525. That doesn't
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
;:;: Include hundreds of potential
!;!; SEA ISLAND, Ga. (UP! ) - What Hyannis Port was to { supporters in states where
party leaders are preparing
to board the Carjer
li!
i:,.::.. bandwagon;
..
resort since sta. rting his 17-month quest for lhe :.: .·; Carter's decisive edge
:·:· Presidential nomination.
;:;: came In the counting of new
;:;: Today he and his sons plan to go deep sea fishing. It was ;::; supporters In West Virginia
::::;!;! the only time that be eKpects to appear In public during ;!;,: and Pennsylvania . The
:::. several days of rest and relaxation.
· ;;:; candidate , confident of
victory, was vacationing at
Sea
Island, Ga.
:·: fAls
,:::
.. requen y s ay m e orne w e e was eorg a ::;: President For~ .
:=;; governor between 1970 and 1974.
::;; meanwhile, passed the 1,001).
:~ ~ Sea Island is one of the Golden Isles in the Alantic, of! ;!;~ delegate mark In his quest for
:;:; the c;oast of southeastern Georgia. The isles have ~ rich :;;: the 1,130 delegates needed for
·.,:·:.:,.·.' legacy of history. St. Simons was the original location of ;:;; the Republican nomination,
the colony o!Georgia in 1733. During World WarD, blin1ps ;:;: The UPI codn1 !hOWI!d Ford
:·: from the nearby Glynco Naval Air Station filled the air :~;: with 1,009 delegates and
1
::;; over the islands and their
major city, Brunswick.
:;:: Ronald Reagan with 893.
:':'
.. There were 98 uncommitted
,:..;:: Sea Island is triangular In shape and attached to the :.: .:
:;;;: east side of St, Simons. A real estate agent said the homes :;;; delegates and 258 stlll to be
·
::;: are valued at between $100,000 and $500,000~ with the :;!;: Chosen.
} average at $200,000.
.
';': Ford and Reagan both will
:, : Carter and his wife, Rosalynn, have disclosed in bits ,;~;~· pe In Des Moines this
;:;: and pieces how they are spending their vacation.
;:::: weekend trying to line up
::: Mrs. Carter said that her husband had read three ot ::;:: delegates at the Iowa GOP
;::: four books, includlog Patrick Anderson's novel, "The)~; convention. Republican
;:;:: President's Mistress." Carter said that he read several ·';'·;' delegates also are being
:::
chosen this weekend In
.'~,.· Valenti's,
books on the John110n adonlnistration, Including Jack ;:;;: Delaware and Washington
" A' Very Human President."
;:;:
.. The staff and the burgeoning news corps accompanying ::~ State.
:;:; Carter, meartwhile, are staying on nearby Jekyll Island, ;:; The Democrats' platform
';!: once a playgrouod of mlllionaires but now state owned. :;:: committee, meeting In Washington, approved a party
{:.,:,:,:,:,:·:,:,:·:::·:::-:::·:·:·:::·:·:':::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::{ platform aimed at avoiding

The White House said the
wife of a chauffeur, who was
driving Meloy and embassy
nobert
0Economic·
. WaringCounselor
to a Beirut
meeting with Lebanese

·

=~~=t~l~!l~~~~n~r~;~j

saying they had been
kidnaped.
The car .never reached its
destination.
"We can confinn l the two
men) have been missing
since late Wednesday
morning Beirut time,"
spokesman Robe rt Funseth
told reporters at the State
Department.
"The two men were
traveling by car to malte an
appointment with PresidentElect · Sarkis but failed to
reach their destination. We
are making every effort to
locate the two ~·n," he said.
....,
Meloy arrived in Beirut
only under
five weeks
ago, 011 from
May
8,
·orders

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

Dateline 1776
LE PRAIRIE:, Canada,
Juue 18 - Col. Be.nedlct
Arnold sent word to his
superiors he had succeeded
·ta removing his entire
force from Montreal along
with some mtlasses and
spirits seized In the town.
He reported that al' usable
boats bad been taken to
lrauport tbe soldiers and
all bridges In his rear were
deitroyed.

-:::~~~n~
~~!f~ ~w=~~
(Continued on page 16)

:::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·::::::::: '

Regatta Notes
Nolan Amusement Co. rides will be open to the public this
evening at regular admission prices.
Thursday evening all rides together from 6 to 10 p.m. cosi
only $2. Friday evening regular admission will be charged. On
Saturday a special matinee will be offered from 1 to Sp.m. with
prices as on Thursday evening, the whole thing for only $2.
From 6until closing, regular admission will be charged.
Sunday from I p.m. until closing regular admission will be
charged.

.:·=..:

c~:~~rtal!s :tti::'ed~g a~:thor~:h/!~ I:hlalpel~hsoh:;efr~~Gn:hi~l~

=
·=
·

..

.=' ·:',·...'=

~

letter bomb postmarked
Texarkana, Tex., had been
delivered to hla office and
marked for the attention · of
Joseph Muccio, a !orm~r
Investigator. The package did
not explode and a bomb
91J1ad took lt away.
Kelley said the FBI did not
know whether a slniJle person
or an organized group mailed
the letters and bombs from
Texarkana.
(In Texarkana, sources in·
dlcated the letter bombs
week were mailed at
collection boxes in rural
Atlanta, Tex., about 20 miles
south
of
Texarkana,
sometime Friday. The
Texarkana Gazette reported
Investigators had conflnned
the letters were ~ed In
collection boxes In Atlanta.)
"Extreme caution should
be Iuken in the event letters

Clarence ;:;cnmucker was
elected commander of Drew
Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion, at a
meeting Tuesday evening.
Other officers elected were
Bruce Cleland, first vice;
Charles Hayes, second vice;
Paul Casci, post. adjutant;
Charles Swalzel, finance
o!!icer; Allan Downie, post

chaplain; Edgar Vanlnwagen, Sgt.-at-Arms .
Outgoing commander
Raymond Jewell was sp.
pointed to the board of
trustees.
Installation of the officers
will be July 6 by the Eighth
District Commander John
Brammer.
In other business plans

,.,

30.

Nine defendants were
fined, one forfeited bond and
one was assessed costa only
in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined were Samuel T.
Copley, 23, Bidwell, ~ and
costs, disorderly manner;
Jerry L. Parsons, 29, Bidwell,
$200 and costs and three days
In jail for driving while Intoxicated and fl50 and costa
and three daYIIS In jail,
while
under
driving
suspension; Kim Hayman,
· 20, Racine, f40 and costa,
'disorderly manner; Brian
Basa, 20, Syracuse, f50 and
·coats,
driving
under
suspension and fl5 and costa,
running a stop sl~n;

DUE TO AN ACCIDENT, the helicopter rides will not be
offered this year at the Big Bend Regatta June 18, 19 and 20.

"We shall kick corporate
asses until there is nothing
else left to kick."
The letters included photographs
of
individual
corporation executives
marked as targeis. Kelley
. aald the exPlosives in . tbe
bombs appeared to be ''low
order In nature."
The Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms,
which has jurisdiction over
explosives, was taking part in
the nationwide Investigation,
as were postal' authorities
·and local law enforcement
agencies across the countrv.
Kelley said the Secret Se~­
vice, which is reSponsible for
pro!ection of the President,
also was involved In the
investigation. But a Secret
Service spokesman denied
the agency was playing an
active role.

were made for handling the
parking of cars at the annual
Meigs COWl ty Fair on Aug. 17
through 21. The color guard of
the Post made plans 10 ap.
pear in the Regatta parade on
Friday, JWJe 18.
The Post commander and
trustees will hold a dinner
and business meeUng June

Volunteers are requested to
help reglater boya at Ohio
University for Boya Stale
which begins Saturday.
Volunteers are to meet at the
U!glon Post home at n0011 on
Saturday. Acheck for NO wu
sent to the American Cancer
Society, Meigs Chapter.
Refreshmenta were served
by Charles Hayes.

Middleport court busy

THE ST. PAUL Lutheran Church in Pomeroy will seD
homemade Ice cream and hot lunches on Friday, June 18 and
19 ..0rders may be taken by calling the church. Serving time is
at II a.m.
Anyooe orderi"!! ice cream should call orders in on
Tuesday, June 15 and Wednesday, June 16.
·

of this type are received,"
aald Kelley, displaying a
replica of the brown manila
envelopes that contained .the
bombs.
He said a "high priority"
alert !cir the bombs was in
effect. He appealed for
anyone having Information to
contact authorities so a stop
could be put to "what could
be a very bad and fearful
situation."
One of the bombs received
Monday exploded In a mail
room of ·a New York
brokerage house, Injuring
four persons. The other dozen
either die not go off or were
defused by authorities.
Kelley aald the extortion
letters contained instructions
of how payments were to be
made, but he declined to give
details. Other FBI sources
quoted one note as saying,

major conflicts With carter's
~ews.
.
The
16
Connecticut
delegutes released by Rep.
Morris Udall refused to Cllllle
out for Carter. Instead they
Issued a statement urglnt( the
national convention to
nominate Udall for vice
president.
Sen.· Frank Church's
Nebraska coordinator said
his delegates In Nebraska
also want Church's name
placed In nomination for vice
president.
Ford, an Eplacollan, addressed the annual meeting
of the Southern Baptist
Convention In Norfolk, Va.,
and recalled that Carter, a
Southern Baptist lay leader,
Introduced to hlrn to a
Southern Baptist breakfast In
Dallas two years ago.
"The man Introducing me
was very considerate, very
generoua In hla remarka, and
very friendly," said Ford. "I
waalntroduced as a man with
'an open mind and a ~PI&amp;­
slonate heart,' and I would
like to
return
that
compliment today to the man
who Introduced me - Gov.
Jimmy Carter."
Ford told the Baptista that
public officials have an
obllgutlon to set a good
example for others to follow
In both their public and
private lives.
A number of Baptist
leaders had objected to Ford
being invited to address the
convention while Carter was
left of! ItS agenda.
The Rev. Jayroy Weber ol
Lubbock, Tex., the Southern
(Continued on page 11)

Schmucker will lead legion post

200 corporations said on bomb list
By ROBERT KAYLOR
WASHINGTON (UPI)
· FBI Dir~tor Clarence Kelley
says about 200 corporations
may be potential targets for
letter bombs slmilar to those
received tills week at variOUB
points around the country.
Kelley told a . news
conference Tuesday 1 ,all
except one ol those recetvlng
the bombs were on a list of
companies that have
'received extortion letters
since last fall demanding
payments totaling "millions
ol dollars."
At least 14letter bombs had
been report!d by Tuesday
night and Kelley voiced
concern more may be en
route.
The 14th was reported late
Tuesday In Paterson, N.J .
Passaic County Prosecutor
Burrell HUJilllhries said a

Carter tops
1505 by 20

missing ':{'::::::;::::; :;:::~: :=~:,:::=:: :=;:::::; :;: :,:,
j
in torn Beirut ~~~~~~y81Edj~yi~~~~i~~~~~~~YE~~11~

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNA110NAL
DETROIT - THE NEW CAR .BUYING SURGE that
began when the 1976 models were Introduced last October
continued Into June with the four U. S. automakers Tuesday
reporting sales up Cl per cent over last year's June 1·10 results.
By HENRY KEYS
It was the strongest showing by the industry since June 1973
WASHINGTON (UPI)
when automakers were heading for their best year ever and U.S. Ambassador to Lebanon
before the Arab on embargo triggered a deep slump.
Francis E. Meloy and
Ford made the best showing, up 50· per cent. General another embassy o!flcial
. Motors junlped 44 per cent arid Chrysler 37 per cent. American disappeared in war-torn
Moiors, falling furtber behind last year's pace because of its Beirut today, the State
· slow«lling small cars, reported sales in early June fell 22 per Department said. Fears im. cent below a year llf!O.
mediately arose that they
The "Big Three" automakers also set truck sales records were kidnaped.
in the period. GM delivered 37,580 commercial vehicles in
"We've lost an ambassador
early June, up 113 per cent. Chrysler set a truck record with a 79 in U!nanon," said Secretary
per cent jllf1ll! and Ford 'a 28,152 truck deliVeries were up 49 per . of State Henry. .A. Kissinger.
cent Jor a record.
"He has dissappeared."

WASHINGTON - FIRESTONE TIRE AND Rubber Co.
must make a full public report about $330,000 in illegal
cbntrlbutloos to members of Congress and other federal, state
and local politicians between 1970 and 19'13, under tenns of a
court order.
The money allegedly was kept in the private sale of the
Akron, Ohio, corporation's chief officer, Raymond C.
Firestone. He and Robert P. Beasley, who retired as vice
chairman 16 days ago, allegedly administered the fund. Judge
Howard Corcoran of the U. S. District Court ordered tbe
defendants in a consent decree Tui!S!Iay not to repeat tbe
6ffense5, which they neithet admitted or denied.
The Securities and Exchaoge Commlsslon, the federal
agency that supervises public corporations, filed the charges
again the company.

commended the Lesion and
the Auxiliary for their interest in commWJity betterment, and th.e Jaycees for
their leadership In the park
(Continued on page 16) .

en tine

.. ~- ""-v~.,...,"&gt;'•'•»···&lt;·······•···&lt;·w ... , ••, •.•.•,. w. "'. , •.•••,.,....,_,uw~

i '"..,VoY\'"..~•'•....y; •'•-.:o•o~o"o0o0o~o.o!o00:o~o,.o!o:o:o:o!o~o:;eo:o;o:o;r.o!':O:O:•:.;:.,,:O:O:•:•,•o•."o'»:&gt;:YN

Webster Post 39 Tuesday
evening.
Participating in the
ceremonies were both girl
and boy scouts, and Mayor
Clarence Andrews who

REGATTA QUEEN CANDI,DATE - Merrl Aull, 17,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Ault, of 'Meigs High
School, Is nne of five candidates for Regatta Queen. The
queen will he crowned at Meigs Junior High In Middleport
before the Ricentennlal Pageant on Friday, June 1~ This
picture was lnadverlently omitted Tuesday when 1- ·tures
of the four other queen candidates were reprod• ,.., , the
llflfltt"l ll,.g:olta Wo•"kend Program edilion.
1;

WORK PLANNED
Two work seSBions have
been scheduled for the Meigs
Local Band Boosters and
other volun leers Involved In
the construction of a food
stand on the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds In preparation
for the Meigs County Fair.
The first will be at 6 p.m.
Thursday and the second wlU
be at 9 a.m. satW'day. Both
will be at the stand location
on the groWJds.

Lawrence L. Coale, If,
Pomeroy,
and coata,
parked onayellowllne; Hugh
C. Rousey, 59, Pomeroy, fliO
and costa, three daya In jall,
driving while lnto1Icated;
VIrgil Phillips, 26, Middleport, f'/5 and coata, lea vine
the scene of an accident;
Ariella Flint, 37, Middleport,
f25 and coats, contributtnc to
the delinquency of a minor;
Brenda Petre, 19, Middleport,
f25 and coata, dllturblng the
peace; Alfred Blrchftelcl, 49,
Middleport, costa only,
dlaturblng the peace. Forfelting a NO bond posted on
an indecent eiJlOiure charge
was Charles William Boyln,
38, Middleport.
·

'5

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday throqll lluda7,
lair Friday l1ld SltardaJ
l1ld a ebaace tl 11t1wen
Swldaf. Hlgba wW be Ia tile
•• and low• motll)' wiD be
In llle fOa.
Showers likely thl&amp; af.
lemoon. 11lghs in the mld IIIII,
. lows tonight In the low 8111.
Mostly aunny Thauday,
hlgba to mid 801. Probability
of rain 70 per cent today, 20
percent tonight, near zero
Thw-aday,

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