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                  <text>10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 14.1977

Last of five escapees is recaptured
PETROS, Tenn. (UP! ) Douglas Shelton, the last of
the five escapees who troke
out of Brushy Mountain Slate
Prison with James Earl Ray,
was recaptured t oday
'
authorities disclosed.
Officials said Shell{ln was
found in the same general
area where Ray was found ,
about eight miles northwest
of the prison.
Shelton was serving a !ISyear sentence for murder,
assault and grand larceny.

Head-to-head competition on water
offers exciting sport on Sunday

Meanwhile, Jack Kershaw,
attorney for James Earl Ray ,
said today he will file a
motion for a new trial within
60 days for his client,
recaptured early Monday
after escaping for :K.bours in
the rugged Cumberland
Mountains.
Kershaw said he has an
excellent picture of " Raoul"
but is not going to release it
immediately. Raoul is the
man Ray claims gave him
instructions to buy the gun ·

Kershaw , -who arrived at the state of Tennessee is able
that killed civil rights leader
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr ., Brushy Mountain State to take care of its own
in Memphis April 4, 1968.
Prison about 8 a, m. to meet prisoners,
Kershaw said he has had it with Ray, said he was not
"There are no grounds for
sure until he talked with his potting Ray in a federal
about two weeks.
"! will recorninend to my client whether Ray would prison. He is not even
client that the picture be talk with two investigators of charged with a federal crime
released soon but not before I the House Assassionations and he is not guilty of a state
file for a petition for a neW Committee.
crime, but that's another
trial."
" I'm going to sit and listen . matter," the Nashville
Asked how he came in I want to hear about those attorney said.
and
the
possession of the picture, rattlesnakes
He did agree with the
Kershaw responded: " By manhunt."
federal ruling that prevents
Kershaw said he disagreed Ray from being held in
sheer luck and investigative
.with Gov. Ray Blanton's solitary Clllllinement for long
lrililance ."
proposal that Ray be turned periods of time.
over to federal CUBtody.
"This would be cruel and
"It's very rare that I inhuman treatment The way
disagree with a governor and to solve this situation is that
agree with a federal court. no American is going to be
But this time I believe the satisfied until Ray is given
lly G"EORGE BOOSEV
Barbara Day discovered the the scene and the bodies, the governor is in error. I believe
hls day in court."
LOCUST GROVE, Okla. bodies at 6 a.m.
little girls were beaten to
(UP!) - In the early hours of
"I don 'I think he was being . death," an OSBI spokesman ·::r::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::.~:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::~;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::~~
Monday morning the Girl selective of the girls," said . "There is some
Scout counselors at Camp Weaver said. "I think he was evidence
of
sexual
Scott began moving from tent being selective of the tent. It molestation of at least two of
to tent, awakening lhe was an end tent and the them.
occupants and telling them to closest one was W to 75 feet
"They are still in the
By Uoited Press bternallonal
pack immediately.
process of finding out just
WASHINGTON - SPEAKER THOMAS O'NEILL
away."
No, they wouldn't tell the
maintained hls silence today on the identity of three House
Oklahoma State Bureau of what we've got.''
girls why they were leavhg. Investigation authorities also
District Attorney Sid Wise, Republicans he said are thinking of switching to the
· Yes, they were being sent were gathering evidence in who joined investigation, had Democratic party, but Rep. John Buchanan, R-Aia. , emerged
home right away.
the slayings of Miss Farmer, a special reason for finding as a likely member of the trio,
A short time later, as the 10, of Tulsa; Miss Milner, 10, the killer. His two daughters
"It's unlikely that I am one of the three," Buchanan told
girls assembled and began of Tulsa: and Miss Guse, 9, of -about the same age as the UP!, but he would not deny he approached the Democratic
piling onto buses in one part Broken Arrow.
victims, had attended the leadership about a possible switch. Other sources aald Rep.
of the camp, law enforcement
camp.
Charles Whalen, R.Qhio, is one of the three, but his aides 9ay
"Apparently, from viewing
"It's a tragedy, but I have only that "Mr. Whalen has not categorically den(ed or
officers gathered in another
- around the covered bodies
the utmost confidence in the confinned that he will switch parties."
of Lori Lee Fanner, Doris
way this camp is managed,' 1
Asked why the Republicans would switch, O'Neill said
Denise Milner and Michele
he said.
"they felt they are closer to the philosophy of Jimmy Carter."
(Qlnlinued from page 1)
Guse.
The camp was closed im· Whalen has been a moderate to liberal Republican and
Authorities were sure two business be paid expenses mediately and the girls were Buchanan in recent years has not followed the fiscal
had been sexually attacked. rather than the pay increase. sent home to their parents. conservatism of his fellow southern Republicans.
All three had been beaten to However, Clerk-Treasurer
Chartered buses brought
death. They were zipped into Gene Grate said that he did the girls from the camp to the
WASIUNGTON- PRESIDENT CARTER has cleared the
their sleeping bags and left not believe that he could scouting
council way for travelers to fly the Atlantic at a cost of only $135 in one
· about IW yards from their legally pay such expenses headquarters in Tulsa early direction and $102 in the other . Carter signed his approval to.a
tent.
Monday afternoon. The girls British plan for no-frUll~ytratn" service linking New York
under that plan.
"It makes me pretty bitter,
Council voted to purchase were called from the buses and London, only four'""il"li5S after the Civil Aeronautics Board
very bitter," said Mayes three new radios for the fire one at a time and reunited recommended It as "a boon ... tilth~ traveling public."
County Sheriff Pete Weaver. department with the present with their parents.
Pan American World Airways and Trans World Airllnes,
"! feel like the investigation radios of the department to
Anxious mothers and although expressing surprise at Carter's quick action, said
will bring results.
hugged
their they will match dollar-for-dollar the cul-&lt;'ate service first
be given to the town. Cost of fathers
"!just don'tthink we have the three radios is not to daughters and in some cases proposed by Britain's Laker Airways. Skytrain tickets from
that many nuts in this exceed $1,000. The discussion. whisked them home, leaving New York to London will cost 65 per cent less than the present
area."
brought out that the depart· luggage and belongings normal economy class fare of $385 and 80 per cent less than the
Weaver said the girls had ment is not operating its bel)ind.
$659 cost of nonnal first class tickets.
'
been accounted for during an present radios on the proper
"The children who went
A CAB spokesman said llil! low-cost flights by aU three
11 o'clock bed check the night frequency but has had no home were not told what airlines can start 60 days after Laker files a formal tariff with
before. Cainp administrator choice in the matter.
hlippened," Mrs. Day said at the board.
·
the
~amp. "Not one child A bid on the teMiS court
not
even the next-door
MADRID, SPAIN- A POlL BY THE SPANISH affiliate
compet.:~ project, only one submitted
neighbors
- knew what of the Gallup organization today predicted the Marxist
'- with a price of $19,015, was
Socialist Workers' party will win Spain's first free elections in
rejected on the grounds that happened.
"This camp is 49 years old 41 years. The poU, published today by the conservative news(Continued from page I)
it is too high and the project
and there never has been an . paper Ya, said the Socialists, led by Felipe Gonzalez, has
Clarence and Iva Lawrence will be readvertised.
A discussion brought out incident other than a snake overtaken Premier Adolfo Suarez' Democratic Center Union
Portland graduated fro~
and were expected to get 28.9 per ~nt of . the vote ill
Southern ' High School this that revenue sharing funds bite."
·
She
said
the
camp
would
Wednesday's election.
spring. She played in the have been reduced slightly
remain
closed
the
rest
of
the
The Icsa-Gallup poll gave Suarez's middl~f-the...~d
band for six years and played because of a drop in the toW.
summer.
election
alliance 25.6 per cent of the vote, followed by the
basketball and volleyball. population. However, the
"Untll
they
apprehend
the
Conununists
with 5.8 and by the right-wing Poptilar Alllance
She was an .alumni' queen population is to be rechecked
person
or
persons
that
did
with
5.,7
per
cent.
'lbe poll was taken two days ago, Icsa-Gallup
candidate 'and was first by the Bureau of the Census.
this,
I
don't
feel
it's
safe
.for
said.
On
SWlday,
the newspaper El Pais published a poll by
runner-up in the Meigs Meantime, Mayor Fred
any
person,"
she
said.
showing that the Socialists were quickly
another
organization
County Junior Miss Pageant Hoffman · said that the
closing
on
the
DemOcratic
Center Union, which earlier surveys
winning the poise and ap- number of w~ter and sewage
had
shown
to
be
leading.
·
pearance, youth fitness and customers 1s up so the
Miss Congeniality awards. population should not be
WASHINGTON -THE CARTER ADMINISTRATION
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
She Is a Sunday school class down.
Thursday through Monday awarded Ohio $13,3 million to help the elderly and lowCouncil approved the
teacher and won the D.A.R.
Saturday,
a gradual income families pay high utility bllls incurred the past winter.
Good Citizenship award at report of Mayor Hoffman for
warming
trend
through the The U. S. CommWlity Services Administration said the grant
Southern High School. She May showing receipts of
period
with
1
cbance of would be distributed among 53,000 elderly and low-income
was a member of the school's $2,270.40 in fines and fees and
showers
about
Saturday. households.
· National Honor Society.
$169 In merchant police
Gov. James A. Rhodes had sought a grant of $90million to
Highs
will
be
near 80
TRACI WEESE, daughter collections for a total of
assist
up to 300,000 utility customers. The Ohio Department of
Thursday,
warming
to
the
of Don and Ullian Weese, $2,439.40.
Economic
and Conununity Develapment ·said It would set
upper
80s
or
lower
90s
Racine, graduated from
A communication was
guidelines
for di~butlng the money,
eligibility
Saturday.
Lows
wnt
be
In
Southern and Meigs High presented from the county
spokesman
for
the department said COWlty welfare
A
the
50•
early
Thursday
and
Schools this.spring. She was a auditor, Howard Frank, in
would
administer
tbe program. The maximum
departments
member of the Vocational regard to an increased In the lOs early Saturday.
payment
will
be
$250,
the
spokesman
said.
Industrial Clubs of America budget request from the
County
Health
and was treasurer of the Meigs
LAKESIDE, OHIO - A SUMMER SCHOOL for ministers
Cosmetology Club. She Department. The auditor
to
sharpen
their pastoral and admini.strative skllls and
belonged to the Future inquired as to what the
of ministerial education were urged Monday
stronger
support
Hmemakers of America, the village would agree to having
night in a report to the West Ohio Conference of the United
withheld from its budget for
concert, marching and pep
Cloudy tonight and Wed· Methodist Olurch. The recommendations came at the
bands, Trl·M. She was a class the health department. It was nesday, lows tonight to 60 and
officer and is · church voted to notify the auditor highs Wednesday in the upper organizing session of !66th armual meeting in the form of a
oompoaite report of 14 district auperintendonts who form the
treasurer. She won several that council approves the 70s.
Pro babillty
of Bi.shops Cabinet.
same figure as last year, precipitation 50 per cent
awards In cosmetology.
It alao called for ''more caring for people's prayer life,
$4,492.76, Clerk·Treasurer today, 20 per cent tonight and
more
emphasis upon discipleship training for the laity and
Grate reviewed the amounts Wednesday, ·
support for the five ehurch related colleges and
fuller
given the department from
14 hospitals and homes and two seminaries within
universities,
the village appropriation
MARTIN
GRADUATES
the
West
Ohio
boundaries."
over the past several years
Sergeant
Michael
R.
with last year being the
Martin, son o.f Mr. ~nd Mrs.
CHICAGO - RESEARCHERS AT GOULD INC., said
highest.
thru TUES.
Council discussed the Richard C. Martin of 5 Vine Monday they have developed a way to recycle more scrap
possibilities of the need for a St ., Jackson, Ohio, has rubber economically. A pilot plant will be set up in Cleveland,
KILLER FORCE
new pollee cruiser next year. graduated at QuanUco Ohio, by the end of the year, Gould Chairman W. T, Ylvisaker
II R"
Attending the meeting were Marine Corps Base, Va., said . The plant's output will he partly used by Gould's
Plus
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk· from the U. S. Air Force Elastometer Products Division.
Tire tread tests under field conditions indicate Gould's
Treasurer Grate, and technical training course for
SPECIAL
computer
programming recycled rubber can be used succeS8fully in tire retreada at
Councilmen King, Kelly,
DELIVERY
Dewey Horton, Carl Horky, specialists. The sergeant replacement leyela up to 30 per cent by weight. That's six
George
Meinhart
and graduated from high school times as much u .,.can be utilized Wider current recycling
"PG"
in 1968 and received a B.S. methods. The ltew process reduces scrap rubber to a fine .
William Walters.
degree in 1977 from St. Leo powder which makes it substitute better for virgin natural or ·
(Fla.) College, His wife, synthetic rubber, Present methods result In reclaimed rubber
Sandra, ls the daughter of losing many of the characteristics of virgin rubber so that
Mrs. Gladine Newlun of usually no more lhlln 5 per cent of reclaimed rubber Is used to
Chillicothe, Ohio. Mrs. make products which require maxlmwn rubber-like
Martin's father, Harold properties.
Newlun, resides at Rt. 1,
ReedaviUe, Ohio.
EDITOR NAMED
CHICAGO (UP!) - The
appointment of Gregory E.
Favre as managing editor of
TJY Our Delicious Strawbeny
the Chicago Daily News was
Shortcake, w~h or without
annoWlced Monday by James
Hoge, editor-in-chief of the
Whipped Cream.
Daily Nell'S and Chicago Sun·

Just about every weekend from
May to October there is outboard
racing within. driving distance. It's
usually head to head competition
equal to any type of amateur
professional racing.
It ranges from six minute sprints
on placid lakes to grueling 30-minute
marathons on more open water. ·
The competitors range in age from
their early teens to men in their 50s
and even 60s. The competition is
stricliy amateur except for some
support from factories to a few
teams in the Outboard Performance
. category. More often than not, it is a
family activity with dad or son
driving and the rest of the family
serving as pit crew.
The speeds range from 30 mph to
120 mph in the larger OPC classes.

Girl·Scout killers sought

If the above arouaed interest,
you will have an opportunity to see
this head to head competition on
Sunday, June 19, on the river in
Pomeroy.
Racing will begin promptly at 1
p.m. with the following classes
competing:
. Sport E, G Production, Sport G,
Family Sport, J Production, SJlirt
J . UJ, and SST.
Persons wanting to compete as
amateurs Sunday, bring your rigs, a
race helmet and a life jacket. There
will be plenty of help around to see
that your rig Is properly set up.
Spectators wanting an exciting
day for the family be sure not to
miss this chance to see first hand
what boat racing is all about. The
price is right too! There Is no ad·
mission charge.

fNews • . •in Briefs! ---------------------------1
! Area Deaths :·Driver

Middleport

•
SIX

~

Weather

MASON DRIVE-IN

DUE TO THE
BIG BEND REGATTA AND
FOR SAfETY SAKE
OUR MAIN LDBBY

WilL Q.OSE AT 3:00 P.M.

AND OUR DRIVE-IN WINIXM
AT 5:00P.M.
.FRIDAY, JUNE 17th

~FarmersBank
t

A

AA1

POMIROY, OHIO

~
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

Times.·

INII 'I

-

PODDS

MRS. JAMES FRENCH
Mr s.

l:verett

Ecker ,

She was the

r

last oi 10

Monday received word of the

children .
Surviving are her husband,
James French, also a former
resident of Gallla County; a

Mrs .

daughter. Mary of Fostoria

Fourth

Ave .,

Gallipolis,

death of her sister -In-law,
James

French

of

Fostoria .

A former Gallla County
resident, Mrs. French was

the daughter of the late
Hamilton and Kay Walters.

and a son, Jack French of
Bowling Green. Funeral

services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday

from

Mann's

Funeral Home in Fostoria.

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted- Audris Arnold,
Pomeroy; Ronald Dailey,
Portland: Janette Lawrence,
Racine : Kathryn Evans,
Portland; Henry Price, Long
Bottom: Carl Gheen, Sr.,
Pomeroy : Sharon Riggs,
Rutland: Aubrey Sands,
Parkersburg;
Frances
Parsons, Racine ; Judith
Laudermilt, Middleport :
Maggie Chaney, Racine : Ella
Linehan, Belpre ; Billie Lou
Gilmore, New Haven; Nancy
Walker, Pomeroy ; Goldie
La~, Minersville; Esta
DIIJIOng, Middleport.
Discharged - Zuelelia

Smith, Theron
Marie Custer.

Durham,

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges June 12)
Patricia Adleta, Richard
Baley, Helen Blackston,
James Bolin, Ruth Glass,
Russell Holland, Dorthy
Lowe, Dwight Unger and
Tracy Wllls.
(Births, June 12)
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
Rousch, a daughter, Point
Pleasant: Mr. and Mrs.
Helson Thomas, a son, New
Haven; Mr, and Mrs. Larry
Wiseman, a. son, Jackson.

Local news, in briefs
The free cervica l cancer
clinic for Meigs area women

scheduled for Wednesday
from 12:30 lo 3:30 p.m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
has been postponed until

Wednesday, June

29.

There

Elderly couple

of Gallia killed
WELLSVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
- Three persons were killed
and one injured Monday in a
car-truck collision on Ohio 7 ,
south of here, the Ohio High·
way Patrol reported.
The patrol identified the
victims as JohnS. Baker, 72,
and his wife Rosebud of
Gallipolis, and Agnes Me·
Millen, sister of Mrs. Baker,
of Shadyside, all passengers .
in .a car driven by George R.
McMillen, 71, Shadyside.
. The patrol said McMillen
pulled out of Route 213 into
the path of a coal truck driven
by Frederick Mix III, 25,
Kensington, Ohio.

CHIEF'S REQUEST
Pamerjly Pollee Jed
Weblt,!ir !Ub residents on
Conddli "Street to please
remove all cars from the
street Friday from 6 p.m.
ta 8 p.m. due ta tbe Regatta
parade disbandlng there.

are a number of openings for

appointments for the June 29

clinic.

Those

who

made

appointments for this week

are asked ·to reschedule.

Numbers to call for those ·
wishing appointments are

992-3382 weekc;fays or 992-7531

from 1 to 4 p.m. on Tuesdays
and Thursdays.
Due to Big Bend Regatta
Weekend actl vi ties a meeting

of

the

Meigs

County

Democrat Central Committee will not be held this

month, The

scheduled
evening.

meeting was

for

Thursday

The Meigs County Unit of
the American Cancer Society
will sponsor a dance from
Satvrday from 10 p.m. to 2

a.m. at the Orchid Room, E.
Main St .. Pomeroy. Tickets
are being sold at Chapman

Shoes and at the local unit

office for $5 per couple
donation. Dress Is casual and
reside11ts 18 and over are
invited.

perform thai job.
Fred

~row ,

president, pres1dent,

Mr. und

•

•

enttne

at
VOL. XXVIII NO. 43

t'&lt;IIIUUendl:d

Mrs. Simon lor the fine efforts they have put forth in getting
th• river bank side deaned up.
Mrs. Simon further reported that George Carper and Don
Hubbard have donated flowers lo be planted along the side of
.the highway on the river bank side.
It was reported that pickup boats are still needed lor I be
boat races to meet Coast Guard regula~ons . Those who are
willbg to use their boats are to contact Barbora Chapman .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

arc lo IIIL'et with Mrs. C.'rlsp later and discuss the possibility of
s.••-rci&lt;Jry, al the chambt•r office .
Als.• n&lt;-eded is a public address system . Thus far there are U&gt;e chamber sponsoring the directory .
On Thursday a variety show will be belli at the Meigs
40 cntries for the eat-thoo ~.be ht!ld Saturday at 3:30p.m. with
st&gt;11w rs to pay so much per hamburger. Tlk' event will be held Junior High in Middleport. Admission is $1 for adults and W
·
at Country Cousins. PrOI.-et.'ds will go to the Jayt'ees for their cents for children.
Nolan Amusement will offer rides Thursday from 6 p.m. to
mirj-nark ln Pomeroy.
The senior citizens orgaruzation hliS made a quilt and the !Op.m. for only $2 and Sunday afternoon from I p.m. to 5 p.m.
Attending were Crow, Barbara Chapman, Dale Warner,
money they receive from donations on the quill will be given to
the chamber for the cleanup of Pomeroy .
l.eo Vaughan, Bill Young , Joe Young , Vernon Weber, Bill
Bluegrass music will be featured Saturday beginning at 6 Gruescr, C. F. . Blakeslee, N. W. Compton, Ted Reed, Jack
p.m. on the stage atl.ynn Street. Mrs. Jack Crisp met with the Carsey, Jirn Frecker, Bill Mayer, Mrs. Crisp and Mrs. Paul
chamber in regard to a service directory . Crow and Blakeslee Simon.

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1977

Ll

-

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

1

I

James D. Jones.

Norman

R.

Smith,

Pomeroy, has recelv~ word

of the death of his brother,
Paul E. Smith of Huntington,
formerly of Pomeroy.
The Pomeroy Emergency

Squad was called to the

Victor Young residence, East

Main St.. at 4:29p.m. Monda y
for Nancy Walker who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was

admitted.
At 6:56p.m. the squad went
to Welshtown Hill for Mrs.
Carol Gartin, a maternity
Mrs. Gartin In the emergency

ambulance. She and her baby
were taken to Pleasant

CASE HEARD
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Valley Hospital.
Federal attorneys have asked
the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals to reinstate a mail
fraud Indictment against a
former Shelby County
(Memphis), Tenn., official,
Billy Ray Shilling, and his
FATHER'S
lawyer.
·
Shilling, a member of the
Shelby County Quarterly
SALE I
Court, was accused of
fraudulently representing
himself concerning the
purehase of a parcel of land
which had to be approved by
the quarterly court.

Joseph D. Wllls, 28, Ad·
dison, was charged with DWI
following an accident at 10:40
p.m. Monday on SR 7, south
of the Meigs County line.
The Gallla-Meigs Post.
State Highway Patrol said
Wills lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the highway through a
guardrall and struck a utility
pole. His car was demolished:
David E. Mllhoane, 23,
Tuppers Plains, escaped
serious Injury in a similar
accident on SR 681 in Meigs
County. The patrol said
Milhoane lost control of his
car ~ -iilft tbe -highway
and 1di 1 tree, then over·
turned. l'lis car also also was
demolished. Milhoane, who
suffered minor Injuries, was
charged ·with ·qoeckless
operation.
Ricky L. Harris, 21, Bid·
well, was cited to Gallipolis
Municipal Court for driving
left of ·center following an
accident at 3:40p.m. Monday
on Pine Hill Cemetery Rd.
eight tenths of a mUe south of
SR 160.
State troopers ssld Harris'
car collided headon with an
auto operated by Dorina F.
Folden, 19, Bldwelt There
was moderate damage.
Sherry. Sanders, 18, Ewington, was charged with failure
to yield the right of way from
a private driveway following
an accident at 7:20 p.m.
Monday on SR 160.
The Sanders car pulled
·from a private driveway Into
the path of an auto operaied
by Ira Mullins, 37, Jager, W.
Va. There was · minor
damage.
.In a weekend accident, the
patrol cited Mark S.
Crawford, 18, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
for
Improper backing
following
an accident
Saturday on SR 325, ·south of
Rio Grande.
Crawford's car struck an
auto operated by Arlie· P,
Hill, 83, Gallipolis.

ASK TO WED
Marriage licenses were
IBsued to Marvin Eugene
Althouse, 20, Rt. 2, Albany,
and BoMie Hazel McVay, 22,
Rt. 2, Albany; Charles Daniel
Jones, 34, Middleport, and
Margaret Ellen Jones, 30,
Middleport.

.
.
Free ClothtDg Day
The Gallia • Meigs Community Action Agency will
bold Its free clothing day for
low income persons on June
17 from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. The
clothing bank is located In the
old high school bulldlng In
Cheshire.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
DAY IS NEXT SUNDAY

MEN'S s15.95

GOlf JACKETS

sur'

Sizes S, M, L, XL - solid
colors. . slash pockets,
zipper

front,

Variety

charged

In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Allee Jones was
granted a divorce from

case. A daughter was born to

CHARTERS APPROVED
. Gormley resigned.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Favre joined the DaUy
News six months ago as . state Board of Education
feature editor after serving Monday approved charters
as editor of the Corpus Christl for five nonpublic schools.
The schools are: East
(Tex.) Caller and Times,
Christian School,
Liverpool
Previously he was managing
East
Liverpool;
First Baptist
editor at the Dayton (Ohio)
School,
Elyria ;
'Christian
Daily News, editor of the
Howland
Christian
School,
Palm Beach (Fla.) Post when
the-newspaperwonaPulltzer Warren; Open Door Christian
Prize and neWI director of School, Elyria and Willo-Hlll
Olristlan School, Willoughby._
WPLG-TV, Miami.

'---------------.;_--J'

parade. Mrs. Paul Simon, who with her husband, are headin~
the cleanup campa1gn m Pnmcruy. vulunlt.-cn..&gt;d helpers tv

l

Favre will succeed Donald

~~ES~y
~
~
1J:: fllliJW Gl

Meigs County is ready for the Big Bend Regatta this
w~kend according to the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerre
which met Tuesday at noon at the Meigs Inn.
Jim Frecker, parade chairman, reported thai over tOO
e!Jirles have. been received for lhe Regatta parade to be held
f'r~day lea"!"g Middleport at 6 p.m . and proceed through
Pomeroy, disbanding on Condor Street
Frecker also repo~ted that entries .;.e stlU coming in. Tlk'
!"'rade wlll form at Middleport al approximately 5 p.m . with
Judgrng of WliUiers to be done before the parade starts
Frecker also said that at least four persons are ~eeded to
clesn streets rn both Middleport and Pomeroy following lhe

1

W. Gormley, effective July 1.

HRS.: 10:00 A.M. Iiln :00 P.M. Sun . Thurs. 10:00 A.M:
til12:00 P.M. Friday and saturday.
·
A(The Pomeroy Bend. Bridge

Siie-u·s

I

Over 100 units will march in parade

reglan

shoulder for comfortable
fit .
Sale prices. too, on men's shirts . men's dr.ss slacks.
fashion jeans · neckties - dress belts. Select Father's
Day gifts now.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

adding
new acts

.-

The Regatta variety show
committee has aimounced
additional acts lor the variety
show to be held Thursday at
the Mei~s Junior High School
auditorium in Middleport
beginning at 8 p.m. These
are :

CONSTRUCTION FOR THE RAVENSWOOD BRIDGE is well
underway by the Dravo COmpany of Permsylvania. A bridge spanmng the

Ohio River at Ravenswood has begun. Shown is one of tbe cofferdams at mid
chaMel. Another is being constructed near the West Virginia shore, south of
Ravenswood.

.· ·-I.ller. -sure
Co mmissioD'''i:~!~rit!~:~~~~~::. ·M
,

·

lair Monday and a chance
ol shower. saturday and

calling for '"~;:*·:,;:::: of victory
•
May
austerity

Austerity became the byword .when -Meigs County
Commissioners met Tuesday
night.
RiChard Jones, com·
missioner, swrunarized the
attitude of the commission in
the following statement:
"In view of the fact thatthe
mental retardatidn levy has
been defeated I feel it is
imperative to call upon all
segments of county govern·
ment to begin at once the
of an
implementation
austerity ·program con·
cerning county expenditures.
The actions of the Ohio
Legislature now make it

Arrests total31
during
in Middleport

mandatory that an adequate
Thirty-one .a rrests were
program for the mentally
made by the Middleport
regarded be enacted. .
"House Bill455 doesn 't say Police Department during
that county government can May, Police Chief J . J.
il it wishes or that it might, it Cremeans reports.
There were six arrests for
states and states very
driving
while intoxicated ;
definitely that county shall "
five
each
for speeding and
provide a program for the
disorderly
manner and two
mentally retarded.
each
for
assured clear
"The · county
com·
distance
and
disturbing the
missioners are charged with
was
one arrest
peace.
There
complying with the law, this
each
on
the
following
will mean appropriating the
• ' funds to enact the program. charges: wrong way on a one·
Cutbacks will need to be way street ; failure to yield
. made in many services now the right of way: ruMlng stop
sign; improper backing;
being provided.
"The time to look at this spinning tires: leaving the
problem is now. We must scene of an accident;
begin at once to curtail reckless operation; conspending. I call on all tributing to the delinquency
members of county govern· of a minor ; petty theft, and
ment !or their cooperation in trespassing.
The
department
in·
'
this endeavor."
vestigated
nine
auto
ac·
During the . meeting the
resignation of Martha cidents and the police cruiser
The great majority of folks Chambers as clerk was read was driven 5,041 miles during
using the services of the and accepted effective June the month. Parking meter
collections for . the month
Meigs Community Mental 15.
totaled $1 ,164.50.
A
motion
was
made
by
Health Center come wanting
to live more effective and Jones and seconded by James
meaningful lives, and are not Roush to extend the closing of Legion command
the tax books from June 20 to
~~mentally ill."
to Albert Roush
They are concerned about July 20.
Meeting with the ,com·
theoquality of their lives. This
Albert Roush was instatled
missioners
were county as commander of the
is one of the messages which
the center's Open House on engineer Wesley Buehl and American 1 Legion, FeeneySaturday, June 18, from 1-:i Dave Spencer. Buehl gave a Bennett Post 128, Middleport,
report of the road patching at the recent installation of
p.m., hopes to impart .
Along with this new quality· projects and stated that the new officers by Marvin Kelly.
of-living focus will be ' the new paving machine is
Other officers installed for
inclusion of a special "working very well." Buehl the 1977-78 year were Andy
his written Batey, first vice commander:
Women's Issues room during presented
the Open House. Women's recommendation on awar- Lewis tong, finance officer:
Issues is a newly emerging ding the contract for bridge 9· Henry Clatworthy, adjutant;
focus at the Center because of C29·20 to the Ohio Bridge and Walter Bunce, chaplain .
its felt need in tile com· Company.
Fish sandwiches were served
A report was received from by Middleport Fire Depart·
munity.
Parent effectiveness the architect on the inulti· ment members following the
training, LD tutoring , purpose building, stating that meeting .
relaxation
awareness plans are proceeding on
groups and assertiveness schedule.
Jones reported that he had
training are some of the other
TWO LOSE BOND
met
with ·Judge John C.
specialized areas the center
Two
defendants forfeited
Bacon
in
regard
to
installing
is moving into. •
bonds
in
the court of Pomeroy
outlets
in
the
jury
electrical
The publlc is warmly in·
Mayor
Clarence Andrews.
room.
Cass
Hindy
will
be
·
vited to attend the Open
are
Floyd Pullcns,
They
House. Special invitations employed to do the work it
PomeroY,
$350,
posted on a
have been sent to individuals was reported .
char~e
ol
driving
while in·
Attending were Henry
in the community in an effort
toxicated.
and
Charles
·to make known the Open Wells, Jones, and Roush,
Ruggics,
Sciotoville,
$30,
House. There will he movies co mmi o:s ioncrs, and Mary
po"\ed
on
a
speeding
charge.
Hobstel,,.r, acting clerk.
and refresttments.

Open House
announced
at MH center

I,

a

BELLAIRE, Ohio (UP!) - John Guzek, president of
District 6 of the United Mlne Worker~ union, said today that
with Arnold Miller apparently a.,;ured of re-election as UMW
president "it's time the mudslinging stopped,"
With 512 of 858 locals reporting nationwide , an unofficial
UP! tatlyshowed Miller leading with 35,478 votes, compared to
31,052 for Leroy Patterson and 22,051 for Harry Patrick, UMW
secretary-treasurer.
.In Guzek's district, however, wi\.!1 about half of the locals
reporting, Patrict had 3,456 votes to 2,592 for Miller and 1,267
for Patterson.
"J'm sure Miller will win
it," said Guzek. 11 There's no former Boyle supporter, has
doubt that he's best for the promised to challenge the
ootcome if Miller wins.
union .''
The returns obviously
Guzek also said he hoped
showed
big pockets of anti·
the bitterness of the camMiller
sentiment,
promising
paign would not carry over
more
unrest
within
the .union
into contract negotiation s
as
President
Carter
tries to
with the bituminous coal
expand
coal
production
to
industry scheduled to start
meet
the
nation's
energy
this fall.
Guzek said the turnout for needs.
the election in District 6,

Andrea and Kim Batey of
Chester, vocal solos. Eight
students from Meigs Junior
High School in an act are
Libby Walkings, Tina Miller,
Rhonda Southern and Nancy
Wallace, Middleport ; Connie
Smith, Barbara Whitlatch,
and Penny and TammY·
Miller, all of Pomeroy.
Tickets for the show will be
W cents for students and S1
for adults at the Meigs Inn
now or at the door 'Thursday
night. The variety show is
part of the Pomeroy ,
Chamber of Commerce's Big
Bend Regatta.

Volunteer units

called 41 times

LATEST "UNOFFICIAL" MEMBER of the Pomeroy
Police DepOrtment is Matthew Hawley. two and one-half
year-&lt;&gt;ld son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hawley, Pomeroy,
who is drawing attention of townspeople as he moves
through the town with his father who is the meter
patrolman. Matthew's very official looking uniform was
tailored for him at the Fabric Shop. Accessories of a gWl,
handcuffs and a night stick round put his outfit and a
search is now underway to locate a hat small enough lor
the new patroiman.

Comment, advice asked
'

The Middleport Fire.
Department answered a total
of 41 calls during the month of
May, according to the
· monthly report of Fire Chief
Middleport Mayor Fred
C. Robert Fisher.
Breakdown on the runs Hoffman today urged all
includes 34 first aid calls, one residents who are interested
mutual aid call and six fires. in the village sewage system
01 the 34 emergency medical to attend the public meeting
and ambulance calls, 19 were being bela Thursday at 7 p.m.
in town and 15 were out of · in the village council
town. Total manhours for chambers at City Hall.
emergency runs amounted to
Purpose of the meeting is to
163.3 hours with · 916.5 miles obtain comments and advice
being driven. On fire calls, rrom all concerned parties in
firemen put in 95.6 hours with. reference to a stud y ol
an average of 12 men making sanitary sewe'rage facilities
for the village qf Middleport.
each call.
The meeting is a part of the
&gt;tudy being conducted by the
Floyd G. Browne and Assoc.,
Ltd . Engineering firm. J . M.
1\ievil,
engineer of this firm,
Clea r tonight, patchy log
will
be
in charge of the
developing, lows in the low
meeting
.
60s. Cloudy, hazy Thursday,
Residents who do not have
highs in the mid 80s.
sewage
service in the village
Probability of precipitation
and
.
residents
whp do have
near zero pee cent today and
sewage
problems
in their
tonight, 20 per cent Thursday.

• Middleport meeting
m

Weather

area are especially urged to
attend so these areas will be
included in the overa ll
sewage plan ol the village.
The village has be~n
awarded a grant lor 75
percent funding of this Step 1
facilities plan to determine
what problems are being
experienced by the village
with the present system and
also to determine the most
ecomical way the village ca n
meet secondary treatment
requirements of the United
St a t es Environmental
Protection Agency.
All
comments
are
welcomed as this is the only
way village officials can
determine th e best plan
which will benefit all village
residents at the least cost to
ali.

••II

which covers Eastern Ohio

••

and the Northern Panhandle
of We•t VIrginia was "pretty
heavy" although exact
figures on how many miners
voted were not immediately
available.
Miller, 54, the reform
leader who ousted W. A.
"Tony" Boyle in 1972, was so
confident of being re-elected
after Tuesday's balloting that
he scheduled a victory news
conference later today.
His opponents, Harry
Patrick and Lee Roy Pat·
terson, also appeared to be on
the verge of conceding defeat
early today. But Patterson, a

vETO OVERRIDE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen.
William F. Bowen, D-&lt;::incinnati, said Tuesday il would
"Jifobably be next week"
before he asked the Ohio
Senate to override Gov.
James A. Rhodes' veto of a
bill to elect Hamilton County
municipal judges from three
judicial districts.
Rhodes vetoed the bill last
Friday. It would divide
Hamilton County into three
districts. Five judges would
be elected fr om the city of
Cincinnati, five . from the
county exclusive ol the c1ty
and three would be elected atlarge from the cily and'
tounty.

\
FIRST FROG DERBY ENTRY - Clarence and
Jacqueline Fraley ol Columbia Township are the_first
persons to enter a frog in the Frog Derby, only one m the
United States, that will be staged at Me1gs Stadium
Saturday at 8 p. m. The frog has been named "Fraley's
Lol!,l(cr" . Owner is Clarence, trainer is Jacqueline, jnck'y

'

•J I '

is Clarence colors are orange and white, sire is Chain Saw
Sam and d~m is Chestnu\ Beauty . It is the only frog that
survives on sawdust and nitroglycerin. Shown are, 1-&lt;',
Clarence and Jacqueline Fraley and Fred Crow,
organizer oltheOhioSociety (or the Promotion of the Bull
Frog.
t

�3- The Daily Senhnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Wed n&lt;&gt;sda). June 15, 1971
• ?- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wed!ll'sday, JWJe 15. 1977

ten Boom story

Editorial comment..
opinion, features

·'

one language to comply \1 Il!1 l:fl&gt; amendments to the Volmg R1ghts Act
It IS the mcre.asmg unp&lt;:td of tllegal un
rru gratwn, hoY. ever, t hat gtves the g1eatest
t:ause fm concern
The problem rs senous,' wa rns Leonard
0 Chapma n, former t:unumsstoner of the
ltnmt gratton and Naturabz.a twn Scrvu.: e
' But we are seemg only the begmmng of a
fl ood, a hwnan llde that IS go mg to engulf
~om cthi n g

out country w1 less

ts done to

slop or alleaslslow It '
Wrtt111g m The Futunst " Jolll! D Huss
amd Melame J W1 rken contend that off!cral
proJeCtiOns of the US populatiOn, based on
the current birthrate of US women and the
total number of legal mulugran ls, are probably " much too low "
More realisti c proJedwns, they say
would lake 111!0 account the 800,000 rllegal
unm•granls, mostly Sp• msh-speakm g,
believed to enter the country each year
Assum111g noth111g IS done to cui b IllegalunrrugratiOn , the U S mr ght have nearly 100
m1lhon more people m the year 2025 than
would be expected on the basrs of the current natural mcrease (2 1 million brrlhs per
yea1 ) plus legal ImmigratiOn (400,000 per
yem )
In the same tssue of the magazmc,
Richard Downes pamt.s two '.scenartos" of
the posstble consequences of Illegal lmnugrahon, one opllmisllc, the other
pessimrsl!c In the f1rsl , the Umled Stales
gradually and peacefully accomplishes the
transrtron to a Spamsh-speakmg soctely In
the second, mounting social stnfe eVlmlually leads to a break-up of the U S A
Forecaslmg the future on the has1s of
presently perceived trends IS always a
highly chancy busmess, of course, especrally when human berngs are mvolved But
enough evrdence IS accumulalmg to lend
more than a htlle urgency to warmngs that
WJless great wrsdom and foresight are
brought to bear on the problems of Illegal
ururugrat10n and hngmsi!C " nghls,' the socalled melllng pot could one day come to a
real boll

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

AtllerJC3h goodwill

coming on film

llmbacs'bdor 16
here to see you.

" CO I1R IF. Behind th e
&amp; enes With THE HIDING
PI ACE." ,, new full length
color release from World
WHie 1;"1(1.ures , w1ll be shown
free at Frrst Southern Baptist
Church, 282 Mulberry Ave

Laurel Oiff
BY BERTHA PARKER
Attendance at the mornmg
servrce June 12 at the Free
Methodrst Church was 88
There was spectal mUSIC by
the chrldren 's choir wrth Mrs
Joy Clark, director
Mr Lonnte Norris, Dayton,
was guest smger Sunday
mormng
Mrs Sandy Dorst, Dean
and Lisa, Mrlan, VISited over
the weekend With her
parents, Mr and Mrs James
Gilmore
Mr and Mrs Guy Russell,
Warren, Mrs Paul Archer,
Columbus, visrted recently
wrth Mrs Georg1a Diehl
Mr and Mrs. Ph1ll WISe,
Beverly, attended Sunday
mormng service at the local
church
Mr~
J R Tracy was
released from VMH Saturday
Mr and Mrs Roy Howell,
Salem, spent the weekend at
!herr home here
Mrs Georgia Drehl vrs1ted
Sunday evenrng With Mrs
Nelhe Tracy, BaU Run
VacatiOn B1ble School wrll
be from June 20 through 24,
9 30 a.m to II 30 a m
Sunday evemng, June 19,
7 30 p m the him "Corne"
will be shown at the local
church
SUSAN SNAPS JAWS
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Susan Ford, daughter of
former Presrdent Gerald
Ford, has become a movre
photographer
M1ss Ford has been hired to
photograph the makmg of
2," sequel to the

popular movie about a b1g
shark, and Will begm work
next week on Jocatron at
Martha's Vmeyard, Mass ,
the film's producer 's,
Rrchard Zanuck and Dav1d
Brown, satd
THE DAILY SF:NTINEL
DF.:VOTEDTOTHE

INTERF.ST Of
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL
Exet Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Ctly Edilur
Pubhsilt:d daily ex c~ pt Sidunlay
by The Oluu VaUcy Publi:shmg Corn
an v Ill Court St Pumcruy OhiO
45769 Bu sm~s.s Offtt:~ Phone !J!tl.~ 156 EdJton&lt;J l Phone 992 2157
Secund t lass posl&lt;:l )lt! Jl&lt;ltld at
Pornl!r uy Ohw
NaiHJJWl
\41.1! ~~

i lll

&lt;J d ve rh::; m ~

W11tLI
Butlmdll

1., 1 I lu11l t\H

IOOJ i

the desk!

Rosalynn Carler
here, sir.

itiJ NOf
Andrew

Cal Rogers : our first 'Lone Eagle'

TOM TIEDE

history The opuuon has 1t
that such d!Stll1ctwn IS owed
to a hometown boy named
Ca lbra1th Perry !lodgers
Rodgers w&lt;:~s the h r~t man
to pilot a flying machme
ac1oss the Uruted States He
did 1t 111 1911 , merely eight
years after th e Wn ght
brothers 111troduced flymg to

Amenta at K1tty Hawk II
look Rodgers 84 days to fly
from New Y01 k to Califorma
Hardl y anyone remembers,
but this year rs the fl!ilh anmverso ry of his death
It's said that Rodgers was
born to adventure Hrs father
was a naval orf1cer y, ho
helped open Ja(lWI to western
trade His grandfather was
Commodore Ohver Hazard
Perry, hero of the Battle of
U.ke Ene ("We have mel the
enemy and they are ours" ) A
slight deafness kept Rodgers
out of the Navy, he became
mstead a motorsport racer
Rodgers was mtroduced to
flym g at the Wnghl brothers
f11ght S&lt;:hool neal Dayton,
Oh10 Early ml911 he received 90 mmutes or mstructwn
the1 e, and soloed urunedmte·
ly after WIIhm two months
he was the owner of a Wnght
ma chme, and he used 1! to
wm $11 ,000 111 a Chtcago con·
te&gt;t for air endurance (he
wa s up for 27 hours )
Flight contests we1 e the

COMMENTARY

re pt cs~n

finfftlh &lt;.:ump;tny
&lt;llicl (,ulla~ hu

Div
New Vu rk N 'r'

r ates l)ehvct"!.-'&lt;1 b)
r1cr wl)ere MV.HJ] uUie 751.'4!nl$ per
Week Oy Mutur U1 utc w/M!re (.:&lt;:~rrlcl
~u lls~;npL I OII

t..:&lt;ll

S4!n lt:c not a v &lt;~l lii bl c , One rnvnt1 1
S:l 25 lh matl 111 Ohtu &lt;~nd W Va
Ouc Yc11r 522 00 Six munth.!l
$11 ;,U Three IIIUll llls $7 Rfl
f l'il wi ll 1~ S;!:fl f)() J I HI SIX IJlU ilh ~
$1 1 ~ ~~
f11 r 11 m o nt h ~
$ 7 56
~ ni P;( 1lpUbll ~r li.l m~ lu1 k&lt;~ suuda v
I Ullt !o.-.')(.:utu u.:l

_ ________,
'

Don Oakley

Black gains are real _
The civil nghts struggle of the 1960s, favorable court
decrs1ons and the passage of equal opporlumly laws resulted 111
more economic, educational and soctal gams by black
Amencans than they achieved many previous decade
More Slgmflcantly, blacks are retammg those gams dunng
the recesswnary 1970s, says Prof Reynolds Farley, a
demographer With the Umvers1ty of Michigan
Some skeptics had predrcled that the lowermg of rac1al
hameiS was only temporary, and allnbuled 1t to the soarmg
V1etnwn warllme economy rather than to any fundamental
decline m while prejudrce Just wait untrllhe CQWltry enters a
recesston, they sa1d
Examtmng some 6!i current sludres and census reoorts on
educatiOn, occupal!on and mcome trends, Farley fmds that the
predicllons we1e wrong· the gams of the 1960s have not disappeared
Despite a shrunken JOb market and a slandsl!ll m C!Vtl nghts
and antipoverty legrslatwn, "racial differences have contmned to narrow 111 all spheres, ' he says educatiOnal alt.ammenl than ever before And while the earnmgs of black
men strll lag far behmd those of whrte men, the earmngs of
black men rose more rapidly than those of wh1te men mlhe frrsl half of the decade By 1974, the wages of black women were
closer to those of whrte women with comparable expenence
Nevertheless, he po111ts out, these garns arc small compared
with many of the racial differences that sl!ll remam For 111stance, the purchas111g power of the typiCal black fam1ly 111
1974 was sl!ll only equiValent to that of a white famrly 10 years

RODGERS (shown sealed rn hrs plane at Sheepshead
Bay, N Y at the be_gurn111g ofhrs transcontinental flight m
1911 ) was fully aware of the perils of early flight He
warned bystanders that "any place m the v1cmrty of my
machine ts dangerous "

vogue of the day, and the
b1ggest of all was sponsored
by the Hearst newspaper
organiZatiOn II offered
$!i0,000 to the ftrsl man to fly
coast to coast m a month 's
lime Given the slate of atr·
craft art, the Hearst money
was safe Several pilots trred,
but none- not even Rodgers •
- made It m 30 days
Sl!ll, Rodgers , "Tite IJ"On
Aviator, " believed he was up
to It So did the ArmoUI meal
packing company, wh1ch also
produced a g1 ape drrnk
named Vrn F1z Armour offered Rodgers $!i a m1le, and
spare parts, to undertake the
transcuntmental odyssey
The frrm asked m return that
the pilot name his ship Vm
Ftz and publicrze the product
Rodgers was no flak , but m
the splrrl of competitiOn he
gave public relatwns a go
Prepanng for the flrghl, he
mechanically gave credrl to
· the manufacturers of Vm
F1z, the deliciOUS drmk winch
sells everywhere for 5 cents a
bottle " It rs not known
whether he drank the stuff
lumself, most people reportedly preferred Coca Cola
Rodgers' machme was an

e&lt;:~rher.

II should also be noted that F&gt;rley's study was undertaken
before a recent US Supreme Court decisiOn, which civtl nghls
activiSts have called not merely WJfavorable but " disastrous."
In a case 111volv111g charges of drscrirrunalron aga111sl a
Texas-based truck111g company, the court has ruled that
semonly systems are not necessarily tllegal, even rf !herr effect ts to perpetuate past discrrnunal!on 111 h1nng and
promolton. II must be proved that a semorrty system was
deliberately deSigned to d1ser1m111ate agamst certarn workers
At the very least, the ruling may force reconsideration of Important d•sctunlnalwn coses 111volvmg the steel and commumcations mdustnes, m whu.: h semonty practwes Were
changed and "af!Irmallve acl!on' procrams IJJSIIIuted to give
members of mmortty groups and women w1der employment
opporlumttes
It could also mean that the predictiOns of the skepllcs could
yet come true and that the philosophy of "last hired, f1rst
fired" may once agam threaten the hopes of blacks and others
for a fairer share of the economrc p1e
Frrendly Panama
The Panama Canal may be a bone of contentiOn between
US and P•namanran drplomats, but on a people-to-people
basts, relatiOns between the tWo countries have apparentlv
never been better
Despite the well-pubhclzed conlrove1 sy over who wrll eventually rWl the canal, Amertcan tounsts cont111ue to pour 11110
Panama m rec.:urd numbers Panama 's Guvernment Tourtst
Bureau (IPAT I reports that 1977 rs the seventh consecul!ve
year the country has enJoyed an 111crease m cent over 1976
lwhkh rl&gt;;clf !i3W a 10 per cent rncrease over 1975), Panama IS
Jayrn!( nut lht• welcome mal fm an anhc1paled 100,000 US
lourJS~' this yea r
Accor&lt;.hng to one recently returned VISitor, a major reason
for the apparent drsregard of the l!cklish politiCal s1tuatron by
Americans head111g for the Isthmus IS !be 'unabashed frlentlhness" of the great mass of the Panamaman pcuple toward
VISllcu s fr tun the States Even those tounsts ex:~ctrng at least
some r esentmcnt ~cause uf the sometunes heHtL'tl canal
II CMOlU.illotlS have bl'CII hm 1.1 put to fmd any, beyond a few anti·
Am c rl &lt;.&lt;tll postll s fi(Jbudv slt·ms to pay mut.:h attcntton to
•

"EX" biplane II was little
more than two wmgs covered
with canvas and held
together With an open
skeleton of spruce He sal to
the left of the 35 horsepou er
engme He explamed the
plane s operatiOn thus
Pullmg the lever back to
positiOn C makes the machme
go up, pushmg rllo positiOn A
makes It go down "
As often as possible ,
Rodgers warned people that
"any place m the vrctn1ty of
my machme ts dangerous "
People found out why shortly
alter hrs JOUrney began on
Sept 17. He started from
Sheepshead Bay 111 Brooklyn,
N Y , and flew uneventfully
to M1ddletoun, N Y The
second day, however, he
crashed on takeoff, rl was the
first of 15 senous accJdenls
Actually, II was beyond the
paraunelers of chance for
Rodgers to fly a safe tnp
There were at the ttme no
radiO communtcatwns, no
beacon signals, and no atr·
ports Even the highway and
ra1Jroad rtbbons were
WJrel!able Followmg one set
of rarlroad tracks to Elmira,
N Y , Rodgers look the wrong
su rtch and wound up 111

Scranton, Pa
Beside the lack of ground
asSistance, Rodgers' biplane
was sunply madequate for
the purpose After takrng 10
days to get across New York,
and several more to traverse
Ohw, Rodgers was first dazed
by lighlmng and then almost
drowned by ram over Indiana, to keep h1• magneto
dry, he had to cup rt m flight
wtth h1s hand
Thus
handicapped,
Rodgers crashed with
regulanty Head first, tall fir·
st, wmg first After he ran mlo a tree durmg one
maneuver, his mother sent
him a message through the
newspapers "Grve tl up, Cal
You were provrdentrally
saved yesterday I fear that
you Will be killed or InJured .
Give II up for my sa)s:e "
But Rodgers had farth m
hiinself Besrdes, his faune
was growmg When he flew
Into Chtcago, thousands
cheered When he landed m
Kansas Ctly (he went south to
avmd the Rocky Mountains),
the meal packmg whistles
blew a welcome Even when
1t was apparent he could not
reach Cahforma m 30 days, to
get the $50,000, he pressed onward
HIS
groundbound
assocrales also kept pushmg
They traveled by tram, and
earned $9,000 worth of spare
parts Assuredly, the parts
were needed Durmg the lrtp
Rodgers' crew repaired SIX
broken cylmders, II skids
and etght propellers, m the
end the only parts of hrs
ongmal plane to survtve were
one skid and a rudder
Ofhc~ally, the end of the
lnp was Sadena, Califorma.
But on reaching 11, Rodgers
mstsled on making one more
leg to Long Beach amd the
ocean Airborne agam, his
engme farled over Compton
and the crash broke his ankle
It was a month before he
could contmue, on crutches,
he fmally set down m Long
Beach on December 10
He had become a hero, but
rl wasn't to last One month
after his fhghl, Cal Rodgers
crashed agam m a plane, and
this tune he drdn 'I survrve
He was g1ven • frttlng burral
here m Prttsburgh, some
years later the local airfield
was named m hrs honor
OtherwiSe, m this year of Lindbergh, the Iron Aviator rs
abnost totally forgotten

Berrys World
Picnic Held
Members and frrends of the
Pomeroy
and
Athens
Seventh-&lt;lay
Adventist
churches gathered at the
home of Mr and Mrs Bob
Prckett near Darwrn Sunday
afternoon, June 5, for their
annual p1cn1c
Due to mclement weather
the drnner was served mstde
m the spacious drnlng room of
the Ptcketts' !ann home
Attendrng were pastor and
Mrs Albert D1ttes and
chtldren Junmy and Juhe ;
Mr and Mrs Herbert
Mcintyre, Mr and Mrs
Mams and daughter, Wendy,
Mr and Mrs Bob Smith.
Bernrce Lou flier, Maym1e
Gates, Sarah Drake, Mr and
Mrs Bob Lipscomb and sons,
Eyrra, Robert, Daniel and
Wrll!am , Mr and Mrs
Joseph Whrte and Mr and
Mrs Bob Pickell and
children, Madalyn, Robert
and Lori, and two fnends of
the Upscolllb family
•
After dmner the group
enJOyed games. rnstrwnental
mUSIC, smgmg and VISiting

•

lll1917byNIA

Sport Parade

Youn~?

Flew across the U. S. 8 years after Kitty Hawk

Pll TSBURGH - (NEA) Nul to take anythmg from
Cha1les LmdbCI gh, but th e! e
IS C:l bvdy uf upimon m thts
commumty wJu c.: h td uses to
accept the Lone Eagle's feat
as the greatest md1vtdual
achlC vcment 111 av1atwn

Bench shines, Reds win 3-2 tilt

lou me8n

under

won't find uG

News Notes

~~Jaws

well hide

19 The smgle showmg 1s to
begin at 7 30 p m
The Ihdmg Pla ce, a true
story frlmed m Holla nd and
other European tocat1ons, 1s
based on the experiences of
Corr ie ten Boom who, with
her fathe r , stster
a nd
brother, provided refuge for
countless Jewish famrlies A
secret room was construeted
111 their home as a hrdtng
pl ace fo r use durmg r. estapo
ra 1ds The ten Boom's acti VIties were di scovered, and
they were sent to pnsons and
concentration camps

• ib}e misgovern
•
InVIS
men1
By Martha Angle and Robert Wal.ers
WASHINGTON- (NEA)- W Mtchael Blumenthal, newly
mstalled as Treasury Secretary, recently produced hrs first
report on the contmumg fmancral travail of New York City
Uke hrs Repubhcan predecessor, Blumenthal convemenlly
1gnored the root causes of New York's phghl'
The report, mlhe form of tesllmony prepared for the Senate
Bankmg Committee, was replete with all the standard chches
about "urban economic dechne" produced by the Otghl of
bus111esses and m1ddle-income households from the "older
centra) c1ties "
• The solemn rhetoric about the need for ftscal responsibihly
differed little from the pious proclamallons of Wilham E
Sunon, whom Blumenthal succeeded
Indeed, there is little mdtcatwn that President Carter's
Democratrc admimstratron rs any more wrliing to confront the
real problems of urban Amerrc• than the Republicans were
under President Gerald R Ford
For too many years, a fundamental cause of our ctltes'
predicament has remamed a well-kept secret, known for the
most part only by the very people who have been among those
most responsrble for urban deterwratwn
, Just published, however, rs a new book whtch bluntly Identifies the men, the mstrlutwns and the schemes whtch brought
debt, dysfuncl!on and debthtatton to the natron's brggest crty
"The Abuse of Power" by Jack Newfteld and Pau!Du Brul
· II rs an angry book, but Its allegatiOns are carefully
documented by a patr of Ideahsl!c but cymcal authors who
~hare several decades of first-hand experience with New
,York's power structure AI the heart of thetr lhesrs rs "the per·
manent government," descrr bed m thrs !ashton
"tntunate power over public pohcy In New York ts mvtsrble
and unelected II rs exercrsed by a loose confederation of
hankers, bond Wlderwrters, members of pubhc aulhonl!es, the
big msurance compames, pol!lrcal fWld-raisers, publiShers,
law ftrms, bwlders, JUdges, backroom pohlrcrans and some
umon leaders
"The power of this mterlockmg net work of elites IS based on
the control of mstrtullons, money, property and the law
makmg process II endures no matter who the voters elect as
ITIIlyor, governor or presrdent Its collectrve power, when
organrzed, IS greater than the elected, representalrve government
" Legal graft IS the currency of the pennanent government
Legal g1 aft IS !tnder's fees, IItle msurance, city contracts It
C.n be mteresl-free deposits of government funds, zonmg
:variances, Insurance premiwns or condemnation awards
" II can be campatgn conlrrbulrons, bond sale commtsstons,
pubhc relatrons retamers II can be real estate leases, mortgage closmgsor, most often , legal fees "
· If that excerpt sounds farruhar to residents of other cities,
11's because the pattern 1s hardly umque to New York Much of
lhe matenalm tbe book, published by The V1kmg Press, rs applicable also to those Cities whrch already share New York's
problems - Baltrmore, Boston, Cleveland, Detrml,
,Philadelphia, Prttsburgh, St LoUis and others
• The phenomenon may be less VISible elsewhere, but the book
.ought to be read by resrdents of smaller crttes and communrtres where
• - The county commissiOners awarded a Juc.;ratlve, non·
'competitiVe contract for new volmg machmes to the company
which retamed the " best conn ected ' law fn lll lntow n
• - The «.: 1ty cuuw.:1l suddenly and !llexpltcablv reZfll l(' d CJ
:valuable tract of land fo r the (l()ncflt of the a1 ea's brggest
_l:leveloper
• - The franchiSe for the local cable television system IS
..omehow controlled by a coalitwn of bankers, politicians and
;other "c1vrc leaders" who already dommale much of the commumty'shfe
; The scale and scope of " the pennancnl gove11uncnt's"
"Operalrons invarrably are smaller elsewhelc than 111 New
• York But rt's at work m every urban ar~a of the uatwu

an

Pome roy, on Sunday', June

Will melting pot boil over?
By Don Oakley
Back around the turn of the cent ury, dUJ mg the hig h tide of lmnugratiOn, reddy
Roosevelt saw a danger of the Umted States
turmng mto a 'polyglot boardmg house '
It d1dn t happen, chiefly becau se m those
surv1val-of the-fittest days 1l was s1nk 01
sw1m for urumgrants E1ther they lea rned
English or they had little chance of entenng
the mamstream of America n society
1 od•y, however, the ruhng philosophy
seems to be that eve ry pnvate problem
must have a public remedy Recent govern
menlleglslatwn and court rulings- combm
ed wrth the phenomenon of a contmued h1gh
nmrugratton rate, especrally of the rllegal
kind - are makmg 1t rncreasmgly likely that
the Umted States will become a b1lmgual, If
not a mulhlmgual, society, say some
obse rvers
In 1974 for example, the U S Supreme
OJurt ruled that San Francisco sc hools must
provide specral language classes for nonEnglish speakmg students This ruling, says
James Farrell 111 a book called ' Give Us
Your Poor (The lmmrgrahon Bomb),"
opened the door formultrlmgual educatiOnal
programs throughout the n•twn -' programs which will ull!malely cost the
taxpayers hundreds of milliOns of dollars
aMually' at a tune when many schools me
berng forced to cut back or ehmmate programs 111 art, music, drama and sports due
to a lack of !WJds
In 1975, Congress passed a btU requmn g
!hal voter mformahon, regiStratiOn forms
and ballots be pnnted both m English and 111
the language of every group cons!Itullng
more than five per cent of the populahon of
a particular area
As a result, San Franc1sco must now pr1111
ballots m English, Spamsh and Chrnese A
fourth language, Tagalog (Filrpmo) may
have to be added after the next census
In 1976, 111 what Farrell sees as another
step m the " de-Amencamzmg" of the
Umled Slates, the US Jushce Department
nded that 513 pohtrcal JUrisdictiOns m some
30 stales must hold elections Ill more than

El fl'esidente~

lot~~

"That sounds great, Rosy, but now tell me about
your trip IN ENGLISH!"

By MILTON RICHMAN
IJPI Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Ellie Hendrrcks was srtting there rn
the dugout smiling, Ughtmg up the whole place the way he
always does With that mlectioliS good nature of hrs
"Now I know what they mean when they say don't gtve your
laundry out," he laughed
He was, m a sense, laughmg at hunseU, makmg a Joke over
the way he has been gomg up and down between the maJor and
mmor leagues like some kmd of human yo-yo ever smce the
season started
The Yankees' thlrd-,!!lrmg catcher wasn 't complaining
because he never really does, bulfor a man putting m hrs lOth
sea111m m the blg leagues, one who has been m four different
World Serres and has never asked out from his job no matter
how banged up he was, rt had to hurt a httle, duln't 11, bemg
bounced around like a rubber ball•
"Not really," s&amp;d the 36-year.old nahve Vrrgm Islander who
spent nme years Ill the nunors before commg up to the majors
for the first time In 1968 With the Ortoles.
"They told me I was gomg to go down m spr111g training and
then changed their nund when (Ron) Blomberg got hurt,"
Hendricks explained
He got a reprreve then, but not for long The Yanks sent hun
to thm Syracuse farm In the Internahonal League on Aprti 26
and Billy Martin told hun not to worry, he'd be hack mlOdays
Hendricks wasn't recalled until May 21, at which time the
Yankees' roster was full, which meant they couldn't put hun on
the1r acttve hst All he could do was work out With the team
hefore each game When the game started, he'd have to take
off his uniform and lmd some place to s1t in the press box
The Yankees shtpped Hendricks to Syracuse agam on May 29
and he didn't rej om the club until ftve days ago After they had
sent hun down tbe first time, Martin made such a fuss about
getting him hack that he was frned $2,500 by the front ol!tce.
"In all the years I've been m baseball, I've never heen many
controversy and I felt bad for Btlly thalrl got to the pomt where
he was fined on account of me," said Hendricks
"When I got back, I went and told hun I was sorry over what
happened He sard 'I had nothing to do wtth tt '
" 'Yeah, but you put your head under the guillotine for me,' I
satd to hun "
For Hendrtcks, tt was easier gorng back to Syracuse the
second tune than the first Before being sent out tbe second
time, he felt a sense of guult bemg With the Yankees.wtthout
actually being on their active roster
"Who wanls to s1t around and wish for somethmg to happen
to a fnend of yours?" he said, referrrng to the Yankees' two
catchers ahead of him, Thurman Munson and Fran Healy.
"You don't want to wish that on anybody Wben they told me I
was gomg down, I was sort of relieved. It may sound crazy, but
it's true
"You know, catchers are a very small unrl by themselves
We have to pull for each otber Catchers aren't supposed to be
human. You get hit m the adams apple wtth a foul tip,
everybody says 'Get up, you're all rtght ' U tt happened to an
outfielder or infielder, he'd be out two weeks You get hit Ill the
grom and you're lymg on the groWJd breakmg out m a cold
sweat, and everybody laughs "
Hendrrcks ts a favorite m Mextco where he spent four years
with Jatisco He's also popular m Puerto Rico where he played
winter ball two years for Hiram Olevas' Santurce club
"Hiram Olevas rs the one man I have to thallk for everything
I've gotten m baseball," Hendrtcks said. "Even after I got
released by the Cardinals and Braves' orgaruzations 111 the
mmors, hedtdn't release me from his club He made 1t possrble
for me to be where I am now, and I wlll never forget him for

that''

Sports transactions
By Umted Press rnternat1onal
Tuesday

Baseball
Cleveland -

S1gned outf•elder
Bruce Compton
the1r
top
chotce m the free agent draft
and asstgned h•m to Batav ia
Pittsburgh - Stgned 1nf1eld
er outftetder James Poff rtQhf
handed p1 tcher Jerry Busby

and

first

Hibbett all

baseman

Wendell

ty
and
left handed
pttcher
Walter Coppol all chotces n
the free agent draft

Mtnnesota - Stgned as free
agent left h!'lnded ret1ef pitcher
Tom Hall and ass •gned h tm to
Tacoma m the Pac1f 1c Coast

League

chOICeS tn the free
draft
Ch tCago Wh1 te Sox So ld
outf•eld~r
Jerry Ha1rston to
P ittsburgh
St Louis Named mmor
league player I n s t r u c I o r
Tommy Thompson manager of
the Arkansas Travelers of th e
Texas League
Boston S1gned as free
agents f rst baseman Andy
Chardt and r tght handed p1tch
er MarK Baum and asstgned
them Elmora
----(;.'! if'
Montreal Stgned nght
handed p1tcher Gregory Staf
fon
outf elder
Dav td
Hall
•
shortstop
Bruc e McAIIJster
ftrst baseman Thoma s Hagger
-e•
a~ent

College

Umverstty of Alabama B1r
mtngham Named
Gene
Bartow of UCLA as athletiC
director and head basketball
coach
Pro Football
Ptttsburgh - Stgned runntng
back Stdney Thornton
thetr
second round draft chof ce from
Northwestern LOUI St ana
Los
Angeles
Traded
quarterback James Harns to
San
Otego for
undtsclo sed
number of future draft chotces

.;:,U

JJ!:l
ued

.11aaznst 2

Rock Springs
sweeps two
over weekend
Independent baseball
action over the weekend saw
vrsrtmg Rock Sprmgs sweep a
doubleheader from Racme, 61 and 1().2 In the first game,
wrnner Brady Huffman
tossed a four-hitter and
faMed 12 while walkmg frve
Roger Abbott led the hrtters
wrth a triple and smgle,
Ronnre Clonch had a double,
Jon Buck two srngles, and
Dave Boyd and Mark Tannehill a smgle each
Greg Cundiff took the loss
as he faMed frve and walked
two. Dave Snodgrass led the
hitters wtth two smgles, Steve
Jenkms had a double and
Fred Miller had a srngle
Jeff McK111ney threw a
ftve-h1tter m the second game
and fanned 12 and walked
only two Mark TaMehrllled
the hitters With a double and
srngle, Jeff Martm had two
singles , Pat Soulsby and
Clonch a double each, and
Stan Moon and Pete Sayre
each had a single
Steve Jenkms took the loss,
and Ron Bachtel led the
hitters with a double and
single. Cundiff, Jrm Hubbard,
and Snodgrass each had a
srngle
000 011 4--6 7 0
RS
000 100 0- 1 4 I
R
RS
R

Reds players
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
Cincmnati man has ftled suut
m Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court agamst Johnny
Bench and Bob Bailey of tbe
Cincinnati Red$, chargmg tbe
players have refused to
return $2,500 he ~atd to
hecome a distributor ur a
water-purrfyrng busmess
they started last year
Kevm Harnngton, who
jJrought the achon, charged
he had received only seven of
10 water purifrers he had
been promised as a
distributor He also clauned
he dtd not receive a ])I'Omised
three-day training program,
ongoing sales leads and
promotion and advertlsmg
for the product.
Harrmgton satd Bench and
Bailey have refused to return
his $2,500, although he said he
has been ready to retulll the
mventory at any tune
Bench ls no longer a
partner in the business, and
Bailey said last March he
planned to repay both
credrtors and unhappy
urvestors

BUFFALO, N.Y (UP!) Left wmger Br1an Spencer of
the Buffalo Sabres has undergone surgery to remove
cartilage from hts left knee, a
spokesman for the National
Hockey League club sard
The spokesman saJd he IS
expected to be ready for the
311 003 2-10 8 3 pre«ason tratning camp 111
100 000 1- 2 5 2 the fall.

By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
Johnny Bench says the
Cincmnati Reds' formula for
catchmg the Los Angeles
Dodgers IS rea ll y qurte
simple - and he's domg hiS
best to prove 1t
"Our goalrs to make up one
game a week," seiys Bench
"That s not too much to
expect aod 1f we do we II pass
'em and win another
pennant "
The Reds were 121&gt; games
behrnd the Dodgers as
recently as May 28 and
seemed to have little chance
to make up that much
ground But now they're
11

and a fte lder 's chotce as t"'red
Norman pitched a siX-hitter
and ratsed his record Ill 7-2
Jtm Kaat suffered hts frlth
loss agamst one victor y for
the Plulhes
Homers by J erry Martm
and M1ke Schnudt accounted
for the Philadelphia runs
Elsewhere m the NL, Los
Angeles chpped Pittsburgh,
3-2, San Francrsco defeated
St Louus, 7-1, Houston beat
Montreal, fHI , Atlanta topped
New York, 8-6, and Chrcago
mpped San Drego, J&gt;.5.
Dodgers 3, Ptrates 2:
Pinch runner JohMy Dales
scored from third base on a

passed ha II as J,os Angeles
rallted I or two runs In the
ninth w take Pittsburgh Lee
U.cy smgled home the tying
rWJ before Prrate catcher Ed
Ott let Rich Gossage's pttch
get past hun OU and Bill
RoblllSOn homered for the
Pirates whrle Steve Garvey
connected for the Dodgers
Giants 7, Cards I·
Ed Hahckr p1tched a threehitter and struck out stx to
wm h1s srxth game for the
G1a nts Gary Thomasson
drove 111 two San F'rancrsco
runs with a double and Derrel
Thomas, Darrell Evans, Tun
Foii and Marc Hill each drove
m one. run Bob Forsch

suffered hiS tiurd setback
aga lllSI etght w1ns
Astrus 5, Expos 0:
Bob Watson htt a two-run
homer and Julio Gonzalez
doubled m three runs for the
Astros as Joaqum AnduJar
allowed four h1ts rn sr x
IIUIII1g5 for his eighth win
agaurst three losses Stan
Bahnsen was the loser for
Montreal
Bra\es 8, Mels 5·
W11lte Montanez knocked m
ftve runs wtth a homer, smgle
and double to lead a 13-lut
Atlamta attack that brought
Max Leon hrs second wm of
the year Barry Bonne 11 had

two hrts for the Braves which
saddled Jackson Todd with
his second defeat Bud
Harrelson, John Milner and
Jerry Grote had two hrts each
for New York.
Cubs I, Padres 5:
Manny Trrllo smgled wtth
two out and the hases hUed 111

the 12th 111nmg enabling lbe
Olbs to raUy lor their vrctory
over Rollie F mgers and lbe
Padres Trillo's wrnnmg hit
ca me after Ge~e Clrnes
doubled and Bobby Murcer
drew an 111tenbonaJ walk
Rookre Donrue Moore was the
wrnnrng pitcher

only" seven games behind

the Dodgers and gaming
ground fast wrth 12 vrctor1es
rn their last 16 games ,
mcludmg a 3-2 tnumph
Tuesday mghl over the
Phrladelphia Phrlbes
Bench drove 111 all three
Cmcrnnatl runs Tuesday
mght wtth a homer, a smgle

Norman racks up
another victory
•

BASEBALL
Ma1or League Slandmgs
By Un1ted Press lnternat1onal
Nahonal League
East
W L Pel GB
Ch tcago
37 19 661
Ptttsbgh
32 23 582 •1'12
St LOU IS
33 25 569
Ph i l a
31 27 534 7
Montreat
25 32 439 12'h
25 34 1 424 1)1/1
New York

s

West
W l

Pel GB
LOS Ang
39 21 650
Cmc
31 27 534
7
San Fran
26 34 433 13
San D•ego
27 37 422 14
Houston
25 3~ 4 10 1 4' '~
Atlant a
23 39 371 17
Tuesday's Results
Atlan ta 8 New York 5
Houston 5 Montreal 0
Cmcmnat• J Phdade!ph 1a 2
Los Angeles 3 Ptttsburgh 2
Ch tcago 6 San Otego 5
San FranctSCO 7 St L OUtS 1
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Ttmes EDTl
New York (MaHa c k 3 7 ) at
Atlanta (Mc laughlin 0 0), 7 35

pm

Montreal
( Brown
3 4)
at
Houst on (Rt ch erd 5 S J 8 35

pm

Phdadelph ta {Ler ch s 21 at
Cmctnnat• (Nolan 4 1 J 8 OS

pm

Pi ttsburgh (Jones 2 1 I at Lo s
A11ge les { Rhoden 8 3)
10 30

pm

Ch 1cago (R Reuschel 8 2) at
San D 1ego ( Shtrley 5 61 10 p m
St LOU IS (Fa lcone 2 5) a t Sen
Franc tsco (Knepper 0 l l. 10 35

pm

Thursday's Games

St Lout s at San FranCi sco
Houston at New York n1ght
P1tt sburgh at LOS Ang , ntght
Ch te ago at San Otego , ntght
Amertcan League

East
Boston
New York
Balltmre
M llw
De1ro1t
Cteve!nd
Toron t o

W
34
35
32
29
25
24
23
West

l
24
26
26
32
31
30
33

Pet
586

GB

574

11

55 2

2
6111
8
8
10

475
446
444
411

W L
Pet GS
Mtnn
34 25 576
Ch 1cago
31 27 534 21!-z
Ca l1f
29 27 518 3•12
28 27 509 4
Texas
28 29 49 1 5
OaKland
Kan Ctty
28 30 483 5'h
Seatt le
25 38 397 11
Tuesday s Re-sults
Boston 7 Ct11cago 1
Texas 7 Cleveland 2
New York 4 Kansas City 2
Cat fornta 12 M tnnesota 9
Detro 1t 7 Toronto 2
Bal t 8 Mllw 5 11 mns
Oakland 6 SeaHie 3
Today's Probable Pitchers

(All Times EDT)
Texas
(Marshall
0 OJ
at
Cleveland { Btbby 5 31 ,- 7 30

pm

Oakland
CNorns
2 lJ
at
(Montague 5 4), 10 35

Seattle

pm

Cal tfornta (Tanana 10 2) at
Mtnnesota (Zahn 6 4) 8 30 p m
Toronto (Lemanczyk 4 SJ at

CINCINNATI (UPI ) Johnny Bench drove home all
the runs and Fred Norman ,
lookmg every b1t like a 20game wmner that Sparky
Anderson thinks he should be ,
ptcked up the vtctory
"But if Morgan doesn't
barrel mto that second
baseman m the stxth mmng
we don't wm the game/' said
Anderson Tuesday mght after
the Cincmnah Reds ran their
wiiUimg streak to four games
wrth a 3-2 vrctory over the
Phtladelphta Phillies.
The score was tied two-all,
one was out and the bases
were loaded m the stxth when
Bench btl a bouncer to Larry
Bowa
The Ph1lhes shortstop
flipped the ball to Ted
Srzemore for a force-out at
second hase And Morgan,
sliding mlo the hag, clipped
Srzemore Just enough to
cause UJ.e second baseman's
relay to hrst to be high
enough to pull Davey Johnson
off the bag

revealed who the Dodgers
mrght be w!llmg to g1ve up to
gel Seaver,
"I don 't plan to worry about
tl, one way or the other," said
Seaver " Look at 1t Uus way,
whether there Is a trade or
not, It still gives you guys
(sports wr1ters ) somethmg to
wr1te about ' '
Grant, while refusmg to
renegollate Seaver's
contract, says the Mets do not
want to trade the lhree-trme
Cy Young Award WIIUier and
have been talking to otber
clubs only because Seaver
said he wanted to be traded
Seaver satd he didn't think
he could resolve his
dtlferences with Grant
"That won't happen Mr
Grant and I are JUSt
polariZed It's not any one
thrng, but a strained relationship between the chatrmam of
the board and myself "

In Pony League actron,
Mrddleport downed host
Syracuse 10-8 m an extra
mnlng contest R Davts,
Chns Hupp and John Davis
combmed for the loss and
Br1tt Dodson and Billy Elkms
got the wm The wmners
faMed 13 and walked only
four.
For Middleport, Britt
Dodson got a double and
srngle, M1ke M11ler two
smgles, and Terry Wayland a

double to lead the hillers
Smgle httters were Gardner,
Elkms , Hysell, Humphrey,
and Roger Carson (2)
For Syracuse, trrple hitters
were W1lhams and J Davis
Gettmg doubles were Name
and M Dav1s, and smgle
h1tters were J
Oavts,
Williams, M Nance (2), and
M Davrs
101 120 23- 10
M
014 101 OJ- 8
s

Middleport pony team wins

pm

International League
Press International

W L Pet GB
35 20 636
35 22 614 1

Pawtuckel
Charleston
R tchmond
Rochester
Tidewater

528

6

31 28 525

6

28 25

26 27 491 8

Syracuse

25 31

Toledo
Columbus

446 10 h

25 36 410 13
19 35 352 15'1'
Tuesday's Results

Columbus 4, Pawtucket 3

Toledo2,

Richmond 1,

1st, 7

tnnmgs

Toledo 5, Rtchmond 4 2nd ,
7 lnnmgs
Rochester 4

lst , 7 tnnings

Charleston J

Charleston 7, Rochester 5

2nd 7 Innings

Syracuse 6 Ttdewater 2

1st, 7 Innings

Tidewater 6
2nd 7 1nn111gs

Syra cuse 5

to "

Home runs by Jerry Marlm
and Mrke Schmidt were
among tbe SIX hits Norman
YJelded as he gamed hrs sixth
straight vtclory and seventh
m nme deciSions
"It seems like Schmidt hits
a homer every tune we play
the Phlls I thtnk our pitchers
must be domg something
wrong," sa1d Anderson.
Wrth the score tied 2-2
Schmtdt also doubled wrth
two out 111 the siXth Anderson
• 1gnaled
Norman
to
mtenlronally walk Greg
Luzmskt The strategy patd
off when Johnson ended the
rnnmg by popprng to Morgan

renegotiated hrs contract
By DAVID MOFFIT
•
wtth
Reds' President Bob
UPI Sports Writer
Howsam
ATLANTA ( UP I) - It
Seaver's present contract,
looks like Tom Seaver may be
a
three-year, $225,000-a-year
staymg wrth the New York
agreement
that rWJs through
Mets awhile longer after
the
1978
season,
has been the
all
bone
of
contention
between
The deal the Mets were
the
star
nght-hander
and the
trymg to work out With the
defendmg world champiOn Mets He's been askmg for
Cmcmnah Reds before more money Mets' Board
tomghl's deadline fell apart Chatrman M Donald Grant
Tuesday wben Reds' rebel has satd no
"I un1erstand that e deal
ace Rawley Eastwtck made tt
(with
Cincrnnalr ) is off,"
clear that he was gomg to
Seaver
said Tuesday mghl
play out his option whether he
"
They
tell me Eastwrck
rema111ed m Cincmnat1 or
wouldn't
go along wtth It The
went to New York
Mets
may
be talking wrth
The Mels-Reds trade supsomeone
else,
I don't know
posedly would have been
I'm
JUSt
st
tting
on the
Seaver for EastwJCk, last
season's top reliever m the s1delmes as an observer "
It has been reported that
Nattonal League, utility
lnfrelder Doug Flynn and the Mets are slrll talking with
hard-hrttmg mmor league the Los Angeles Dodgers
ftrsl
baseman
Dave about a possible Seaver
trade, but 11 has not been
Revering
The trade was so close
earher In the week that
Seaver
had
already

Milwaukee (Slat on 4 6) a t
Bathmore (Flanagan 2 Sl 7 30

Umted

throw Wlll be

" I think I noticed some
disagreement from my
troopers when I had Fredie
walk Luzrnskr," said a
smiling Anderson "But I saw
that monster's average up
there on the scoreboard and
smce he's domg better than
one for three, I wasn't gonna
let hun beat me m that
Situation "
Luztnskr camed a 340
baltrng
average
accomparued by 13 homers
mto the game
Bench hit his 12th homer of
the season and fourth 111 his
last 10 games m second
IIUimg for the Reds first run
He smgled home a second run
m the fourth mning'
"All I want from Bench rs
RBis," satd Anderson "I
don't care about his battmg
average He has come a long
way Tbere for a while he had
noth111g 111 RBis "
Bench's
three
RBis
Tuesday mght boosted hrs
season total to 42

Seaver-Reds' deal off

Detro•t (Arroyo 4 31 a p m

Thursday's Games
Oakland at Seattle
Caltfornia at M inn n1ght
Toronto at Detro1t ntght
Mtlw at Batt more 01ght
Kan C1fy at New York n1ght
C"h 1cago at Efoston n1ghl

The errant throw prevented
an mnmg-endmg double play
and enabled Pete Rose to
come home from third wtth
what proved to be the wmning
run.
" I JUst wanted to get
Sizemore mto the a1r," sa1d
Morgan " I've been m tbe
same stluatton myseU and I
know If he's m the mr, his

LEAR SUED
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Norman Lear, producer of
"All m the Family" and otber
hberal message teleVISion
shows, was sued Monday by a
black wrtter who cbarged
Lear
w1th
racral
discrunmalton
Errc Monte accused Lear
and his productiOn company
of VIOJa!Jng hiS CIVIl nghls by
consp1rrng to prevent black
writers or producers from
marketmg prrme tune televlston senes Monte , rn a $250
mrllwn surt, alleged Lear had
turned over to other wrrters
1deas for shows that Monte
satd he or1gmaled about
blacks, such as " Good
Times "

" The

Jeffersons"

'
and " What's
Happenmg"

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�4 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wed nrsday, Jwte 1~. 1977

Crenshaw suffering from flu
By MIKE RABUN
UPI Sports Writer
TULSA,Okla. (UPI ) - Ben
Crenshaw is suffering from
the no. defending champion
Jerry Pate is still rusty from
a long layoff, JohMy Miller is
having a hard time hitting the
ball s tra ight and AI
Geiberger, who shot a record
59 last week, is in the midst of
a letdown .
All of that can be accepted
as routine news on the eve of
the U.S. Open.
But when Jack Nicklaus
hits the grounds for the first
time and says he has
handicapped himself by
steppiOg into a hole on his
home course and spraining
his right ankle, heads turn.
The incident occurred at
Nicklaus' Muirfield Village
course last Sunday. Sunday
night he could not walk . On
Monday, however , Nicklaus
felt better and hit some
practice balls.
And on Tuesday he showed
· up at Southern Iillis Cowttry
Club, site of the 77th Open
championship, saying he did
not think the twisted ankle
would bother him.
"It only hurts when something touches the ankle," said .
Nicklaus. "So I have done
something to one. of my
shoes. ''

With that Nicklaus reached
into his locker and pulled out
a golf shoe that looked as if it
had been attacked by an
electric knife. Aportion Of the
right side of the shoe had
been cut away so the tender
ankle could be exposed.
" It doesn't look good," said
Nicklaus. "But itfeels good."
Nicklaus did not show up at
Southern Hills until late in the
day and by then there was
further testimony that this
year's Open layout would
play easier th!ln most.
"It's got to play easier
because the rough is easier,''
said Gary Player. "This is
the shortest rough I have ever
.seen for a U.S. Open. The
longest rough I have ever

Among those not so
in 19~8 (P layer's first confident was Crenshaw, who
Open )."
came down with a virus last
Player pronounced himself week and is still feeling it.
"1 don 't feel good at all,"
a serious contender for the
event that opens Thursday, said Crenshaw, who looked
like a candidate for a hospital
as did another Open champ bed. ·'But I'm going to play.
Lee Trevino.
" I'm feeling great," said This tournament only comes
Trevino, who missed last around once a year."
And then there was Geiberyear's Open with a hack
ailment
that required ger, whose 59 in the second
surgery. ''I've got a &amp;-wood in · round at Memphis last week
my bag for this short rough set an all-time PGA record.
He arrived in town Tuesday
and I'm really hitting it."
seen was at thi.s same course

LOS ANGELES (UP!) Quite predictably, Toinmy
Lasorda was talking about
the Big Dodger in the Sky
again.
After the Los Angeles Dodgers' thrilling photo finish
Tuesday night, the first-year
·skipper wore his brightest

or

the fire that would have scored pinch ruMOr John
reduced their evaporating Hale with the tying rwt and
division advantage to six sent pinch runner J ohMy
games.
Oates to third.
Instead, their lead today
On an 0-2 coon! to Bill
stiU is seven.
Russell, Ott committed a
On home runs by Ed Ott passed ball that allowed
and Bill Robinson, the Oates to score the winning
Pirates took a 2-lleadinto the run standing up.
ninth inning with Rich
smile.
"That was my biggest hit
It's been chronicled that Gossage, their bullpen ace, as a Dodger ," grinned
Lasorda could convince a on the mound.
Powell,
the
onetime
condemned man it was a
Gossage, who replaced American League MVP who
beautiful day for a hanging . veteran left-bander Jim now is Mor-17 as a Los
He must have told his players Rooker with two out in the Angeles pinch hitter. "It.'s
something like that in the eighth, struck out Rick been tough adjusting to
ninth inning.
Monday but Boog Powell, becoming a pinch hitter. My
''The Big Dodger in the Sky hatting for Steve Yeager, fingernails are starting to
found his way back to Dodger singled to center.
grow back."
Stadium," he said after the
steve Garvey hit his 12th
Pinch hitter Ed Goodson
Dodgers came from behind to followed and hit a grounder homer of the season for Los
nip the Pittsburgh Pirates .3-2 that had game-ending Angeles' first run in the
with two final-Inning runs . doubleplay written aU over it. seventh inning and Don
"What a finish, what a EM Pirate shortstop Frank Sutton pitched four-hlt ball
finish.
That
was Taveras fumbled it for . an through seven iimlngs for the
wtbelievable. We needed that error.
Dodgers. Stan Wall evened
one real bad. I'm really proud
Lee Lacy followed with a his record at 2-2 with two
of these guys. We battled and bouncing single through the shutout innings.
never gave up. We never middle of the infield that
dropped our heada. We felt
Maior League Leadeu
BV United Press rnternational
we were going to win it aU the
Batting

way."

· Lasorda might have been
guilty of hyperbole but who
could blame · him. On the
morning of May 28, his
Dodgers led the Cincinnati
Reds in the National League
West by 131&gt; games.
Just back from a U road
trip and losers of 15 of 20, the
Dodgers snatched a loss out

(based on 125 1t bats)
National League

G. AB . H . Pet.

SCIOTO DOWNS
COLUMBUS (UPil
Lakewood Sharon led all the
way Monday night in winning
the featured eighth race by
ill• lenghts over' Ocean
Mistress at Scioto Downs.
The winner ,, driven by
Lar.-y Landon, covered the
mile in 2:04 3·5 and returned
$7 .00, $~ . 00 and $2.80.
Goodsho.w N was third .
The 6· 1 nightly double
combination of Wne Her Oaks
and Betty Happy was worth
$22.20, while the ninth race
trilecta combo of 10· 1-4 paid

Parker Pit
Mmphry St .
valntne Mtl
Li.JZinski Pt11

Ph i ltt
Clnci

001 100 QOO- 2 6 0
010 101 OOx - 3 7 0
Kaat, Brusstar (6 ), Reed (7)
and Boone.: Norman and Bench .
w-Norman . 7-2. L -K aat, 1-5.
· HRs- Philadelphia , Martin {3),
Sch'rn idf &lt; 13 1; Cinc innat i. Bench
112 1.

· Pl-tsbgh

000 110

coo- 2

42
L.A
000 000 t02- 3 1 1
Rooker, Gossage (8) illnd Ott ;
Sutton , Watt (8) anel Yeager _ w
- Wall , 2.2. L ---'Gossage, 5-3.
HRs- P ittsburgh , Ott (2}. Rob ins-on (6); Los Angeles. Garvey
(12).

(12 innings)
Chicago
000 004 000 011- 6 lO 2
San Diego
0'2100100001o-5 80
Bonl"lam . P . Reuschel (6J.
Sutter ( 81 , w. Hernandez (101.
TDdd (11) , Moore (11 ) and
Milterwill ld; Griffin, Tomlin (61.
Fingers (8) and Davis, Roberts.
W- Moore, 2-0. L- f'ingers , A-3.

HR - San Diego, Hendrick (7) .
St.&lt;..
OOOOOt 000- t 3 2
San Frn
112 120 oox - 7 11 0
Forsch, Schultz (5 ), Hrabosky
(8 ) etnd Rader ; H~licki and
Hill .
w - Halicki ,
Forsch , 8·3.

·

6.5.

American League

Chicgo
Boston

L-

100 000 000- 1 4 0
000 200 OSx- 7 6 0

Te &gt;..as, Gr:ieve (5) , May
Cleveland, Thornton (4).

Kan

City

000 020 ooo- 2

(2).

41
N.Y ,
000 020 02x- 4 8 0
Has S·l e r , Gura (BJ and
FJorter ; Gullett and Munson . W
- Gullet, 6·2. L - 1:-tassler, 3-2.
HR - Kansas City , FJorter (5) .

36 127 45 .354
55 225 79 .351
49 127 0
51 210 71
50 191 64
49 136 45

.339

.338
.335

SCott St. L
;;tennett Pit
Tmpltn St.L
Rose Cin

53 19~ 65 .328
53 228 7A .325

Slmmns St.L

52 191 61 .319

.331

58 226 72 .319

American Lea9ue

G. AB, H. Pet.
Carew Min
57 237 91 .:ld4
Bostock Min
55 '213 73 .343
Fisk Sos
56 196 67 .342
Sing leton Bal
-49 170 57 .335
Bailor Tor
44 167 5~ ,335
Paquet KC
43 154 SO .325
Burleson 8os
53 222 71 .320
Fairly Tor
46 153 49 .320
Rivers NY
54 211 67 .318
Wilts Te)(
49 180 57 .317
Home Runs
National League: Burroughs,
At l 15 ; FoSter , Cin, Cey and
Smith , LA 14 ; Luz insk i and
Sc l"lm idt , Phil and W i nf i e:ld~ SO
tJ .
Amer.ican League : Zisk. Chi
16 ; Hisle, Minn and Gross . Oak
15 ; Rice and Scott , 8os and
Bonds . Cal -u .
Runs BaHed In
NatiOnat Lngve: Cey, LA .52 ;
Burroughs, Atl 'and Garvey, LA
50 ;. W infield, SO 47 ; Fost.er. Cin
46.
American
League:
Hisle.
M inn 56; Rudi. Cal 52.; Zi&amp;k,
Chi 43 ,· Hobson , Bos and

Knapp, wood (8) , LaGrow (81 $322.20.
Press International
and Essian ; Wise, Campbell (8 } · A crowd of 4, 480 wagered
National League
$282.062.
NeW Yrk
001 020 2Cl0-- 5 10 0 and F isk. W- Wise. J -L l Atlanta
002 022 02x- 8 13 2 Knapp, S-3. HRs -Chicago, Garr
· lodd, Baldwin {5), Apocsace Ul. Sor.ton. Scott 2 (l.t), Carbo KANAREK SUES
(6). Lockwood (8) and Grot'e, m .
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Stearns 16 ) ; Leon , LaCorte (6),
02-4 010 ooo--- 7 12 0 Charles Manson's defense
Campb!ll ( 71. Coll ins (9) and Texas
000 000 020- 2 8 0
Pocoroba . W-L eon , 2-2. L---'- Cleve
Perry,
Lindblad
(8}
and attorney , Irving Kanarek,
Todd' ; 2-2. HR - Atlanta, Mon Sundberg ; Garland, Hood (JJ. sued the makers of the
tanez Cll .
Fitzmorris (6), Buskey {8) and
Fosse, Kendall (6l. W- Perry,
6-5 . L - Garland, 2-7. · HRs-

55 196 72 .367

Tr illo Chi
Bonnell All

By ·u nited

guson . W- Anduiar , 8-3. L Bahnsen . 1-2. HR - Houston ,
Watson IBl.

world .''

Big Dodger in the sky is content

Results, line scores

Mntral
000 000 ooo- 0 5 1
Houstn
020 030 OOx- 5 5 0
Bahnsen, Sta n h o use {5}.
Walker (8 ) apd Carter ; An dujar , ,._. ie k 'rt~ (7) and Fer -

and
was
immediately
besieged by fans and
members of the media who
wanted him to relive every
shot of that fabulous round .
"There was so mu&lt;'h
interest in that round," said
Geiberger, "and I've had so
many phone c;U.is that I have
had a hard time coming
down."
"One thing a rowtd like that
does is build your confidence.
Obviously you are in another

television film "Heller
Skelter" Monday, charging
that even under a fictitious
name mariy viewers would
recognize Kanarek in the

film.

Summaries of
youth league
baseball play
The Middleport t;raves won
two games recently. 14· 13
over the Ra ccoon Valley
Indians and 6--4 over the

Bartow has
reasons for

~ _ The

Honolulu
moV11lgon in Bowl talk

Kanarek charged invasion
of privacy and defamatioo of Munson, NY ~1 . Stoten Bases
character in a $15 million suit
Nationll LtJgue : Taveras,
Ca lif
401 420 1oo-12 11 1
a
g·
a
in
s
I
L
o
r
i
m
a
r
Mln·n
230 300 01o- 9 14 0
P ilt 27 ; Morgan. Cin. Cabell
Hartzell , Miller UJ 1 LaRoche Productions, which made the and Cedeno, Hou 22 ; Royster.
{8) and Humphrey ; Redfern,
and Lopes., LA '20.
CBS-TV,
whlch AflAmeriCan
Schueler (3), D . Johnson (5) film,
League: Remy , Cal
and Wyhegar . W- Miller , 3-2. L broadcast it, and Manson
22 ; F'atek, KC 17 ; Norris, Clev
- Schueler, 2-A. HAs- Califor - prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi
16; Bonds, Cal 15 ; . Rivers , NY
nia, Rudi 2 (13) .
t3 .
and Curt Gentry, who coPitching
the pitching chor-es and
Tronto
000 000 101- 2 4 0 authored the book on which it
MOsf Victories
struck out five ·and walked
Det
100 041 lOx- 7 8 0
National League : R .Reusche l. eight. Browning had a lriple
Jefferson, Willis (5), DeBarr was baSed.
Chi 8-2: Andujar, Hou atld
and double while Rucker had
~orsch, St .L. Rhoden, LA and
(7) and AShby ; Hil ler and May.
Carlton, Phil 8-3 : ROgers , Mtl 8- a single for the only hits .
W- H ill er , 4-6. L- JeUerson, 3- CARTERS HOST
021 .o-- 3
R No.2
Burris , Ch i 8-5. ,
5. HAs- Detroit, May U l.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A ; American
league : . Tanana , R No. 1
366 x--15
Toronto. Fa irly (6) , Rader {1) .
Olip carter and his wife Cal 10-2; Ryan . cat 9 -S.- R .May ,
111 innings)
Caron will host Princess Bait 8·5: Castro , Mil and
PEE WEE PLAY
Garvin. Tor 7-3; Figueroa and
Milwaukee
In
Pee
Wee actloo, Dale C.
Anne
and
her
hwlband
Mark
Torrez , NY 7 -5; Palmer , Ball
00030001001- !\ 111
Warner Insurance downed
BaltimOre
Philips at a small White arid Augi.Jsllne, Mil 7-6.
the hosl Rutland Angels 18-11
Earned Run Average
003 010 000 Oot- B: lA. 2
(based on 63 Innings pitched) with Rod Harrison leading
Haas. corr (1), McClUre (8L House luncheon Thursday.
Nationll League : Candelaria , the hitting with fwo doubles
The President's son and
Castro {81 and Moore : Palmer,
D. Martinez (91 and Oempi'!Y . daughter4n.Jaw had a ''fabu- P itt 1.99 ; Rogers. Mtl 2. 1A ; and a triple. Bryan Willis got
Hough. LA 2.42: Fingers . 50 the win. Marty Hart took the
W- D . Martinez, S-4. L- Castro.
7-3. HAs- Milwaukee, Cooptr lous time" representing the 2.63 ; Norman , Cin 2.69.
loss In relief as the winners
· (8 ). Baltimore, L . May C10 l. first family at the royal
American League: . Tanana.
Cal 1.85 ; Tidrow, NY 1.86 ; scor-ed seven times in the
Ketty {7 ).
·celebration of Queen Eliza- Blyleven, Tex 2.07; Ryan, Cal sixth Inning. Jack Peterson
and Robbie Hatfield led the
Oaklnd
000 000 420- 6 13 2 beth's 25th year of reign, a 2.32 : Figueroa, NY 2.60.
hitters with two singles each
Strikeouts
Seattle
002 100 ooo- 3 9 1 spokesman said.
National League : Rogei's, Mtl while David Lambert had a
Medich . Torrealba (4). Lacey
Princess Anne and bet 92 ; Niekro. AU 85 ; Koosman. double.
(71 lind Newman ; Ri. Jones:
Pagan (6}, House (71. Romo husband will be in the United NY 77: Halicki. SF 76 ; Seaver. w
105 327-18 6 1
(7). Kekich (8) and Stinson. W
NY 72.
5t2 120--11 7 0
- Torrealba, 3-0. L - House. 0-1. States to wtveil a statue of
American League : Ryan. Cat R
153 ; Tanana , Cal 106; Palmer,
HRs- Seattle , Braun (2) ; Oak- Queen Anne in Queen Anne
Powell's downed the host
Bait 90 ; Slyleven , Tex 88 ;
land . Gross (15 ).
coonty, Md.
Eckersley, Clev 12.
Middleport Cubs 9-3 as Bryan

•

NEW YORK ( UP! ) National Football League
owners today were. expected
to decide on a site for the 1979
Pro Bowl, with most of the
eight cities who bid for the
Super Bowl along with
Honolulu expected to be in the
running .
Next January's Pro Bowl
will be at Tampa, F1a .
On Tuesday the owners,
sticking to sites which have
been successful in the past,
voted to play Ute 1979 Super
Bowl inMiami'sOrange Bowl
and the 19110 game at the Rose
Bowl in Pasadena, Calif.
The aMouncement marked
the first time the NFL has
chosen sites for two games.
In the past, single Super Bowl
sites have been announced
two years in advance .
League owners also refused
to act on compensation for
teams who lost players after
playing out their options.
After a lengthy discussion ,
which carried over from the
winter meetings in Phoenix,
the owners decided to let
individual clube work out
their own compensation
problems.
The owners also made

basketball team during the
1978-79 season, and Bartow
Saip he expects to have a
winner immediately.
He said scheduling will be a
major problem, but he
expects to caD on several
coaching friends to bring
some of the nation's top
teams to. play UAB in the
city's new
17,000-seat
coliseum .
Bartow, who bad a 52-9
record and two Pacific Eight
Conference titles during his
two years as Bruin coach,
said he expects to have a
nationally prominent team
within four ·or five years.
He said he believes Utere
ru:e ~enty of players in the
state to stock UAB, Alabama
and Auburn. The competition
should hei8hten Ute interest
in basketball in the area, he
said.

some
minor
decisions
regarding
tiebreaking
procedures in the draft,
starting times for games and
preseason schedules.
The owners ruled that in
the future, ties in the draft
among teams frotn the same
division would be broken
under Ute formula used to
determine league champions
rather than putting a team ·
playing the weaker schedule
ahead of another.
They also decided that
beginning in 1978, aU games
would start at one minute
alter the hour to provide
uniformity and avoid delay in
doubleheaders. Alao starting
in 1978 when the Ill-game
regular season goes into
effect, each team must
schedule two preseason
opponents
outside
its
conference before playing the
other two games against
conference clubs.
Miami, which will be the
Super Bowl site for the fifUt
timer, and Pasadena, which
played host to the title game
before a record crowd of
100,000 last January, were
chosen after presentations
from eight cities. Los
Angeles, Houston and New
Orleans, all previous Super
Bowl sites, and SeatUe, Pontiac, Mich ., and Dallas,
bidding to hQid the game for
the first time, lost out.
"We wanted some leeway,
some time to make preparations,"
said
NFL
Commissioner Pete Rozelle,
who aMowtced the sites. "We
decided to pick the next two
sites."
Super Bowl Xlll, which will
be played in the 80,000-seat
Orange Bowl in Miami, is
scheduled. for Jan. 21, 1979.
Super Bowl XIV, set for the
104,0QO.seat Rose Bowl h
Pasadena, will be played on
Jan. 20, 1980. No starting
times were announced.
The next Super Bowl is set
for Ute 80,000 seat Louisiana
Superdome in New Orleans
on Jan.l5, Jg78. It will start at
6 p.m. EST, the latest Super
Bowl start ever .

UNTIL 5 PM

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political demands, printed on
hundreds of leaflets hurled
from the mission windows,
had been widely publicized.
The gunmen atfkst held off
police with Ute bluff that they
were holding a hostage.
" It was a little hairy for a
while there ," said police
officer Frank Macintosh,
who was with the Croatians
during the last-minute
scuffle. "We didn't Utink we 'd
be able to get them out of
Ulere."

89•

~----------~--~~i ·

Hours after the incident,
Ute wife of one of the Croatian
nationalists called United
Press International and said,
" I'm shocked, but I'm proud
he did it."
An official at the Yugosla v
Consulate, about 10 blocks
from the mission, said police
told them the nationalists
were linked to the hijacking
of a 'IWA jetliner by five
Croatians last September.
"But we don 't call them
nationals," he said bitterly .

using only your own rules
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt, following
reports of obscene phone
calls oilers the following tips
as suggested in the Operation
Crime Alert Citizen's Handbook. which can help in the
citizens'
fight against
repeated obscene
and
abusive phone calls.
- AJways set your own
rules for using the phone.
Talk on your terms, not the
caller's. Don't talk to anyone
unless you want to. Hang up.
- Ask all callers to identify
themselves. If someone calls
you and asks "who is this?"
- don't answer. Ask "what
number were you calling?"
or " who do you want?"

- Never answer questions
-- Report threatening or
about your phone number, abusive phone calls to the
address, home, family, or · telephone company and to the
any personal matter unless police immediately. If the
you know exactly to whom cans persist, your lines can
you are speaking and why. be tapped in order to trace
- If you get a call from a the calls.
"breather " - one who calls
Explain these tips to your
repeatedly and says nothing children.
-- beat him at his own game
The Ohio Revised Code
- say nothing, and hang up. provides a fine of not more
-Don't worry about of- than $500, or imprisonment of
fending salespeople on the not more than six months, or
phone. Say goodbye to Wl· both, for persons fowtd guilty
wanted sales calls and don't of making . threatening or
give out information .
harassing phone calls.

, '\I

·· we c.all then.lerrori.sls. wuJ
they're terrorists with
Amrrican passports."
1\.s the three men were led
from the missioo at FifUt
Avenue and 67th St., opposite
Central Park, police said
angry Yu goslav government
employes suddenly turned
weapons on the terrorists and
threatened them .
Within moments the
Yugoslav officials were
restrained and the three
Croatians were whisked
away in police cars to be
charged with attempted
murder,
assault
and
burglary .
Police said they took three
handguns from the Croatians
but could not disarm the
Yugoslav nationals, who
enjoy diplomatic immunity
from restrictions on bearing
arms.
At a Tuesday night news
conference, Yugoslav U.N .
Ambassador Jaksa Petrie
showed newsmen the bloodspattered floor where the

Middleport Village Council
had a total of $60,494.14 in aU
of..its expendable funds, as of
May 31, according to the
monthly report of Vlllage
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate.
The receipts, disbursements during the month
and the balance as of May 31,
for each of the expendable
funds included: general,
$4,816.59, $5,930.36, $34,792.67;
cemetery, $1,036, $1,002.02,
$858.42; fire"equipment, $275,
$179.12, $107.28; swimming
pool, no receipts. $8.93, .
$3,577 .42; planning commission, no receipts, $50.13,
$285.41; street maintenance.
$3,216.76, $2,384.72, $6,&gt;96.13;
federal revenue sharing, no
receipts, $886.31, $13,780.17;
anti'!'recession assistance, no
receipts, $72.29, $516.64.
EXJl!!nditures for the month
totaled $10,511 .88 while
disbursements
totaled
~ $9,344.35.
n
The council has $30,899.09
in its obligated funds with no
receipts for the month and
expenditures totaling $52.50.
' The town's board of public
• affairs has $189,495.08 in its
· obligated funds. Receipts,
disbursements and the
balance in each of the
' categories making up the
' obligated funds include:
sanitary sewer, $4,055 .70,
$4,383.77, $36,157.00; sanitary
, sewer escrow, $60, no
disbursements, $136,630.09;
water, $7,412.69, $6,86p5,
$9,382.69; water meter trusts,
$225, $242.83, and $7,325.27.
'Receipts for the month
totaled $11,753.39, while
disbursements
totaled
$11,491.35.
Total indebtedness of the
town Is $1,351,100.75 or $485.31
per capita .
·
•

mission was being planned.
He cia imed a request for
increased protection was ignored by local and federal
authprlties .

In
Washington,
the
Yugoslav Embassy lodged a
formal protest with the State
Department.
The Cruatian suspects were
identi lied
as
Marijan
Buconjic, 28, of New York,
Jozo .Brekalo, 30 of St. Louis,
and Vladimir Dizdar, 23, of
Chicago.
The guard, Radomir
Medic, 58, was liste4 in
satisfactory condition after
surgery at Lenox Hill
Hospital.
'
Boconjic's wife Louisa told
UP! she was surprised to
learn of her husband's
involvement in the attack,
out added, "Somehow you
have to do these thifl8ll. But
not shooting. I hope he didn't
hurt anybody. My husband

EXTRA SPECIAL PRICES ON 70
SERIES AND THE WIDE 60 SERIES

G60xl4

$31 ~~s
$2 .94 Fed . EK . Tax
Other Sizes At
Special Savings

DAYS
'

SPECIAL SAVINGS FOR FATHER'S DAY AND SUMMER

,.,~· :~~

FIRESTONE FOAM

WESTERN REDWOOD
FOLDING
SETTEE

4-H meet set
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
60th annual· Ohio 4-H
Congress opens today at Qhio
State University, with more
than 800 4-H Club members
from every Ohio county
expected to attend the threeday event.
·The Congress' theme is "75
and Room to Grow" to
commemorate the 75th
anniversary of the 4-H in
Ohio.
Delegates, who were
seleCted on the basis of
leadership ability and
achievement, will debate a
biD in the House Chamber at
the Statehouse.
To explore career interests,
they will tour departments at
the university.
The program also will
include a concert featuring
the Columus Symphony
Youth Orchestra, a banquet
and dance at the university
and a trip to German Village.
. The Congress' keynote
speaker will be Henry
Shriver, a farmer, from
Gralton.

wouldn 't hurt anybody , not
even a bird."
The Croatians invaded the
mission shortly before 2:30
p.m., walking quieUy past
police officer John Gavin,
who regularly patrols the
area . Once inside the
vestibule, the terrorists shot
the security guard In the
stomach and raced to the
third noor where they tore a
Yugoslav flag from its
stanchion
and
began
throwing the leaflets to the
street.
"Freedom for Croatia!"
read the neatly printed
flyers . They went on to list six
demands for Croatian
independence that were
forwarded, at the terrorists'
insistence, to U.N. Secretary
General Kurt Waldheim .
Last September . a TWA
New York-Chicago jet with 86
passengers and a crew of
seven was hijacked to Paris
by live Cr.oatians, who were
later convicted and sentenced
to stiff jail terms.

guard wa::; shut and said hls
o£fk~ had reL-eived prior
information an assault on the

FINAL
4

60th annual

Over $60,000
in expendable
village funds ,

PARK RESERVED

EVE.RY
MONDAY
HOLIDAYS

Cro·a tian independence demanded by terrorist

Talk always on telephone

.·

CLOSED

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., w,'&lt;lnesday. June 15. 1977

By JOHN MOODY
NEW YORK lU Pl )
Three Croatian terrorists
shOt their way into the
Yugoslav Mission to the
United Nations Tuesday wounding a security guard and held Ute diplomatic residence for two tense hours to
publicize their demands for
Croatian independence.
The gunmen rmally surrendered to New York police
officers and FBI agents who
convinced them their six

WATCH FOROUR 'AD IN THURSDAY'S
PAPER

Gain

FRENCH CITY
20 COUNT

1

•

By GLENN STEPHENS
AI&lt;&gt; .
BIRMINGHAM,
(UPI) -- Gene Bartow admits
he may be called crazy for
resigning as basketball coach
at UCLA to go to a school that
won 't even have a team until
1978, but be says there are
reasons for the move to the
University of Alabama in
twelve. Maynard got a l-lome
Birmingham.
run and single to lead the
" When everything was
hitting .
132 502- 13 4 ~ taken into consideration, we
R
M
061 1~1-- 14 a·J just felt it would be an
exciting challenge to start a
Rod Ebersbach pitched and
hit his team to the win over new program at a great
Bartow
the Dodgers. Ebersbach university ,''
blasted a grand slam home. explained Tuesday at a news
r-un in the first inning to put
conference. "I think many
his team ahead. and then was
people in mY profession
r-elieved on the mound in the
fifth frame by Earl Wines would welcome this kind of
who got credit for a save . challenge."
Together they fapned eight
Besides that, Bartow said
and walked onl'f five , and
the
happiest years of his life
Ebersbach gave up the only
were the four seasons he was
two Dodger hils, two doubles
by Bolin. Bishop went all the head coach at Memphis
way for the losers. fanning
four and walking three while State. He said he welcomed
the chance to move back to
giving up just four hits.
R
011 020--4 2 1 the South.
M
400 20x--6 4 0
" I have the feeling that
there
will be many people
The Racine Cardinals
who
will
feel that maybe I
downed the visiting Syracuse
psychiatric
care for
need
Royals 12-1 behind the threehi! pilch ing of Richard leaving UCLA, but there will
Dugan . Dugan fanned nine
and walked only four while be many people who feel that
helping his own cause by since in two years we haven't
cracking two doubles . John
won a national championship
Porter also had two doubles ... then maybe it will be best
while Luke Pickens had a for me and my family," he
home run, and Richard Lyons
said.
had one double. Tony Riflle
was tagged with the loss .
UAB, an .urban wtiversity
5.
110 oo-- 2 3 with an enrollment of almost
R
205 23--12 10 13,000, currently has no interLetart downed the hosl collegiate athletic program
Syracuse Ind ians 21 -3 in a
but is planning to field
come -from -behind
victory.
basketball, track, swimming,
Letart is now 4-2. Paul Roush
If d te · t
f
was the winning pitcher as he
go an nms earns or men
fanned 11 and walked 11. and women beginning next
Allen Tucker led the hitters year.
with a home run1 triple,
Bartow who took over as
doub_i~~ and t\yo singles a_s he..._ head c~ach after the
went f1ve for f1ve on the-n1ght.
Cunningham led the losers legendary John Wonden
\'tith two triple$, a double and retired at UCLA two years
single. but he was also lagged ago will be athletic director
with the loss. fanning nine but anl head basketball coach at
walk.ng fourteen while UAB
yield ing fourteen hits.
·
L
034 662--21 14 o
The school will field its first
332 500,...1l 7 2 --,...---·- - - - - - - s
Reedsville No. 1 downed Korn and Chris Shank got the
visiting Tuppers Plains No. 1 win . Shank had a double and
14-3. J . Carter and I. Larkins single while Greg Fields had
teamed for the win. fanning two singles. For the Cubs,
ten and walking riine. 0 . Nick Blish, Steve Crow and
Durst, M. Holter, J . Larkins George Justis did the pitand B. Smith each got a ching . Bush had a homer and
homer for the winners while singfe V~hile Crow had a
G. Putnam had two doubles. double and single to lead the
B. Merriweather and 0. hitters.
350 !10--9 5
Spurlock took the loss, fan : R
200 01-3 5
nlng five and wal~ing six. M
Merriweather had a double
The Pizza Shack scored
and Spurlock a single for the
twice in the first and then
only two losers' hits .
T
100 2- 2 2 held qn to down the visiting
653 K-14 10 Rulland Reds 2-1. Parker
R
Long got the win as he fanned
Reedsville
No . 1 got foUrteen and walked · four.
another win wh,en they The oddity in the contest was
whipped rival Reedsville No. that the winners were not
2 15-3. Larkins and Mark allowed a single hit as loser
Holter comblhed to strike out Riek Wise tossed a no-hitter'
eleven and walk only four while fanning eleven but
whi l e gl\dng up ltJst three w~lklng nine . Wise was the
hits. Holter , led the hitting leading hitter with a triple
with a triple , double and ·and single while Shawn Grant
single while L. Cowdery had had two singles. Pizza Shack
is now .4-1 on the season.
three singles .
000 to--t 4 0
Mark
Jones ,
Kenny R
200 OK-2 0 0
Browning, Scott VanMeter P
and Ronnie HennsleY shared
Rutland Dodgers. The Braves
are now 1- 1. h'\ the Ind ians
game, Earl W ines got the win
as he teamed with Chris
Burdette and Rod Ebersbacl-l
to fan four teen and walk
nineteen . Tim Wamsley got a
homer and single to lead the
hitting.
Dale Martin got the loss as
l-Ie teamed with Wayne
!v\aynard to tan nine and walk

r

Holds

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WALKING THE CAT instead of the deg is a mild
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cat co-&lt;ltars In a nightclub act with Joy and Ron Holiday of
St. Petersburg, F.Ja., who accompany him on a stroll in
downtown Montreal where the trio was playing a date .
FARM MONEY
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
Ohio House Tuesday unanimously passed and sent to the
Senate legislation giving the
state treasury C)lstody of
some $1,6 million infarm loan
funds formerly held by the
federal government.
Rep. Dale Locker, D-Anna,
chief sponsor, said· the
federal government notified
the state it would no longer
hold the money in trust.

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•

•
•

�6- The Daily Sent mel, M1ddleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, June 1~. 1m

Philathea women
show·. off quilts
•

•

Pictures by Jud~ Owen
The Philathea W0111en of the Middleport Church of Christ
sponsored a qwlt dispiay Saturday afternoon to show off the
talents of their members and several other area citizens who
entered their wares.

An award for "hest of the show" was to have been g1ven
but of the many interesting and attractive quilts entered, the
selection committee could not narrow its decision to just one.
"They were all outstanding," said Mrs. Rose Reynolds, a
representative of the Philathea Women, of the 60 quilts
displayed. " It was just too hard to choose," she added.
The quilts, labeled ''not for sale," were displayed at the
church from 1~ plll. when over 100 persons turned out to view
them and enjoy the refreshments which were served by the

women.

-..-.
QlnLTING DEMONST!j.ATED - L. 0. Hardinger,
demonstrated the fine art ol quilting to those who attended
afternoon.

POLLY'S POINTERS :
Polly Cramer
POLLY'S RPOBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I used a
L'O llon crocheted rru.t 011 my
38-year-old waxed mahogany
dinmg table When I put a
paper plate with warm, not
hot, food on 1! I was left w1th a
white spot. I have tried using
wax and the mixture of
c1garelte ashes and butter
but the spot remains. Any
suggestions for rernovmg th1s
spot w1U be greatly appreciated. - M A
DEAR M.A. -If your table
is h1ghly waxed there IS a
chance that removing the
I
wax mtght remove the spot
It may· not have penetrated
through a heavy wax coatmg.
I have removed such spots by
rubbing on petroleum JeUy
and leaving 1t for about 24
qmll
d1splay
While
most
were
qwlted
by
church
QUILTS DISPLAYEO - A var~ety of interesting and
hours and then rubbing 1t off.
members, several were made by other persons m the
attractive handmade quilts were ntered m Saturday's
Or, you nught dampen a cloth
t'Ommumty.
with spirits of camphor, daub
thLS on the spot, let dry and
then pobsh or wax as usual.
The last is only 1f the table
has a varmshed or sheUac
flmsh - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - When
opemng a can be sure to put
the tid mto the can when 11 is
emptied You'll save many a
cut finger or himd.- WILMA
_ DEAR POLLY- I have a
~better remedy for the reader
who has gum on her slacks.
Use peanut butter such as one
buys at the market (not the
natural kmd ) and rub a small
amount on the gum and let 11
sta nd for a couple of days and
then wash it as usual. Bebeve
me, with two k1ds who love
gum I use this remedy a lot. GERRY.
DEAR READERS
left, and Audrey Swett
SILVER TEA SET - An attractive silver tea set adorned the refreslunent table. Several readers wrote the
the quilt display Saturday
Servmg, 1-r, are Mrs. Betty McKmley, Mrs. Rose Reynolds and Miss Mildred Hawley.
same suggestion and most of

\1!.

•~~:·:·:·:·:·::!·!·!:!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!•:0!·:0!•!;:·:·:·:·:•!•!•!•!::::.:=::;:;

Couple exchanges vows J Daughter born
!•!·

::;.

WEST COLUMBIA Paulette F. Cundiff and
Ronald V. Parsons were
united in marriage on
Monday, May 30,7:30 p.m. at
the Salem Community
Church in West Columbia.
The bride is the daughter of

Mr and Mrs. John Kearns,
Jr., Harttord, and the groom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Parsons, McKee,
Kyt
The double ring ceremony
was performed by the Rev.
George Hoschar, minister of
the · Salem Community

i::::::::::: :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:~·:·:-::·:·:::.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·~~f: Church.

::

Son born

~

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:',•.•:

BELLVILLE, Ohio - Mr.
and Mrs. Dean Paxton,
former Barbara Caruthers,
of Pomeroy, Bellville, Ohio,
announce the birth of a son,
Eric Whitney, born June ,1 at
Mansfield General Hospital.
1'he infant weighed six
pounds and 13 ounces.
Paternal grandmother is
Mrs. Ethel Paxton, Bellville,
maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Caruthers, Pomeroy, great
grandparents are Mrs.
Maggie Caruthers, Mid·
dleport imd Mr. and Mrs.
Paul ~.turgJon, Rt. 1, Mid·
dleport . .

NOW YOU KNOW
Two tons of water are
needed to grow enough wheat
for a one-pound loaf of bread.

The bride and groom were
attended by Lyda Russell,
who served as matron of
honor, and BUiy Stewart, best
man.
Others present included the
bride's children of a former
marriage, Jeff, April, Angie
and Joy Cundiff, family and
friends of the bride and
groom.
Mr. and Mrs. Parsons are
now taking an extended trip
to Florida.

m: to

::·.\'

:~·

Jndia111J couple :\:
:·:

::;:

Mr. and Mrs. Victor C.
"Chuck" Young III of
Plainfield, Ind., are an·
nouncing the birth of an eight
pound, 12 ounce daughter,
Julia Katherine, on June I.
Mr. and Mrs. Young have a
1011, Victorq.&amp;rleaYoung IV.
Grandparents are Mrs.
Nancy Roby, Indiana; Edwin
Eggleton, Indiana, and Mr.
and Mrs. Victor C. Young,
Jr.,
Pomeroy.
Great·
grandparents are Mrs.
Audrey Young, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. James T.
Thomas, East Uverpool; Mr.
and Mrs. Clifton Wilcoxon,
and Earl Eggleton, both of
Indiana. Great-great
grandmother Is Mrs. Mary
Esenhuth of East Uverpooi.

Mrs. Irene Gilmore
hosts out of town guests
Weekend guests of Mrs.
Irene Gilmore, Route 2,
Pomeroy, were Pvt. Jimmie

.

For Father's Day
Bulova Accutron~~
Make Father' s Day a real red letter day. Give
him an Accutron date and day watch.
Guaranteed accurate to within a
minute a month. • And
guaranteed to please

lmpreulve
In &amp;!Wit, Silt
•nd performance
Champ••n•
dil l

T11lored tlmepltce
wiUf brown dial ,
polished link btnd

'

•we will tdht$1 to this tolerance, if necessary Guar1ntn/s tor one year .

Joe Arnold, Pvt. John Wilson,
Fort Knox, Ky.; Pvt. and
Mrs. Paul Laudermiit
and twins, Tammy and
Timmy, Fort Bragg, N. C. ;
Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Arnold, Ronnie and Ger·
aid Arnold, Lancaster,
and Debb1e Landers, Colum-

bUs.
Pvt. Jimmie Joe Arnold
completed his basic traming
at Fort Knox on June ~ and
will leave soon for a three
year tour of duty in
Frankfort, Germany. He 1s
the son of Mr and Mrs.
Grover Arnold (Carole Kessinger) Lancaster, former
..Pciineroy restdents, and the
grandson of Mrs. Gilmore
and the late Charles ( Fnday)
Kessinger, Pomeroy.

Touch softly signals designs
for coming season in fashions
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Senior Editor
NEW YORK (UP!)
Fashion 1s a soft touch for the
coming season.
"Soft, feminine, flattering "
are terms designers and
manufacturers
use
to
describe their fall and wmter
collections, now m production
and some already shipped to
the stores.
"Fail's message is spelled
out in light, fluid fabrics that
can be layered, bloused and
ballooned without looking
masstve," said one source,
summing up the looks
ahead.
"There's not a stiff line m
slight. Smocks bubble over
belts, skirts bubble at the
hem, sleeves puff, waists are
softened w1th gathers The
. only
exception :
the
chairperson of the hoard look
of menswear ta1lormg,
pinstriped suits, shirts But
even the strictly tailored look
is softened this season with
fuller softer skirts, worn

This week, the shows are
scheduled by Mildred
Sullivans, With her "New
Directions'' organization .
Next week, the btgger guns
among des1g ners show
thro,ugh the Eleanor Lambert
publicity organization .
In no way are pants out,
smd Ms. Sullivan But the
demand for dresses is
stronger and women will fmd
them smocked, bloused,
shirred and given schoolgirl
looks Mark femmm1ty also
with high, high heels, lace,

stlks, clouds of taffeta, ruffles
by the mile, and challis floral
fabriCS.
With the nation on a
physical fitness jag, active
sportswear is bigger than
ever and the accent spills
over into so-called sport·
swear for day in, day 'out,
wear to off1ce, for shopping,
lunching, whatever.
The name of the game 1s
the play of pattern With
pattern, mixing textures and
piling on !ayers of sweaters,
vests , tunics, pants and
skirts.
More blouses are showing
- femlllltle with jabots, lace
tnm, ruffled cuffs, big
sleeves gathered at the cuffs,
touches of the Victorian era
of dress. Newest of the big
shapes are the thin batistes.
The blouson is the number
one lllp, showing in oversized
sweaters that skip past the
wmstline but hug the hip, and
the adaptations of the sweatshirt for both day and evening
in soft mohairs and angors.
In pants, the accent is on
the ankle. Look for slouch
pants cut loose above then
gathered at the ankles, the
peg leg pants
The secret oo the dress
revtval is the lack of inner
stiffness. manufacturers
said. Whether of satin, jersey
or challis they look easy, and
as relaxed as sportswear.
Outerwear is designed to
keep the heat in. Coats are

MISs Linda Rebecca Rupe and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
rece1ved her bachelor of Faulk, Mrs. Edd1e Smith, Mr.
science degree m elementary and Mrs D. P. B1ggerstafl,
education from Ohio Umver- Lakeland, Fla. ; Mr. and Mrs.
stly on June II.
Jeffrey Copeland, Ottremwa,
Miss Rupe is a member of Iowa, Miss Lori Rupe, and
Kappa Delta Pi, an honor her parents, Mr and Mrs.
soc1ety in education and a Richard Rupe.
member of the Honor Society
of Phi Kappa Ph1. She was
also a nominee for the Lester
Regatta Week-End Special
D. Crow Award for Ex·
cellence mStudent 1'eachmg.
Following the comFRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
mencement exercises, an
honorary dumer was g1ven by
her lather at the Meigs Inn.
Smile,
Attending were Miss Rupe 's
a Frog
fiance, Charles Faulk, Jr.,
loves you

All GREEN
FABRIC

10%
OFF

ll
PRINTED JERSEY 12 PRICE

RACINE-Mr. and Mrs.
James Rees, Racine, entertained with a buffet dmner
honoring their daughter,
Jane Ann Rees, on her
graduallon from Ohio Univer·
Slty.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. James Rees, Jr.,
Jonathon and Jay, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Myron Mack,
Trevor, Jason and Andy,
Grove City; Mr. and Mrs.
Winn Rees, Bradley. Matthew and Alan, Mr and Mrs.
Gale Rees, Mtchael and An·
na, Westervllie, Doug Rees,
and Pat Eddy, Athens.

flung over layers of
separates. Ponchos, capes
and cocoon-Uke shawls and
unlined coats fit over all.
Look for lots . of thick
sweatercoats
in
bold
jacquards and stripes.
To go with the bundled-up
look, legs are covered in
bulky wools, ribs, thigh·
highs, kneehighs, tights, leg
warmers and leggings. And
for mght, the bulk disappears
and slink takes over in
sheers, metailics and laces.

BELlONE :
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER '
Mr . H. W. Mattingly
will be at Meigs Inn,
Pomeroy, Ohio on
Thursday, June lk
from 9 a. m. to 1~
Noon to repair andservice hearing aids.

' ''
Batteries
and '
supplies for ali make$'
for sale.
,

''

Mr. Mattingly wi II ~,
glad to give you a free ·
hearing test with th'e ·
latest
Beltone
Electronic
"'
equipment.
..

BELTONE

'"

HEARING AID CENTER..

~:~~. ~: ....:.~:. ~198
T-SHIRT PLAIN OR PRI
KNITS........... •1.98 52.98

FRIDAY, JUNE 17th

(!!]Farmers Bank
•

BORDER AND
SCARF FABRIC ••···.... •.... ~ OFF
NON-ROLL ElASTIC 4 yds. $1.00

, THE FABRIC SHOP
McCall's. Kwick-5ew. Simplicity Patterns
992-2284
15 W. Second
Po
o.

POMEROY, OHIO
••

(

•••• •

.

ibcal pastor
.bn' committee
f/t!.ring camp
'

•

: Pastor Albert Dittes of the
~omeroy Seventy-day Ad;.ootist Church will serve on
the public relations comZnil'tee at his denomination 's
;tnnual camp meeting 'June
47-25 on the campus of Mount
:tr ern on Academy, Mount
~emon, Ohio. An estunated
~.1!1!0 persons from across
lllli.o are expected to attend.
• flreaching will fill part of
lhe day. The afternoons will
:Z,. given to spec1al classes in
:amily enrichment, in·
serpersonal relationships,
coul wmning, and economical
:;..egetarian cooking.
: During the camp meeting
3Ie.[iod the Pomeroy Aventist
:fl!urch will hold regular
ilervices at 2 p.m. Saturday.

Social
:calendar

W. VA.

Phone 525-7221

-

••

)VEDNESDAY
: i:REV!VAL at the Fatrplay
fllapel, located on Me1gs
~unty Road i off State Route
:H5 near Danville or State
~ute 124 near Salem Center
:IJ!Tough Saturday rught at
~ :~o each evemng. The Rev.
~ereon Durham, evangelist,
~I be speaking and there
Zvnt be spec1al mus1c. The
ZII!bhc IS inv1ted .

••

:tHURSDAY
:;'ROCK SPRING BE'ITER
:HEALTH CLUB, 1:15 p m.
»ursday at the home of Mrs.
ftlylhs Skmner with Mrs.
~ncy Grueser to be host~ss.
:Mrs. Judy Humphreys w1ll be
:Z,~ogram leader, and Mrs.
:flVlel Grueser, will conduct
~he contest.
• :'MAGNOLIA CLUB, 1'hurs·
:li)ly, home of Miss Bermce
~ Durst, 7 30 p.m. White
: ' OSE GARDEN CLUB,
:t;ilppers Plams, will hold lis
»ual picnic for members
,~d their farruhes at the
;nGme of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
~ut, at 6 p m. Thursd~y.
• EASTERN ffiGH SCHOOL
~AND rehearsal, 7 to 8:30 in
othe high school band room m
;.reparatiOn for the regatta

G) Padded

Swealer Collar @Ful ly Leather Loned@
Solly Leather Upper @ Safety Sleel Toe @Goodyear
Welt @cushton Insole 0cus hiOn Neopren e Outsole
@3 R•b Stee l Shank @ Extra Rugged Goodyear
Stormwelt

WIDTHS A-EEE, SIZES: 6·14 AVAILABLE

IRED WING I""I
Hartley 's Shoes

~rade.
•

•

MIDDLE OF UPPER BLOCK
POMEROY, OHIO
OPEN :

9 a.m. to 5 p.rr. Mon. thru
9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday
Saturday 9 a. m. to 5 p.m .

Thur$.

"

"'

Tnsha lleatuu u·ldH e~tt·d

Mr~

ht•t M'\ t' lllh bll thd.ty H'l'l'llll~~

Hu.:hw ds. s t&gt;t.TL'litf} . Mrs.
Huth
Blt~wn.
asSJStiuJt

"I til~ "11 lll'l

M ' l ' f'etary ;
Mrs t-;,u ... st
B~•wlt• s , tn..·a:o;UI'l'l ; Mrs.
J· 1 t.lllk Wd!'ihingtull ~huph.tlll:

A. lkato11, Huutt~ 3, Pvmcroy.

ruast aud 1mt1y
.11 tht· hiJIIH" ufhc1 g1 illlil·
p:.th·uL"', M1 . ami Mt.s Jt~mt•_s
Atll' ltdm~ tl"l(.'

piirly gtvcn

A Father's Oay p1 ug1 aon by
Mrs Dun lkll h1ghl1ghtc&gt;d a
meeting uf tho United
Methodist Wumcn uf the
l.etarl F'.tlls Church held
recently at the home of Mrs.
Rose McDade 111 Middleport
Reading ~
inc lud ed
"Father's Day " by Mrs John
Hill; "The Father's Hand " by
Mrs RertGmnm ; "My Dad"
TRISHA HEA1'0N
by Mrs. Inez H1ll : ''The
Bread of L1fe" by
Mrs Harold Roush: "To
,)$W
,..,,.
ya
~J..~~.n
7 Qj) l'• • IN
Every Dad " by Mrs .
Sluelds; an1 'Dad" by Mrs.
Allee BaiJ;er. Mrs. Bell closed
the program wtth a swruner
prayer.
Mrs Grurun openec.l the
meetmg
wtlh an mspirat10nal
Mr. and M1 s Alan Wallace
readtng
and £or devot10n.s,
and children, Ke1th and
Mrs.
Hill
used the subje-ct,
Alison of Canal Winchester

•

1
*

~m~ ,

Middleport
Personal Notes

spent

U1e

weekend

: WOMEN's ASSOCIATION
!fhursday mght at the M1d·
~leport First Un1ted
:?;-esbyterian Church, 7:30
:P.m. Mrs. Walter Wadden
:;wili give the devotwns. Pr&lt;&gt;- m will be "I Love tu Ten
the Story" by Mrs. Velma
Rue and Md. Mildred Karr

i

here

VlSillng his parents, .Mr and
Mrs. Dw1ght Wallace.
Mr. and Mrs Arnold
Richards spent Sunday in
Col umbus VISiting Mr. and
Mrs. Edwa rd Smith and
duldren.

..

Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gr1mm
were m Columbus to attend
the graduation of the1r grand·
daughter, Amy Gr1mm,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Grimm, from
Western High School m Columbus. She wlil enter Bowimg Green Umversity in the
fall.
Meg Lochary, daughter of
the Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lochary of near Chtcago, Iii
will arrive today for a summer vis1t w1th her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo
Story and Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Lochary. Mrs. Story,
hospitalized for the past two
weeks at the Holzer Medtcal
Center, was ,returned to her
home Tuesday .
VBS TO BE HE!LD

Vacation Bible School w1ll
be held at the Alfred Umted
Methodist Church, Monday
through Friday, from 9 a.m.
to 11.30 a.m. with a picnic to
he held at noon on Friday. A
closing program will be held
at 8 p.m. with the public Ul·
vited. Anyone needing more
informahon may call 9853562.
Hostesses will he members of
Group 3.Fathers Soc Sent
FRIDAY
CHURCH of Christ at Keno
revtvai, Friday through
Sunday, 8 p.m. each evemng
w1th Steve Hill. Kentucky
Christi~n College, evangelist,
and Scott Bryant, also from
Kentucky Christian College,
as song leader ; public in·
vited .

ch1ld 111 Indw

~pnnsored

by

SHORT SLEEVE

DRESS AND CASUAL

SLACKS

KNIT SHIRTS

SPORT SHIRTS

:·

MPER POP AT STI FFLER 'S POLYESTER AND DOUBLEKNIT

·&gt;- "liMPER POP AT STIFFLER 'S.
MEN 'S PLAIN AND FANCY
FAMOU S CAMPUS BRAND

POP AT STIFFLER 'SSPECIAL GROUP MEN' S

Choon hom s good selection of

Summary ai)Of1 sh lrtt In a
selection ol llgh~-w elghl , bright
look f1brlca Fashioned with
hi gh.aty lel Wide r ange at
dealgner p1ttems

:·

::

·:

.:·

·:·

Dad a mo!l specie! day Is on It 's ·
way and that meana now 11 the
time to SH our telectlon ol pop
plea s In slacks In a wide ChOice of
colors

fam01.11 campus Brand knit ShirU In
uaorted tt~tes , col ors and patterns .
Give Otd our best on his day

:: For Ftther s day giving! Men'e
·: lamo1.11 Fr1.1lt o f the Loom aolld
• oo tor pocket tee al11rta In your
choice of lasl1ion colors Siva
now !

$1 ~c~

Mrs. Carl Sayre, Route 1,
Rutland, was the Monday
guest of Mrs. Mtidred Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carp
ofWarw1ck, R.I. left Monday
to return home after vtsttmg
in Columbus and Pomeroy
with Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Eskew. Whtle here Mr. and
Mrs. Carp and Mr. and Mrs .
Eskew and Mildred Withee
went to Xema and WIImmgtun on Fnday, and on Sun·
day were joined by Charles
Eskew for a tnp to Hawk's
Nest and a tour through the
West V1rgima hills wtth. a
v1sit to Fayetteville to see the
New R1ver Gorge Br~dge , the
second highest bndge in the
Umted States.

VISits during May was made.
A letter WH :S read £10111 the

PAMPER POP ON HIS DAYl
SUPER VA LUES FROM STIFFLER'S

Pomeroy
Personal Notes

Sunday guests of Mrs.
Helen Hayes, Great Bend,
were Mr. and Mrs. James
Strafford, Dr. and Mrs.
James Curtis, Portsmouth,
and Drs. Craig anti Rebecca
Strafford and daughter,
Kalle, Galli polls.

meeting . A repHit of :\1 s1ck

.
I

" ,-"...-»•O•X»
•.:,•.
..-.;.:c:ol'·"•"&lt;•'•'•X..o•X&lt;g~•X:l
.t..:'·:~~OXQ....:o;

i

nommat1ng eunmliltt.&gt;c whtch
w1ll report at the next

the UMW. Mrs. llill con·
dueled the Bible study on the
last three chapters St John
Takmg part in the diSCUSSion
held by Mrs Hill "l're Mrs
Housh, Mrs. Allee Balser,
Mrs McDade, Mrs. li1ll, Mrs.
Bell, Mrs Shwlds, ond Mrs.
Gnnun A new book of the BIble will be slill'lcu at the next
meet1ng to be held at the
horne of Mrs. Shields 111
Rac1ne Mrs Am.h cw Cross
w1ll have lhe pro~-trmn, and
devotwns Will be b) Mrs. Er·
nest Shuler M1•s Mt-Dade
served ref reshrnc nt.~ during a
" The Measure of God ' s concludmg socwl hour.
Love " She read from
Romans 5, and presented
"God Can "
A thought for the day:
Dunng the bus111ess
Scottish
author John Buchan
meeting plans were made for
satd,
"
We
can only pay our
holdmg a rmrunage and bake
debt
to
the
past
by putting the
sale 1n early fall . Mrs. Slueids
future
in
debt
to
ourselves."
was named cha1rman of the

many battered kids who need help - before the pattern 1s set
and they end up as parents who can't help usmg their fists.
, I thought I could never hit as my father d1d ·but I was wrong.
And how I hated myself for 11.
I! someone had reported him, taken my mother and me
away earlier, mayhe we wouldn't have spent su many years m
misery and I'd have alovedand lovmg daughter now. But back
m those days, people figured family beatmgs were nobody's
business but the husband's.
So, Helen's readers, if you suspect child or Wife (or even hus·
band ) abuse, call the authorities- right now! And msist on an
mvestlgation! You may save someone's life, or anyway her
sanity.· BEEN THERE, CAME BACK DEAR READERS :
What can I say, except, read and re-read "Been There's" let·
ter- and don't turn away if a neighbor child, or a battered wife,
needs help. Can the Health and Welfare Agency, your local
womens' assistance orgamzatwn, the police. Find out what
can be done and do It. II you're aware of abuse and do nothing,
fOfi're almost as gutity as the abuser.
• Get involved! ·H.
: For your copy of "Fourteen Commandments for Parents,"
iend a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Helen Bolte!, care
5I this newspaper. ·H .
: Got a problem] An adult subject!of diSCussion] You can talk
~over m her colwnn 1f you write to Helen Bolte!, care of this
newspaper.

HUNTINGTON,

AMERICA'S MOST.
COMFORTABLE
SAFETY
SHOE

IH ' t' S llh' lll ;

Mrs. Ndlic Wmston. sc1 gcttnl by hl'l' ll&lt;:il cnL".i, Mr and Mrs.
at arms : ami Mrs Campbell Oa vtd S Heaton and sister.
H~trpet , tustoria11 and paum;t. Kn stct,
were ~i:Ullt!S W
Plans wert~ made during llcalon, Tony :md Kevin, Mr.
the meetmg fu1· the Depal'l· and Mrs Robert l:lauer,
ment convcnlton to IJc held Ill BL·~kJ. Mu:hacl, Brian .and
Tolc'llo, July 8-10 w1th at least '{'l(,y, Sharon F'rank and Kim
two members to attend. Mrs. Bruwnang. Sendmg gifts were
Winston reported on cards 'l't11:1 h41's grcfit-gr&lt;indrnother,
sent durmg the month and Mrs. M.argaret lieatu r1 ,
member s Slgned a round Bradenton, F'la. and Mr and
robm ca rd fo1· Mrs. Sm1th.
M1s Jun Nally and Nancy
There was no reJ)Qrt on pop-- Ann
PY day due to the absence of
Mrs. Smith, poppy duunnan.
INSTALLING
Mrs. Hampton, president,
M". Arnold Richards. i&gt;ast
presented the awards won by ~:1g htl1 D1str1cl president,
the umt at the swnmer con· was mst.alhng offwer for the
ventwn held 111 Middleport in- new officers of the Joseph
dudmg a moneta ry one on
Freeman 476 Pu.st, Amertcan
commumty se rv1ce. Mrs Leg1on Auxiliary at
Saunders was the community W1lkesv1ilc recently. She also
service chainnan for the uullated two ca ndidates Acyear.
cumpanyJng Mrs, Richards to
Hefreshments were served W1lkesvtlle was Mrs. Campby th~ hostess.
bell Harper.

.., I'm writing this because I'm not the only one: there are so

••
•

601 SIXTH AVE.

GROUP OF

AT 5:00 P.M.

,,

reporters.

Linda Rupe graduates

DUE TO lHE
BIG BEND REGATTA AND
FOR SAFETY SAKE
OUR MAIN LOBBY
WILL QDSE AT 3:00 P.M.
AND OUR DRIVE-IN WINOON

tanv

mstead of pants, and shorter,
body-conscwus jackets."
And if anyone is womed
about hemline changes,
relax They stay right where
th ey'v.e been, somewhere
beneath the knees.
This feminine-for-fall
keynoted the collections New
York manufactuerers showed
as the first of the sellli-annual
1
'press week" presentations
began Monday for the
nation's vi sitmg fashiOn

jane Rees
honored
with dinner

them just rubbed Ul the··
peanut butter and then
washed as usual.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY- My family
prefers electric blankets to '
quilts on the beds so I became ·
qmte frustrated as I love to do"
patchwork . However I am ,
now using my sewmg scraps
to make patchwork curtains
and bedspread for my owri'
room. I particularly like a
f1ve-mch square pattern for ·
them and will line them w1th '
sheets.
A friend of mme has ·a '
beautiful jacket that she
rru.de of solid color quilt
squares To make a qmck and '
inexpensive patchwork
"throw" I use a mattress
cover as the backing for the •
patchwork and use lie knots ·
to hold it in place. Old cor·:
duroy garments are great to '
use for such throws and I cut
the pieces m rectangles. Sucl]:
throw LS also lined with a'
sheet and the "quilting" donM
.'
w1thtie knots.-MERRY. • ·•
DEAR POLLY-When I clip ·
a coupon from the paper I
always look to see if there iS '
an expiration date. If so, I un~ ·
mediately circle the date with
a pen and put the coupons ui·
my purse m numerical order.
When I go to the market td·
shop there is no time wastell '
at the check-out counter. , ,
NELLIE.
:
Polly will send you one of
her s1gned thank-you '
newspaper coupon cbppers if '
she uses your favorite Poin.a. ·
ter, Peeve or Problem m her
column Wnte POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of thi~ '
newspaper.

vl~t._·

Offlt't!rs fm· the 1977-78 year
were mstallc&gt;d when the
Ammcan Legion Auxiliary
uf l.ew1s Manley Post 263,
'DEAR HELEN :
mel Tuesday at the home of
My first memory was my mother's screams wllen my Mrs. Arnold Richards.
drunken father beat her. He'd lock me m the bedroom and if 1'
Jnstalied by Mrs. RIChards
wed. I got bruises too. Once he broke my arm. They tolrl the were Mrs. Allen Hampton,
doctor I fell.
prc&gt;~denL ;
Mrs. Charles
They finally put Mother m a state hospital, and I went to one Saunder};, vice pres1deut;
fo~ter home after another for the next seven years. Some were
Mrs. Wilham Smith, second
aiy,ful - got raped twice. One was okay, but they wouldn't M me
stay.So I ran away.
At 151 had a baby. I just had to keep her, and I thought I'd
never love ~ything so much. I even lived with a man I hated
(pot her father ) so they wouldn't take her away
GRADUATES
But they did take her away from me. Mental imcompetence,
they called 11. They could have sa1d child abuse. Yes, I'd have
Susan Smart Kienzl e,
cra~Y nervous spells, and I'd end up htltmg her and screaming .
,J!!SIIike my mother, I spent time in an institution. The dif- daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Milton Smart, and
f~rence was I recovered m a year, and she took almost ten
granddaughter
of Mr and
years to come back .
Mrs.
Paul
Smart,
Middleport,
.I'm living with her now· two people trying to pick up the
graduatec.l
Fdday
from Law
pieces from battered lives. We're going to make 11. I have a
Sehool
of
the
Univers1ty
of
ll'a1tress job; I'm takmg night-school classes. She works too,
Toledo
w1th
a
degree
of
doc·
but is still very nervous. I want to go to coliege. I'm not dumb
tor of JUrtsprude ncc. She 1s
l'il he proud of me yet.
employed
as an attorney w1th
. But I'll never have children because I sbn can 'I trust myself
the
Owens
IUmolS Co. 111
tllatfar. And I won't try to get my lovely daughter back I finalToledo.
Mr.
and
M1 s. Smart
ly released her for adoption, though it broke my heart. Many
were
in
Toledo
for
the comrughts I cry myself to sleep. But in the mormng I say, " Look,
lnencernentprograin.
Jerry, you're not the only one· stop feeimg sorry for yourself."

Father's Day program
highlights UMW meeting
•

Trisha Heaton
has birthday

.Auxiliary ladies meet

·:

-P AMPER POP AT ST IFFLER 'SMEN 'S MAVRICK

MEN 'S MAVERI CK

CA MPUS PERM PRESS

AUTOMATICK

AUTOMATICK

SHORT SLEEVE

PRE-WASH JEANS

DENIM JEANS

SPORT SHIRTS

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Ma'l8rlck ara now Automa!lckl So easy
to care fot l

SU MM-ER WALKING

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Thfl b&amp;IU for Cad
He deHrtel Ill
Ftmoua Campua Brand aport shlr1a
In auorted style~
colora and
panern a Save at Stllf ler't

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tow prtce l Men 'a famous Maveri ck
Automttlck blue denim lean• In
auorted alylea Greal valuMI

Great gtltalor Cad come trom S till ier a

MENS POPL IN &amp; DOUBLEKNIT

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and paHtrnl Ol~o Dad Our Be!!
on His Oayl

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MEN 'S PERMANENT PRESS
FANCY BROADCLOTH

COMFORTABLE

LOUNGING ROBES
Men 1 wuh and wear robell In noIron tabrles Good selection Robes
111 for a king come tram Stllfler'!
Comtortable and rele•lng

PAJAMAS
Fat he r'S Day ghrln-gl Men '1
made of plain and lan e~
cotton broadcloth In a
ol patterns and colora

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SHIRTS............. PKG

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Gift tin tor Cad In ~sorted sollde and
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WASH-N·WEAR $529
SHOR TS.... .. ....
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Shop now lor men a lesh lon beltl
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wldt/'11 Pemper Pop on hla
tpeeltl day wltn glha trom
Stllfltr'l

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FAMOUS SCAMPS

HOUSE SLIPPERS
Pamper Pop on Hts epjtelll der with
supe r Scamp Houaeallpp &amp;ra from
Stlfl ler a Seve11l atylea to choot e 11om
A.twers 1 favorite

Now le tne time to stock up and
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ot regular or menthol

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HANDKERCHIEFS
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handkerchiefs Great ldetl

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Great sel ection of men a new Cam pus
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MEN'S HANES
DRESS &amp; CASUAL

SOCKS

Choose I rom • wldt ttl~ tlon of
ltm01.11 Hanel draM tnd c at ual
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tnd patterns
A rN I Pop
pltaserl

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TO

I·

i

�Carter saves
energy progr_..
nuclea r reactor at Oak Rid ~e.
WASHIN GTON (UP!\ - Tenn . , alive by turning down.
The White House starr was" 19-11 . an att empt to cut it
euphoric a nd Presi dent from $150 million to $33
Calter was beaming : "We million. Ca rter wants . the
project stopped, becau&gt;re the
won ."
Rep. AI Ullman, D-Ore., on reactor would ' ' breed"
Ca pitol Hill , was expansive : pl utonium. whi~h also can be
"What we have done today is · used to ma ke nuclear bombs.
Cart er's oil tax would hit
ensure to the country that we
wi ll have a mea ning fu l in phases that by 1981 would
raise th e now-controlled
energy program ."
prices
or domestic oil to
The so urce of thei r
approximately
the world
ple.asure was a series of votes
price.
Oil
set
now
at
$5.25, lor
Tuesday in Ullman's Ways
example,
wou
ld
Increase
by
and Mean s Committ ee
something
more
than
$3
a
rejecting a new reward for oil
until
it
reached
about
year
exploration and ad opting, in
modified form , Calter's idea $13.50.
The committee comof a tax on oil to enCourage
plicated the plan by &gt;retting a
. conservation .
The tax would bri ng different tax lor each difdomestic oil to the world oil feren t grade , type, and
price by 1981 in three phases. location of crude oil. But
The new tax wo uld be ge nerally, the result would be
assessed ~n the 11 first pur· to largely erase, through
chaser," meaning usually the taxes, the difference between
refiner who buys oil from domesti c and for eign oil
producers. He would pass th e prices.
Wh enever the Pr esident
tax on down the line to th e
felt the taxes were going to
ultimate consumer.
Oil and petroleum products hurt the economy , he could
would increase in price, and suspend them, subject to
Carter believes ihat would congressional veto of the
persuade Americans to spend suspension.
What pleased the President
less of their money on such
as much as approval
almost
things. But he proposed also
of
his
tax was that the
to return the oil tax to
committee
turned down
Americans in income tax
attempts
to
give
oil producers
rebates, hi gher welfare
payments and lower heating a new reward for exploration.
Rep. Joe Waggonner, Doil prices.
The committee set con- La., backed by Republicans
some
oil-state
sideration of the rebates for and
Democrats, had a &gt;rerles of
today.
It was win some, lose some, amendments : offering
for Carter's energy policy billions of dollars of special .
payments to producers for
Tuesday.
The Hou&gt;re Science and investing in exploration. The
Technology Committee kept series was voted down , 21·16,
the Clin ch River " breeder " then 17-11 , then 19-11.
By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTilY RIGHTS RESERVED

(

Prices Effective
Thru June 18

BILL DALLAS

Bill Dallas
is graduated
'

from BGU

USDA CHOICE

Carnival workers were busy Monday, Tuesday and today preparing

BONELESS
$ 29
ROUND STEAK•••••••• ~ ••
USDA CHOICE

for the thousands of Big Bend R egaua Weekend visitors to come to
the fun area back of the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.

· University to receive degrees
in cOmmencement exercises

RUMP R-OASt •••••••• ~~ ••

$
CUBE STEAK ••••••••• ~~ •••

here Saturday at Doyt L.
Perry Field.
Young Dallas, graduating
cum la ude, has been accepted
at the Ohio Northern
University School of Law.

Features, events, personalities,

$ -39

BUCKET

BOWLING GREEN - Bill
Dallas, son of Cbampagne
CountY Supt. of Schools and
Mrs. George Dallas, was one
of more than 2,200 students at
Bowling
Gr een
State

for Meigs County

His university yea rs wer e

marked by citations for
singing in the men's chor us,
as Men 's Superstar for 1976,
Who's Who among students in
American Colleges and
unive rsiti es, as a n "O ut·
standing Young Man in
America," president of his
soci al fr aternity, Alpha
Sigma Phi, and for winning
the President 's Award for
distinguished service to the

49

TV •••in ReView
NEW YORK ( UPI ) - Tennis, anyone?
U you like tennis, you'll love Peter Ustinov narrating a
special on NBC June 18, 5-6 p.m., Eastern time. It's "Tbe
Great English Garden Party," dealing with the first 100 years
of Wimbledon, the world's oldest and most prestigious tennis

tournament.

~

'

U you don't give a deuce about the game, you still Ukely will
succomb to Ustinov's cbarm and the nostalgia of an era when
belrs to the throne played - not competed, that wouldn't be
quite the thiilg.
Tennla at Wimbledon was an aristocratic sport, played for
fun, not money, in the early days. The pace on the courts was
much slower than it is today, and in the stands tbe viewers ate
strawberries and cream, not the fast food concoctions vendors
&gt;rell today.
What makes the program a delight, aside from Ustinov, are
the shots of championship tennis being played, and the running
conunentary on the social side of the game, from competitors'
attitudes to their costwnes.
The costumes pre fascinating. It's bad enough to
contemplate the men in their long trou&gt;rers and long-aleeved
shirtS buttoned at the wrist. But think of the women players in
ankle~ength skirts and corset stays.
As styles changed, stuffy Wimbledon went along reluctantly.
It was shocked when wolllen players escaped their stays, and
when &amp;Izanne Len glen wore a tennis dress without sleeves.
When the age of shorts shot into view, it was rwnore&lt;l the
prior approval of the royal family was sought and a notice
went up, 11If shorts get any shorter,. they won't be worn any

university.

Young Dallas' mother is
the former Kitty Bachtel of
Middleport. His father is. the
son of Mrs. William Matlack,
Chester Rd. Attending the
comme nce ment were Mr.
and Mrs. Matlack and Mrs.
Juanita Bachtel, Middleport.

SUPERIORS BULK

WIENERS ••••••••••••••~~·.
GROUND BEEF. •••••• ~u~

Confession
is thrown out

r

GROUND
CHUCK.•••• ~.
.

~ ROTARIAN AND Mrs. Vernon Weber were chief cooks
•- at the recent picnic of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
: Club held "at Forest Acres Park in Rutland. Helping Mr.
~ and Mrs. Weber prepare hotdogs and hamburgers for the
:; families and guests of Rotarians was their daughter
~

..r.."'·

NBC bas announced an eighthour "dramatic event" for the
1977-78 season - "Holocaust," written by novelist Gerald
Green and tracing the murder of six mtlllon Jews by the NazliJ.
The director for the full eight hours - in televiaion such
directorial chores usually are split up - will be Marvin
Cbornsky, who directed six hours of "Roots." While "Rbots"
was a story of survival, "HolocPust" will be a tale of death.

\o

..•.
•'·"'

WHOLE

~

~

,.
,..,.
...'
~

The top 10 network television programs for the week enlllll8
June 12, according to the A.C. Nielsen Co., were:
1: "Charlie,s Angels"; 2: uA Sensitive, Passionate Man"
!NBC Monday movie); 3: M-A-S-H"; 4: ''Quincy" ; 5: :
"Laverne &amp;Shirley"; 6: "Baretta"; 7: "One Day At A Time";
8: "More Dead Than Alive" (NBC Saturday movie); 9:
"Happy Days"; 10 : "&amp;lidde Run" (ABC Sunday movie) .

·wATERMELONS••••••• ~~

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Offer Expires June 18, 1977

ARGO PEAS
17

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Offer Expires June 18, 1977

HI DRI-·- .

PAPER TOWELS

J= 3/$1 w;c ·
Limit 1 Per Customer
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June 18, 1977
Offer

POINT PLEASANT Representing Mason County
this year in the annual Black
Walnut Festival held in
Sepncer is Tammy R. Simp. son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
David Simpson of Pt.
Pleasant .
She is 5'7" tall and weighs
. 130 Jbs., her measurements
being 36-26'fl-36'k. Tammy, a
17 year old student of Pt.
Pleasant High School, is
active as a Class officer,
President of Y-Teens, the
Girls' Track team, and is a
. member of the Baptist Youth
Fellowship.
Her hobbies include
collecting material stuffed
animals, collecting plants,
swimming, and bowling .
After completing high school
she plans to attend West
Vjrginia University to major
in nursing. Her flower girl for
the festival will be Miss Libby
· Ann Miles, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Miles of
Mason.
One of the featured events
this year at the Black Walnut
Festival will be the Bu~weiser Clydesdale horses.

" From the undisputed tes-

Miss Mason · County· was
&gt;reJected by the Jr. Woman's
Club of Pt. Pleasant and
sponsored by the Citizens
National Bank. Photograph
by "Portraits By Ingels" Linda Ingels,

timon y in the record., it is
cl ea r that (Brown ) wa s
extremely distraught at the
time
he
ma de
the
incriminating

.,

MANSION SOLD .
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
deed to the old governor's
mansion was officially
· banded over Monday from
state Auditor Thomas
Ferguson to James A.
Powers, a Capitol City
realtor-investor
\vho
purcbased the mansion for
$224,000.
Powers was th e second
highest bidder on the
propelty but was awarded
the mansion when a
Springfield, Ohio, man's bid
was ruled illegal.
• The mansion and· about 2.2
acres of land have been
OWJ1ed by the state of Ohio
since 1919, Ferguson said .

RECEPTION HONORS RETIRED EMPLOYEES - Two longtime employees of the
Meigs Local School District were honored Monday afternoon at a reception· gi~en by the
faculty and administration of Meigs High School. Mrs. Grace Drake, left, bas retired, after
29 years plus as head secretary, and Mrs. Martha Husted, as a teacher fo r 35 years, 24 wtth
the Meigs District. Mrs. Drake was given a hand-engraved necklace by Principal Jallles A.
Diehl and the faculty and her co-workers presented her with a grill and waffle maker. Mrs.
Husted, who plans to do some travelling now that she 'II fi nally have enough free time on her
bands, received a Linde Star sa pphire ring from the faculty and administ ration .

Flynt is suing for his rights
CINCINNATI (UPI I - A
suit filed Tuesday in U.S.
District Court by Hustler
magazine publisher Larry
Flynt charges Hamilton
County pr osec utor Simon

Leis and Hamilton County
Common Pleas court judges
Robert Kraft and William
Morissey with vi olatin g
Flynt's civil rights.
Flynt said they did so by

not allowing him to ha ve
Herald Fahringer and Paul
Cambria as !lis attorneys in
his appeal of his convictions
on pandering obscenity and
engaging in oranized ·c rime.

Flynt was found guilty in
February of those cha rges
and was sente nced to 7 to 25
years in prison and fin ed

statements ,' '

wrote Circuit Judge Anthony
J . Ceiebre zze, author of the
decision. " He was seized by
an overwhelming fear tha t he
would suffer violence at the
hand of poli ce. "
Brown and two others had
been the subject of a massive
manhunt because of their
sUSpec ted involvement in gun
battles with police in 1972, in
which one officer was killed
and seve ral others were
wounded , the cow-t noted .
Brown was arrested in the
vicinity of the clinic shortly
after it had been firebombed .
$55.000 on both counts. He is
fr ee pending appeaL
After he filed his appeal,
Fl ynt fil ed a bias. and
prej u.dice moti on aga inst

Morrissey, who was the judge
in the original trial, and
Morr issey was removed a11d
Kraft assign ed to hea r the
appea L

~shiand executive .w ill talk on energy to enterprise meet
••
I

DETERGENT

W/C

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COUPON

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OXYDOL

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Good Only At Powell ' s
Of.f er Expires June 18, 1977

r

w

FRIED CHICKEN ••• !!~: ...

ELF POP

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4 Oi

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6

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I

'

COCA-COLA
OL
OR SPRITE •••••••••82~E;.

private line telephone cir-

cuits by association mem·
bers.
In another challenge involving Ohio Bell. the
Supreme Court ruled against
member commission violated state universities that )Uid
the
open
meeting protested the new .ra)e aprequirements of the Sunshine proved by PUCO for centrer
Law by Improperly bandling users.
The universities claimed
the notification of meetings.
Taft had claimed PUCO the lack of detailed billing of
violated the ''Sunshine Law" centrex users denied them
because it periodically the opportunity to closely
brought up the Ohio Bell case control telephone usage.
The High Court, in ruling
at a regularly scheduled and
announced meeting, but then against Central State,
tabled the case to another day Cleveland State, Kent State,
when a regular meeting was Ohio State, Wright State,
Youngstown State anlf
not scheduled.
This was the first time that University ol Toledo, aid the
procedures of the Sunshine new centrek rate was
reasorwble.

..•

u

Court narrows
sunshine.law
The precedent - setting
ruling came in a suit filed by
the burglar alar'm industry
challenging the $200 million
rate hike granted last year to
Ohio Bell Telephone Co. by
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) .
ColumbUll attorney Sheldon
A. Taft claimed the three-

PPHS student Will
represent Mason Co.

~

&lt;

"Sunshine Law ."

TAMMY SIMPSON

: Donna.

"

Law, which mandates open
meetings,
have
been
challenged since it went Into
effect nearly two years ago.
· Taft repre&gt;rented the Ohio
Committee of the Central
station Electrical Protection
Association, a group of 28 ·
burglar and fire alarm
companies which protested
the rate· changes made In

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
federa l appeals court has
thrown out the conviction of a
Detroit ma n accused in the
1973 fir ebombing of a
Planned Parenthood clini c
near the campus of Wayne
· State University, Detroit.
A confession of arson obtained from · Hay ward L .
Brown by Detroit police,
while the defendan t was in
the back seat of a patrol car,
was not given vo lwttarily , the
6th U.S. Circuit Court of
appea ls ruled Tuesday.,

I

longer."

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Supreme Court ruled
today that harm or prejudice
must be. shown before a
government agency can be
faulted for violating the

.

i'

RIO GRANDE - When
.. high school seniors and
; business leaders get together
· : next week at Rio Grande
; College-Community College
• to talk about America's free
: enterprise system , the
; students will have a chance to
' discuss United States enerev
; policy with a vice-president
t of
-Ashland Petroleum
; Company.
/~ Floyd A. Thomasson, a 28
/ t year veteran of the compan y,
! w!U speak at a Thursday

•

evening session about the
need for a strong energy
policy in the fr ee enterprise
system.
More than 150 students and
their teachers will gather on
the campus June 20-24 for a
Sef11.inar in whi ch parti ci pants will enga ge in
dialogue · about the opportunities, potential and
problems of free enterpri&gt;re.
Thomasson is only one of
several business and industry
repre sentatlv·e s invol ved .

Students will also meet a
former Governor of Illinois,
William G. Stratton, who is
now vice-president for corporate relations with th~
Canteen Corporation . · A
member of Firestone Tire
and Rubber Company's
corporate relations staff,
Peter Scholfield, and the
United Rubber Workers
Union'sdii'ector of education,
Bob Strauber, will discuss
management and labur.
Allo~ ether, 10 businessmen

will palticipate in the workshop along with educators
from both Rio Grande College
- Community College and
Ohio University.
Thomasson has been a vice'
president
of
Ashland
Petroleum CompaQy since
1970. A native of St . Petersburg, Fla., he is a graduate of
Centre College , Danville,
Ky. He has been an Ashland
Oil employee since 1949. He
worked in Purchasing and
Refinery Sales , becoming

State trip set to California

division managet a t Buffa lo,

and West Virginia.

N. Y., in 19&gt;3.
In !960 he was named
special representative for
Refinery Sales and transferred to the Ashland offi ce.
In 1968 he became president
of 0 . K. Tire and Rubber
Company, before taking his
present post.
Students att endin g the
seminar are all seniors
&gt;reJected from high schools in
41 differ ent communiti es
representin ~ Ohio, Kentucky

years ago at Rio Grande as
COLUMBUS (UP! )
an attempt to offer a chance Three members of the state
for business and social Department of Economic and
studies students to examine Community Development
America's economic system . will visit three California
cities this week and next to
seek new and expa nded
Firm possibility
business and manufactw-ing
Don't despai r about flabby ·in Ohio.
thighs: the muscles there are
They will make 238 calls to
long and large, a.ul among businesses in San Diego, Los
the easiest to firm up with Ange les and San Francisco ,
da ily exercise.
Director James Duerk said

The seminar began three

..

Tuesday.
Duerk said 67 calls will be
made to companies which
already have fa cilities in
. Ohio. The development team
will offer to help the se
companies with expansion ,
In May 1976, a similar trip
was made and resulted in 18
immediate and 21 long..-ange
prospects for" Ohio facilities
and expansion, D\ierk said.

�10 - The Daily Sentinel. Muldlt."por·t -Pomeroy , 0 .. \\\'tl~~t•!)t~t) • JUIIL' 1!}, 1 ~177

•
•

·Brown charged
in power grab

•

~

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UP I )
Democratic legislative
leaders, a ccusing Republican
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown of a "blatant attempt
to ursurp the powers vested
in
the Ohio General
Assembly," have gone to the
state's highest court to secure
immediate implementati on
of election day vote r
registration.
The majority lea.ders asked
the Ohio Supreme Court
Tuesday to direct Brown to
implement election day and
permanent re gistration a t
once a nd eliminate the
possibility of repeal through a
public referendwn on the
controversial issues .
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron ,
and House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr ., D-New Boston , filed
for writs of mandamus and
prohibition with the high
co urt . dom inated 4-3 by
Democratic justices.
th e
Th ey
claimed
Republican secretary of state
violated the law and the Ohio
Constitution · in. delaying the
effective
date
of
a
Democra tic-written voter
registration package until
Aug. 30.
The 9iklay delay, normal
for
all
bills
except
appr.opriations
and
emergencies, permits repeal
through referendwn .
The suit was filed by David
J. Young and David P . Hiller,
specia l trial counsel for state
Attorney General William J.
Brown.
Secretary of State Brown
declared that the legislation,
passed last month by the
Democratic-dominated
General Assembly with · the
support of organized labor,
would take effect in 90 days,
except for a $6.8 million
appropriation which would
take effect immediately.
' He declared that the 9lklay
portion of the measure was
subject to repeal through
public referendum .
Ocasek and Riffe have
insisted the money in the biU
makes the entire measure an
appropriation subject to immediate implementation and
no referendur,n .
" Respondent's (Brown's)
acts and omissjons afQresa id
constitute a dereliction of
duty and a blatant attempt to
usurp the powers vested In
the Ohio General Assembly
under t he separation of
powers
doctrine
as
enun ciated In the Ohio
Constitution/' they said in
their lawsuit.
Ocasek and Riffe said
unless Brown is forced to .
implement the legislation at

once , c itizens wilJ be
disenfr&lt;111chised in 17 local
eh.-ctions through next Aug.
13.
They said ' that because of
the absence of election day
registration, eligible citizens
were being denied U1c right to
vote on a school levy in

Cincinnati Tuesday, and
more would be denied next
Tuesday in Toledo.
Major portions of the voter
r egistra tion bill were signed
by Gov . James A. Rhodes.
They ca lled for mandatory
registration in all88 cow1ties,
requi red that boards of
election keep longer hours
during the last three weeks
before
the
close
of
registrat ion a nd pem itted
house-to-house registra tion ,
signups at alternate county
offices and registra tion in
shopping centers and olher
publ ic places.
The governor vetoed
elec ti on day regis trati on,
sign ups at deputy motor
vehicJe r egistrar s' offices
and a provision eliminating
the requir ement that a n
elector vote at least every
two years to keep his
reg istration valid . The
General Assembly overrode
those vetoes tWo days later.
Ted Brown declared all the
provisions would undergo the
routine 9lklay delay to allow
a referendwn ir one was
planned.
Oh ioans
for
the
Prese rvation of Hone st
Elections (OPHE) filed a
sample petition with the
attorney general to repea l the
election day registration and
permanent registration
provisions .
If allowed by the a ttorney
general, OPHE will have
until Aug. :l9 to collect 184,321
. signatures to get the repealer
on the November ballot. ll
they fail, the entire law will
take effect Aug . 30.
"Senate Bill 125 , designed
to
enhance
c itizen
participation in the electoral
process , is now law ,"
c-omplained Ocasek and Riffe
in filing their court action.
"The secretary of state has
taken it upon himself to
deterruine what laws shall be
implemented and what laws
passed by the Ge neral
Assembly shall not . This
a dm inistrat i ve veto
exercised by the secretary of
state far surpasses anything
in
the
provided
for
Constitution .
implementation
are a
usurpation
of
the
constitutional powers of all
three separate but equa l
branches of gaverrnnent,"
said Ocasek and Riffe.

being produced

.,

..

E

EKO LYI

··
SAVE s20

Reg.1J995

95

NEW

grade and the even higherpriced .. Prime&gt;' grade .
Nelson said studies showed
this change has been followed
over the past year by a
significant change in the
grades given meat moving
through the federal grading
system. The amount of beef
given the top Prime grade
rose more than 2 percentage
points a nd the amount graded
Choice rose more than 1.5
points.
At the same time, the
amount of beef given the
lower Good grade went down
3.5 percentage points.
Consumer leaders had
argued before adoption of the
new system that it might
victimize shoppers by
requiring them to pay Choice
grade prices for some beef
previously classed as Good ,
and Prime grade prices for
meat which earlier had been
priced as Choice.
·
Nelson 's report did not
discuss this argument. The
economist said, however, he
found no significant change in
prices for Choice beef which
cou ld be traced to the
increased amount of Choice
and the reduced volume of
meat carry ing the Good
grade.

j,

The report said Nazis have
buildings in New York ,

bestorganized.
over the lon~ hauL
He estimated it had 75
" We want them to lhink
stormlroopers plus at least 50 that the average party
Youth Corps members in tr..-oper only wants to clean
"White Power" T-Mirts, of up his own neighborhood ,
whom Collin said, " We train maybe even the whole
them to be ruthless little country, and then get back
barbarians. We even give · about his business .
"! would love to be in the
them a chance at a shotgun,
even when it bruises their White House some day," he
little shoulders."
added, "a nd call aU of the
It appeared the party has nation's most talented minds
equal enlistment and support around the rose garden,
in both the North and South outside my office, and get out
with about 50 unifo.rrned men the · checkbook and say,
in the average city chapter, 'Okay, who's got ideas to set
Baughman wrote.
this country back on
Asked if the party was course? '"
interested in overthrowing
According to Collin , Nazis
the U.S. government, Collin aren't "troublemakers ... the
responded, " They're ( the Jews and the niggers are tbe
government) not sure how far troublemakers, and the
we plan to go and American public is begirming
unfortunately that's our fault to see that," predicting "a
for not being more coosistent devastating race war" in the

Chicago, San Francisco,
Cleveland, Dallas, Toronto,
Paris, Copenhagen and
MWlich, and chapters have
secret meeting places in
Pasadena and Galveston,
Tex., Inglewood, Calif., Oklahoma City, St. Louis, Milwaukee,
Ind ianapolis,
Detroit, Brighton , Mich .,
Cincinnati, Louisville ,
Pittsburgh, Salt Lake City,
Vicksburg, Ky ., and Lincoln,
Neb;
plus
commando
training camps in Raleigh, N.
C.,and Panorama City, Calif.
Baughman estimated there
are 1,300 dues-paying, uni·
formed members nationally.
He reported that the National
Socllallst Party of America ,
Collin's organization in
Olicago, was the largest and

ncar future .
"We will be there to guide it
when the time is right, but we
can 't just come out and incite
people to violence," Collin
added .
The report _ooted Collin
pla&lt;-ed second in a field of six
candidates from his 15th
ward in aldermanic races in
1975, in which he and four
other Nazi candidates totaled
5.000 votes; then the party
delivered 15,000 signatures on
pelilions to put him in
nomination for Congress last
November on the White
Power Party . He officially
got 1,100 votes but claims he
would have had 30 per cent of
the total.
Baughman reported a tape
recording from a 1976 rally at
the
National
Socialist
Congress included Collin

sayin~. in part, " We must
compete against the red
scum ... Natiooal
Socialism
will ~o forward-omas!J, kill,
exterminate its enemies until
the white race is the only race
on the planet Earth !"
Collin told of "having loved
Hitler" as rar back a.s he
could remember and added,
~' I
have always been
attracted to the swastika ."

REUNION SET
A reunion of the Chick
Patterson family will be held
Sunday at the roadside park,
going oorth on Route 33 north
of Pomeroy, with a picnic
dinner to be held at noon .
Those attending are to take a
covered dish and their own
table service.

9995

..

21-1520

TRC -452 packs full power plus PLL circuit,
separate RF gain and squelch controls, ANL
and PAfC B switc hes , lighted meter and dial.
Over 28% off this week , only at Radio Shack.

-

TRC-468 CB has the power to get your :
message thru! PLL adj . squelch. ANL, ;
lighted dial, modulation indicator. Only :
1 112x5V.x7'l'8'. Cut 20% '
:

208 East Main Street While Quantities Last

Quantity Rights Reserved

we are not respons!bte

f~r

II II III 1111 {. ~,

I

•

TRC-455 turns on at pre-set time
with or without alarm! PLL Delta
tune , ANL, blanker, RF gain , SWR
Gal .. PA. sq ue lch controls . Lighted
SWR &amp; SIA F meters .AC &amp; DC power
cables. mobile mount.

.

REALISTIC 6 CH. MOBILE CB RADIO

21-1542

---

---

....

,.,.,.,,.

-@-

II

NEW!

.

NOISE ·
CANCEL
CB MIKE

--

Re~-51995
24

~-~

NELSON'S DRUG

No license required! No crystals
needed! Use s existing antenna. Easy·
pl~nookup!

I

Give-away priced TRC -11 features ANL sw~c;h , lighted
d ial, push·lo-talk mike. Ready to use on one channel.
add optional c rystals for up to 5 more - C h 1 to Ch 23.

Realistic close-talking mike
cuts road , engine and
bac kground noise '

Limit One

••Ew,

Nelson•s ·

JENSEN .
AUTO CONSOLE
lfs o kiNG-stZE llltei buchll
w 11n c honge pOCkeiJ . bever ·
c ge com j:JOttmeroh JYn lor

11,

1 1 2!5~

•

color co d

.

-

• •

Protecis CB
'
equipment! Die cut
foam interior -easy to
fit to· your gear.

Attaches instantly! Directs sound
. upward to you , not the floor.

SAVE s10

SAVE 66o/o

MOTORIZED MOBILE
"DISAPPEARING" WHIP

NO
LICENSE
WALKIETALKIE

"CITIZENS BAND"
Reg.

175
1111·1047

Exciting 224 page
novel from
Paramounl's new
movie!

COMBINED
VALUE

MOBILE
MIRROR
TWIN MNT.

34'~942

4995
5995

2t-970

33" center~loaded
antenna extends
lromf retracts into
fender at llip of switch.
Prevents theft! It's
out-of-sight!

Reg. 21 95

16~~4 .
With ch. 14 crystals &amp; batt
Add optional c rystals for
second channel .

ALL ABOUTCB
TWO-WAY RADIO

Reg. 1

25
68-1046

120 pages of CB
information . New
40 Ch edition'

,..!
.....

4 dB ~ain . 19' 10"
vert1cal radiator.

Three 18' nidi
tors . 9 dB gail

~--

3-WAY CB
TESTER

i;;Jj,;.""Ji
_. ~
''Jill . '

2495
21·526

Reads output. power,
SWR , % of mod~latio n .

10 92~·549
360" swivel base .

Antenna disconnects
to hide in trunk .

•12" Model
•Whilpei' Ololitt
oper•Uon
•Push·butten

spMd stlect•r
•Stationery Gr
rotlllnl

,

Ill

,

I

r•

O

otyler/dryer

It~...-,.~;;;.--- .. ~~ . '·.~:..~~ ~.• 100 Willi lor latl e111c1e111 drying
• 2 pa- ...lln;t-dfy for IIIII drying
al1cl ltyll for gentle styling

• ·.' •'' .

•

Premixed Ready-to-use.

Protection to -25 . Works
I n a l l automotlu
washer unit syuems.

~

•• • '
• ••

• 200 IG 900 Willi
• jW jlltll bla pow.., dial ,.ltn 9 h,~ tl 8llflow !IIIU i n~s
• "tlyllng att.ch mtnlt lb•ui!l
1 eom~••.M leDIIlll~ t11ndlli)

Nelson's
Reg . 125.99

Nelso·n•s

•Cinr Key
•Pi.,,, subtracts, mulTI·
Pitt, d l¥ides, •CJUals
Function Keys
•Perc•nt, Pius,
Minus Key
•Accum.,l•tlon
Switch
•Memory Key
•O.Cim•l Point
Switch

ALL AROUND ZIPPER

LEATHER BILLFOLDS

COWHIDE BILLFOLD

Black
&amp;

Nelson'•
Reg. 4.19

$

·

HORSEHEAD
SMOKER
15" TALL

WOODS TONE
SMOKER
::ZS" TALL

POT BELLY STOVE
SMOKER
20" TALL

Nelson's
Reg . 515.49

.....

. ..;_ ..;_ .

.,. _._

Reg. 58.99 ·

50 FT. STEEL TAPE
Headquarters
tor

1095

4s_s

21 ·538
Underdash
mount.

21·538
Contoured

21 ·537
Spare
bracket fo
2nd car.

mount.

Nelson's
Reg . $8.99

PACER
ELECTRIC ICE CREAM
FREEZER
With purchase of

Nelson's _Reg. $8.99

.

FLICKA
DISPOSABLE LIGHTER
Most items a lS o avatlabfe
at Radio Sha ck Dealer-s .
Look for this stgn
in your neighborhood . ·

-·
-•
PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIViDUAL STORE$

•

Reg . 528.69

4 PLAYER

BADMINTON SET

Nelson's Reg. $1.65

ONLY

Polypropylene Tub

--.SMUCKER'S GRAPE JELLY
2-LBS.
Nelson's
Reg. 51 .19

69~
Nelson.s Reg. 89t

79~
Nelson's Reg. 54.79

GRAPE JAM ALSO AVAILABLE

Mor• powerful
motor makes. Pacer

Label .

11 our IMst buv In a
wooden fr ..ur ,

Ice Crum In lO
mlnut•s or l•n .

4 Quart

4 Quart

t ' ~"t'

99~

WOODEN
ELECTRIC ICE CREAII/I
FREEZER

with snow Flake

&amp;I
Nelson's

•

box w/shelf

Tap Grain With
Change Puru

SJ 1a Value

MA TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY

8ig steel

From

&amp;
Brown

IJt-".._

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

Know where your tool• 1re

tool

..

gas

floor

Nelson's
Reg . $20.77

Nelson' s

.

.

.:

1 Year warranty
UL Approved

"'" 'go• "'I

~

ol - - },

·'

3-Speed 20"
Window Fan .

.
... _.,....,..)
...
_..,_
.......__
_
........
·-

SLIDE-MOUNT
CB QBFI~~KET~•.

i.

7·91f-

Nelson's

Reg . 99c

,........... """ "" ......

b~ GilleHe
l• ::f'O'"'hlt

.

34 9
· .

FAN

Black

Brown

CHARGE IT

plans maw- a lao b• •v•ll·
able .. Det•ila al 7our
n1u r b y !lore

17"xJS"

SUPERIOR ELECTRIC

Your Choice

MEN'S TOP GRAIN

Gill Boxed

5 1877

CANNON
CANOLA CALCULATOR
LS12

. .. and vou can

lm&amp;l

VENTILATED AUTO
SEAT CUSHION

,_
..
,
_
..
.
·u
l:.
'""' . .
. .'..... .

\. -

\

1

Nelson's
Reg. $35.95

..

,

CB EXTENSION
SPEAKER

C

$169_

JS .·69

BORON WINDSHIELD
WASHER FLUID
1 GALLON

Rtg. S22.99

•

39~~933

:'- ~

~ "'~~.":~'

BEAM~.

21-1133

MNT.

,~

BASE ..,.

3495

DETACHABLE
ANT. TRUNK

Reg. U .79

oscUla fit!'

l -·
1_
&amp;

'!•·wave. Mounls all
surfaces.

'/e·WAVE OMNI
BASE ANT.

$300

$299

!

21-912

Stainless steel,
adj . tip rods .

Reg.

Botti I c.p Ill on 11111 off twlteh. ""'-u••
10". U..l " O'' bwtterlw, [no! In&lt;:! ..mod) .

}r Gillene .. '. \

...,..IM•&gt; '

CHIPS
RACK

SCHLITZ BOTTLE
FLASH LITE

Neilan's
Reg. s1 .99

• Ffnllhed-•l yllng btulh

.••••••.•

I

'. 3195

pol'lelt

Oscillating Fan

.I ,
I· . .

FIBERGLASS
102" MARINE

Nelson's
Rtg. S5.49

ER

l .r-·superma}U,
..
• 3 ogrNIItyUng atlattlnMntl:
• Det1ngllng.,d atylin1 comb
• Strllghhlnlng Met 1h1pin1 comb ·

EL

ARCHER® BASE &amp; MOBILE ANTENNAS IMPROVE ANY CB RADIO

occ~~tnt

t OOki Jtk e or,gmcrl eq..,,pmenr

UNIVERSAL. CB
CARRY CASE

SUNSET TAN

Nelson's Reg. $1,99

Roll COUPON EXPIRES 6/22177 ',

~

SOUND DIRECTOR

or

$699

~ ~-~·=~-=~C-:U:P:O~N-:M:U:ST~-:A:CC:O:•:PA:N~V-:V:O:U~R-:O:R:DE~·=
· =;1~; ·:-~··~·L~E~~·•:MO:v•:•;:::::..::i~~lJL___

~-

TWO GREAT CB BOOKS!
ACTION FROM THE MOVIE
&amp; FACTS FROM THE SHACK®

$499

Reg , S5.99

1r

ea

or slides {i,ctudes 110 si.zeL

,.o me 11 Mogh·$lyl e, riCh eOOily

29~-~

••

59

klee ne• r.old er, to o ll1te r
biJ~;ket Ooub les · o• comport.
mef1t I~" mopt wnQiou~~t. rOY

Reg.
7995

TOBACCO BROWN

· Nelson's

BRUSH·SHOE HOR!Io
COMBO

c1
1 ·s x 1 coLoR
I ~~~~~~~~~~~~:~~~ ·
II

21-500

.-f~
•'

T

1SPK~.

99'&gt;

N•lson's
Reg. Sl.l7

HEAR ALL 40 CB CHANNELS
OVER YOUR CAR AM RADIO!

JEWELRY BOX

Fam ous Westclox quality at
low cost. Nickel finish case.

Gift Carton
ONLY

WOODEN PIRATE CHEST

POCKET WATCH

6 oz.

SAVE 20o/o

NEW!

CB

STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By The Head )- Stock Cows
110 to 230; Stock Cows and
Calves 190 to 275; Stock Bulls
180 to 270; Baby Calves 5 to

BULLS-EYE

AFTER SHAVE

169!1~

.... ~--

l-lappy Fritlter's Dag •

Skin Bracer..

Reali stic TRC -461 handset has
speaker, mike , lighted dial,
off-on/vol. . squelch buill· in!
Transceiver hides in trunk with
-;::::=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;
· . remote (21-600, optional
[~ ··
.~,;.;;JI
$24.95) cable!

249g 5

Shadow of your eyes
To help widen close-set
eyes, try using light , frosted
shadows between the eyes
and the bridge of the nose up
to the corner of the brow.

33.

DUFFLE BAGS

WESTCLOX

Wllh

"

REALISTIC 40 CHANNEL
BASE/MOBIL!: RADIO WITH
LED READOUT AND CLOCK

Gallipolis, Ohio,
June II , 1977
Sales Report of
Ohio Valley Uvestoek Co.
STOCKER CATTLE STEERS - 250 to 300 lbs. 31
to 38.50; 300 to 400 lbs. 32.50 to
40; 400 to 500 lbs. 31.50 to 39;
500 to 600 lbs. 30 to 39.25 ; 600
to 700 lbs. 29 to 38.50; 700 lbs.
and Over 28 to 37.
HEIFER CALVES- - 250
to 300 lbs . 24 to 29; 300 to 400
lbs. 25 to 31 ; 400 to 500 lbs.
·25.50 to 31.50; 500 to 600 lbs.
24.25 to 30; 600 to 700 lbs. 23 to
32; 700 lbs. and Over 22.50 to

Phone 992-2586

typographical errors.

MIENNEN

40 CH. MOBILE CB
PUTS ALL CONTROLS
IN YOUR HAND!

..

41 ; (By Tbe Pound) CaMers &amp; Cutters Cows 17 to
22.75; Holstein Cows 22 to
25 .50 ; Commercial Bulls
0,000 lbs. and over) 28 to
33.50.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 32 to 37; Medium
?00 lbs. to 300 2S to 31.50; Culls
24 down.
Sows - 35ll Ibs. up 32 to
33.75.
Pigs _ 6 to 35.

Good thru June 19, 1977

..-

NEW!
' ' .,

Markd Report

Starts Today

~

lh•se two credit c1 rds
are honored at P•r ·
ttcip•Un o RDdio SMck
store&amp;. Othef" credit

LEGAL NOTICES
COLUMBUS ( UP! ) - The
Ohio Senate gave final
legislative apProval Tuesday
to a bill clarifying present
law and allowing legal
notices to be printed in
newspapers published, but
not necessairly printed, in a
countie s where the legal
notice must be publicized.

CLEVELAND ( UPI I " America's top Nazi," Frank
Collin of Chicago, says the
Nazis have regrouped and
are "in better shape than
ever," the Lorain (Ohio )
Journal reported Tuesday in
a copyrighted story.
Collin became national
coordinator of the newly
formed National Socialist
Congress at a summit
meeting held in Cleveland in
February, according to the
series of stories by J . Ross
Baughman,
a
Journal
photographer who infiltrated
the party.
Baughman said Collin
united 19 chapters from the
United States, Canada and
western Europe and since
then claims he has recruited
working class people from
seven additional cities.

Reg.

21-1521

REALISTIC® 40 CHANNEl MOBILE
WITH EVERY WANTED FEATURE

ri'op leader says Nazis are regrouped, stronger than ever now

REALISTIC 40 CHANNEL COMPACT MOBILE RADIO'

''T h e secret a r Y.' s
instructions
to
defer

Leaner meat now
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON (UP!) . New federal beef grading
standards which took effect
in February, 1976 after a
year-long controversy have
suCcetded in rev a m p i n g
cattle price differentials to
encourage the production of
leaner meat, the Agriculture
Department says.
The conclusion came from
a report produced by Kenneth
Nelson, a department economist stationed at the
University of lllinois.
standards
The
new
·-included 1 two major changes
from past practice. One was a
ruling requiring packers who
apply for federal quality
grading of their meat to also
obtain a federa l " yield
grade" - a rating which
indica tes th e amou nt of
usable lean meat in a carcass
as opposed to waste fat.
Under the new system, two
· ca r casses receiving the
Choice grade on a quality
basis can have wide ly
varying value if one has a
high yield grade while the
second carries more waste
!at and gets a low yield grade.
Nelson said price reports
since adoption of the new
system showed a widening of
the price spread for lean and
"wasty" beef carcasses. This
has given farmer s an
increased economic incentive
to produce more usable lean
meat and less fat, ofricials
said .
A second mlljor feature of
the new grading stands rds
reduced' the amount of
internal " marbling " fat
required to qualify beef for
the prized "Choice" qua lity

PLUS CUT-PRIC~ NEW AND REG. CB RADIOS AND ACCESSORIES AT AMERICA'S CB·HEADQUARTERS

11 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , o ., Wednesday, Jun~ 15, 1977

Nelson'•

Ro~ .

S17.99

$ 1499

FLEXWALL POOLS

Nelson· ~

Reg. S24.99

$

19 9 9

REYNOLD'S DIAMOND
ALUMINUM F

�•
11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wed rwl&lt;day. June t~. 1977

12 - The Dailv Sentin(•l, MiddleJXlrl·P('IlU'n') . 0 .. Wt-'( lf"'"'''- •.\ .. Julh' 15. l!.li7

·J·u ry indicts ex-Legion chief
in stealing over $lh million

Conservation produc·e s heated debate in House
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
OOLUMBUS ( UPI J - The
idea was to encourage fuel
conservation , but enough
heat was expended during
Tuesday's debate on the Ohio
House fl oor to provide an
abundance of energy.
At issue was a bill calling
for conservation of natura l
gas and petrolewn - part of
the response made by

Clcanmrc l'atnc nnly aftn
47-46 defeat of a motion t()

•

- Hl'qUln.'s the

stttt(l'

pac·kal-(e.
Wojtanr,w:;ki 's amcnd!nent
hul('d un a 29--64 vf'lte. 'f:.-~.bled

to

makt~

committee for rewriting. As

most gas-heated swiuuning

it turned out, the effective
date was delayed, penalties

pools, outdoor decorative
lamps fueled by natural gas,

lmprnvemcnt.s on existing
buildings ;md plan future
bUJid!ll gs. equipmenl and

and many new gas~perated
appliances.
It also mandates energy
conservation measures by
the stale in the areas of

was an amendment by Rep. operating costs. Opponents
Norman A. Murdock. H· said that .provision would
Cincinrwti , ~king to rt"move "open the door to hanky·

purchases with an eye tow•rd
conservcttion.
- Hequires ea ch · state
agency, starlin ~ in 1980, to
purchase automobiles with

the entire section banning

panky .

heate-d swimming pools and
outdmr decorative li ghting.

building design, equipment
purchases , transportation
and education.
As fi nally adopted, the
bill :
- Bans the use of gas lor
most heated swinuning pools
and outd oor decora tive
lighting, and bans new gas
appliances with C&lt;Jntinuous
burning pilot lights, other
than furna ce&amp; and water

an average fuel economy of

- IJy Reps . Harry J .
Lehman. D..Shaker Heights,
and Charles F . Kurfess. RBowling Green, postponing
the ban on gas-fired outdoor
decorative ligh ting and
heated swimming pools from
this year to Jan . I, 1979.
Murdock, who said he owns
a gas clothes dryer and an
outdoor gaslight, tried to

were reduced on severa l fuel
conservation violations and

another controversial
provision was de1eted altoge.
Iller.

e n crt.! y ~s aving

Sttll, (1pposition continued.

Rep . .). Leona rd Camera, D·
Lorain , said the measure
would result in "millions of
dollars bemg lost in this

no les$ than 22 miles per
gallon .
- Hequires the teaching of

state ''

-{;ails on the state to
encourage car-pooling and
use of mass transit, and to
design pubilc highway and
transportation facltities with
a view toward fuel economy.
Branstool sa id his blll
would help set an example for
the private sector and would
"buy time" for development
of alternate fuels. "This is the
first step in the right
direction toward energy

violations .

- By Rep. John E. Johnson ,
D.Orrville, eliminating a sec·
lion which would have
allowed the state Department
of Administrative Services to
award a contract to a bidder
who had not submitted tbe
lowest proposal but who could

conservation,'' he said.

Sponsors

agreed

Americans waste energy, but

it soon became evident the
bill would generate its own
heat.
Hep.
Dennis
L.
Wojtanowski , D-Chesterland,
said it provision forbidding
the sale or use of 11 any
outdoor decorative lamp or
lighting fixture" fu eled by
natural gas contained a loo·
phole
the
word
"Gas lighting is not essential," said Wojtanowski, attempting to remove the word
decorative. ' '

But

a

ho st

'.

J

-

...,..,...,_

''

4.,, , . ~ 11 (

I

"
•
••

702

~

PIONEERING a new CB use, Gary Reagan of St.
Louis tries out a battery .powered unit on his bicycle. He
transferred the radio from his car when he decided to do
more traveling by bike as a fuel-&lt;:onservation measure. ·

Miss Ohio will be crowned by reigning Miss Ohio, Janice
Elaine Cooley ol Portsmouth. She will then go to Atlantic City
as the Buckeye State's representative in tile Miss America
pageant .
MOSCOW - THE SOVIET KGB Secret police have
ordered an American journalist to appear for more
questioning today in connection with accusations he received
stale secrets from a Soviet scientist. Robert Toth of the Los
Angeles Times was interrogated for lour hours Tuesday by a
KGB official and told he could not leave the country while an
'
investigation was under way.
Toth, who had been scheduled to end his tour of duty in
Moscow and leave with his family Friday, was ordered to
report to Moscow's lortress~ike Lefortovo Prison again loda:y
for further questioning. In Washington, acting Secretary of
State Warren Christopher called Soviet Ambassador Anatoly
Dobrynin Tuesday to protest Toth's arrest and interrogation
and assailed the Soviet Union's " g~neral pattern of harrass·

WE'VE GOT AFULL
HOUSE' OF GREAT
JEWELRY. ·.
I

..••

•

CANADA ' S Prime
Minister Trudeau favors
c los e r

economic

cooperation between
Industrialized
and
developlag nations lo
combat trade Imbalances
and
worldwide
lnflatloaary teadencles.
The Canadian leader
pressed for cooperative
policy at the London
economic summit and In
private talb wltb other
Western leaders.

HYBRID aircraft undergoing flight tests at Ft. Worth, Tex., is the XV-15, a joint Army
and NASA development C&lt;Jmbining features of helicopters and conventional planes. Two
··' tilt-rotor craft, designed for fast point-to-point transportation, are being constructed for

research.

MANSFIELD, OHIO - PRELIMINARY JUDGING of
twenty young women from Ohio, who have entered this
weekend's Miss Ohio Pageant, will begin Thursday night.
The pageant theme is ' Cards, Casinos and Chorus Lines .''
Preliminary rounds will continue Friday with the finals
Saturday night at Mansfield Malabar High School. The new

LOCUST GROVE, Okla.
(UP!) - The murder of three
Girl Scouts attending a
summer session at Camp
Scott has not stopped other
youth groups from con·
dueling their swnmer camps
in the green hills of Northeast
Oklahoma.
A spokesman lor the Boy
Scouts said Camp Garland,
located just three miles from
Camp Scott across Oklahoma
· 82 in the shadow of the
Arkansas Ozarks; was still in
session. He said some ad·
ditional security measures
had been taken - but there
were no plans to close the
camp.
A delegation from the
Campfire Girls left Tulsa
Tuesday to begin a swnmer
camp session. Officials said
the girls were accompanied
by armed guards and asked
that the exact location and
name of their camp not be
disclosed.
,
The additional security
precautions were prompted
by the murders of Lori Lee
Farmer, 8, Doris Denise
· Milner, 10, both of Tulsa, and
Michele Guse, 9, of Broken
Arrow, early Monday at
Camp Scott. Autopsy reporis
s;lid the Milner girl was
strangled and the other two
girls were beaten to death.
No arrest has been made.
Bodies of the victims were
found 15b yards !rom their 12·
by-1.4-loot, green frame tent.

SPINTRIM
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ON THE ROCKS
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Composer Paul William s
("We've Only Just Begun ,"
"Old Fashioned Love Song,"
"Phantom ol tile Paradise ")
wants Anita Bryant and the
anti-homosexual right s
campaigners to know just
where he stands.
Williams and his wife Katy
look out a full page ad in
loday's Daily Variety, the
show business newspaper , at
a cost of ~75, which says :
" Mr . and Mrs . Paul
Williams , in response to
Anita Bryant's crusade, have
stopped
drinking

emergency

clause.
The bill,
M. Morris
land, was
vote and

sponsored by Sen.
Jackson, D.Oevepassed on a 77-15
returned to the
Senate for concurrence in
changes.
Hospitals and rest homes,
but not nursing homes, C&lt;Juld
have "smoking " and

'"no~

smoking" rooms if both types
are available under the
revised version ol the blll.
Jackson's intent was to
prevent patients from
sneaking cigarettes in rooms
where smokinR is forbidden
by the state's no-smoking
law.

TAX INFORMATION
OOLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The
Ohio Senate argued lor
almost an hour Tuesday
belore passing a bill allowing
municipal tax officials to get
the names, addresses and
identification numbe rs ol
people who file state income
tax returns.
Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R·
Cincinnati, argued the bill
might erode privacy statutes,
· and amended the legislation
to specify that
any
information gathered by local
officials would be used solely
to collect loeal taxes.
Sen. Antilony J. Celebrezze,
Jr., D.Cleveland, said local
officials C&lt;Juld probably get
such information anyway,
but it would be cheaper if the
information was regularly
forwarded to the chief tax
enforcement officier of a
municipal corporation .

C enera l

A.. ~e mbly ·

HOUSE

SB 265 , Celebrene . Per mits lhe laK commiss •oner to
furn ish certain information to
municipal income tax of ·

Bills Introduced
HB
756 ,
Cross land .
Regulates the rights and
duties of landlords and
tenants if the tenant ab(tn
dons the property .
HB 757 . Feighan. EKempts
sales of prescri ption lenses
and frames from the sales

tax .
HB 7S8, Mclin . Requires
independent candidates for
partisan offices to qualify fo,.
the general election in a
primary election for in ·
dependents .
HB 759 , Mclin. Requires
independent can didates who
run l or partisan offices to run
in a primary elec1ion for
indpendents .

NO. 1 PRE·
1
CUT STUDS

Bills Passed
Sub. HB 419, Branstool.

Establishes energy con servation measures tor state
government. 59-35.
Am . H B 493, Locker .
Requires earnings on ln\I~St ­
ment of Ohio Farm Loan
revolvi ng fund to be credited

to th e
Department o f
Agricu l ture. 94-0.
Am . SB 212, Jack son .
Quali f ies the designation of
smoking and non~moking
areas in health ca re facilities .

77 -15.

SENATE
Bills Passed
Am . HB 42, Locker . Per ·
mits a newspaper printed
outside the coun t y in which It
circulates to publish legal
notices. 3'2 -1.

Sub .

SB

137,

Bulls .

Authorizes muni cipal courts
t~ create housing courts. 23·

$
each

HOUSING COURTS
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
Ohio Senate Tuesday passed
and sent to the House a bill
allowing municipal courts to

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

create a "housing court" and

designate one judge to serve
on that specialized t.ench.
The bill gives local courts
discretion in · creating tbe
court , which would have
jurisdiction over zoning laws,
fire safety codes or sanitation
codes .

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and misleadin~ stat~ments
on a proxy, live years and
$10.000.

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CHOPPED BEEF

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2~~~ ....... 380

to !.Irving Davidson - a loan
that was later C&lt;Jnverted to
Gleason's personal use.
The third count charged
Gleason with making false
stat ements in a proxy
st at ement lor Chicago
Helicopter Industries Inc.
with the Securities and Ex·
change Commission on June
I, 1975.
.
The indictment said the
statement failed to disclose
that Gleason converted the
proceeds ol the loan to his
own use.
The Justice Department
said the charge of misapplying funds by a bank office r
carries a maximum penalty

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Resolution Offered
SJ R
23.
McCormack .
Proposed amending th e
Consfllution to permill,ws to
be passed on the use of pr-ison
labor . Referred to Judiciary .

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PITTSBURGH (UPI ) Former Pittsburgh Steeler
defensive back Hubert
Bryant was arrested Tuesday
and charged with attempting
to incite a riot among a crowd
that gathered as police
arrested two men for
creating a disturbance.
Pollee said Bryant, 31, ol
suburhan Penn Hills, was
taken into custody when he
tried to prevent officers from
putting William N. Evans, 22,
and Thomas T. Tucker Jr.,
22, both ol Coraopolis, into a
police van .in the city's
downtown area.
Police said during the In·
cident, one officer suffered an
injured hand and another was
cut over the eye.

10

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CALIFORNIA

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tending the camp, if it
weren't for the guards.
''I kinda thought about it
seriously, but after really
thinking about it I figured,
well, they were possibly as
sale there at camp as they
would be at home," said
Kenneth Carrouthers, whose
twin daughters left Tuesday
to attend the camp.
"You know, just leave them
in the hands of the Lord. Just
·
trust in God."
Funeral services for Lori
Lee Fanner were scheduled
for today. Services lor Doris
Denise Milner were set for
Thursday and lor Michele
Guse Friday .

..:asin~

llc ials J03

Legislation at a glance

IN NUTMEG MAPLE FINISH .
WITH FORMICA &lt;R) ·LAMINATED TOPS!

Remember DAD
on his day @ill

1

ARMOUR'S

The murders at Camp Scott
disturbed the Boy Scout
leaders but they felt their
camp security was sufficient.
" Basically, we start oil
with the advantage of having
a good many more adults in a
Boy Scout camp than you
would have in a Girl Scout
camp," said Herb Me·
Coggins, scout executive lpr
the Indian Nations Council at
Tulsa.
Camp Scott and Camp
Garland are located on a
brushy hillside a bout 40 miles
from the Arkansas border.
Camp Scott is virtually
inaccessible except lor a
blacktop road through forests
and thick underbrush. A
locked gate stops all vehicle
traffic.
McCoggins said there were
14 Boy Scout troops at Camp
Garland this week and some
ol the smaller troops have
been combined for additional
protection. He said adult
scout leaders were taking
turns staying awake at night
on guard.
''I guess the major
precaution that we are taking
is that we have closed up the
outpost camps and the ac·
tivities that would involved
just two or three boys,"
McCoggins said.
The Girl Scout tragedy
prompted security measures
at the Campfire Girls ca!Jlp.
Some parents said their
daughters would not be at·

C~f(

a

'

~.

in area of girls' murder ·

co~nlry have

OOLUMBUS - JUDGES WBBYING .FOR A PAY raise
before the Ohio General Assembly Tuesday were told there 's
not enough money to lund the increases. When asked how he
responded to the judges' pleas lor pay boost, Senate Finance
Committee cbairman Harry Meshel, [).Youngstown, said he
gave tilem a "smile and a handshake."
" It is extremely difficult to accommodate the judges,"
said Meshel. A delegation of judges, most ol tilem with
Meshel's nortileast Ohio district, met with Meshel and Senate
President Pro Tempore Oliver Oeasek, D·Akron.
They discussed the bieMial budget bill, pending before
Meshel's committee, and favorable consideration on a bill
unanimously recorrunend&lt;d by the House Judicary Committee
last week. "The judges want a pay raise. There is no money in
tile bUdget. There will not be a pay raise for judges in the
budget," said Ocasek after meeting witil the Ohio Judicial
Conference delegation.

••

continued

COLUMBUS IUPII
Here
1s qlrtnce at acl lv•ty Tuesday

law in health eare facilities,
but not before removing

of five years in prison and a

described Ugandan President ldi Amin as a deranged leader
who believes be can talk with God and spends long hours in his
empty office !iring a re~olver into a wall. The report Tuesday
by Micbael Nicholson, a correspondent in Nairobi lor Britain's
Independent Television News, was based on statements made
to him by two self-exiled Ugandans. The two men were shown
in silhouette and refused to 'be identified.
Nicholson said, "the most startling evidence I have heard
from these men is the state of Amin's mind. He admits openly
now of having long conversations with God. For some time he
bas been broadcasting on Uganda Radio saying God has told
him the exact time and place that he will die." Security guards
also have seen Amin firing his revolver and shouting abuse in
his empty office, Nicholson said.
·

'

ou~ings

misapplications ol funds
began on Nov. 8, !9R
The first count charged
Gleason causes loans to be
made to Earthu Watchers
Inc., a Wisconsin corporation
in which he held 00 per cent
ownership but reported he
was only a 2 per cent
shareholder.
A second count charged
Gleason misapplied approximately $60,000 of the
bank's funds through a loan

approves, the ban on new gas

appliances will take effect in
1979 on ranges, refrigerators,
air-&lt;:onditioners, dishwashers
and clothes washers and
dryers without electronically
ignited pilots.
Also adopted was an
amendment allow ing gas·
heated swimming pools
which are "used primarily by
disabled
persons
for
therapeutic purposes."
Both the House and Senate
were to reconvene at 1:30
p.m. today.

WNDON - TWO MEN WllO FLEQ THE

l '

•

Summer

CINCINNATI - CINCINNATI VOTERS, ignoring a ment."
warning that schools will be.forced to close next year, defeated
a ~. !knilll levy in Tuesday's special election. The levy was
rejected by a 37,476 to 35,032 margin, according to Hamilton
County election officials .
Without tile $13.4 million the levy would have generated
city schools will be forced to close from about late October,
1978until January, 1979, superintendent James N. Jacobs said.
"The only recourse we have is to operate our schools with the
money we have until it runs out," said Jacobs . "Inevitably in
1978 we 'll have to close our schools."
However, So!lle school board members indicated Tuesday
night the levy wlll be placed on the ballot again in November.

•,.
••
••

I'

new gas-operated appliances,
would
be
saying it
unenforc"Cable.
But he failed on a 4().53
vote, and il the Senate

mlllion voters Tuesday, Rob, a 37-year-old northern Virginia
attorney, posted a solid six per cent victory in a three-way race
against two state legislators.

objections on grounds entire
communities such as CUlton
and Glendale depend on gaspowered street lights, .
"I feel certa in that the city
of Cincinnati will respond for
the g_ood of tl1e state and will
develop a program to
eliminate outdoor · gas
lighting if we pass this blll,"
said Rep. Thomas J . carney ,
D·Boardman, one of the
authors ol the Demorratic

Court in Chicago charged
Gleason, former board
chairman of the Mercantile
National Bank of Chicago,
with converting $528,745 of
bank funds to his own use.
Gleason, 62, ol Winnetka,
was national American
Legion commander in the
1950s and was head of the
Veterans Administration
from 1961 to 1965.
The grand jury charged the

remove the section barring

nomination in an upset.
In a light turnout of less tban 24 per cent ol the state's 2

ol

representatives from
Ci nc innati voiced loud

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
federal grand jury Tuesday
charged John S. Gleason Jr.,
former national American
Legion commander and
former head ol the Veterans
·Admi nistration, with
misapplying more than
$500,000 in hank funds lor his
personal use.
The Justice Department
said a three-&lt;:ount Indictment
returned in U. S. District

11

By United Press International /
RICHMOII!D. VA. - PRESIDENT LYNDON Johnson's
son-in-law, Cbarles Robb, has won the Democratic nomination
for lieutenant governor ol Virginia in his first bid lor public
office. Populist Henry Howell won the gubernatorial

"decorative. 1 '

11

with

In quick fa shion the House
~dopted amendments :
- By Rep. A.G. Lancione,
DBellaire, eliminating a six·
month jail term and $1,000
line for repeat offenses of
using gas lor deco rative
lighting and swirruning pools
or selling new grain drying
equipment without informing
the buyer ol its fuel
requirements. A $100 line
would be imposed lor all

grade .

sociobiologists theorize that
11
aggression, altruism and
rac ists.
The protestors were hooted homosexuality are among
transmitted
out ol the hall by the traits
genetically.
ga thering ol 650 scientists
1
'Many people don't want to
who engaged in shouting
know
what human nature
matches with them.
r
eally
is," said Garrett
~'oes ol the science cbarged
Hardin,
professor ol hwnan
it is not only racist but sexist,
ecology
at
the University of
similar to Nazi genetic beliefs
11
Calilornia,
Santa Barbara .
of Superior" humans a nd an
The new scientific field
exploitation of Charles
Darwin 's "survival of the emerged in 197~ with the
fittest " evolution th eory. publication ol a book by
Prof.
tium8nities Co nverge nc~ They said it prolongs racial Harvard biology
P rogram,
which
is stereotypes and ignores Edward . Wil son,
" Sociobiology : The New
§ponsoring the symposium ol social change .
\he nation 's largest scientific
The
highly
charged Synthesis."
organization.
sociobiology dispute has
: "No one has ever before divided
the
academic
REVIVAL SET
suggested that behavior is C&lt;Jmmunity.
Freedom Gospel Mission at
Inherited and subject to
A spokesman lor the Bald Knobs will hold a
~volutionary forces," he said symposium
said revival starting this evening
at the gathering ol the
and running through Sunday
American Association lor the
night. Meetings wlll begin at
·Mvancement ol Science.
7:3D p. m. each evening. The
: · The C&lt;Jntroversial two-day
MONTREAL (UPI ) _ The Rev. 0 . G. McKinney, pastor ,
;meeting convened Tuesday to
!~on's ider a new science, Montreal Expos .have signed invites the public to attend.
:sociobiology, which claims live players selected in last
MILWAUKEE (UP! ) i~uman behavior traits may week's free agent draft, the
Gordon Johnc ock, who
!l)e inherited in the same way club announced Tuesday.
suffered head and neck
l ~enes pass on physical
Heading the latest group is lllJUnes when his car
!characteristics like hair Gregory Staffon, a right· slammed into the wall on the
t~olor.
handed
pitcher
from third turn in Sunday's Rex
j• Angry, chanting Hawthorne, Calif., who was Mays Classic at State Fair
rdemonstrators tried chosen in the second round. Park , was discharge d
1vPsuccessfully to halt the
Also reaching· terms were Tuesday !rom Milwaukee
;&amp;art of the symposium.
David Hall, an outfielder County General Hospital.
: ' After
picketing
the from Winnetka m.; Bruce
Outside of a stiff neck and
•(neeting, about 20 members McAllister, a shortstop from upper back, Johncock, 40,
!or the Committee Against Dover, N.H.; Thomas said he was feeling good
~ ' l!aciAm
entered
the Haggerty, a first baseman Monday but doctors kept him
· !!)niversity building where it is from Phoenix Ariz .; and in another day to take more .
;oomg .held and shouted:
Walter Coppol, a IP.ftilanded X-rays of his head. No serious
: : " Racist pigs; Stop the pitcher from Claymont, Del. . injuries were ·found .

businesses ,

motels

swimming p:Klls.

standa r d
co urses
in
kinde rgarte n through 12th

debate . No free speech lor

by

including

energy eonscrvation in driver
education courses and in

Battle over genes joined

'.

demonl'llratl! his product ur
s~rvi ce
would increase
ener~y efficiency and lower

send the proposal back to would impose future bans on

Although the House Energy
and Environment Committee
majority
Demo c rati c had worked on the bill for
lawmakers to last winter's thr ee months, opponents,
mainly Republicans, poked
fuel shortage .
The measure was adopted holes in it until a senes of
59·35 and sent to the Senate, amendments enabled it to
t&gt;ut not before it was pass. Six Republicans offset a
defect in g
cpnsiderably watered down half -d oze n
Democrats
as
the
proposal
I? quiet oppone nts and secure
was
fin
ally
adopted
.
oassaJ=:e.

By RICK DUBROW
. SAN FRANC::ISOO (UP!) ~major scientific meeting is
&lt;'Onsiderlng the "shocking "
idea that homosexuality and
other human behavior may
be inherited - despite
protests that the notion also
has
strong
racist
linpticatlons.
~ " It 's a shocking theory ,"
said Michael Gregor y,
director of San Francisco
State University's Science·

cneq~y

heaters , all a&lt; nf Jan . I. 1979.

The bill. sponsor{.'d by Rep .
Eu~cne Branstool, 0 -Utica ,

NO SMOKtN&lt;;
COLUMBUS tUP il - The
Ohio lloose Tuesday adopted
Sena te-passed legislation

OPEN

WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMP
SHOPPERS

9 til 7
Mon.-Sat.
10 til 5

I

MON. 8:30-5:00
TUES. 8:30-5:00
WED. 8:30-5:00
THURS. 8:30-12:00
FRI. 8:30-8:00
SAT. 8:30-5;00

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.
HOURS :

Sunday

Man ., Thurs. &amp; Sat .
8:00-5 : 30
8:00-8:00 .

Prices Effective Thursday thru Sunday

,,

STORE HOURS

l

••

�14 - The Daily Sentinel. Maddleport-l'onwruy. U , Wl'&lt;lrlt'sdar ..luna• I&gt;. 1~; i

15-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday, Jun~ 15. 197i

Smith has 2-stroke lead

Nursing conference is set
POMEROY
The
American Cancer Society on
July 7 will sponsor an area
nursing conference open to
R.N.'&gt;, L.P.N.'s and allied
health personnel.
The subject lor the conference will be "Chemotherapy
and
the
Nurse." Speakers for the day
will be Warren Parrish,
American Ca nce r Society
Ohio Division Representative ; Thomas Stevenson,
M.D.. Dept. ol Pathology,

Ohio State University
Ho&gt;pital, Columbus; Ellen
Grubb, R.N., Clinical Nurse
Specialist, Ohio State
University Comprehensive
Cancer Center. Columbus;
Deborah Roedige r, R.N.,
Head Nurse on Medical Floor
Richmond Hts. General
Hospital, Richmond Hts .;
Leona Mourad, R.N., M.S.N.,
Assistant Professor School ol
Nursing
Ohio · State
University. Columbus.
The conference will be held
at Meigs High School in the

ZANESVll..LE, Ohio (UPI J
- Defending champion
Chuck Smith of Delaware
took a tw&lt;&gt;-stroke lead into the
final 18 holes today in the
22nd annual Ohio Golf
Association
Pre-Seniors
tourney.
smith fired a three-under
par 69 over the 6,607-yard
Zanesville Country Club
TUesday to take the lead over
playing partner John Gerard,
&amp; seven-handicapper from
Columbu9.
Smith, 41, had three birdies
and no bot!eys In getting his
69. Gerard had a 37 oo the
front nine, but matched
Smith's 34 111 the back side.
Gerard bot!eyed four holes,
but birdied three.

cafeteria from 9 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. Certificates will be
awarded for attendance and
CEU's have been applied for.
The conference is free and

there is a $2 luncheon lee per
person .
Anyone wishing to attend
should complete the fonn
below and mail it and a check
for their luncheon to the
American Cancer Society,
Meigs County Unit. P. 0 . Box
692, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. For
more infonnation please call
the Cancer office at 992·7531.

J\RCA NUR S l NG CONFERENCE
" C II C N U '1' If E R (1. I' Y

A N 0

P r e-H~ g istr&lt;H1on

PLEASE P RIN T :

T H E

N U R S E"

Deadl ine: Ju ne .10,

l977

T-i red

Name ----------------------------------•Coun~y _ _______-1
Addr ess

City - - - - - - - - · - - State _ _ __ _ _ _ Zip Code

Hak e Checks P.::i. ydble a.nJ Mail Wl.th t his form to:

- -----1

$2.00 Per

P~rson

IF VOU hove a service to offer,

want fo buy or sell something ,
oe looking for work . . . or
whatever ... you 'll get results

Luncheon F'ee

laster with a Sentinel Want Ad .

N-1ERICAN CJ\.NCF;R SOCIETY
~teiiJ ' s County UniL
Post Office! £\ox 69 2

Pomeroy, Ohio

Market Report

-Call992-2156.
-.-- --- --·

YA RD SALE . 257 Main Street , Mid-

4 5769

dleport. Weds . and Thursday ,

,,,,,,,;,,,,,:;;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,~,.,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,,,,:z:&lt;=~:::-,w.•~-::.w;c;:;~'i:l$·

w

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- 1 washington

COLUMBUS {UP!)
Monday's livestock auction:
Compared with last week
slaughter steers and heifers
steady to 2 lower, slaughter
cows 2.5(1.3 lower, slaughter
bulls and bullocks 1·2 lower,
vealers 2·5lower, feeder
cattle steady to 2 lower at
Marysville, 2 higher at
Creston. Slaughter steers :
Choice and prime 2-4 900-1250
38-40.75; few individual 41.00.
42; choice 2-3 115().1275 37-39;
· good and choice 2-3 1000..1400
36-38.50; good 2-3 950-1400
33.75-37.
Slaughter heifers: Choice
few prime 2-4 86!&gt;-1000 3638.90; choice2-3 785 35; choice
4-5 851'-1150 33.75-35.50; good
and choice 2-3 950-1100 36.2537.75; good 2-3 725-1150 32-36.
Slaughter cows: Utility and
commercial 2-4 860-1760 2328.85; cutter 1-2 670-1400 2227; canner 1-2 626-1250 17.00.
24.85.
Slaughter bulls : 1's 1025· 2000 32.85-35.85; 1·2 1110.2000
30-34; 2's 950-1410 28-32.85.
Bullocks: Good 1-2 900-1185.
34-35.50.
Vealers; Choice and prime
130.220 47-M; choice 80-.250 3248; good 126-275 33-45; good
60.140 14-31; bulk 2().31.
Feeder cattle: Choice
steers 525-820 35-39.25; few
good 47:&gt;-725 31-35; standard
and good ~ 28-31.50;
heifers chOice 350-725 28.00.
31.75; good 401).745 22-29.75.
Hogs: Barrows and gilts
steay to 1.30 higher, sows :26.90 lower, boars under 240 .45
higher; Barrows and gilts lot
1·2 225 45.60; 1·3 200-250 4445.50; 1-3 195-225 43-43.50; 2-3
191-276 42.9~43.70; . sows
medium and l's 34!1-460 35.4036.50; 1-3 J00..420 4Q.41.50; 400.
550 37-.'18; 2-3 403-MO 33.2537.10.
.
Feeder pigs: 1-3 20 15 per
head, 30 T/.50 per head, 00-60
34.5().38 per head.
Sheep; Slaughter lambs
steady oo I higher, spring
lambs choice and prime 83110 47-54.50; 123 50.25; choice
7i1'104 45-.'iO; slaughter ewes
utility and good 11~151 10.14.

l$

;$

:~(

:;~

R eport

..

The
registration deadline date for
the 14day wilderness canoe
trip sponsored by Rio Grande
College-Community College
has been extended to Thursday, July 7.
There are still a few
openings left for the trip,
scheduled for Aug. 1·14,
which will take nine people
into the Quetico Province in
Ontario, Canada.

~
~
;;;:

By Clarence
Miller

Inthe93rdCongress,abill
was Introduced to create a
federal regulatory program
for youth camp safety. It was
not until the following
Congress that the bill reached
the House floor where it was
approved on a vote of 197-114.
The Senate took no action on
the measure.
This year, however, the biU
has been resurrected and will
soon face another House test.
Under the bill as reported
from Committee, the federal
government, specifically the
Department of Health,
Education and Welfare,
would regulate and
set
standards on a wide variety
of camping activities for
youth under 18 years old.
HEW bureaucrats could
inspect camps at anytime,
det er mine st aff
qualifications , establish

HIS AND HERS
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Cynthia Lang, a fashion
model who said she lived with
rork singer Alice Cooper for
seven years after he
promised to share his lifetime
wealth with her, sued Cooper
Tuesday . lor · her half -estimating it at $7.5 million
now and $90,000 a year in the
future.
Miss Lang, Tl, said she
gave up her career in 1968 to
live with Cooper, 28, to
"devote her full time and
attentions to caring for his
personal needs as his com·
panlon, homemaker and
confidante," until they
separated in 1975.
A spokesman for Cooper
said "No comment- there's
a lot to say, but no com·
!flent."

South Carolina. Willey is an
instructor and coach at Rio
Grande.
Anyone interested should
Phone 245-.'i353 for additional
information and course
requirements.

extensive reporting
requirements, set specific
safety standards, create
ratios of staff to campers and
so on. If a camp is found in
violation of any requirement,
HEW could dismiss the stall
or close the camp down.
The well are of our
youngsters while at camp is a
legitimate concern, but is it a
proper function of the federal
government to oversee? I
think not.
Camp safety is bette.r
·achieved, more efficiently
maintained by consumer and
industry or local regutation.
There is no evidence that
camp injuries or fatalities
are at epidemic proportions
to warrant a national
response. A survey of camps
conducted · by HEW in the
states of Washington, Pennsylvania and Florida during
the 1975 camping season
found campers are far s;~fer
than their peers In the
general youth -population. In
fact, caljlps have sixty times
fewer fatalities and five
times fewer injuries than the
· same youth populace at
large.
·
My concerns about this bill
are as follows :
i.) it would create a new,
large powerful bureaucracy
costing $37.5 million
2.) its new financial and
paperwork burdens may
force many efficient and safe
camps to close
3.) its definitions are . so
broad as to include many
activitie$ not presently antlclpated
,.
4.) It could lead to federal
control of other areas where
safety issues exist such a!
parks, playgrounds, swimming pools and beaches
If federal bureaucrats get
their foot in this door, as
experience has repeatedly
shown, their authority wUI
not stop at just safety. HEW's
tentacles could soon extend to
interfering with a camp's
curriculum, hiring practices,
admission's policy, program
format, and ministry.
However well intentioned
the bill's proponents may be,
what they really may get in
the "camel's nose in the tent"
- a most serious threat to
personal and religious
freedoms.

and South Second , Monday thru

Thursday , 9 till 5. Friday , 9 !ill
-~i~dleport.
---YARD SALE Weds . and Thursday.
Clothing, c u(lain s, etc. behind
post office in long Bottom at

TV

·rT_?.~~~ym::::
an.:c'•::.·---· _ _
GARAGE SALE, Weds ., Thursday ,
and Friday. June IS-17th. 109
Spring Ave ., Pome·roy . Ol'd
dresser, cool stove , cash
..legister , and mi~~~tems.
YARD SALE starting noon . 14th,
and all day 15th , 16th. Ed Miller
resi dence, Cherry St ., Racine.
Phone 949 -2361 .
3 FAMIL V YARD Sole just off Rt.

Re-

124 on County Rood l2 , 1/ 1 mile
past Langsville Bridge . First
trailer on left . Phone 742-2830.

GARAGE SALE, 4 'h miles west of
Tuppers Plairis , Friday and Saturday. June · 17 and· 18th , on Stole
Rt. 581 ot Alfr'ed . Phone 985-3504.
2 FAMILY YARD So le , Friday and
Saturday , 17 and 18. lots of
childrens clothing . furni ture.
quilt, Don Walker , 5th Street .
~ocine Ohio.

.

runs?

WEL-L 1 FAA&amp;, IT ~S L.IKE

Tt1E:.'/'Ve CA(JGIHT iJOIJES

GOAL..-TeNDINGJI .heAIN I

@

You won't find

re~runs

in your Daily Sentinel ••• just fresh,

interesting local, state and national news plus .pictures,_
feature stories, women's news·, sports and advertising on..
the excellent values that are available at the retail
and ·food stores.

You' II Find It
•
1n
Fresh .D aily

The Daily Sentinel

~

~

The wilderness tfip is
planned to provide first hand
experience in environmental
study, swimming, canoeing,
camping, open fire cooking
and ecology. Eight of the 14
days will be spent in travel
through tue Quetico-Superior
Wilderness.
Dr. Bruce Curtis and Bob
WIUey are instructors for the
trip. CurtiS i1 on the faculty of
Columbia College, Columbia,
I

~--

~-~ -----~

•
JAMES MORGAN ,
. Address unknown_ ;

CHARlES MORGAN ,
Address unknown ;
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS ,
DEVISEES , LEGATEES,
ADMINISTRATORS,
EXECUTOR 5 AND ASSIGNS
OF
EACH
OF
THE
FOLLOWING
DEFEN DANTS :
Ellen Morgan ,
Elizabeth M. Blough ,_ James
Morgan, Ct,arle5 Morgan,
~ara Jones, Elizabeth Coates,
Herbert A. Coates, Hiram
Jones, Elizabeth Jone,s,
Thomas T . Jones and Joseph
Jones, Address Unknown ;

ET AL.,
Defendants.

No·. 16,442
-SERVICE BY
PUBLICATIONTO THE DEF.ENDANTS
ABOVE NAMED :
You are hereby notified
th at a Com.plalnt has been
filed in the · common Pleas
Court of Meigs county, Oh i o,
Case No . 16,442, demanding
partition of the following
described real estate, to -w i t :
Parcel No . 1: The following
described real estate situate
In Su tton Township, in the
County of Meigs, and State of
Ohio. to ·wit ; And be ing in one
hundred acre lot nuri'il'lered
two hundred and ninety seven In the Ohio Company's
Purchase, and being in the
To.wnship of Sutton and
Village of Syracuse in sa i d
Co unt y
and
State
and
beginning f ifteen feet Sou t h of
lot numbec one in Car leton's
Addition to said Vil lage ;
thence Sout11 one hundred
feet ; thence west ninety .
eight feet ; thence North one
hundred teet; thence East
ninety -eig ht feerto the place
of beginning .
Parcel No . 2: Also~ the
fol low ing real estate situate
In the County of Meigs and
State of Ohio. and in one
hundred acre lo t No. 297 in
Town No . 2, and Range No. 12
1
of the Ohio Company ' s
Purchase, and being a strip of
land 25 feet by 100 feet and
bounded as follows ; Beg in ning at the northwest corner
of a lot formerly belonging to
Said Elizabeth Jones at tt1e
alley; thence west a long tt1e
alley 25 feet to a stake ;
lhence sou th 100 feet to a
stake; thence east 25 feet to a
stake at the southwest corner
of said lot formerly belong ing
to Elizabeth Jones; ·thence
North 100 teet to place of
beginning .
1
' Parcel No. 3 : The following
described real estate , to -wit :
e:eing 1 acre located in the
South West corner of the
N.orfh East 1 31/_. acre of
Ff'"actlon No . 31 , in Bedford
T-ownship, Meigs County.
Ohio .
' Parcel No. 4: The following
described real estate, to -wit :
Being ::v. acre located in the
North East corner of Frac tion No . 31 in Bedford
Township, Meigs County ,
Ofllo.
.
. Retreence Deed : Vol. 150,
P-age 530, Deed Records
Meigs County, Ohio .
,
' YOIJ are notif ied that you
ate required to answer the
Cpmplalnt within twenty eight days atter the last
PUblication.
The
last
PUblication will be made on
the 22nd day of June, 1977 .

'·

1&gt;!15

\

residence. June 15 and 16 behind
post office, Cli fton, W.VA . Follow
signs . Macrame. clothes , misc.

Pll!lntlff,
vs.

~

Total cost is $285, including
tra!lllportation, lodging and
food. A $100 non-refundable
deposit must accompany
registration. Those who
complete the trip and
required course work will
receive three hours of credit
in outdoor educatloo studies
from Rio · Grande CollegeCommunity College.

YARD SALE: Clarence Wamsley

IN THE
COMMON PlEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
THOMAS J . SCOTT,

Bollen

FUNNY BUSINESS

and 16th. 10:00 A .M .
P.M . White uniforms,
Women 's shoes . size
4 B. Curtains , dishes ,

women's clothes , size 12, etc ,
....__. - YARD SALE at corner of Mulberry

·X

Extend registration
deadline for trip
rl!O GRANDE -

June 15
till 4:00
size 14 .
ION and

.

LARRY E. SPENCER,
CLERK OF COURTS,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
(5) 11, 18, 25 (6) I, 8, 15 . 22. ltc

r '

•'

1

Walt Brownback,
Worthington, fired a SS-24-72
for third place.
In fOUI'!h was Bob Widener,
Medina, who had 38-35-73.
Tied for fifth were Dick
Quinn, Zanesville, John
Bowers, Columbus, and Bob
Miller, Mansfield, all at 74.
Youngstown's Rick Jones,
the 1975 champ who was
edged out by Smith last year,

was amoog a trio at 7~. Joe
Sugar, Columbus, and Ray
Tenser, Warren, also had 7Ss.
Zanesville's Don Blancett ,
who won the 1963 Pre-&amp;nior
at Zanesville Country Club,
was at 76.
1'hree-time Pre-Senior
champ Bob Seyerle, Ashland,
who won in 1965, 1970, 1971,
came in with an 84.

By BILL MADDEN
" I've surprised myself,"
UP! Sports Writer
admitted Hiller. "! didn't
When Detroit Tige rs' think I could go eight or nine
Manager Ralph Houk had imings like I have. lt's nice to
only nne reliable starting he able to do that because it
pitcher - rookie Dave · gives you a feeling of .
Rozema -- three weeks ago accomplishment."
he pulled reliever Jvhn Hiller
Elsewhere in the American
out of the bullpen and made League, Boston clubbed
him a starter.
Chicago, 7-1, New York put
It paid off and Hiller has away Kansas City, 4-2, Texas
performed too well to go back downed Cleveland, 7-2,
to the bullpen permanently. California outlasted Min" He'll be starting more and nesota . 12-9, Baltimore beat
more because "f the Milwaukee, 8-5, and Oakland
schedule," said Houk.
topped Seattle, 6-3.
Hiller's latest effort, a four. Yankees 4, Royals %:
hit, 7-2 vi~tory over the
Don Gullett hurled a fourToronto Blue Jays Tuesday hitter and Roy White drew a
night, made him 2-3 as a hases~oaded walk oo force
starter, but in only one of home the tie-breaking run in
those games did he give up the eighth inning. After loser
more than three runs.
Andy Hassler ran the count to
Hiller, who struck out 12 ~ on White, Larry Gura
batters, gave up solo homers relieved and completed the
In Ron Fairly and Doug walk before giving up an RBI
Rader, but got all the runs he single oo Lou Piniella.
needed in the fourth when the Red Sox 7, White Sol&lt; 1:
Tigers seared four times, the
George Scott drove in four
key blow being a two-run runs with a pair of homers
triple by Tito Fuentes and a while Rick Wise and Bill
sacrifice fly by Rusty Staub. r.amnt-11 - - bined. on a

Classi c," a men's sanctioned
slow·pit~h softball tour·
nament on the weekend of
July 2 and 3, with July 4to be
used in case ol raiJ1.
Entry lee for this tournament will be $50 lor sanctioned teams and $60 for nonsanctioned teams. The
tournament entries will be
limited to 30 teams.
The drawing will be held on
June 29 at 7 p.m. at Diamond
No. I, La bold Field, in Portsmouth, Ohio.
B and L Blacktop from
Columbus, Ohio Is the
"Portsmouth Classic"
defending champion.
.
For more · information
concerning the tournament,
contact Sam McGraw (614)
354-1886; Mike Prater (614)
354-2161 ; or Dewey Lykins
(614 ) 778-2928 at Portsmouth,
Ohio.

and witnessed the fight.
Cleveland general manager
PhU Seghi said the fan was
arrested on a charge of
disorderly conduct.
"Later 1 went to the
commissioner and told him I
was representing Corbett and
not to make the fine too
heavy," smiled Seghi. "Kuhn
just laughed.
"And befofe the game I
was telling the commissioner
what a nice quiet night It was
going to be."

fourhitter. Scott's first homer served up Kelly's homer and
was a solo shot in the fourth, was the loser. Lee May also
followed two pitches later by homered lor Baltimore, while
another homer by Bernie Cecil Cooper had a solo
Carbo. Scott added a thr.ee· homer for Milwaukee .
run homer to cap a five..-un A's 6, Mariners 3:
eighth.
Pinch-hitter Jim Tyrone
Angels 1%, Twins 9:
lined ~ two..-un, seventhJoe Rudi, who now as 13 inning single and Wayne
homers and ~2 RBI, smacked Gross hit his 15th home run, a
a pair of homers, a double two-run shot in the eighth oo
and drove in five runs for the rally the A's to a comeback
Angels. California shortstop victory .
Mario Guerrero cootributed
three RBI in a 5-for-.5 night at
BOSTON ( UP!) -- The
the plate.
Boston Red Sox announced
Rallgers 7, Indians Z: ·
Dave May belted a three- TUesday illght they have
run homer and Tom Grieve signed free-agent first
added a two..-un shot to power baseman Andy Chardt and
the Rangers. Gaylord Perry pitcher Mark Baum, one of 28
went 71-3 innings for his sixth players named by the club in
win, while Wayne Garland last week's major league
was charged with his seventh draft.
Baum's signing brings to 18
loss.
the number of draftees who
Orioles B, Brewers S:
Pat Kelly's three run have come to terms with tbe
homer capped a four-1'\111 lith Red Sox, the Red Sox said.
Both players will report to
inning oo enable the Orioles to
Boston's
Elmira farm team
pull out a see-saw victory.
in
the
New York-Penn
Rookie Dennis Martinez was
League,
the
Red Sox said.
the wimer while BUI Castro

KIOGU

---------------M ·

I

12

·-··------------- M

COST CUTTER COUPON

·--

12 I

COST CUHI• COUPON

Wesson
Oil

Meat or
Franks

SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Soock
in the Mariners hockey franchise Is being sold back to the
World Hockey Associatioo,
Mariners' General Manager
Ballard
Smith
said
Tuesday,
Ray Kroc, owner of the
Mariners, has signed an
agreement with the WHA, the .
terms of which were not
disclosed.

•

Hiller fans 12 m 7-2 wm

Newberry's Sporting Goods
Softball Team is sponsoring
the annual " Portsmouth

Indian fan arresied
CLEVELAND {UP! ) Texas Rangers owner Brad
Corbett battled a Cleveland
fan in the stands Tuesday
night while his baseball team
was pummeling the India!lll
on the field.
Witnesses said a fan in his
mid 20's behind the Rangers'
dugout kept yelling at the
Texas players on the field.
They say he called Corbett
1
' Fatso" when he found out
who he was.
"He
kept
yelling
vulgarities onoo the field, so I
went over and oold him oo cut
it out because there were a lot
of women and children in the
area," said Corbett.
"When I told him I was
going to call the police, he
stuck his linger in my eye,"
he added. "But I got in a few
good swings."
Baseball Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn was at the game

•

'Portsmouth
to host '77
tournament

I
I
I
I
I

Clorox

I

I
' I
I
I
I
I

c

ilmmL 1'U1cwf

lTEI)

COPw•oan lm-TNII(IC)OU co. ~TaM...., ..as

COUP'ONPIRFAMILY
-lmlll....l - l t. IIU
..., "~ n•naliUI. JWJ

GOOD....,.,I' JUMIII, lmTMIUIANmAV JUNitt.

""'"'

r:3::~1·a~J
"'
~

£·
•

UMIT 11'11 COUPON

•ntuTWtr•u.atn

r::.. .

Thurodoy, Juno 16, 1177

-~

WITH COUI'ON

•

..aCT IIIIMICMU ITin . .

""' IIIU

..,;,;

l!!JIIHIHIM..IIItiiiiHIIHtUII-

ASTRO•GRAPH i

fiW·:•;' ' C):·c;;;"' JIIfl.l

Bernice Bede Osol ·

iS
:

A\10(!][1

w

~

Tll ere is a strong possibility this
year that you'll tread paths you
never trod before. Excitment and
adv-3nture lie ahead , but blaze
the trail cautio-usly .

rill·
.
2o-;"-ciiF
=

5-7-ll, AVC. WHOLE .(SLICED .. • Ll. W)

Smoked

Hi Nu 2%

19
·Shampoo .... :.. ..

16·01 .
111.

5

cri~lde Cut

French Fries... . ,;~b~.

stOKELY

$139

ea••u., s.~ta4

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
Try not to come on too strong today with one you've recently met,
or you'll chase thi s person away
before he gets to know you .

SMALL CUID 01 LAIGI CUID

KC.roger Ch
Ottage

8818

29c
99 C

Ctn.

SMcopthe h
u....
ou was .. .. . 111.

$129·

40~

OFF · j

WITH COUPON
, . ntl PUitOWol Of -

I
i
:

1-ll UJIUCPAI

Sonka Coffee

i

""lflU Mrw.lf 1111 II, lfP7
IIMCnt-""'t.tfaf mnut

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sun ..
TWI
IIUlfl " UPUCMU
'
L1C1iL

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20'. OFF · i..

WITH COUPON

.... ,.. ,...,. 01
iAOI VIIU

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5

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30' OFF

~

WITH COUPON

=
-

..-n~~N~CW~•-11-01. CA111.et.

i:

- ..,

Arkansas
Tomatoes ..............lb.

~:;:':b:~~ies ........ 5129
01.

w~...,,

............... M ..

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

.......... lf. Mtt....--.

12 fi'IICIS CHICK IN .

~~;;:c;:ALAD.6DINNIIIOlLS

Chicken ................ Each
•

$ 49

4

f

lit!!· ~ '·'.:!&lt;'&lt;! ~ .-;;-,.-.~-;; 11Mi
21

U-ot, 5-Qt.

Big K Drink Aid

-.
..........
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-.--~- ----'
...._...
..................
.....,

luyO..At$1.19 GeiO.. i

.......................... i UM#r·FI\EE
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tlll.vTUMn.l-ll. ltrJ
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Lal TIUJ

Clli1 lllllllllllllfiii11UMIIIIIUI

lbs.

O~QSCOLL

•

-;-;.., ·· " '·• "'•• lllf\12

~ No Pest Strip

HOMI GIOWN FLAYOH

can•

TAURU$ (April 20·Miy 20)

-

__I

l ~e_)IIIIIIIIUIUIIIIIIUIMII,IUIU.dl

S
S

WHOLIMILONS . .. EACH 11 .19

17•01.

tend to spark prematurely today.
Take ca re not to ope.n . your
mouth and spoil something
which could be very._good for
you .

:

=

Red Ripe
Watermelons ... ......lb.

3 age

Stokely .
Applesauce.. .

:

li5
=

CUT INTO HAL VIS 01 QUARrElS

You

cNEWSPfiPER ENT~RPRISI-: .-\SSN I

sgc

Golden
Ripe Bananas .. ..
California
Bing Cherries ........ .lb.

· ·

u-a•.

-..nTI~~NUa~llln•
tiCAl TAW

~

·~ Big K Drink Aid ~

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) In

There's a possibility you CO\Jid
suffer a ross today because ' of
the rash judgment of a business
associate . Eye closely any
partnership activities.

129

$

• Mou th lids .. ........... :...........12-C•.sgc
Wtde
""•·
12-et 79c
Regular Caps .............................. ""•·

family matters today, try to keep
things on an eqvitable basis
between you and. your mate._If
either Is overshadow~d. the
other will be angry .

ARIES (Morell 21·Apr1111)

$

Texas
Cantaloupes

Regular lids.. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. •.. .. .. . 212·"·75c
""•'·

Kroter Flaky
.
9'/,-oz.
B'fICUI•t1 .............
Tube

'tMartllll~l-U. Ith ~

···r;:;

12-CI.

Regular Jan..................... c•••·
..._
th
12-Ct $299
Quart W,,.. Mou Jars .... ... ........ c...·

OlD FASHtON 01 FAitMSTYll

5

s
•
r!i.ttniiiiiiiiiiHIItiiiiiHIIKI. . .
(Dill I . .. .. - .. . .

Quart

CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon. 11)
You may take on new responsibilities where you earn your
bread and butter. Unless you ·
treat them seriously , th ings
cou ld go awry.
·

t

i:'

:

• ReguIa rJars.... .. .. .. .. .. .. ... .. .. c••• $239
P•nt
12-CI $269

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)

21) Your judgment Is too easily
influenced today by outside
opinions and pressures . You
could please the others. but
wrong yourself.

C•n•

i

~

Sliced
Bacon .................. Pkl-Ib11 :
SERVE 'N' SAVE
Sliced Luncheon 1-lb.
Meat 1 .................. Pkg.

17-o:z.

BBQ Sauce

~-

Mixed · ~~
Fryer Parts. · ·"""' .lb.

3

Fruit •
Cock tad . .. ... .

~

·~

foil t-.lt C..O.- h-11 Y•lloprSIM

liBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) In
fin ancial mauers. this could be
an expensive day . You're too Impatient to get au the facts to
make a logical evaluatiOn .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc.

'

II

. .IJ("T.'•.H;o

HOLLY IIOGE FAI:MS

Baby
.

WITH COUPON

~IHIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHICI

HOLLV FAlMS. U.S.D.A. INSI'ECTED

II• OfF LAUL, JOHNSON &amp;
JOHNSON

··~

,.uTIIII'UIOIJI
• -.or. an. D"tun

-

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beel. ... ..... .lb.

Lowfat Milk

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sipt. 22) Fresh
ambitions may be awakened to·
day, but don't rush into them
without discretion. If you move
too fast . you might trip over your
own shoelaces.

Joint ventures could take an une"'pected turn today and cause
complications ·with associates.
Should something extraordinary
occur, keep your cool.

SLICED ... Ll. 79'
IEGULA. OR CHUIPAK

1

=
5

s:

--... _, ICniCI ............. .....lb •

KIOGU

Astra-Graph , P.O . . Box 489, .
Radio City Slation, N.Y. 10019.

lEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Don't
build your hopes too high on a
new interes t today. It's a bit more
uncertain and c:omple"' than it
appears on the surface.

,

p• •

GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20)
Before involving your~elf ln any
new ventures, tidy up the old
ones first. If you don't, they may
overlap and cause nothing but
confusion. To find out more
about yourself send tor your
copy of Astra-Graph Letter . Mail
50 cents for each a long, self·
addressed. stamped envelope to

bygones be bygones today
where an old d ispute with a
friend Is concerned. There is
certainly no merit" to reopening
wounds now.

~-

!

\IIIUITU .....
ti.IIHJ
IIUCTTUfPUCIMUtan . .
tJMLIUU
.!!..)ltHIIIIMIIItiiiiiiiHIIIIIIIII
~

Juno !6,' 1977

CANCER (June 21-July 22) let

t ·•IIIMMI P.t.a

Kroger Pudding

$:

mnwlli~ffi\1

Be sure ·to specify you r birth
·
sign.

WITH COUPON
ue .. ,...,. • •

WllH COU,ON

1 COU'(tll NIIIIM!lY

•lf'lll•:.rr•
"n
-.m11
~ran•

IH11111111• •HNI

J"'
·

�•o - ""' uowv MI'IUN!I, Mlarueport-t'omeroy, v .. weone!ICily, JWle 1~, 1977

' ~----...
'

I

wANTAn
CHARGES

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

15 Words or Undef'
c.~.

....

1.00

I U:.tr

~ilii)'!i
3dit)'!&amp;
&amp;Wiy~
£Hd1

1.80

a.oo
wunJ

l'l'urd!i is 4

lilt! 11\UIIIIIWII 15
ptr word pt&gt;r d11y.

UVl'f

t'ettt..!l

"WI ruunlug other uwm

COI~.WCuU vt!

Will bt&gt; &lt;.'hiHjj~ lit tilt! I tlilly

~)"il
flllll'.

In m~mory, Dll'd or Tlumk:; amd
OOilwny ; 6 ~·t&gt;niJ ~r won.l. $3.00
tnUI!.IliWll . Cl!Ulh Ul »1..1\'iiiiCt! .

Mobile Honlf ~~~~~ 111Ml V111'd ~~Mlr11
ifl' iit't'l'pl~ WI])' Wllh Citt! JI ,..1\h

unkl'. :!!; ct:nl du.rgr fvr itWI c.v.r-ry·
Ull(

Box Nurn!Jt:r In Care ul Tlw &amp;·n-

} "or Rent

FOUND - FEMALE Beagle, black ,
ton and while wearing block
collar. Phone 992-3796 . Fisher
St. , Middleport .

3 AND 4 RM. furnished and un- COAl . ltmes.lone . and colttum

BLACK POODLE lq1-t , 2 year&amp; old ,
wearing chocker chain . no tog.
Boys pet. Con Tact Ronald Lon·
dakar at Kopple 's Pennzoil.
LOSl - LARGE DOG in Kin gsbury.
Rt. 33, Roadside Park areas.
Long hair, mostly block with
some while. Has ·a sostl choin
collar . Phone Bud Wilson,
992-7283 or 992 -2126.

Lmd .

Thr Pullli.!iht!r

rrSt'~l'lli

llw

~hi

w edu or rr/'l;'{'\ lillY 111.1.!&gt; dt.'t'll1t'd vi)
jt...:LIIJfutl. T .e PuUhshcl' Will nut 1.11:
respull!ilblt fur IIM't U101.n on!.! llll'vr·
ft't-1.Uist: 11 ](11J,

PIWJtll' 992-WJ6

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
lndoor ·Outdoor runs , grooming
all breeds, clean •onllory
foci lil ies oe 361-7112 . Cheshire.
Phone (614) 367-0292 .

NOTICE

HOOF HOLLOW . Buy , sell , trade
or train horses. RUTH REEVES,
troiner. Phon_~_(61-A) 69!_-32~:_

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

AKC SHETLAND sheep dogJ.
(M in ,) Collies, 2 females , 7
weeks old . Shots and wormed.
Phone (614 ) 3~7 ·- 0292 or
. 367 -7112 .

Muuday
Nvo11 on Saturd;ay

MEIGS COUNTV Humane Society
Animal Careline, 992-7690: or
otter b p.m., 992 -s.t~- __

TlWsility

thru Fridity
thl' d&lt;i)'

4P.M.

IJdon~

puUllcatiun

Sund11y
4P.M.

PEEK-A-POO dog, l lfl year old.
House broken • ,..ery good with
children. Colt 99:2-7074 or

992.:J.465.
FOR ADOPTION , obondecj 3
week old mole Spaniel puppy,
needt s p~ io l care . Humane

Frid11y uflerntJOil

Society . 9'12·7~
:::.,·:-:,-,-,--

chlortde ond calctum br,ne for
furnished opts. Phone ~2du11.1 control and speCial ml.:ing
543• .
soU fo1 lormers. hcclstor Soh
COUNTRY Mobil• Home Pork , Rt.
Works . Moln Stree t, Pomeroy
33. t'n miles north of Pomeroy.
Ohio or phone 9Ci12- 3891 .
large lots with concr ete patios ,
sid•wolks . runners ond off CAMPER . $«10. Also, horse
trader , $4 50. Phone (614) b98
street parking. Phone 992-7479.

3290.

who passed owov June 15,

1966.
To times long ogo ond years gone

by ,
Our thoughts so often go bock :
When we drove the sorrel ho"e
In those horse and buggy days.
I feel folk think we ho'l'e forgot
When our hearts aeem light and
free .
But down inside ore heortoches ,
Only a smi le con hide .
· Then comes ogoln this time of

yeor
And silent tears still fo!l :
This kind of lrowe that lash and
lasts
Never fades away.
Sadly missed by his wife cmd
family .

FEMALE PART German Shepherd
to give away to good nome,
around l8 months old , Blo&lt;Jk
and ton . Phone992 -3361.
PfEK-A -POO, very good with
children, hous8broken, Phone
992-7074 t;:.r992 -:Wb5 . $50.

CHEN APPLIANCES FURNISHED.
FUH Y CARPETED. STARTING . CB Mobile Transce iver
AT$11 7. PHONE 99H&gt;J65 SYBIL complete with weather
AND JIM WOOD. MANAGERS, proof PA speaker . 2 way
APT. 10.
base loaa ed CB antenna.

for roof tap or trunk mount .
Power co rd , co ax. antenna
cable and all hardware
inc luded .

-

ONLY

SWISS COLONY travel trailers
cus tom mode: MAPLE LEAF
tondems 16' up : CRICKET lrllck
campers specia l at CODNER's
CAMPERS , Rainbow Ridge .
Open evenings. Toke Meigs 28
or 32 to Bashan . Owner . Raben
~od~er , long Botto'!', ~~io .

S69 .9S

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _Ja tkPhone
W . Carsey , Mg r.
99 2-211 1

~

PIANO LESSONS , r:hildrens and
adults . Mrs . Harvey Von
Vrankan . 992-2270.
REWARD OFFERED for information leading to the recovery of
Iorge female Hound , wliite with
black potch over l~~~:fl eye.
Wearing block studded col lar .
Phone 992-7735.
CONCRETE WORK . Patios, steps ,
~olks , and ·driveway!. Pt'tone
992-22AA .

ner .. . Contoct Dick Roberts 1
(61.t) 4A6-7612 for Advertising
Sp.clolties. "He who hestlotes
does without ."

systems . Springs developed.
AU work Is ~C(Ironteed . Brad
Lewis , phone 7A2·2ASI .

Developers . Finest In remodel·
lng , pointing -and concrete
work . Interior and exterior.
Free estimates . Phone

CASH paid for aU rnoke.......and
models . of mobile homes .
Phone oreo code 614·A23·9531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price for standing
sawtimber . Call 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1 -4•~· 8570 .

742·2331.

WANTED · CHIPWOOD Poloo ,
Max . diameter, 10 Inches on
largest end, $8 per ton;, bundled slobs, S6 per ton. Delivered
to Ohio Pollet Company, Rt. :Z,
Pomeroy , Ohio .
Phone
992 -2689.

TAll TIMBERS
NilE CLUB
Rt. 7, Pomeroy,

o.

1~ 2

FLEETWOOO mobile Mome,
t•x65 , 3 bedrooms , 11/t botM,
unfu r nished ,
dishwasher ,
washer and drver, underpining. Pl:tone 667 -6385 after 5
p .m .

U 'x 60' MOBILE HOME. Front
porch. bock patio on 2'1t acres
with new born . Phone 773·5233

LOCAL INSURANCE agency needs
someone to represent them on
an established territory. Good
wages , e~~:cellent benifits, If
vou can meet people don't poss
this up . No experience required, only the will to work .
Send resume to Box 67'2
Pomeroy, Oh . .of5769.
TRAC TOR-TRAILER driver, 2S
years minimum age, 3 yean
e)(parience. Musl pass I.C.C.
requirements .
Minimum
guarantee of $150 w"kly.
Phone 'f92-6666. .
.,._ ..,. --· ----------- ~----GROUP OR Organization to
deliver Mandbills. Phona 99'2-

619&lt;.

'

6 ROOM lroilor, aluminum polio
and underpinn ing in good con dit~on . Birch panelling on insid• . Good as new, ha1 to be
moved. Phone 2-47-2252 .
.......,_
-

___

RETAIL SALES
MANAGEMENT
TRA1NEE

---1911 REBEL MOBILE Home, 12 111:
--

-~--

65, central air. partially furnished, sel up in Mobile Home
Pork . Phone 992-5590. ____ _
2 BEDROOM Trailer, unlurnished ,
100 x SO corner lot, I block from
Syracuse Recreation ~ark .
17.500 lot and trailer. Phone

992·71:J.4.
-------------1970 MONTEREY Mob;lo Homo , 12
)( 60, 2 bedroom plus utility room •
and 150ft . fence. Underpinn ing
and tires incluct.d , $3800. Phone

9'12·5001.

M 'fe~JI'i' 'donlm'
,..-~.:.::•:.

TWO BEDROOM trailer . Brown's
Trailer Court . Adults only.

Phone '192·332A.

84 · LUMBER WILL
OPEN
40
NEW
STORES IN 1.,7.
Averogo eornlngs for llrot
year · exceed
111,000, .
mAnagers Hrn In excess of

120,000.
Share in our 1rowth , Act

now-

S.. Don Wlloon
TH 6·16 IA·IP
IF 6-17 IA-IP
14 LumMr c..
1111 I &amp; Ill. 14
WllllomstOMt, WV
We

ere

an

Equal

Opportunity Employer

1

Now Only

L-----------------------------~.0.

r-----------,

BISSEll SIDING CO
A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

Let us test
Free.

your

water
·

Pomeroy Landmark

r.~ Jack W. Car5e)'. Mgr .
~

Phone 992 -2181

QEALIOQ
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD. SR.
REALTOR
216 E. Second Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Phone 992· 3325

,cAs£ LOT
CAN GOODS

has stove 'and r efrigerator .
Coal
furnace .
ful l
basement. 2 car garage,

Not tess ttt1n 112 case.

Miler Produce
&amp;

Garden Center
1210 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

V-HUlllone Star boot , IS ft., SO
h.p. motor, $800. Phone {30-4 }
773·5873.

.COMPLETE PEAVEY P.A. Syslem,
Fender guitar, lou: master with
case. Phone 992 -7:256.

BWEEK old plgo, $25 ooch, Phone
9&lt;9·2857.

FOR SALE .
"Ne~ co . Op water so-f tenen, model VC -SVI.
Only 1279.95
Save uo.oo on a new
Hotpolnt Refrigerator .
1 Ntw 20 cubic ft .
Chest Freezer
UI9.9S
N,w in stack, comptettllne
Df bulk g.arden seeds.
1 Good McCullougtl Ch1in

.

. us

1 Good Used Poulan Chain
Saw
$50
., Good Used Unlco
Dr¥tr
SID.OO
I Good UsedG.E : Dryer $85 ·

.rom.., t..ndmark

and on level lot . $35.000.

rod, $15. Rhone7&lt;2·2050.

·.

Reedsville. 0 . Ph. 378-&lt;1250
5·27·TFC

plus. 2 baths on the 1st
floor , 2 baths on th e second
fl oor. tot a l of 5 bedrooms.
good
locat ion . ONLY

$24,000.00.
WHITE ELEPHANT -

12 .

room s:, 3 kit chens, 2 baths,
all br ick 2 stor y home.
sever a l f irepla ces, live In it

or buy to rent. ASK ING
$20,000 .00.
6:~;_.

ACRES Close to
Pomeroy . T his 3 Bdrm .
frame is ready to move
into . 3 acres fenced w ith
barn for animals. Sec luded
&amp;
beautiful.
ON LY

$19,200 .00.
GOOO OLDER HOME The hardwood f loors and
trim make this 3 Bdrm .
home really distinctive .
Dinin g
room , ·
ba th ,
basement.
fireplace .

CHEAP AT $12.500.00.
ON THE RIVER -

rooms, 4 bedrooms, bath ,
large living, hot water
heat , on corner lot with 2
car garage.

BRICK -

3 apartments ,

Associates

992·2259- 985·4112
992·256B

Enormous famil y home
with S bedrooms ,-31!2 baths,
large rec. room with builtIn bar. 2 wood -burning
fireplaces ,
all
on a

beaulllully landscaped lot
with

shrubbery .

Good

neighborhood .
Appointment only.
COUNTRY HOME -

3

bedrooms, bath , fuel oil
furnace, full basemen t.
carport and garage on 1
acres. $25,000 .

DEXTER
Bus ;ness
bu ilding 30'x40' . Will sell on
land controct. On'ly $5,500 .
MIDDLEPORT
Convenient! y loc at ed, 2
bed roo m frame home .
Bath , ga s heatin9 and city
Water. Want only $11,000
for quick sate .

" •I

No. 208 - 1 acre bi-level
home. 7 rooms. ·2112 baths;
large fam i ly room w ith
fireplace, 2 ca r garage,
ce ntral air conditioning,
lots of closet space. Owner
transferred out of · area.
Pr ice $44,000 .
No. 203 - Pomeroy, S room
home,
has
aluminum
siding and storm windows,
close to business d istrict .

MARTIN

Long Botlom

ar ea, 3 acres 12x 50 mobile
home, beautiful view of the
rive r . Price $7,500.

No. 206 -

Middleport. · 3

bedroom older
home ,
several big closet s, modern
ki t chen, has pr ivate patio,
just the r ight size to beat

gas

bills.

within

h ·.

HARRISON'S T.V. Repair : Service
Cal ls. 276 Sycomoru , St. , Mid dleport . Ph an£19~252~~

Will do odd jobs, roofing , poin ting , gutter w,o rk . Phone 992 -

7409. '
SE WING - ALTERATIONS :
Uph o l ster ing ,
.drapes
reasonable . 512' Sout h Th ird
Ave ., M i dd leport.
Ph one

992·6306.
PIANO TUNING, lone Daniels_. 12
yeors of service . Phone

992·20B2.
PIANO TUNING by Electronic Comp ar ison
A cc urate .
Reasonable 99:2-3718 .
WILL CARE for elderly womefl' 'ln
our home, Trained and exPhone992-7314.

IT'll BE A

Lois Pauley

Un scramble these four Jumbles.
one leiter to ea ch square. 10 lorm
tour ordtnary words

JUST LISTED -l'h acres ollevellahd , nice 12x64 all
carpeted mobile home with 2 BRs. living room , kitchen
and bath, 2 room5 built on. n ice family room with
fireplace, plenty of garden spa ce. some .fruit trees .
Large workshop and block cellar . City water and septic
ta nk . Nice county seHing on County Rd. 28 . Price

,..... ,.. c __ ,__

IIUIDOWS &amp; DOORS

$15,900 .

IT WAS A Tfi'EE
IN ~DOCTOR"

A GUY UP A TR'EE!
-'IF IT WAS A MAN,

ft.DE~N'S

It£ HAD lONG, WHilE

YARD--

YOU KNOW•• INSJD£
lttAl HIGH WALL·-

WI LD ANO

1 DON'1 THINK

I JUST

50 -- LOR Ell A

At-ID I WfftE DOWN

BY Tt1E

C~EK

Upper Syracuse. Good 2 bedroom

house with bath . Two more small bedrooms could be

finishe d upstairs . Also garage, storage building ,
strawberry patch and garden space. Dr iveway is
electric heated. Nice Ohio River v iew. Furniture can
be bought e,;tra . Price for quick sale. House and lot .

$12.600.
WE ARE SELLING PROPERTY AND NEED YOUR
HELP, LIST WITH ' US. WE HAVE BUY·EIIS FOR
VACANT LAND . FARM . AND RESIDENTIAL
PROPER TY.
•
Call Jimmy Qeem AI 949.2388

•

'

To LOOK UP

THRoUGH

PLA'r'tM' AT TH '
TIME-·

lH ' BUSHES· ·

1 Roll Bluo Shog
1 Roll Brown Shag
Both Rubber ·B.otk
Regular$8.95
Sale $5 .88 Sq . Yd .

Yes~erday·s

Illuminated
Asia n river
Speechifies
Rusty or
Golden
14 Wheedle ·
15 Aher 16 Night Oyer
17 Duty
18 Puncture
20 Success
21 Exhaust
22 Colton
fabric
23 Fireplace
debris
25 Comi c,
Myron 26 I've had '
27 Piqued
28 Neighbor of
5
8
9
13

bath-

'

'

WAS.
Now arrange lhe ctrcled teners to
form. the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon.
·

(

IIJITITI
·

Theatre 33 ..
B:3!l--'What•s Happening 6,13.

\'!

9:0o-Movle "The 3000 Mile Chase" 3,4,15 ; Bar'ney
Miller 6; Hawaii F.lve·O 8; Movi e "Th e Barre ll s of
Wimpole Street" 10; Movie "Li'l Scratch" 13; Age
of Uncerta lr1ty 20,33.

river

9:31l- Fish 6.
1tl :oo-Stree l s of San Francisco 6 ; Barnaby J ones 8;

News 20; At The Top 33.

ll : ~ N e ws 4,6,8,1 0,13, 15.3; MacN eil -Lehrer Re:port

( 4 wds .)
4 Three, in

II Lancelot's
beloved
1.2 Chu rch
official

Kit 33.
7:3&lt;f-Hol lywood squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6:
Price is Right B; MacNeii ·Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
Wild Ki ngdom 10; Nashville on the Road 13: Dol ly
Welcome Back Kotter
6, 13; Waltons 8.10: Tribal Eye 2.0; Mast~r piece

DOWN
I RM amuck
2 Graven .:.__
. 3 Suddenly

(3 wds.l

My Three Sons IS; ·AI!1'1anac 20; Consum (J:r Survival

9 : ~Fantastlc Jou rney 3,ll , 15;

ll Belgian

Italy
5 Find
6. Wrought-up
7 - Mahal
10 Highly

S: 31l-Adam ·12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20.33.
6:0Cl-News 3.4.8. 10. 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6:31l-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffi lh 6;
CBS News B.lO: Once Upor a Classic 20,33.
7:0Cl-Trulh or Cons. 3; To Tell the Trulh o; Liar 's Club
6: Muppel Show 8; News 11); To Tell the Truth 13;

""-'""":";,;!
Yesterday's Answer
16 Locks out
25 Wheedle
19 Legal claim
22 Word with
lo~ or for
· Z3 Defensive ·
obstacle
24 Greek moon
goddess

'l1 Smear

29 Variant of
Helen
JO Rich cake
31 Jot down
li Border

33.
11 :31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: SWAT 6, 13; Kojak 8:
Mary Hariman )0; ABC News 33.
12 :0o-Movle " Before Wi nter Comes" 10; Janak i 33.
12 :-ao- What's My Line? A 25th Anniver sary Salu te

6. 13; Movie "One Spy Too Many" 8. .

1:oo-- Tomorrow 3.4 .

2, lll- News 13 .
MOVIE CHANNEL 4 5 and 9 p.m. - Diamonds
7 and 11 p.m. - Mol her. Jugs and Speed
Cable Channel 5 6:30 p.m. - Tes llmony Time

37 R emunerate , 7:00

--~~--~--~--=-~=-----------

(a bbr .)
from

J2 Wireless
( abbr.)
33 Neighbor or
Bel g.
34 Wernher -

It's in m'

fool pocket

--+---+-+--~ South

If spades broke 3-2 he was
borne. Wa s there any cha nce
if they broke 4-1?
South saw th ere was. He
drew trumps with Lhree leads
and led a low spade. Maybe

WEST
EAST
.Ql0 94 .
9 652
9 3
t8 6 '
t 91543
olo AI06S .
olo Q98742
SOUTH ( D)
"' A K 83
. AKQJ 109
• KQJ

lry to cash the ace of clubs.
No such luck bul the hand
made anyway .
East simply led a low club .
South rolled , ran off all his
lrump s and the three
diamonds while ma king sure
Lo win lhe last diamond ln
dumm y. Po or We s t was
squeezed. He had to chuck a
spade in order to hang on to
the ace or clubs .

NORTH
• 7 6 52

. 871
t A 10 2
• KJ 3

Braun

.J

~~~~~~~~~P7:~~~~~~7.=~~~:;~~~~~~~~~~~~,---~r1~Saucy
-AND NON Wf3'. MU5161\/E
38 UnderTHANKS FOR ALL TI-lE RICHES
WEVE B£'£:1\1 Be510WED WITH -

stMding
39 Befo re
( Lal.)
40 Ella Morse
BAILY C HYI'TO&lt;!UOTE - Here's how In work it:
AXYDLII/\1\XR
is

CRVPTOQUOTES

TOeD EVoRYWDY I .\\
MCK ?

I WANT IT 70
BE A BIG
SURPRISE'

.. IN ANOTnC.&lt;. ,'Y!RT OF

I 1Hh'JK ITS TiMo I LoFT
TH IS BED, THI5 ROC~\ W1B
H:J.U:'c ... AN:J PAY
Vv'II\J\:; A ,SJ(~/(1;:_::
Vl f - !

:
•
•, :

1•

,

Ru laANDJ!
.~. _

t

'

:

1

T\-IINI&lt;' L{QU'RE
RIGHT, MARCIE.

SYD

AK

S YI K

ACE
COUNTRY
CLUB

O J IlK

We11

Nortb East

Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
Pass
3 N T Pass
Pass Pass

Opening lead - 5 'I

XN

DSK

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
A K North didn 't raise spades in
ASXTS
UM
GXLJ, JL
JHEM
spite of holding four Hltle
cards in that suit. He had
YLK
AS Y D
AK
N K K
TY,H
already raised hearts with 4-33·3 dl•tribution and wanted to
TYLEMEK
DSJGYN
show lhat his hand was
balanced wilh its high cards
Yesterday's Cryploquole : THE ART OF ACHIEV EMENT IS all in Lhe minor suits.
THE ART OF Mi\KING UFE - YOUR UFE - A MASTER·
Soulh gave up all thought ol
PiECE. - WILFERD A. PETERSON
seven and jusl jumped to s ix
(') 1977 Kin&amp; fhlu ru S~Mka,t. Inc.
hearts . West opened a trump
and
South was in a fine slam .
"~RNEY

TATER GOT HIS
BOOSTER SHOT
TODAY, PAW

PRETTi/ FANC'{ ENTRANCE!
REAL STONE PILLARS
AND A GENUINE BRASS
NAME PLATE ...

1\

·-

Both vulnerable

I. 0 ~· G F E I. I. 0 W

On e letter . sim ply ~ tm1d s f or anot her . In thi s sa mpl e A is
used fur th e th ree [. \, X f or the tw o O's, etc. Si ngle lct.ters.
apos troph es, th e length anti formalio ~ of th e words are all
hint s. Ea('h da y tht' codf' lrtte r s are di fTrn•nt.

ili:~;s:=::::::::-;~HA:V:E:":'l':;:O:;:u;-'\ #OTA SOUL .'

squeezes out slam
15

.,.-+-1f--t--

35 Habituated

·•

Paul Gaudi no Family Fitness

29 Proceed

FURNITURE

Mon. , Tues. , Wed.
8:00til5 : 00
Thursday B'til Noon

p.m. -

7:30p .m. - Happy Place
8:00 p.m. - Blue Rl~ge uartet
8:30p.m . - Cable Journal
9:30 p.m. - Tole Painting
10:00 o.m. - 700 Club..

Yugoslavia

RUT"A~_D

·R UnA .._D ~\JRNITURJ

.

WHAT THE
I
ANNUAL SHINDI&amp;

I

ACROSS

Ca 11742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

,_IINO(D GRATE!'-

Neighborhood 20,33; Emer gency One 13; Mi ssion :
Imposs ible 156.

Jumbles HABIT GAWKY TINKLE HITHER
Answe r· What s.he said after a date with a titled
E"'llishman - WHAT A"KNIGHT'"'"~
! ~i

I Uproar

't.h'

extra to pay.

S:oo-B;g Valley 3: Brady Bunch 8; Mi sler Rogers'

by THOMAS JOSEPH

with

Good selection ell on sale.
Installed with padding, no

-

.

Andy Hardy"' 10: Dinah 13.
4: 3()--My Three Sons 3; Star Trek 4; Emergency One
6; Partridge Family 8; Hogan 's Heroes 15.

6ID#IM~t112'

even

····•••••••••
.~
........................ •.
742·2211

Know Your Antiques 20; Bit with Knit 33 .
3: 15----General Hospi t al 6,1 3.
3:30--Malch Game 8,10; Li lias Yog~ &amp; You 20: College
for Canines 33 .
4:0G-M ister Carto on J ; Gong Show 4,15 ; New Mickey
Mouse Club 6; Sesame St . 20.33; Movie "Love Finds

(Answers lomorrow)

is

Close Sal At 5 P.M.

,,.::

2: 3o- Doctors 3,4,15; One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding

' ,._.,, ,,,.. .,

Printanswerhere:O

Candy Slrtp
Rubber Back
Regular S6.9S
Save $4.811 Sq. Yd.

iJ FRIDAY TIL 5 i
1~~~ .
_.l·j
e

Associates

·

8.10.
2:0Cl-S20,000 Pyramid 6,13; Soundstage 33.
Light 6. 10.
3;01)-1\nother World 3,4.15; All In The Farnlly 8. 10:

INOGIBB j

HAPPEN~O

SA.VE ON
CARPETING

...... .. ...... __
•
••

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

!-----,

~- t?f]out!j

SIDIIK-SIIffiTT

•

•
::
•

Young &amp; the Re stless 10; Not For Women On l y 15 ;
Nova 33 .
·
: Jo- Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The W01'1d Tur ns

I KX:

REPI,Mli!IEIIT
WIIDfJI!$
AUIIIIIIII

409 PEARL STREET
IN J 1M'S PLAZA
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PHONE 304-773-5471

•
·=

Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.

TES

OHIO RIVER AUCTION

bedroom house, mostly carpeted .

13; Divorce Court 8; Forsyte Saga 33.

12 :31l-Chlco t the Man 3.15; Ryan·s Hope 6,1 3; Bob
1:oo-Gong Show 3; All My Chi ldren 6,13; News 8;

f!!J 1.9 ~~ •

os.

Dealers, Store Owners, Service Station
Owners, Gift Shops, Etc. There will be a
dealers only auction Thursday, June 16th at
11 : 00 A. M. Truckloads of new merchandise
coming in from surrounding states,
something for all types of business. Lunch &amp;
Parking facilities.

Branch Manager

W ith Knit 33 .

11 ;31l-ll's Anybody's Guess 3,4,15; Family Feud o,\3:
Love of Life 8,1 0: Erica 33.
11 :55-C BS News 8; Ms. FIKit 10.
12 :0il- News 3,4,6,10; Shoot lor lhe Stars 15; Midday

'\tjJI}~ ~'\t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

PLE~R:E ,

AnENTION

992-7133

T·urnlng Points 33.

ll :OCJ-Wheel of For1une 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13: Bit

12 :o10-Myslery ol the Week 6.13.

30 rolls of carpet in stock.

CONTACT:

10: 31l-Hollvwood Sauares 3,4,15; Price is Right B. 10;

1;0C&gt;-Tomorrow 3,4 .
~ : lG-- News 13.

698· 7331'

804 w. Main
Pomeroy
'192·2298
Aller Hours Call

IO :Oo-Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Here'! Lucv 8, 10;
M ike Douglas 13 ; World War 1 33.

STURM

cov oting . septi c systems,
dozer, bockhoe. dump truck ,
liiTiestone , grovel. black to p
po\li ng . Rl . 143. Phone I (61-4) .

walking distance to stores .

9 : 3o--Cro~s- Wits 3; Edge of N!ght 6; Cncentra1ion 8.

10 ;(10-Kingston : Confidential 3,4, 15 ; Charlie's Angels
6, 13; News 20 .
.
10 :30-- ln Search .of the Rea l America 20.
11 :0().--,News 3, .. ,6,8 1 10, 13, 1S; MacN eii · Let1rer Report
33; Monty Pylhon's Flying Circus 20.
11 :30-Johnny Ca rson JA, lS ; Rook ies 6,13; Columbo 8;
Mary Hartman 10 ; ABC News 33 .
12 : DO-Movle "Dime w ith a Halo" 10,' Janaki 33 .

wrap around por ch, garage, large lot, all ov erlooking
the Ohio Ri ver . Asking S16.500 .

Helen L. Tulord

8:0Cl--Grizzly Adams 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Good
Times 8,10; Nova 20.33.

Flooncloc AIOilablo
Blowtt lol6 Walls UHicl

Pr ice S7 .500.
No. 202 -

Break lhe Bank 13;

The Top 20.

1

992.5B58.
HOWERY AND

1~

II\ Jl ·nn-

KlnQdom

qn

with 3 bedrooms, bath and dining room, nice fireplace
in living room, full basement, F.O. heat , house situated
off main .road for priva cy, located ln Morning Star
area, j ust teo minutes from Pomeroy . Asking S1S,OOO .

JUST LISTED -

Game PM 6; $25 ,000 Pyramid 8; MacNeil Lehrer

Report 20,33; The Judg e

r-t .. ~o.

7:0Cl-Today 3.4.1S; Good Morning Amer ica 6.13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Report s 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:31&gt;-Schoolies 10 .
.
8:0Cl-Howdy Doody 6: Capt. Kangaroo B.I O: Sesame
51 . 33.
8:3&lt;f-Big Valley 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13.15: Andy Gdlllth 8;
Mike Douglas 10; Childhood 33.

8·30-Ma.rllyn McCoo &amp; Billy O~vis Jr. 8, 10.
Cjl :00--3 Girls 3 3,4, 15; Baretta 6, 13; Movie "Carrie" 8;
Theater In America 33; Movi e "Scarecrow" 10; At

'

appointment. Ph. 742·2005.
6·5· 1 mo. Pd .

LOOK WHAT WE GOT - App.rox. i3 acres. nice level
land. large pond sf&lt;&gt;&lt;: ked with fish. good 1' ' story house

~•

THE KIDNAPIN&lt;3'

School. Evening work by

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

MINERSVILLE

.

News 3,4,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.

Wild

7M

6 : 15-Farm Report 13 ,
6· 2()--Not for Women Only 13.
6: 3()-0octors on Call A; News 6 ; Summ er Semester 8;
Urban League 10.
6; 4s---MorninQ Report 3.
6· 5o----Good Morning, West Virginia 13
6:S5-Good Morning, T ri stale 13.

7;3&lt;f-Dol ly 3; SlOO.OOO Name Thai Tune 4; Malch

DIOWn
Insulation Services

wheel
balancing,
tune -up,
brake work, minor
repair.
Behind llulland Grode

one down and 2 up, one
furnished and has a 3 ca r

garage . All in good
condition tor $17,500.
MIDDLEPORT

'IOU I'IE~E IN ON

HOME SITES for so le , I acre and EXC AVATING , dozer, loader and BRADFORD . Auctioneer, Co'm ~
plete S,-rvice. Phone 949-2$
up. Middleport . neo r Rutland.
backhoe work; dump lrucks
or 949-2000 . Racine , Ohio, cttf;t
Caii992-7.. Bl .
ond !o-bovs for hire : will haul
Bradford.
..,...
fill
dirt
,
to
soil.
limestone
and
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 bafh s,
grove
l.
Call
Bob
or
Roger
Jef
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAI~ ".....
all elec ,. I acre, Middleport,
fers , day phone 992 -7089 ,
Sweepers . toasters, irons ,
dose to Rutland . Phone 992,
ni ght phone 992-3525 or 992small appli ances. Lawn mowar41
7481. --:--~--,.--...,...~
5232.
ne~~:t to Stole Highway Garogw'
SMALL form fo r sole, 10,-. down,
on Route 7 , Phone (614) 985,
EXCAVATING
,
dozer,
backhoe
-owner financed. Monroe Coun 3825.
'·
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat.ty, W. Vo. Pho11e (304} 772field
,
Bock
Hoe
Service
,
REMODELING
,
Plumbing,
heating
3102 o_r (304)7_72_·3227 .·-'--Rutland , Ohio . Pnon e742 -2008.
and alltvpes of general repai r.
Work guaranteed 20 years exWILL do roofing, const ruction :
perience.
Phone 992 -2409 . -,
plumbing and heating . No iob
too large or too sm all. Phone SEWING MACHINE Repoirs, ser~
742 -23'48.
vice, all mokes, ~2- 2284 . The
--.'-~----~
,______,
Fabric Shop , Pomero.y1•
CARPENTER, fl ooring, cei ling,
AUtho
rized Singer Sales ond
_goneling~o~2 - 2759 .
Service. We sharpen Scissors . ~
· MOBILE Home Repair , Elec,
plumbing and heating .. Phone ,.__________,

CALL US AND CHECK TO
SEE IF WE
HAVE
SOMETHING
YOU
MIGHT NEED .

10

KNOWi •• UNLS~~

OF F- 1\/E!

HAIR , AL\..

FI SHERMAN"S
PAR ADIS E. S7.300.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR PROPERTY (LIST WITH US) .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank , Kathy &amp; Leona

'

a,ISHY' ... AND
WHISKERS·•

Only $9,500.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

lol . Just S5.000 .
MIDDLEPORT

FREE

FRONT END
AUGMMENT

Pr ice $21,000.

B

OFF CAME WHEN
'IOU CLA1M5D lHE
~A~SOM WAS Silt
MILLION IN.STEAD

OF COURSE I WA5 IN ON IT:
VOU AND I AAE (JOTH CRQOI&lt;5,
SASY·· THAT".S WHAT DREW
U.S TOGETHI'I&lt;!

-

6-oo-Summer Semester 10.

You 33 .
~
Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar 's Club
6; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15;
Consumer Survival Kit 20 ; People &amp; Places 33 .

HOW WOULD 'lOLl

Paul Gaud1no Fam1ly Fllnes\
Spec1al Edit ion
Movie "Topper Returns"

THURSDAY , JUNE 16.1 971

J·oo-

I J&lt;NOW' THIO liP-

mo .

10 00 p m

:-.;

6 30 NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13. AndyGriffilh 6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable SQup 20 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;

2·23·1 mo.

DUGAN'S

the
3

6·00

Pomeroy, 0 .

~h. "z.2174

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED ~ Exactly

This 1

20.33

SIL-ENCE!

m

m
8 30 p m
S:QO- Bi g Valley J ; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Eme rg ency One 13 ; M ission ·
lmooss lble IS .
5: 3()-Adam -12 .t ; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.

•

'

C.rpet-Lino .. Tile
Pl&gt;one Mike Young at
992·2206 or 992-7630

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC • .

Complete
Safes
and
Service and Supplies.
3- 14-1 mo.

yr . o ld home has 3 - 4
Bdrms .. rec . room, utility,
nice kitchen &amp; 1 acre. A

'

REFRIGERATOR
DOOR FROM
'
!J::!S I DE , T~1f'ol:Y I
a..,(. SAM
MAINTAIN

Installation. samples
brought to your home
with no charge .• .

RATES

1 00 p
1 30 p

WEDr.ESDAY, JUNE 15.1977

Free Estimates

REASONABI.E

Bdrms. , ba th, basement.
own water , 2 fir eplaces.

HANGING BASKETS, r.ts , and
8 AcRES - 4 bedroom
geraniuma .
C eland ' s
hou se,
modern
b'ath.
Greenhou ae,
Gerald ine
natural gas . F .A . furnace,
_...cJ!I~nd, ~~ocin!·-~~-io__._..__~ _ · nice kitchen. ouibulldings
1973 GREMLIN, factory .:l r, o1-1to
and near town for S20,000 .
loon 'volue, $1000. 1972 Hondo
WE HAVE SEVERAL
3!50 El.ct. start , e)(cellent con BUILDING LOTS AND
dition. One 30 gallon ond one 5
ACREAGE
. WHAT DO
gallon oquariUm 'Ond ot:c .1 .both
YOU NEED? MAKE'
$50. Female poodle, 3 years
YOUR
INVES TMENT
old , eJCcallent with kids , wh ite
NOW .
and has popen , $35. See oil al
Gordon B. TNford
620Loure1St ., Middleport .
PET CLIPPERS, $l0. Bass ·fishing

Route 3,

Middleport. 0 .
992-5724

what you have been looking
for - 12 acres, close to
town. 1 room brick, wi th 4

~YE

Pomeroy, 0 .

2-23-1

PARTS • LABOR
GUARANTEED

t.

DALE·s .38!

••'

"The Ol'lginotors

Automatic
Transmission Service

BABY FARM ~ 13/_. acres
in Rutland Township . Ha s a
4 room stucco house w i th
bath, and two outbuildings.

room frame house on Rt. 7,
T. P. water available .
electric, and n ice t orner

MEEl' THE

IS

Young's Carpeting

Nobil SumMit Road
Rt . 1
.

E.

'

Not The lmit1tors"

No Sunday C. lis Pleue
6·13·1 mo.

Channel 5 )0 p m
Testtmony T ime

FIRST T1-t1NG

Carpet &amp; Upholstery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 992-7630

Ali~nment,

kitchen . in this . southern
styl e home has everything

TEAFORD[g

Route 3,

Free Estimates

1975 SHULTZ 12111: bOMob ile home
wilh cemen t porch and owning .
Tile bl oc k goroge , ce llor
building with utility room
overhead on 2 1 · ~ acres of land .
Loca t ed nt;tor langsville ,
$1-4 ,000. Phone992-5589.

GOOD BUY AT $37,500.00.
COOKS DELIGHT - The

STUCCO - 9 "rooms. 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. Kitchen

Slrlckly wl&gt;oltS&lt;llt to ell.

HOUSE, RANCH, 1500 sq. ft . 3
bedrooms , close lo l awn ,
$16 ,qo() , Phone 992-3684 . 9
a.m. Iii! 5 p.m.

$15,000.00.
SPLIT ENTRY -

'l nnd ) p m
Familv Plot
9 and 11 p mm - Godfather II

'

Young's carpeting ,!.

SWAIN'S

NEW HOUSE for sole 3 bedroom .
I ' 1 both . rec . room . and
garage . l ee Const ruction .
Phone 99.2.3 454 or (6 14 )
446 ·q568 .

•

Superior
Steam Extraction

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

SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
CRAFT AND ARTI ·ST

94~ · 26JS .

th e
requ i rements
for
country living, 5 acres,
garden , fru it trees, barn,
milk house . All FOR

127 ~. 95

c:-:-:::::'-,..,-·-:---ccc - - · - -

Saw

HELP WANTED

_(~lotwoodoreo) .

let Pomeroy landmark
·soften &amp; condition yOur
water and a Co-op water
softener, Model UC-XVI.

7A2·2292.

miles from Harrisonvi lle. Has
completely furn ished 12x50
mobile home including washer
and
dryer,
and air conditioning , Large pond , spr,
ing, and well, newly built 20x36
garage , and 2.. d8 concre te
f!oor shed . Priced at $1 ~ . 000 .
Phona after 5 p.m. 992 -51b-4 .

2 BEDROOM HOU SE, large living
room . modern 1 ~..~11 size bosemen! , built-in goroge an
i ' , acres . ci ty wo ter, gos, high
gtound . good neighbors , Phone

BDRM S. full basement.
Cl\ LL TODAY 125,000.00.
JUST LISTED ~ Th is 2
BDRM frame home has a ll

5 ROOM HOUSE, 1 both, 2 porches, one screened . garage and
ONE REGISTERED Jersey family . carport , gas fu rnace . Wa lk ing
milk co w . now cnilking, 2 vears distance to town and to school.
old: one regilleredNubion Billy ~ aft~ 2-~3A88.
Goal, I year old . Phone

COAL FURNACE, Phone367·7652.

lHE DESPERADOES

7 Phcne J61&lt; )667·63()•.

I:

~

RANGE - PINE dining room tables
w ith -4 choirs and an old cherrv
buffet. Phone992-S15-4 .

COINS, CURRENCV, tokens, old
pocket watches and choins 1
silver and gold . We need 196-C
and older silver coins. Buy , sell ,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,

SO to 60 Acres of crop land FOR OLD FURNITURE, Ice boxes, bran
RENT . In Rutland. Phone (513)
beds , etc . ,
complete
S39·7439.
households. Write M . 0 . Miller ,
Rt. " · Pomeroy , Ohio or call
992·776ll.

Music · Afternoon and
Evening by-

YAMAHA . HAR LEV-OAVIOSON , &amp;

TWO F.LOOR go~ furnaces for
sole. Phone 992-5501 .

I&amp; ACRES land on Kingsbury Rd. 3

ANYONE DUMPING garbage or

FREE OOOKOUT

KRAUT CABBAGE, $ 1 bushel . Cur
your own, James Hill Fa rm .

SOFTENER?

p .b., Ranger interior, topper,
automatic, 10.000 miles . Phofi•· HOOVER UP-RIGHT sweepers.
1977 mode ls. Onlv .$22 cash or
.7&lt;2·2050.
terms . Phone 992-5146.
197-4 GMC . PICKUP with topper .
ELECTRO·LUX SWEEPERS. Com·
Phone 9Cl2-3288.
pletelv re -built with ot·
. toct)mants . Onlv $32. 50 cash or
terms . Phone 992 -51A6 .

992·3573.
FAIR TIME is Just Around ttle Cor- EXCAVATION · COMPLETE sopllc

REGATTA SU_NDAY,
JUNE 19

7&lt;2·2050.

7A2·2315.

p.m.::-:c-~--":'c-:c::--:Pl&gt;ono 7A2·2590.
PiGS, 7-9 weeks old. $30 each.
1976 F· lOO PICKUP V·8, olr, p.s ..
Phone 949-2115.

NEW COMPANY 1· a1g Bond

THE MEIGS Co. Fish and Game
Assn. will hold an important
meeting Friday , June 17, at 1:30
p.m. to make pions for the fi sh
derby for children . The meeting
will be held ol the new club Mouse
on Shade River Road .

1-A2 ln. cost Iron kitchensink , I
basin and 1 drain board. hQng
on wall type , white . 1-3 burn er
~hot plata . Phona-992-5714 .

Phone 992-368-4 9 a.m. till 5 I!:AWASAKI 175 - dirt bike . S-400;
Sui uki 72 • street bike. $750.
p .m.
Call 949·2.t63, evening• oh•r 6
1976 FORD F2SO, -4 wheel drive,

NEW SUMMER Hours lor Seldom
Rest Ceramics, Tuppers Plains .
Classes on Tuesday 9 till12 , 1-A
and 1-10. Weds. 7-10. Will
resur,-.e regular hours In .the
loll.

j unk
on
my ·farm along Birmingham Rood
or
Plants ,
Ohio will be prosecuted ro the full
extent
of
the low ,
Signed. Joy Hall Jr.

TWO ANT IQUE Key wind pocket
watches , very old . Be st offer,

ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil at- Con-Am Motorcycles. Complete
tachments. llke new . ask ing soles and fantastic servku! Hours
REG . TREEING Walker female
M·T, T. 9·6; W-F. 9·7, Sol. 9·5,
$2250
. Phone {biA) 698-3290.
coondog, 8 yrs . old . Phone 992·
"The Mot orcvcle People of
3068.
GOOD RICH Top soil. Charles R. Southeastern Ohio ." Athens Sport
Hatfie ld Backhoe Service . Cycles , Inc. 20 W. Stimson Ave ..
Phone 7A2-2008.
Athen s, Ohio. Phone (61A ) 592·
COAL ~NO Wood cookstove : red· 1692.
tick tlound. I yeor old. Bir· 2Y-fl. METAL Display Gonddas ,
1972 FORO Von Econoline 200 In dhouses. Picnic toblea. Phone S'lt"isher and Lohse Pha rm acy ,
s; ide fi~~:ed up. Past Eastern High
985·A12A .
School ol top of hill. Phone
5 · ~~~·
985·3323. $:1200.
. 1•-FT. ALUMINUM Bas• boot with '1.'12·2'1~:.:
trailer , 14 horse-power Seon
1953 FORo PICkUP, V-8 flatbed ,
engine ond one two-speed NEED A WATER
$649. Phone 992-368-4, 9 a.m.
troll ing motor . $550. Phone
tillS p.m.

1940 PACKARD Coupe, $995.

CommeroQI properly opprox 17
a cre~. level land . located ol
1 u pper~ Plotns Oil Ohto, Route

New house lor sole, 3 bedroc:&gt;m, 1
11, both. rec. room ond
gorog e. lee Constructton .
phone 99'1·3454 or 446 -Gl568.

MOTHER CAT and 5 kiflens.
P'hone ~2·3090.
IN LOVING Memory of Oris Gaul

ed wood~ . water and good OC·
ceu in Monroe County, W Va .
S l 000 down. call (304} 172
3102 Of {30.. ) 77'1-3227 ,

VILLAGE GREEN APTS . MULBERRY

CB SPECIAL
ROBYNWV-23

'

, P~:~-i~e

Business Services

COUNHfY la rmlond wuh !t.eclud.

CRAfTY LADIES
HANDICRAfT

---- - -- -9J'!Pii·.KC~Jii;..~~~=.

,'

' .,

-·"'"

EIGHT
R SLUGS

FURNISHED APT. Adults onlv , no
NEW 3 bedroom house . built -in
peh.. Phone ~2- 3874 , Mid- SPRING GARDEN Suppl ies , Cabk1tchen both and ' r , Phone SUPPLIES.
bage , cauliflower , brcxcolt ,
dleport.
742-2306orcontoctMiiOB . Hut - CLASSES OFFERED IN
and head leth,• oe plonh .
ch 1son , Rut land, Oh 1o.
DIFFERENT
CRAFTS.
ONE BEDROOM furnishvd apartyellow, white, ond red anton
OPEr. 6 DAYS A WEEK.
ment In Middleport . Call
sets , onion plants, t&lt;ennebec. VA -FHA.' 30yr . finoncmg. Ireland 10 : 00 to .5 : 00
992·5•3• or 992-3129 .
cobbler, Kotohdin. Red Pontiac
Mo,tgoge, 77 E. Slolo, Alhon• .
phone (614 ) 592 -3051 ,
and Red Losodo seed po totoe~ .
4 BEDROOM MOBILE home in
Bulk garden seeds , potting soil. 145 A( RE FARM, 7 room hcu•e ;n
RQcine area . Coli 992-5858 .
peat moss, fruit trees and rosu
Rutland. lot s of privacy . Phone
AVAILABLE AT Rivers ide Apart bu1hes . Midwov Markel ,
741 3057 ofler b p .m . or an
804 West Main Stree1
ments. one bedroom , $105 per
Pomeroy , Ohio, ~2 - 2582 ,
wee kends .
Just Below the Jones
month, 2 bedroom , $138 per
-..Bob:s Markel , Mason . W.Vo.
Bovs' in Pomeroy, Ohio
month . Phone 992-6098 . Equal
(:io&lt;)773-5721.
2 BEDROOM HOUSE , Locust Sl. ,
Phone"l-2291
Housing Opportunity.
Middleport. $14 ,500. Phone
51
~2 -3 43b and Cjl92-5248.
._..__ _ _ _ _,_._1_·_m_o_._ .
HEIGHTS, LUSURY LIVING IN
NEW 2 BEDROOM APTS .
TASTEFULLY DECORATED . KIT·

""'""TRACY

Ht&gt;nl ~:statt&gt; for ~le

For Sale

Lost and fo' ound

MOVIE CHANNEL&lt; -

17- TlleDailySenlinei.Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Wednesday June 15 1977

HOW DID "TH '
LEETLE FELLER
"TAKE IT?

the winner of that trick would

~u~~
A Pennsylvania reader asks
if we can tell anythi ng about
the late Olive Avery Peterson.
Unlil her deillh in 1965,
Olive was one of the leading
bridge teachers and players
with 12 national women's and
mixed championsl1i ps to her
credit. Even more important,
she wa s one of the nicest of
the thousand s ol bri dge
players .
(For e cop y of JAC OBY
MODER N, send $I ro: "Win ot
Br idg e," ct o fhis newspaper,
P 0. Bo;. 489. Radio City Srarion,
N ew York , N Y 10D19)

�18 - The Daily Sentmel, Mlddleport-Pumcro)', 0 . , Wcdfll'sday, June 1 ~. 1977

!-- ---A~ea -J)-~;th~---- !

Local news, in briefs

I

The mobile off ice ot Sen
How ard Met zenbaum will be
on ,the upper parldng lot m
Pomer oy tram 2 30 to 5· 30
p.m Fr ida y . Travellnq in the
mobi le off ice to answer any
quest ions of resi dents will be
St ev e Wi tt
a nd
Steve
Fr iedman. members of Sen .
Me1zenbaom 's stall

LULA DR UMMON D
Mr s. Lula Levina Drum
men d, 86 , a resi den t o f
Cheshire, died in the Da lton
Heal1h Ca r e Center , I r on ton ,
around 9 15 a . m Tuesda y .
She had been In fa iling
healt h the past two years. She
w as born Sept. 5, 189 1. in
I ronton, daugh t er of the la te
Will iam an d M ar y S1 raig ht
Coonrod .
She m a rr ied Claren ce
Drummond in 1914 in Ironton .
He preceded her in death .
The following c h il dren
su rv i ve :
Mr s.
Ear l
( Em o g ene)
O' N e i l l ;
Aliqu ippa , Pa .: Mrs. Pau l

(Ruth ) King , ln ci no, Ca lit. ;

MrS. Har old (Odt:;·lla l Ma ck ,
Cheshire ,· Mrs. Forest ( Ida)
Bartram, Akr on ; Clarence
Dr ummond Jr .. and Robert
Dru m m on d ,
bot h
of
Cl evel an d ;
t we nty -sev en
g rand ch i ld ren, 63 grea t qrand ch i ld ren and thrPP
greaf gr eat . gra ndchild r en ·
survive .
Six chi ldr en preceded her
in death : M ildred Dr ummond , M ar jory Drummond ,
Bi ll Drummond , M r s. Leo

I
Harris. Sou th Charleston , W,
Va . ; M rs freda Kn uckles .
E l ~ Cree~ . W. Va ., and M rs .
Luc•lle W1fhr ow. Nasswada s.
W. Va . One s•s ter prece ded
hi m in dea th.
·M r . Harris was a farmer
and a Wor ld War It veteran .
ha ving served wi th fhe U. S.
Navy
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by the M cCoy M oore F une ra l Home i n
Vi nton.
Funera l ser vtces wi ll be
held 2 p.m . Fr iday at the
McCoy Moore F unera l Home
il"l V inton. Bur ial will be in
Vi nton Mem or ia l Park .

Fr ie nds may ca ll a l the

fu neral home on Thu r sday
afternoon from 2·4 and 7·9
p.m .

CLAUDE GRUBB .
Cla ude Vernon Gr ubb, SO,
of 289 Overby Road, Hun tington , died Tuesday In a
Hunting ton hospitlll. He was

bo r n Marc h 15 , 1927 in

Hunting ton , W. Va .. son of t he

late Claude and Mary Cole
Grubb.

He is survived by his wife,

Mrs. Edna

Vernell Moye

(Mayme ) Shaver, Mrs. Lewis
1Doroth y 1 Pompon i and

Grubb, one daug hter , Mr s.

Eugene Drum mond .
One brother and one sis ter
survi ve, Georg e Coo nr od .
Ir onton , an d M rs . Di c k

Gary of Hullett. Wyo .. Roger

(Mildred) Smi th, Selma, Ala.

One- sister , Mrs. Mid Nell
Wilson an d one broth er ,
Oli ver Coonrod , preceded her
in dea th .
Mrs. Drum mond was a
mem ber of th e I ro n to n

Meth odist church.

Funer a l ser vices w ill be

held

2

Wi ll is

p. m. Friday at the

Funeral

Home w ith

Rev . Alfred Hol ley and Rev.

Will iam Uber off icia ting .
Buri al w i ll be In · Ohio
V al l ey M emo r y Ga r dens .
Friends ma y ca ll at the
fu neral home on Thursday
fr om 2-4 a nd 7-9 p . m .

EARL HARRIS

Jack !Sharon) Whitley of
Proc tor v i lle ;

t hree

sons,

and Larry , bot h a t home , and
si x sis t ers : Mr s. E ve lv n
Husse ll , Mrs. Ailene Short,

both of Hunt ington ; Mrs.
Jackie Gra ham , Mls• Reg ina

Gr u bb a nd

Mi ss

Win one

Grubb, a ll of Northup and

Mr s.

Gwen

Jone.s

of

Pa taskala and one brother,

John , Columbus .
Serv ices w;t l be 1 p. m .

Thursda y at the Hall Funer•l

Hom e, Proctor vi lle w ith John

Ha ckenb en y pres id ing .

Buria l wil l

be In Huxhnn -

Grubb Cemetery in Huntington .

Fr iends

may call

after 6 p . m. today .
RAY NEAL

Earl Basil Harr is, 64 , a
res ident of Rt . 1. Ewington,
d ied in HoLzer Medica l Center
around 7 a.m . toda y.

He was born Apr il 10, 1913,

in Roane Cou n.ty , W. Va ,; son

· of the late Jess.le and Lucy
Randol ph Harris .

He marr ied Murl Pauley on
May 30, 1935, in Dunbar, W.

WEST COLUMBIA - Ray
"Jay Bird" Neal, 54, of West
Columbia , died Tuesday
afternoon at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born February 25, 1923, in
Gallipol is Ferry, he was the
son of the late Joseph D. and
Mary E. Taylor Neal.

Va . She survives , along w ith

He was a boilermaker _on
c;: bnstruction, a member of
the Boilermaker 's Un ion No.

Jr., Tornando, W. Va . ; Mrs.

667

three children : Basil Harris,
Logan (VIrgin ia) Goldinger,
lnterlakln, N. Y. and Mrs.
Ben I Barbara ) Watts,
Beckley , W. Va . One
daughter preceded him In
death. Eleven grandchildren
and one great-grandchild
survive.
Two brothers and two
sisters
survive :
James
Harris, Rt . 1, Ew inqton ; Carl

of Charleston and
member of the . SpJirn.an
United Methdalst Church.
Neal was preceded In death
by a son, Ray Eug,ne Neal,
Huntington, and a brother ,
Joseph Lawrence Neal. Sr.
Surviving are his
Mildred K . Neal ,

wife,

West
Columbia ; twa daughters ,
Mrs .

Virginia

Johnson,

Letart: Deborah E. Neal. at

home ; three sons. Jlmmy of

Letart, Charles of Pomeroy,
Timothy at home ; four
sisters, Mrs. Dimple Long ,
Mrs . Dorothy Bush, both of
Gallipol is Ferry ; Mrs. Opal
Plants, Gall ip0 11s, and Mrs.
Lyda Weathers, Aliquippa,
Pa .: one brother, Charles W.
of Al iquippa , and six grand children .·
.
On 90-Day
Fuheral services will be
conducted Friday at 1:30 p.
Certificates
m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev . 0 . B.
Hatcher and Rev . George
5.75 per cent paid on
Hoschar officiating . Burial
will follow in the Gr•h•m
90 day Certificates of
.
DeposIt.
$1,000.00 • Cemetery
Friends may c•ll after 2 p.
Minim\lm .
Interest m. on Thursday.

Our Interest Is
Greater For You

5.75%

Payabie

.Q uarterly .

A substantial

penauv is

invoked on all certificate
accounts Withdrawn prior
to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch,

~
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Second St .
Pomeroy , Ohio

ODE TO MOROCCO
RABAT, Morocco (UP!) --'
President Mobutu Sese Seko
of Zaire arrived in Morocco
Tuesday for a four-day vlsi.t
to thank Moroccan King
Hassan II for sending troops
to aid Zaire during the recent
invasinon of Sbal1a province.
The king and the prelldent
Friday will review a parade
in Casablanca of the
Moroccan C!Jnlingent sent to
Zaire. Mobutu said before
arriving here be wanted "to
earnestly thank King Hassan
for his support of my country
during the Invasion of
Shaba."

AT THE INN

"TIGRESS"
2GALS
FROM PARKERSBURG
THURSDAY 9:00,1100
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
10 TIL 2

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

POMEROY

Middleport Pollee Chiet

GRUUCHO AILING ANEW
LOS ANGELES fU PI J Groucho Marx was back in
the hospital toda y. Just why
was not dear.
The 116-year-old comedian,
who has been in precarious
health for some time and is
under supervision of a murtordered guardian, underwent
surgery in Marcy to replace
part of his right hip with an

'Jcw lh 'l.t.~c.ond Av-ro on Fr-•day
;,Her 1 p .rn unlit altpr l h~
p.1rildewll1Ch ... dl torm th('H!
P.omf•roy Poll ee Chtet Jed
WPhs tPr , .vks recoidcnts of
Con d.or S tr ~e l to ple ase
rrmove car-, from the street
Ffl dity Irom 6 p .m to 8 p m
due to th e Regat ta parade
dt sbandmg there

artificial joint. A spokesman
for Marx revealed Tuesday
that Marx had been returned
to Cedars-Sinai hospital for
surgery Sunday f~r a hlp
injury. No details were
revealed .
Marx was ' doing terrific"
and is expected to be released
in about a week , the spokesman said.
1

J .-

J . Cremean s has ask ed
resi dents of South Second
Ave .. betwe en M i ll and
Mulberry Sts. not to park on

Syracuse man
is injured in
West Virginia
POINT PLEASANT - The
driver was injured in a single
car wrekc on Jericho Rd. at
a pproximately I a.m., according to Mason County
Sheri ff's De put y E. F .
Crwnp.
Admitt ed to Pleasant
Valley Hospital was Michael
Richa rd
Peo ples,
26,
Syracuse, Ohio. A hosp ital
spokesman sa id he wa s in
satisfactory condition.
The a cc ide nt occ urred
when Peoples was forced off
the 'road by an unidentifi ed
ca r as he was traveling west.
The steering on his ca r
reportedly locked as it went
through fencing, over a 50foot drop, knocking over a
metal swing set before going
over another five-foot embankment.
Minor damage resulted in .a
two-car collision Monday on
Lievlng Rd . nea r West
Columbus at approximately
8: 10 p.m ., according to
Deputy Thomas E. Roush,
John R. Workman, 18, Rt. I
Mason; and John Da niel
Strange, 20, Rt . 1 Letart,
were id entifi ed as the
drivers.

Hospital News

Oft ice r s
of
Ra ci ne
Amencan Leg1on haVe been
n&lt;Jmed and will be insta ll ed
Thursday at a p t'h . by Albert
Roush.
E l me r
Picke ns
reported .
Officers
are
Cla r ence Tom Wol fe. com
mtm der , Bill Cross, firs t vice .
Jack Ab les . sec ond vice,
Rol]..er Brauer , f ina ncia l
officer'", anO Tom Diddle,
tr us tee.
Fra ter n al
Orde r
Eagles , Ae r ie 2171

WAREtllUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

IES

of
wi ll

meet Monday , June 20 at
p.m

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

B

Al l member s urged to

ITHOUT

at tend.

CA RP E NTER
Homecom ing services wi ll be

held at the Mt . Union Baptist
Church

nea r

Carpente r .
Sunday . June 19. A baskel
di nner wi ll be held a t noon
and hymn si ng at 1: 30 p.m .
The Rev . John El sw ick is
pastor .
Farmers
Hom e
Ad minis tr ation , Pomeroy, will
not hold off ice hours Friday

morning. The offi ce wi ll be

JERI SUE FAULKNER

Seventh can:didate is
entered in Queen race

A seventh candidate for
1977 Big Bend Rega tta Queen
is J eri . Sue Faulkner,
Wesle y Wi se. 35, Mid- da ught er of Ge ne a nd
dleport , wa s taken to Holzer
M edic al Center by the Mason Ma rgar et Eskew, Linco ln
Rescu e
Squad
M onda y Hill, Pomeroy.
morn ing fo ll ow ing an ac
Miss Faulkner has been a
cident at the Gal lia Coal band member since the fifth
Cornpa ny, West Colum bi a_.
Wi se su ffer ed contu sions and grade. She has bee n a
a sp ra in in his spine. He wa s. Oagbearcr for the past three
f rea ted and r eleased .
years in the marchi ng ba nd
and
plays cla rinet in the
Th e Mid dlep ort Child
concert
band. She ·has been a
Con serVa t i on Leag u e w i ll
hold a potl uck picnic at 6: 30 membe r of the Fut ure
p .m . Thursday at the r oad - ' Homemak ers
Club ;
a
side park . on the rig ht going
chapla
in
for
the
junior
north on Ro ut e 33 , far
member s and fami li es and cosmetology class and is the
p ros p ec t ive me m bers an d new chaplai n for the V!CA
t hei r fa m i li es :. Th ose at - Club at Meigs High School
tending are to take t heir own
where she will be a senior in
tabl e ser v ice.
the !all. Miss Faulkner was a
Rac ine Amer ican Legion candidate for VICA queen.
Posl 602 wi ll not ho ld its She is active in church amj
square dance as scheduled
lh is Fr iday due to Big Bend sin gs prov idin g her own
Regatta wee ken d act iv ities . · accompa niment on the piano

open but no a ppoi nt ments will
be

m~d e .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted - Donna . Hatfield , Pomeroy; Anton Liter,
Long
Bottom ; Hu ghie
Ogdin,Middleport ; Lydi a
Ebersbach,
Pom ero y;
Samuel Pickens, Syracuse;
Margaret Randolph, Athens;
Mel&lt;!lna Spencer , Pomeroy;
Chester Foully, Long Bottom ;
Annette
E va 11 s,
Monaville, W. Va.
Discharged
Walter
LIMA, Ohio (UPI ) - The
Green, Sr., Carol Wines, Third District Ohio Appeals
Rona Ohlinger; Pa uli ne Court today ruled that county
Perr.y.
auditors may refuse to levy
.
taxes in areas assigned Joint
Vocation School Districts by
PLEASANT VALLEY
Discharges - Belfor d the state when voters in those
Jividen, Grirtuns Landing; areas ha ve rejected the
Beatrice Meadows, Ashton ; levies.
The ruling came in a suit
Forest Crllli1p, Henderso n;
Nancy See, Point Pleasant ; liled by (he •'late seeking a
Harris,
Point
Marie
Pleasant ; Daniel Seen ,
Gallipolls; Parry Cassady,
Point Pleasant; Delor.is Neal,
OCEANPORT, N.J. (UPI )
New Haven ; Cheryl Haga r,
·
_
Bill Hartack, one of the
Southside; Cindy Ha ll,
and
most
greatest
Northup, 0 _; Enna Matheny,
oversial
jockeys
,
will
be
contr
LeQn; Darlene Hensley, New
honored
Thursday,
June
16,
Haven; Laura Bachel or,
Point Pleasant; William Dye, at Monmouth Park Race
New Haven; Mrs. La rry Cour se by fellow riders and
th e ma nage ment of the
· Willet, Cheshire; . Clyde Monmouth Park Jockey Club.
Kinnaird, Apple Grove; Lorie
Hartack, who has been
Lamb~rt, Patriot; Sandra
riding in Hong
successfully
Triplett, Crown City; Mrs.
Kong
after
ending
his U,S.
Joe Ball, Ashton; Mrs. Carl
,
ca
reer
three
years
ago,
was a ·
Walden, Gallipolis Ferry ;
three-time
riding
champion
Linda
Russell,
Point
Pleasant; Linda Martin , at Monmouth, winning most
Buffalo, and Charlene of the track's major stakes
races.
Clonch, Point Pleasant.
He . is tied with Eddie
Birth - A son to Mr. and
Arcaro
for most victories in
Mrs. Alfice Chapman.
U1e
Kentucky
Derby with
Ashton.
five.

and organ .
Quee n cand idat es a nd
visiting queens will be guests
at a lun cheon to be held
F (iday aft ernoon at th e
Meigs Inn pre ceding t he
annu a l parade . The new
re gatta . qu een will be
crowned foll owing the parade
at the stage area on Lynn St.

Several fined
in ·Middleport

F ined in t he court of
Middleport May or Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night were
Don Lovett, 54 , Middl eport,
$25 and costs each on two
di sorderly manner counts ;
Rona ld K. Circle, New
Haven, $10 and costs, runn ing
a red light; Vickie L. Rempe,
19, Min•'ler , Ohio , $25 ·and
costs, no license tags; Roger
M. Cole, 27, Middleport, $10
and costs, running a red light.
Forfeiting bonds were Paul
R. Stewart , 23, Midd leport ,
$300, po•'led on a driving
while intoxicat ea charge;
writ of mandamus against Robe11 M. Johnson , Jr., 19,
auditors in Putnam, Mercer Racine , and John Jenkins, 19,
and Van Wert counties who . Syracuse, $200 each on petty
have refused to levy taxes for theft charges and K~ven W.
areas assigned to the Van- Thomas, 20, Stockport, $25 ,
tage Joint Vocational School spinning tires.
District near Van Wert .
They were assigned to the
district by the Ohio Board of
Edu cat ion wh ic h al so
claimed that the taxes also
should be collected.
The three judge panel noted
in its ruling there· is no
statutory authority for the
levies to be spread on the tax
duplicat e of local school
districts merely by reason of
th eir assig nment to the
district by the state.

CAAPIT AEMNANT
SPECTACULAA!

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
(Discharges June 14)
Kenneth Adams, Betty
Bapst, Howard Carmeon,
Robert Correll, Betty Crouse,
Dorothy Gibbs, Wanda
Giblon, Ray Hicks, Bette
Horan, Nona Hu11t, Michelle
Janke, Merble Jenkins, Betty
Johnaon, Norma Johnson,
Seaford Jordan, Victoria
Loga11, Elizabeth Lu cas,
Shari McFarland, Denise
Mitchell, .Teresa Myers,
Tanuny Pelfrey, Eva Pigge,
Sally Ross, Shirley Sharp,
Mhrvin Shively Jr., Shirley
Smith, Lucille Story, Clara
Turner, Geneva Van Fossan,
Lee Wood, III.
(Births, June 14)
Mr. and Mrs. James Rowe,
a110n, Northup. Mr, and Mrs.
DuUus Janey , a daughter,
Langsville.

DATE Wl'l1f A MADAM
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI)Gov. Rudy Perpich had a
luncheon date today with St.
Paul's best known madam.
She paid $135 for his companionship.
Rebecca Sue Rand, who
operates several '· rap
parlors" and has been convicted ol pi'OitltuUon in the
put, woo hlnch With the·
gov11110r by making the
hlghe• bid at a Minnesota
Opera Charity ll~ll auction.

HUSTlER SQUAD
II

R"

Plus

TRIP WITH
THE TEACHERS

* Bound Edges

* Assorted Prints
*Nylon Pile

*Ideal For Bathrooms

Special
ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

A Service of PoinTView Cable TV.

.
'12 gallon

Blue Bonnet

OLEO ••••••• , •••••• !~·.
16 oz. Kratt

61V
;r ·

59'•

LB 99•
SUCED CHEESE ••••••
~

.

11 oz. Ban

TO ALL FATHERS

.CABBAGE2 · tb.35~
HEAD
LEITUCE •••••••

39'

TV Dinners •••••••••• &amp;r each

PEACHES •••••••••••••••• ~:~.z~. 59'
PEANUT BUTIER ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;::L.99~
WELCH AID GRAPE DRINK •••••••••••••~.~!:4r
BLACKBERRY
JELLY OR JAM••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • .~:-.sr
FAMILY SIZE
LIPTON TEA BAGS .......................... s1.75
46 oz. CROWN CLARION
TOMATO JUICE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.
17 OZ. LUCK'S
GtANT LIMA BEANS •••••••••••••••••••••••••. 39'
.NESTEA. •• :.o.z~ ....•............................ $1.89
18

6300

Sweat-Pruf leather insoles
Barnyard - Prul oiled leather uppers
Non- S~id , non-marking cork sales
Arch su pporting steel ,shanks
A sure-lire value lor the man who wants
his money's v1arth

CHAPMAN SHOES
Next Door To Elberfelds
Pome(oy's Quality Shoe Store
104 E. Main
992-2815
Pomeroy, 0.

•

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••~·. 99'
EUJmRM ILK ....•..•••

10% DISCOUNT .

The Dai~ Senlinel

JOWL BACON ••••••..•••••••••••••••••••••••~. 59'
AGA-R CANNED HAM •••••••••••• :.;~~.~~~}4.95

Valley Bell

Chippewa,' the people
who believe in the All
LEATHER boat and the
Goodyear leather Welt

Pt. Pleasant Register

6'x9' RUBBER.BACK
CARPET

can refuse tax levies

Wed. , Thurs., Fri .
June 15-16-17

Supplement to Gallipolis Dai~ Tribune

Reg. '39.95

Court rules auditors

MASON DRIVE-IN

ERY

IAL
I YOUR
HO

sr

5 OZ. ARMOUR

vienna ·sausage •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 2/&amp;r

THE COST: JUST 29 A
DAY
4

IN ADDITION TO YOUR REGULAR MONTHLY CABLE RATE

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