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                  <text>Intern sofial servire ·agency makes ~
~ark in 28-county Appalachian area
'

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Beat. ·. ·

Of the Bend
.JJ.y IJo/1 llm'}lklt

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1" •

DIS80Lln aON ASKED

NOW YOU KNOW
Sidewalk calel CJI'ICiuled
in 11th century VIthey were introduced to ww
women - who were lllrrtlf
from the lnlerlor or the etlll"

GAWPOUS- M!dlael L.
Pollock and Mary R. RoUock,
Rt. 21'Patriot, have fU&amp;i for
diSJOiution of their rilarrlage
of Dec. 7, 1918. They have
four children,

•

..

A'I'HF:NS - Since 1973· initial gra nt from the Ap.
..cures of souU1eastern' 0111 ~ pa lachlan Regional ComPOMEROY - Generally, this column Is laced wiih the commum ties and thOusands mtssion'. APSI, in turn, has a
names of individuals and organizations and glimpses or wna1 s of citizens living in a 211- subagreement with the Ohio
cooking with them.
. ,
county area have henefiled Department of Econom k
Today, however, is an exception. Not the first local name from the services of Ohio Development to operale the
Is uted and yet - this column is pretty personal. It's all about University st udenl~ .
prog ram . For · th e one·
you, you and YOU !
In ·some conununlli es quarter internship, the
Could Bob Hilliard and Sanuny Fain have lmown abo,ut t1·ansportat!on . !las been student receives a $1,200
Melp County over 25 years ago when _they penned their greil tly improved, · the in- stipend and atademic credit,
popular song, "Dear Hearts and Gentle People"?
dustrial developm e nt
Eight students
are
•
Or Is it only coincidental that "Dear llearL~ and Gentle potential of others have been currenJly serving summer
People" are exactly what I llke most about Meigs County '
enhanced and even a few internships.
While it is true that Meigs Co\lllty sits in the heart of homes may ,bon be warmed
Directors or agencies who
Appalschia - an economlcaUy depressed area of our great by solar heat.
.
ha ve had inlerns ~re ennation - the people of the co \lilly are rich!
'
'
. '!'Iiese are but a lew of the . thusiaslic about the program,
No, they 're not rich in the sense of material possessions.· prOJects s u g ~esled and
Pam Mender of the Athens .,
Their wealth lies, Instead, in·a life style that makes my developed by .various par· Tri-County Head Start preborne countv a wonderful nlace in which to live These people llc lpa tmg age neies and school program said, "my
are rich in the American traits of warmth,' friendliness, ca med out by more than 50 interns have provided ex·
helpfulness, geryerosity and love for their fellow man .
student.s who have served cellent service \o the agency
They lmow the wonderful heart-warming experience of under the Appalachia n Public and 1 hope to have more."
everyone pitching in to help pay the hospital expenses of a sick Service Internship PrQgr mn
Mayor John Laslo of
or Injured child. They feel often the satisfying reward of inner lAPS! ) during the las! U1ree Martins Ferry commenled,
peace found through helping reestablish a family which has yem·s.
"I was very impressed with a
lost everything in a D?fld or a ~re . They, almOilt instincj.ively,
S~m e of the. age llcws. job well done by two summer
perform all of the kmdnesses which ease the burd ~n of a ehg1ble to recetve mterns in!erns." ACcording to Laslo,
neighbor in time of illness. They rally around survivors to help throug h the APSI programs " ! was highly pleased with
Uft the heavy grief ~f death.
are community action· ·and Ule input and final results
Un/rded by ~Ph•shcatlon, the "Dear Hearts an~ Gentle . slate or.ga niza lions, city and accom111sished by these fine
People of Metgs . CoWJty make _up volunteer f1re and county governmenll! school young gentlemen."
emergency umts which respond readrly to calls !or help at any districts and n~h-profil
The Tri-Couri ty Community
time of the day o~ night. They compose orgaruzaUons whtch orga nizations.
.
Action committee Of Caldlabor furioUBI~ to msure that the und~rprlvlleged know at least.
The main objectives of well was especially com·
some joy durmg the ChriStmas holiday sea~n.
,
APSI arc tw ofold : first, plimentary to the students
These peollhple odefmy borne county _still smg the NatiOnal student interns gain valuable assigned to their agency last
Anlhem w pr1 , rectte With d1gn1ty the Pledge of ex·perience ' h'l
·
l •
· · ·
w 1e gomg .· 0 year. Davrd Slt vtson, former
.Allegiance to "Old Glory" and still humbly bow their h ds t
•
ea o. college, and second, soctal program planner and John
God Indprayer ·
· agenctes
· m
· sou thern Tingle execuUve director
,
.
serv1ce
An racism 1. The~ ve never experienced It! Black and Ohio have an opportunity to said 'that these intern~
white have worked s.tde by side for years to conquer life supplement their staff and
ro•' d d 1 bl h 1 ·
problemsfarmoreunporlantthan thecolorofone'sskin.
initiate and complete Po 1 1e., vaua . el ep ttsn
And yet woven In'• the ·m 1 lif t 1 · k
c mp e.ng specta prOJeC ·
"'
arve ous e s Y,e IS a een projects tha t otherwise might which otherwise could not
•sense of humor. If this were not true, a frog jump)Jlg contest, not be.implemented .
have heen done.
beaded by county leaders, could not posstbly have become the
Encoura gi ng stud ent in·
St' '
d. Ti
h
top. attraction of one
terns h.tps Ill
. I oca I pu bI'1c b ttvrson an ng·1e per aps
. · town's annual summer celebration ,
h
I feel confident that Amerlcals dotted from coast to coast
·.
. · es
summa me
t e
with towns ' popUlated with many "Dea~ Hearts and Gentle servl:e programs
IS significance and impact of
People" Uke the ones wh·o "live and love" in Meigs County
especially Important Ill the ·the mternship program in !be
· limo th
.
·
Appalachian area, where the area 11 serves.
w, en, 111 a1. Amer1ca can look forward to a great · outmigration rate hinders
·It (APSI ) h b
h
future. After all, the same type of grass root peojlle brought us
.
as roug l
to this present proud historicaltime - our 200th Birthday
com mu mty growth and student expertise to public
•
•
·
development.
service agencies which we
Local agencies in the could have found in no other
1\ppalachian area ha ve ex- way, they maintain, And our
'
penen~ed much difficulty in
agency was able to give the
obtatmng qualified staff with student the pra ctical exthe sktlls and backgrounds perience ·he co uld ha••e
relevant to commu nity gained in no other way,·
development activities. Bv
J !nsliluting and maintathing
. mternshlp in the area; the
BOARD TO MEET
University direct,d program
GALLIPOLIS - The July
·fur thers both the career
developmenl of the interns meeting of the Gallia Coun ty
and the socia l and Dislricl Ubrary Board of
HUNTINGTON _ The
General permits, he said, economical developmen t of Trustees will he held at 5 p.m.
Tuesday, July 13, in the
liiii:Ondphase of a three-phase
i
the area .
wh ch will minimize permit
APSI utilizes federal funds librarian's office at the
program to protect the processing requirements,
quality of the waters of the will he used to the maximum . for ils programming. The library on the corner of Third
United States 11gains\ harm· ext,nt possible for all ac· state of Ohio received the Ave. and State St.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
1776 CHAIR SALE
~ -

•

KROEHLER and BERKLINE

•

JUly Clearance
•

•

GROUP 1

Save ·Up T9 $163.00

Recliners,
Rock-0- Loung.es, Wa II away ana
9ccasional. Large selection. of fabrics. Regular
$239.00, $249.00, $269.00, $298.00 and $339.00.

...

SAlE'

t

BUT•••
CANCER CURE COSTS MONEY
CANCER can bankrupt your family

CARROL K. SNOWI)EN
25 State Street
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446·4290
Home 446-4518

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~.......

l~

,

Age

"Call melor good mue
in car i!ISUraDCf!'

lI

i
I

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PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS'

MONDAY, JULY 12, 1976

POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

.,'

Toihly's schedule for
emocratic convention
NEW YORK (UPI)- Today's scheduled events at the
Democratic National Convention- (all times p.m. EDT):
8:00: Convention opens , Democratic National
Olalrman .Robert S. Strauss presiding. Opening
ceremonies Including Invocation, presentatloo of colors,
remarks by party vice chairmen Caroline W1lklns and
Basll Paterson, appolnbnent of temporary officers and
welcomes by New York Gov. Hugh Carey and New York
Mayor Alraham Beame.
9:00 : Treasurer's report, Edward BeMett wmtam•:
finance report, S. Lee Kling; remarks'by !'jew York Lt.
Gov. Mary Ann Krupsak,
9:30: Convention filpJ; 10:00: Address, Stfatiss;
10:30: Keynote speech, Sen. John GleM, !).()hlo: 11:15:
Keynote speech, Rep, Barj)ara Jordan, O.Tex. and 11:50:
Benediction.
•

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:. ·. .'e• fls
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*

And to underscore, the uni!Y theme, the 5,034 convention
NEW YORK (UP!)- Democrats convene tonight for a four· nominated late Wednesday night The convention will ratify
delegates
and alternates also hear welcoming speeches by
t
fi~ day festival of love and newfound harmony climaxing when his choice Thursday afternoon during the final session.· '
New
York
City's JewiSh mayor, the state's lrlsh·American
Additional delegate votes continued to shill into Carler's ·
they give their presidential oomlriaUon to Jimmy Carter a
·.:;;_..,.
Ml
• • •
.
shrewd newcomer from the Deep South and a stranger to m~t column as the convention opening approached, ·By late ,Sunday governor and woman lieutenant governor, and the Democratic
of them.
night, a running UP!.tabulation showed Carter had 1,952 votes National Committee's black vice chairman.
;' : :.; · .
. by UDited l'feu Jnlenlatioaal
Hours befote Democratic National Ola!rman Robert S. - nearly two-thitds of the 3,008 convention total and far more . Not only was suspelll!C virtually lacking, but only one
squabble threatened to mar tl)e WJcharacteristicaUy placid
, . :,:TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - UGANDAN PRESIDENT ldi Strauss tiiiVelJ the party's 37th nationalcooventlon to order at than the 1,505 majority needed for nomination,
.
Democratic cimclave :... a far cry from the rancorous McGov·
Rtmnlng
secondas
he
did
In
most
of
the.
primaries
was
~.Jl'alslng the Israeli raid on Entebbe airport 88 a "very 8 p.m. EDT In Madison Square Garden, the only suspense
ern
convention of 19721 the violence of 1968 In Chicago or the
Rep,
Morris
Udall
of
Arizona
with
lliss
than
350
votes.
Udall
.glk!ll:~ ,military operation, says he has severed his ties with centered on Carter's choice of a runhlng mate. .
last
convention to be neld in New York, a two-week Demosays
his
name
probably
will
be
placed
in
nomination
to
satisfy
~b auerrWa l!l'OUD8. an Israeli newlpaper reported. The
The former Georgia governor ~d only that "so far as I
cratic
marathon in 1924that took 103 ballots to nominate John
his
supporters,
but
he
llkely
will
withdraw
immediately
or
~~per Ma'ar!v said Sunday Amln made the remarks In a know," his candidate for the vice presidential nominee would ·
W.
Davis.
·
teliiJihone c:aU Friday to hJa former miUtary adviser, reserve come from amoog seven members of Congress. Of the seven allow his votes to shift to Carter before the first ballot ends.
The
sole
controversy
centered
on
women's
rights,
at a
There was a chance that Gov. Edm.Wid Brown of California
Co[. Bai'Uch Bar Lev.
· .
be said, "there are maybe three that 1re at the top of my list.':
· ·,, ]'Not as a polltlclsn but 88 a professional anny rium, 1 The seven are Sens, Frank Oturch of Idaho, JOhn Glenn of and Ellen McCormack, the antiabortion candidate, also will convention where women lnake up 34 per cent of the delegates,
After meeting W\th 75 ranking party women leaders Sunday,
~ tell you that the llraell army action was' very good," Ohlo, Henry M. Jackson of Washington, Waller Mondale of have their names placed in nomination, but it was ex~ed
Carler
said he would seek a compromise to a women's
that
Carter
would
he
nominated
by
acclamation
hefore
the
.Amln was quoted as saying. "'Your commando 1s very good.'' Minnesota, Edmund S. Muskle of Maine and Adlai E:
proposal
that would require an even sexual balance of dele·
Wednesday
night
session
i.
s
over
.
Anilil~ 'saldhe haa rut off relations with the guerrllla Stevenson InofDllnols,and Rep. Peter Rodino of New Jersey.
gates
to
the
1980 convention. .
.
Before
giving
Carter
the
nomination
and
their
hopes
for
or~tiOOa' liK&amp;UBe of complications arising from- the . All would give the Carter ticket eeographieal balance and a
During
an
hour-long
Interview
Sunday
on
NBC's
"Meet the
reclaiming
the
White
House
after
a
long
decade
of
bitter
party
Entebbe hijack drama ,
,
link to the Waslllngton poUtlcal estab!Wunent that has never
~ess,"
Carter
agreed
with
Democratic
chairmen
Strfiussthat
the
Democrats
present
for
opening
night
on
prune
strife
''I don't want anything to do with them/' he told Bar Lev, · known him. Some wouldprovldeacceS!Ito such party elements
aceoriing wMa'ariv. "You can tell Premier Yltzhak Rabin as Hberals and organized labor where he. ls considered time television tonight a pair of ke)'llote speakers heavy with "there is a problem about Catholic votes" in his appeal to the
pqblic.
·
symbolism.
'
and.tbe Israeli govel'llllll!nt that I have cut off relaUons with weakest.
,
But
he
added,
"I
don't
tldnlt
we can characterize Catholic
They areGieiUl , the Ohio senator who was the first a§tronaut
· lhemand!amgolngtoannouncelhistothepress."
. Carter, wbo said &amp;lnday he had changed his mind three or
voters
as
any
kind
of
a
bloc
and
I
think we can deal' with them
four times about hla favorites, prOII)Ises to observe tradition to orbit earth, and Rep. Barbara Jordan, 0-Tex., the first
( ·
.On the issues."
NORTHEASTERN OffiO WAS PLASTERED FOR the and withhold announcement of his decision until after he is black woman elected to Congress from the South.
aeCon4 conaerutlve daY. with a number of Wl(.'Onfinned
tornacjpea, aevere tllunderstonns, heavy rain showers and
~e ,l)aU &amp;lnday. Showers and thundershowers ended in the
no~Stmlay evening. .
HALIFAX, N. C., July 11
Aspokesman for the IBEW
'11!e rains were heavy enough w cause . considerable United
Jntemalional Uniled.Electrical Workers of
said
the
union
had
many
The council ol safely
America
and
the
Federation
DiiiMl!ilg of the IIBIIIII Dood.prone areas, Flood warnings were in
More than 12,000 electrical
issues
"that
were
best
ordered
all persons
of
Westinghouse
Independent
~IC1l.(or many counties of the northeast. About four Inches of workers went on strike
resolved
f
o
11
o
w
i
n
g
this
"inimical
to
the liberties of
Salaries
Unions
agreedto
~fell In the Kent area, and Youngstown had more than against Westinghouse today
pattern
(striking
).
So(lle
America"
to
submit an
·
day-to-day
contract
thieit iind one-balf Inches In about an hour. No rain fell in the whlle some 42,000 others kept
issues
unique
to
the
IBEW
inventory
of
their
real and
extensions,
averting
a
w~m lind S!)uthem counties &amp;indajr.
·working under contract
contribuled
to
that
decision."
personal
property
to their . · NEW . YORK (UP!) Earlier he intenlewed
-.,. •...
·'
extensions. Auto workers nationwide walkout which
'
A
company
spokesman
said
county
committees.
Any
Jimmy
Carter,
clearly
the
tbree
other senators,
" LONG BEACH. CAUF, - PAT NIXON, BUOYED by a ended a crippling strike at a had been schedulect for 12: 01
contract
negotiations
would
refusing
were
;warned
they
apple
of
this
city'e
eye
on
the
Edmund
Muskle of Maine,
vi.Gt
her family a gardenia plucked from her garden and key Olrysler engine plant. a.m. today,
resume later today. ·
would be taken in custody opening day of the JohnGleMofOhloandHenry
Cli'dl·and letters from around the world, today was reported
Gov. Hugh Carey of New
Dr.
J
.
W
arren
Tolf,
the
·and
arraigned hefore the Democratic National Con· Jackson of Washington In
pul . the critical Btalle in her fight !or recovery from a York called for arbitratloo of
New
York
State
Health
counciL
vention , prepared to fmish addiUon to Moodale.
par~ stroke. Her family physldan, Dr~ John Lungl'en, - a six-day hcispltal strike In
llld,''Thecrltlcalllagelsover,Mrs.NixoniSnotyetoutotthe New York City. The state
~=~~~~:·:or ~:~c~~~~
::e~vi:~s ~~~e~ ~~~~a~ lh~::d :eyina~t!'~:~"::i
wOOds, but she is progressing very nicely."
Health Department offered to
City health services, sai&gt;.'. 50
mate
areat 111e to p of my list ,"
: Mrs. Nlml was allfferlng from a slliht paraly!ls on her help with patient care In
centra!
office
professionals
He
aclmowledged
"mayhe
Carter said during TV
left -'de, but !!he wsa fecelvlng therapy In twice-a-day walks In struck hospitals and nursing
would
begin
helping
strike-hit
three"
topped
his
list,
At
least
network Interviews.
her ho!lpltalroom with assistance, Her speech, slightly slurred homes.
RACINE
Local
hospitals
and
nursing
home,
two
of
the
seven
had
facwrs
"! haven't made known In
11 a hlultofthe stroke, wasreported improving,
The International Brother· emergency • rescue volun·
. •
that perhaps could result In lheslightestmypreferenceto
.:
hood of El~rical Workers, leers were called out in beginning Monday,
~N. - QUEEN ELIZABETH AND PRINCE Philip representing about 12,500 ' medical cases twice Satur·
from the ' my wtfbe or my telseop
"' . .
.
mem ers or anyooe
,"
~pent the last day of llleli' Blcentermtalstate visit to the United Westinghouse employes, day, once Sunday and once ...............·.·.·.·.·.-.·.················· ...... .,...,.......... ,......
Intemewed
Rep.
said.
"Cross
my
heart,
I
have
Carter
Slalli totD'Ing Revolutionary War lites and stressing the went on strike at several today,
'
Thf
Middleport
Pete
Rodino,
67,
of
New
an
open
mind
about'
it."
6ieiiCiillip between America and Britain, Bolton gave the Weatlngbouse plants.
Saturday, 2:35p.m . to lAng
During the day he also
Emergency Squad - had Jersey, chairman of the
royall!j~UJ~le ooe of the most lavlah and colorful receptions of
The lnternatioiral union of Bottom fo~ Tom Hayman, 36,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
House
Judiciary
:
Comittee's
revealed
· that
black
numerous
calls
'
over
the
their lllx-day vialt.
..
Electrical Workers,. the removed to St. · Joseph
Wednesday through
1974
impacement
Inquiry
,
Congressman
Andrew
Young
, 1be day opened with a 21.gun salute from Old Jronsldes,
Hospital, Parkersburg ; at
Friday , little or no weekend. It went:
At 6:18 p.m. Saturday for and aclmowledged that "age of Atlanta his closest friend
the frlaate used' aplnst Britain In the War of 1812, and ended
5:20p.m, for Larry Kiser , RD
precipitation. Highs from
Charles
Scott, Cheshire, is a factor, yes." He said Sen. among public officials, would
with I banquet aboard the royal yacht Britannia before It
Racine
to
Veterans
the mid 70s to low 80s
taken
to
Holzer Medical Walter Mondale of Minnesota give a seconding address for
111lle•Hor Halifax, Canada. In her only speech o( the day, the
Memorl~ Hospital ; Sunday, -•' · wednesday and Thursday
Center
complaining
of severe was taking "minimal hiB nomination."
quef!I told Boltonlana outside the Old StateboUIIe, "We have makes OUtageS at 11 p,m, for Marie Spaun , and tn the 80s Friday, lAws
He said he opposed a quota
stomach
pains;
7:19
p.m. medication" for mild
enjoyed tremendously joining with the people of America In
Racine, to VMH, and at 11 :23
in the 50s Wednesday and
hypertension.
sstem
that would insure 50
Saturday,
Julia
McComas,
lheelllebrstioo or the Bicentenary. We are deeply gratified for
a.m, today for Gloria
Thursday and the 60s
Carter
said,
however,
that
per
cent
female
341
Main
Street,
Middleport,
the ldndneaa with which we have been welcomed everywhere."
Ohio Power Co, officials Wagner, 17 months, RD ' Friday.
he
h~d
found
no
financial
or
representation
among
t~~e·
taken· to Hol zer Medical
said lnday scattered power J\aclne, suffering fever and
•)'OUNGSTOWN, OHIO - DESPITE BEING alx months outages occurred throughout convulsions, .to Holzer .::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::::::•:·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Center; at 3:36 a.m. Sunday phystcal problems that would delegates at the 1980 national
but
was
for Clarence McOani el, Main eliminate any of the seven. convention
~t, Gail Clayton of Portlmoulh was on the linkll today Meigs County Sunday night. Medical Cenler,
Carter
was
to
speak
today
"perfectly
~lllng
as
head
of
Street,
}\utland,
taken
to
prep!rlnf to defend her Ohio Women's Amateur golf crown, A heavy thunderstorm
with
the
.
f
inal
two
Sens.
the
party"
to
work
towards
Vc!erans
Memorial
Hospital;
The field started with an \1-bole qualifying round in the
.
at 9:56 a.m. Sunday; for Frank Church of Idabo, who such representation. '
Unt111D•ualamateurtourney II the Younptpw!) COIUltry Cl11b,
Carter opened the day
Lawrence Stewart, Sycamore defeated him in two late
1f11!i1! plly, starts 'l'ueaday for Clayton and the low 31 Columbus and Soirtheth
primaries,
and
Adlai
bowed
In prayer at a chapel
St., Middleport, taken to
~ In todly's l'OIIIIC!. Clayton, who won the tiUe at Ohio Electric Co, officials
The Pomeroy Emergency p.m, to the home of Rachelle Velerans Memorial Hospital; Stevenson Ill of Illinois, service at the Fifth· Avenue
Tuliclil a year ago, hal kept practicing deaplte her condition said their· men had been out Squad was called four times Louise Ward, who was also
at 1:42 p,m. Sunday, Ethel whose greatgrandfalher was Presbyterian Church, and
~ CGiftP6Ied In the recent Babe Zaharias pro tourney at aU night working on outages, Sunday and once this mor- taken to Veterans Memorial
vice president and whose ended it with two massive,
~Falls.
·
Hospita l; 11 : 19 p.m. ''to Bakley, 276 Rutland Street, father was the Democratic noisy parties at Rockefeller
and had not returned to the ning:
Middleport,
suffering
chest
office as or 10 this morning.
At 6:02p.m . Sunday, to 114 .Rutland for Dale Bachner, p~ins, taken to Holzer standard bearer In 1952 and Plaza and Pier 88.
.
The ferry operating be· Laurel St. , for Webster who was taken to O'Bleness
1956,
Between ~. Carler, his
~' - ""
.
.
tween Pomeroy and Mason Is Hodge, who was treated by Hospital, and at 7:50 a.m. Medical Center, and at 12:17
wife Rosalynn and their
·a.m.
Monday
to
the
Sam
closed today due to high the squad; at8&lt;42a .ni, Mabel today, Jack Follold was taken
daughter, Amy, 8, walked up
water brought on by the .Wolle was taken to Veterans fr om Pomeroy to Velerans Williams residence .in Two counts put ·
u
.
'
.
Fifth Avenue In a crush of
I
Burlingham: He.was taken to
storm.
Memorial Hospital; at 12:52 Memorial Hospital.
reporters, photographers and
Ve!erans Memorial Hospital.
· Tit'AVIV, llrael (UPI)·- AI Fatall &amp;roup, the largest
.
on
car's
driver
passersby . One shouted,
Tbe • ' lsraeU
military guerr1lla organization In the
"Who's your vice president,
Palestine Liberation
Jimmy?"
He answered with
Billy H. Roush , ~s .
ill
the
West Oraanllatlon, also were
a
smile,
"Haven't
decided.
Kanauga, was charged with
Jordan had bl'Oilea uncowred, the spokesman
United
lnternatlollll thi-ee pert10118 In New York and
killing · Shirley,
Interested?"
driving under suspension and
.U.'I'IIII
cella llfUialed said
Po wa ful thunderstorms and two In Pennsylvania.
Lowmaster, 47.
...,;.,1.. fo
·
hil..skip following a tralflc
~ noat r
He said varioua types of roamed much of the East
Officials said the· woman
Ughtnlng ltruck the Kn.OX•
acciden
t at 2:45 , p,m.
tile Ulllrltkin ol PIJeetlne, 111111 and IDIJilunltion were &amp;lnday, IIPiwnlna tornadoes dale Fli'e Hall In Pennsyl· was watching television when
Cloudy this alternoon and Saturday at the junction of
vanls's Jefferson County and the winds ripped aj)art her
tlll~tipbekl
F r111ce
fqr selzedl
ull wellf.ll
_ Dl anreaponllbleAlr
lflt
o cI.a..•· sald . andAt flulllloods.
least five penons were electrocuted fireman Roy dwelling . The twister lifted tonight. Highs In the low 80s. Rts. 35 and 7.
BIKE FOUND
Lows tonighiin the upper 50s
The Gallia·Meigs Post
1o Upnda.
&amp;inday at least two Jl'D- killed d 111x othe
the victim 150 feet into the air and low 60s. Mostly sunny
1M
Relnald,
47,
ci
Knox
dale.
A
girl's
bicycle has been
MfithaniO~ were Paleallnlan guerrillas ope
· crWcaUy
an
• ri injured, Tbree other firemen were and dropped her In a , Tuesday, Highs in the upper State Highway Patrol said found and taken to the
arrtlred, lnclud Dl many Involved In the hijacking
11re storms whipped SCI'OA Injured,
neighbor's yard, pallt;e said. 70s. Probabillty of rain 40 per Roush's car struck the rear Pomeroy Police Department.
~ jailed and were close associates of New York, Pennaylvarila,
Another twister hit Dubois, cent today, lOper cent tonight end of a vehicle driven by To claim ownership, the bike
A tornado hit Jefferson
E. Grueser, 63, Miners·
chirps,
lnternallmal
terrorist
rill nd til terrorllt
~
llld
'
.,
__ ,_
· 1mD!ch . Obio, Indiana and Vlr&amp;lnla. County, deinolishlng a mobile PD. There were no 'reports of and near zero per cent Carl
ville.
There was modcrale must be ldentlfled by giving a
ct _ , IPI'"""''
.
........nz Sanchez, also own
\be combination llf winds, home at Big RWI Bora~ major damage or .injuries .
description .
&lt;(-·
Tuesday,
111
damage,
l/
'
. ~qelll\ialonilng to the u "Carloe."
llli1\tnlng and
kllled

e B
, zn
rze .

..}:&gt;;,:»&gt;.~:w&amp;~~:::~~~:f.'mm

Electrical workers strike

Dateline 1776

Pre••

ROCK-A·
LOUNGER ·

'fY'. ,...

rrom

Four persons

~beck

Slrel c:h out

~~·

, Save Up To
,$92.00

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

are assisted

•

:,,.', ' , ' . ' ' , ' , ' ,' ,'• ' • ' , ' , ' , ' . ' . ' . ' . '; ' ,• :•:•,• : • : • : • :•:•:• • : , , , · , · , , , ·,

Regular $149.00, $169.00, $179.00,
$198.00 and $209.00.

WBII(IIl'ay.

Lounging

T.V. Viewing

'·

Full Rec:llnt

I'

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lhcoen~Astellminatlon

~he

•

eavy StOrm

Easy room arrang ing !lnce ctlalr may be
plaoed just 3" from the wall. will not
to•uch well . .In ,al'ly pos lllon . A great
space saver r

,,.

&gt;

Mi d dJepOI1
b
unit usy

.

H

I~ I~ I~

Sale
.,

Three top list
for ·Veep's job

.

GROUP 2

~:~e~ ~~~ o~~~nsformer

Continuing our Storewide July Clearance Sale
with Bargains in Every Department in the Main
Store, Annex and Mechanic Street Warehouse.

Unit called out Sunday

.

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'

Free Customer Parking on Second Street ·
.
and at the Mechanic Street Warehouse.

· -~:-:Guerrilla cells hit

'

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lfAfl fAIM

.

enttne

"Under this procedure, a
deputy could withhold taxes
collected by oot lll!lldlng 1n
the application or other fonDa
and it would be ui!detecled
until a final checkout," the
report said.
Field audita, wblch were to.
be done pertodlc:aUy at each
location, "were apparently
lacking" at'(!ordlng to the
audit.

'·~

To llelp , In these costs a revolutionary new
l!ruklhrouth with the development of a CANCER only
, lnturlnct policy, with no age limit and In plain talk is
- IVIiilblt.
,
·
•
'• Pet lull particulars on thi• policy~;jjh:;,;i;:i,iig;t;;;n-:-1
llltlt tbt fofltwlne Information to C. D. Cramer -· Box 1
Vinton, Ohio 45686.
1

I" -

•

The BMV allowed local
registrars to deposit IJI(IIey
collected in local banks
without supporting forms
helng se~t w: the bureau.
The bureau kept ledger
cards on the Inventory ancl
sales of eaCh deputy but the
cards were "completed many
months after the close of the
license year" the audit said.

•

:D emocrats await running mate choice

= -·

how .it was

Are YOU Immune To Cancer?

section of the appliatlon
where the local taxing
district should be listed.
"This was a rna lor factor In
erroneous pro rating of taxes
to districts as such laxes are
advances on estimates baaed
on the previous experience
indicated. by those forms,"
the audit said,
Without adequate history of
each taxing district, the ad·
vanees given were often in
error
and
"caused
indebtedness in some
districts," the audit says.
It does not indicate the
districl!l that were forced Into
indebtedness,
Any taxing district, "distressed by Improper tax
distribution (should) be
certified as . a delinquent
claim to enable the attorney
general to wor)t out an
equitable solution," the audit
said.

•

'r:t'f""'

Th is is.

.:_!.:_:

NO. 59

,,

.ful dii!Charges of dredged or tivlties with no significant
fill materlall ieheduled for environmental impacts.
;;,''·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::::::·:::::::::;:::::::::::·:::·:::::·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·::&gt;:·:·:·:·:·:::::::::::·:·:-:-::·:·:::-:-:·:-:-:·:::::·:·:;:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:
Implementation by the Army
The general permits are · ·=·
.:::
.::
By FRANK HilL . ·.'.:_:'.
Col. Scott B.,Smith, Hun- and practical by reducing the' :::
. ttngton Dlstr[t\ t Engineer , amoun t of coordination .:.::
lllld tbe·permit'program was required on certain types of
lnltiated by the Congress minor activities.
under Section 404 of the The first phase began July ....
Federal Water Pollution 25 1975 h · th · · d' r
·..
.
'
Conlr~J ,Act Amendments of of' the C;p~nOf ~~~~e~~SIOn
19.'/l and reinforced by the In the 404 permit program GALLIJ:'(JLIS - The "American House" was a large
March 27,1915, decision of the extended only to coastal · frame hotel which stood on the river bank at the end of Court
U. S. District Co.urt for the waters, inland navigable St. across from the old John L, Vance home.
Diltrict of Columbia,
· waters of the Uniled States .
'!'his hotel, catering to the river·boat people, was operated
CoL Smith said Phase II, and adjacent wetlands.
by W. B, Sloan.
·
which will now go into effect
At that time, the Corps
In 1863 Dr. C. D. Wall who had purchased it, had a local
on August 3Q, 1976, extends announced the schedule lor carpenter by the name of John ·Myers· move it to lAcust St.
the Engineers' jurisdiction to · the second and third phases . across from the courthouse.
regulate disposal of dredged
The third phase, scheduled ·
The building was so large Myers had to saw it in half to
or flll,materials to lakes with to start July 1, 1977, will move it. Many years later Jim Betz dismantled it.
more than five surface acres, further expand the Corps '
To those who may be interested;
·primary tributaries of jurisdiction lo regulate
navl&amp;able waters of the discharges of dredged or fill
-Manv veara a2o w. s. Kerr operated a 2 rocerv store in
United States, and adJacent malerial into other walers town called the "Cow Pasture."
,
welluds,
generally up to the head- ·
During the 1850s, Jal(les Harper, publisher of the
SmUll emphasized that the waters.
Gallipolis Journal, paid his apprentices $30 a year and board,
Corpe will Continue to use
The Corp s' Huntington
The first newspaper printed in town was the American
moderation and 8 reasonable mailing address is Army Standard sljlrted in 1817. ·
ipproach in ttie ad· Corps of En.gineers, P. 0 . Box I In 1866 th e post ·or···
'' ~ " was 1ocaled in the Gardner building
t
I
m nlatra ion
and
en· 2127, Huntington , W. Va. • on State St. Achilles Scatterday was postmaster.
forcement of the program. 25721.
In 1~25 James McCormick owned the "Our House" and
•
rented it out as apartments,
In 1818 ~artinus Vanden Bemden sold Rene Lepine the ,lot
at the flverstde lower corner of First Av.e. and Cedar St. £or
$500, The large brick house standing there was once the
McHale family home, a family very prominent in city hisiory,
In 1853 P. J. llJ!rnum, later of circus fame, gave a speech
CANCER will •trikel
on Temperance in Pomeroy.
52 million Americans now living
My son Alan was born on July 4th,
2 •!It of 3 families
The answer to last week's question :
CANCER will kllll I
On Feb. 19, 1799 J. P. R. Bureau married Madelaine
975 Americans every day
Francoise Omrlotte Marrel in a boat on the river·so as to be In
7 limn u 1111ny as automobiles
the jurisdiction of Virginia. There were no Justices of the
Peace in town at the time, so one from Pt. Pleasant performed
the ceremony.
·.
'.
CANCER can be cured! II
One out of three now
One 111t of two possible
Something to tlrlnk about:
,
J27,totl llvn per year- can be saved
Who was the last survivor of ·the original French 500 that
came over by ship to settle our toWn?

at y

e

•

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'

enough to warrant another
audit covering the more
recent years and one wUI be
started soon, sources in the
auditors office told the
newspaper.
In addition to the·improper
distribution of money to local
governments, the aqdit alsO
noted:
- Lack of c'llntrol by ·the
enforcement division of the
BMV on depqty l!Uditor regi·
stars. across the state and
bookkee ping procedures
which allowed deputies to
hold- state money for long
periods of time.
·
- Destruction of records by
the BMV without the legally
required permission of the
state Records Commission,
The audit indicates many
local auto tag outlets were not
preparing · applications
properly and says "about a 50
per L'ent error existed" in a

plans deferred

:::~ !~:~:r:o;~/~~~$~ ~:~!~~~~ct m~~e ~=~:gea~:

' Mot~r vehicle bureaucracy
caught Shorting home folks
.

W~ter . quality··

!'

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.m.t:

Like I ao00 neighbor,
Stile Fmn is there.
p 7565

A

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Stonus· r ake 'E
. ast 'with wiitd' rain
Pre••

c.,._

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~~~~==aecurlty

E·LB FELDS IN POMEROY
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Weather

twlstera

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3- TheDallySemlnei,Middleport,Pcmeroy, 0., Monday,,July 12, 1D76

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pcxneroy, o., M!ldaY, July 12, 1976

Attention .drawn to political
personalities of Ohio Sunday
NEW .YORK (UPIJ- Noo· .
delegate Ohio Democrata
were nW1ng moat of the
splash Sunday when the
state'• !52-member
deleption to tbe Democratic
Natlooal COOvenuoo arrived
at Its headijuarleri betel.
Delegatea walled In lei1gthy
check-In lines in the
overheated lobby ol tbe New
York Qleraton whUe much ol
the attention wu diverted to
the anivll of Sen . .lohn H.
Glenn Jr., · ~io, a vice
presldentlal posslbWiy.
Most of the Ohio delegates,
126, are pledged to support
fonner Georgia Gov. Jimmy·
Carter,. the apparent
prealdentlal ncmlnee.
Twerltyotberssupport Rep.
Morris K. Udall of Arizona,
and the other six are pledged
to Rep. Louil Stokes, D-Ohio,
a favorite son from
Cleveland.
Glelln, his wife Annie, aon
David and daughter 1.4'n were
!lfeeled by a battery of
televlllon cameru and a
lwarm of well-'ll'ilben u
they arrived at tbe betel.
Lt. Gov. Richard F.
Celeste, not a conventloo
delegate but a potential
candidate for governor In
1978, waa on hand with a
dozeD frterida. Included were
three office employ• he said
were oo ·V!lcation, trying to
drum up 1upport lot Glem as
a vice prsldenllal candidate.
Glean told neWimen at two
crowded ...... lltlefql that
be hu beard no further 'II'U'd
from Carter oo his choice of a
running mate.
Celelte's aides posted and
distributed handbills
announcing tbe former
MI!UUIIIt'l arrival.
"llblnk it's" impor1ant that
everybody iay hello to John
Glean here," said Celeste.
"D's loilll to be Ill important
llftt few dlya for him."
Democratic · State
Qlalrman Paul Tipps,
IIIOtber noode~. arrived
early to help 1181 ap the Ohio

headquarters. He alao made
II a point to welcqme Glenn
and get Into the photos made
of him.
"I think John Glenn Is THE
outstanding running mate for
Jimmy Carter," said Celeste.
"I tblnk we're going to need
our strongest ticket to wln.in
November, despite what
aome people say, and there ~
no question In my mind that
John Glenn will make It the
strongest
ticket
the
Democrats have to offer."
WbUe Glenn arrived In
celelrated style, the man he
beat for the Democratic
Senate nomination In 1974,

Howard M. Metzenbaum of
Cleveland, checked in
without publlc fanfare at the
other end of the Sheraton
lobby.
Metzenbaunl, a multbniiUonalre, was accompanied by
his wife Shirley. He toted two
large pieces of luggage by

himself.
The former senator who
was ousted by Gl~n Is not a
. convention delegate oot said
he Is attending to touch base
'll'l.th politicians fl'OI)l various
other states.
He said he hopes to
convince Sens. Hubert
Humphrey o!Mimeaota and
Alan Cr~ ofCaUfornla to

Sinatra weds ·. 4th wife
PALM SPRINGS, Cllllf.
(UP)) - Frank Sinatra and

Agnew, who escorted
Sinatra's daughter Naney,
and former CaUfornia Gov.
Ronald Rengan and his ,wife,
Nancy.
Other weD-known guests at
,the wedding an.d reception
·following at Sinatra •.s
compound hall a mile from
the
Annenberg's
"Sunnylands" estate
Included Rosalind RusseD,
Mlltoa Jlerle, Gregory Peck,
Kirk l)ouglas and Pat Henry.
Freeman Gosden of the old
"Amos a~d Andy" radio
seri• served as best man
while Beatrice Konbak, wife
of a prominent iDs Angeles
attorney, was· matron of
honor.
Slnatra~s other daughter,
Olrlstlna, was alao .present,
along witb bls mother,
Natalie, and the bride's
~ents,, Olaries and Irene

Barbara Marx were married
Sundly at a ceremony kept
secret from everyone but the
130 guesta am surprised each
olher with an exchange of
cars as wedding gifts. .
Barbara Mars Sinatra; ~.
the singer's long-time
companion, gave her new
husband a gray Jaguar.
He surprlaed her with a
fiOO,OOO RoDs Royce- a deep
blue color, to match her eyes,
he said - equipped with
several 1111111')1 extras and
special Ucenae plltes reading
"BMS 1" for her ._ lnltia]4.
Sinatra, 60,andhis lrlde,in
a flowing beige gown, were
married In a civil ceremony
Sunday afternoon at the
desert estate of Walter
Anllenber.g, former U.S.
IIJTibasswlor to Britain.
the afternoon temperature Blakely. . ·
roae to a sinllng 109, bul the
Guest:! at the reo!ption
tii'O&lt;IIIIn a Ught tan suit and munched on a lavisb seafood
guesta wore ties as requested buffet and a seven-tiered
m engraved Invitations "to a cake.
Sinatra was married three
party" aent out a few daya
times before - to Nancy
earlier.
The gueat . lilt Included Barbato, Ava Gardner and
f&lt;lrmer Vice President Spiro Mia Farrow, who was

Ohio delegate is youngest
~YORX(UPIJ-Clare

amib, a pert t7..year old from
UDIVInity Rejctta, Obio, Ia
lib any other teen-qer on
her lint villi to Nft York,
acJq lkyacrapen, plannlnc
lllloP,ilig
spreea
and
anUc:lJ)IIUng vlalta io the
Slatue of l...iberty and the
UDited Natiaal.
.
1be anlf dllfertnee Ia lbat
Clare Ia the J0U11111t of the
deliegalll It the DlmoeraliC NalkiDal Coa\'elltkll.
Clare, wbo will not be ollj
. . . . to.-e111111J the NOY. 2

3.

d ctlaa, became an •J..Iarte
ado delegate p!edrf to
.J1mmJ Cll'ter "on 1 lark"
lfllr ..,.,.,.... a film of the
tm Democratic National
CWtiallau ill her biP achool
........ ella
8he Ia able to as 1

.. ... ;aatlw ddega&amp;e beciliM
• Oblo law permll8
I * - to 'lute and ldd
alflallf lbeJ will be .. by the

aeneralellrt'"'

Clare, wbo 111r111 1J

nen

Oct. lf, ..... Ia clui ll
J:rleriew Catholic HJgb
llcllaol, 1 prhate prll'
lchaal, Jut wiiU' watdiD8
. "1be Makq of the Prellclent
-lJ'II."

''BIIb Fu•- Ill, who's

appear on his behalf In Ohio
this fall In his campaign for
the Senate against Sen .
Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhlo.
Metzenbaum said either
Glenn, Sen. Walter Mondale
of Mlnne110ta or Sen. Edmund
Mualde of Maine would make
good vice presidential
timber.
"Don't count Muskle out,"
he said.
The former senator volunteered that Glenn, his
~.evlous arch-«"lval at 'the
state level, would be a "gOod
selection" as a vice
presidential nominee and
"would meet with my tots!
enthusmsn\."

from Lak~ lilxl .... In
the cJaas, got to talking with
me and we . were saying
'wonkD't It be a trip to go to
·the coavention this year!"'
Tbey made il
Beth, a blmde, bl~ed
.girl wbo tumed 18 In June,
and Clare began working for
Carter organizing young
people and addressing
envelopes In a local
annpalp. headquarten.
"When we flnt started
working back in February,
we didn't know much about
Carter," says Beth. "But. we
gradually learned what he
lllood for and we liked him
better lban any of the Cltben.
Hewu• frtlb face, and we'd
'"-· work for aomebody we
liked tblln somebody we
tbougbt cOuld win. We didn't
IIIli* Carter bad I c:hance."
When It came lime for
carter's Oblo orpntzettoo to
make ap allate of delegalll,
the two girls went to the
alewlde caucua in Akron.
"My father pointed out
there wwen't ~ women
m the llate,10 we decided to
lUI on a lark," tecani Clare.
"We bad to get up and give
a 1IU1e apeecb. All these
people were aaylng how they

w~re

officeholders from
V1lrious disiricts. I didn't
know what to say, but I said
aomethlng and liO did )leth,
and we got elected. It was
juat some crazy idea we bad
in our beads."
Carter did the rest. He
swept tlie at-large jrbnary
bellotln.g and carried the girls
to the convention.
Clare, I freckle-faced girl
with curly bnllette hair, hu
already learned lluit
anything Ia lor sale . at a
conventim In New York. She
parted with her guest pass for
flO spendlni mmey.
9le wiD be attending the
University of &lt;lllcago sa a
pollticaiiCience major In the
fall, and ligures her early
convention espertence wiU
stand her In good stead.
Clare plans to vial! the
Statue of .Liberty and the '
United Natlms, and attend a
performance
l!Y the
Rocli:etles, as weD aa tbe
calll'UIIes and cocktail parties
of the delegation.
''I'm e~:clted about my first
vial! to New York," abe said,
"but 1 imagine it will mean
more In the futwe to bllve
been a cooventim delegate,
especially the youngeat."

DR. LAMB

divorced from the singer 10
years ago.
The new Mrs. Sinatra, who
wu divorced from COO!edlan
Zeppo Marx In 19'13, was
married before that to Robert
Oliver of l.rog )leach, Calif.
FLACK ATI'ACJ[
WASHINGTON (UPl)
Although 'Congress is on a
two-week recess,
the
legislative bureaucracy
keeps churning out press
re1eases.
Typical of the daily produclion of announcements and
statements sent out from
· angressmen's offices even
when the congressmen themselves are absent included
one from Rep. Ronald M.
MotU, D.Qhio, who said he
thinks it was ridiculous for
federal bureaucrats to try to
end f8ther«lll and motherdaughter school events.
FORMER COP, HELD

STRONGSVILLI):,

Ohio

.--... .

( UPI) - John P. Stanovik,

311 "'"'-'sville and his balf
lxother. JameS p . "Sormy"

McWeeny Jr., 35, Brullswick,
are charged with possession

of at 1eut $200;000 in stolen
~ction equipment and

veliiCies.
Stanovik,

a

former

Sll-ongsville policeman, wu
in City Jail Sunday. He quit in

1974 after about seven years ,
the pollee force.
. McWeeny was released

•

IIJLnnDeeE. Lamb, MD. mediately I began to. feel
·
.
DEAR OR. LAMB - How better.
I remain very strict. I only
can lever lbaDk you enough?
For more yean than l care to uae 11011-Gtlry mUk, no ice
mnamber I bad IZohn's cream, no cheese. I take
dlaeat .. reclu enleitia. calcium piUs. I've got so
Four reara ago l bad .much energy now. At tlmea I
emer1ancr aurgery. My have ipells, but I sug)poae
that Ia to be npected. lbank
. lalelllna
ap and ,Pioded. The doetor said, you for your help and article.
''IGITJ, rllbt now nolblnc The only thiJIII I dlallke Ia
willldU the bug." I - w.t, my weight. Now I'm not 122
Vlll'f IIIIa. l'wu ao tired that oot UiO poundl. Food now
appetlzl!lg
and
....... down the llaJn WU I loOks
deUciOUI.
Before
I
couldn't
raJ proJect I bad to be In bed
three out of fin daya. even loot at lt. I'd force
~ ball and ball to fattening food down and
bulldDIJIIIIup, vltumll,lc:e apend hours In the bathroom
cnm,ct..plore.l'dpt II' in bed.
l'm .billy, my husband 'is
10 lldE I wlabed I'd die.
The doetor 11ve me happy with my health lind
lr811C(ui11An for my tn- also my children. I enjoy
lli'l w. No IIOaP· All lay In everythlns and haven't
IIIII fti'Y WOrillmu- enough houi'IIO clean, cook,
llale lbaat lwo ,_. 1110 I lhop and apend lime with my
........... 1011 III'IJie lovely family.
lbelt bow IIIII: IIIII p.ten , DEAR READER- Thank
lffoell IJIIetUnea. My you for your wonderfulletler
t 11 lid IIIII I .. lllld, "011, and I am so pleMed that you
Will, pw It tile old eallep feel better. Crolm's dlaease Ia
llrJ." I did And .aJmcilt lm·

'*"

the region
of the In testing where the
small Intestine joins !he
'{'lion. It may also affect
adjoining areas of the In·
te!Une. It Is true that many
people with this problem are
intolerant to milk and milk
products as your case
demonatrates. Patients with
ulcerative ~Utia may also
bllve attacks (ireclpltaled by
milk and milk products.
ButtermUk·, cheese and Ice
cream are not devoid of
lactose, the double sugar that
aeema to cause a lot of these
problems . . Natural fer·
mentation with the lactobaclllus will eliminate
more than half of the llctoee
but commercial buttermilk Is
not made that way and wiD
~uae the per1011intolerant to
lactose to have real misery.
Commercial cheeses are also
not free of lactose. Yot~urt Is
10111etimea recommetded bllt
commercial yogu t (not
made by natur I fer·
mentatton~y the lac·
anlnflamma~onof

.'
'

.The Riding Man
The rumpled, nervoualnnkeeper uaembled In the State Houle at
' ED. NOTE - The editor welcomes
watch!d the rldef canter Into the Philadelphia when he reached the
the return to print of another "A Sort
of Journal" by John A. McKean of
foggy glOOI)I of ihe lantern's light. alate One. II wu steep, rocky, hill
The mesaenger'a ordet bad been land: the rolling lowlands lay · .....
Gallipolis who several years ago for
a period of a time was a regul~
expUcit : bllve your beat remount behind him.
· .
·waiUng; The horseman, scarcely
The air waa heavy in the ball,
contributor to The Sunday Times·
Sentinel until personal affairs
speaking and dlldalnlng victuals, aUII the windows were cloaed but for
denied hbn the Urne to write.
awUUy swulli! utrtde the frelh a few Inches aa aecurllf ~gainlt ..
Readers will recall Mr. McKean Is a
mount and was gone at a gaUop. prying ears. In contrllt to previOUI
retired U. S. Air For:ce Captain who
Somehow this man, no stranger, contenUous sesalona, this -bly ~·
piloted combat bombers and pursuit
always subdued the hoatler ,. . ,was subdued aa matters of rouUne w
aircraft in the Mediterranean
~led lnjusUy of Tory leanings.
were dlspoaed of. Many an1loua eara ~
Theater of War In World War II.
Perbllpe he was awed· by the green were tuned more to the sowld llf '"
silk scarf whi~h only parUaUy hooves than to the buzz of vlcloua
The story bel9w hill.appeared In
other publications outside this area
concealed the rider's face. Too, horseRies attacking the delesalll ..
and' is being reprinted here - with
rumors or revolt against the Crown from the stables nearby.
circled about lliis man. Bad for
The Congress, resolved Into a .:
minor additions by the author .with Mr. McKean's permission.
business. But so was the, King .
committee of the whole, reaumed ' ·
Readers are advised that the ·
The rider reined the horse to an the dlscusalon be&amp;un on Monday of
similarity.-ln names of one of ·the
easy lope. George Read could not be' Richard Henry ~·s Independence "
characters in the story, Thomas
censured, he thought, refreshed now resoluUon of June 7, and polllloned
McKean, delegal.e io the Second .. by the staUon slop. Read was an until now to achieve unanlmltv.
Continental Congress from the
Today, on , the day 01 fateful
honorable man; too cautious
. coiO(Iy of Maryland,. and the author
perhaps, but a patriot nonetheless. decision, that vital unanimous "
of the article , Is not a colncide"hce.
One who could not perceive that agreement was threatened by the ,,.
sometimes conservative men must, posltlon of the Delaware delegation •";
THE RIDING MAN
with jusUce, act radically.
- one for, one against, and one · -•
By John A. M&lt;Kean
The rid.er? A forty«ven year absent - the rider.
For a long moment jagged • old bachelor, gifted with modest
DrummiDR hooves sounded on
wealth and a keen mind, disfigured the cobbleatoned street. A sUr, and
fingers of lightning danced between
the fearsome, grumbling thunby nature and loathsome face Thomsa McKean, the friend and ~
derclouds and exposed the lone rider
cancer whi~h would kill him in a few fellow delegate who had summoned
and his lathered mo110t on the
years. He had rejected advice to him, rushed o~t to .greet and Inform
battered road, just yesterday a
seek surgical treatment In England: · the rider. The vole was being taken .. snaking line of dust but now a
a principle held him In the saddle The exbllusted patriot, erect and ..
. gleaming, ugly quagmlre. The horse
that fearful night. .
calm, strode Inside to proclabn; ,.
had long since setUed to his galt, a
He ignored the vety real danger . "Caesar Rodney votes l'lelaware for ...
fast walk, which bore his master
from sea ttered renegade Indians but independence."
...
steadily past quiet unlighted farmhad noted casuaUy Colonel CoUins'
When Rodney1 broke the tie be·
steads and storm-tossed virgin
majestic home - Belmont Hall -:- tween Delaware's Read and ~
forests.
·
near Duck Creek Crossraada. A McKean, the ~ Resolution was
The horseman rode hunkered
general of militia, he was senior to adopted unanlmoWII)tly each slate's ·~
beneath his sodden tricorn bat and
Col. CoUins, now in the field with majority ·vote, ex~pt New York ~
inunense cape, 01J occasion spurring
General .Washington facing invasl.on . whose delegates abstained tem·
lighUy, only enough to keep his
by General Howe's Brilish army In porarlly for lacl! of authority. ~ · ,
mount on the bit; He knew the
New York. fie Oed through Cant· Thomas Jefferson's declaration "
animal was doing well under the
well's Bridge on Appoqulnimlnk would be sifted, amended, and
conditions but, at daylight, the pace
Creek toward the tavern .on St. adopted two days.hence. Signatures ' ,
would have to quicken. Time was
George's Creek. It was the King's to the· final document would be af· ;;:;
precious and the road long.
Highway - aD the way.
fiXed days, months, even years,
He'd had no sleep. The messenger
A trace of gray, steaming dawn later. John Adams believed July 2, .
had btought the alarming news In
brushed the towering clouds; and he 1776,sllould and would be the U. S. ...
late evening as he prepared to resl
spurred the horse to a splattering, National birthday. But the delegates '"
after a tiresome day spent
mud.flinging gaUop. By the tavern . to the Continental Congreas were
recruiting men and support for the
at Red Lion Creek a porUy, strident cool, deliberate men. The entire
impending struggle. This man,
cock ·loudly proclaimed Tuesday, · process must be completed to nail ·~
whom John Adams described as
July 2, tn6, and the traveler down independence, and that end "'
"taU, siel)der; pale, a face no bigger
prodded the failing beast into New was achieved on July 4, 1776.
than an apple ; butfuU of fll'e, spirit,
Castle on the Delaware .
Such a 81i1UP of men had not
and wit," was accustomed to
His compatriots were break· assembled since the Golden Age of .u
responsbility. His duty was clear :
fasting . in PhUadelphla wblle he Greece. It Is unUkely that such a ••
get to the city inunediately. No
exchanged mounts at New Cas~. magnificent group shall assemble
carriage trip, this. It would be 86
They engaged i!l committee again. Their minds altered the
tortuous miles of primitive road
meetings as he rushed across ~ourse of human history. And ••
through colonial Delaware Christmaa Creek toward Robinson Caesar Rodney, an uncooquerable
Pennsylvania's "Lower Three
House. The delegates to the Second . · mail, but historically obscure,
Counties."
Continental
Congress were played a mighty role for freedom.
NO

the equipment, iDcluding two
mobile h(ll)el, a boat, .farm
tractors, bulldozers, lumber
and OODIItnlctillll cables, In an
iliOialed clearing in the hills
near Warsaw in Calllocton
County.

" ''

Convention is costly extravaganza_

NEW YORK (UPI) -The mous without you," Daley
Certer Ia acting more ~esl·
"1.18
milliOn
In
federal
funds
·
·d
dentlal
every day. He oow
•
sa1 •
for financing the Democratic
hu a court lllenographer
National Convention this Morris Udall, flashing his making an official rec~rd of
week Is only the tip .of the weD-Imowil wit, drew laughs aU his pubUc utterances.
A · spoke&amp;man said the
iceberg. It dom't count such at a news conference here
t,bqs aa paying for 10,000 about . 110me chitchat In the record wsa being kept so
chicken !ega and wings.
.cloakrooln of the House of ttansct'IJU could be Issued to
TNIOAI. r SIHTMl
Also
not
Included
are
the
Repcesentstives laat · week. the press - just like at the
DfVOTUi ro ,..
_,OL_
cost of the Secret Service He said some "olil timers" White House.
MfHU-MAION AtfA
guanlng 140,000 credentials, were recalll~g that Rep.
Dfi'SJDL TA......U
Bedroom notes at · the ·
one
telephone for every three Wayne Hays of Ohio bad been
•••. 14.
people at tbe coovention, a mililani bawk during the Democratic National ConCltyl41tw
venUon:
PWIIthH •nr _...,, ..,....,. .... .rentln2 and refurbishln~ Vietnam war and that they
"""'Ohio
P:w61 ' ' I
. . Madison Square Garden and had alsays told biro "make
Carter il staying In the f'/50
.m c-rt 11•• ~ . ON. u1". the New York City pollee love, not war."
suite
at the Americana Hotel
h•h~Oflld ..._
" t.11tt..
force.
Wt...-1"-tft·IU7.
"WeD, he finally tried it where John F. Kennedy alefll
'""""' ct.. ,...... .." ..
~n Congreu decided the and now they want to run him
when he was in town. The red
' - o y. OW..
..., ...... .._..Wftt ,.,......,.,1.. govenment would pay lor out of Congress," UdiU said,
canopied bed waa uaed In the
Ww4l • Orltftth c....-r. -- ....
the conventions, they set ref~ to the E~th film "The Godfather... and
tU..III ..... 0.1...... IM• .• 1S7 ~
f;ll.lS
million as the legal Ray sex scandal,
ha~ also IJeen Used by Frank
.,.~-, "·'·,·"·
..:
.,_.,.,
limit for the party's con·
Sinatra and Jerry Lewis.
c.rr.......... ...u.w. 7J - · · ,...
vention costa. But that only Rocky Pomerance, the
UdaU, who ftnllh second
~ • .,,...Mot« - · · .,,._
-"'~
""-.. ._..,,
covers a fraction of the cost of Miami Beach j'olice &lt;lllef, more often than not in the
N .21 . ... .-IIIII ot.a.• w. Y• .. OM
putting on a national con· didauchagoodjobofkeeplng primaries, Ia ~ In tbe
'-· •n•~t•_..__.,ue;n...
_
..... If. .. I._.._. .....
vention.
•
the peace at the 1t72 "Thunas E. Dewey Suite," of
N~!!r York City put up $3.6 RepubUcan and Dernocntlc
the Roosevelt H!Jtel. It Ia
... """'"" t13.1t: ,....... """'""'· ' '·" ·
.............. P"k- ~ .....,.
million
to
attract
the
convenconventlms
In
h1a
hometown
named
after
another
n..-s.rttlftel.
lion. Molt of the JD0111!Y was that tbe Democrats lired him Presidential contender who
' - - - - - - - - - ' spent renting the Garden aa chief of security for the finished aecond more than a
(almoat $2 million) and convention ln~ew York.
quarter of a century ago.
turning It Into a convenUm
Pomerance h'aa been the
floor (f1.4 milUon).
subject of many Interviews
It was an 111uauai gathering
The gove~~~~tnt gave the by reporters covering pre- In the .offtcea of CIIUfornla
city f2.5 million for added convention actlvtttea anc1 ne Gov.Edmuncl "Jerry" Brown
poUce prolectlon during the said he called his chlldren In Jr., one nl&amp;ht In February,
convent1011.
Miami to tell them he waa Ul'l5.
The New Yok Telephone going to be on televlalon.
All UdaD recaUa it he had
Co. inltaUed a fl mUUoo
"I'll be on tbe Today Show gone to seek the young
· telephone syatem for the - morrow and the T0111orrow governor's IIJIIpol't In h1a
tobacillus) is so thin that dry anvenUon - one phone for 111ow tonight," he said.
oowly 1111ounced race for the
milk powder Is often added to evey three delesates,
·
~
Democratic Prealdentlal
it. That makes I! especlaUy reporters, VIP and gueata. Is Jimmy Carter preparing nomination. '1b!l wu helen
rich in lactose and parThe 10,000 piecel of chicken 111e11 lor .the James Earl Brown 1111ounced he would
ticularly harmful to patients - legs and wings :.... along · Carter Jr. Pretldentlal be a candidate for the
with this problem.
wl th 450 gallons of Ubrary In Plalna, Ga.?
nomination.
I'm sendiot~ you The Health soda pop,
900 gal·
Letter, number 7-2, Milk loos of cold veer, one-half ·
Producls: Good and Bad. too · of· cole lliaw, and a
Others whO .want more In· quarter ton of cold cuta for
formation on this subject can thole who don't like cbleken,
obtain It by forwarding 50 -~ to the party Jimmy
centa and a long, stamped, ~ fllrew Sunday nidhl on
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Glenn said,~ the brief
self-eddreased envelope for .•.Huda.on' ru- pier for the Sen. John Glenn, J).()hlo, - ~ Will be used "to put
mailllli!. Address your letter delegatea.
IMIII't think his keyncte aome of our COIICtJl'lll out In
to me In care of this newsHil c~ will pick up addresa at tonight's opening front to all the paople,"
paper, P. 0. Box 326, San tbe f12,760 tsb for the food. Millon of the Democratic
Glenn, a former lltronaut,
Antonio, TX 78292.
OJnventlon will have any wllllhare the 1t1ynote dutiaa
There Is now hope that Mayor Rlcbllrd J. Daley bearing on whether or not he with Rip. Barbara Jardan,
people Uke you can use low asked the Dllnoia deleption Ia picked aa Jimmy Carter'a D-Tex. Bolli IP"Chet sllould
lactose milk. There II a Sunday to IMJiove Jimmy runniJ!C mate.
..be abort, he aald. ·
·
~nduct called Lact.Ald that Carter
for · president
Gillin, who arrived here
Suntanned and amW111,
you can mil In ordinary milk. unanlmoualy. Among the amday amid speculation be Glenn emer1ed from a
It contslna the enzyme lac· chorul of ayaa tbat foUolled, . Ia amo.ns Carter'• top li!!!Ptf• aalllde lbe bale!
taae that your intestinal ceUs there were four RBYIJ.
. proapeell ail vice prealdent, wbm be and .._, members
lack. The enzyme will IIPHI
"I will not vote to mab .lt aald he diacl-' the"llpeedi of tb{"Qdo deleplllll are
the lactose In the milk before IIIBllimous," declared \'t'ln,. mly "In geaerallerml" with ltaylng amid oealtered
you use lt. I hope you conUnue neba1o County Treasurer. Carter during their meeting applause and 101ne ahouta of
to do well and am dellg~led DouliU Aurand, a Jerry 1ut Tlatraday in Plainl, Ga. "bey, 'VIce prtlidslt" and
with your progress.
· Brown iiUjJpiN'ter.
Carter
made
no ''aU the way."
·"'P*I we'll make it unanJ. IIIUIIIionl on the remarl{i, 11-

--l(H

v....,.

..

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

....

~f

..

.,.

...........

~

Doctor's advice ends problems
•

'
•

lXI

after posling f2,500 bond.
Authorities found most of

c

Fidrych gets nod for AL All Stars

...

A Sort of Journal

......

"We had our visit and wtien
I came . back · through t1ie
waiting room who's sitting
there but Jimmy Carter'."
said Udilll. "As tt turned out
It was the only time I got In
first ahead of Carter," 'he

..

added.

..... ,
J•

...
'

REVIEW URGED
CLEVELAND (UPl) ~
Democratic · congreui&lt;lllll
candl~~&amp;te Mary Rose Dakar
has urged the Public UtiUtlell
Commlaalon of Ohio to
conduct an adlnlnlaraU'I'e ·
review of the llteat rate
lncreue ,granted the OhiO
Jlell Telepllone Co.
•
Mill Dakar, a aevemna
City Council member~
Sunday said "the PUCO
board haa been remlu iD
awarding Ohio Bell the
outlandish rate iDc:rellt .D
She aald llhe would "Ialii
other legal actions" If tbitl
PUCO rllfules to conduct the
adrnlnlatraUve review wttiiiR
the next two weeb "In ali
acC8111ible locallm to thli

consumer." Mlaa 08ltar aaJO

lhe would be joined In bl!f
flsht by other unname'

consumer groupe.

•
. "Our conaumer-actlob
grouprequaat(s) the PUCO tp
vote favorably for an
adrnlnlatrative review of thli .
rate Increase within tbe nelt
two weeki before legal me~Jt
are otbenrlse aought, "· . . .
said.
.-

·Sport Parade
I)' MILTON RlaDSAN
\}PI SJIII'II . . _
· ,
·
•··: PffU ,pLPHIA (UPI\- There wis a tlmnhen you could
.. ~· CIIll builiiD'allftlll All~ pme ~ apectacl~ and nobody
. •would lii1J8h, II WJed to be an Intensely eiciting; easerly
· :· anticipated event tbat not ooly fascillllted the farw, but a1ao
.'; had lilnlflcant appeal for the plsyen and managers,
· .~ That waa way back, more than a quarter century aso; when
• ' theAll..stargamebadaomerneanlng,aomesenulneiUbstance
· ··: to It, when everybody could relate to Carl Hubbell strllllng out
.;': Babe Rulli, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie FOD, AI Slmm0111 and Joe
· ·:,'Cronin In IUCcellllon, and to Ted Wllliarnll rattUng one of Rip
·.~Sewell'• ''eeplll8" baUs five rnUes downtown for a Utanlc
' 'l "
horne nlfl .
.:· Somehow mCilll of the crama has dlaappeared from the All.:;Star game, and with It, much of the Interest as well.
·:. lluebaD'a beauliful people, the very belt perfonners It bas
·;,to oller, wiD be showcased for the whole ,.lion to ogle at In
." \OIIIor~w nlght'a All-Star con.telll here, but about the ooly ones
,'.left who take the game even half4eriou.lly any more are the
· ·.'.farw. Certainly the PlYel\.don't, nor do any of tbe managera
·~who aren't directly Involved.
. .
··:· "To me, It'&amp; a great big nothing," says Billy Martin, ~
.. Yankee's manager. "It doesn't prove a damn lhi!l8. All it
:.amounts to Ia the two league ~esidenta trying to outdo each
: other.
·: "The All.Star game doean't represent a team effort. It's only
~·a bunch a Individuals pushing their own abiUty, and the guy
,.who pushes least II tbe pitcher. He's got noi!Jing to,gain by
'; puahlng.lf you're out there pitching for the All-stars Tuesday
•; night and you know you're son,. have to start for your own
Thursday, are you lliXI,. bust your back?"
" Yeara ago, yes. Today, no. That's why All-Star games today
' · .:; aren't what IIIey were years ago.
.' Billy Martin won't be here for tomorrow night's AD.Stsr
· , ·game. Neither will the majority of other managera, most of
. :, whom wiU be back home relaxing ..
· · Martin never cared to take part In tbe All-Star game during
::', his acUve career,moat ol which he spent playing second base
, ·~ for the Yankees under the late Casey Stengel.
,~· "Casey would alwaya say 'who wants to go?"' Martin
;. • remembers. "Some of the guys like ·Gil MacDougald, Bill
:.','Skowron and a couple of the others wbo hadn't been picked
.: 'wouldaay they'd like to go, bull never wanted to.
·
· .:: "NeWe Fo.x always beat me out for the All-Star game. I'd
· •ftnllh secmd to him alllhe lime. It dum 't bother me. I always
:','admired him. He waa a helluva competitor." · ·
·
::: Flnall):, Stengel made Martin go to an All-star game In 1956.
.~ ''Calley said to me, 'you never been to one. Y911 gotta go,'"
·:,Martin remembers,' "So I went to Washington all(! sat on the
• bench most ofthegame.lgot to hit only once and grounded out
.~'to Roy McMillan, my buddy."
,
~.~ Although the All-Star game has Uttle or no appeal at aU for
·;,Billy Martin, he concedes It's still a fine vehicle for the fans
·:,because It's like a big holiday outing for them.·
., He says it's also a great thing for tbe players' pension fund,
· ,',which derives revenue from the All-star game, and for such
· . ,'j\11-star flrst.timera as the Twlna' Butch Wynegar and his own
,:,MICkey Rivers.
. ·
•; "For them, It's super,'' says Martin: "Everyone ought to be
·•.in an All-Star game at leaat once."
.
'..-JUven Ia only me of six Yankees on the American League
squad. The others are pitchers Jbn ''Catfish" Hunter and
Sparky Lyle, catcher Thunnan Munson, first baseman Chris
OJamblisiJ and pitching coach Bob Le111on, serving as
honorary captain of the American LeaguerS. Lemon Is to be
,IIJIIucled Into baseball's Hall of Fame at CoopersiOWJi, N.Y.
next month.
·
· ':'Rookie second baseman Willie Randolph also was to have
. :1-epresented the Yankees In the game, but he was scratched by
;ft,klle!! Injury.
.
· ::: With the Yankees 9-'&gt;11 games ap In the American League
·l!last, Billy Martin could be managing the All-stars this time
next year. ''If lever manage In an All-star game, I'll manage
the only way I know and !hat's to win. But I Still say the All·
.Star game Is a great big nothing. It doesn't prove that one
league Ia better than the other, only the World Series proves

.::team

that."

r-------..
·: HOW.,·

;;'CINCINNATI (UPI) -The baD took more than a ltUie of
· ·.eloclty of Don GulleU's fast· the sting out of the loss to the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
"If Gullett's as sound
physically aa he looked today,
'.' ~..fture
. then we can open up a vacant
l ~
. .4, . lot between us and the Los
. ·1 ,
Anceles Dodgen," said
·~
'
~
pitchin1 coach Larry
" ·
· " Ia your
Shepard Sunday after the
.
car lnaurance
Reds dropped an ~ decisi~X~
..
· cover111ie?
to the Pirates.
·•
Gullett was making his first
Ytvt p&lt;- ...., IMj
atart
aince ·June 20, when he
"
departed
with a 10re left
"
shoulder
after
being rapped
lll JOUf ,...;auld• , _
for nine .hl.ta and four runs
while pitching three Innings
.. CIII:
against the Ph1111es.
During the Interim, he
P. J, PAULIY
Pitched only one Inning In
104 w. Mllln. "'mlror
reUef, and that was last
,
PH.fft-2111
Tuesday qalnat Montreal.
"All far ul'm concerned
"
.
NA110NWIJI • said
Shepard,
"GuDelt's
·
INIURANCI
'
,........_..,.._, tbrowtnc was the only good
thing about today's game. A
;; ""='C'.;;:I:"' guy
can 'I posslbly throw .as

. _,
1..

_...,.....""_
_..,..,_ ....

----

tJ

·--..
•

-

.

••
:
••• ••
••
•••
••
'FRIDAYTIL .B ::

! .t •••Mon., Tues., Wed,
. •••.
~
•·~ ·
noon
•

.
;:.
.
...
..
•. .
!·•.· ···••••••· . :
. •....•..•.•............

.; ,

t

• · •

8:o0ti15:00

Thursday 8 tll12

11

,:.
~

'

.

.

Close Sat At 5 p.m.
.

1•
.

~

I .

I&gt;

dNOi.CflliATE . .

RUTLAND

· League In the 47th mid·
summeT ~lassie Tuesday
night at Veter~~~'a Sfadlum.
Jones, the wlnrilngest
pllcher In tbe majors with )6
victories, had previously
been named by manager
Sparky Andenon to star_! for
the NaUonal League. ·
All-Star Game rules
prohibit a starting pitcher
from going ·more than three
Innings and chances are
neither pitcher will have a
dramatic effect on the
· game's final outcome. But no
matter: It's ali Intriguing
matchup and It's the kind of
thing the All.Star game Is

e

~ to be about.

In getting the n&lt;mlnation,
Fldrych will beccme only the
second rookie In history to
start an AIJ.$tsr game. The
f1n1 wu Dave Stenhouse of
Washington, who started the
second All-star game of the
1962 season. Unfilrtunately,
Uuit ~oved lo he the high
point of Stenhouse's career.
·· After posting a 111-4 record
with a 2. 73 earned run
average for the first half of
the 1862 sea9011, Stenhouse
finished theyearwithan 11-12
.

M.

bard as he did Wday If his
shoulder is bothering him."
The Reds pitching coach's
elation,
though,
was
tempered by the memory of
GuUett's June 5 victory over
In St. louis.
.
On tblit occasloo, Gullett,
after being sidelined slnce
May 20 when lie lalled to

.

record. Two years later he
· was gone from the major
lellgues.
Even If he doesn't get a
batter out, though, Fidrych is
hound til please the crowd,
which Is expected to number
more than 60,000 and Include
a nost of notable dignitaries,
Including President Ford. A
hyperactive youngster who
tslks out loud to the baseball
and r\IIIS around the Infield
congratulating teammates
for good . plays, "The Big
Bird", as he is called, has

succeeded In drawing large
crowds wherever he has
pitched this - · His ~2
record and major league
leading 1.78 e'rhed run
average Indicate there Is
nothing flakey about his
ability, however.
Jones, too, has been. something of a curiosity but not
because uf any emoUonal
behavior. The 26-year-old
southpaw, who has · been
attracting from 10 to 15,000
more fans to the park
whenever he pitchea, Is

C&lt;lllldered unique because he
wins without being able _,
lhrow a major leagde
fastball. He Ia a llil*erball
~peci!IUst who seldom walks
a batter and while his pitches
look delectable, betters have
trouble connecting.solldly. In
one game agalnat Onclonatl
this year, All-star Pete llo!!e,
a switchhltter, got up lefthanded against Jones
hecsuae he was bllvlng · so
much trouble with liln from
the right.Jland side of the
plate.

ei gs blanks ·LoWell
··

survive the first Inning
against San Francisco, was
his usual overpowering self In
beating the ·Cards' ~I wblle
striking out eight and waUdng
only one.
The ~year-Gid Reds lefty
picked up victories In his next
two starts after his triumph
over the Cards but wasn't

c .
·

had the only other hils for the

losers ..
The GaUipolis Red Sox won
their second' tournament
game, 12-8 over the Racine
A's. Pacing the winners were
Danny Hennessey with three
doubles; Willie Ward, a
double, Bryan Harrold, a
triple; Tomy Armstrong, a
double and single and Mark
Allen, a single.
Racine's top hitters were
Zane Beegle, a double: Tom
Roseberry, a single; Jay
1\ees, a slngle; Kent Wolle, a
double, Scott Frederick and
Melanie Weese, each a single
and Wayne Lyons, a double
and single.
Middleport's .Braves
scored an easy 13-0, victory .

OFFICE
9:30 to
2 lo- S I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT

•

W '

Nesselroad led at .394, and In those two games, Meigs B81rd and Johnson.
By Greg BaUey
Warming up lor the James, Johnson, Davenport, stole a total of 16 bases.
Arnerlca·n
Legion Calvin Minnis, and Gary M
009 353 1- 12 11 0 MEIGS DROPPED ITS
Swain
were
hot
on
his
heels.
L
0001000-141 season record ~ I~ by
Tournament the last of this
month, the Meigs American M
203 000 0-5 9 0 Huffman and Johnson, loslilg steam on a hot and
Legion Team won three out of L
000030~71 Hamilton (7). Ullman O.P ), muggy . day . and falling to
four .games this weekend,
Glouster In the second game,
Smith (WP J. Baird (5) and Matlack (5) and Loar.
doubiH1 d
t Johnson. Rice and l.osr.
7-4.. Nine walks and three
laking on
a Saturdayea byer the
a
AT SYRACUSE ON Meigs
errors
helped
·Lowell
scores of &amp;.3 and 12-1, and
In the second contest, SUNDAY, Meigs started the Glouster. Meigs took a quick
splitting a pair with visiting Meigs took the lead In the day off right by whipping lead_by plating a run In each
Glouster on Sunday, tsklng third and again didn't Glouster 7-1 In the lirst of flle first two lnnnlnga, but
the first game · 7·1 and relinquish it as right-hander contest as Baird went the the visitors came back with
th
d 7-4
Brady Huffman went aU the distance, striking out six and two In U!e third on a walk, a
dropping
e
seton
·
In the first game Saturday, way for the victory. He walking just three. In the first single, and fielder's choice, ·
Greg Smith picked up the win fann ed ei~ht and walked with two outs, Mike Nessel- and an error on . the rlgbi
. wt had to have some help seven, and along with that rosd gave the home town fielder.
from Steve Baird In the fifth fme performance of Greg · boys a quick 1.0 lead as he
Meigs regained the lead by
when LoweD scored all their Smith in that first game, stroked a double and getting one In the fourth when
runs. Meigs was never pleased Coach Nesselroad; scampered home as Glouster _James singled, stole se&lt;:!)lld,
headed as they plated two In since the tournament Is so cotrunitled two errors on the and came aU the way home
thefirst on a Brent Jolmson near.
'
play. But the visitors tled it In from second on a ground out
single, a double by Mike
Meigs plated . three in the their ball of the third.
to the shortstop. But then
Nesselroad, and a run- · fourth and that was all they · But Meigs took the lead for. came the disastrous fifth
~oduclng single by Mick needed. They got those on good in the bottom of that when Glouster got three runs
Davenport .
· singles by James and Minnis, Inning when Johnson led off on two walks, a double, two
They opened up a five-run an error on the left fielder, a with a walk, and Brian singles, a fielder's .choice,
lead In the third when Nessel- double by Terry Wall, and a Hamilton followed with a run- and a ground out.
road singled, Davenport run-producing ground-Gut by scoring single. • Nesselroad
There was a mcxnent of
·reached on an error, Greg Mark Mitch.
then poked a single that sent excitement In Meigs' last at
James singled them both · They got live insuranCe · Hamilton home, and Nessel- bat . when with \he ba$es
hbme, and James later runs in the nell frame on road came home on a ground loaded and two gone, John
scored on a ground out.
singles by Davenport, Baird, out.lt was all over In the fifth Sayre slanuned a long drive
Johnson and Nesselroad and »omer Smith plus three when Meigs ,plated three on Into left field thl!t was snared
each had a double and single walks, ' a ground out, and a three bases on · ball, a by the fielder In a roiUng,
10 pace the way, and Daven- fielder's choi&lt;;S. In the sixth, fielder's choice, and a two- diving catch.
port bad two singles. James, with Nesselroad and James run double by Gary Swain. . James bad two singles In
Bill Metzner, and Baird each aboard, Minnis unloaded with Nesseiroad again led · the that game, Minnis a double,
chipped In with a stngk. As of a long homer that put the attack In that game with his and Johnson a single. Meigs
Saturday, Meigs had six game out of reach. Minnis led double and single, Hamilton will host l.Dgan at Syracuse
hitt~rs batting over .300. the hitters with that homer had two singles, Swain had on Wednesday.
and a single, Wall had his his double, and Baird and G
002 030 2-7 5 2
double, and
Johnson, Johnson each had one single. M
llO 101 o.-.4 4 3
·Davenport, Nesseiroad, Mitz. G
1101 000 0-1 5 4
Gardner and South. James.
Io:i 030 x- 7 7 0 Smith (3), Huffman (4),
Don Sutton picked up his ner, James, Baird, Huffman M
ninth victory with three and Smith each had one hit. Echstenkamper and Poston. Johnson (5, LP), Baird (7)
and Metmer.
innings of one1un relief.
Braves 9, Meta 8
Willie Montanez drove
home six runs, including a
three-run, two-out double in
the eighth Inning to bring
Atlanta from behind to
victory. Tbe six rbi gave
Montsnez nine for the fourgame series.

qliite so impressive. Then
came his ill.faled appearance
against the PhUs June 211.
11
So/' said Shepard, 11l'm
eager 10 see how Don does in
his next two or three
starts."
· Wildness was Gullett's
downfall Sunday. He issued
four walks,, and all came In
th.e fourth lnnillg. Two of
them, one to Dave Parker
and another to Tommy
Helms, came with the bases
loaded.

•

•

.

.

LEXINGTON, Ohio (UPI ) . when he passed Inside of
- Marty Smith, a poweiiully Hannah, who tried to regain
built 19-year-Gid from San the lead but ran into Smith's
Diego, Calif., gave a lesson in bike and tumbled off the
motocross ra cing to the course. In the second molD,
Europeans · Sunday with a Smith passed Hannah just
crowd-pleasi ng victory in the after the start-flnlllil line on
$19,540 U.S. Grand Prix for the 14th lap. Hannah, In
125 cc motorbikes at Mid· desperation to catch up,
Ohio Moto Pa1·k.
failed to negotiate a turn and
The Europeans, who have lost more than 10 seconda to
traditionally dominated the Smith.
sport of motocross racing, ' Smith, with two firsts,
took a back seal to Smith and moved Into second place In
two other American riders. the world 125 point standings.
Smith, who set motocross However, Gaston Rahier of
history here a year ago when Belgium placed fifth In the
he was the first American first race to gain enough
ever 10 win a 125 Grand Prix points ·to capture his second
event, won the overall tiUe straight 125 championship.
Sunday with two fitst places
Hannah, with two seconds,
in both grueling 40-lninute was runnerup overall. Grossi
motos In 90-llegree heat. His was third overall, foDowed by
main opposition came from YoShifumi Sugio of Japan,
Bob Hannah, a 19-year-Gid with an eighth and a fourth In
rookie from Whittier, Calif., two motos.
and Bill Grossi, San.ta L'ruz,
Steve Wise of McAllen,

veteran !:~~~~s:'~~thk':~:
SmithandHannahgave the was sixth-place Jlri Churavy
·crowd of better than 30,000, of Czechoslovakia with an

•

.•.

Smith scores
•
motocross wm

·3 more teams move
•
K
up m
. tournament .~~~~:a!~~r"lld
.

.

two, splits with Glouster

iD losing

~

RUTLAND PUINITURE . :

t,'i 742-2211

colorful 2J..year-Gld Fidrych

to art againlt the' Na\ionll

By KEN ROSENBERG oo the verge of Sllch .a
UPI Sporta Writer
transformation, thanka to 23While the Philadelphia y e a r • o.l d
J oa q u In
Phlllles and Cincinnati Reds (pronounced Waakeen J
look""
,.,.· at Tuesday night's AU- Andujar,· who last year
Star game to the gUtter and appeared to he well on his
glory of the playoffs, the San way to becoming li career
Franclaco Glania and the minor leaguer, never having
Houston AatrOII try to turn woo more than eight games.
their springs of despair Into
On Sunday, Andujar
the summer of hope.
scattered nine hits to pitch his
The future for thoae two · third shutout of the seallOil
National League alao rana and give the Aatros a 1.0
looked brighter &amp;lnday when victory and a four·gl!me
a pair of young rlght-hand!!rs sweep of tbe Montreal Expos,
came up with outstanding helping Houston move to
•-u game of third
pItchi ng performances as within One ""'
both the Giants and the pllce.
Astros scored shutout . In other NL games, Phlla·
victories.
delphia blanked San Diego 3Ed,Hallclti, a 6-foot-7 side- 0, Pittsburgh outslugged
arming fastballer who Cincinnati 8.1, Los Angeles
appeared to be on the raiDed by St. Louis 9-6 and
threshold of greatness when AUants edged New York 9-8.
he pitched a no-hitter against Pblla 3, Padrea 0 the New York Mets last , Greg Luzlnsld broke up a
season, hurled a two-hitter in scoreless pitching duel with a
San Francisco's :z.o· victory three-run double In the siXth
over the Chicago Cubs.
Inning to help Jim Kaat gain
It completed a renaissance his ninth victory and Philaof sorts for Halicki, counted · delphia maintain its l~ame
on by manager Bill Rigney to lead over Pittsburgh In the
he ooe of the malnatays of a NL Eaat. Luzinsld's blow
heralded pitching staff. that followed ari infield single by
was supposed to help the Dave Cash and bunt singles
Giants challenge Cincinnati by Larry · Bowa and Mike
for silpretnacy In the West. Schmidt. Kaat aU.,W.!d nine
Instead, Halicki lOili lieven hits in pitChing his 29th
of his first eighl decisloos and career shutout.
Rigney threatened to send
him to the minors unless
Dodgen t, Cards I
things changed quickly. .
Reggie &amp;nith hlg\ilighled a
"EarUer In the season I
seven-run,
seventh inning
didn't have good stuff,"
with
a
three1un
homer, his
Halicki said aner raising his
third
In
as
many
games
record to S.ll. "Coach Frank
against
his
former
Funk helped me shorten my
stride, worked on my slider teammates, as Los Angeles
and I buUI up \ny confidence. wiped out a five-run deficit.
I don't worry what happened Bill Buckner had a two-run
double In the Inning. St. LOuis
the last time out."
Rigney can ~X~iy hope his took a S.O lead on a 110lo
Giants, currently mired In homer by Keith Hernandez, a
last place, can turn things three-run homer by ex·
Dodger Willie Crawford and a
around like HaUck!.
MeanwhUe, lhe Aatros are solo homer by Bake 'McBride.

Point Pleasant's Peoples
Bank, the Gallipolis Red Sox
and Middleport's Braves
captured wins Saturday 'night
at the 1Mh annual Kyger
Creek LitUe. League Tournament.
·
In tbe opening grnae, Point
Pleasant's Peoples Bank
:lumped the Pomeroy
Yankees, 10.2.
Steve Porter led the ·eight·
hit attack with a double and'
slngle. Ronnie Cremeans got
two singles, Tony Gooclman
hit a double, Torn Jordan
tripled and Mike Ohlinger,
doubled.
Pacing the ,. Yank attack
were Roger Kovalchik with a
double and single. Ronnie
• Rlcharda and Mike Whitlatch

.

Johnson, manager of the
American League, named the

Giants, Astros
could move up

·~GuUet . lo()ked · good

..• .

Glenn, Carter discuss keynote

By F:RED MtlHANE
UPISportaWriter
PHILADELPHIA (UPI J It's the kind of pairing tbat
Arch Ward bad In mind for
IU "dream game" when he
founded the All-Star anteat
In 1933 aa part of the &lt;lllcago
World's Fair.
'
Rindy Jooea vei'IUI Mark
Ftdrych.
What better matciJip could
there be lban baseball's two
111011 exciting pltchen and
biggest gate attractlon8 of the
sea8011sllowlng their·tltufiiO
the guys in ·the "other
league" before the President
of tbe United States and the
largest All-Star Game crowd
In more than two decadea?
That oonfrontstion became
olllclal Sunday when Darrell

•

. ,

..

" If is wise not to seek a

secret and honest not to
reveal i1 ,' 1

f

It' s a wis~ person who.
seeks the very best in

savings without sacrificing
value. Sh9pping with fh e
" FRIENDLY
the answer .

ONES"

is

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

·
·
The Department Store of
over RuUand's Reds. Leading largest
ever
see a race
at eighth and se:e:n:th:.:pla:ce:.
Mid-Ohio,
twotoexciting
duels.
the Braves were Jeff Hannah. held the lead through
Wayland wlth .a double; J~ most of both races , only to
Boyer;a triple; Rick Ebers- have Smith overtake him at
badJ, two' singles.
,.
the end.
Wayland hurled a thre.e- , Smith captured the lead in
inning no· hi Iter .
tile first moto on the 12th lap,
For Your Winter

r ..__ _

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FREE STORAGE
GARMENTS

We will dry clean and store. Pay for in the
fa II when. picked up. Cleaning charges only.

I
Ploy il oafe and· l!lll'e
II may be time to
have your pree~nt
policy updated.

. ·f'ur

St~rage

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Insured

Let's folk Soon

DALE C. WARNER

ROBINSON'S CLEANERS

101 W. Main

I'Gmeroy

PH. 992-3428

.

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POMERO~ '

.

' -.

�,,

c

,.
3- TheDallySemlnei,Middleport,Pcmeroy, 0., Monday,,July 12, 1D76

2- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pcxneroy, o., M!ldaY, July 12, 1976

Attention .drawn to political
personalities of Ohio Sunday
NEW .YORK (UPIJ- Noo· .
delegate Ohio Democrata
were nW1ng moat of the
splash Sunday when the
state'• !52-member
deleption to tbe Democratic
Natlooal COOvenuoo arrived
at Its headijuarleri betel.
Delegatea walled In lei1gthy
check-In lines in the
overheated lobby ol tbe New
York Qleraton whUe much ol
the attention wu diverted to
the anivll of Sen . .lohn H.
Glenn Jr., · ~io, a vice
presldentlal posslbWiy.
Most of the Ohio delegates,
126, are pledged to support
fonner Georgia Gov. Jimmy·
Carter,. the apparent
prealdentlal ncmlnee.
Twerltyotberssupport Rep.
Morris K. Udall of Arizona,
and the other six are pledged
to Rep. Louil Stokes, D-Ohio,
a favorite son from
Cleveland.
Glelln, his wife Annie, aon
David and daughter 1.4'n were
!lfeeled by a battery of
televlllon cameru and a
lwarm of well-'ll'ilben u
they arrived at tbe betel.
Lt. Gov. Richard F.
Celeste, not a conventloo
delegate but a potential
candidate for governor In
1978, waa on hand with a
dozeD frterida. Included were
three office employ• he said
were oo ·V!lcation, trying to
drum up 1upport lot Glem as
a vice prsldenllal candidate.
Glean told neWimen at two
crowded ...... lltlefql that
be hu beard no further 'II'U'd
from Carter oo his choice of a
running mate.
Celelte's aides posted and
distributed handbills
announcing tbe former
MI!UUIIIt'l arrival.
"llblnk it's" impor1ant that
everybody iay hello to John
Glean here," said Celeste.
"D's loilll to be Ill important
llftt few dlya for him."
Democratic · State
Qlalrman Paul Tipps,
IIIOtber noode~. arrived
early to help 1181 ap the Ohio

headquarters. He alao made
II a point to welcqme Glenn
and get Into the photos made
of him.
"I think John Glenn Is THE
outstanding running mate for
Jimmy Carter," said Celeste.
"I tblnk we're going to need
our strongest ticket to wln.in
November, despite what
aome people say, and there ~
no question In my mind that
John Glenn will make It the
strongest
ticket
the
Democrats have to offer."
WbUe Glenn arrived In
celelrated style, the man he
beat for the Democratic
Senate nomination In 1974,

Howard M. Metzenbaum of
Cleveland, checked in
without publlc fanfare at the
other end of the Sheraton
lobby.
Metzenbaunl, a multbniiUonalre, was accompanied by
his wife Shirley. He toted two
large pieces of luggage by

himself.
The former senator who
was ousted by Gl~n Is not a
. convention delegate oot said
he Is attending to touch base
'll'l.th politicians fl'OI)l various
other states.
He said he hopes to
convince Sens. Hubert
Humphrey o!Mimeaota and
Alan Cr~ ofCaUfornla to

Sinatra weds ·. 4th wife
PALM SPRINGS, Cllllf.
(UP)) - Frank Sinatra and

Agnew, who escorted
Sinatra's daughter Naney,
and former CaUfornia Gov.
Ronald Rengan and his ,wife,
Nancy.
Other weD-known guests at
,the wedding an.d reception
·following at Sinatra •.s
compound hall a mile from
the
Annenberg's
"Sunnylands" estate
Included Rosalind RusseD,
Mlltoa Jlerle, Gregory Peck,
Kirk l)ouglas and Pat Henry.
Freeman Gosden of the old
"Amos a~d Andy" radio
seri• served as best man
while Beatrice Konbak, wife
of a prominent iDs Angeles
attorney, was· matron of
honor.
Slnatra~s other daughter,
Olrlstlna, was alao .present,
along witb bls mother,
Natalie, and the bride's
~ents,, Olaries and Irene

Barbara Marx were married
Sundly at a ceremony kept
secret from everyone but the
130 guesta am surprised each
olher with an exchange of
cars as wedding gifts. .
Barbara Mars Sinatra; ~.
the singer's long-time
companion, gave her new
husband a gray Jaguar.
He surprlaed her with a
fiOO,OOO RoDs Royce- a deep
blue color, to match her eyes,
he said - equipped with
several 1111111')1 extras and
special Ucenae plltes reading
"BMS 1" for her ._ lnltia]4.
Sinatra, 60,andhis lrlde,in
a flowing beige gown, were
married In a civil ceremony
Sunday afternoon at the
desert estate of Walter
Anllenber.g, former U.S.
IIJTibasswlor to Britain.
the afternoon temperature Blakely. . ·
roae to a sinllng 109, bul the
Guest:! at the reo!ption
tii'O&lt;IIIIn a Ught tan suit and munched on a lavisb seafood
guesta wore ties as requested buffet and a seven-tiered
m engraved Invitations "to a cake.
Sinatra was married three
party" aent out a few daya
times before - to Nancy
earlier.
The gueat . lilt Included Barbato, Ava Gardner and
f&lt;lrmer Vice President Spiro Mia Farrow, who was

Ohio delegate is youngest
~YORX(UPIJ-Clare

amib, a pert t7..year old from
UDIVInity Rejctta, Obio, Ia
lib any other teen-qer on
her lint villi to Nft York,
acJq lkyacrapen, plannlnc
lllloP,ilig
spreea
and
anUc:lJ)IIUng vlalta io the
Slatue of l...iberty and the
UDited Natiaal.
.
1be anlf dllfertnee Ia lbat
Clare Ia the J0U11111t of the
deliegalll It the DlmoeraliC NalkiDal Coa\'elltkll.
Clare, wbo will not be ollj
. . . . to.-e111111J the NOY. 2

3.

d ctlaa, became an •J..Iarte
ado delegate p!edrf to
.J1mmJ Cll'ter "on 1 lark"
lfllr ..,.,.,.... a film of the
tm Democratic National
CWtiallau ill her biP achool
........ ella
8he Ia able to as 1

.. ... ;aatlw ddega&amp;e beciliM
• Oblo law permll8
I * - to 'lute and ldd
alflallf lbeJ will be .. by the

aeneralellrt'"'

Clare, wbo 111r111 1J

nen

Oct. lf, ..... Ia clui ll
J:rleriew Catholic HJgb
llcllaol, 1 prhate prll'
lchaal, Jut wiiU' watdiD8
. "1be Makq of the Prellclent
-lJ'II."

''BIIb Fu•- Ill, who's

appear on his behalf In Ohio
this fall In his campaign for
the Senate against Sen .
Robert Taft Jr., R.Qhlo.
Metzenbaum said either
Glenn, Sen. Walter Mondale
of Mlnne110ta or Sen. Edmund
Mualde of Maine would make
good vice presidential
timber.
"Don't count Muskle out,"
he said.
The former senator volunteered that Glenn, his
~.evlous arch-«"lval at 'the
state level, would be a "gOod
selection" as a vice
presidential nominee and
"would meet with my tots!
enthusmsn\."

from Lak~ lilxl .... In
the cJaas, got to talking with
me and we . were saying
'wonkD't It be a trip to go to
·the coavention this year!"'
Tbey made il
Beth, a blmde, bl~ed
.girl wbo tumed 18 In June,
and Clare began working for
Carter organizing young
people and addressing
envelopes In a local
annpalp. headquarten.
"When we flnt started
working back in February,
we didn't know much about
Carter," says Beth. "But. we
gradually learned what he
lllood for and we liked him
better lban any of the Cltben.
Hewu• frtlb face, and we'd
'"-· work for aomebody we
liked tblln somebody we
tbougbt cOuld win. We didn't
IIIli* Carter bad I c:hance."
When It came lime for
carter's Oblo orpntzettoo to
make ap allate of delegalll,
the two girls went to the
alewlde caucua in Akron.
"My father pointed out
there wwen't ~ women
m the llate,10 we decided to
lUI on a lark," tecani Clare.
"We bad to get up and give
a 1IU1e apeecb. All these
people were aaylng how they

w~re

officeholders from
V1lrious disiricts. I didn't
know what to say, but I said
aomethlng and liO did )leth,
and we got elected. It was
juat some crazy idea we bad
in our beads."
Carter did the rest. He
swept tlie at-large jrbnary
bellotln.g and carried the girls
to the convention.
Clare, I freckle-faced girl
with curly bnllette hair, hu
already learned lluit
anything Ia lor sale . at a
conventim In New York. She
parted with her guest pass for
flO spendlni mmey.
9le wiD be attending the
University of &lt;lllcago sa a
pollticaiiCience major In the
fall, and ligures her early
convention espertence wiU
stand her In good stead.
Clare plans to vial! the
Statue of .Liberty and the '
United Natlms, and attend a
performance
l!Y the
Rocli:etles, as weD aa tbe
calll'UIIes and cocktail parties
of the delegation.
''I'm e~:clted about my first
vial! to New York," abe said,
"but 1 imagine it will mean
more In the futwe to bllve
been a cooventim delegate,
especially the youngeat."

DR. LAMB

divorced from the singer 10
years ago.
The new Mrs. Sinatra, who
wu divorced from COO!edlan
Zeppo Marx In 19'13, was
married before that to Robert
Oliver of l.rog )leach, Calif.
FLACK ATI'ACJ[
WASHINGTON (UPl)
Although 'Congress is on a
two-week recess,
the
legislative bureaucracy
keeps churning out press
re1eases.
Typical of the daily produclion of announcements and
statements sent out from
· angressmen's offices even
when the congressmen themselves are absent included
one from Rep. Ronald M.
MotU, D.Qhio, who said he
thinks it was ridiculous for
federal bureaucrats to try to
end f8ther«lll and motherdaughter school events.
FORMER COP, HELD

STRONGSVILLI):,

Ohio

.--... .

( UPI) - John P. Stanovik,

311 "'"'-'sville and his balf
lxother. JameS p . "Sormy"

McWeeny Jr., 35, Brullswick,
are charged with possession

of at 1eut $200;000 in stolen
~ction equipment and

veliiCies.
Stanovik,

a

former

Sll-ongsville policeman, wu
in City Jail Sunday. He quit in

1974 after about seven years ,
the pollee force.
. McWeeny was released

•

IIJLnnDeeE. Lamb, MD. mediately I began to. feel
·
.
DEAR OR. LAMB - How better.
I remain very strict. I only
can lever lbaDk you enough?
For more yean than l care to uae 11011-Gtlry mUk, no ice
mnamber I bad IZohn's cream, no cheese. I take
dlaeat .. reclu enleitia. calcium piUs. I've got so
Four reara ago l bad .much energy now. At tlmea I
emer1ancr aurgery. My have ipells, but I sug)poae
that Ia to be npected. lbank
. lalelllna
ap and ,Pioded. The doetor said, you for your help and article.
''IGITJ, rllbt now nolblnc The only thiJIII I dlallke Ia
willldU the bug." I - w.t, my weight. Now I'm not 122
Vlll'f IIIIa. l'wu ao tired that oot UiO poundl. Food now
appetlzl!lg
and
....... down the llaJn WU I loOks
deUciOUI.
Before
I
couldn't
raJ proJect I bad to be In bed
three out of fin daya. even loot at lt. I'd force
~ ball and ball to fattening food down and
bulldDIJIIIIup, vltumll,lc:e apend hours In the bathroom
cnm,ct..plore.l'dpt II' in bed.
l'm .billy, my husband 'is
10 lldE I wlabed I'd die.
The doetor 11ve me happy with my health lind
lr811C(ui11An for my tn- also my children. I enjoy
lli'l w. No IIOaP· All lay In everythlns and haven't
IIIII fti'Y WOrillmu- enough houi'IIO clean, cook,
llale lbaat lwo ,_. 1110 I lhop and apend lime with my
........... 1011 III'IJie lovely family.
lbelt bow IIIII: IIIII p.ten , DEAR READER- Thank
lffoell IJIIetUnea. My you for your wonderfulletler
t 11 lid IIIII I .. lllld, "011, and I am so pleMed that you
Will, pw It tile old eallep feel better. Crolm's dlaease Ia
llrJ." I did And .aJmcilt lm·

'*"

the region
of the In testing where the
small Intestine joins !he
'{'lion. It may also affect
adjoining areas of the In·
te!Une. It Is true that many
people with this problem are
intolerant to milk and milk
products as your case
demonatrates. Patients with
ulcerative ~Utia may also
bllve attacks (ireclpltaled by
milk and milk products.
ButtermUk·, cheese and Ice
cream are not devoid of
lactose, the double sugar that
aeema to cause a lot of these
problems . . Natural fer·
mentation with the lactobaclllus will eliminate
more than half of the llctoee
but commercial buttermilk Is
not made that way and wiD
~uae the per1011intolerant to
lactose to have real misery.
Commercial cheeses are also
not free of lactose. Yot~urt Is
10111etimea recommetded bllt
commercial yogu t (not
made by natur I fer·
mentatton~y the lac·
anlnflamma~onof

.'
'

.The Riding Man
The rumpled, nervoualnnkeeper uaembled In the State Houle at
' ED. NOTE - The editor welcomes
watch!d the rldef canter Into the Philadelphia when he reached the
the return to print of another "A Sort
of Journal" by John A. McKean of
foggy glOOI)I of ihe lantern's light. alate One. II wu steep, rocky, hill
The mesaenger'a ordet bad been land: the rolling lowlands lay · .....
Gallipolis who several years ago for
a period of a time was a regul~
expUcit : bllve your beat remount behind him.
· .
·waiUng; The horseman, scarcely
The air waa heavy in the ball,
contributor to The Sunday Times·
Sentinel until personal affairs
speaking and dlldalnlng victuals, aUII the windows were cloaed but for
denied hbn the Urne to write.
awUUy swulli! utrtde the frelh a few Inches aa aecurllf ~gainlt ..
Readers will recall Mr. McKean Is a
mount and was gone at a gaUop. prying ears. In contrllt to previOUI
retired U. S. Air For:ce Captain who
Somehow this man, no stranger, contenUous sesalona, this -bly ~·
piloted combat bombers and pursuit
always subdued the hoatler ,. . ,was subdued aa matters of rouUne w
aircraft in the Mediterranean
~led lnjusUy of Tory leanings.
were dlspoaed of. Many an1loua eara ~
Theater of War In World War II.
Perbllpe he was awed· by the green were tuned more to the sowld llf '"
silk scarf whi~h only parUaUy hooves than to the buzz of vlcloua
The story bel9w hill.appeared In
other publications outside this area
concealed the rider's face. Too, horseRies attacking the delesalll ..
and' is being reprinted here - with
rumors or revolt against the Crown from the stables nearby.
circled about lliis man. Bad for
The Congress, resolved Into a .:
minor additions by the author .with Mr. McKean's permission.
business. But so was the, King .
committee of the whole, reaumed ' ·
Readers are advised that the ·
The rider reined the horse to an the dlscusalon be&amp;un on Monday of
similarity.-ln names of one of ·the
easy lope. George Read could not be' Richard Henry ~·s Independence "
characters in the story, Thomas
censured, he thought, refreshed now resoluUon of June 7, and polllloned
McKean, delegal.e io the Second .. by the staUon slop. Read was an until now to achieve unanlmltv.
Continental Congress from the
Today, on , the day 01 fateful
honorable man; too cautious
. coiO(Iy of Maryland,. and the author
perhaps, but a patriot nonetheless. decision, that vital unanimous "
of the article , Is not a colncide"hce.
One who could not perceive that agreement was threatened by the ,,.
sometimes conservative men must, posltlon of the Delaware delegation •";
THE RIDING MAN
with jusUce, act radically.
- one for, one against, and one · -•
By John A. M&lt;Kean
The rid.er? A forty«ven year absent - the rider.
For a long moment jagged • old bachelor, gifted with modest
DrummiDR hooves sounded on
wealth and a keen mind, disfigured the cobbleatoned street. A sUr, and
fingers of lightning danced between
the fearsome, grumbling thunby nature and loathsome face Thomsa McKean, the friend and ~
derclouds and exposed the lone rider
cancer whi~h would kill him in a few fellow delegate who had summoned
and his lathered mo110t on the
years. He had rejected advice to him, rushed o~t to .greet and Inform
battered road, just yesterday a
seek surgical treatment In England: · the rider. The vole was being taken .. snaking line of dust but now a
a principle held him In the saddle The exbllusted patriot, erect and ..
. gleaming, ugly quagmlre. The horse
that fearful night. .
calm, strode Inside to proclabn; ,.
had long since setUed to his galt, a
He ignored the vety real danger . "Caesar Rodney votes l'lelaware for ...
fast walk, which bore his master
from sea ttered renegade Indians but independence."
...
steadily past quiet unlighted farmhad noted casuaUy Colonel CoUins'
When Rodney1 broke the tie be·
steads and storm-tossed virgin
majestic home - Belmont Hall -:- tween Delaware's Read and ~
forests.
·
near Duck Creek Crossraada. A McKean, the ~ Resolution was
The horseman rode hunkered
general of militia, he was senior to adopted unanlmoWII)tly each slate's ·~
beneath his sodden tricorn bat and
Col. CoUins, now in the field with majority ·vote, ex~pt New York ~
inunense cape, 01J occasion spurring
General .Washington facing invasl.on . whose delegates abstained tem·
lighUy, only enough to keep his
by General Howe's Brilish army In porarlly for lacl! of authority. ~ · ,
mount on the bit; He knew the
New York. fie Oed through Cant· Thomas Jefferson's declaration "
animal was doing well under the
well's Bridge on Appoqulnimlnk would be sifted, amended, and
conditions but, at daylight, the pace
Creek toward the tavern .on St. adopted two days.hence. Signatures ' ,
would have to quicken. Time was
George's Creek. It was the King's to the· final document would be af· ;;:;
precious and the road long.
Highway - aD the way.
fiXed days, months, even years,
He'd had no sleep. The messenger
A trace of gray, steaming dawn later. John Adams believed July 2, .
had btought the alarming news In
brushed the towering clouds; and he 1776,sllould and would be the U. S. ...
late evening as he prepared to resl
spurred the horse to a splattering, National birthday. But the delegates '"
after a tiresome day spent
mud.flinging gaUop. By the tavern . to the Continental Congreas were
recruiting men and support for the
at Red Lion Creek a porUy, strident cool, deliberate men. The entire
impending struggle. This man,
cock ·loudly proclaimed Tuesday, · process must be completed to nail ·~
whom John Adams described as
July 2, tn6, and the traveler down independence, and that end "'
"taU, siel)der; pale, a face no bigger
prodded the failing beast into New was achieved on July 4, 1776.
than an apple ; butfuU of fll'e, spirit,
Castle on the Delaware .
Such a 81i1UP of men had not
and wit," was accustomed to
His compatriots were break· assembled since the Golden Age of .u
responsbility. His duty was clear :
fasting . in PhUadelphla wblle he Greece. It Is unUkely that such a ••
get to the city inunediately. No
exchanged mounts at New Cas~. magnificent group shall assemble
carriage trip, this. It would be 86
They engaged i!l committee again. Their minds altered the
tortuous miles of primitive road
meetings as he rushed across ~ourse of human history. And ••
through colonial Delaware Christmaa Creek toward Robinson Caesar Rodney, an uncooquerable
Pennsylvania's "Lower Three
House. The delegates to the Second . · mail, but historically obscure,
Counties."
Continental
Congress were played a mighty role for freedom.
NO

the equipment, iDcluding two
mobile h(ll)el, a boat, .farm
tractors, bulldozers, lumber
and OODIItnlctillll cables, In an
iliOialed clearing in the hills
near Warsaw in Calllocton
County.

" ''

Convention is costly extravaganza_

NEW YORK (UPI) -The mous without you," Daley
Certer Ia acting more ~esl·
"1.18
milliOn
In
federal
funds
·
·d
dentlal
every day. He oow
•
sa1 •
for financing the Democratic
hu a court lllenographer
National Convention this Morris Udall, flashing his making an official rec~rd of
week Is only the tip .of the weD-Imowil wit, drew laughs aU his pubUc utterances.
A · spoke&amp;man said the
iceberg. It dom't count such at a news conference here
t,bqs aa paying for 10,000 about . 110me chitchat In the record wsa being kept so
chicken !ega and wings.
.cloakrooln of the House of ttansct'IJU could be Issued to
TNIOAI. r SIHTMl
Also
not
Included
are
the
Repcesentstives laat · week. the press - just like at the
DfVOTUi ro ,..
_,OL_
cost of the Secret Service He said some "olil timers" White House.
MfHU-MAION AtfA
guanlng 140,000 credentials, were recalll~g that Rep.
Dfi'SJDL TA......U
Bedroom notes at · the ·
one
telephone for every three Wayne Hays of Ohio bad been
•••. 14.
people at tbe coovention, a mililani bawk during the Democratic National ConCltyl41tw
venUon:
PWIIthH •nr _...,, ..,....,. .... .rentln2 and refurbishln~ Vietnam war and that they
"""'Ohio
P:w61 ' ' I
. . Madison Square Garden and had alsays told biro "make
Carter il staying In the f'/50
.m c-rt 11•• ~ . ON. u1". the New York City pollee love, not war."
suite
at the Americana Hotel
h•h~Oflld ..._
" t.11tt..
force.
Wt...-1"-tft·IU7.
"WeD, he finally tried it where John F. Kennedy alefll
'""""' ct.. ,...... .." ..
~n Congreu decided the and now they want to run him
when he was in town. The red
' - o y. OW..
..., ...... .._..Wftt ,.,......,.,1.. govenment would pay lor out of Congress," UdiU said,
canopied bed waa uaed In the
Ww4l • Orltftth c....-r. -- ....
the conventions, they set ref~ to the E~th film "The Godfather... and
tU..III ..... 0.1...... IM• .• 1S7 ~
f;ll.lS
million as the legal Ray sex scandal,
ha~ also IJeen Used by Frank
.,.~-, "·'·,·"·
..:
.,_.,.,
limit for the party's con·
Sinatra and Jerry Lewis.
c.rr.......... ...u.w. 7J - · · ,...
vention costa. But that only Rocky Pomerance, the
UdaU, who ftnllh second
~ • .,,...Mot« - · · .,,._
-"'~
""-.. ._..,,
covers a fraction of the cost of Miami Beach j'olice &lt;lllef, more often than not in the
N .21 . ... .-IIIII ot.a.• w. Y• .. OM
putting on a national con· didauchagoodjobofkeeplng primaries, Ia ~ In tbe
'-· •n•~t•_..__.,ue;n...
_
..... If. .. I._.._. .....
vention.
•
the peace at the 1t72 "Thunas E. Dewey Suite," of
N~!!r York City put up $3.6 RepubUcan and Dernocntlc
the Roosevelt H!Jtel. It Ia
... """'"" t13.1t: ,....... """'""'· ' '·" ·
.............. P"k- ~ .....,.
million
to
attract
the
convenconventlms
In
h1a
hometown
named
after
another
n..-s.rttlftel.
lion. Molt of the JD0111!Y was that tbe Democrats lired him Presidential contender who
' - - - - - - - - - ' spent renting the Garden aa chief of security for the finished aecond more than a
(almoat $2 million) and convention ln~ew York.
quarter of a century ago.
turning It Into a convenUm
Pomerance h'aa been the
floor (f1.4 milUon).
subject of many Interviews
It was an 111uauai gathering
The gove~~~~tnt gave the by reporters covering pre- In the .offtcea of CIIUfornla
city f2.5 million for added convention actlvtttea anc1 ne Gov.Edmuncl "Jerry" Brown
poUce prolectlon during the said he called his chlldren In Jr., one nl&amp;ht In February,
convent1011.
Miami to tell them he waa Ul'l5.
The New Yok Telephone going to be on televlalon.
All UdaD recaUa it he had
Co. inltaUed a fl mUUoo
"I'll be on tbe Today Show gone to seek the young
· telephone syatem for the - morrow and the T0111orrow governor's IIJIIpol't In h1a
tobacillus) is so thin that dry anvenUon - one phone for 111ow tonight," he said.
oowly 1111ounced race for the
milk powder Is often added to evey three delesates,
·
~
Democratic Prealdentlal
it. That makes I! especlaUy reporters, VIP and gueata. Is Jimmy Carter preparing nomination. '1b!l wu helen
rich in lactose and parThe 10,000 piecel of chicken 111e11 lor .the James Earl Brown 1111ounced he would
ticularly harmful to patients - legs and wings :.... along · Carter Jr. Pretldentlal be a candidate for the
with this problem.
wl th 450 gallons of Ubrary In Plalna, Ga.?
nomination.
I'm sendiot~ you The Health soda pop,
900 gal·
Letter, number 7-2, Milk loos of cold veer, one-half ·
Producls: Good and Bad. too · of· cole lliaw, and a
Others whO .want more In· quarter ton of cold cuta for
formation on this subject can thole who don't like cbleken,
obtain It by forwarding 50 -~ to the party Jimmy
centa and a long, stamped, ~ fllrew Sunday nidhl on
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Glenn said,~ the brief
self-eddreased envelope for .•.Huda.on' ru- pier for the Sen. John Glenn, J).()hlo, - ~ Will be used "to put
mailllli!. Address your letter delegatea.
IMIII't think his keyncte aome of our COIICtJl'lll out In
to me In care of this newsHil c~ will pick up addresa at tonight's opening front to all the paople,"
paper, P. 0. Box 326, San tbe f12,760 tsb for the food. Millon of the Democratic
Glenn, a former lltronaut,
Antonio, TX 78292.
OJnventlon will have any wllllhare the 1t1ynote dutiaa
There Is now hope that Mayor Rlcbllrd J. Daley bearing on whether or not he with Rip. Barbara Jardan,
people Uke you can use low asked the Dllnoia deleption Ia picked aa Jimmy Carter'a D-Tex. Bolli IP"Chet sllould
lactose milk. There II a Sunday to IMJiove Jimmy runniJ!C mate.
..be abort, he aald. ·
·
~nduct called Lact.Ald that Carter
for · president
Gillin, who arrived here
Suntanned and amW111,
you can mil In ordinary milk. unanlmoualy. Among the amday amid speculation be Glenn emer1ed from a
It contslna the enzyme lac· chorul of ayaa tbat foUolled, . Ia amo.ns Carter'• top li!!!Ptf• aalllde lbe bale!
taae that your intestinal ceUs there were four RBYIJ.
. proapeell ail vice prealdent, wbm be and .._, members
lack. The enzyme will IIPHI
"I will not vote to mab .lt aald he diacl-' the"llpeedi of tb{"Qdo deleplllll are
the lactose In the milk before IIIBllimous," declared \'t'ln,. mly "In geaerallerml" with ltaylng amid oealtered
you use lt. I hope you conUnue neba1o County Treasurer. Carter during their meeting applause and 101ne ahouta of
to do well and am dellg~led DouliU Aurand, a Jerry 1ut Tlatraday in Plainl, Ga. "bey, 'VIce prtlidslt" and
with your progress.
· Brown iiUjJpiN'ter.
Carter
made
no ''aU the way."
·"'P*I we'll make it unanJ. IIIUIIIionl on the remarl{i, 11-

--l(H

v....,.

..

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

....

~f

..

.,.

...........

~

Doctor's advice ends problems
•

'
•

lXI

after posling f2,500 bond.
Authorities found most of

c

Fidrych gets nod for AL All Stars

...

A Sort of Journal

......

"We had our visit and wtien
I came . back · through t1ie
waiting room who's sitting
there but Jimmy Carter'."
said Udilll. "As tt turned out
It was the only time I got In
first ahead of Carter," 'he

..

added.

..... ,
J•

...
'

REVIEW URGED
CLEVELAND (UPl) ~
Democratic · congreui&lt;lllll
candl~~&amp;te Mary Rose Dakar
has urged the Public UtiUtlell
Commlaalon of Ohio to
conduct an adlnlnlaraU'I'e ·
review of the llteat rate
lncreue ,granted the OhiO
Jlell Telepllone Co.
•
Mill Dakar, a aevemna
City Council member~
Sunday said "the PUCO
board haa been remlu iD
awarding Ohio Bell the
outlandish rate iDc:rellt .D
She aald llhe would "Ialii
other legal actions" If tbitl
PUCO rllfules to conduct the
adrnlnlatraUve review wttiiiR
the next two weeb "In ali
acC8111ible locallm to thli

consumer." Mlaa 08ltar aaJO

lhe would be joined In bl!f
flsht by other unname'

consumer groupe.

•
. "Our conaumer-actlob
grouprequaat(s) the PUCO tp
vote favorably for an
adrnlnlatrative review of thli .
rate Increase within tbe nelt
two weeki before legal me~Jt
are otbenrlse aought, "· . . .
said.
.-

·Sport Parade
I)' MILTON RlaDSAN
\}PI SJIII'II . . _
· ,
·
•··: PffU ,pLPHIA (UPI\- There wis a tlmnhen you could
.. ~· CIIll builiiD'allftlll All~ pme ~ apectacl~ and nobody
. •would lii1J8h, II WJed to be an Intensely eiciting; easerly
· :· anticipated event tbat not ooly fascillllted the farw, but a1ao
.'; had lilnlflcant appeal for the plsyen and managers,
· .~ That waa way back, more than a quarter century aso; when
• ' theAll..stargamebadaomerneanlng,aomesenulneiUbstance
· ··: to It, when everybody could relate to Carl Hubbell strllllng out
.;': Babe Rulli, Lou Gehrig, Jimmie FOD, AI Slmm0111 and Joe
· ·:,'Cronin In IUCcellllon, and to Ted Wllliarnll rattUng one of Rip
·.~Sewell'• ''eeplll8" baUs five rnUes downtown for a Utanlc
' 'l "
horne nlfl .
.:· Somehow mCilll of the crama has dlaappeared from the All.:;Star game, and with It, much of the Interest as well.
·:. lluebaD'a beauliful people, the very belt perfonners It bas
·;,to oller, wiD be showcased for the whole ,.lion to ogle at In
." \OIIIor~w nlght'a All-Star con.telll here, but about the ooly ones
,'.left who take the game even half4eriou.lly any more are the
· ·.'.farw. Certainly the PlYel\.don't, nor do any of tbe managera
·~who aren't directly Involved.
. .
··:· "To me, It'&amp; a great big nothing," says Billy Martin, ~
.. Yankee's manager. "It doesn't prove a damn lhi!l8. All it
:.amounts to Ia the two league ~esidenta trying to outdo each
: other.
·: "The All.Star game doean't represent a team effort. It's only
~·a bunch a Individuals pushing their own abiUty, and the guy
,.who pushes least II tbe pitcher. He's got noi!Jing to,gain by
'; puahlng.lf you're out there pitching for the All-stars Tuesday
•; night and you know you're son,. have to start for your own
Thursday, are you lliXI,. bust your back?"
" Yeara ago, yes. Today, no. That's why All-Star games today
' · .:; aren't what IIIey were years ago.
.' Billy Martin won't be here for tomorrow night's AD.Stsr
· , ·game. Neither will the majority of other managera, most of
. :, whom wiU be back home relaxing ..
· · Martin never cared to take part In tbe All-Star game during
::', his acUve career,moat ol which he spent playing second base
, ·~ for the Yankees under the late Casey Stengel.
,~· "Casey would alwaya say 'who wants to go?"' Martin
;. • remembers. "Some of the guys like ·Gil MacDougald, Bill
:.','Skowron and a couple of the others wbo hadn't been picked
.: 'wouldaay they'd like to go, bull never wanted to.
·
· .:: "NeWe Fo.x always beat me out for the All-Star game. I'd
· •ftnllh secmd to him alllhe lime. It dum 't bother me. I always
:','admired him. He waa a helluva competitor." · ·
·
::: Flnall):, Stengel made Martin go to an All-star game In 1956.
.~ ''Calley said to me, 'you never been to one. Y911 gotta go,'"
·:,Martin remembers,' "So I went to Washington all(! sat on the
• bench most ofthegame.lgot to hit only once and grounded out
.~'to Roy McMillan, my buddy."
,
~.~ Although the All-Star game has Uttle or no appeal at aU for
·;,Billy Martin, he concedes It's still a fine vehicle for the fans
·:,because It's like a big holiday outing for them.·
., He says it's also a great thing for tbe players' pension fund,
· ,',which derives revenue from the All-star game, and for such
· . ,'j\11-star flrst.timera as the Twlna' Butch Wynegar and his own
,:,MICkey Rivers.
. ·
•; "For them, It's super,'' says Martin: "Everyone ought to be
·•.in an All-Star game at leaat once."
.
'..-JUven Ia only me of six Yankees on the American League
squad. The others are pitchers Jbn ''Catfish" Hunter and
Sparky Lyle, catcher Thunnan Munson, first baseman Chris
OJamblisiJ and pitching coach Bob Le111on, serving as
honorary captain of the American LeaguerS. Lemon Is to be
,IIJIIucled Into baseball's Hall of Fame at CoopersiOWJi, N.Y.
next month.
·
· ':'Rookie second baseman Willie Randolph also was to have
. :1-epresented the Yankees In the game, but he was scratched by
;ft,klle!! Injury.
.
· ::: With the Yankees 9-'&gt;11 games ap In the American League
·l!last, Billy Martin could be managing the All-stars this time
next year. ''If lever manage In an All-star game, I'll manage
the only way I know and !hat's to win. But I Still say the All·
.Star game Is a great big nothing. It doesn't prove that one
league Ia better than the other, only the World Series proves

.::team

that."

r-------..
·: HOW.,·

;;'CINCINNATI (UPI) -The baD took more than a ltUie of
· ·.eloclty of Don GulleU's fast· the sting out of the loss to the
Pittsburgh Pirates.
"If Gullett's as sound
physically aa he looked today,
'.' ~..fture
. then we can open up a vacant
l ~
. .4, . lot between us and the Los
. ·1 ,
Anceles Dodgen," said
·~
'
~
pitchin1 coach Larry
" ·
· " Ia your
Shepard Sunday after the
.
car lnaurance
Reds dropped an ~ decisi~X~
..
· cover111ie?
to the Pirates.
·•
Gullett was making his first
Ytvt p&lt;- ...., IMj
atart
aince ·June 20, when he
"
departed
with a 10re left
"
shoulder
after
being rapped
lll JOUf ,...;auld• , _
for nine .hl.ta and four runs
while pitching three Innings
.. CIII:
against the Ph1111es.
During the Interim, he
P. J, PAULIY
Pitched only one Inning In
104 w. Mllln. "'mlror
reUef, and that was last
,
PH.fft-2111
Tuesday qalnat Montreal.
"All far ul'm concerned
"
.
NA110NWIJI • said
Shepard,
"GuDelt's
·
INIURANCI
'
,........_..,.._, tbrowtnc was the only good
thing about today's game. A
;; ""='C'.;;:I:"' guy
can 'I posslbly throw .as

. _,
1..

_...,.....""_
_..,..,_ ....

----

tJ

·--..
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:
••• ••
••
•••
••
'FRIDAYTIL .B ::

! .t •••Mon., Tues., Wed,
. •••.
~
•·~ ·
noon
•

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;:.
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...
..
•. .
!·•.· ···••••••· . :
. •....•..•.•............

.; ,

t

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8:o0ti15:00

Thursday 8 tll12

11

,:.
~

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Close Sat At 5 p.m.
.

1•
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I&gt;

dNOi.CflliATE . .

RUTLAND

· League In the 47th mid·
summeT ~lassie Tuesday
night at Veter~~~'a Sfadlum.
Jones, the wlnrilngest
pllcher In tbe majors with )6
victories, had previously
been named by manager
Sparky Andenon to star_! for
the NaUonal League. ·
All-Star Game rules
prohibit a starting pitcher
from going ·more than three
Innings and chances are
neither pitcher will have a
dramatic effect on the
· game's final outcome. But no
matter: It's ali Intriguing
matchup and It's the kind of
thing the All.Star game Is

e

~ to be about.

In getting the n&lt;mlnation,
Fldrych will beccme only the
second rookie In history to
start an AIJ.$tsr game. The
f1n1 wu Dave Stenhouse of
Washington, who started the
second All-star game of the
1962 season. Unfilrtunately,
Uuit ~oved lo he the high
point of Stenhouse's career.
·· After posting a 111-4 record
with a 2. 73 earned run
average for the first half of
the 1862 sea9011, Stenhouse
finished theyearwithan 11-12
.

M.

bard as he did Wday If his
shoulder is bothering him."
The Reds pitching coach's
elation,
though,
was
tempered by the memory of
GuUett's June 5 victory over
In St. louis.
.
On tblit occasloo, Gullett,
after being sidelined slnce
May 20 when lie lalled to

.

record. Two years later he
· was gone from the major
lellgues.
Even If he doesn't get a
batter out, though, Fidrych is
hound til please the crowd,
which Is expected to number
more than 60,000 and Include
a nost of notable dignitaries,
Including President Ford. A
hyperactive youngster who
tslks out loud to the baseball
and r\IIIS around the Infield
congratulating teammates
for good . plays, "The Big
Bird", as he is called, has

succeeded In drawing large
crowds wherever he has
pitched this - · His ~2
record and major league
leading 1.78 e'rhed run
average Indicate there Is
nothing flakey about his
ability, however.
Jones, too, has been. something of a curiosity but not
because uf any emoUonal
behavior. The 26-year-old
southpaw, who has · been
attracting from 10 to 15,000
more fans to the park
whenever he pitchea, Is

C&lt;lllldered unique because he
wins without being able _,
lhrow a major leagde
fastball. He Ia a llil*erball
~peci!IUst who seldom walks
a batter and while his pitches
look delectable, betters have
trouble connecting.solldly. In
one game agalnat Onclonatl
this year, All-star Pete llo!!e,
a switchhltter, got up lefthanded against Jones
hecsuae he was bllvlng · so
much trouble with liln from
the right.Jland side of the
plate.

ei gs blanks ·LoWell
··

survive the first Inning
against San Francisco, was
his usual overpowering self In
beating the ·Cards' ~I wblle
striking out eight and waUdng
only one.
The ~year-Gid Reds lefty
picked up victories In his next
two starts after his triumph
over the Cards but wasn't

c .
·

had the only other hils for the

losers ..
The GaUipolis Red Sox won
their second' tournament
game, 12-8 over the Racine
A's. Pacing the winners were
Danny Hennessey with three
doubles; Willie Ward, a
double, Bryan Harrold, a
triple; Tomy Armstrong, a
double and single and Mark
Allen, a single.
Racine's top hitters were
Zane Beegle, a double: Tom
Roseberry, a single; Jay
1\ees, a slngle; Kent Wolle, a
double, Scott Frederick and
Melanie Weese, each a single
and Wayne Lyons, a double
and single.
Middleport's .Braves
scored an easy 13-0, victory .

OFFICE
9:30 to
2 lo- S I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT

•

W '

Nesselroad led at .394, and In those two games, Meigs B81rd and Johnson.
By Greg BaUey
Warming up lor the James, Johnson, Davenport, stole a total of 16 bases.
Arnerlca·n
Legion Calvin Minnis, and Gary M
009 353 1- 12 11 0 MEIGS DROPPED ITS
Swain
were
hot
on
his
heels.
L
0001000-141 season record ~ I~ by
Tournament the last of this
month, the Meigs American M
203 000 0-5 9 0 Huffman and Johnson, loslilg steam on a hot and
Legion Team won three out of L
000030~71 Hamilton (7). Ullman O.P ), muggy . day . and falling to
four .games this weekend,
Glouster In the second game,
Smith (WP J. Baird (5) and Matlack (5) and Loar.
doubiH1 d
t Johnson. Rice and l.osr.
7-4.. Nine walks and three
laking on
a Saturdayea byer the
a
AT SYRACUSE ON Meigs
errors
helped
·Lowell
scores of &amp;.3 and 12-1, and
In the second contest, SUNDAY, Meigs started the Glouster. Meigs took a quick
splitting a pair with visiting Meigs took the lead In the day off right by whipping lead_by plating a run In each
Glouster on Sunday, tsklng third and again didn't Glouster 7-1 In the lirst of flle first two lnnnlnga, but
the first game · 7·1 and relinquish it as right-hander contest as Baird went the the visitors came back with
th
d 7-4
Brady Huffman went aU the distance, striking out six and two In U!e third on a walk, a
dropping
e
seton
·
In the first game Saturday, way for the victory. He walking just three. In the first single, and fielder's choice, ·
Greg Smith picked up the win fann ed ei~ht and walked with two outs, Mike Nessel- and an error on . the rlgbi
. wt had to have some help seven, and along with that rosd gave the home town fielder.
from Steve Baird In the fifth fme performance of Greg · boys a quick 1.0 lead as he
Meigs regained the lead by
when LoweD scored all their Smith in that first game, stroked a double and getting one In the fourth when
runs. Meigs was never pleased Coach Nesselroad; scampered home as Glouster _James singled, stole se&lt;:!)lld,
headed as they plated two In since the tournament Is so cotrunitled two errors on the and came aU the way home
thefirst on a Brent Jolmson near.
'
play. But the visitors tled it In from second on a ground out
single, a double by Mike
Meigs plated . three in the their ball of the third.
to the shortstop. But then
Nesselroad, and a run- · fourth and that was all they · But Meigs took the lead for. came the disastrous fifth
~oduclng single by Mick needed. They got those on good in the bottom of that when Glouster got three runs
Davenport .
· singles by James and Minnis, Inning when Johnson led off on two walks, a double, two
They opened up a five-run an error on the left fielder, a with a walk, and Brian singles, a fielder's .choice,
lead In the third when Nessel- double by Terry Wall, and a Hamilton followed with a run- and a ground out.
road singled, Davenport run-producing ground-Gut by scoring single. • Nesselroad
There was a mcxnent of
·reached on an error, Greg Mark Mitch.
then poked a single that sent excitement In Meigs' last at
James singled them both · They got live insuranCe · Hamilton home, and Nessel- bat . when with \he ba$es
hbme, and James later runs in the nell frame on road came home on a ground loaded and two gone, John
scored on a ground out.
singles by Davenport, Baird, out.lt was all over In the fifth Sayre slanuned a long drive
Johnson and Nesselroad and »omer Smith plus three when Meigs ,plated three on Into left field thl!t was snared
each had a double and single walks, ' a ground out, and a three bases on · ball, a by the fielder In a roiUng,
10 pace the way, and Daven- fielder's choi&lt;;S. In the sixth, fielder's choice, and a two- diving catch.
port bad two singles. James, with Nesselroad and James run double by Gary Swain. . James bad two singles In
Bill Metzner, and Baird each aboard, Minnis unloaded with Nesseiroad again led · the that game, Minnis a double,
chipped In with a stngk. As of a long homer that put the attack In that game with his and Johnson a single. Meigs
Saturday, Meigs had six game out of reach. Minnis led double and single, Hamilton will host l.Dgan at Syracuse
hitt~rs batting over .300. the hitters with that homer had two singles, Swain had on Wednesday.
and a single, Wall had his his double, and Baird and G
002 030 2-7 5 2
double, and
Johnson, Johnson each had one single. M
llO 101 o.-.4 4 3
·Davenport, Nesseiroad, Mitz. G
1101 000 0-1 5 4
Gardner and South. James.
Io:i 030 x- 7 7 0 Smith (3), Huffman (4),
Don Sutton picked up his ner, James, Baird, Huffman M
ninth victory with three and Smith each had one hit. Echstenkamper and Poston. Johnson (5, LP), Baird (7)
and Metmer.
innings of one1un relief.
Braves 9, Meta 8
Willie Montanez drove
home six runs, including a
three-run, two-out double in
the eighth Inning to bring
Atlanta from behind to
victory. Tbe six rbi gave
Montsnez nine for the fourgame series.

qliite so impressive. Then
came his ill.faled appearance
against the PhUs June 211.
11
So/' said Shepard, 11l'm
eager 10 see how Don does in
his next two or three
starts."
· Wildness was Gullett's
downfall Sunday. He issued
four walks,, and all came In
th.e fourth lnnillg. Two of
them, one to Dave Parker
and another to Tommy
Helms, came with the bases
loaded.

•

•

.

.

LEXINGTON, Ohio (UPI ) . when he passed Inside of
- Marty Smith, a poweiiully Hannah, who tried to regain
built 19-year-Gid from San the lead but ran into Smith's
Diego, Calif., gave a lesson in bike and tumbled off the
motocross ra cing to the course. In the second molD,
Europeans · Sunday with a Smith passed Hannah just
crowd-pleasi ng victory in the after the start-flnlllil line on
$19,540 U.S. Grand Prix for the 14th lap. Hannah, In
125 cc motorbikes at Mid· desperation to catch up,
Ohio Moto Pa1·k.
failed to negotiate a turn and
The Europeans, who have lost more than 10 seconda to
traditionally dominated the Smith.
sport of motocross racing, ' Smith, with two firsts,
took a back seal to Smith and moved Into second place In
two other American riders. the world 125 point standings.
Smith, who set motocross However, Gaston Rahier of
history here a year ago when Belgium placed fifth In the
he was the first American first race to gain enough
ever 10 win a 125 Grand Prix points ·to capture his second
event, won the overall tiUe straight 125 championship.
Sunday with two fitst places
Hannah, with two seconds,
in both grueling 40-lninute was runnerup overall. Grossi
motos In 90-llegree heat. His was third overall, foDowed by
main opposition came from YoShifumi Sugio of Japan,
Bob Hannah, a 19-year-Gid with an eighth and a fourth In
rookie from Whittier, Calif., two motos.
and Bill Grossi, San.ta L'ruz,
Steve Wise of McAllen,

veteran !:~~~~s:'~~thk':~:
SmithandHannahgave the was sixth-place Jlri Churavy
·crowd of better than 30,000, of Czechoslovakia with an

•

.•.

Smith scores
•
motocross wm

·3 more teams move
•
K
up m
. tournament .~~~~:a!~~r"lld
.

.

two, splits with Glouster

iD losing

~

RUTLAND PUINITURE . :

t,'i 742-2211

colorful 2J..year-Gld Fidrych

to art againlt the' Na\ionll

By KEN ROSENBERG oo the verge of Sllch .a
UPI Sporta Writer
transformation, thanka to 23While the Philadelphia y e a r • o.l d
J oa q u In
Phlllles and Cincinnati Reds (pronounced Waakeen J
look""
,.,.· at Tuesday night's AU- Andujar,· who last year
Star game to the gUtter and appeared to he well on his
glory of the playoffs, the San way to becoming li career
Franclaco Glania and the minor leaguer, never having
Houston AatrOII try to turn woo more than eight games.
their springs of despair Into
On Sunday, Andujar
the summer of hope.
scattered nine hits to pitch his
The future for thoae two · third shutout of the seallOil
National League alao rana and give the Aatros a 1.0
looked brighter &amp;lnday when victory and a four·gl!me
a pair of young rlght-hand!!rs sweep of tbe Montreal Expos,
came up with outstanding helping Houston move to
•-u game of third
pItchi ng performances as within One ""'
both the Giants and the pllce.
Astros scored shutout . In other NL games, Phlla·
victories.
delphia blanked San Diego 3Ed,Hallclti, a 6-foot-7 side- 0, Pittsburgh outslugged
arming fastballer who Cincinnati 8.1, Los Angeles
appeared to be on the raiDed by St. Louis 9-6 and
threshold of greatness when AUants edged New York 9-8.
he pitched a no-hitter against Pblla 3, Padrea 0 the New York Mets last , Greg Luzlnsld broke up a
season, hurled a two-hitter in scoreless pitching duel with a
San Francisco's :z.o· victory three-run double In the siXth
over the Chicago Cubs.
Inning to help Jim Kaat gain
It completed a renaissance his ninth victory and Philaof sorts for Halicki, counted · delphia maintain its l~ame
on by manager Bill Rigney to lead over Pittsburgh In the
he ooe of the malnatays of a NL Eaat. Luzinsld's blow
heralded pitching staff. that followed ari infield single by
was supposed to help the Dave Cash and bunt singles
Giants challenge Cincinnati by Larry · Bowa and Mike
for silpretnacy In the West. Schmidt. Kaat aU.,W.!d nine
Instead, Halicki lOili lieven hits in pitChing his 29th
of his first eighl decisloos and career shutout.
Rigney threatened to send
him to the minors unless
Dodgen t, Cards I
things changed quickly. .
Reggie &amp;nith hlg\ilighled a
"EarUer In the season I
seven-run,
seventh inning
didn't have good stuff,"
with
a
three1un
homer, his
Halicki said aner raising his
third
In
as
many
games
record to S.ll. "Coach Frank
against
his
former
Funk helped me shorten my
stride, worked on my slider teammates, as Los Angeles
and I buUI up \ny confidence. wiped out a five-run deficit.
I don't worry what happened Bill Buckner had a two-run
double In the Inning. St. LOuis
the last time out."
Rigney can ~X~iy hope his took a S.O lead on a 110lo
Giants, currently mired In homer by Keith Hernandez, a
last place, can turn things three-run homer by ex·
Dodger Willie Crawford and a
around like HaUck!.
MeanwhUe, lhe Aatros are solo homer by Bake 'McBride.

Point Pleasant's Peoples
Bank, the Gallipolis Red Sox
and Middleport's Braves
captured wins Saturday 'night
at the 1Mh annual Kyger
Creek LitUe. League Tournament.
·
In tbe opening grnae, Point
Pleasant's Peoples Bank
:lumped the Pomeroy
Yankees, 10.2.
Steve Porter led the ·eight·
hit attack with a double and'
slngle. Ronnie Cremeans got
two singles, Tony Gooclman
hit a double, Torn Jordan
tripled and Mike Ohlinger,
doubled.
Pacing the ,. Yank attack
were Roger Kovalchik with a
double and single. Ronnie
• Rlcharda and Mike Whitlatch

.

Johnson, manager of the
American League, named the

Giants, Astros
could move up

·~GuUet . lo()ked · good

..• .

Glenn, Carter discuss keynote

By F:RED MtlHANE
UPISportaWriter
PHILADELPHIA (UPI J It's the kind of pairing tbat
Arch Ward bad In mind for
IU "dream game" when he
founded the All-Star anteat
In 1933 aa part of the &lt;lllcago
World's Fair.
'
Rindy Jooea vei'IUI Mark
Ftdrych.
What better matciJip could
there be lban baseball's two
111011 exciting pltchen and
biggest gate attractlon8 of the
sea8011sllowlng their·tltufiiO
the guys in ·the "other
league" before the President
of tbe United States and the
largest All-Star Game crowd
In more than two decadea?
That oonfrontstion became
olllclal Sunday when Darrell

•

. ,

..

" If is wise not to seek a

secret and honest not to
reveal i1 ,' 1

f

It' s a wis~ person who.
seeks the very best in

savings without sacrificing
value. Sh9pping with fh e
" FRIENDLY
the answer .

ONES"

is

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK

·
·
The Department Store of
over RuUand's Reds. Leading largest
ever
see a race
at eighth and se:e:n:th:.:pla:ce:.
Mid-Ohio,
twotoexciting
duels.
the Braves were Jeff Hannah. held the lead through
Wayland wlth .a double; J~ most of both races , only to
Boyer;a triple; Rick Ebers- have Smith overtake him at
badJ, two' singles.
,.
the end.
Wayland hurled a thre.e- , Smith captured the lead in
inning no· hi Iter .
tile first moto on the 12th lap,
For Your Winter

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GARMENTS

We will dry clean and store. Pay for in the
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I
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. ·f'ur

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Let's folk Soon

DALE C. WARNER

ROBINSON'S CLEANERS

101 W. Main

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POMERO~ '

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' -.

�...

..

t

...
•

,

.

'4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmteroy, 0,, Monday , July 12, 19'16

Aaron's '754th homer
.drops Rapgers; 5-4·
.
'

Oakland drub~ Clew land, a third lmlng single aa the
9-3, and Baltimore stopp:ed Red SoJ: climbed liack to .5011.
California , 3-l.
FergliaOn Jenkins, U, went a
Yanliel'tl s, WhHe So&amp; 0
1-3lnnlngslocthevlctory'and
Oscar Gamble's towering was r~placed by Jim
twiH'Un homer backed the Willoughby wben Craig
three-hit pitching· of , Ed- K11.1ick hit a two-run slngl~
Figueroa as U1e Yankees for · Minnesota In the nlnth.
continued Utelr mastery over Tlpn I, Royall S
the White Sox by beating
Rusty Staub grounded a
them for ninth time iD 10 tw~alngleupthemlddleto
games Utls year, Gamble's '8COI'e Jobn Wockeiiuss from
homer, which came after a third baae ln the 12th Inning
second-Inning leadoff walk to enabllnc Detroit to slow
Graig Nettles, landed in the Kansas City's runaway effort
last rows of Yankee over second place Texas in
Stadium 's rlghlfleld the AL West. Wlth the score
bleachers . Figueroa, 1~, , Ued $-5, Wockenfuss began
allowed only singles and the 12th against loeer Stew
struck out four in pitching his Mlngorl with a walk and
third 1976 shutDut
advanced ·oo a sacrifice and
Red So1 1, Twins 4
. an infield sl'llUilCklut.
Fred Lynn belted a solo A's I, lnl!lau 3 ·
homer .and Denny Doyle
Majer league atoldl baae
knocked in a pair of Nils with · king Billy Nortb swiped

By BILL MADDEN '
UPI !lp4!rll Writer
II wu a scene right out of
that giorlous, tieer-soaked
penruutt year of 11157. Hank
Aaron stood there grandly,
.basking In the cheers of some
28,000 Milwaukee fans after
another dramatl~ game·
wlnnl!tg home run.
Even If the unifOrm, the
team and the situation jVere
different, the delirious
Milwaukee fans sensed the
slgnlllcance of N!ron's oneout, loth-Inning hcmer which
gave Ute homewwn Brewers
a Sot victory liver the Texas
Rangers aoo a sweep of
SUnday's doubleheader. So,
too, did ba!ll!ball's all-time

..

borne run king.

.

"The bome.nm I hit In 1957
, against the St. Louis
Cardinals, whlch. won the .
pennant was my biggest thrill
bere," said Aaron. ·"But I'd
. hive to say this one ranks
eecond." .
Aanlll'l homer. his ninth of
the season and ?54th lifetime,
came after the Brewers won
the first galile, 6-3, behind the
four-hit pitching of Jim
· Slaton and then raWed to Ue
the nlghlca!l In the ninth
·Inning on ,run«qrlng singles
by Bernie Carbo and Robin.
Yount. ·
The Ba ewa s, still last In
the AL Ea1ll with a 34-44 WOO·
1o1t mark, abo came from
bebln!l to wilt the opener with
a five-run rally in the sevenUt

National LtJ14Ue

G All • II ,.,,

Second hlse tn the first Inning

to set up one run and drove li\
two others as the A's
completed ·a three-game
sweep o(Jhe Indians. North,
who scored three times,
singled h«ne tWo runs in the
second with two 0111. Paul
MilcheU, ~. was the winner
with 3 2-3' innings ofjshutDut
relief from .Paul Undblad.
Orioles 3, ADcela I'
Reggie .Jaclt:Bon drWed a
two-run first lpnifl(! homer
and Terry Crowley singled
borne Kdl Singleton with an
lmurance run in the eighth,
enabltng the Orioles tD best
Angel strikeOut ace Nolan
· Ryan. Ryan, 7·10, fanned IZ
and went the distance,
spacing nine hits. Ex·Yankee
Dave Pagan, 2-3, went 7 2-3·
Innings tD get the win for .
BaiUmore. · ·

Boiling hot sun
greets 58 Beng~s .

WILMINGTON, Ohio
(UPI) - Pat Mcinally
checked Into ll)e sccrching
hot . Cincinnati Bengals
training camp with an air
conditioner and small
refrigerator,
.
"Whew,"the Moot~ liutky
punter and receiver sighed
Inside his stm:stuffy
Inning.
.W ilmington College
Ellewhere In the American donnitory JWm, "I just hope
League New York blinked I'm able to stay at my peak
Clneago, 5-0; BGston put Wring two+days (drills) In
away Ml!lleiOta, 5-4; Detroit an Utia heat and lllmidity."
edged K&amp;!IJIS City, S-5 ;
Outside, huge (6-l, 270

poWlds) Illy Bacul W81 per·
spiril)g f!'eely ~r working
out just a few minutes under
a.reldltless 1111 that PIU'DPed
the lhermiiDtttr above the 90
degree mark.
"I came here needing to
loee about seven poWlds and I
tbiM I've loll about flw
already," g..OO Bacon.
Mclnaily IIIII Baoon were
just two d 58 B«lgal hopefub

strelterq

~ ~

as the National Football
tz.gue team opened its ninth
11111111&amp;1 training ~ in this
fann.rich 110ulbwestem Ohio ·
community, 5$ miles
.... llleUt of Ondnnati.
New · bead coach Bill
Jobnaoo., gf!ting 1U first
cradt .a t the kJp job after
lllilillg ~ _..._ as a
Atqah .....nt andet tl;ae
rec:em.Jy retired 1'1111 Brcnm,
greeted 41 ~ and 17
I ooties to the Clllllp that will

01. 1t. J. $TAEIII 01. fltffAIAN w.lTZ
Ott. K. H. CIIUNQ ,

rfOR252-3181COWCTl
PltiCO CAU

One or Two Day Full Denture •
Service, Partials, Extractions,
X. Rays, Cleaning

cmlhlle ror ~ weeta.
Bat die Bellp.ls' illOIIt c:elelnted III!WtlOIII!t -t-.time
Heisman Tropby . winner
Arcbie Griffin d Qlio.Stlite wm't be bere ror .two mare
. . . . Tbe ~ balft.d[ wbo
hopes to ptll9e that he's big
dlllllllb far Ule pros alreedy is
in tbe College AU.Star
trainng Clllq).
Another JWkie not here
&amp;lnday wu!Gp lhft dioice
Billy Broob, arecen• from

-.·-........-.

~ •. the

_,., Be~al
rotundercontriiCll\ marked
the first time in the nine year
.... """
•- that ·
•UM-.,.. of. ·the· fr·anc..·~
the No. 1 nft pi,ck hid not
.,__. by the time camp
~""""
opened. ·
"We dm't hive any real
cmcerit about .il," assured
Brown, wbo still is general
·te
ht' s
·manager d esp l ·
tdilal)t!lt' frOm· coaching.
"We'll evettually ·cooclude
an agreeinent with Brooks
withrut any trouble."
,.
·
'tho
Catnp also ·opened WI ut
wtA!raulefenSive ~kle Bob
Bro-"•' who will. be .a t Duke
UniversitY's unique " Fat
Firm" llJMiher week ·trying
•· ,~ about Z5 ._. his 300
\ll
'.w ~
ptands. Rooaes Chris Babr
and Kdl Kuhn also 'ftl'e
W""V

abaenl

---

105 ; HIJnter , NY 9.&amp; .

·~.

Te.xas
Milwa u kee

DO l '000 MO--l .&amp; l
100 000 SO K-6 11 0
Blylevon , Hoornor {1), Fou·
cault (1} .and Fahey ; Slaton

earc lerp~o (9), - ~ouc~ult
~,, ~ at.'l:d S·undber.g ~ AVQIJst-ine,

B C COUNT WINS
COLUMBUS CUPil -

·

~

·

l'\

S1 . l.ou is

Chjcago

Morltr,a1

56 25 . 691 -

46 35 -S68 ·10

46 o12 ..523 13'.-2
'36 :4-6 _..J9 "20'11
36 -48 ~29 "21 1 2

25 52 ' :ns
West

·?9 '

W L Pet.

Cinc inna ti
'Los Angeles

san

Diego

Houston

GB

Sl ll .616 ~
47 l9 . 5.. 7 6

.o _..

101r:

.o194
42 .u .All J1
40 45 ..ctJ Jl,n

A!lo~t.nta
San Frandtco 35 S2 .A02 181h

, Stturctay' s ResuH5·
P ittsbufg'h 1 Cincinnat i 1
~ i caoo ·8 San

·

.. Standings

3
.:;;,~:: ~ g,iF.:rni ~ 1
OakJafto 't ...Jeveland

·M~C11y'1

Glmet

LOS Angeles

Francisco 6

cn;cogo

L Pet . GB
50 31 ,617
.eo AO .SOO 9117
40 42 .... 10'12
38 •t .A81 11
n " .m 11

Boston

Detroit

Inflation: ·

Cl~veland

Mltwaukr .

at sea.··

We all know about inflation. Everything costs more than it did
five years ago . .. or two years ago.
·
Still, there are some things we can't do without. Inflation or np,
we've got to go where the natural gas is .. . like way out in the
Gulf of Mexico.
For e~~ple: The rig s,J,,·th I is drilling for natural gas 100 miles
off the \TeXils coast in 500 feet of water. Out there, the physical
problems alone spell high stakes. But look what inflation is.doing:
1967,

1976

Rig COllstruction cost
$14;000,000
$30,000,000
Rlmt.JJ rate per dny
15,000
25,000
The numbers are big. Here's an example that's easier to grasp . .
Common 9%" well casing (pipe) cosi $9 a foot six years ago. Today
it costs $19 a foot! At an average depth of 11,000 feet, this means
$110,000 more prr wtll.
.
If gas is found out there, it'll take four to six years, working1round
thr dock, before the gas can be delivered to your home. If inflatipn
isn't brought under control, think what six years 'will do to our gas
~~

I

.

lA

W

California

u

west ·

Konsas Cily J · St
Texas
..,.
· Oaklond
&lt;•
Minnesota
39
Chicago
• 37

.o1J6

Ohio

·--- ~

000 001 701-9 1l 0

St H~~!. Ra~~s\:0 ~~ 1(17 ~ A Public SerVice of 1lis Newspaper &amp; 1l1e ~rtising Council
end Rodri~uez, Yeager (1J ;
·
·

L. Pet .
31 .622
38 .SJ7
;1 .511
U .o110
45 .451

GB
7
1'112
12 h
1&lt;

Sunc~tv's Rtsulls
BOston 6 Minnesota A
Detroit 6 Kansas City 5
Milwaukee 6 Texas 3, lst
MllwiJukee 5 Texas o1, 2nd, 10

lnni~s

Biggest S.le Ever

•

aJid returned home.
.
Which 1tr1np up a question:. oow can. people avoid .beinl!
IUCIIed into the lanlltlcal kinds of rellclon.lhat appeal so much
to the young? I'm nat an athellt, but !get scared wben my klda
atartlhowlng Interest ln IIO&lt;alled Cltrlatlan grqape:Then.I feel

-

gullten•t there guidelines ldda CGUid follow so they'd be
wa$td about •'Children of God," the Moonies, etc.? -

OOMcERNEI&gt; PARENT

.t

!
Dear Concerned: .
ling H ,
Yea, thereareguldeilneaand they bear re-prin • ere s
Bill Starr, president ~ Young Ufe (a safe and sane
_J

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Look for our Stars lot big uvlnga

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Uke This
17 ~u. ft.
Frost·Proof

I
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-

'·;- .j'
-

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REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER

·-•••••
...

··~

Reel CrOlL

PURSES

1heGoocl/

1f2 PRICE

__...

Neigh~or.

Middleport. o.

•

.
The 11011 of a friend gotjnvolved with the "Moon Children"
·and biB pareots just about went crazy before he came to his
'

Easlwick 19) ond Bench. WP12-21.

AU SUMMER

.,

•'MoOIIles" Raise Doubla

100 -ooo 001 - 2 7 0 Tekulve 11-11. LP·Borbon
000 000 OOil-O 2 1 HR ·PiHsburgh , Ziti&lt;. (10) .

herifaae house
(

I

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I

~e~as born at Olarleston,
F br

11 1945 Ut

:~v~~ ~~~ ~

..:en:
LaR
of N'tr
1 0
Ohlinger
ue
'
formerly of Hartford.
Besides his parents, he
' leaves his wife, Alva Shaffer
LaRue, two SON, Charles and
Shane, a daughter, Crystal
Irene, one brother, Gerald, of
Germantown, Ohio, two
nephews, two nieces, an aunt,
Mrs. Leo (FLorence)Ciarkof
Letart, two uncles, Clifford of
Hartford aro Dallas of San
Monica, California, and
several cousins.
Those from Mason County

In 1972, Sen. George
McGovern of South Dakota
was nominated .as the
Democratic candidate for
president. He was bidly
beaten 1n November by
Richard Nixon.

CElEBRATES BffiTHDAY - Kyle Reed Slndalr ·
celel:nted hll fourth birthday recently at the home li bla
parenta, Mr and Mrs. Lyle Sinclair In Tuppers ~
Refreshmenta were served to Mr. and Mrs. Alba SinClair,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry l&lt;rautter and DarreU, Mrs. ~
Reed aoo Bfenda, t.eann, Crystal, Mrs. Mlalne WeiDel',
Kim, Jaounle arid April, Mrs. Bonnie Krautter, Debh'e,
Jackie, Tom and Gilly Harper, Mrs. Judy Krautter, Mn.
Nancy Arnold, Mrs. Betty Imboden and Amy Eberalllcb,
Mr. 800 Mrs. Keith Krautter, DoroUty aoo Rudy Mu r,
Mrs. Paula Lantz, sons, Danny, Joe and Joi!My, Mn.
Freda Krautter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whaley and - ·
Kenny. Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Nelson, Mr.
and Mrs. Wlnn Blah.

17 YEARS IN MIDDLEPORT

Ingels Furniture
PHONE 992-2635
HOME OF FAMOUS BRANDS

Open Mon., Tues., Wed .• Thurs .• Sat.
9:00 TiiS:OO
SHOP FRIDAYTIL8:00 PM

I

others to go through and take
what they want. One may use
instand coffee and another ~
onlyfreshandsoon. This way
no coupons are wasted.- M.
M.
DEAR POLLY - By lassmy
kitchen sink I kkeep a g h
botUe with a sha er top, sue
llll garlic salt or ~full
grouoo pepper comes tn,
of washing. detergent .
Whenever I have just .a
couple of glasses or a plate or
two to wash, I shake a bit.
this soap on them 800 wash,
rather than filling the whole
sink wit!\ water and soap. MARCIA.
DEAR POLLy .- Often I
I
Uta .
butooyla buncflh of ce ery tatbl•s
ong to tin my vege . e
keeper . I cut off the ends aoo
freeze in small containers to
use later in soup or stuffmg. I
alwaybsl drythemthet leaves and
·crum e
o use tn many
things. - RUTH D . .
DEAR POLLY - My trick
is for emergencies. When you
make up aoo your hair looks
llll If it should have been
shampooed the night before,
try using powder on it.
LighUy powder the hlir and

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·''

Qui11ttan youUt orpnllatl011) has to say:
·
· · Earmarb of a cullllt rellclous group are:
~lion d dlac«d between klda and parents. Some
cultllta come between r.mDy members, to .make ~P
!nemberllllp paramount.
..
'
.
Pt 1 e s · - · 'Ibis nfera either w Ute giving li money
or the totalglmg li Mil, physical or mental. Any organization
tbat den\9001 total, abject devotions from Its members Is
unri!allltlc and dangerous.
.
Work and merit syalems. Some groups require members
to apeiM1 lOng hours aeUing Items or ralalng fundi for the
licklen J)II'IIOIIeli of enrlcblng the organizations - or Its
leaders.
·Prlorlliel. Urglng ~bers tD place organilaU011 values
and (or) actlvlllell above school or work reapo~~lllblllliea. ·
Esciullveneaa. Groupe tbat 1o111t everyone else II wrong
8nd onlY.they hlft the key lo life's meanlilg: theae should be
.lighly ~
..,.., th
· CIIJied aylleml. Will the group a.~""' . e young person as
• per11011-lfhedoe111't accept Its polntm view? •
·· Colnmanlty lavolvement. Doea the ~ cooperate with
dnirdlu In the CIJIIIIDI•nily? If not, or If It clo-.rades other
acceptecl ~~~....... t.chlnp, beware!
. The bard ..0. CoercliJn W!'t Cltrlstlan. Groups 1111ch as
Y..q Life limply offer their frlendlldp, no strings attached.
Parenta llled hlft no worriea about thel!e.- H.

+++

Dear llelell:
. Yoa aCCIIIed a ,wJfe ol "U.U. the phone line as her

to remove aU the powder
(and the oil with it). Your
hair will look good enough w
make it through the day but
be sure to wash it that night.
'Jbis is something the same as
using dry shampoo but much
leu exenslve. - DONNA.
DEAR
POLLY
)Vbenever I buy an inferior
food product, I write direcUy
to the company whose ad·
dress is oo the label. I hive
always received prompt and
courteous replies and usually
coupons I can use to buy other
producl!t. Many times the
coupoos give me tl]e products
free of charge. - IRENB. ·
Polly wUI send yoa oae of
her "peachy" lbank·yoa
cards. Ideal lot fmnlag or
placing ill . your family
aerapbook, H she 11.1es your
favorite Polnler, Peeve or
Problem Ia her column. Wrtle
Polly's Pointers In care ol
his newspaper.

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Property .
·Tra11sfers

.
George R.:.Starcher, Judith
M, Starcher to Herbert
Barker, Betty Lou Barker, .!0
acre, Chester.
Harley E. McDonald Ill
Lloyd Harmon, Juanita
Hannon, .15 acre, RuUand.
John A. Bradford to WUey
H. Byers,lOacres, Lebanon .
Thomas P. Byers, Sarah E.
Byers to Wiley H. Byers,
Lebanon.
,
,
· Viola M. Thomas. Willey,
dec., to Edward K. Willey,
Edward p, Willey, affld. for
trans., Lehlnon.
Edward K. Willey, dec. to
Edward P. Willey, affid. for
trans., Lebenon .

.' ..
1 .

.By now almost eve11:one.kn?~ what a
great resoW'Ce Am~nca has m. 1t:s ~ast c~
reserves. And how Important It IS m making
electricity.
· ·
· But just having th~ coal doesn't make it
electricity.
It has to be n;llned, fl.rst. Then we have
to convert that coal into electricity and get ·
it to your homes arid factories .
Without facilities to do all that, all the
coal in the world wouldn't generate the f'rrst
kilowatt of electric power. The lights ,
wouldn't burn. And the machines that help
us do our jobs wouldn't run.
. Unfortunately, the cost of building these
facilities has gone up drastically. For instance,

bqilding a power plant today costs fl.ve times
as much as it did 15 years ago. And it was
costly, even then.
.
On top of that, building new facilities
takes time. And it takes the cooperation and
understanding of the people who will benefit
from them.
You might say it's a kind of power partnership between you anq us that takes a
realistic approach to the needs of today. And
tomorrow, too. ·
.
· ·
· Without your help and Wlderstanding
about the needs and the cost, facilities may
never get built. ·
·
~
' And coal, which can become electricity,
will just stay coal.

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"&lt;
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r.nures

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Meigs

. •pnNDcal cord." '1'1111 when her husband cilmplalned that she
-"ran to ber matber with eYIII'J problem."
. Hal It ~ to you tbat Mother Is the only one who
~? My dliUI!htn have hlllbandl you "'ouldn't
blllen: .,...1111 Dlllllllera who gi'le them nothing but
traable. Tlllt'" even bnld tile children aplr!at me. And one
of IIIJ p!l ._ biG med 11111 I "talk too much." She would
nmrbaft llld U.lf ber 1w,..m baG~, polloDed her mind.
'1'1111* p iln TMIIIJ- diUihla' lllillCCIIDell to me with
IIIII* •••. I~ tbeanly- abe Cllil twnttln. If II wu HER
knr.llt........, wbo..ttbetllllty letter to you, let him be 011
illlllce: Prllltthe I.Grdii!J danlhter still has me! "-MOTHER STlUitE SE'JTLED
AKRON,~ (t!Pl) -A
WHO~
1~ strike at four Lever
Brothers Co. plantB has been
Dear Mlllher:
!!!! -H.
settled.
.
++~
About 2,100 I!lternaliOIIal
I'BR80NAL to ''llalbinl bat Resreta" ~It's been said that Owlplcal Workera returned
• ......., Ia a WGIIIIJI who bolrdl rap and throln away food. to their jobl today at planll'ln
belllrc )OGtvl with long...,
and remember Balttmore, IAI ~elaa, St.
Looll aoo Edgewatl!r, N.J.
, _ - lthn . . . ....S.- H.
.
.

f

thenb~itTHOROUGHLY

DeBr Helen:

·

beytbu~

.ls S2 .402 18'h

Kansas Clly 7 Delroll 1
Min_nesota ' Boston 2
Ookland 7 Cltvtlond 3
Chicaoo • N!w York 1
Bollln:Jore 5 Collfornla 2

,

Us•••

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Russell Capehart, John
Campbell, Harry MiUer and
Sam Lont!anacre.
Word was received here of
the de&amp;Ut of Donald Vance of
Poplar Bri\IICII, N. C., on June
26 13 ••pm Mr vance was
ba the:,. of Be
. the.1 v
a ro r
ance, a
former resident or New
Haven, bUI whO now resides
at Poplai: Branch..
Lewis Richard Lu~ue or
Shreve, Ohio was killed
Wedneaday evening June 17
in ·a two-car accident about
100 to 150 yarda from hls

.. ..

of:

~iddlepcirt,

Averag~
i&lt;~l:~
R~ults

~~~

magic marker I write the
name of the food and the date
on the carton before puiUng it
ln the lreeier. Once food is
frozen, the containers can be
slacked sideways or upright.
Also gallon p~tic milk
containers can be lillect with
water aoo frozen. This gives
you plenty of ice for blanchifl(!loods for freezing or for
extra ice to go in an ice chest
Slit the sides with a knl!e to
get the blOck of ice out. Also,
these plastic cartons ·can be
cut in half and used for
feeding or watering animals.
_ LOUISE.
i

DAIRY ISLE

Fr:didaire

'" '~r

. 5afurd•y•s Rttults
Milwaukee 3 Texu I

Worse yet, think of Ihe cost of going without natural gas.

. , Minute. An arrangement of
. , lrelh plant material In a line
; IU'rangement. This should
Interpret any event of our
· early period, arranger's
, choice ..Consultant, Mts. Ray
• Proffitt. Blue Ribbon, Mrs.
: Patrick Riley; Red Ribbon,
: Mrs. Lee Gibbs; Yellow
Ribbon, Mrs. Ray Proffitt;
Wldte Ribbon, Mrs. Cheater
Weaver. Mn. P.atrlck Riley
also received the ribbon for
.· tbe· Beat of Show for her
arrangement in this class.
CluB IU - P1011eer1, Ob
Pioneers. An arrangement of
fresh plant material 1n an

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nters

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MarVan
Restaurant ,
Members attending were
Donald F. Roush, Dick Ord,
James Layne, Uoyd Roush,
Ray Weaver, Karl wues,

who atlended the last rites
· hre Mr. and Mrs. WilDe
Grinstead, Mrs. Bill Uevlng
and daughter, Vickie, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Clark, Mrs.
Charles Yonker, and also
1\{rs. Cindy While of Logan,
W. Va.
Captain and Mrs. Edward
M. Brown and son of .'Del Rio,
Teus, have spent the past
tWo weeks vlsiUng Mr. and
Mrs. Dooald (Doc) Ohlinger,
and also Mrs. Brown 's
parenll! at Racine, Ofiio. .
Dl"ight Sayre was a recent
surgical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. aoo Mrs. John Fry ·
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fr~man Roush at
Cleveland, Virginia.
Brent Layne, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Layne, was
among those a!tending Camp
Luther at Cowen last week-.
Homer · Roush has
returned to his home alter
being a medical patient at
Veterlli1.'l Memorial HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Dotson
and family, Usa, Stacey and
Scott, from Florida, are .
visiting Mr. anc! Mrs. Everett
Bwngarner.

~~
tna•tonandcl~-~ ~~taro~~tthe~,M~ri~a~.--------~~=~=~==~==~=~----~=================~
CluB il- A Bicentennial with inas)Ung tape. With !l In a cigar box for the .~

~

Act now during our .. .

W'

Blltimort

Waf,
.tbt;

Anoeles 3

IY United Pren lnternaflon•l
· ·
Enl

N.

heritage or heirloom con·
tatner. Consultant- Mrs. J.
DEAR POLLY- I wonder
V. M~w. Blue Ribbon, whyjroc:ery stores do not put
.._ J V McGr
Red a cttltalner near the entrance
· ...... · •
ew; ..,_ · where coupons not wanted by
Ribbon Mrs William Gl
· Mrs. David
"""• some c11.1tcmers could be put.
Yellow ' Ribbon,
Simonton; .While Ribbon, They ~ould be used by others
Mrs. Velma Roush.
. who use that particular
Clua IV - Our Father's brand. Some people just
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· · ·• ·

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New York·

~~~~

McCiure~s

.(no ga mes Sd"leduled )
Rasmussen , MtGioth_en (6), ,
Tuesdey•• Gtmes
Greif (7) , Forsch (7)--; SOlomon
,l AI J .Sta.r Game--oo · 9emes (7 ), Wallace (8) an.cl Simmons.
·
· schedule-d }·
.
WP -SUtton (9 -BI . LP -F,or~h (3o1 L HRS ·LOS Angeles, Smith
·M,Ijor ·l ..eltut 8.a se.b lll RtiUih (11 ); St. Lou is, Hlltf"nandez (1),
-' By United Press l.ntematiOAII
McBride (3). Crawford (6L
Nttioftll l..eJigue
010 201 031- 111 I
SanOiego
OOOOOOOOG-09 0 PittsbUrgh
108 100 201 - S 122
Pnilede1 phia .000 003 .oox- 3 8 0 Cinc inna ti
Rooke-r . Tekulv~ (7), Reu11
Fr~isleben . MeflQE'f ( 1) and
Kendall ; Kaat (9.Jl and Boone. (81 .md SOnguillon : Gullett,
Borbon 171, McEnaney (8) ,
L P - fr~isfeben U -.5 ·San Fran

An

lan'
"""" P •

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ore l'vzen fiood
in milk COntainer

Skipper Jim was third .
The w inner was driven - in

t1~ilill 11 1 and HHI; Stone.
Suiter 17), Knowles 191, Cole·
New York o1 Atlanta 2
· 1 man J91 and .Swisher, Mitler·
Ameriun Ltll'"
HousTon • NcJotreal 2
wold 191. LP ·Stone (l .t\. HR· Minnesota 101 000 002- 4 10 o
Plliladelphia S San Diego 0. ~n Francts·co. ~tthew1 (11) . Bo&gt;lon
102'020 101&lt;- 6 13 0
1st
·
·
S.ln;er.
Goltz
151, Burgmoler
Philade-lphia 4 San Die;o 2, N&lt;&gt;ntreal
I 000 000 OOil-O 9 1 (8) «td Wyneoer ; Jenkins ~
llld
Houston
ooo 010 oox- n o WilloUghby 191 and Fisk, WP·
Scmc~av~S; Raults
· Rogers 12·11 and Johnson : Jenk;ns CUI . ~P . Sing~ 11·41.
Pittsburgh 8. Cincinnati $
Anduiar (5 -5) and .Herrm~nn .
HR -6oSIOt1 , L'ynn 161.
San Fr&amp;.ndscq "2 Chicago o
ptlilldeiPhia 3 .S111 Oieoo o
Now v or k 020 002 Ooi0-8 8 2 Kan City 000 002 300 ooo-s to 3
Allanta 9 N·e w York ·8
Allonlo
100 000 53x- 9 11 • Del roll 020 210 000 001~ 10 o
Los Angelet 9 Sf . Louis 6
Matlack, Koosman (7) , SeavSplittorff, Pattin (Sl, Mlngorl
Hou.sn,n 1 MonJrell o
er C71. Apodaca lll and (8) and Martinez, Stinson (6) ;
,,., Gamts
HodgH ; Ruthven, MarShall (8) , Ruhle, Grilli 161. Hiller 171 and
4Chtduledl
Oal Canton (8) and Pocoroba , Kimm. Wockentuss (fl . WP ·
dty's Games
Willlams (A) . WP -Oa' Canton HIIIor 18·•1. LP Mlngorl (3·11 . _
(All -Star Game.no games p.t), LP.Apodaca ll·ll. HR · HR·Delrolr. Rodriguez C6t.
scheduled I,
New YO&lt;I&lt;, HoQves C•1 .
Am•r"-;c"'•,:.n"L•"'•:::gu:::e-;5;;::io=ndintt

St. Lou ;• 6 Los

not

symbola.". Thla ·
unacceptable
to
Tal....-.

Thee.

of · - ·

P.oily's .

nese ~ ~ .. mpetelf II:

~ "Olympic,

To.

u-

Pherson ;n tho featured S5,000
pace al sc ;oto 0 owns
Saturday night .

·

N•tian•l Luvue' Sta...invs

;,We were 10 aun of:.
victory,,.. did not iMb . ,: ,
cmtiJI«ency plllla."
:
Lawrence S. Tlnl, ~
delegation leader, ~
"Lord Klllanlll ~
gave In to tennllald down bf
the Canadian ""' wwlil "
This II a lou of ~­
ideala. tt
••
The Canlidlan ~;
wblcb hll dlplo•llc
relltiOIII witb ~ ,_.,(
Republlc of Odna, wu ~
prepll'td to permit ealry ur•
the. Taipei daleptktn If ""
team called lllelf Taiwan 1114
did not lUll 011 n,q II(
national fill or p1aylnl Ill!:
national utbem.
•
Tlte IOC IIIII tba Ceudl•(
government, tbe lint to cbal!:
lenge the IOC'I aatbarltJ.
worked out atwJPiomlae anSaturday wbereb)' the Tliwa::

JULY 17

v ictory by two and one-four·t h
lengths over Jerr';' Mac -

1: 51 2-5 t)y Bred GlrinOton
and pai~ S5.60, SJ.IO and S2.80 ..
Frise:u a '(ll),, Sac:ecki UU, Castro
Eddies Discard and Hon
Jl ' ilnd 'Kosnyer. W"P -Castro ( 2· Car Lith combined for a 5-3

·

··

.

EJ:ecullve would. 10 apbwt.

8 C

Count led oil lhe way lo

the SCOREBOARD

~:;,i i

lll!lll«tliWbaditCeiMfram:
intematimal IIPfll"i lnlua,.
we never beUtftd tW

ntRU

.

,~i:::::::::;.;:::::::::::p:=::::::;:;!~:::=:::r-::::=:~~:::::0~::;:;:~~!::::;:~.:.::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::!:::::::::!:!:!:::;:::::::~~:::.:::::::::~~::::;::::::::=:::~-=~::~

::::

. , aid,
"We wen tabn bJ etl'ilf't
IAI'Jlrile. AIIM the -'!It

.

God,

Haven personals
Social New
.
Calendar ~~;:~v~n~~,w~t~:
~~~~:~~

MONDAY
y ll Ribbon Mr C M
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
e ow '
Whl. s.Rl.:.....: lloolters Moodily a pm. at
Adams, Jr.;
te """''• ligh school. Everyone urged
Mlsa Lelah Jane Powell.
w at~ .
Judges for the ihow were
Mr S A Sa
Mr
•· · · · vage,
s.
nJESDA)'
Ralph A. Scltmltz and Mrs.
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
~ Smlth, an frOm the 461 Tuesday 7:30 pm. All
Parkeuburg area. AI the master ma.wns invited,
COJiCIUIII)II of the judging, the . WINDiNG TRAIL Garden
jUdges and garden club. Cl b 7 30
. Tueaday at
members preae·nt were
u • : p.m.Mr.
h.
b
the home of
s. ancy
served a 1unc eon
Y CoUins. Plant auction will be
the hospitality commit· held. Mrs. Roberl Lewis wUl
tee consl1tlng of Mrs. have a program on .. How to
John , Campbell, Mrs. Tom Enjoy Your Weeds .. and the
Hoffman, Miss Lelah Jane flower arrangement class
Powell and Mrs. Uoyd wiU be "Swnmer Triumph."
Ro11.1h.
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL
NOW
in
progress at RuUand Com·
·
·
munlty Church through July
~oi
18 at 7:30p.m. nightly. The
.
Rev. Raymond .Rice, Byes·
ville, former alcoi!Qlic, guest
r..,
speaker . Public Invited.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1' 30
p.m. We~nesday at !he
AmMiddleporerlcant. Legion ~all in
•.
POMEROY LODGE 1&amp;1~
caMot afford to buy the . F&amp;:AM, special meeting, 7:30
newspapers to get the p.m. Wednesday; all Master
coupons. - W. W.
Masons invited.
DEAR POLLY - My
·
friends '8oo I aU clip "cents
In 1961, 73 Jl!!I'SOilS died In
off" coupons from papers and Ute
crash
of
a
magazl~s. We ~ the ones Czechoslovakian plane In

arrqdlldlt
material In an heritage or
heirloom container. Con-·'Ia t u~ Roy •
Bl
ow n • ......
· -· ue
Ribbon, Mra. Tom Hoffman;
Red Ribbon, Mra. ~ard
Burris; Yellow IUbbon, Mrs.'
Harry Miller; Whl~ RlbboO,
Mra. Herman Layne.
V,- Happy Birthday,
us.Cl1111
A An
of
· ·
arrqemen1
Fresh Plant material
utiiWng a candle or candlea.
Con1ultant, Mrs. Douglas
Miller· Blue Ribbon, Mrs.
.~~.CGIIIIItedRl...._.' ofwerlhee bonJamesMrN. RoulhDa ; HatRedboRlb,.. _,..,....,
_.,,.
• a.
My
Uf;
awardedtotheentranla.Mn.
'~'~lama~ Grinstead and Mr.
Jack Frey both received
· aweepltake'a ribbons and
Mrs. Grlnllead received the
Belt of Show ribbon lor her
en""'
ola beautliul begonia.
.,
In the Artlallc Division the
&lt;'t
following ribbons ' were
VI
awarded.
&lt;lilll I. Boston Tea Party.
•·
•
An arrangement of freah By Polty Cramer
plant material arranged in a
~apot. Consultant, Miss
INFlATION ·FIGifi'ER
Lelab Jane PoweU.
DEAR POLLY - To save
Blue Ribbon, Mrs. Donald on buying contaners for
Smith; Red Ribbon, Mrs . . freezlfl(! foods, I wash and
Harold Bumgarner; Yellow keep all empty waxed mill!
l'ibbol), Mrs. Ray Proffitt; contatners. Mter preparing
While Ribbon, Mrs. Chester food, Ilet it cool and then put

~ ~~~tl

· JULY 12

Cot . McDonald's vs .. Mansfield Farmer' s Bank
Mt . Vernon vs . Smithville

! t st go mel

BYIIU.lLOYDilOUSR .
...... . , _
AD._.__._,
_,..,_.,..ur....,...
.~ow ap0111ored by the
Nelw lht• Garden Qub and
Ra- G--'- Club
tbe .,_
...,..
·-· .. ...,,
,_ held Tuelday 'in the
mwu.,....,_ room of Sl.
Pial Lutheran Olurch, New
. Haven, llnd 'l'&amp;l open;:ID the
public from 2 p.m; to a pm.
Tbe
of the ihow wu
''Of ....... l ." 'ft•'. " u~. Mel
.._ - • ~•
Clark aerved 11 general
cbalrlnaA of the allow with
MU. Lee Gibbs as CO·
cltalrman.

~

,11
J

,

Almost aD the 'pla¥er:s
checked in "Sun:lay
...m.. --''"-a-'
read·! to 01. LP·!f'OUCaUII 17·51. HRS· nightly double WOrth $48.10.
. - - I.:UliU.IWWJ 1 ..,
1
Tuas . Grieve (1}) ; M ilwaukee,
Attendance was 8, 173 and
go. ·
. .
Corbo (11, Aaron 19).
the han~le WI\ $150, 182 . .

New Yor.k

A piece of the energy puzzle.

·

~

.

6- Tbt ~llotttlrei,Mlddleport-~, 0 ., Monday,JuiJ 1%, l9'1S •

bo·ote·d. out · Bicentennial miniflower
d
b
1:
b
·
h
s
ow
s
onsore
c
u
P
of '76 Olympics :.
·····1

SONNY BURGE~\?= .

Wbo
were -in

~il adeJ ptl i ;:t
P.if-tSbur1g~

...
...
...

·

MONTREAL (UPI)- Tbe . Never In the 11111«y li the
Republic al Cbinlt lelm ..., Olymplca, whlcb were
talned Ita Mlllli, Ita flag and revlwd at Albe.. ln 1111, baa
national antbem and cot the ~~ wted down
booted out ol .the Olympic a recDilllJeriplkrt frcm the
.
·
Games. But lt IJI'OI!Iiled to Board.
There
.
are
7&amp;
voting
fight baclt. .
Five dlya of 11011-etop Iaiii members in the roc.
New memben a~ elected
ended Sunday when j,ard
KW8nln. pntdclent of the by . the membership and
Fost et" , Cln 17 ; f.Aondav . Ch i 15 i International
Olympic retain thelr Mall for tlh. The
~rgan , Cln, Cedeno. Hov and
Cunmlltee, announced lhe Clll'f«&lt;t 1lat lncludu lOW'
~oblnson , Pitt u .
M E·R I CAN LFAGUE : ntne-m8n Executive Board prlnats, a sultan, a grand
eando , Oak 19 ; Htndr lc: k, Clev wlll
recommend
the ckili;e, a ra)a and a Uberal
11J Vastrzems ld , 8os
16;
exclusion ol the Republic of asaortment of European
L.May . Bait" ' Rico. Bos 13.
Runs laHed In
counll and lord&amp;.
NATIONAL LEAGUE : FO!· Oiina team when the Games &lt;luke.,
PhiUp
0. Krumm, the u.s.
ter. Ci n 73 ; Kingman . NY 69 ; ~July 17.
Morgan , Ci~ 62: Schmidt, Ph il
"This Is an eztremely, Olympic Committee
61 ; Per-ez. C•n 59..
wlfortunate
day In Olympic prutdent and one al three
AMER ICAN LEAGUE : May.
Wrrv . KC, Chambliss, NY · end history," said .KIIIanln after mai repretientill« the 138
~u rrou~ hs , Te)t 56} 'fastrzem Ute EJ:ecutlve Boanl bowed National Olympic
ski. Bos ana Olio. KC 53, ·
tD polltlcalp-eiS)II'e from the Cuiunlttee's on the ICC's
Stol~.n Bastl ,_
NATIONAL 'LEAGUE : Cede· Canadian External Affairs Tripartite Commission,'
no , Hou 78 ; Broc k, St .L 16 ;
however, holda oula glimmer
Tavera s , PUt 24; N'!orga n, Cin Department.
.
anc1 Lopes. LA. 13 .
A Talw.anese spokesman of bQpe.
· ~ M E R I CAN LEAGUE : Said the team Is awaiting
"There
still
ta the
Nor th , Olilk A3; Patek, KC 38 :
·
poaatblllty
the
RepubliC
of
Saylor , Oak 36 ; Carew, Mlnn etder1 from Taipei, "bot we
35 ; LeFiort . Oet and Cam · expect to be told to challenge
Otlna CGUid compete 'under
paner is , Oak 29.
the Canadiln gownment'a ~· or aa 'Talwan' or sa
Pitching
Mo1t Victorits
'lndependenll under the
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jones, decision to bar us entry Into Olympic banner."'
the
country.
SO 16 3 ; Looborg 1 Phil ll·S:
Krumm, while admitting
M1Hae k., NY 10-2; Ruth ven, Atl
"We cannot get in by air
10 8; C3rllon and Kaat, Pflil Y· becBWJe no U.S. airline will he Ia~ an almQst bopelesa
3; Niekro, Ati 9-A : Seaver, NY
9-5: Koosrnen , NY 9-6; Messen- permit us to buy tickets, but task In his bid wmediate the
mltn, All 9·7 : Sutton , LA and we can always hi~ dispute, said l)e would try to
·R ict1ard~ Hou 9-9.
&amp;et the Taiwanese to reverse
AM'ERICAN LEAGUE : Pil· automobiles.
,.,.,. , Salt t hl ; Garland, Ball
"We shall not ~turn home their stand. '
10.1; Campbell. Mlnn 10-2: with011t a fight. We shall flglll
~ the declaim, a
Ell is . NY 10:.a ; Fit zmorris , KC
to.s; T&lt;ant . Bos, Tanana. Cat, to Ute bitter eoo ...
Slaton and Travers. Mil and
The Executive IIGard's
Flfuerna , NY 10-6;. Dobson.
decision
has to be ratllled at '
Clev 10·7: Hunt or, NY 10·8.
E•rntd Run Average
the
'18th Congress IUIIOII of
( based an 11 i nnings pitcfttdl
NAT IONAL LEAGUE : Mes· the IOC, 'l!hich beglus Its
sersmith, All 2.43 ; Stenhouse, ~Y meeting Tuelday . .
MU 2.51; Jones , so 2.Sl :
·Fre;sleben , so 2.61; Motlack,
NV 1.65.
N.t~".nal Bueball Congress .
AME RICAN LEAG UE; F; . · \~vrnament Results ~
« vch, Det 1.78 : Travers , Mil un 41 Pr u International - ·
1.91 ; Garland, all ·2.37; Brell, Col
c oneld ' s 9 Sugar
en; 1.• 9; Brown , Clev l.IS.
Cr~tk o
Mansfield Farmer'$ Bank 3
Strikeouts:
,NATIONAL LEAGUE ; Seo· Mansti~ld Water World 'o
ver, NY 127 : Messer$m tlh, All Sm-ithville -4 Steubenville 0
lOS ; Richard. i&lt;ou to• : ~ ;ekro , ML Ve'"r.non 13 cann~l..-ille. 3
AN 96 ; LoHch, NY 90.
Zanesville Sr . Pioneers 6
AME.RICAN LEAGUE: Ryon , Coshocton Stone Conta"lne.r 2
Cal 165; .Tanana, Cal 130 ; ·sandusky • Mar iori 1
Tuesday's G•mes
Blyleven, Tex f2l; Jenk;ns, Bos

:·

By United Pr:!~tlntern~~ttonal
~~~ 'L Pet . G·s

~

Oliver, Pill
73 29750 107 .300
Crawford , St.L 66232 33 80 .3•l
Gr lrtey, Cin 79300 66 102 .:140
Rose, Cin
86 J&lt;t9 7S 111 .335
Morgan, Cln 70 227 62 7! .330
Foster . Cln
76 306 n 100 .327
Monlan·oz. All !8 341 31112 .322
MaddOK, Phil 71 26! •3 IS ,321
Cey, LA ' 7!2701216 .319
Gercm lmo, Cln 77 2~1 36 79 .31!
Am,.rlun L••oull'
G. Aa R. H, Pet.
arell. KC
12 33351 122 .366
McRae, KC 82 JO.&lt; 51 105 .3.5
LeFlore. Del 71 303 lO 100 .330
Ca-'w. Minn 81 32252 IOl .326
Lynn , Bos
71 27'139 88 llol
Munson. NY 11 110 31 99 .319
Rlvert r NY
73 32'6 SJ" IQI .310
Stoub. Del
19 2U 37 81 .310
Htargrovt ,· Tex 7l 78'2 51 86 .JOS
Manning, Cloy 79 324 42 98 .302
G' rt, Chi
67 265 32 80 .302
Home Runs ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE ; King •
man. NV 30; Schmid!, Phil 23 :

the
.. ~enlded
.PBW ~
muclll'ou
placeticRrfrlm Pain Slate, I~ D-61 and Porter , Kusnyer 181.
is with tbe ·College~' l... P-Biy"leven (6"11L HRs-Texas,
·
Faht r t1l ; Milwaukee, Scott
~ KlDb, 8 linet.ckeber 181.
,
frcm Olio State, is to
lidelined aWhile tteean;e af 12ndgamel
··
·
re.os
020 QOa 020 D---.. ,a 0
.an opleratioo for a knee Milwaukee ·000-000 702 1- 5 8 1
o • ._

injury. ·

..

.. ~~:::::t~·::~:~·:~·~ Ch z·na
M•tor-- LUIUt LeMNrt

'

\

•

•

�...

..

t

...
•

,

.

'4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pmteroy, 0,, Monday , July 12, 19'16

Aaron's '754th homer
.drops Rapgers; 5-4·
.
'

Oakland drub~ Clew land, a third lmlng single aa the
9-3, and Baltimore stopp:ed Red SoJ: climbed liack to .5011.
California , 3-l.
FergliaOn Jenkins, U, went a
Yanliel'tl s, WhHe So&amp; 0
1-3lnnlngslocthevlctory'and
Oscar Gamble's towering was r~placed by Jim
twiH'Un homer backed the Willoughby wben Craig
three-hit pitching· of , Ed- K11.1ick hit a two-run slngl~
Figueroa as U1e Yankees for · Minnesota In the nlnth.
continued Utelr mastery over Tlpn I, Royall S
the White Sox by beating
Rusty Staub grounded a
them for ninth time iD 10 tw~alngleupthemlddleto
games Utls year, Gamble's '8COI'e Jobn Wockeiiuss from
homer, which came after a third baae ln the 12th Inning
second-Inning leadoff walk to enabllnc Detroit to slow
Graig Nettles, landed in the Kansas City's runaway effort
last rows of Yankee over second place Texas in
Stadium 's rlghlfleld the AL West. Wlth the score
bleachers . Figueroa, 1~, , Ued $-5, Wockenfuss began
allowed only singles and the 12th against loeer Stew
struck out four in pitching his Mlngorl with a walk and
third 1976 shutDut
advanced ·oo a sacrifice and
Red So1 1, Twins 4
. an infield sl'llUilCklut.
Fred Lynn belted a solo A's I, lnl!lau 3 ·
homer .and Denny Doyle
Majer league atoldl baae
knocked in a pair of Nils with · king Billy Nortb swiped

By BILL MADDEN '
UPI !lp4!rll Writer
II wu a scene right out of
that giorlous, tieer-soaked
penruutt year of 11157. Hank
Aaron stood there grandly,
.basking In the cheers of some
28,000 Milwaukee fans after
another dramatl~ game·
wlnnl!tg home run.
Even If the unifOrm, the
team and the situation jVere
different, the delirious
Milwaukee fans sensed the
slgnlllcance of N!ron's oneout, loth-Inning hcmer which
gave Ute homewwn Brewers
a Sot victory liver the Texas
Rangers aoo a sweep of
SUnday's doubleheader. So,
too, did ba!ll!ball's all-time

..

borne run king.

.

"The bome.nm I hit In 1957
, against the St. Louis
Cardinals, whlch. won the .
pennant was my biggest thrill
bere," said Aaron. ·"But I'd
. hive to say this one ranks
eecond." .
Aanlll'l homer. his ninth of
the season and ?54th lifetime,
came after the Brewers won
the first galile, 6-3, behind the
four-hit pitching of Jim
· Slaton and then raWed to Ue
the nlghlca!l In the ninth
·Inning on ,run«qrlng singles
by Bernie Carbo and Robin.
Yount. ·
The Ba ewa s, still last In
the AL Ea1ll with a 34-44 WOO·
1o1t mark, abo came from
bebln!l to wilt the opener with
a five-run rally in the sevenUt

National LtJ14Ue

G All • II ,.,,

Second hlse tn the first Inning

to set up one run and drove li\
two others as the A's
completed ·a three-game
sweep o(Jhe Indians. North,
who scored three times,
singled h«ne tWo runs in the
second with two 0111. Paul
MilcheU, ~. was the winner
with 3 2-3' innings ofjshutDut
relief from .Paul Undblad.
Orioles 3, ADcela I'
Reggie .Jaclt:Bon drWed a
two-run first lpnifl(! homer
and Terry Crowley singled
borne Kdl Singleton with an
lmurance run in the eighth,
enabltng the Orioles tD best
Angel strikeOut ace Nolan
· Ryan. Ryan, 7·10, fanned IZ
and went the distance,
spacing nine hits. Ex·Yankee
Dave Pagan, 2-3, went 7 2-3·
Innings tD get the win for .
BaiUmore. · ·

Boiling hot sun
greets 58 Beng~s .

WILMINGTON, Ohio
(UPI) - Pat Mcinally
checked Into ll)e sccrching
hot . Cincinnati Bengals
training camp with an air
conditioner and small
refrigerator,
.
"Whew,"the Moot~ liutky
punter and receiver sighed
Inside his stm:stuffy
Inning.
.W ilmington College
Ellewhere In the American donnitory JWm, "I just hope
League New York blinked I'm able to stay at my peak
Clneago, 5-0; BGston put Wring two+days (drills) In
away Ml!lleiOta, 5-4; Detroit an Utia heat and lllmidity."
edged K&amp;!IJIS City, S-5 ;
Outside, huge (6-l, 270

poWlds) Illy Bacul W81 per·
spiril)g f!'eely ~r working
out just a few minutes under
a.reldltless 1111 that PIU'DPed
the lhermiiDtttr above the 90
degree mark.
"I came here needing to
loee about seven poWlds and I
tbiM I've loll about flw
already," g..OO Bacon.
Mclnaily IIIII Baoon were
just two d 58 B«lgal hopefub

strelterq

~ ~

as the National Football
tz.gue team opened its ninth
11111111&amp;1 training ~ in this
fann.rich 110ulbwestem Ohio ·
community, 5$ miles
.... llleUt of Ondnnati.
New · bead coach Bill
Jobnaoo., gf!ting 1U first
cradt .a t the kJp job after
lllilillg ~ _..._ as a
Atqah .....nt andet tl;ae
rec:em.Jy retired 1'1111 Brcnm,
greeted 41 ~ and 17
I ooties to the Clllllp that will

01. 1t. J. $TAEIII 01. fltffAIAN w.lTZ
Ott. K. H. CIIUNQ ,

rfOR252-3181COWCTl
PltiCO CAU

One or Two Day Full Denture •
Service, Partials, Extractions,
X. Rays, Cleaning

cmlhlle ror ~ weeta.
Bat die Bellp.ls' illOIIt c:elelnted III!WtlOIII!t -t-.time
Heisman Tropby . winner
Arcbie Griffin d Qlio.Stlite wm't be bere ror .two mare
. . . . Tbe ~ balft.d[ wbo
hopes to ptll9e that he's big
dlllllllb far Ule pros alreedy is
in tbe College AU.Star
trainng Clllq).
Another JWkie not here
&amp;lnday wu!Gp lhft dioice
Billy Broob, arecen• from

-.·-........-.

~ •. the

_,., Be~al
rotundercontriiCll\ marked
the first time in the nine year
.... """
•- that ·
•UM-.,.. of. ·the· fr·anc..·~
the No. 1 nft pi,ck hid not
.,__. by the time camp
~""""
opened. ·
"We dm't hive any real
cmcerit about .il," assured
Brown, wbo still is general
·te
ht' s
·manager d esp l ·
tdilal)t!lt' frOm· coaching.
"We'll evettually ·cooclude
an agreeinent with Brooks
withrut any trouble."
,.
·
'tho
Catnp also ·opened WI ut
wtA!raulefenSive ~kle Bob
Bro-"•' who will. be .a t Duke
UniversitY's unique " Fat
Firm" llJMiher week ·trying
•· ,~ about Z5 ._. his 300
\ll
'.w ~
ptands. Rooaes Chris Babr
and Kdl Kuhn also 'ftl'e
W""V

abaenl

---

105 ; HIJnter , NY 9.&amp; .

·~.

Te.xas
Milwa u kee

DO l '000 MO--l .&amp; l
100 000 SO K-6 11 0
Blylevon , Hoornor {1), Fou·
cault (1} .and Fahey ; Slaton

earc lerp~o (9), - ~ouc~ult
~,, ~ at.'l:d S·undber.g ~ AVQIJst-ine,

B C COUNT WINS
COLUMBUS CUPil -

·

~

·

l'\

S1 . l.ou is

Chjcago

Morltr,a1

56 25 . 691 -

46 35 -S68 ·10

46 o12 ..523 13'.-2
'36 :4-6 _..J9 "20'11
36 -48 ~29 "21 1 2

25 52 ' :ns
West

·?9 '

W L Pet.

Cinc inna ti
'Los Angeles

san

Diego

Houston

GB

Sl ll .616 ~
47 l9 . 5.. 7 6

.o _..

101r:

.o194
42 .u .All J1
40 45 ..ctJ Jl,n

A!lo~t.nta
San Frandtco 35 S2 .A02 181h

, Stturctay' s ResuH5·
P ittsbufg'h 1 Cincinnat i 1
~ i caoo ·8 San

·

.. Standings

3
.:;;,~:: ~ g,iF.:rni ~ 1
OakJafto 't ...Jeveland

·M~C11y'1

Glmet

LOS Angeles

Francisco 6

cn;cogo

L Pet . GB
50 31 ,617
.eo AO .SOO 9117
40 42 .... 10'12
38 •t .A81 11
n " .m 11

Boston

Detroit

Inflation: ·

Cl~veland

Mltwaukr .

at sea.··

We all know about inflation. Everything costs more than it did
five years ago . .. or two years ago.
·
Still, there are some things we can't do without. Inflation or np,
we've got to go where the natural gas is .. . like way out in the
Gulf of Mexico.
For e~~ple: The rig s,J,,·th I is drilling for natural gas 100 miles
off the \TeXils coast in 500 feet of water. Out there, the physical
problems alone spell high stakes. But look what inflation is.doing:
1967,

1976

Rig COllstruction cost
$14;000,000
$30,000,000
Rlmt.JJ rate per dny
15,000
25,000
The numbers are big. Here's an example that's easier to grasp . .
Common 9%" well casing (pipe) cosi $9 a foot six years ago. Today
it costs $19 a foot! At an average depth of 11,000 feet, this means
$110,000 more prr wtll.
.
If gas is found out there, it'll take four to six years, working1round
thr dock, before the gas can be delivered to your home. If inflatipn
isn't brought under control, think what six years 'will do to our gas
~~

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lA

W

California

u

west ·

Konsas Cily J · St
Texas
..,.
· Oaklond
&lt;•
Minnesota
39
Chicago
• 37

.o1J6

Ohio

·--- ~

000 001 701-9 1l 0

St H~~!. Ra~~s\:0 ~~ 1(17 ~ A Public SerVice of 1lis Newspaper &amp; 1l1e ~rtising Council
end Rodri~uez, Yeager (1J ;
·
·

L. Pet .
31 .622
38 .SJ7
;1 .511
U .o110
45 .451

GB
7
1'112
12 h
1&lt;

Sunc~tv's Rtsulls
BOston 6 Minnesota A
Detroit 6 Kansas City 5
Milwaukee 6 Texas 3, lst
MllwiJukee 5 Texas o1, 2nd, 10

lnni~s

Biggest S.le Ever

•

aJid returned home.
.
Which 1tr1np up a question:. oow can. people avoid .beinl!
IUCIIed into the lanlltlcal kinds of rellclon.lhat appeal so much
to the young? I'm nat an athellt, but !get scared wben my klda
atartlhowlng Interest ln IIO&lt;alled Cltrlatlan grqape:Then.I feel

-

gullten•t there guidelines ldda CGUid follow so they'd be
wa$td about •'Children of God," the Moonies, etc.? -

OOMcERNEI&gt; PARENT

.t

!
Dear Concerned: .
ling H ,
Yea, thereareguldeilneaand they bear re-prin • ere s
Bill Starr, president ~ Young Ufe (a safe and sane
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Look for our Stars lot big uvlnga

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Uke This
17 ~u. ft.
Frost·Proof

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REFRIGERATOR
FREEZER

·-•••••
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Reel CrOlL

PURSES

1heGoocl/

1f2 PRICE

__...

Neigh~or.

Middleport. o.

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The 11011 of a friend gotjnvolved with the "Moon Children"
·and biB pareots just about went crazy before he came to his
'

Easlwick 19) ond Bench. WP12-21.

AU SUMMER

.,

•'MoOIIles" Raise Doubla

100 -ooo 001 - 2 7 0 Tekulve 11-11. LP·Borbon
000 000 OOil-O 2 1 HR ·PiHsburgh , Ziti&lt;. (10) .

herifaae house
(

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~e~as born at Olarleston,
F br

11 1945 Ut

:~v~~ ~~~ ~

..:en:
LaR
of N'tr
1 0
Ohlinger
ue
'
formerly of Hartford.
Besides his parents, he
' leaves his wife, Alva Shaffer
LaRue, two SON, Charles and
Shane, a daughter, Crystal
Irene, one brother, Gerald, of
Germantown, Ohio, two
nephews, two nieces, an aunt,
Mrs. Leo (FLorence)Ciarkof
Letart, two uncles, Clifford of
Hartford aro Dallas of San
Monica, California, and
several cousins.
Those from Mason County

In 1972, Sen. George
McGovern of South Dakota
was nominated .as the
Democratic candidate for
president. He was bidly
beaten 1n November by
Richard Nixon.

CElEBRATES BffiTHDAY - Kyle Reed Slndalr ·
celel:nted hll fourth birthday recently at the home li bla
parenta, Mr and Mrs. Lyle Sinclair In Tuppers ~
Refreshmenta were served to Mr. and Mrs. Alba SinClair,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry l&lt;rautter and DarreU, Mrs. ~
Reed aoo Bfenda, t.eann, Crystal, Mrs. Mlalne WeiDel',
Kim, Jaounle arid April, Mrs. Bonnie Krautter, Debh'e,
Jackie, Tom and Gilly Harper, Mrs. Judy Krautter, Mn.
Nancy Arnold, Mrs. Betty Imboden and Amy Eberalllcb,
Mr. 800 Mrs. Keith Krautter, DoroUty aoo Rudy Mu r,
Mrs. Paula Lantz, sons, Danny, Joe and Joi!My, Mn.
Freda Krautter, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whaley and - ·
Kenny. Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Nelson, Mr.
and Mrs. Wlnn Blah.

17 YEARS IN MIDDLEPORT

Ingels Furniture
PHONE 992-2635
HOME OF FAMOUS BRANDS

Open Mon., Tues., Wed .• Thurs .• Sat.
9:00 TiiS:OO
SHOP FRIDAYTIL8:00 PM

I

others to go through and take
what they want. One may use
instand coffee and another ~
onlyfreshandsoon. This way
no coupons are wasted.- M.
M.
DEAR POLLY - By lassmy
kitchen sink I kkeep a g h
botUe with a sha er top, sue
llll garlic salt or ~full
grouoo pepper comes tn,
of washing. detergent .
Whenever I have just .a
couple of glasses or a plate or
two to wash, I shake a bit.
this soap on them 800 wash,
rather than filling the whole
sink wit!\ water and soap. MARCIA.
DEAR POLLy .- Often I
I
Uta .
butooyla buncflh of ce ery tatbl•s
ong to tin my vege . e
keeper . I cut off the ends aoo
freeze in small containers to
use later in soup or stuffmg. I
alwaybsl drythemthet leaves and
·crum e
o use tn many
things. - RUTH D . .
DEAR POLLY - My trick
is for emergencies. When you
make up aoo your hair looks
llll If it should have been
shampooed the night before,
try using powder on it.
LighUy powder the hlir and

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Qui11ttan youUt orpnllatl011) has to say:
·
· · Earmarb of a cullllt rellclous group are:
~lion d dlac«d between klda and parents. Some
cultllta come between r.mDy members, to .make ~P
!nemberllllp paramount.
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Pt 1 e s · - · 'Ibis nfera either w Ute giving li money
or the totalglmg li Mil, physical or mental. Any organization
tbat den\9001 total, abject devotions from Its members Is
unri!allltlc and dangerous.
.
Work and merit syalems. Some groups require members
to apeiM1 lOng hours aeUing Items or ralalng fundi for the
licklen J)II'IIOIIeli of enrlcblng the organizations - or Its
leaders.
·Prlorlliel. Urglng ~bers tD place organilaU011 values
and (or) actlvlllell above school or work reapo~~lllblllliea. ·
Esciullveneaa. Groupe tbat 1o111t everyone else II wrong
8nd onlY.they hlft the key lo life's meanlilg: theae should be
.lighly ~
..,.., th
· CIIJied aylleml. Will the group a.~""' . e young person as
• per11011-lfhedoe111't accept Its polntm view? •
·· Colnmanlty lavolvement. Doea the ~ cooperate with
dnirdlu In the CIJIIIIDI•nily? If not, or If It clo-.rades other
acceptecl ~~~....... t.chlnp, beware!
. The bard ..0. CoercliJn W!'t Cltrlstlan. Groups 1111ch as
Y..q Life limply offer their frlendlldp, no strings attached.
Parenta llled hlft no worriea about thel!e.- H.

+++

Dear llelell:
. Yoa aCCIIIed a ,wJfe ol "U.U. the phone line as her

to remove aU the powder
(and the oil with it). Your
hair will look good enough w
make it through the day but
be sure to wash it that night.
'Jbis is something the same as
using dry shampoo but much
leu exenslve. - DONNA.
DEAR
POLLY
)Vbenever I buy an inferior
food product, I write direcUy
to the company whose ad·
dress is oo the label. I hive
always received prompt and
courteous replies and usually
coupons I can use to buy other
producl!t. Many times the
coupoos give me tl]e products
free of charge. - IRENB. ·
Polly wUI send yoa oae of
her "peachy" lbank·yoa
cards. Ideal lot fmnlag or
placing ill . your family
aerapbook, H she 11.1es your
favorite Polnler, Peeve or
Problem Ia her column. Wrtle
Polly's Pointers In care ol
his newspaper.

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Property .
·Tra11sfers

.
George R.:.Starcher, Judith
M, Starcher to Herbert
Barker, Betty Lou Barker, .!0
acre, Chester.
Harley E. McDonald Ill
Lloyd Harmon, Juanita
Hannon, .15 acre, RuUand.
John A. Bradford to WUey
H. Byers,lOacres, Lebanon .
Thomas P. Byers, Sarah E.
Byers to Wiley H. Byers,
Lebanon.
,
,
· Viola M. Thomas. Willey,
dec., to Edward K. Willey,
Edward p, Willey, affld. for
trans., Lehlnon.
Edward K. Willey, dec. to
Edward P. Willey, affid. for
trans., Lebenon .

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1 .

.By now almost eve11:one.kn?~ what a
great resoW'Ce Am~nca has m. 1t:s ~ast c~
reserves. And how Important It IS m making
electricity.
· ·
· But just having th~ coal doesn't make it
electricity.
It has to be n;llned, fl.rst. Then we have
to convert that coal into electricity and get ·
it to your homes arid factories .
Without facilities to do all that, all the
coal in the world wouldn't generate the f'rrst
kilowatt of electric power. The lights ,
wouldn't burn. And the machines that help
us do our jobs wouldn't run.
. Unfortunately, the cost of building these
facilities has gone up drastically. For instance,

bqilding a power plant today costs fl.ve times
as much as it did 15 years ago. And it was
costly, even then.
.
On top of that, building new facilities
takes time. And it takes the cooperation and
understanding of the people who will benefit
from them.
You might say it's a kind of power partnership between you anq us that takes a
realistic approach to the needs of today. And
tomorrow, too. ·
.
· ·
· Without your help and Wlderstanding
about the needs and the cost, facilities may
never get built. ·
·
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' And coal, which can become electricity,
will just stay coal.

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r.nures

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Meigs

. •pnNDcal cord." '1'1111 when her husband cilmplalned that she
-"ran to ber matber with eYIII'J problem."
. Hal It ~ to you tbat Mother Is the only one who
~? My dliUI!htn have hlllbandl you "'ouldn't
blllen: .,...1111 Dlllllllera who gi'le them nothing but
traable. Tlllt'" even bnld tile children aplr!at me. And one
of IIIJ p!l ._ biG med 11111 I "talk too much." She would
nmrbaft llld U.lf ber 1w,..m baG~, polloDed her mind.
'1'1111* p iln TMIIIJ- diUihla' lllillCCIIDell to me with
IIIII* •••. I~ tbeanly- abe Cllil twnttln. If II wu HER
knr.llt........, wbo..ttbetllllty letter to you, let him be 011
illlllce: Prllltthe I.Grdii!J danlhter still has me! "-MOTHER STlUitE SE'JTLED
AKRON,~ (t!Pl) -A
WHO~
1~ strike at four Lever
Brothers Co. plantB has been
Dear Mlllher:
!!!! -H.
settled.
.
++~
About 2,100 I!lternaliOIIal
I'BR80NAL to ''llalbinl bat Resreta" ~It's been said that Owlplcal Workera returned
• ......., Ia a WGIIIIJI who bolrdl rap and throln away food. to their jobl today at planll'ln
belllrc )OGtvl with long...,
and remember Balttmore, IAI ~elaa, St.
Looll aoo Edgewatl!r, N.J.
, _ - lthn . . . ....S.- H.
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f

thenb~itTHOROUGHLY

DeBr Helen:

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beytbu~

.ls S2 .402 18'h

Kansas Clly 7 Delroll 1
Min_nesota ' Boston 2
Ookland 7 Cltvtlond 3
Chicaoo • N!w York 1
Bollln:Jore 5 Collfornla 2

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Russell Capehart, John
Campbell, Harry MiUer and
Sam Lont!anacre.
Word was received here of
the de&amp;Ut of Donald Vance of
Poplar Bri\IICII, N. C., on June
26 13 ••pm Mr vance was
ba the:,. of Be
. the.1 v
a ro r
ance, a
former resident or New
Haven, bUI whO now resides
at Poplai: Branch..
Lewis Richard Lu~ue or
Shreve, Ohio was killed
Wedneaday evening June 17
in ·a two-car accident about
100 to 150 yarda from hls

.. ..

of:

~iddlepcirt,

Averag~
i&lt;~l:~
R~ults

~~~

magic marker I write the
name of the food and the date
on the carton before puiUng it
ln the lreeier. Once food is
frozen, the containers can be
slacked sideways or upright.
Also gallon p~tic milk
containers can be lillect with
water aoo frozen. This gives
you plenty of ice for blanchifl(!loods for freezing or for
extra ice to go in an ice chest
Slit the sides with a knl!e to
get the blOck of ice out. Also,
these plastic cartons ·can be
cut in half and used for
feeding or watering animals.
_ LOUISE.
i

DAIRY ISLE

Fr:didaire

'" '~r

. 5afurd•y•s Rttults
Milwaukee 3 Texu I

Worse yet, think of Ihe cost of going without natural gas.

. , Minute. An arrangement of
. , lrelh plant material In a line
; IU'rangement. This should
Interpret any event of our
· early period, arranger's
, choice ..Consultant, Mts. Ray
• Proffitt. Blue Ribbon, Mrs.
: Patrick Riley; Red Ribbon,
: Mrs. Lee Gibbs; Yellow
Ribbon, Mrs. Ray Proffitt;
Wldte Ribbon, Mrs. Cheater
Weaver. Mn. P.atrlck Riley
also received the ribbon for
.· tbe· Beat of Show for her
arrangement in this class.
CluB IU - P1011eer1, Ob
Pioneers. An arrangement of
fresh plant material 1n an

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nters

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MarVan
Restaurant ,
Members attending were
Donald F. Roush, Dick Ord,
James Layne, Uoyd Roush,
Ray Weaver, Karl wues,

who atlended the last rites
· hre Mr. and Mrs. WilDe
Grinstead, Mrs. Bill Uevlng
and daughter, Vickie, Mr.
and Mrs. Leo Clark, Mrs.
Charles Yonker, and also
1\{rs. Cindy While of Logan,
W. Va.
Captain and Mrs. Edward
M. Brown and son of .'Del Rio,
Teus, have spent the past
tWo weeks vlsiUng Mr. and
Mrs. Dooald (Doc) Ohlinger,
and also Mrs. Brown 's
parenll! at Racine, Ofiio. .
Dl"ight Sayre was a recent
surgical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. aoo Mrs. John Fry ·
were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fr~man Roush at
Cleveland, Virginia.
Brent Layne, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James Layne, was
among those a!tending Camp
Luther at Cowen last week-.
Homer · Roush has
returned to his home alter
being a medical patient at
Veterlli1.'l Memorial HospitaL
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Dotson
and family, Usa, Stacey and
Scott, from Florida, are .
visiting Mr. anc! Mrs. Everett
Bwngarner.

~~
tna•tonandcl~-~ ~~taro~~tthe~,M~ri~a~.--------~~=~=~==~==~=~----~=================~
CluB il- A Bicentennial with inas)Ung tape. With !l In a cigar box for the .~

~

Act now during our .. .

W'

Blltimort

Waf,
.tbt;

Anoeles 3

IY United Pren lnternaflon•l
· ·
Enl

N.

heritage or heirloom con·
tatner. Consultant- Mrs. J.
DEAR POLLY- I wonder
V. M~w. Blue Ribbon, whyjroc:ery stores do not put
.._ J V McGr
Red a cttltalner near the entrance
· ...... · •
ew; ..,_ · where coupons not wanted by
Ribbon Mrs William Gl
· Mrs. David
"""• some c11.1tcmers could be put.
Yellow ' Ribbon,
Simonton; .While Ribbon, They ~ould be used by others
Mrs. Velma Roush.
. who use that particular
Clua IV - Our Father's brand. Some people just
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· · ·• ·

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New York·

~~~~

McCiure~s

.(no ga mes Sd"leduled )
Rasmussen , MtGioth_en (6), ,
Tuesdey•• Gtmes
Greif (7) , Forsch (7)--; SOlomon
,l AI J .Sta.r Game--oo · 9emes (7 ), Wallace (8) an.cl Simmons.
·
· schedule-d }·
.
WP -SUtton (9 -BI . LP -F,or~h (3o1 L HRS ·LOS Angeles, Smith
·M,Ijor ·l ..eltut 8.a se.b lll RtiUih (11 ); St. Lou is, Hlltf"nandez (1),
-' By United Press l.ntematiOAII
McBride (3). Crawford (6L
Nttioftll l..eJigue
010 201 031- 111 I
SanOiego
OOOOOOOOG-09 0 PittsbUrgh
108 100 201 - S 122
Pnilede1 phia .000 003 .oox- 3 8 0 Cinc inna ti
Rooke-r . Tekulv~ (7), Reu11
Fr~isleben . MeflQE'f ( 1) and
Kendall ; Kaat (9.Jl and Boone. (81 .md SOnguillon : Gullett,
Borbon 171, McEnaney (8) ,
L P - fr~isfeben U -.5 ·San Fran

An

lan'
"""" P •

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ore l'vzen fiood
in milk COntainer

Skipper Jim was third .
The w inner was driven - in

t1~ilill 11 1 and HHI; Stone.
Suiter 17), Knowles 191, Cole·
New York o1 Atlanta 2
· 1 man J91 and .Swisher, Mitler·
Ameriun Ltll'"
HousTon • NcJotreal 2
wold 191. LP ·Stone (l .t\. HR· Minnesota 101 000 002- 4 10 o
Plliladelphia S San Diego 0. ~n Francts·co. ~tthew1 (11) . Bo&gt;lon
102'020 101&lt;- 6 13 0
1st
·
·
S.ln;er.
Goltz
151, Burgmoler
Philade-lphia 4 San Die;o 2, N&lt;&gt;ntreal
I 000 000 OOil-O 9 1 (8) «td Wyneoer ; Jenkins ~
llld
Houston
ooo 010 oox- n o WilloUghby 191 and Fisk, WP·
Scmc~av~S; Raults
· Rogers 12·11 and Johnson : Jenk;ns CUI . ~P . Sing~ 11·41.
Pittsburgh 8. Cincinnati $
Anduiar (5 -5) and .Herrm~nn .
HR -6oSIOt1 , L'ynn 161.
San Fr&amp;.ndscq "2 Chicago o
ptlilldeiPhia 3 .S111 Oieoo o
Now v or k 020 002 Ooi0-8 8 2 Kan City 000 002 300 ooo-s to 3
Allanta 9 N·e w York ·8
Allonlo
100 000 53x- 9 11 • Del roll 020 210 000 001~ 10 o
Los Angelet 9 Sf . Louis 6
Matlack, Koosman (7) , SeavSplittorff, Pattin (Sl, Mlngorl
Hou.sn,n 1 MonJrell o
er C71. Apodaca lll and (8) and Martinez, Stinson (6) ;
,,., Gamts
HodgH ; Ruthven, MarShall (8) , Ruhle, Grilli 161. Hiller 171 and
4Chtduledl
Oal Canton (8) and Pocoroba , Kimm. Wockentuss (fl . WP ·
dty's Games
Willlams (A) . WP -Oa' Canton HIIIor 18·•1. LP Mlngorl (3·11 . _
(All -Star Game.no games p.t), LP.Apodaca ll·ll. HR · HR·Delrolr. Rodriguez C6t.
scheduled I,
New YO&lt;I&lt;, HoQves C•1 .
Am•r"-;c"'•,:.n"L•"'•:::gu:::e-;5;;::io=ndintt

St. Lou ;• 6 Los

not

symbola.". Thla ·
unacceptable
to
Tal....-.

Thee.

of · - ·

P.oily's .

nese ~ ~ .. mpetelf II:

~ "Olympic,

To.

u-

Pherson ;n tho featured S5,000
pace al sc ;oto 0 owns
Saturday night .

·

N•tian•l Luvue' Sta...invs

;,We were 10 aun of:.
victory,,.. did not iMb . ,: ,
cmtiJI«ency plllla."
:
Lawrence S. Tlnl, ~
delegation leader, ~
"Lord Klllanlll ~
gave In to tennllald down bf
the Canadian ""' wwlil "
This II a lou of ~­
ideala. tt
••
The Canlidlan ~;
wblcb hll dlplo•llc
relltiOIII witb ~ ,_.,(
Republlc of Odna, wu ~
prepll'td to permit ealry ur•
the. Taipei daleptktn If ""
team called lllelf Taiwan 1114
did not lUll 011 n,q II(
national fill or p1aylnl Ill!:
national utbem.
•
Tlte IOC IIIII tba Ceudl•(
government, tbe lint to cbal!:
lenge the IOC'I aatbarltJ.
worked out atwJPiomlae anSaturday wbereb)' the Tliwa::

JULY 17

v ictory by two and one-four·t h
lengths over Jerr';' Mac -

1: 51 2-5 t)y Bred GlrinOton
and pai~ S5.60, SJ.IO and S2.80 ..
Frise:u a '(ll),, Sac:ecki UU, Castro
Eddies Discard and Hon
Jl ' ilnd 'Kosnyer. W"P -Castro ( 2· Car Lith combined for a 5-3

·

··

.

EJ:ecullve would. 10 apbwt.

8 C

Count led oil lhe way lo

the SCOREBOARD

~:;,i i

lll!lll«tliWbaditCeiMfram:
intematimal IIPfll"i lnlua,.
we never beUtftd tW

ntRU

.

,~i:::::::::;.;:::::::::::p:=::::::;:;!~:::=:::r-::::=:~~:::::0~::;:;:~~!::::;:~.:.::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::!:::::::::!:!:!:::;:::::::~~:::.:::::::::~~::::;::::::::=:::~-=~::~

::::

. , aid,
"We wen tabn bJ etl'ilf't
IAI'Jlrile. AIIM the -'!It

.

God,

Haven personals
Social New
.
Calendar ~~;:~v~n~~,w~t~:
~~~~:~~

MONDAY
y ll Ribbon Mr C M
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC
e ow '
Whl. s.Rl.:.....: lloolters Moodily a pm. at
Adams, Jr.;
te """''• ligh school. Everyone urged
Mlsa Lelah Jane Powell.
w at~ .
Judges for the ihow were
Mr S A Sa
Mr
•· · · · vage,
s.
nJESDA)'
Ralph A. Scltmltz and Mrs.
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
~ Smlth, an frOm the 461 Tuesday 7:30 pm. All
Parkeuburg area. AI the master ma.wns invited,
COJiCIUIII)II of the judging, the . WINDiNG TRAIL Garden
jUdges and garden club. Cl b 7 30
. Tueaday at
members preae·nt were
u • : p.m.Mr.
h.
b
the home of
s. ancy
served a 1unc eon
Y CoUins. Plant auction will be
the hospitality commit· held. Mrs. Roberl Lewis wUl
tee consl1tlng of Mrs. have a program on .. How to
John , Campbell, Mrs. Tom Enjoy Your Weeds .. and the
Hoffman, Miss Lelah Jane flower arrangement class
Powell and Mrs. Uoyd wiU be "Swnmer Triumph."
Ro11.1h.
WEDNESDAY
REVIVAL
NOW
in
progress at RuUand Com·
·
·
munlty Church through July
~oi
18 at 7:30p.m. nightly. The
.
Rev. Raymond .Rice, Byes·
ville, former alcoi!Qlic, guest
r..,
speaker . Public Invited.
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1' 30
p.m. We~nesday at !he
AmMiddleporerlcant. Legion ~all in
•.
POMEROY LODGE 1&amp;1~
caMot afford to buy the . F&amp;:AM, special meeting, 7:30
newspapers to get the p.m. Wednesday; all Master
coupons. - W. W.
Masons invited.
DEAR POLLY - My
·
friends '8oo I aU clip "cents
In 1961, 73 Jl!!I'SOilS died In
off" coupons from papers and Ute
crash
of
a
magazl~s. We ~ the ones Czechoslovakian plane In

arrqdlldlt
material In an heritage or
heirloom container. Con-·'Ia t u~ Roy •
Bl
ow n • ......
· -· ue
Ribbon, Mra. Tom Hoffman;
Red Ribbon, Mra. ~ard
Burris; Yellow IUbbon, Mrs.'
Harry Miller; Whl~ RlbboO,
Mra. Herman Layne.
V,- Happy Birthday,
us.Cl1111
A An
of
· ·
arrqemen1
Fresh Plant material
utiiWng a candle or candlea.
Con1ultant, Mrs. Douglas
Miller· Blue Ribbon, Mrs.
.~~.CGIIIIItedRl...._.' ofwerlhee bonJamesMrN. RoulhDa ; HatRedboRlb,.. _,..,....,
_.,,.
• a.
My
Uf;
awardedtotheentranla.Mn.
'~'~lama~ Grinstead and Mr.
Jack Frey both received
· aweepltake'a ribbons and
Mrs. Grlnllead received the
Belt of Show ribbon lor her
en""'
ola beautliul begonia.
.,
In the Artlallc Division the
&lt;'t
following ribbons ' were
VI
awarded.
&lt;lilll I. Boston Tea Party.
•·
•
An arrangement of freah By Polty Cramer
plant material arranged in a
~apot. Consultant, Miss
INFlATION ·FIGifi'ER
Lelab Jane PoweU.
DEAR POLLY - To save
Blue Ribbon, Mrs. Donald on buying contaners for
Smith; Red Ribbon, Mrs . . freezlfl(! foods, I wash and
Harold Bumgarner; Yellow keep all empty waxed mill!
l'ibbol), Mrs. Ray Proffitt; contatners. Mter preparing
While Ribbon, Mrs. Chester food, Ilet it cool and then put

~ ~~~tl

· JULY 12

Cot . McDonald's vs .. Mansfield Farmer' s Bank
Mt . Vernon vs . Smithville

! t st go mel

BYIIU.lLOYDilOUSR .
...... . , _
AD._.__._,
_,..,_.,..ur....,...
.~ow ap0111ored by the
Nelw lht• Garden Qub and
Ra- G--'- Club
tbe .,_
...,..
·-· .. ...,,
,_ held Tuelday 'in the
mwu.,....,_ room of Sl.
Pial Lutheran Olurch, New
. Haven, llnd 'l'&amp;l open;:ID the
public from 2 p.m; to a pm.
Tbe
of the ihow wu
''Of ....... l ." 'ft•'. " u~. Mel
.._ - • ~•
Clark aerved 11 general
cbalrlnaA of the allow with
MU. Lee Gibbs as CO·
cltalrman.

~

,11
J

,

Almost aD the 'pla¥er:s
checked in "Sun:lay
...m.. --''"-a-'
read·! to 01. LP·!f'OUCaUII 17·51. HRS· nightly double WOrth $48.10.
. - - I.:UliU.IWWJ 1 ..,
1
Tuas . Grieve (1}) ; M ilwaukee,
Attendance was 8, 173 and
go. ·
. .
Corbo (11, Aaron 19).
the han~le WI\ $150, 182 . .

New Yor.k

A piece of the energy puzzle.

·

~

.

6- Tbt ~llotttlrei,Mlddleport-~, 0 ., Monday,JuiJ 1%, l9'1S •

bo·ote·d. out · Bicentennial miniflower
d
b
1:
b
·
h
s
ow
s
onsore
c
u
P
of '76 Olympics :.
·····1

SONNY BURGE~\?= .

Wbo
were -in

~il adeJ ptl i ;:t
P.if-tSbur1g~

...
...
...

·

MONTREAL (UPI)- Tbe . Never In the 11111«y li the
Republic al Cbinlt lelm ..., Olymplca, whlcb were
talned Ita Mlllli, Ita flag and revlwd at Albe.. ln 1111, baa
national antbem and cot the ~~ wted down
booted out ol .the Olympic a recDilllJeriplkrt frcm the
.
·
Games. But lt IJI'OI!Iiled to Board.
There
.
are
7&amp;
voting
fight baclt. .
Five dlya of 11011-etop Iaiii members in the roc.
New memben a~ elected
ended Sunday when j,ard
KW8nln. pntdclent of the by . the membership and
Fost et" , Cln 17 ; f.Aondav . Ch i 15 i International
Olympic retain thelr Mall for tlh. The
~rgan , Cln, Cedeno. Hov and
Cunmlltee, announced lhe Clll'f«&lt;t 1lat lncludu lOW'
~oblnson , Pitt u .
M E·R I CAN LFAGUE : ntne-m8n Executive Board prlnats, a sultan, a grand
eando , Oak 19 ; Htndr lc: k, Clev wlll
recommend
the ckili;e, a ra)a and a Uberal
11J Vastrzems ld , 8os
16;
exclusion ol the Republic of asaortment of European
L.May . Bait" ' Rico. Bos 13.
Runs laHed In
counll and lord&amp;.
NATIONAL LEAGUE : FO!· Oiina team when the Games &lt;luke.,
PhiUp
0. Krumm, the u.s.
ter. Ci n 73 ; Kingman . NY 69 ; ~July 17.
Morgan , Ci~ 62: Schmidt, Ph il
"This Is an eztremely, Olympic Committee
61 ; Per-ez. C•n 59..
wlfortunate
day In Olympic prutdent and one al three
AMER ICAN LEAGUE : May.
Wrrv . KC, Chambliss, NY · end history," said .KIIIanln after mai repretientill« the 138
~u rrou~ hs , Te)t 56} 'fastrzem Ute EJ:ecutlve Boanl bowed National Olympic
ski. Bos ana Olio. KC 53, ·
tD polltlcalp-eiS)II'e from the Cuiunlttee's on the ICC's
Stol~.n Bastl ,_
NATIONAL 'LEAGUE : Cede· Canadian External Affairs Tripartite Commission,'
no , Hou 78 ; Broc k, St .L 16 ;
however, holda oula glimmer
Tavera s , PUt 24; N'!orga n, Cin Department.
.
anc1 Lopes. LA. 13 .
A Talw.anese spokesman of bQpe.
· ~ M E R I CAN LEAGUE : Said the team Is awaiting
"There
still
ta the
Nor th , Olilk A3; Patek, KC 38 :
·
poaatblllty
the
RepubliC
of
Saylor , Oak 36 ; Carew, Mlnn etder1 from Taipei, "bot we
35 ; LeFiort . Oet and Cam · expect to be told to challenge
Otlna CGUid compete 'under
paner is , Oak 29.
the Canadiln gownment'a ~· or aa 'Talwan' or sa
Pitching
Mo1t Victorits
'lndependenll under the
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Jones, decision to bar us entry Into Olympic banner."'
the
country.
SO 16 3 ; Looborg 1 Phil ll·S:
Krumm, while admitting
M1Hae k., NY 10-2; Ruth ven, Atl
"We cannot get in by air
10 8; C3rllon and Kaat, Pflil Y· becBWJe no U.S. airline will he Ia~ an almQst bopelesa
3; Niekro, Ati 9-A : Seaver, NY
9-5: Koosrnen , NY 9-6; Messen- permit us to buy tickets, but task In his bid wmediate the
mltn, All 9·7 : Sutton , LA and we can always hi~ dispute, said l)e would try to
·R ict1ard~ Hou 9-9.
&amp;et the Taiwanese to reverse
AM'ERICAN LEAGUE : Pil· automobiles.
,.,.,. , Salt t hl ; Garland, Ball
"We shall not ~turn home their stand. '
10.1; Campbell. Mlnn 10-2: with011t a fight. We shall flglll
~ the declaim, a
Ell is . NY 10:.a ; Fit zmorris , KC
to.s; T&lt;ant . Bos, Tanana. Cat, to Ute bitter eoo ...
Slaton and Travers. Mil and
The Executive IIGard's
Flfuerna , NY 10-6;. Dobson.
decision
has to be ratllled at '
Clev 10·7: Hunt or, NY 10·8.
E•rntd Run Average
the
'18th Congress IUIIOII of
( based an 11 i nnings pitcfttdl
NAT IONAL LEAGUE : Mes· the IOC, 'l!hich beglus Its
sersmith, All 2.43 ; Stenhouse, ~Y meeting Tuelday . .
MU 2.51; Jones , so 2.Sl :
·Fre;sleben , so 2.61; Motlack,
NV 1.65.
N.t~".nal Bueball Congress .
AME RICAN LEAG UE; F; . · \~vrnament Results ~
« vch, Det 1.78 : Travers , Mil un 41 Pr u International - ·
1.91 ; Garland, all ·2.37; Brell, Col
c oneld ' s 9 Sugar
en; 1.• 9; Brown , Clev l.IS.
Cr~tk o
Mansfield Farmer'$ Bank 3
Strikeouts:
,NATIONAL LEAGUE ; Seo· Mansti~ld Water World 'o
ver, NY 127 : Messer$m tlh, All Sm-ithville -4 Steubenville 0
lOS ; Richard. i&lt;ou to• : ~ ;ekro , ML Ve'"r.non 13 cann~l..-ille. 3
AN 96 ; LoHch, NY 90.
Zanesville Sr . Pioneers 6
AME.RICAN LEAGUE: Ryon , Coshocton Stone Conta"lne.r 2
Cal 165; .Tanana, Cal 130 ; ·sandusky • Mar iori 1
Tuesday's G•mes
Blyleven, Tex f2l; Jenk;ns, Bos

:·

By United Pr:!~tlntern~~ttonal
~~~ 'L Pet . G·s

~

Oliver, Pill
73 29750 107 .300
Crawford , St.L 66232 33 80 .3•l
Gr lrtey, Cin 79300 66 102 .:140
Rose, Cin
86 J&lt;t9 7S 111 .335
Morgan, Cln 70 227 62 7! .330
Foster . Cln
76 306 n 100 .327
Monlan·oz. All !8 341 31112 .322
MaddOK, Phil 71 26! •3 IS ,321
Cey, LA ' 7!2701216 .319
Gercm lmo, Cln 77 2~1 36 79 .31!
Am,.rlun L••oull'
G. Aa R. H, Pet.
arell. KC
12 33351 122 .366
McRae, KC 82 JO.&lt; 51 105 .3.5
LeFlore. Del 71 303 lO 100 .330
Ca-'w. Minn 81 32252 IOl .326
Lynn , Bos
71 27'139 88 llol
Munson. NY 11 110 31 99 .319
Rlvert r NY
73 32'6 SJ" IQI .310
Stoub. Del
19 2U 37 81 .310
Htargrovt ,· Tex 7l 78'2 51 86 .JOS
Manning, Cloy 79 324 42 98 .302
G' rt, Chi
67 265 32 80 .302
Home Runs ·
NATIONAL LEAGUE ; King •
man. NV 30; Schmid!, Phil 23 :

the
.. ~enlded
.PBW ~
muclll'ou
placeticRrfrlm Pain Slate, I~ D-61 and Porter , Kusnyer 181.
is with tbe ·College~' l... P-Biy"leven (6"11L HRs-Texas,
·
Faht r t1l ; Milwaukee, Scott
~ KlDb, 8 linet.ckeber 181.
,
frcm Olio State, is to
lidelined aWhile tteean;e af 12ndgamel
··
·
re.os
020 QOa 020 D---.. ,a 0
.an opleratioo for a knee Milwaukee ·000-000 702 1- 5 8 1
o • ._

injury. ·

..

.. ~~:::::t~·::~:~·:~·~ Ch z·na
M•tor-- LUIUt LeMNrt

'

\

•

•

�J
6- The Daily Senlmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, July 12, 1976

•

SPRINGFIELD, Pa. (UP11
- Three ladies competed
today In an IS-hole playoff for ·
the U.S . Women 's Open
'h
hi
Son dra
C amp 1ons PPl\lmer, JoAnne Carner and
Lady Luck.
Both Palmer and Carner
wbo battled each other back •
and forth SWlday to finish
wlth72holetotalsof292, eight
overpar,mentlonedlucka lot
when they talked about their
final round.
Carner, the second leading
money winner on the l.PGA
!AJur this year .and the longest
hitler, sank a five-foot putt m
the 17\h hole to go one up on
Palmer, pIa ying in the group
behind her .
Along came Sandra to the
par-5, 438-ya rd hole and
dropped in a 20-looter for a
11-~
bu'•dl'e and s••y
wa
cu .
"I jusi got lucky," said
ino cham·
Palmer' the derend --c
pion. "I reaUy knew I had 10
make a birdie after JoAnne
did. I had a a.lron to the
green, I don't know how 11

•
•

•

ever stayed on the green."

Carner made a routine par
m the 18th
, hole, also a par 5,

to finish with

a tw()o()ver

d esc rl!H!d reel es tat e :

\\~~d~~~lr~;~d t~" 'S~t~!:.'~

Mrs. ErnesUne Hayman is
enjoying a fishing trip to the
state of Minnesota as a guest
of her daughrer, Katitryn.
A Father's Day . dinner
(chicken barbec ue) was
enjoyed by the Larkins
family In honor of Fred
Larkins..
Mr.
Norman
Weber's birthday also was
celebrated. Those in attendance were Mr. and Mrs .
'
Fred Larkins, Mr. and Mrs .
Norman Weber and Vida, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Weber and
Mlkie, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Weber and Jim, Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Larkins, Cheryl and
Brent, Mr. and Mrs . Douglas
Hauber, Kim and Tim, Mrs.
Donna Bogard and daughter,
, •
Denise
Hauber,
Mr.
,
Raymond Larkins. The chefs
,' •
for the dinner were Raymond.
Larkins and Charles Weber.
&amp;veryone enjoy"lf the day.
Boble Fitch and Janie
Brewer were married June
'
•21. They llve at U1eir new
: _ trailer at Long Bottom. A
: :
wedding shower was held at
the Long ·Bottom Methodist
' •
,.
Church basement.
; : : , • Mr. and Mrs. Elza Larkins
;· : · visited Mary Pierce one
: ~ ·; evening recentlY.
,
: ~ ·~ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph of
• 1 ' Nelsonville were .recent
fu~dinner guesta of Mr. and Mrs.
• ~:
Fred Larkinl.
: :Thole who came to see

and described as follows :

Situated In the VIllage of

Pomeroy , be ing Lot No . •J ~
commencing on th e North side
of Condor Street in said City at
a stone placed at e permanent
corner th ef\ce running at r tghf

1

~ Bermce Bode Osot

anoles with said street 100
feet ; thence running parallel
w llh the line first run 100 feet

For Tue1day, July 13, 1976

to th e stree t first named ;
th ence easterly along said
street 38 feet to the place of .
begi nning , being lhe same
pr e m lses
c()nveyed
to
Margaret Ka utz by c Ha.mm
and susan Hamm , his wife , by
deed dated Aug . Jrd .• 1841, end
recorded In Vol. 9 page 4.49 of

..

..

.

;.

:"' Emmett Stehem on hiS 82nd
- birthday lncluded Mr. and
• ':' Mrs. Kenneth Durin of
" : -. Belver, Pa., Mr. and Mrs.
• ~, •.Howard You,. of Paden City,
• • ' W. Va., Mr. llld Mra. Garth
:. 1 Smith, Llilll Bottom, Mr. and
; : l ~ Mra. Roland Slelbem, lAng
' l: . Bottom, Patty Triplett and
. · ~ : son, T. J. Dinner was served
• • • and 1 blrlhdiy cake baked by
•' •.' Mn.Dwm.

.

!; ' .

Other recent callers on Mr.

to expect more today
than c ondl ~ lons warrant .
Bulldlng unrealistic hopes Is
foohsh View things wit h a Jaun·
diced eye.
You tend

TAURUS (April 20-Mor ' 20)
Don't rely solely on Lady Luck
and your good looks to get you
by today. You 'll have to work

the Records of Deeds in Meigs
Countv , Ohio Said prem ises
are known as No 202 Condor
St reet
The fallowing real esfale
situated in the VIllage Of
Po mero y.
Townsh i p
of
Salisbury . County of Meigs
and State Qf Oh io and more
parttcularly bounded and
described n follow s .
Be1 ng Lot No •2. on Condor
St . said lot be ing 36 lee! front
on Condor Street in Sf'c ond
Ward of said Village of

for any rewards.

GEMINI (Mor 21-Juno 20)
Don t let hunches or mtultlon
t ~ke precedence over logic tO·
day . If 11 doesn 't compute In
your mind chances are it won 't
work .

CANCER ~Junt 21-July 22)
Normally yo u can 't be mistaken
whe re bargains are concerned.

Pomeroy,

~Jutr

known

23-Aug. 22) Friends

S't reel.

~Aug .

23 -Sopt. 22)
SUck to your sensible health
habits today The temptation to

' .. and 1011, Waynle of ' Can!AJn,
and Mn. Paul Osborn,

discipline.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23) II
· could ' prove costly on a risky
finan cial expend iture to take
th e word of someone who
tends to exaggerate
BCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nay, 22)
Look for ways to trim the family

budgei today. Remember, lfs
not made of rubber and has
limits 1o Its elas11cl1y.

SAGITTARIUS (No•. 23·Doa.
21) You're liable 10 make some
lavish promises 1oday In order
to gel others 10 do 1hlngs.
you'll have lo pay
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon.
111 There Is a s1rong posslbliily
you wan't make the best ol
your opportun ities today, es-

pecially if they hapjlen to be
ones.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Ftb. 11)

material

•

Uon8 Hensley,
= Long BottAJm, Mae McPete,
- ~Long Bottom, Lewis Long
; : ;-:;and Dorothy Long, Mid·
- · t •dleport, Robert Hartenbach,
: : i , :Pomeroy, Ralph Gr~, Eaat
·. ; l ',' :uverpool, Mrs. George
... : : · ;PaUina, Elber Riebel, Mr.
: :!_ ;and Mrs. Willard Pigott, Mr.
· • -• and Mrs. Ronald Osborn and
· ·! Mr.andMrs. HaroldOsborn .
: : : , Saturday guests of Mr. and
: ; ! , ~. Joe Blasell and son,
Kemeth, Long Bottom, were
; : :;. - Mr. and Mra. Ted Hayman,
• • " Kim, Terri and Eddie,
· · : · ·weatervUie, Mr. and Mrs .
• ·; ~ ' Tom Groeneveld and Tom: : \ my, WorUIIngton, Mr. and
· · "'Mn. Mike BlsseU, Colwnbus,
; • '---Mr. and Mrl.
Drake'
- .Reynolclibilrg, Mr. and Mrs.
:"''"Jpe A. BIIIMill, Sherry, Sue
;;-and Jole, Mr. and Mrs. John .
• • Northup and Jeremy of
• : · ~.W. Va., Mr. and Mrs .
David Smith and Diana ,
lleeda9111e, Mr. and Mrs.
Har,old Holter, Jucly and
Mark and Mr. and Mrs.
lltmn Holter and Stacl of
: Lq Botlml a,nd Mr. and
lin. David G. Smith . of
•• ' t:heater. In lilt afternoon
~lilt and homemade lee
• 1ft1111 Win IIIII'Ved In ob• tiiiLii ol Mr. BlllieU 's

guided by your own hand loctay. Otherwise, the results
won 't be what you desire.

PISCES (Fob, 20-Morch 20)
Be businessli ke, but lair, today
Don 't leave It up to someone

• .F

rom

~.
I

.

.

'

-

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC E:
Wesley A. Buehl , Meigs
coun ty Engineer, reports that

Township ~oad l . J t 2 In
Chester Township will be
closed to thru traffic tor
sev~ral weeks; begin n ing
Monday July 12~ 1976, while
ttte County Is replacing the
bridge over Shade R tver .
This IS th e steel trus&amp; br idge
on Boy Scout Roed T-112, just
below the Issac Walton Fetrm .
Traffic uslno Sugar Run

Road T-15Sand Sand Hill Rood

T .59 will have to gcraround on

Eag le Rld9e Road C-32 .
The Ohio Bridge company
of cambridge was low bidder
and hes the contract for
S43, lAS.OO,
westev A. Buehl, P .E ., P.S.,
Meigs county Engineer

17&gt; 11. 12. 2tc
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
on the 121h dey of Ju ly, 1976 M
7:00P .M . e pvbllc hearing will
be held on the budget
prepared bY the Bedford
Townlhlp Trust ees, Meigs
Co .• Ohio tor the neKt suc ceeding Fiscal year . ending .
December 31 , 1916.

.,

Such hearlno will be hold ol
Helen Swtrtt , Clerk , Rou te ~
BOX lSI , Coolville, Ohio
171 12 "'

c

EXPIRIINQD

D. Bumprdner

the

as

No

202

Condor

.,

RATES
For Wont Ad Sorvire
S cenrs . per word o"e

insertion
Mm imum
U cents

Charge S1.00.
per word three
consecutive Insertions.
26 cents per word she
consecutive msertlons .
2S Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ·a d! paid
within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
S2 .00
for
80
word
mtnimum .
Each additional wbrd 3
cents .

BLIND ADS

Adc:fitionel

25c

Cherge

per Advertlsem!-nl
OFFICE HOURS
8.30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Daily , 8· 30 a .m. to 12 .00
Noon Saturday
Phone 1oday 992-2156.

NOT1CES
ATTN :I!
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sates, Rummage ,
Porch and Basement Porch
and Basement Sates, etc .
must be paid in advance
Get yours in earl"t by
s topp ing bv our office at
The Daily sentinel, 111
Cour t St. or wr iting Box
7l9, Pomeroy , OhiO 45769
with your rem ittance.

'-------------l

~

Pomeroy , the ir successors WILl DO odd iobt. rooting, pain·
and asshilnS.
ling, hauling, treewo~ . and
There is also included the
~~wJ~·
Pho-"!.!~ · 7409 .
right to use an altev , _. 'eet and
10 Inches wide on the west side
of the herein described real
estate, Sa id alley to be used In
common with the Elberfeld
Realty company and the
ANNOUNCEMENT
Village of Pomeroy for the
OF INTENT TO
purpose of Ingress and egress. ·• PERFORM FLOOD
said nfley Is located In Lot 152.
ELEVATION STUDY
Thet the said Council of the
The Federal Insurance
V illage of Pomeroy , having Administration of the u. s.
the
supervision
or Department of Housing and
management of the property Urban Development, under
to be sold , be and hereby is author i ty of the National
authorized to advertise said Flood Insurance Act of 1968
real estate for sate to the IS amended , (P .L . 90-•••) end
highest bidder according to the Flood Disaster Protection
taw. upon the following terms ; /lei of J91J, (P .L. 93-2341. IS
Cash in hand on the day of the fundlng a detailed study of the
sale .
0
flood hazard areu In Mid ·
Each bid must contain th'e dleporl,
Ohio.
full name of every person or
The study is bring per ·
company Interested In the formed for the Federal In ·
same, end be accompanied by suranco Adm iniStration by
a bond or cert If led check In the Burgess &amp; Niple, Limited ,
sum of $100 .00 to the Consulting Engineers and
satisfaction of Villag e Council Planners, SOB' Reed Road ,
as a guaranty that If the bids Is Columbus , Ohio 43220.
accepted conva'ct w ill be
The purpose of th is study
entered into and Its perform - is to eKamine and evaluate the
ance properjy secured .
flood hazard areas In the
which
are
These checks or bonds witt community
be returned at once to 111 developed or which are likely
ex"p l the successfvl bidder. to be developed and to
His check or bond wilt be held determine flood elevations for
until the contract or bid Is those areas . Flood etevattonl
properly executed by him .
will be used by the community
SAid Council reserves the to carry out the flood plain
right to retect any and all bids management objectives of 1he
received for the sale of any National Flood Insurance
parcel of reet estate . Th is Program . They will also be
Oi'dlnance shall go into effect used as the bills for deter ·
from and after th e earliest rt'lning the appropriate flood
~erlod

•

.'.iONDAY, JULY12, lfl6
5:110-Bonama 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible 15
.
5:30-Adam-12 4,13; News 6; Family Alfalr 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
'
6:110-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:30-NBC Newllf ••• 15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Hodgepodge Lodgo 20;
Carrascolendas 33.
7:110-Democratlc Convention 3, •• 15; Bawling fur
Dollars 6; ·Buck Owens I; News 10; Cendld
G:emera 13• Lowell Thomas · Remembtrs 20;
~esourceful West VJrglnla l3.
7 :30-WJid Wild World of Animals 6; Democratic
Convenllon B, 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Robert
MacNeil Report 20,33.
8:110-Movle "Future Cop" 6,13; Great Performances
' 20,33. '

MOTORS, INC.

l't.ttt-tm

CMPET SIIIP
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBB[R
BACILCARPEnNG
CAPTAIN EASY

Squert Vord tnstetltd

... I l
PIIOitUtHIZ4

SMITH NELSON

®

Insertion .

-

'6e95 .

lloltl._ ...

POM- EROY ·M-OTOR 00 - ,
OJ. ,

The Publisher reserves

' ;

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UCINE

SWIMMING
POOlS

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

1974 CHEVY NOVA 4 DOOR
•2795
local tow mileage car , V-8 engine, automatic r:.w--r
steering and brakes, radio, lire show little WMr,
green finish . Sharp and nice .
.

the right to edit or relect .
any ads deem~cl Ob
iecHonat. The publlsh·er
will not be respons ible for
more than one Incorrect

'

Television log for easy viewing· . .

IS THIS SNEAK THIEF
MUSIC LOVER

l-------------------~--------_.~----------.----------------~·.

see It now.

b6
:el~g~~~ 0 ~pl~~~~~l an~u~~~ ~~== ==~-~- ~;~~-~-11ereln named , VIllage of · ·

Important matters must be ·

Julr 13, 1171
Valuable contacts can be made
1hls year lhrough your
organizational artiliattons. Par·
Uclpale fully in work lha1 displays your abllilles . .

mirrors, radio -

992·6010 or inquire ' at 66 Mill
L()t touted between Lots lSl
-and 152 to the place of _~'.!!!.: Middieer~ ·- O~~o: · - beginning . This tot to be sold js
known as the City H.tll, $200 wHkly stuffing eoY11Piope1
into already stomped and adPomeroy , Oh io
dressed envelopes. Stuffing
There is also Included a
strip of land on the easterly
molenol provided free, Send :
side of the herein described
Self .address e d s tomp ed
premises . extending from
envelope: Diversified, Dept .
Second Street to the rear of
A.A. 1206 Camden Or., RKhsaid Lot , a stripS feet wide for
the purpose of an alley , to be -~~·Virginia 23229.
used In common
the

Remember ,• It they produce

e~

QUAlity

Pomeroy
M otor· 0
•

.
,.,..
197SCHEV. CAPRICE CPE. · ..
U2t5
Dark red with black vinyl lop. Less lhan 7,000 miles
and sharp •• • new car . Loaded with extras lncludt~
,._
la'pe and power window and air.
!97SCHEV. BLAZERK-S
15295
4 h 1d 1 ilk
•· 1or , Iess t•·
w ee r ve, e new 1n..,r
•..,n 12,000 miles,
white over sliver, 3SO V-8. aulomatlc. power steering
and brakes, chrome mldgs., bumpers, exterior

Stree t, at the southeasterly ~ ~~ _ ! :-~-:- • ::..
earner of the building 'now or ~ - ...,
--·· · ·
=
formerly owned by said CHy of
- .. ";:'(~-::.~ ~-. -=..::. ;:i;;.•
Pomeroy (known as the Cll y RACINE Fire Department will
Hall ) ; thence northwesterly , hove o gun shoot Saturday ot
parallel with the westerly line
6&lt;)0 p.n\ . 01 rheir new bulldmg
ol Lot 1• I , 100 feet or to the
oH Boshan Rood
north line of an unnumbered
lot ,
located between tots REGISTERED Du'oc mole hog Ia&lt;
numbered 141 and 152 in said
servite Coli at lewis Smiths,
vi llage, thence southw es terly
Rt. 143 ond Rt 7. Phone 992following t he northerly line of
3t83.
Lot 152 and tf'le heretofore
mentioned unnumbered lot to SPECIAL meetmg of the Racine
the northeasterly corner of the
Gun Club. Thursday , July 15 at
premises now or formerly
7 p m All members invi ted.
owned by the Elberfeld Realty
Company (For reference deed
see Vol. 161, page JSOl. Thence
southeasterly parallel with the
westerly tine Lot1S2 of Second
Street, thence northeasterly WANTED . To•t drivers. good
following the southerly line of
driverS record requirud . Call
Lot 152 and the unnumbered

overindulge will be strong ,
You 'll 'stray without rlgld self.

. :: ,, and Mn._Emmett Stethem else to do1ormlne 1he size ot
: :.• , were Mr. and Mrs. Edll'ard your piece ol the acUon.
• • • ·Hedrick of Columbus, Mr.
: : ~ . -~.and Mn. Roland Ste\hem,

·. · t ~· Mr. and Mra. Gerald Stehem

being

Parcel 4: The tollowtng
described real esta te sit ua ted
in the VIllage of Pol'neroy ,
Counlv of Meigs and State of
Ohio ; Btgmning 60 feet .end 7
inches southwester ly from the
southea!terlycornerot Lot lSI
in sai d V illage on Second

are prone to tall you what you'd
like Ia hear today rather than
give you a frank opinion. Bear
lhts 10 mind.

VIRGO

Oh io,

same prem ises sold by Josiah
ttotf and Wife sarah A Hoff ,
Is are des~;r l bed in Vol . 108
page 256 , Meigs Counry Deed
Records. Said prem ises are

Today, yo u may be taken in by
the glitter and over look the
'i&amp;lue.

LEO

i::

s' ..

Page JB6, records of Deeds Of
Soul h para lie with Nye street
eighteen 1181 fee l; !hence
Wes t twen ty -six 1261 feet ;
lhence norfh eighteen ( 18)
'
1 feet; thence East twenty -six
1261 fe et IO lhe place Of
.
OPEN EVES. B:OOJ'.M.
begi
nn
ing
.
Saving
and
ex
POMEROY, OHIO
cepll ng all coal and other
minerals underly ing the ,.__._ _ _ _ _ _ __._.,.._ _.__ _ _ _ _.:.~
• .
premises hereby gran!Od . •
'
•
Together wlth the rlohl to
mine the same wilhout any . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - , 1'168 Chevollo1 d&lt;. hO&lt;dlop , V-8,
automat ~c . S•SO. Phone (6141)
unnecessary damage to the
WANT ADS
surfa ce Of the ,.me
tNF'ORMATtON
985-3596.
Dee d Referen ce . Volume I&lt;,
DEADLINES
Page 286, Me:gs county Deed s PM . Day Before 1972 Ford 1 ton flatbed truck ,
Records .
Publication .
$220(). 18 lt. londem low boy
Parcel l · Sit uated In the
Cancellations ,
correc~&lt;oiler , $750. Phone (61~ ) 985 Township ot Salisbury , County lions accepted first day of
3373
of Me:gs and State of Ohoo and publication
more part ic ularly bounded
REGULATIONS
1969 Codiltoc Coupa O.Ville. full

ARIES (March 21·Aprll U)

l.orig Bottom
News Notes

1

MeigS County. Oh io. Th~nce

Astr:oGraph.

green and watched Palmer

·

Thai the fol low ing described
&lt;oal esta!O belonging fO !he
Village of Pomeroy Is ...,o,
~~;~~:e , 1t~r,.;,~~y munJclpat
Parcel t : LOI 11 In V. B
Horton's
Addition to Pomeroy ,
LOI ll ln V. S . HorTon 'S A,(t , ,
dil lon to Pomeroy.
· Reference Deed : liolume
20S,
Page
387 Deed
of lheRecords
Me igs
County
, Ohio,
Parcel 2: Begtnntno on Nv e •
Street at the Nor theast corner
of a lo t heretofore deeded bv
Curt is D Reed and Laura
Alberta Reed to John M ' '

m

ame in and leave herseH 40
·
th
fee I away f rom th e pm
wi

@
fJt. 2 SIGNS,
Of

AutoSales

...c..

Pomeroy , CJohLo , unlit 12
O'clock
noon
19th Of
July , 1976,
tor on
lhe the
pure host
of
Ihe
following , parcels

ror

1

Autt.Sales..;_

~~· s~:~~dof ;rr~:.:~~~~~~.wr~i ~-....;--------

1964.

73.

!hal

Sea ledbldsw ll lberocelvedal

leaving a tough, five-foot
downhiU putt that broke to
•L
..ul it in f
u1e r i ght. Sh e dropp...
or
a round of 75 and forced the
Open
PIaYoff • the 11r st '"the
w•
since
"lwasgladlwasinandshe
(Palmer) had !AJ pur in. It's
just Lady Luck 1( she
birdies," Carner said.
"When Sandy lined up that
s~cond putt and started
shakbtg her hea d. I knew it
was going to go in . 1'\1 rather
play an 13 hole playoff than
sudden death. That's just
Lady Luck."
.., Jane Blalock, who dropped
OUt Of conrention with a
double bogey on th e 16tit ho1e,
flnished ·with. 76
a 296
total; earning $3,454.
Susie McAllister was aI one
at
and Amy Alcott and
Sharon Miller were at 299.
MaryBethKing ofBemvllle,
Pa., was the low amateur
with a 303 total.
Judy Rankin made l.PGA
.~
history when she finish ""
with a 74fora307totalto eam
f' sf
$1,229 and become the lr
woman pro to earn more than
$100,000 in a year.

She then stood along the

her third shot.
Her first putt was short,

~OII~~?sL~~r:t~T;,~~n

The Sentinel Classifieds
.
l'
Busz·ne'ss . ervz·ces

LAt-ID SAt&lt;eSJ

David P1rsons, Owner

A

FREE E~nMATES 11111111

llllllllill Senkts

6·7-1 mo.

Alumilum Sidina,

-~

-loltllo11U1tla

24'-$11.00

u·- m.so

$!01111

llniiiOIIU DOORS

21'- $21.00

IIIIDIIII$

South.5terii Ohio

IIEPIAC£,1:111

....

IUIIIIIIUII
SIOIIIWUfml

.

........

4-10-1 m~

For

WIN AT BRIDGE
High-stakes, skillful bidding

•

AI. TROMM OONSl

r~nU!Il
6-J:H61 mo.
power equipment , om -fm
rodto, a.c. climate control ,
SEPT1C TANKS cloanod. Modorn
telucope, tilt steering wheel ,
Sanitation. 992-HS-4 or 992·
$1 ,000 or best oHer. Also. Ford
2428.
One -half ton pickup truck . all
CANNING peochRs now ready
original. $275. Con be snn ot
thru August. Several varieties, Will do rooflnw, construction,
Richard Felly re1idence ,
plumbmg ond h.atlng. No job Continuous ana piece
by
tM bushel . 'II bushel or
Rullond, or phone 7~2 - 2bl8 .
too
Iorge or too small . Phone gutters. We hong H, Ill' do II .
peck . Please bring own con1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo,'"'a ir .
tainer , 2 convenient locations: ' 7~2-:1348.
yoursell. Special prices to
Qutomatic, p.s .. p .b,, ste reot. Midway Market, Pomeroy. CARPENTER, lloorlng, ceiling,
builders.
tape, rodlal firs . 22.000 miles . I
992·2582 : Bob's Markel, Mason, _F-,noling. Phone 9'12·2759.
Colt992-7036.
nJ.S72t.
. -·---·- WILL t rim or cut tr"s and shrubPhone 949-2814
197-4 Ctlevrolel Belo1r, 4 door ,
bery. phone 949-2545 or 7~29
A.M) o5 P.M.
p.s.. p.b.. oir condihon,ng ,
316:.;
7·- - - - - - 'l
..-odial tires ...Phone m .sm.
VERMEER BALER SALES AND S~R·
992-7320 evenings
1969 Buick Skylark, "' dr . sedan ,
1f2 gal. Ice Cream
VICE, Melgs·At~s County .
•
has oir , rodiol tires; h~e new
Bolers from $3995 up. Merrill
insKI• ood out , 56,000 octual
6-27-76
-~hoso, (6")698-3021.
miles . Phone 742·2103 ofte..EXPERIENCED house pointer. tiRAOfORO, Austioneer . Com6:30p.m.
Willi Every Cubic Foot of
Phone Arthur Muuer, 742·
plete Service. Phone 949-2.487
1965 Chevrolet one·holf ton Unlco F,..zor 5pKe You
or 9•9·2000. Racine, Ohio, Crilt
Buy.
2180::·======-----pkk up, 6 cyl. , standard, runs
Bradford.
EXAMPLE : .
&amp;xCAVATING, BACKHOES AND
good, $1!iQ. Phone (6") 378·
DOZER - lARGE AND SMJI.Ll, ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR :10 cu. 11. 10 gal. Ice Crt11m
6'236.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED, lOW
SwHjarl, , toasters, Irons , all
1972 vegO , new tires , runs good.
,POMEROY
LANDMARK
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS . Bill
smqll appliances. lawn mower ,
Colt 9~9- 1626 or 1~7 -2 6&lt;41 , Mike
....
I
'
PUlliNS, PHONE 99'2-2•78 DAY
next
to State Highway G13rage
Robetts.
...Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
" OR NIGHT.
on Routo 7. Phone (6U) 985•
~
Phone 992·2181
B_
U:._
IL"D-IN"'G".-"---,-em
- od_,.o_.,li-n-g.- -on""d
1966 Mustang, b cyl , four speed ,
3825.
good gos m1leoge. see at 570
repairs. Quohty work, effictent
REMOOEliNG , Plumbing healing
Pearl Streer,1MKtdleport ,
ser..,ice. Jeue Rodman, phone
2 motorcycles, One 197• YZ
and all types of general repolr.
991-5980.
1968 Rambler. 6 cyltnder, stan.
YoOOma 80, One . 1971 Sl Hon·
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
dord shift. good condition.
do 100. Phone (61~) 367-0424.
parlance. Phone 992-2409.
--·--·----$300 Phone 991-SJOI 0&lt; '192·
TOMATOES, Cleland Forms and
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ex3682.
Greenhouses ,
Geraldine
perience. Insured free
1970 Cornaro Rally Sport, ex CleJond, Rocine, Ohio.
estimates. Coli 992-2384 or
cellent condition Phone 992(614) 698-7257 Albany.
TAPPAN Gas cook tfove, ovacodo
76&lt;49.
green , •xcellent condition , $75.
SEWlNG MACHINE Repairs, serPhone7A2·3157.
vice, all makes, 992-2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scinors.
FURNISHED, 2 bedrm . apartment ,
adults onl~ , '" · Middleport.
EXCAVATING, dozer, looder and
Phone 991-3874.
boc:khoe work; dump truck•
·and lo·bors for hire; will houl
3 AND ~ RM. lurnish"!! and unFISHING
0~
fill dirt, top soil, limettone and
furnished apt5. Ptlone 992HOME - located an the·
.grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
543~ .
Dem..strolor S.le - We
CJ&gt;Io River. 3 BR, bath,
fert, doy phone 992-7089,
COUNTRY Mobole Home Pork. Rl. hove 3 - 1976 model
night phone 992·3525 or m own water system, nice
33. ten mil~ north of Pomeroy . demonstrators for 11le1
5232.
kl1chen,
lois
of
carpeting,
large lots with concret patios ,
wilh worronly. Buy
peneled, carport, nice front
EXCAVATING , dozer, . backhoe
sidewpllu. runners ond off
ony
of
llltH
trac1ofs
•t
list_
and ditcher. Charlet R. Hot- •
porch. storage bldg. $8.900.
street parking . Phone 992-7479 .
price, and get the moMr
·field , Back Ho8 Service ,
POMEROY - Ranch
ONE bedroom oportmenh ot
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7•2·:1008,
Type.
fr"4
BR.
2
baths,
utility
VtllAGI: MANOR in Middlepo&lt;t 1 model 524 2 wheel tractor
R., pert basement with
GREG'S CB SAlES, locotod at Er- •
for- $1()4 monthly plus elvc. or
1 SUper C·l 2 wheel tradtll'
Rec. R., large .glass enc.
win 's Gulf Service, Mid·
$130 including electric. LOWER
clloporl, Ohio. Phone 9'12-'
porch, garage. $30,000.
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS. 1 model 112 riding tractor
2.38.
Convenient lo $hopping on
RUTLAND - On Leading
Third ond Mill Street5 in Mtd ·
Creek. 1.72 acres. Mostly In
SEPTIC Syotomo instollod by
dleport, Brond new high quoli ·
lawn. Lovely for home or
licensed insto!ler . Shepard
ty oportmenh , See the
Contro,tors. Phone742·2~09.
trailer . $3,300.
monoger ot River5ide Apart ·
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
ments or coli 992·3273. Fur·
frame,
5 BR, 1112 baths.
Pomeroy,
Olllo
n11hed
oportments ol5o
utlllly R.. dining R., small
" ' - 614-992-2975
ovoiloble.-- __ __....._,__
'
basement. 11arge enclosed
HOMESITES for sole, I ocro and
TRAilER spo&lt;:e for rent to Mid ·
porches.
garage
&amp;
carport.
CHOICE
Timolhr
bbled
hoy.
up. Middleport near Rutland.
dleport. Phone 9'12-5&lt;134.
Phono7~1-2359.
Coli 99'2-7481 .
L,
JUST $12,000.
3 room furn ished oporlm4Hlt ,
A
HONEY
FOR
THE
bog1, tizo I polafoet,
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 botho.
utd1ties poKI. Inquire at 356 50$1lb.
MONEY - 135 acres an Rt.
.50, Grodo A olso ovoilablo.
all oloc. 1 ocre, Mlddlopdrl.
North Four th, Middleport ,
8
a
.m.
till
6
p.m.
o.lbeft
681.
Most
minerals.
Waler
close to ~utlond . Phone 992Ohio
lawson, ~t . 338 , David Yotl
7&lt;181.
available.
Close
to
farm , Great Send, Ohio.
~ room and bath furni•hed aport ·
Recreation
.
$16,600.
APPROXIMATELY 10 ocr01 - - - - - - - .::..c="---ment tn Middteport. Utilities
FOR GAlt! INVEST IN
1974 Harley Oovklson Supe&gt;r
beoutlfl building silo, on good
pood . Phone 991-3205 between
Glide, 1200 C.C., good condl·
REAL ESTATE.
rood. Ch"ter water, will toke '
__9_~ - ~ ~!.~? P ·~·
tion. Phono 9'12·5833.
trades and help finance if
992-2259 Ill' tt2-2S61 •
SEMI.furnished etficiency opart · necessary. Phone 949-2770.
5
h.p.
ilordentiller.
$175:
Phone
ment for rent, water ond •lee:
9'12.'
5
532.
SMALl form for 1ale, 10,.. down,
Included. Cootos-Buildlng, Call -:~~-;-·
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
992-2610or991-SI41.
1'16&lt;1 Pontiac 1 dr. hardtop. Phone
ty , W. Yo. Phone {30-1) 7729•9-1511.
3102 or (30-1) 772-3227 .
~~
-~--~--

• 75
¥ KJ98

t2

4AKQ974
li:AST
WEST
· 6 AQJ0864
6 KJ932
¥10 3 2
t l0764
• (l J 9
...
10 6 53
+J
SOUTH

BORN LOS&amp;R

West

~

•

~;"'":"'

-~ -~~'IJJ

r

197"' 24 ft t fl'lOiorhome, e~~ecellent
' condition with obaolutely
.-.erything. Phone949·2n0.

- - ---------tNTERNATtONAL Model 6orl com ·
blne, e)(cellent condition , lott
of e.dro ports. large tandem
f..-tllzor sptoodor, good cond•Uon. Troctor belt driven wood
sow. 1959 Chevrolet 1 ton with
01um . von body ~d po.,..er
tollgate, good cond•tion . Phone

'M9-2770.

is ;,-:u;;-o.~,..;;.~~~d
troiler. Phon•99'2·SS32.

=...
.. '

OlD furniture, ice boKft , brU11

3 Bedroom, all el.c. home, Five
Points, 6 room houM. Phone

991-2571 or9'12-3975.
bods, wall telophon01 ond
parts, or complete hous.OOJds. 5 ROOM houoo with both ond
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
laundry roam, rnod.rn kitchen,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Colt 9'12-7760.
11 ocres with born and milk
'
house located at Minersville,
C.IISH paid lor oil m&lt;Zkes ond
Ohio. kenneth Wilt , phone
models of mobile hornet .
_Phone oroo code 61•·•23-9531 ,
992-31~05::..- ; ---::::-----,
$$Cosh$$$ lorTunkod auto. Fryo'o GOOD 8 room house, 39 acres of
pastur•, letOrt Falls, Ohio near
Truck Auto Ports, Rutlond.
Racine Do~. Mn. Floyd Norrlt .
Phone 7•2·20111.

MAYBEAGOOO
-WILL

5TRA1GtfTE~

HIM OUT-

-

COfNs~'t~ ~;;;f~-;,

Call2~7-2206.

got'd;r ~- ...- - " ' ' - c - - - - : - - - silver jewelry, tpoonl, rlngs, 20 acre farm with pond and born

-~----

dental. Will lrodo . Cofl Roger
Wamoloy , Rutlond. Qhoo, 7•2233::1,-. -,--~-"----

IF VOU have a service to offer, TIMlER. Pomeroy For..t Prowant to buy or sell something,
duct•. lop price for olandlnt
are looking for work . .. or
sowllmber. Coil Kent Hanby.
· whatever . .. you'll fiet result1
1-·&lt;16-8570.
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
Call 9'12-2156.
• WANTEO fo buy used plono In
- ---- - ·· ~--~- --good condition. Baldwin or
2 Fomlly Yard and Goroe- Sale,
othtr comparable brand.
Mondov. Tuesday ond Weds~
Phone 9~9·2•25. _......,...._..,
•
Nka dothlng, man 's clothing, "
• nd hild
•-- WANT&amp;D: One malo ond one
womens, o
c ren , •~.
foma!o QOOt. 'A. R Knight,
allowed by law .
Insurance premlvm retes
range, dishes and jewelrl
Pomeroy ~otor COrflpony.
applicable for nell{ buildings
across from Brodburr tchoo ,
Phone9'12-2126.
'
· Ralph Werry, and their contents, as well as
star1ingtlme9o.m. fll 5p.m.

-------

__ _

plut oilier buildings. Aloo a i
ttory farm house ond a 2 year
old Ekona double wldo troller.
~II on

some property, Coli dur·

tng wHI&lt; , 9'12-7590.

MAKE tprlng cloonlng prolltable,
turn unwanted iltmt Into cash.
,Advtrtlte{ry the Wont..Ads.

loCUST ~~s~
to~.~,ou
~n~d~or~op~l11.
-----·--------..- ~
President of determ ining lhe rates to be YARD "s.l;,- juiy' 1l, 1i, lD
Phono949·2n4 .
'
:oO
till
Village Council used for the second layer of
Village of Pomeroy Insurance
on
existing
~:00 ocrC?ss from Enterprise
COAI.j llmet'tone, ond caklum
ATT'EST :
bvildlngs and contents.
Church. Small aP:pliances ,
chlori4A and calcium brine for
Jane Walton ,
This annouricem ent Is In .
hou1ahold llems. Clothing.
dust conJrol and tpeclol 'mixlng
Clerk of VIllage
tended to notify 111 Interested
· ·
~- · ....... _
soh for for"*". Main Strwt.
At&lt;C Reglttertd Old Englioh
of Pomeroy
p!rsynsofthecommencement
·- --- . - Pomeroy, Ollio or phone 9'12Sheepdog puppiol lor 10lo. Call
3891 ,
~~~~ s.~~~~~;'t~~1!v'~:Yb~~: ~f41f'pliliil,.·'
9'12-73'95.
161 1•. 21 , 28 171 l , 12, 51&lt;
.. -·
---------·'·--any relevant facts anq 15 f 1
o1
•· trov trai ..r, siMps six, TER111-POO pupplet, 6 ~s~. MIDlAND C.l . PUBLIC NOTICE
technical data concerning
radio with
$10. Phone 992-7261 .
Th e Trvstees of Lebanon local flOOd haz•rds to the $850. PhOOJ 99'2·3194 or 992·
•idobond. Aloo, wall and otonTownship, Meigs County~ attention of Mr . Fred Hoff. 3459.
ding wovo ~fer, 5 oloment
AFGtfANhound.-m~. 10~~
Ohio/ will meet In Special man , Mayor/ Mlddloport, 237 1975 'em·p·;;;ii lt. travel trailer,
beom. Aloo, Hoo- conlof..ald.
Apri&lt;of wilh blaCk maok,
Sess on July 20. 1976 11 9:00 Race Street, Middleport, Ohio
vocuum7
· cloonor. Phone (61~)
AKC
wllh
podigrM.
Phone
A.M. for the purpose of •S760, ror forwtrdlng 10 the · .J1&lt;1ulppod lor Notional gao
985424
.
9'12·2186.
adapt ing a budget for the year af'proprlate representatives hookups, 2 door exits, full
·- ------·-:-:-of 1971.
·
o the Federal Insurance bath, relractoblt o•nlng. PUP'i:-;;,~;... ~~~. fr;;;;Voarl ONE good milk ~·· Phone Paul
Clarence Lawrence · Administration
storm windOw•. excellent c;on•
Karr, Chooter, Ohio (61•1 '115homos, 7 mol01. Phone (61~)
351,18.
•
Township Cltr• ' July 12, 19, 26, lie
dltion , Phone843-2621.
,_
985 - ~2.4 .

--

.·

·--

-

~

. ..

-

T

..
'/

---

'

~--

•

river
5 Gotham
City's
protector
11 Med,wllcal
routine
1% Actress

I

5¥
6¥
Pass
7•

A Kansas reader wants !AJ
lutow if expert bridge playen
are equally good at other card
games.
The answer is that most of
o\hem play other card games
very well, but some possess
expertise at bridge and 110
other game.
{Do you have a question
for the eKperts? Write "Ask
rhe Jacobys" care o,t this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individ!JII questions
•f slamped. self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most in leresling queslions
wilt be used in thiS column
and w111 rece1ve copies of
JACOBY MODERN.!

• Banilbed
5 Chew out
'Solo

7 Make lace
STille in ·
Strltch
India
u Mmcan
13 Soviet lake
t Part of a.m.· cheer
U Revolve
Z5 Initials
15 st. John -, II Indigence

--- -,
as well.

11 Speak in-

Roman
church

shakes
20 Exclude

21 Super or
alter
22 Otance

%0Comport

oneself

23 Whitened.
h

denoting

coberenUy
It Having the

You wuz trap-t7 ComPoser
anLjhow! 18 :;:,ce,
as with
frost
r/Piaying

an allu
zt Nonaeme
%8 CUrse
31 Hidden
3% Hell·

copter

:JS RidJ Little,
e.g.
34 Row
35 Enfut
terrible
r7 ChllllnC
ill Fellow
:It BibUcal
weed
41 I lllve

part

'

•
'

•

. I•. '

•

••

'

•

•

.
•

33.

. 3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Title
X 33.

4:QQ-Bewltched 6; Mlsler Rogers 20,33; Dinah 13.
• :30-Niod Squad 6; Sesame St. 20,335:1105:110-Democrallc Convenllon 3••• 8. 10, IS . 5:30-News 6; Elec. Co. 20.33; Adam-12 13.
6:110-News 8,13; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6; Let's Go To Tho
Race&gt; 8; Hodgepodge. Lodge 2~1 Lilla~ Yoga &amp;
You 33.
•
.
7:110-.[lowllng tor Dollars6; Demo... a1lc Convenllon I ;
Name That T~ne 13; Romagnolls' Table 20; Strauu
Family 33.
7:30-Democratlc Convention 6,13; Robert MacNeil
Report 20.
8:110-Democratlc Convention 3,4,8, 10,15; Baseball AllStar Game 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembef'S 33;
. At The Top 20.
8:30-Consumer Survival Kll 33.
9:110-Evenlng at Pops 3!1; More Music From Aspen :10.
10:110-News 20; To Be Annouoced 33.
10:30-Biack Per~lve an the News 20; Woman 33.
11;110-News 3,4,15; ABC News 33.
1'1: 15-Democrallc Conventllfn 6,13.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,.,15; News 8,10; Janak! 33.
12:110-Movle " Night of the Lepus" 8; Movie "The LMt
Voyage" 10.
12:15-News 6,13.
12 : 45-'-Hogan'~ Heroes 13
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:15-New! 13.

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

(Lat.)

,....,.,......,-,-,:;-ro-"1r.:l"'"'1

marble
Z8 Silvers
'IV role
Z9 l.a.sso

.. ' )...\
:;,U:L::AB==N=E=R:::::::;rv;~~~:;T~"A;a;:;:;;;)::;:r;l
I.
I'VE HEARD 1'1-E U~\K?-ir f )~AD
•.:::l•""BRBUTTHERE5ALW!I'rS
1"-V•'"l

IGHT SIDG-

30 - emptor
31 Honeybee
33 Liturgical

f~~\cj~Ci\ij~fi:-BF~r:"W?~~;:::;;~
vestment
;;;:
3S Ham it up
CHILD IN A
·130ARDIN6 SCHOO/; WI-1£RE: lHI::5
HE VON'r BE AI-N t:---s

IROUBLE'-

___ us.

1•

DOWN
I Uttered
z Mrs.. Copper·
field
3 Stille (Fr .)

ACROSS
I European

.TEAFORD
. .
-

we..-.

Soatb

9:110-Piccaclllly Clrcw 20,33 .
9:36-Democrollc Convention 6, 13.
10:110-BI-Ways 33.
~0 : 1~tKI Door 20.
10:»;--Newa 20; Calclt-33 33.
11 :DO-News 3.4.15; ABC News 33.
J!;10-Jct!!n.!'Y Carson 3,•,15; News 8,10; Janakl 33.
12:110-News 6.13; Movie " Grand Prix" 8; Movie
"Drums of Africa" 10.
12:30-Honeymoon Suite 6,13.
1:QQ-Tomorrow 3,4.
2:110-News 13.
TUESDAY, JULY 13. 1f16
6:QQ - Summer Semester 10.
6: 15-Farnl Report 13.
6:20-Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13.
6:30---&lt;:olumbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
· 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:.50--Goocl Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6:55-&lt;huck While R~ports 10; Good Momlno, Trl
5fate 13.
7:110-Today 3A,15; Good Morning America ~,13 ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
8:110-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesam~ St. 33.
1:31&gt;-Big Valley 6.
9:110-A.M. 9; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Dougt1s 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:30-Crou-WIIs 3; One ~lie, to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:110-Santorct &amp; Son M,IS; Edge of Night 6; Price Is
Right 8,10; Bit with Knll 33.
10:30-Celilbrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15;; Dinah 6; Llll~s
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :110-Wheet of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambll
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares3,,j,J5; Happy Days 13; Love
ol Life 8,10.
.'
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12:110-Fun Factory 3,15: H¢ Seal 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8,10; Sesame St. 33.
12:»---GGng Show 3,15; All My Chlldren '6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
•
1:110-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue I ;
Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Etec. Co. :ij.
,
,
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10; Family Theatre 33.
2:!10-S20.000 Pyramid 6, 13; 1'11-Ways 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding Ltghl
8, 10; Unto the Hills 33.
3:01&gt;-Democratlc Convention 3••• 10,15; Genera!
Hospllal 6,13; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Catch-33

~"tit'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.__-""
VIrgil B. Sr., Ruttor
110 Mtchlnlc Pomeror. &lt;:!·
Phone 992-331~
RUTLAND-. J bedrooms,
bath, all city utilities,
porches,furnace,andlarge
lot near school. 112,000.
BUSINESS BUILDING With 5 robm apartm011t
over.
City
utilities ,
excellent location. Only
$13,500.
WALK TO WORK - 3 large
bedrooms 'jVIth closets, ' JI/2
baths, new gas bolltr
~stoam
hoet),
full
basement near stores.'
129,500.
'
U500.QQ - Workingman's
speclat, 2 bedrooms, nat.
gas F :~. ' furnace and city
wafel'.
11500.00- 3 bedrooms, nat.
gas • . clly water, full
basen\ent and looks nice
lmldt. Give "' an offer.
BUSINESS BUILDING 30x40 at · Deder. Good
location for many ldus.
Juat Willi.
11 ACRES - Mostly alt
new fenced, 7 .. room
reslcltnce, 1t,; balhl, and
goodspring
129.000.
4\'&gt; ACRES - 2 bedrooms.
""' baths. -fral 11r 2nd
hoal, 2 Cll' gerage and
I!H'ge gll'dtn lpoll. 129,500.
ADS
ATlRACT
LOOKERS. SALESMEN
SILL . PROPERTY. TRY

really alert he would still bave
bid seven spades rather than
risk letting his opponents score
their vulnerable grand slam."
Jim : " I agree but you can't
quarrel with success."

By Oswald &amp; Jame1 Jacoby
Oswald : "How about some
examples of strategic bidTHAl'S ' 1DADD'f'
ding?"
FOR 'IOU --· HE's SO
Jtm : "I have a good examHOHEST Hftl MEVER
ple right here. The game was
BELIEVE EVER'f'80tJ'(
ElSE DOESH'T WMT
team-of-four with ihterm BE 011 ni' LEVEL,
national match-point scoring.
100-·
South was pretty sure that he
could wrap up seven hearts.
His problem was to get to play
hea rts - when his not
vulnerable opponents held the
spade suit."
.
Oswald : " His bid of just
five hearts was a calculated
risk . He would have looted
.___."--'-- mighty stlly if East-West bad

GRAVE~Y

fij

Pass
64
Pass

tuouso
bi~~~l r;ro111l811Cf!,
but lfeel
·
sl had been

Dbl.
Pass Pas~
Opemng lead - Ace 4

--

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

Oswald . "I don't like to tate
away credit from South's vir-

Pass

GRAVELY
TRACTORS

------

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

.

-~

Nortb Eoot
14
Pass
4¥
••

14
54

FREE

,

700."

¥ AQ7654
tAKB S3
482
North-South vulnerable

FREE ICE CREAM

~-

·-

·-

-·------,- GUTTER SERVICE.

--

let him play there."
Jim : "Strangely enough,
five hearts matina ~even
would have been a 1e0re of
710. At the other table North
and South slam-banged Into
seven hearts and East-West
took the save at seven spades.
The defense collected just
lour tricks to score a mere

12

NORTH (DI

Your Hom~- _

Rutland
·742-2121
All Work Guorontetd
Fret Esllmatn
6-23-2 ntO.

Rllllitif, Ol1iti 45715
,h, lfl4!74Z-Z411

LARRZJ!i.!DER

lW THE TileS !I AROUND HERS!

The Complete
Remodeling Service

'

TfUSS R1fter Co.

~"'"

AIID SEE I~ THEil£~ AIIYTH 1~6 $ U~PIC10115

UP ~IKE A
60RtLI.A... --&lt;f&lt;

Roorq, Gutlels,
Plintittllld Rep~ir

4:12 'lfch

filllldtiiWHto

l 'D BETTE II rAKe /I lOOt&lt; OUT THE WINDOW '

IT'S

D~ESSEP

J49-2114

,_

FtR~T

LUtiATIC ON THt; •OOSE

~

•

Jlor Fast Results Use

Three open plaro££
for la~es' open

•

41 Kidd or
Teach
42 One ol \he

upantshads

J.Jlg~~IJ.I *':::"

43 Be·
charm
44 AI band

Unacramble thooe four Jumbles.
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinar1 word1.

t5 Witty
comeback
tl Yawn

DAILY
I I..O.U.:O HAVE:
DONe 1HAT AN'/·

HOo\l••• WITH ...m

• Wf1llOliT..:,OUR
PERMISSION I

'...J=:

NEFIT
CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to
A. X Y D L ,B A .A X R
Is LONGFELLOW

work

It:

One letter simply stands for another. In this aample A II
used lor the three L's X lor the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formati?n of the words are all
hm1s. Each day 1he code tellers are d11Terent.
'

CRYPTOQUOTES
J

HJW

.JHBRWF
V JWZP

HREF

FB

X V. J W Z Q E

BX
I PF

CJLP

J

ZPVFJQW

QWFPSSQIPWF

QIWB·

J W KTCP V P.-ZC JVSPE

GPFFPVQWI

yesterdiy 's Cryproquote: MAN IS PERISHABLE,NO MATI'&amp;R
HOW HE TRlES TO PERISH THE THOUGHT. - HARRY
PESIN

~

~

(bawett .._rrow)

.,

s.,••,..
' "-

I

Jumw.., SOLAR BEGUN TORRID PAUII

,. ..

.

An1wt:n Ferflaerlrt•JI!rftl'fMr "I!MIWM" "
,_.~AIIIQ

WAIT!! C~ BACK!
HAVE 50\\E OOU6HNUTS
AAD POT~ CHIPS
WITH I«JUfl CUP CAJ&lt;f!!

�J
6- The Daily Senlmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, July 12, 1976

•

SPRINGFIELD, Pa. (UP11
- Three ladies competed
today In an IS-hole playoff for ·
the U.S . Women 's Open
'h
hi
Son dra
C amp 1ons PPl\lmer, JoAnne Carner and
Lady Luck.
Both Palmer and Carner
wbo battled each other back •
and forth SWlday to finish
wlth72holetotalsof292, eight
overpar,mentlonedlucka lot
when they talked about their
final round.
Carner, the second leading
money winner on the l.PGA
!AJur this year .and the longest
hitler, sank a five-foot putt m
the 17\h hole to go one up on
Palmer, pIa ying in the group
behind her .
Along came Sandra to the
par-5, 438-ya rd hole and
dropped in a 20-looter for a
11-~
bu'•dl'e and s••y
wa
cu .
"I jusi got lucky," said
ino cham·
Palmer' the derend --c
pion. "I reaUy knew I had 10
make a birdie after JoAnne
did. I had a a.lron to the
green, I don't know how 11

•
•

•

ever stayed on the green."

Carner made a routine par
m the 18th
, hole, also a par 5,

to finish with

a tw()o()ver

d esc rl!H!d reel es tat e :

\\~~d~~~lr~;~d t~" 'S~t~!:.'~

Mrs. ErnesUne Hayman is
enjoying a fishing trip to the
state of Minnesota as a guest
of her daughrer, Katitryn.
A Father's Day . dinner
(chicken barbec ue) was
enjoyed by the Larkins
family In honor of Fred
Larkins..
Mr.
Norman
Weber's birthday also was
celebrated. Those in attendance were Mr. and Mrs .
'
Fred Larkins, Mr. and Mrs .
Norman Weber and Vida, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Weber and
Mlkie, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Weber and Jim, Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Larkins, Cheryl and
Brent, Mr. and Mrs . Douglas
Hauber, Kim and Tim, Mrs.
Donna Bogard and daughter,
, •
Denise
Hauber,
Mr.
,
Raymond Larkins. The chefs
,' •
for the dinner were Raymond.
Larkins and Charles Weber.
&amp;veryone enjoy"lf the day.
Boble Fitch and Janie
Brewer were married June
'
•21. They llve at U1eir new
: _ trailer at Long Bottom. A
: :
wedding shower was held at
the Long ·Bottom Methodist
' •
,.
Church basement.
; : : , • Mr. and Mrs. Elza Larkins
;· : · visited Mary Pierce one
: ~ ·; evening recentlY.
,
: ~ ·~ Mr. and Mrs. Ralph of
• 1 ' Nelsonville were .recent
fu~dinner guesta of Mr. and Mrs.
• ~:
Fred Larkinl.
: :Thole who came to see

and described as follows :

Situated In the VIllage of

Pomeroy , be ing Lot No . •J ~
commencing on th e North side
of Condor Street in said City at
a stone placed at e permanent
corner th ef\ce running at r tghf

1

~ Bermce Bode Osot

anoles with said street 100
feet ; thence running parallel
w llh the line first run 100 feet

For Tue1day, July 13, 1976

to th e stree t first named ;
th ence easterly along said
street 38 feet to the place of .
begi nning , being lhe same
pr e m lses
c()nveyed
to
Margaret Ka utz by c Ha.mm
and susan Hamm , his wife , by
deed dated Aug . Jrd .• 1841, end
recorded In Vol. 9 page 4.49 of

..

..

.

;.

:"' Emmett Stehem on hiS 82nd
- birthday lncluded Mr. and
• ':' Mrs. Kenneth Durin of
" : -. Belver, Pa., Mr. and Mrs.
• ~, •.Howard You,. of Paden City,
• • ' W. Va., Mr. llld Mra. Garth
:. 1 Smith, Llilll Bottom, Mr. and
; : l ~ Mra. Roland Slelbem, lAng
' l: . Bottom, Patty Triplett and
. · ~ : son, T. J. Dinner was served
• • • and 1 blrlhdiy cake baked by
•' •.' Mn.Dwm.

.

!; ' .

Other recent callers on Mr.

to expect more today
than c ondl ~ lons warrant .
Bulldlng unrealistic hopes Is
foohsh View things wit h a Jaun·
diced eye.
You tend

TAURUS (April 20-Mor ' 20)
Don't rely solely on Lady Luck
and your good looks to get you
by today. You 'll have to work

the Records of Deeds in Meigs
Countv , Ohio Said prem ises
are known as No 202 Condor
St reet
The fallowing real esfale
situated in the VIllage Of
Po mero y.
Townsh i p
of
Salisbury . County of Meigs
and State Qf Oh io and more
parttcularly bounded and
described n follow s .
Be1 ng Lot No •2. on Condor
St . said lot be ing 36 lee! front
on Condor Street in Sf'c ond
Ward of said Village of

for any rewards.

GEMINI (Mor 21-Juno 20)
Don t let hunches or mtultlon
t ~ke precedence over logic tO·
day . If 11 doesn 't compute In
your mind chances are it won 't
work .

CANCER ~Junt 21-July 22)
Normally yo u can 't be mistaken
whe re bargains are concerned.

Pomeroy,

~Jutr

known

23-Aug. 22) Friends

S't reel.

~Aug .

23 -Sopt. 22)
SUck to your sensible health
habits today The temptation to

' .. and 1011, Waynle of ' Can!AJn,
and Mn. Paul Osborn,

discipline.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct, 23) II
· could ' prove costly on a risky
finan cial expend iture to take
th e word of someone who
tends to exaggerate
BCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nay, 22)
Look for ways to trim the family

budgei today. Remember, lfs
not made of rubber and has
limits 1o Its elas11cl1y.

SAGITTARIUS (No•. 23·Doa.
21) You're liable 10 make some
lavish promises 1oday In order
to gel others 10 do 1hlngs.
you'll have lo pay
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jon.
111 There Is a s1rong posslbliily
you wan't make the best ol
your opportun ities today, es-

pecially if they hapjlen to be
ones.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Ftb. 11)

material

•

Uon8 Hensley,
= Long BottAJm, Mae McPete,
- ~Long Bottom, Lewis Long
; : ;-:;and Dorothy Long, Mid·
- · t •dleport, Robert Hartenbach,
: : i , :Pomeroy, Ralph Gr~, Eaat
·. ; l ',' :uverpool, Mrs. George
... : : · ;PaUina, Elber Riebel, Mr.
: :!_ ;and Mrs. Willard Pigott, Mr.
· • -• and Mrs. Ronald Osborn and
· ·! Mr.andMrs. HaroldOsborn .
: : : , Saturday guests of Mr. and
: ; ! , ~. Joe Blasell and son,
Kemeth, Long Bottom, were
; : :;. - Mr. and Mra. Ted Hayman,
• • " Kim, Terri and Eddie,
· · : · ·weatervUie, Mr. and Mrs .
• ·; ~ ' Tom Groeneveld and Tom: : \ my, WorUIIngton, Mr. and
· · "'Mn. Mike BlsseU, Colwnbus,
; • '---Mr. and Mrl.
Drake'
- .Reynolclibilrg, Mr. and Mrs.
:"''"Jpe A. BIIIMill, Sherry, Sue
;;-and Jole, Mr. and Mrs. John .
• • Northup and Jeremy of
• : · ~.W. Va., Mr. and Mrs .
David Smith and Diana ,
lleeda9111e, Mr. and Mrs.
Har,old Holter, Jucly and
Mark and Mr. and Mrs.
lltmn Holter and Stacl of
: Lq Botlml a,nd Mr. and
lin. David G. Smith . of
•• ' t:heater. In lilt afternoon
~lilt and homemade lee
• 1ft1111 Win IIIII'Ved In ob• tiiiLii ol Mr. BlllieU 's

guided by your own hand loctay. Otherwise, the results
won 't be what you desire.

PISCES (Fob, 20-Morch 20)
Be businessli ke, but lair, today
Don 't leave It up to someone

• .F

rom

~.
I

.

.

'

-

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTIC E:
Wesley A. Buehl , Meigs
coun ty Engineer, reports that

Township ~oad l . J t 2 In
Chester Township will be
closed to thru traffic tor
sev~ral weeks; begin n ing
Monday July 12~ 1976, while
ttte County Is replacing the
bridge over Shade R tver .
This IS th e steel trus&amp; br idge
on Boy Scout Roed T-112, just
below the Issac Walton Fetrm .
Traffic uslno Sugar Run

Road T-15Sand Sand Hill Rood

T .59 will have to gcraround on

Eag le Rld9e Road C-32 .
The Ohio Bridge company
of cambridge was low bidder
and hes the contract for
S43, lAS.OO,
westev A. Buehl, P .E ., P.S.,
Meigs county Engineer

17&gt; 11. 12. 2tc
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
on the 121h dey of Ju ly, 1976 M
7:00P .M . e pvbllc hearing will
be held on the budget
prepared bY the Bedford
Townlhlp Trust ees, Meigs
Co .• Ohio tor the neKt suc ceeding Fiscal year . ending .
December 31 , 1916.

.,

Such hearlno will be hold ol
Helen Swtrtt , Clerk , Rou te ~
BOX lSI , Coolville, Ohio
171 12 "'

c

EXPIRIINQD

D. Bumprdner

the

as

No

202

Condor

.,

RATES
For Wont Ad Sorvire
S cenrs . per word o"e

insertion
Mm imum
U cents

Charge S1.00.
per word three
consecutive Insertions.
26 cents per word she
consecutive msertlons .
2S Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ·a d! paid
within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUAR Y
S2 .00
for
80
word
mtnimum .
Each additional wbrd 3
cents .

BLIND ADS

Adc:fitionel

25c

Cherge

per Advertlsem!-nl
OFFICE HOURS
8.30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Daily , 8· 30 a .m. to 12 .00
Noon Saturday
Phone 1oday 992-2156.

NOT1CES
ATTN :I!
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sates, Rummage ,
Porch and Basement Porch
and Basement Sates, etc .
must be paid in advance
Get yours in earl"t by
s topp ing bv our office at
The Daily sentinel, 111
Cour t St. or wr iting Box
7l9, Pomeroy , OhiO 45769
with your rem ittance.

'-------------l

~

Pomeroy , the ir successors WILl DO odd iobt. rooting, pain·
and asshilnS.
ling, hauling, treewo~ . and
There is also included the
~~wJ~·
Pho-"!.!~ · 7409 .
right to use an altev , _. 'eet and
10 Inches wide on the west side
of the herein described real
estate, Sa id alley to be used In
common with the Elberfeld
Realty company and the
ANNOUNCEMENT
Village of Pomeroy for the
OF INTENT TO
purpose of Ingress and egress. ·• PERFORM FLOOD
said nfley Is located In Lot 152.
ELEVATION STUDY
Thet the said Council of the
The Federal Insurance
V illage of Pomeroy , having Administration of the u. s.
the
supervision
or Department of Housing and
management of the property Urban Development, under
to be sold , be and hereby is author i ty of the National
authorized to advertise said Flood Insurance Act of 1968
real estate for sate to the IS amended , (P .L . 90-•••) end
highest bidder according to the Flood Disaster Protection
taw. upon the following terms ; /lei of J91J, (P .L. 93-2341. IS
Cash in hand on the day of the fundlng a detailed study of the
sale .
0
flood hazard areu In Mid ·
Each bid must contain th'e dleporl,
Ohio.
full name of every person or
The study is bring per ·
company Interested In the formed for the Federal In ·
same, end be accompanied by suranco Adm iniStration by
a bond or cert If led check In the Burgess &amp; Niple, Limited ,
sum of $100 .00 to the Consulting Engineers and
satisfaction of Villag e Council Planners, SOB' Reed Road ,
as a guaranty that If the bids Is Columbus , Ohio 43220.
accepted conva'ct w ill be
The purpose of th is study
entered into and Its perform - is to eKamine and evaluate the
ance properjy secured .
flood hazard areas In the
which
are
These checks or bonds witt community
be returned at once to 111 developed or which are likely
ex"p l the successfvl bidder. to be developed and to
His check or bond wilt be held determine flood elevations for
until the contract or bid Is those areas . Flood etevattonl
properly executed by him .
will be used by the community
SAid Council reserves the to carry out the flood plain
right to retect any and all bids management objectives of 1he
received for the sale of any National Flood Insurance
parcel of reet estate . Th is Program . They will also be
Oi'dlnance shall go into effect used as the bills for deter ·
from and after th e earliest rt'lning the appropriate flood
~erlod

•

.'.iONDAY, JULY12, lfl6
5:110-Bonama 3; Partridge Family 8; Mission: Impossible 15
.
5:30-Adam-12 4,13; News 6; Family Alfalr 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
'
6:110-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:30-NBC Newllf ••• 15; ABC News13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,1 0; Hodgepodge Lodgo 20;
Carrascolendas 33.
7:110-Democratlc Convention 3, •• 15; Bawling fur
Dollars 6; ·Buck Owens I; News 10; Cendld
G:emera 13• Lowell Thomas · Remembtrs 20;
~esourceful West VJrglnla l3.
7 :30-WJid Wild World of Animals 6; Democratic
Convenllon B, 10; To Tell the Truth 13; Robert
MacNeil Report 20,33.
8:110-Movle "Future Cop" 6,13; Great Performances
' 20,33. '

MOTORS, INC.

l't.ttt-tm

CMPET SIIIP
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBB[R
BACILCARPEnNG
CAPTAIN EASY

Squert Vord tnstetltd

... I l
PIIOitUtHIZ4

SMITH NELSON

®

Insertion .

-

'6e95 .

lloltl._ ...

POM- EROY ·M-OTOR 00 - ,
OJ. ,

The Publisher reserves

' ;

'

UCINE

SWIMMING
POOlS

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

1974 CHEVY NOVA 4 DOOR
•2795
local tow mileage car , V-8 engine, automatic r:.w--r
steering and brakes, radio, lire show little WMr,
green finish . Sharp and nice .
.

the right to edit or relect .
any ads deem~cl Ob
iecHonat. The publlsh·er
will not be respons ible for
more than one Incorrect

'

Television log for easy viewing· . .

IS THIS SNEAK THIEF
MUSIC LOVER

l-------------------~--------_.~----------.----------------~·.

see It now.

b6
:el~g~~~ 0 ~pl~~~~~l an~u~~~ ~~== ==~-~- ~;~~-~-11ereln named , VIllage of · ·

Important matters must be ·

Julr 13, 1171
Valuable contacts can be made
1hls year lhrough your
organizational artiliattons. Par·
Uclpale fully in work lha1 displays your abllilles . .

mirrors, radio -

992·6010 or inquire ' at 66 Mill
L()t touted between Lots lSl
-and 152 to the place of _~'.!!!.: Middieer~ ·- O~~o: · - beginning . This tot to be sold js
known as the City H.tll, $200 wHkly stuffing eoY11Piope1
into already stomped and adPomeroy , Oh io
dressed envelopes. Stuffing
There is also Included a
strip of land on the easterly
molenol provided free, Send :
side of the herein described
Self .address e d s tomp ed
premises . extending from
envelope: Diversified, Dept .
Second Street to the rear of
A.A. 1206 Camden Or., RKhsaid Lot , a stripS feet wide for
the purpose of an alley , to be -~~·Virginia 23229.
used In common
the

Remember ,• It they produce

e~

QUAlity

Pomeroy
M otor· 0
•

.
,.,..
197SCHEV. CAPRICE CPE. · ..
U2t5
Dark red with black vinyl lop. Less lhan 7,000 miles
and sharp •• • new car . Loaded with extras lncludt~
,._
la'pe and power window and air.
!97SCHEV. BLAZERK-S
15295
4 h 1d 1 ilk
•· 1or , Iess t•·
w ee r ve, e new 1n..,r
•..,n 12,000 miles,
white over sliver, 3SO V-8. aulomatlc. power steering
and brakes, chrome mldgs., bumpers, exterior

Stree t, at the southeasterly ~ ~~ _ ! :-~-:- • ::..
earner of the building 'now or ~ - ...,
--·· · ·
=
formerly owned by said CHy of
- .. ";:'(~-::.~ ~-. -=..::. ;:i;;.•
Pomeroy (known as the Cll y RACINE Fire Department will
Hall ) ; thence northwesterly , hove o gun shoot Saturday ot
parallel with the westerly line
6&lt;)0 p.n\ . 01 rheir new bulldmg
ol Lot 1• I , 100 feet or to the
oH Boshan Rood
north line of an unnumbered
lot ,
located between tots REGISTERED Du'oc mole hog Ia&lt;
numbered 141 and 152 in said
servite Coli at lewis Smiths,
vi llage, thence southw es terly
Rt. 143 ond Rt 7. Phone 992following t he northerly line of
3t83.
Lot 152 and tf'le heretofore
mentioned unnumbered lot to SPECIAL meetmg of the Racine
the northeasterly corner of the
Gun Club. Thursday , July 15 at
premises now or formerly
7 p m All members invi ted.
owned by the Elberfeld Realty
Company (For reference deed
see Vol. 161, page JSOl. Thence
southeasterly parallel with the
westerly tine Lot1S2 of Second
Street, thence northeasterly WANTED . To•t drivers. good
following the southerly line of
driverS record requirud . Call
Lot 152 and the unnumbered

overindulge will be strong ,
You 'll 'stray without rlgld self.

. :: ,, and Mn._Emmett Stethem else to do1ormlne 1he size ot
: :.• , were Mr. and Mrs. Edll'ard your piece ol the acUon.
• • • ·Hedrick of Columbus, Mr.
: : ~ . -~.and Mn. Roland Ste\hem,

·. · t ~· Mr. and Mra. Gerald Stehem

being

Parcel 4: The tollowtng
described real esta te sit ua ted
in the VIllage of Pol'neroy ,
Counlv of Meigs and State of
Ohio ; Btgmning 60 feet .end 7
inches southwester ly from the
southea!terlycornerot Lot lSI
in sai d V illage on Second

are prone to tall you what you'd
like Ia hear today rather than
give you a frank opinion. Bear
lhts 10 mind.

VIRGO

Oh io,

same prem ises sold by Josiah
ttotf and Wife sarah A Hoff ,
Is are des~;r l bed in Vol . 108
page 256 , Meigs Counry Deed
Records. Said prem ises are

Today, yo u may be taken in by
the glitter and over look the
'i&amp;lue.

LEO

i::

s' ..

Page JB6, records of Deeds Of
Soul h para lie with Nye street
eighteen 1181 fee l; !hence
Wes t twen ty -six 1261 feet ;
lhence norfh eighteen ( 18)
'
1 feet; thence East twenty -six
1261 fe et IO lhe place Of
.
OPEN EVES. B:OOJ'.M.
begi
nn
ing
.
Saving
and
ex
POMEROY, OHIO
cepll ng all coal and other
minerals underly ing the ,.__._ _ _ _ _ _ __._.,.._ _.__ _ _ _ _.:.~
• .
premises hereby gran!Od . •
'
•
Together wlth the rlohl to
mine the same wilhout any . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - , 1'168 Chevollo1 d&lt;. hO&lt;dlop , V-8,
automat ~c . S•SO. Phone (6141)
unnecessary damage to the
WANT ADS
surfa ce Of the ,.me
tNF'ORMATtON
985-3596.
Dee d Referen ce . Volume I&lt;,
DEADLINES
Page 286, Me:gs county Deed s PM . Day Before 1972 Ford 1 ton flatbed truck ,
Records .
Publication .
$220(). 18 lt. londem low boy
Parcel l · Sit uated In the
Cancellations ,
correc~&lt;oiler , $750. Phone (61~ ) 985 Township ot Salisbury , County lions accepted first day of
3373
of Me:gs and State of Ohoo and publication
more part ic ularly bounded
REGULATIONS
1969 Codiltoc Coupa O.Ville. full

ARIES (March 21·Aprll U)

l.orig Bottom
News Notes

1

MeigS County. Oh io. Th~nce

Astr:oGraph.

green and watched Palmer

·

Thai the fol low ing described
&lt;oal esta!O belonging fO !he
Village of Pomeroy Is ...,o,
~~;~~:e , 1t~r,.;,~~y munJclpat
Parcel t : LOI 11 In V. B
Horton's
Addition to Pomeroy ,
LOI ll ln V. S . HorTon 'S A,(t , ,
dil lon to Pomeroy.
· Reference Deed : liolume
20S,
Page
387 Deed
of lheRecords
Me igs
County
, Ohio,
Parcel 2: Begtnntno on Nv e •
Street at the Nor theast corner
of a lo t heretofore deeded bv
Curt is D Reed and Laura
Alberta Reed to John M ' '

m

ame in and leave herseH 40
·
th
fee I away f rom th e pm
wi

@
fJt. 2 SIGNS,
Of

AutoSales

...c..

Pomeroy , CJohLo , unlit 12
O'clock
noon
19th Of
July , 1976,
tor on
lhe the
pure host
of
Ihe
following , parcels

ror

1

Autt.Sales..;_

~~· s~:~~dof ;rr~:.:~~~~~~.wr~i ~-....;--------

1964.

73.

!hal

Sea ledbldsw ll lberocelvedal

leaving a tough, five-foot
downhiU putt that broke to
•L
..ul it in f
u1e r i ght. Sh e dropp...
or
a round of 75 and forced the
Open
PIaYoff • the 11r st '"the
w•
since
"lwasgladlwasinandshe
(Palmer) had !AJ pur in. It's
just Lady Luck 1( she
birdies," Carner said.
"When Sandy lined up that
s~cond putt and started
shakbtg her hea d. I knew it
was going to go in . 1'\1 rather
play an 13 hole playoff than
sudden death. That's just
Lady Luck."
.., Jane Blalock, who dropped
OUt Of conrention with a
double bogey on th e 16tit ho1e,
flnished ·with. 76
a 296
total; earning $3,454.
Susie McAllister was aI one
at
and Amy Alcott and
Sharon Miller were at 299.
MaryBethKing ofBemvllle,
Pa., was the low amateur
with a 303 total.
Judy Rankin made l.PGA
.~
history when she finish ""
with a 74fora307totalto eam
f' sf
$1,229 and become the lr
woman pro to earn more than
$100,000 in a year.

She then stood along the

her third shot.
Her first putt was short,

~OII~~?sL~~r:t~T;,~~n

The Sentinel Classifieds
.
l'
Busz·ne'ss . ervz·ces

LAt-ID SAt&lt;eSJ

David P1rsons, Owner

A

FREE E~nMATES 11111111

llllllllill Senkts

6·7-1 mo.

Alumilum Sidina,

-~

-loltllo11U1tla

24'-$11.00

u·- m.so

$!01111

llniiiOIIU DOORS

21'- $21.00

IIIIDIIII$

South.5terii Ohio

IIEPIAC£,1:111

....

IUIIIIIIUII
SIOIIIWUfml

.

........

4-10-1 m~

For

WIN AT BRIDGE
High-stakes, skillful bidding

•

AI. TROMM OONSl

r~nU!Il
6-J:H61 mo.
power equipment , om -fm
rodto, a.c. climate control ,
SEPT1C TANKS cloanod. Modorn
telucope, tilt steering wheel ,
Sanitation. 992-HS-4 or 992·
$1 ,000 or best oHer. Also. Ford
2428.
One -half ton pickup truck . all
CANNING peochRs now ready
original. $275. Con be snn ot
thru August. Several varieties, Will do rooflnw, construction,
Richard Felly re1idence ,
plumbmg ond h.atlng. No job Continuous ana piece
by
tM bushel . 'II bushel or
Rullond, or phone 7~2 - 2bl8 .
too
Iorge or too small . Phone gutters. We hong H, Ill' do II .
peck . Please bring own con1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo,'"'a ir .
tainer , 2 convenient locations: ' 7~2-:1348.
yoursell. Special prices to
Qutomatic, p.s .. p .b,, ste reot. Midway Market, Pomeroy. CARPENTER, lloorlng, ceiling,
builders.
tape, rodlal firs . 22.000 miles . I
992·2582 : Bob's Markel, Mason, _F-,noling. Phone 9'12·2759.
Colt992-7036.
nJ.S72t.
. -·---·- WILL t rim or cut tr"s and shrubPhone 949-2814
197-4 Ctlevrolel Belo1r, 4 door ,
bery. phone 949-2545 or 7~29
A.M) o5 P.M.
p.s.. p.b.. oir condihon,ng ,
316:.;
7·- - - - - - 'l
..-odial tires ...Phone m .sm.
VERMEER BALER SALES AND S~R·
992-7320 evenings
1969 Buick Skylark, "' dr . sedan ,
1f2 gal. Ice Cream
VICE, Melgs·At~s County .
•
has oir , rodiol tires; h~e new
Bolers from $3995 up. Merrill
insKI• ood out , 56,000 octual
6-27-76
-~hoso, (6")698-3021.
miles . Phone 742·2103 ofte..EXPERIENCED house pointer. tiRAOfORO, Austioneer . Com6:30p.m.
Willi Every Cubic Foot of
Phone Arthur Muuer, 742·
plete Service. Phone 949-2.487
1965 Chevrolet one·holf ton Unlco F,..zor 5pKe You
or 9•9·2000. Racine, Ohio, Crilt
Buy.
2180::·======-----pkk up, 6 cyl. , standard, runs
Bradford.
EXAMPLE : .
&amp;xCAVATING, BACKHOES AND
good, $1!iQ. Phone (6") 378·
DOZER - lARGE AND SMJI.Ll, ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR :10 cu. 11. 10 gal. Ice Crt11m
6'236.
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED, lOW
SwHjarl, , toasters, Irons , all
1972 vegO , new tires , runs good.
,POMEROY
LANDMARK
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS . Bill
smqll appliances. lawn mower ,
Colt 9~9- 1626 or 1~7 -2 6&lt;41 , Mike
....
I
'
PUlliNS, PHONE 99'2-2•78 DAY
next
to State Highway G13rage
Robetts.
...Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
" OR NIGHT.
on Routo 7. Phone (6U) 985•
~
Phone 992·2181
B_
U:._
IL"D-IN"'G".-"---,-em
- od_,.o_.,li-n-g.- -on""d
1966 Mustang, b cyl , four speed ,
3825.
good gos m1leoge. see at 570
repairs. Quohty work, effictent
REMOOEliNG , Plumbing healing
Pearl Streer,1MKtdleport ,
ser..,ice. Jeue Rodman, phone
2 motorcycles, One 197• YZ
and all types of general repolr.
991-5980.
1968 Rambler. 6 cyltnder, stan.
YoOOma 80, One . 1971 Sl Hon·
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
dord shift. good condition.
do 100. Phone (61~) 367-0424.
parlance. Phone 992-2409.
--·--·----$300 Phone 991-SJOI 0&lt; '192·
TOMATOES, Cleland Forms and
D&amp;D TREE Trimming, 20 years ex3682.
Greenhouses ,
Geraldine
perience. Insured free
1970 Cornaro Rally Sport, ex CleJond, Rocine, Ohio.
estimates. Coli 992-2384 or
cellent condition Phone 992(614) 698-7257 Albany.
TAPPAN Gas cook tfove, ovacodo
76&lt;49.
green , •xcellent condition , $75.
SEWlNG MACHINE Repairs, serPhone7A2·3157.
vice, all makes, 992-2284. The
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scinors.
FURNISHED, 2 bedrm . apartment ,
adults onl~ , '" · Middleport.
EXCAVATING, dozer, looder and
Phone 991-3874.
boc:khoe work; dump truck•
·and lo·bors for hire; will houl
3 AND ~ RM. lurnish"!! and unFISHING
0~
fill dirt, top soil, limettone and
furnished apt5. Ptlone 992HOME - located an the·
.grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
543~ .
Dem..strolor S.le - We
CJ&gt;Io River. 3 BR, bath,
fert, doy phone 992-7089,
COUNTRY Mobole Home Pork. Rl. hove 3 - 1976 model
night phone 992·3525 or m own water system, nice
33. ten mil~ north of Pomeroy . demonstrators for 11le1
5232.
kl1chen,
lois
of
carpeting,
large lots with concret patios ,
wilh worronly. Buy
peneled, carport, nice front
EXCAVATING , dozer, . backhoe
sidewpllu. runners ond off
ony
of
llltH
trac1ofs
•t
list_
and ditcher. Charlet R. Hot- •
porch. storage bldg. $8.900.
street parking . Phone 992-7479 .
price, and get the moMr
·field , Back Ho8 Service ,
POMEROY - Ranch
ONE bedroom oportmenh ot
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7•2·:1008,
Type.
fr"4
BR.
2
baths,
utility
VtllAGI: MANOR in Middlepo&lt;t 1 model 524 2 wheel tractor
R., pert basement with
GREG'S CB SAlES, locotod at Er- •
for- $1()4 monthly plus elvc. or
1 SUper C·l 2 wheel tradtll'
Rec. R., large .glass enc.
win 's Gulf Service, Mid·
$130 including electric. LOWER
clloporl, Ohio. Phone 9'12-'
porch, garage. $30,000.
RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS. 1 model 112 riding tractor
2.38.
Convenient lo $hopping on
RUTLAND - On Leading
Third ond Mill Street5 in Mtd ·
Creek. 1.72 acres. Mostly In
SEPTIC Syotomo instollod by
dleport, Brond new high quoli ·
lawn. Lovely for home or
licensed insto!ler . Shepard
ty oportmenh , See the
Contro,tors. Phone742·2~09.
trailer . $3,300.
monoger ot River5ide Apart ·
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story
ments or coli 992·3273. Fur·
frame,
5 BR, 1112 baths.
Pomeroy,
Olllo
n11hed
oportments ol5o
utlllly R.. dining R., small
" ' - 614-992-2975
ovoiloble.-- __ __....._,__
'
basement. 11arge enclosed
HOMESITES for sole, I ocro and
TRAilER spo&lt;:e for rent to Mid ·
porches.
garage
&amp;
carport.
CHOICE
Timolhr
bbled
hoy.
up. Middleport near Rutland.
dleport. Phone 9'12-5&lt;134.
Phono7~1-2359.
Coli 99'2-7481 .
L,
JUST $12,000.
3 room furn ished oporlm4Hlt ,
A
HONEY
FOR
THE
bog1, tizo I polafoet,
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 botho.
utd1ties poKI. Inquire at 356 50$1lb.
MONEY - 135 acres an Rt.
.50, Grodo A olso ovoilablo.
all oloc. 1 ocre, Mlddlopdrl.
North Four th, Middleport ,
8
a
.m.
till
6
p.m.
o.lbeft
681.
Most
minerals.
Waler
close to ~utlond . Phone 992Ohio
lawson, ~t . 338 , David Yotl
7&lt;181.
available.
Close
to
farm , Great Send, Ohio.
~ room and bath furni•hed aport ·
Recreation
.
$16,600.
APPROXIMATELY 10 ocr01 - - - - - - - .::..c="---ment tn Middteport. Utilities
FOR GAlt! INVEST IN
1974 Harley Oovklson Supe&gt;r
beoutlfl building silo, on good
pood . Phone 991-3205 between
Glide, 1200 C.C., good condl·
REAL ESTATE.
rood. Ch"ter water, will toke '
__9_~ - ~ ~!.~? P ·~·
tion. Phono 9'12·5833.
trades and help finance if
992-2259 Ill' tt2-2S61 •
SEMI.furnished etficiency opart · necessary. Phone 949-2770.
5
h.p.
ilordentiller.
$175:
Phone
ment for rent, water ond •lee:
9'12.'
5
532.
SMALl form for 1ale, 10,.. down,
Included. Cootos-Buildlng, Call -:~~-;-·
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
992-2610or991-SI41.
1'16&lt;1 Pontiac 1 dr. hardtop. Phone
ty , W. Yo. Phone {30-1) 7729•9-1511.
3102 or (30-1) 772-3227 .
~~
-~--~--

• 75
¥ KJ98

t2

4AKQ974
li:AST
WEST
· 6 AQJ0864
6 KJ932
¥10 3 2
t l0764
• (l J 9
...
10 6 53
+J
SOUTH

BORN LOS&amp;R

West

~

•

~;"'":"'

-~ -~~'IJJ

r

197"' 24 ft t fl'lOiorhome, e~~ecellent
' condition with obaolutely
.-.erything. Phone949·2n0.

- - ---------tNTERNATtONAL Model 6orl com ·
blne, e)(cellent condition , lott
of e.dro ports. large tandem
f..-tllzor sptoodor, good cond•Uon. Troctor belt driven wood
sow. 1959 Chevrolet 1 ton with
01um . von body ~d po.,..er
tollgate, good cond•tion . Phone

'M9-2770.

is ;,-:u;;-o.~,..;;.~~~d
troiler. Phon•99'2·SS32.

=...
.. '

OlD furniture, ice boKft , brU11

3 Bedroom, all el.c. home, Five
Points, 6 room houM. Phone

991-2571 or9'12-3975.
bods, wall telophon01 ond
parts, or complete hous.OOJds. 5 ROOM houoo with both ond
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4,
laundry roam, rnod.rn kitchen,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Colt 9'12-7760.
11 ocres with born and milk
'
house located at Minersville,
C.IISH paid lor oil m&lt;Zkes ond
Ohio. kenneth Wilt , phone
models of mobile hornet .
_Phone oroo code 61•·•23-9531 ,
992-31~05::..- ; ---::::-----,
$$Cosh$$$ lorTunkod auto. Fryo'o GOOD 8 room house, 39 acres of
pastur•, letOrt Falls, Ohio near
Truck Auto Ports, Rutlond.
Racine Do~. Mn. Floyd Norrlt .
Phone 7•2·20111.

MAYBEAGOOO
-WILL

5TRA1GtfTE~

HIM OUT-

-

COfNs~'t~ ~;;;f~-;,

Call2~7-2206.

got'd;r ~- ...- - " ' ' - c - - - - : - - - silver jewelry, tpoonl, rlngs, 20 acre farm with pond and born

-~----

dental. Will lrodo . Cofl Roger
Wamoloy , Rutlond. Qhoo, 7•2233::1,-. -,--~-"----

IF VOU have a service to offer, TIMlER. Pomeroy For..t Prowant to buy or sell something,
duct•. lop price for olandlnt
are looking for work . .. or
sowllmber. Coil Kent Hanby.
· whatever . .. you'll fiet result1
1-·&lt;16-8570.
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
Call 9'12-2156.
• WANTEO fo buy used plono In
- ---- - ·· ~--~- --good condition. Baldwin or
2 Fomlly Yard and Goroe- Sale,
othtr comparable brand.
Mondov. Tuesday ond Weds~
Phone 9~9·2•25. _......,...._..,
•
Nka dothlng, man 's clothing, "
• nd hild
•-- WANT&amp;D: One malo ond one
womens, o
c ren , •~.
foma!o QOOt. 'A. R Knight,
allowed by law .
Insurance premlvm retes
range, dishes and jewelrl
Pomeroy ~otor COrflpony.
applicable for nell{ buildings
across from Brodburr tchoo ,
Phone9'12-2126.
'
· Ralph Werry, and their contents, as well as
star1ingtlme9o.m. fll 5p.m.

-------

__ _

plut oilier buildings. Aloo a i
ttory farm house ond a 2 year
old Ekona double wldo troller.
~II on

some property, Coli dur·

tng wHI&lt; , 9'12-7590.

MAKE tprlng cloonlng prolltable,
turn unwanted iltmt Into cash.
,Advtrtlte{ry the Wont..Ads.

loCUST ~~s~
to~.~,ou
~n~d~or~op~l11.
-----·--------..- ~
President of determ ining lhe rates to be YARD "s.l;,- juiy' 1l, 1i, lD
Phono949·2n4 .
'
:oO
till
Village Council used for the second layer of
Village of Pomeroy Insurance
on
existing
~:00 ocrC?ss from Enterprise
COAI.j llmet'tone, ond caklum
ATT'EST :
bvildlngs and contents.
Church. Small aP:pliances ,
chlori4A and calcium brine for
Jane Walton ,
This annouricem ent Is In .
hou1ahold llems. Clothing.
dust conJrol and tpeclol 'mixlng
Clerk of VIllage
tended to notify 111 Interested
· ·
~- · ....... _
soh for for"*". Main Strwt.
At&lt;C Reglttertd Old Englioh
of Pomeroy
p!rsynsofthecommencement
·- --- . - Pomeroy, Ollio or phone 9'12Sheepdog puppiol lor 10lo. Call
3891 ,
~~~~ s.~~~~~;'t~~1!v'~:Yb~~: ~f41f'pliliil,.·'
9'12-73'95.
161 1•. 21 , 28 171 l , 12, 51&lt;
.. -·
---------·'·--any relevant facts anq 15 f 1
o1
•· trov trai ..r, siMps six, TER111-POO pupplet, 6 ~s~. MIDlAND C.l . PUBLIC NOTICE
technical data concerning
radio with
$10. Phone 992-7261 .
Th e Trvstees of Lebanon local flOOd haz•rds to the $850. PhOOJ 99'2·3194 or 992·
•idobond. Aloo, wall and otonTownship, Meigs County~ attention of Mr . Fred Hoff. 3459.
ding wovo ~fer, 5 oloment
AFGtfANhound.-m~. 10~~
Ohio/ will meet In Special man , Mayor/ Mlddloport, 237 1975 'em·p·;;;ii lt. travel trailer,
beom. Aloo, Hoo- conlof..ald.
Apri&lt;of wilh blaCk maok,
Sess on July 20. 1976 11 9:00 Race Street, Middleport, Ohio
vocuum7
· cloonor. Phone (61~)
AKC
wllh
podigrM.
Phone
A.M. for the purpose of •S760, ror forwtrdlng 10 the · .J1&lt;1ulppod lor Notional gao
985424
.
9'12·2186.
adapt ing a budget for the year af'proprlate representatives hookups, 2 door exits, full
·- ------·-:-:-of 1971.
·
o the Federal Insurance bath, relractoblt o•nlng. PUP'i:-;;,~;... ~~~. fr;;;;Voarl ONE good milk ~·· Phone Paul
Clarence Lawrence · Administration
storm windOw•. excellent c;on•
Karr, Chooter, Ohio (61•1 '115homos, 7 mol01. Phone (61~)
351,18.
•
Township Cltr• ' July 12, 19, 26, lie
dltion , Phone843-2621.
,_
985 - ~2.4 .

--

.·

·--

-

~

. ..

-

T

..
'/

---

'

~--

•

river
5 Gotham
City's
protector
11 Med,wllcal
routine
1% Actress

I

5¥
6¥
Pass
7•

A Kansas reader wants !AJ
lutow if expert bridge playen
are equally good at other card
games.
The answer is that most of
o\hem play other card games
very well, but some possess
expertise at bridge and 110
other game.
{Do you have a question
for the eKperts? Write "Ask
rhe Jacobys" care o,t this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individ!JII questions
•f slamped. self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most in leresling queslions
wilt be used in thiS column
and w111 rece1ve copies of
JACOBY MODERN.!

• Banilbed
5 Chew out
'Solo

7 Make lace
STille in ·
Strltch
India
u Mmcan
13 Soviet lake
t Part of a.m.· cheer
U Revolve
Z5 Initials
15 st. John -, II Indigence

--- -,
as well.

11 Speak in-

Roman
church

shakes
20 Exclude

21 Super or
alter
22 Otance

%0Comport

oneself

23 Whitened.
h

denoting

coberenUy
It Having the

You wuz trap-t7 ComPoser
anLjhow! 18 :;:,ce,
as with
frost
r/Piaying

an allu
zt Nonaeme
%8 CUrse
31 Hidden
3% Hell·

copter

:JS RidJ Little,
e.g.
34 Row
35 Enfut
terrible
r7 ChllllnC
ill Fellow
:It BibUcal
weed
41 I lllve

part

'

•
'

•

. I•. '

•

••

'

•

•

.
•

33.

. 3:30-0ne Life to Live 13; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Title
X 33.

4:QQ-Bewltched 6; Mlsler Rogers 20,33; Dinah 13.
• :30-Niod Squad 6; Sesame St. 20,335:1105:110-Democrallc Convenllon 3••• 8. 10, IS . 5:30-News 6; Elec. Co. 20.33; Adam-12 13.
6:110-News 8,13; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6; Let's Go To Tho
Race&gt; 8; Hodgepodge. Lodge 2~1 Lilla~ Yoga &amp;
You 33.
•
.
7:110-.[lowllng tor Dollars6; Demo... a1lc Convenllon I ;
Name That T~ne 13; Romagnolls' Table 20; Strauu
Family 33.
7:30-Democratlc Convention 6,13; Robert MacNeil
Report 20.
8:110-Democratlc Convention 3,4,8, 10,15; Baseball AllStar Game 6, 13; Lowell Thomas Remembef'S 33;
. At The Top 20.
8:30-Consumer Survival Kll 33.
9:110-Evenlng at Pops 3!1; More Music From Aspen :10.
10:110-News 20; To Be Annouoced 33.
10:30-Biack Per~lve an the News 20; Woman 33.
11;110-News 3,4,15; ABC News 33.
1'1: 15-Democrallc Conventllfn 6,13.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,.,15; News 8,10; Janak! 33.
12:110-Movle " Night of the Lepus" 8; Movie "The LMt
Voyage" 10.
12:15-News 6,13.
12 : 45-'-Hogan'~ Heroes 13
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4.
1:15-New! 13.

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

(Lat.)

,....,.,......,-,-,:;-ro-"1r.:l"'"'1

marble
Z8 Silvers
'IV role
Z9 l.a.sso

.. ' )...\
:;,U:L::AB==N=E=R:::::::;rv;~~~:;T~"A;a;:;:;;;)::;:r;l
I.
I'VE HEARD 1'1-E U~\K?-ir f )~AD
•.:::l•""BRBUTTHERE5ALW!I'rS
1"-V•'"l

IGHT SIDG-

30 - emptor
31 Honeybee
33 Liturgical

f~~\cj~Ci\ij~fi:-BF~r:"W?~~;:::;;~
vestment
;;;:
3S Ham it up
CHILD IN A
·130ARDIN6 SCHOO/; WI-1£RE: lHI::5
HE VON'r BE AI-N t:---s

IROUBLE'-

___ us.

1•

DOWN
I Uttered
z Mrs.. Copper·
field
3 Stille (Fr .)

ACROSS
I European

.TEAFORD
. .
-

we..-.

Soatb

9:110-Piccaclllly Clrcw 20,33 .
9:36-Democrollc Convention 6, 13.
10:110-BI-Ways 33.
~0 : 1~tKI Door 20.
10:»;--Newa 20; Calclt-33 33.
11 :DO-News 3.4.15; ABC News 33.
J!;10-Jct!!n.!'Y Carson 3,•,15; News 8,10; Janakl 33.
12:110-News 6.13; Movie " Grand Prix" 8; Movie
"Drums of Africa" 10.
12:30-Honeymoon Suite 6,13.
1:QQ-Tomorrow 3,4.
2:110-News 13.
TUESDAY, JULY 13. 1f16
6:QQ - Summer Semester 10.
6: 15-Farnl Report 13.
6:20-Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13.
6:30---&lt;:olumbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester
· 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:.50--Goocl Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6:55-&lt;huck While R~ports 10; Good Momlno, Trl
5fate 13.
7:110-Today 3A,15; Good Morning America ~,13 ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7: 30-Schoolles 10.
8:110-Lassle 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesam~ St. 33.
1:31&gt;-Big Valley 6.
9:110-A.M. 9; Phil Donahue 4.15; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Dougt1s 10; Morning with D.J . 13.
9:30-Crou-WIIs 3; One ~lie, to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas 13.
10:110-Santorct &amp; Son M,IS; Edge of Night 6; Price Is
Right 8,10; Bit with Knll 33.
10:30-Celilbrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15;; Dinah 6; Llll~s
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :110-Wheet of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4; Gambll
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares3,,j,J5; Happy Days 13; Love
ol Life 8,10.
.'
11 :55-Take Kerr 8; Dan Imel's World 10.
12:110-Fun Factory 3,15: H¢ Seal 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8,10; Sesame St. 33.
12:»---GGng Show 3,15; All My Chlldren '6,13; Search
for Tomorrow 8,10.
12:55-NBC News 3,15.
•
1:110-News 3; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Phil Donahue I ;
Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Not For Women Only 15;
Etec. Co. :ij.
,
,
1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns 8,10; Family Theatre 33.
2:!10-S20.000 Pyramid 6, 13; 1'11-Ways 33.
2:30-Doctors 3,4; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding Ltghl
8, 10; Unto the Hills 33.
3:01&gt;-Democratlc Convention 3••• 10,15; Genera!
Hospllal 6,13; Consumer Survival Kit 20; Catch-33

~"tit'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

.__-""
VIrgil B. Sr., Ruttor
110 Mtchlnlc Pomeror. &lt;:!·
Phone 992-331~
RUTLAND-. J bedrooms,
bath, all city utilities,
porches,furnace,andlarge
lot near school. 112,000.
BUSINESS BUILDING With 5 robm apartm011t
over.
City
utilities ,
excellent location. Only
$13,500.
WALK TO WORK - 3 large
bedrooms 'jVIth closets, ' JI/2
baths, new gas bolltr
~stoam
hoet),
full
basement near stores.'
129,500.
'
U500.QQ - Workingman's
speclat, 2 bedrooms, nat.
gas F :~. ' furnace and city
wafel'.
11500.00- 3 bedrooms, nat.
gas • . clly water, full
basen\ent and looks nice
lmldt. Give "' an offer.
BUSINESS BUILDING 30x40 at · Deder. Good
location for many ldus.
Juat Willi.
11 ACRES - Mostly alt
new fenced, 7 .. room
reslcltnce, 1t,; balhl, and
goodspring
129.000.
4\'&gt; ACRES - 2 bedrooms.
""' baths. -fral 11r 2nd
hoal, 2 Cll' gerage and
I!H'ge gll'dtn lpoll. 129,500.
ADS
ATlRACT
LOOKERS. SALESMEN
SILL . PROPERTY. TRY

really alert he would still bave
bid seven spades rather than
risk letting his opponents score
their vulnerable grand slam."
Jim : " I agree but you can't
quarrel with success."

By Oswald &amp; Jame1 Jacoby
Oswald : "How about some
examples of strategic bidTHAl'S ' 1DADD'f'
ding?"
FOR 'IOU --· HE's SO
Jtm : "I have a good examHOHEST Hftl MEVER
ple right here. The game was
BELIEVE EVER'f'80tJ'(
ElSE DOESH'T WMT
team-of-four with ihterm BE 011 ni' LEVEL,
national match-point scoring.
100-·
South was pretty sure that he
could wrap up seven hearts.
His problem was to get to play
hea rts - when his not
vulnerable opponents held the
spade suit."
.
Oswald : " His bid of just
five hearts was a calculated
risk . He would have looted
.___."--'-- mighty stlly if East-West bad

GRAVE~Y

fij

Pass
64
Pass

tuouso
bi~~~l r;ro111l811Cf!,
but lfeel
·
sl had been

Dbl.
Pass Pas~
Opemng lead - Ace 4

--

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

Oswald . "I don't like to tate
away credit from South's vir-

Pass

GRAVELY
TRACTORS

------

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

.

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Nortb Eoot
14
Pass
4¥
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14
54

FREE

,

700."

¥ AQ7654
tAKB S3
482
North-South vulnerable

FREE ICE CREAM

~-

·-

·-

-·------,- GUTTER SERVICE.

--

let him play there."
Jim : "Strangely enough,
five hearts matina ~even
would have been a 1e0re of
710. At the other table North
and South slam-banged Into
seven hearts and East-West
took the save at seven spades.
The defense collected just
lour tricks to score a mere

12

NORTH (DI

Your Hom~- _

Rutland
·742-2121
All Work Guorontetd
Fret Esllmatn
6-23-2 ntO.

Rllllitif, Ol1iti 45715
,h, lfl4!74Z-Z411

LARRZJ!i.!DER

lW THE TileS !I AROUND HERS!

The Complete
Remodeling Service

'

TfUSS R1fter Co.

~"'"

AIID SEE I~ THEil£~ AIIYTH 1~6 $ U~PIC10115

UP ~IKE A
60RtLI.A... --&lt;f&lt;

Roorq, Gutlels,
Plintittllld Rep~ir

4:12 'lfch

filllldtiiWHto

l 'D BETTE II rAKe /I lOOt&lt; OUT THE WINDOW '

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D~ESSEP

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LUtiATIC ON THt; •OOSE

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Three open plaro££
for la~es' open

•

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Teach
42 One ol \he

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J.Jlg~~IJ.I *':::"

43 Be·
charm
44 AI band

Unacramble thooe four Jumbles.
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinar1 word1.

t5 Witty
comeback
tl Yawn

DAILY
I I..O.U.:O HAVE:
DONe 1HAT AN'/·

HOo\l••• WITH ...m

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PERMISSION I

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CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to
A. X Y D L ,B A .A X R
Is LONGFELLOW

work

It:

One letter simply stands for another. In this aample A II
used lor the three L's X lor the two O's, etc. Single !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formati?n of the words are all
hm1s. Each day 1he code tellers are d11Terent.
'

CRYPTOQUOTES
J

HJW

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HREF

FB

X V. J W Z Q E

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yesterdiy 's Cryproquote: MAN IS PERISHABLE,NO MATI'&amp;R
HOW HE TRlES TO PERISH THE THOUGHT. - HARRY
PESIN

~

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(bawett .._rrow)

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Jumw.., SOLAR BEGUN TORRID PAUII

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An1wt:n Ferflaerlrt•JI!rftl'fMr "I!MIWM" "
,_.~AIIIQ

WAIT!! C~ BACK!
HAVE 50\\E OOU6HNUTS
AAD POT~ CHIPS
WITH I«JUfl CUP CAJ&lt;f!!

�r
.·
; 8- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport· Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 12

History of Pomet~Y reviewed

Mrs. McKnight died on.Sunday Contract on Daniel Davidson died Sunday ·

R endazzo

COOLVILLE - Funeral Phillips will conduct the
·DIInlei J . Dtvidlon, Ill, of
services will be held Wed- Wednesday morning .riles,
747 Cheater Rold1 Pomeroy,
nesday al 11 a.m. here from with burial to lollow In
~led Sunday night at
the Whi le Euneral Home for Coolville Cemetery. Friends
Veterana Memorial Holpltal.
..'
&lt;Mrs . Ru by
Ashcraft may caU afternoon Tuesday.
Mr. Davldlon wu borrt
But no rightist capture of
BEIRtrr, Lebanon (UP! )
McKnig ht, 62, CoolviUe, who
March 10, 1t0'1, I aon of the
: - ChrlBUan militiamen today the city, lebaoon's second
died Sunday in O'Bleness .
lite Jamea and Mary JuaUa
reported the ca.pture of · largest port, was expected.
. . Memorial Hospital. in Athens
Davidson. He was also
another leftist town In Palestinians said Syrian
ending a brief ill ness.
DETROIT ( UPI) _ ' preceded in death by four
northern Lebanoo in what artillery shelled the Weyfel
born in Meigs County, a ~
Ofi UD Y Reputed crime syndicate slltert and two brOthers:
they and their leftist enell)ies refu gee camp near the
• dau ghter of Olive Blanch
,
figure Frank Rendlzlo and
He II survived by hll wife,
called a multipronged drive ancient city of Baalbek, !i6 ·
Ashcraft, Coolville, and · the
Roy. C. Rasp, 71 • Amherst two other n\eil were lhclt to Lorena Davidson; one
towards the Moslem citadel miles northeast of )lelrut, the
late Eddie G. Ashcraft, she Manor, Amherst, Ohio, died death Sunday nlghtataneut daughter, Nancy Pettit,
Nahrel Bared and Baddawi
• city of Tripoli .
was a member of the .Baptist Sunday· Mr · Rasp was born aide houae.
Pomeroy ; two .grand·
'
Heavy fighting also was campa In Tripoli and the Ain
7
1905
Gospel. Temple of Parkers·· .March •
• the son of the
Two suspects were . children, Timothy Davidson,
reported a round
five el Helwe camp in Ill!! port of
burg and of the Minear la.te William and Marguerite arrested for the slaylnga .~j~
and Jeffrey Smith, both of
Pal~inls,n refugee camps Sidon, 30 miles south of
Chapler No. 274, Order _ql Cir~le Rasp. He was also
Sgt Fred Williama a pollee
•
and the Christians rightists Beirut.
Eastern Star, G~ysville. Mrs. preceded in death by two IIJ)O~sman, identlfled OQe of
Th e Syr lan -back ed'
claimed to have captured the
McKnighthad resided in this sisters . and three brothers. the victims as Frank
larg~ ofthem, Tal Zalatar m Christian offensive was seen
James D. l!tggs, 86, Rt. 4,
area the past 40 years.
lie lS survived by one Rendaao 82 Rendazm was
suburban Beirut, after · a 21· as an attempt to make
Surviving beside her brother, John, of Fostoria,
ed ~n'tesilmony before 1 Pomeroy, died Friday al
strategic gains before any
day siege.
mother ·are her husband, and one sister, Katie ~ Senate Committee Veterans Hospital, Hun·
But Palestinian spokesman decision by the Arab League
Clarence R., at home; live Haywood , Columbu~. and ln·v~stlgatlng organized tqton. Mr. Biggs wu born
denied the claim, saying Tal foreign ministers meeting ·
Dec 11, IIMII the 11011 of the
sons, Rex L., Athens; Ross several nlects and ~":.~'7d crime in 1963.
•
1
Zaatar's defenders repelled today in Cairo.
late.Jamea
a~ Ollie Poullin•
A., Parkersburg; Eddie, Funeral serv ces w
e
Police said Rendallil wai
The Lebanese press
the 52nd assault on the camp
Biggs.
He
wualao
preceded
Memphis, Tenn .; Ted ., local, Tuesday at~~- m.hat E;tng shOt 111 the chest . .
in an overnight batUe thai left . reported that the League or
ev ·
A second man pollee said 1n death bf two brothers,
and Ken C., Guysville; a Chapel w t t e
some 100 dead on both sides. some of its members were
daughter, Mrs . Philip Freeland Norris officiatin~. abo w11 found Shot to death' Ralph ·and Buel, alaters,
Palestinian s our ces consider ing sending more
(Carreen ) Nichols, local, and Burial will be in Olester ·In lba basement of .the horne, Elizabeth eonarove and Nora
eooceded
the Christians had troops oo halt the fighting that
'.·
15 grandchildren :
Cemetery. Friends may call and the third II\AI1 died IIi the Biggs. .
•
made "strategiC gains" previous Ar~b efforts have
Mr. Blgga wu a Veteran of
A brother and two. sisters at the funeral home after 7 p. emergency room at nearby
around the borders of the failed to check.
FRITZ
SISSON , · preceded her in dea th.
m. this evening.
St. John aospltal.
. World War,II; a member of
Arab diplomats said
Syracuse, landed this bass
shell battered 7wcre camp
Eastern' Star services will
The other two men were not Fraternal Order of Eagles,
weighing 3 lbs., and 20
and said its fall was League "Secretary General
Woodmen of
Identified pending Modern
· ''lnunlnent and inevitable" if Mahmoud Iliad would report
Inches long recently at be conducted at 7:30p.m.
America
and
·Carpenter
Tuesday . . The Rev. R. L.
notillcaUm of their nut of
on ihe unsuccessful outcome
the siege went on.
Hidden Lakes.
The artillery, rocket and of his recent mediation effort
mortar fire that resounded m In Lebanon.
shooting
was
not
The diplomats said Riad's
several fronts throughout the
Mrs. Ethel Mary Farley,
A one car ' a~oc­ Immediately kno1111 but was
night claimed an estimated report would put the blame
Holzer Medical Center
'
curred
early
SUnda
m
ing
.for
the
failure
of
his
threeVeterans
Memorial
Hospital
under
investiption.
.
,;
85;"·'1\utland
Street, Mld·
150 ~ead and 300 wounded.
(Births, July 9)
on
TR
353'
·in
Ru
land
man
committee
on
"certain
Saturday
Admissio
ns
Police
said
they
wert
dleport,
died
Sunday 'af·
Christians, backed by what
Mr . and Mrs. David Townshl.P, the Meigs
ty
seeking
murder
warrants
ternoon
at
Holzer
Medical
factions
....
determined
to
Barbara
James,
Pomeroy;
the Palestlnians Charged was
Beaver, son, Gallipolis.
Sheriff's
_
D
ept.
reported.
continue
their
military
Daniel
Davidson,
Pomeroy;
against
the
two
suspects.
Center.
She
wal
born
Oct. 20,
Syrian anlllery support, said
· (Births, July 10)
escalation."
·
Helen
Leifheit,
Pom
eroy
;
.A
westbound
car
operated
· 1890 at Cheshire, the
they captured Bstroumine,
Mr. and Mrs . Phillip Miller, by Clarence McDaniel, 32,
Earlier
this
w
eek,
Tunisian
Ruby
Congo,
Racine;
Sarah
daUihter of tile late Joh!l and
five miles southeast of
son, Rutland ; Mr . and Mrs. .Rutland, went out of control
HOSPITALIZED
Foreign
Minister
Habib
.
Brown;
Minersville;
Mary
Matilda
Ripley
Tripoli. The Ouistlans said
Wayne Massey, son, Hamlin ; in gravel and swerved off the
Owen RobinSon, iormerly Mary
ShatU
angered
the
~banese
Ann
Kiser,
Racine
;
Frances
Herrmann.
She
was
aln
this was the 17th leftist town
Mi. and Mrs. Ira Love, road. McDaniel was taken to of Middleport, is in critical
Christians
by
blaming
them
Miller,
Racine.
pr'eceded
in
death
by
her
to fall in a weeklong
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Veterans Hospital where he is condition at St. Marys
for
the
failure
of
the
mission.
Saturday
Discharges
husband,
Charles
E.
Farley
offensive.
Byland, listed in satisfactory con· Hospital, Huntington. Cards
Barbara Smi th, Rodney Mrs. Gerald
Both sides reported fierce
daughter,
Gallipolis
;
Mr. and 'clition.
may be sent to him in care of in 1956. Two sisters and thr~
Klein, Elsie Spence, Lucy
brothers also preceded her in
fighting around Tripoli, with
Mrs. James Cullen , son,
There was moderate the hospital. Mr. RobinSon is death.
the rightists pushing towards KLIPSTINE COMMANDER McCune, Gladys Bosworth, McArthur.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Gladys Goulding, Naomi
damage to the car and no the brother of Mrs. WUllam
She Is survived by a son,
the leftlsl stronghold from the
(
Births,
July
11}
Murray of Worthington, Ky.
citation was issued.·
\..
"
.
the
Rev. Noel Herrman,
north, the south and the American Legim of Ohio Bentley, Florence ·llallrru!n,
·Mr. ·and Mrs . Donald
endeditsthre~ay ,58thstale lnzy Newell, Dwight Sayre.
Middleport,
with ·whom she
southeast.
convention . Sunday by
Sunday . Admissions - Thacker, son, Vinton.
Uved; one stepdaughter, Mrs.
electing Robert L. Klipstine Clarence McDaniel, RuUand ;
MoUy Frances Tresenrider,
of West Milton its state Lawrence Stewart, Mid·
PLEASANT VALLEY
Colum)lus; one step-son
commander.
dleport; Mabel Wolfe,
DISCHARGES - Allen
Raymond Charles Farley,
Tonignl, July 12th
Also elected were Melvin Pomeroy ; Antoinette Norris, Underwood, Leland Johnson,
• through July 151h
D. Olapnuln, Beverly, first Akron ; Charles C. lewis, R.uth Wolfinbarger , Point
NOT OPEN
vice conunander; Elden 0 . Middleport; Mildred Me· Pleasant; Clarence Strow,
•
MANILA, Philippines
Bolm, Columbus, second vice Daniel, Middleport; Milford Henderson ; Larry VanMeter,
• •
Fri.-Sai.-Sun.
•
(UP!)
- The Pllilippines and
· commander ; Jac!l Scott, Bailey , Athens; Lowell Letart ; William Hamm ,
July 16-17·18 '
Bainbridge, treasurer; D-emeans, Coolville; Mary Bidwell; Ora Robinson, Mrs. Vietnam today announced the
THE DUCHEsS&amp;
Arthur H. Euler, BoWling Baldw i n, Pomeroy ; Dolph Hill, Point Pleasant; establishment of diplomatic
THE DIRTWATER FOX
Green,
national executive Raymond Bragg, Vinton ; Lucille Po.well, Hartford ; relations, including an
.. George Segal, Goldie cmunltteeman
; and Olarles George Conde, Syracuse.
Hawn, Jenn ifer Lee.
James Simpkins , Mason ; agreement that no foreign
Sunday Discharges - Mrs. !Illy Duncan, Gallipo!U
( PG) · R. Green, Warren, alternate
Show starls7 p.m.
n ali o ria 1 n e cut i v e Minnie Johnson, Anna Wolfe, Ferry; Curtis Wallis, Apple BruesUe, Mabel Marsh, Mrs.
• ·:
cmunltteeman.
Shirley Evans, Carol Hilil, Grove; Lynn Thompson, .Park Lee, Vera Martin,
Beverly
Roush, McQuaid,
Gladys Mason ; Ada · Scarberry , David Cheesebr.ew, Ricky
,
Barton, Barbara
Ripley; Mrs. Ro.bert Baker, Patterson, WUllam Grove, all
Jonriie Meadows, Errol Mabel Cleland, Racine; · Point Pleasant; Betty Angel,
Fullrod, Linda 9timm , James fulndolph , Hen- Mason; Victoria Williams,
Grace .Hysell, Jeffrey derson ; Esther Pearson, Gallipolis, and Della David,
Reltmire, Jolm Hunnell..
Dora
Glenn, Natalie Henderson.

••

.

..

completed

Roy C. Rasp
died
S da ·

Janles D. B:aggs

1

Auto ditched.

·HOSPITAL NEWS

off rural road

Mr1. Hlrry (Nalflll) Wyatt,
Poitlti'GY, and Mrt. Pete
( Laveda)

Wheeler,

Columblll, IIICIIIYII'II 1111ceJ
IUld nepbewl.
:
. Funeral · aervlctl wiD be

WedMMlly at I p. m. at ·
Ewing ct.pel With the Rev.
Richaril Jarvia oftldatlnc.
Burial will be in Rock 8llrlnp
Cemetery. Frlendl lillY ea11
at the funeral home aft« 7p.
m. thla evenln8.
;

died

on Fn'day

Union Locall50.
.
He is survived by lour
brOtherl, Dor,ltl, Alfred and
· Nathan, all of Pomeroy 111C1
Norman of Dayton, one
slater, Frances Adklnl,
f&gt;omeroy, and several nlecea
and nephews. · .
Funeral ~~ervicea wiD be
held Tueadly at 1 p. m. at
Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Jack Perry offlclatl!ll. Burial
Will be In MeiC• r.temory
Gardens. Frlendllllly calla\ ·
the funeral home at 1111ytlme.

kln~~~~~~~d~otive ~the Ethel Farley died on Sunday

Vietnam, Philippines ·:

MEIGS lltEATRE

Pomeroy; three alattu,

MelvinA O.Yidlan, l'omlroJ;

exchanging diplomats

P.------------------.
PAINTING
NEEDS

SENIOR CITIZENS

:t
.
Columbus, and elsht grand·
chUdren.
Funeral services will be ' .
held Tuesday at 10 a. m. at
· the Free Will Baptist Church,
· Ash St., Mldllleport, '1111!1 ~ .
Revs. Raymond Fife 1111d Ben
DIUard officiating. Bl)l'lal
will be In Greenlawn
Cemetery, Columbus.
Friendl may call at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral .)
Home at anyUme until 9 a. m,
Tuesday when the body will
be taken to the church.
CLUB TO MEET
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council m D of A
will meet at the hall Wed,
nesday at 8 p.M. Margaret
'rutUe and Leda Kraeuter will
be hostesses.
RAIN HALTS PLAY
KENT, Ohio (UPI) - A
heavy rainltmn wiahed out
the Clevelanl BroWDI rooltle
scrimmage Iller fwr plays
SUnday at the Kent State
University tralnb~f cunp.
~ learn practiced about
40mlnutes prier to tile acrlm-

mage.

lllowing up .. . acheduled
SUnday night were live vete. rans: (IU8rd Pate A.claml,
lineback Dicit Ambrose,
(IU8rd Bob Jacbon, I'UJUIIn.g
back Henry Hynolkl lnd
defensive back Van Green.

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: Elberfelds In Pomeroy :
••
••

.,

Are Preferred People
•

At Farmers Bank

lhe nme year the · first .
electric street !lghta w~
lnitalled.
In 1119 the ftrat 1treet car
came to l'olileroy IIICI
reached as far u Antiquity;
In 1900 an Ol'fiiD factory
opened.
President Fred Morrow
commended Gerlach for
making a review of ~
history of Pomeroy amualng
• and Intereating.
Merrow noted election ·of
offlcers this month and
an ordinance that In· nexed and Pomeroy detained he•dlng the nominating
trmcatin8 beverages could be Its ftrat fire truck. In 1870 the . committee will be Ted Reed,
sold only by the gallon and paving of streeta began and Jack Kerr, 11nd Jack Carsey.
could ~ot be consumed on the Pomeroy's populiUon r01e to Members will be noUIIed by
mallllld return their vote by ·
5,824.
premises.
AN lllf40RARY MI!MI!ERHPPLAQU!- p 11 lied to PciulaO) ...,_, Claraaee
mall. He said dues are
In
1871
the
Cltll
War
In 1851 the enUre middle
Ar.drewa, left, by Fred MOI'I'OW, pnlldent tt the Pomeroy Olamber tt Ccmmerce, m behalf
payable.
monument
next
to
the
court.
block, e1cepl two buildings,
tt lba dllmber Monday at the -luncheon meeting at Melp Inn, In aplftdation of the
The Marietta Olamber of
house
wu
dedicated.
In
'1876
was destroyed by fire. During
cooperation by tile mayor to mernben tt the chamber.
Conunerce
lias invited the
they . started
paving
Pomeroy
merchants
to atsldewalb IUld in 1877 another
tend
a
bl-eak!ast
on
July
'll
.•
fire hit the downto1111 area. It
, .
with
Gov.
Jamea
Rhodes
to
· waa · then that Pomeroy
CoUilcU uld no more wooden submit and dllcusa an.issues
1..
buUdlngs could be erected. · they wish to bring before
Jn 1880 the populatlm of Gov. Rhodes.
Ken Gilkey reviewed
'Mella County reached 32,325.
· In 1882 the first telephone progress of the chamber's ' '
. service na ina tailed 111C1 the membership . drive. In·
dlvidual membership is f25
VOL XXVill NO. GO
POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
TUESDAY, JUlY 13, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS llratborae dra11'!1 eib aervtce and
bus1neu membenhlp Is
----------------~--------------~------------------~ -----------------------------------------~ chllclren
wu•tabllined.ln1U3the
's hoine Willi built and $50. GOkey said the chamber
in 1114 the third largeat flood cleared $1,000 during ReBa Ita
in Pooleroy'a hlatocy hit the weekend In spite of rain that
area. In 11192 a smallpox fell for tbreP. dava. He alated
(tonllniiil Clll .... 10f
epidemic hit Pomeroy and in
.
.
.
ByUDitedPreuloterDatioul
" .
COLUMBUS (UPI),.... The
I.DNG BEACH, CAUF. - PAT NIXON, PARTIAlLY state Department of Natural
paral;yled by a stroke, wiD be rtlealed from the h01pitalln a Retources intends to concenweelr: to 10 days but Iicea mmths of thentpy to regain uae of. Irate most of ita development
mliiCles on her left llde ~ and may never completely recover. of new recreilUonal faclllti•
in urban areas over the next
Even after she complete&amp; therapy • she may suffer recurrent five years, according to a
WMkneu in 110111e lllUIClea when she grows tired, the Nillm
family pllual"'••,
approved Mmday.
, _ , Dr. John Lungren, told reporters Monday. plan
Thenewplanwaaap~ed
"'lbOUIIh Mrs. Nlxm 's . ClllliliUm rl!ll18inl aerloua, she
of
appears to be ltabWzlng satisfactorily,'.' he said. Unleaa she by the Departnient
llllffers a relapee she will be released from Long Beach Interior·
·
Obi
Memorial Hospital in a week to 10 days, but lt will take three or
Approval makea
o
Chief of Pollee J. J . would be gl!ld to give a pay
four mmtha of therapy to achieve "significant recoVllry ;" he elegible for matching federal
Cremeans
· Monday night · Increase but the vlllage
funds until IBM. Up to $14
threatened to resign his post doesn't have the! m&lt;iney.
said.
.
.
mtlllon may be available by
A councU member asked
effectiVll at year's end if toWn
. CHICAGO - TWENTY-EIGHT OF THE TOP 30, Central : then, a~rdlng to Madonna
council does not increaae his Cremellli what amount of
State&amp; Teamsters Union Pension Fund executives have been ~:,th·=~ssi~=
pay increase Shpuld be made.
salary.
dlsmlll8ed or have resigned In the aftermath of a reform of the 10
·
Cremeans replled, "You're
D-emeans was particularly
the
Ia!hera of the towil, figure
fund, according to report&amp;.published today. The Chicago Sun· · :iMcGrath Gov James
dlBsatisfied that he Dl8kes
out
what we're worth."
·
Times quoted the lund's executive director, Daniel J · Shannon, A ·Rhodes ' and· Ohio
only $1.52 more per day than
Middleport
Mayor
Fred
u Uylng'Oilly me top JM!!l,sim fund executive rl!ll18lni in his D~partment of Natural
a patrolman does. He also
former )lfllition while a second baa been shifted to another Job. _Retources Director Robert
said- the ' police uniform Hoffman said any pay In·
OU'l1lOOR REaU!ATION PLAM tJNVEILED- Gcw. J - A. IUtodiiiJICI Nlbnl
'lbe refonna came amid growing pressure from the U.S. W T ter made the joint
allowance of f/5 per year is creases abould be based upon
Reslw ces Director Robert . w. TeiUr I!Jilmlne tbe P!!I!1!IM'J of lbe (ldo Outdoor
government and the llnahdal community for the Teamsters to
· es ement at a Statetoo low to pay for purchasing a seniority ayatern.
llecreatioo Plan, which wll1 guide rec:reatlonal development In the stllte I~ the na:t five
clean up ~oppy bookkeeping and cease making dubloua loan announc
No action wu taken on the
and
maintaining a good ~~et of
years. The plan llll8lll'e8 that pub1lc outdoor recreJitlon projects In Ohio are eligible for
Investments. ibmnoo, who took charge of·the fund 16 months 00
plan
pay
increase isaue.
police unlfonlll.
assistance from the u.s. Land and Water Ccmervatlon Fund, and It largelr Ignores SoutiJ.
In
other busineu, council
ago, was unavallale fa: comment. The report quoted him,as was "the bell program In the
Gene Grate, the Clerk·
voted
unanimously to declare.
. saying moat of the vacancies created by tbe lhalteup were
!iOn despite the (state) Clll8l Cillo.
Treasurer, said council likely
filled by young •:academic type~" who worked overtime to nausierity .. ·
.
Middleport an "impa~ted
area~· as it relates to natural
bring 10111e order out of the fuild'ii confused records.
a The pian calls for the
gas
This was done to
division .of the state into 15
maintain · Middleport's
HALIFAX, CANADA - QUEEN EUZABmtf wrapped regl011s, escb tailoring future
natural gas allocations at
up her Bicentennial visit to the United States 1111d headed to recreational needs 'lo lis
Canada today to open histOry's most heavUy guarded Olympic specific locality. Each regloo ·
present leVllls.
In some lnitances, if an
Ganies. .
·
.
will come up with plana lor
NEW YORK (UPI) - floor aquabble by women's cmtroversy over women's acatterecl blackl and Uberala,
for
equal who acltnowledged their rro- area is not declared to be
Fog and rainy weather was forecast for the Queen's the speCial recreational Jimmy Carter Is sailing rlghta delegates',!llUed black demands
impacted, when buildings are
arrival at the start of her I:Hiay Canadian tour- four days of needs of. handicapped Obi· serenely towar:d nmlinatloo leaders on the back and rep.-,taUon at the IBM testa would go nowhere.
Rep.
Rmald
Delluma,
1).
torn down, the area's gas
It In Nova Scotia and New Brunawick before Dying to Montreal oans and residents of urban as presidential candidate of stayed in his 21Jt.41aor Illite convention when he won
to Inaugurate the sununer games Saturday. 'lbe queen and her
the strongest, most unified at the Americana Hotel to acceptance of a compl'fllliae Calif., with the bacltlng of allocaUm can be . reduced
laiaband, Prince Phlllp, left on the voyage to Nova Scotia arg~~ has received $7.6 Democratic.Party in a dozen awalt the Inevitable.
proposal and offered a Rep. John Qmyers, 0-Mich., according to the amount of
aboard the royal yacht Britannia from Boston, site of the "Tea mlllioo In matching grants years. · Only a whisper of
As the .first, 3-llour 23- lengthy list of promises to said he expects to have hll natural gas used in that
Party" lhat began the dismantling of the British empire·
· for recreeUonal facllitles 1n dissent was heard u the 37th minute aesslon ended, further women'a rigbta· Jn a . name placed on ncminatim building.
. Council also unartimous!y
for vice pre1ldenl. The
1978. Of !hat sum, $4.6 mlliJm Nalionai Convention got earter's delegate total had Carter admlnlstratim .
FULlERTON, CALIF. - POUCE TODAY are looking fo~ was distributed to 75 loca) under way.
.
passed the two-thirds mark to
The comrromlse involved nominating and seconding adopted the 1977 budget
. a motive In the random shooting l&gt;y a college janitor, who governments . for related
Joyous delegates whooped 2,095 votes, far more than the rules to ''promote" delegate speeches would provide which calls for $297,514 in
8llegedly stalked the schoollilrary with a rlfle, killing seven projects. The rema.lnder went to the stralni of the "Happy 1,505 he needs.
equality under naUmal party Uberala a fclrum for dissent esUmated expenditures.
Bids were opened and read
and wounding llfo. The victlma "were just dropped in their · to state.funded projects.
Days~ Here Again" aa the
The former Georgia . superviBim, starting with the that they are not pennltted In
trackl With Pepsi cans and papers In their handl," said . "In general, the p1ann1ng cmvention opened Mmday governor also moved closer Democrats' midterm cmven- dlscusslons of the platform,
(Conlblled OD plllt 10)
rules and credenllals.
Paramedic Capt. Carmon Johnson, ooeofthe first on the scene reglms with the greatest night 1n a flag-draped to a decillion m his vice Um In 1978.
Tom Bradley, the black
On the eve of Carter's
Monday. "It looked Uke Vle1nam."
·
needs are thoae with large Madison Square Garden preaidentlal running male,
The alleged gunman, Edward Chari• Allaway, 37, urban concentrations," ringed by pollee.
ending his
candidate' coronation, there were mild mayor of Loa Angeles,
IIUI'I'endered after telephonln8 pollee from a nearby motel, according to the plan. "The
·~ party is organized, Interviews by meeting with rumblings of discontent from rejected a move by Ollcago
black leader Jesse Jackaon
wbere hll estranged wife, Bonnie, 22 is a part-time waitress. plannlng regions that most vibrant, forward-looking and Sens. Frank Church of Idaho
and others to present hll
Identifying himself as ''the man who did the shootinR," he told frequently have surplus hell-bent on victory," shouted and Adlai E. Stevenson m.of
FERRY DOWN
name as Carter's running
them "come and get me." FeUow workers, who described capacity are thoae 1n Democratic Chairman Dllnois.
-·Paul strauss, 26, Rt. 1,
Allaway as a !mer, said he had been troubled recently by a southeastern Ohio."
Roberts. Strauss. Delegates Hisllsi was narrowed to siJ: The ferry betwe~ Illite.
Gov. Edmund Brown Jr., RuUand, formerly of New
separation from his wife. Ubrarian Essie Easter said she
The plan ncltes that the lllngry for batUe against the . when Rep. Peter Rodino, 1). . , Pomeroy and Mason IS sthe
beard the rlfleman say, as he cut down one fleeing figure after most
widely
used Republlcans ro~red back N.J., 67, withdrew because of out of serv1ce due to ht told a cheering Callfomla York, wa$ bound over to the
' another, ''I'm going to kill .all of these SOBs for m•g recreational facilities are their approval from the glaucoma In me eye.
heavy rains on Sunday nlg . delegatlm he would allow grand jury this ornlng by
Cesar Cllavez of the farm Coll!lty Court Jul!Se Robert
around with my wife."
.
those designed for bicycUng, cmventlon floor .
Carter promptly asked
workers'
unlm to place his E. Buck.
golf, 8110wsldlng and tennis.
Rep. Barbara Jordan, 0- ·Rildlno, who led the House
name
in
nomination
against
Strauss was arrested on
WASHINGToN- PRESIDENT FORD'a strateglata1111id Two other leisure-time Tex., received the only Judiciary Committee's
Clrter.
June
29 by the sheriff, Robert
today that by the end of the week he will be just a few delegate pursuits, sledding and trail s p 0 n t an eo us f I o o r impeachment inquiry against
Brown
was
backed
by
Gov.
C. Hartenbach, his depuUes,
votes away from cllnching the Republican preiidentlal bllting, bave "high needs" in demonatraUm opening night . Richard M. Nlson, to make
Edwin Edwardl of Loulalana, and Middleport Pollee
nomlnaUon. Vote counters for the Fcrd campaign Conunlttee a few counties but generally with an eloquent keynote his chlel,nomlniting speech
wbo said ·Brown ''more Department officers, at his
told UPI that the 35delegates th~ e:apect to win In Cmnecticut are not popular in most of the speech warning America that Wednesday nl(ht. Rodino
this weekend will put them near the llllglc number of 1,130
it faces ''the great danger
agreed
nearly lOla a respmse to residence where 300 plants of
major needs of my state and marijuana were confiscated.
delegate&amp; needed to win the nominutlm.
~~· the Cleveland that we will cease to be o;,;; Today's secmd cmventim
my natlm" than Carter. .
StraUss was arrested on
Rmald Reagan's strategiata dllcounted the Ford claims, metropolltan area, for naUoo and become instead a aesslm, beginning at the
uylngtheGOPchallengerhaahlddenpocketaofsupportersln aample, the plan calls for collecUon oflnterelll groups, unusual hour of 3:30 p.m.
charges of cultivation of
~&gt;:&lt;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::&gt;::::;:;:::;,:
marijuana. His bond is $5,000.
lllljor · uncommitted delegate blocs in New Jeraey, ·IIGOmoreholesofgollby lllMl, each seeking to fulfill private EDT, was e:apected to aee
PelllliYlvanla, Nl"\' York anct'ellewhere. Reagan delegate 45 more miles of bicycle drearna."
rules, credentials and
' lulter Andrew Carter declined to "play the numbers game out tralla, 4,000 more picnic Sen. John Glenn of Ohio, platform issues whip through
In the open" but predicted such hidden strength will begin to tablea, 461 more tennil courts the former astronaut and to awroval With hardly a '
. NEW YoRK, July u _
aurlltccl for the CaUfornla Republican "In the next week or and a little more 111an two fellow keynoter of the flrat munnur of protelll.
•
·
Adm. Lord Rlcbard Howe
two."
,more miles of traU bllte · black woman elected to
Carter defused
the
artlved at Staten Island
'
.
Cmgresa from the South,
(Continued 011 page 10)
(Qmtinued aa pqe 10)
urged Democrats to press the
!rum England at lhe bead
of a fleet of 100 ships and an
battle against racism ·lll!d
espeditlonary force of
lead the way to ·a ''new
SYRACUSE Three
11,000 Redcoata. The
patriotism" aparkect by the
defendants
were
fined
and a
MosUy
sUMY
today
and
Eagllsh troops already
Bicentennial.
.
fourth
forfeited
bond
in ·
Wednesday.
High
today
near
there under hie brother,
Carter, his overwhehning
DAVE
KRAWSC'ZYN
Syracuse
Mayor
Herman
Gen. William Howe,
. nomlna~lon assured late 80. Fair tonight. Low around
David Krawsczyn, IOJI of welcomed tbe rein·
Lon.cion's Court Monday
Wednesday night, took the 56. High Wedneaday 80 to 85.
Mr. and Mrs. John forcemeats wllh salulea.
night.
steam out of a threatened Olance of rain near zero per
KniWICZyJI,
Middleport,
cent today and tonight and 10
Fined were Mark P.
has received notice of bls
per cent Wednesday.
Zielinski, Reedav!lle, $15 and
acceplance Into lhe fall
ctJsts, ~peeding; Roger D.
Melgl County's com~· _D. Webster, chairman of ~ over Shade River on CR 28 in
freahmu
clan
of
Signs,
nails
too
TALKS
RESUME
Adkins, Syracuse, .$25 and
· miaslonera Mond•y heard Meigs County Board of Chester Townahip. According
veterinary medicine at
'
J
'
AKEN
TO
HOLZER
CLEVELAND
(UP!)
costs,
unsafe operaUon of i
arpmenta they should ap· Men t a 1 R e tar dation ; to the plln, the esUmated cost
Oblo Slate Unlveulty. · Negotiations resumed motor vehicle, and Edna M. .
SYRACUSE
Mayor
The
Middleport
prove operating lunda for a membera of the State Board of repairing the bridge Is
David grad1111ted !rom Oblo Monday between the strlklng Lavender, Syracuse, $5 and
London an· Emergency Squad was
·. acbool for the mentally of Mental Retardation, f38,750 with work to start • Herman
Stale
In M•rch 19'11 wllh I United Rubber. Workera costs, stop sign , violation.
n~ today that lay
summoned at 11:08 a.m.
retarded.
Aaaistant Prosecullns AI· immediately upon funding
B.S.
In Agriculture, bla Union and Uniroyal.
gTOU!Il or iDdlvidUIIII wbo
Monday to 353 N. Fourth Ave.
James M. Bentz, Middleport,
U operating lunda are not torney Charlea Knlsht, approval. The commissioners
major
being Animal
have
alpl
on
poles
lD
tile
for
Dorothy
Reynolds,
who
forfeited
his $20 bond for
approved by the Com· · repreaentativ• of the Meigs deferred acti011.
Science. Wblle at Oblo
..
vDiage
of
Syracue
are
to
waa
Ul.
She
was
taken
to
being
left
of
center. Arresting
mlulonen for the school County Auoclallon for
Henry Wells, chairman of
Stale be was lavolved lD
BOARD TO MEET
remave
them
alld
the
ulla
Holzer
Medical
Center.
officer
was
chief of pollee
year It'll-1877, then S2SO,OOO Retarded Citizens, and
the board, amounced an
m10y 1peclal anlm~l
RACINE -There will be a Million Varian.
uaed
to
plac:e
them
there
as
In 1tate conatrucUon money parents.
,
. application
for
non·
projeell ucl was on tile . special meeting of Southel'll
well, Immediately!
UNJTCAU.ED
hSndy Moore, Syracuae,
(matchlns local levies
The commluloners wlll metropolitan cliacreUonary
deaa'• lilt seve111l times- Local School Board Wed· reported the theft of a AM·
Tile
mayor
aald
political
At
4:07
a.m.
~Y
the
already voted) to build the give a reply at their next . fl.scal year 19'18 community
and yanl sale slgap are stlll Pomeroy E!nergency Squad He wa• 'also selected lor nesday, July 14, at 7 p.m. at FM 8 track tape player from
acbool will be loti. The scheduled meeting on July 19. developp~ent block pant
membership Ia Gamma the.high school. The purpcliC! the front seat of his. car
011 poln ucl tbey are was called to the home of
meetlna
.laated
ap·
In other action, Wesley .A. lunda has been aubmltted to
Sigma ~Ita, a aatlolial . of the meeting Is to approVe . Monday at 9 am. parked in
hal8rdoua lor men who Mrs. Eatle Roberta who was
proJtimately 4&amp; minute&amp;.
Buehl, Meiga County HUD and is available to in·
honor frateraity lor the budlel for the 1976-77 front of the Syracuse Drive·
taken to Veterans Memorial
have ~ cllmb them,
.hJnonl the concern.ed Engineer, submitted a plap to teres ted parties upon
agriculftre·
school year.
In.
I
~ preaent were Mamlng repair a steel f;U18 lliltdge request.
:.·:·:·:·:·:O:·~;.:-:·:·:O:"..:·:·:,··:·:·:···:·:
~·:···:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:: Hospital.
...... . ...... . .. .....................
·

e

•

Mike Gerlach, Melp Local
Iacher and acUve in the

was formed, Dill's Tavern. In
1830 Valentine B. Horton
local Pioneer and Hiltorlcal arrived here. Three years
Society gave an account of later Horton convinced WUlla
the beginnings of Pomeroy at Pomeroy he abould come to
the noon luncheon meeting of the area and open coal mines,
the Pomeroy Chamber of which he did, and they were
Coollnerce Monday.
called Pomeroy l Sons.
Important polnta were :
Horton married the diUihter
The first settler In the . of Pomt!l-oy and Horton in·
Pomeroy area in 1806 wu slated that the name of the
Samuel Erwin. In 1811 the . Utile town along the .Ohio
first steamboat, the New River be named Pomeroy .
Orleana went down the Ohio
In 1637 Pomeroy had tile
River but could not come largeat coal mlnea in the
back up due to lack of steam. alate. In 1640 Horton con·
In 1817 the steamboat, vinced the politlclana to move
George Washington, wu the the courtho111e from Chester
flntboattocomeuptheriver to Pomeroy and the court.
and In 1819 Meigs County was house wu moved In 1841.
formed.
In 1640 the first m~ting of
In 1821 the first business In Pomeroy CoW1Cil was held.
what later became Pomeroy At thla meeting council or-

dered all hogs off the slreeta. the year11 18111 and 1162 I '
In 1141 Pomeroy wu in· .cl'ime ••"' hit the ll'tl and
corporated, Gerlach ex· In 11154 the flrat f~ aervice,
hone drawn, wu put Into
plaiDed • •
•
In IMa the first telegraph ~auon.
In 11154 another fire cleaned
arrived In Pomeroy, IIICI In
1848 the flrlt tall works and out the middle and lower
barbershop appeared. In 11119 block on M.aill Street and
local buaineu establlshmenta three bulldlnp nat to the
lnitalled wooden aldewallul courtho~~~e; at thla Ume the
and in 1850 the new court. courthouae waa painted
hOuse was completed and the white: Bwdloeas wu not lood
populiiUon of Pometily was In Pomeroy duOnl the CivU
war.
3,480.
In '1881 Coalp«t wu an·
A1ao In !850 councU passed

nne

entine

.ews •·""'• "•";zn........Bnefi
'"'"":--· ~S-east
. Ohio mf)stly forgoUen
'

Cremeans
•
wants raise

;:!e;"..:t::;

Democr~ts unified, confident

use:

Strauss is
hound over

FOlJR.LENGTJi WIN
NORTHFIELD, Ohio
(UPI) - Osborne's Brei
scored a four-length victory
over Pickwick Baron In
Saturday night'a featured
$10,000 free.for..U pace at
Northfield Park.
The big 4-year-old chestnut
stallion,
with
Tom
Brinlterhoff in the lll1ky'
covered the mile In 1:57 1-6
and paid t$.40, .., and $2.:1!.
JUley showed.
In the lOth.:race trifecta,
the 6-10-6 combination
returned f3,18UO.
Attendance was 6,378. The
hancDe was f490,:n&amp;.

RED LATEX

BARN PAINT

f&lt;wm·1ts1ed,
lead·fre• .
Al)plits and coveruo•ily.

~3!~
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT

PIHUiiDE .
lATEX
HOUSE
PAINT
EXTERIOR

REDWOOD

SALE
PRICE

$698

Because We

F~mish

Commission listens,
.postpones decis.i on

A

Free Checking Account For Yo...

$lAIN

PrOtects and restores .
!osy ...,., deonup.

..

W~ Invite you to use this preferred service with no

R..ulor S9.25

service charge. Ail those 65 years and · over are
welcome to open an account any time. Stop In and
see us now.

$699 .
GAL.

POMEROY
aMENT

~BLOCK

co. :

The DeNrtment

. Store ol BuHdlng
. Since lf15

•

POMEROY, OHIO

.

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each DeDOsitor
·Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Dateline 1776

ONLY APARENT
In cue of emqaney only a
)llrellt of a girl at glrliCOUI
camp may caD Margaret
Parker ,at 982-2284.

CHOIR TO MEET
The aenlor cltlzena choir
.will rehearse Tuesday at
12:16 p.m. at senior cltlzena

bulldlnc.

..

Weather

.

. •

Three fined
in Syracuse

1

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