<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15168" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15168?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T20:26:49+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48289">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/556ee5546a3965e7e825a774a53e0e68.pdf</src>
      <authentication>612085812f7370b18ecf3e4ef472652e</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48710">
                  <text>•

'
N-The SundMy Tunes-Sentmei,Swlday. July 24, 1977

Rotarians bid goodhy
MlDOLEPORT - Fumiko
lwaMki, the exchllnge
&amp;udent trom Japan who has
attended school in Meigs
County the pa!lt year sponIOr.d -by the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club, said
ber farewella to the club and
to the USA Friday evening.
The bighly talented (musicaclence) 17-year old girl who
will graduate in Japan in a
year and a haH, after already
receiving her diploma (with
bonorlt) from Meigs High
School, did not exactly shed
tears when·she spoke of going
· home, but she was · not fa r
from it.
"I'm not ready to go back,"
, !!he said In her fluent English,
and then in a softer voice,
almost to herseH: " I may
never go back."

She has about a week
before Dying west to Tokyo
with a stop over in Hawaii.
Miss Iwasaki has been the
house guest of Rotary
families Mr. and Mrs.· Bernard Fultz, Mr.'and Mrs. Bob
Buck, and Mr. and Mrs. John .
Rice, and of Mr. and Mrs.
James Sheets during her year

here. ·

Miss Iwasaki received the
best wishes of each Rotarian
following· the meeting. She
was most · grateful 'for the
chance to spend the year in
the United States.
President Carl Denison

Protesters ·

•

Continued from page D-1
again Friday afternoon,
holding a three-bour mass
meeting · on University
Commons. After several
talks, the some 400 persons
marched to the campus
police
station,
the
administration building and
to Taylor Hall, scene of the
last week's mass arrests.
At each stop, the group
beard moce speeches urging
further resistance despite the
court order. There were no
incidents.
At Blanket Hill, 15 persons
volunteered to go under the
reinforced rope around the .
planned construction site ,
which is the court injunction
nO-trespass area, and get
arre!lted.

"When the 15 ducked under
the rope, lots of others surged
on the site,'' a KSU
spokesman. "There were a
lot of them, about 100 who
defied his injunction."
Although there were
several KSU Campus pOlice
and Portage County sheriH's
deputies at the Blanket Hil)
site, no arrests were made
but· the occupation was
videotaped The film is to be
given to Judge Kainrad for
consideration. ,He could hold
them _in coo tempt of court.
The KSU spokesman said
those illegally on the
construction site stayed there
"10 to 15.minutes, and when
they weren't arrested,
~erylli)dy left."
"The whole areJ was
deserted, nobody camped on
the hill overnight," he said.
At the court hearing, the
judge told both - sides to
''maintain status quo" while
he cmsi.dered the university
request for a permanent
injunctim, needed to keep the
area clear during the planned
construction, work. Kainrad
extended his . temporary
. injunction pending bis ruling.
The !K'Ote!lters have asked
the ·area be preserved as it
now Ls, or make a national
shrine to the four -killed and
the others injured seven
years ago.

presided over the meeting in
Heath United Methodist
Church .
The ·District
Governor will visit the club
Aug. 12. Ladies of the church
served a steak dinner.

Meigs
Property
.Transfers ·
Pat E. Mitchell, Marcella
S. Mitchell to PaulA. Musser,
Deborah S. Musser, Lo t,
Rutland.
Fatrners ·Home Adm. to
John A. Compton, Naomi B.
Compton, Riverview Acres,

Middleport. ·
Bernard V. Fultz, Exec.,
Mary A. Park, dec., to
Gregory Hines, Lot. Middleport.
Michael Lonchar to Diane
Dobs, Diane Lonchar, .141&gt;
A., Scipio.
Nina D. Yates to Salem A.
Yates..234 A., Sutton.
Charil!ll.JlisseU, Margaret
Bissell to Roy F . Rifne,
Frona K. Riffle , .33 · A.,
Chester.

Center's range
of activities ·
are reviewed
GALIJPOLIS- The Gallia
County Human Resource
Council dined at lunch July 14
at the Bob Evans Shelter
House. Lunch was prepared
and served by the Guiding
Hand School.
Nancy Raming from the
Gallia - Jackson - Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center discussed the Center's
wide range of available
services. In addition -to the
main clinic in Gallia.county,
satellite clinics in Jackson
and Pomeroy provide services to their . r.espective
communities. Plans are
being finalized to mo~e into
the new Gallia !acUity August
I. The site is located at the
junction of US 35 and SR 160.
A fall Resource Council
meeting was scheduled at the
new clinic. At that time, the
council will tour the fac!Uty. ·
An open . invitation is · extended to all area residents
and representative from
service agencies to al\end the
monthly meetings scheduled
at noon on the second ThurS:'
day of each month. For more
information call Ponney
Cisco at the Buckeye Hills
Career Center.

OOLUMBUS (UPJ) - In
between · debate about .
collective bargining, the state
budget, political redistricting
and other weighty topics, the
Ohio House Thursday loWJd ·
time to talk about salt.
"I think it's a little silly ID
require the director of the
(Ohio) Environmental
Protection Agency to draft
rules to keep salt out of the
rain," quipped Rep. Rodney
Hughes, R-Bellefontaine.
. The bill, which was sent. to
the Senate 73-15, requir~ that
the rules be drafted by Nov. I.
After Jan. 1, 1978, more than
100 tons of stockpiled salt
would have to be adequately
covered from the elements.
Th.e requirement was necssary to avoid pollution.

QUALITY FURNITURE
:

by LANE

From the 11 0.kmounti' Coi!Ktian . by lane. This
tmartly styled contempor•ry bedroom suite features
e~pert craftsm•nshrp and styling plus O•k Veneers
and 0.11: Solids, •ntiqued brass, finish hardware,
recessed bases, no wg dr•~•r glides.

SALE PRICED AT

.

Lellers ol oplalOII are welcomed. They 1ltodl he
less thiii3GO wor.., laq tor be ••bleet le ~1&lt;111 by
the edhor ) allill m ..t be slglled witb the tlpee't address. Names may he withheld 11pot1 publlcatiOil.
Qowever, on request, names will he dlsc'-'1. Letters
shoulcl be Ia good taste, addreu.lng l18ueo, •ol ptr•
sonalltles.

.... ~~&amp;ah:....,:::::;
Not over, we've just begun
ED. NOTE : Our poJicy is to limit ·'lel\ers to the editor" to
those originating from local persons residing in the area
served by our newspaper or dealing with issues that relate to
. local problems. The letter below, while outside those
guidelines, appears to have an overriding significance . Local
organizagions may write to Mr. Angevine for a speaking date,
according to the letter. ·
'
_ __
Dear Sir:
There is far too much gloom and despair being handled
about these days. We are told thatbecauseof man'sactions : I)
The Earth will be choked by pOllution, 2) The Earth will freeze
because of dust in the air, 3) The Earth will fry because of
carbon dioxide in the air(?), 4) We will run out of energy, and
therefore out of everything else, S) Nuclear \'far will destroy
our civilization, 6) New germs froin DNA experiments will
cause a plague, or eat all ·our plastics, or whatnot, 7) Our
citizens will sit in front of their TV ·sets,· take their various
drugs, and let our country collapse through inaction, 8) etc.,
etc., etc., ... Actually, the.only serious problem that we face is
number seven. The rest only appear serious to those who, like
most Europeans in the 1400's, have their vision limited lo the
Old World. Today, as then, there is a New World(s). The only
difference is that we know·far more about it th!ln Columbus
knew about the 'Western Ocean' when he sailed (he hit the
wrong continent!) . I refer, of course, to the other eight planets,
their moons, and the numerous asteroids which compose our
solar systems. Only a hundred miles above our heads, the
sun's energy beats down unaffected by any atmosphere. A
satellite can be placed in an orbit where It is always over the
same spot on the Earth, and where it is In . that searmg
'daylight' more thaq 99 per ce~t of the time. The energy could
them be sent back to ·Earth in the form of a narrow beam of
microwaves and collected by a recteMa. This would eliminate
· two of the major problems with solar energy ; storage, and the
amount of space taken up by collectors on the ground. The
third problem, cost, can be solved by making the solar
collectors in space from lunar material Shipped from the moon
by an electromagnetic catapult, rather than by a rocket .
Thus ends the energy problem, along with the danger and
pollution problems of nuclear and coal plants. A NASA-Ames
study states that this energy source could produce more'
energy th!ln the Alaskan pipeline by the 1990's, which is about
the time the pipelinewouidbedrying up. This is only one of the
many benefits of colonizing space which are known to oe
possible. ZerQil conditions, which cannot be achieved on
Earth, provide a manufactUring environment for new drugs,
cheaper ·vaccines, new computer materials, and new alloys
from metals which cannot be mixed on Earth. Asteroids could
be towed to Earth orbit by solar powered 'rockets' whose
electromagnetic engines would simply use the material from
the asteroid itself as fuel. (A small, on~bic-mile asteroid is
worth one trillion dollars at today's metal prices.) Possible
retalitory expeditions from the space colonies (such as
deOecting an asteroid to smash an opposing country) would
make Ameri"ca's defense position secure. In 2176, there will
probably be more Americans living their extended-youth, 200
year lifespans (already shown possible in experiments with
rats) in orbiting space cities ami on other plants than in
America ilseH. They will probably wonder as we do, why it·
took the people of the Old World so long to realize the value of
the -New:
I belong to a group ·of engineers, biologists, physicists and
others at Ohio State University and elsewhere who believe that
America need not decline, that rather we have hardly begun.
We would welcome the chance to explain our viewpoint before
any school or community group which would Uke to hear one &lt;if
us speak and discuss on America's future . Our address ls : .
Foundation, 81 East 15th Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43201 (tel.
614-299-3359).
·
Sincerely,
William H. Angevine

. '
WET SALT

$59!)00

•

· It'll take some arm twisting
Dear Sir:
Some things have been weighing on my mind lor a coupie
of weeks and since they affect the youth of our county who have
spent a year, along with their parents' encouragement, io fit
their sale animals for the upcoming Junior Fair, it needs to be
said. It would be easier to wait until after the livestock sale at
the Fair is over and say, "ltold you so," but I think if the
people that are affected have a chance to help seek support
now everyone will be better served.
For 17 years I had the privilege of buying many, many
animals at aU the local fairs for the Evans Packing Company.
After leaving the meat packing business; I was asked, and was
happy ID do so, to buy the animals for the Jones Boys Stores.
I just want to relay to the kids and their parents that one
big buyer of animals, if not the biggest single buyer, will not be
present this year at the sal~. I think it should be said that
during the last five years Tlie Jones Boys Stores.spent'more
than$56,000atthelocalfairs in support &lt;if the local youth for an
average of over $11,000 per year.
I, for one, think this is support that is commendable, and it
is sure going to hurt this year when the Jones Boys aren't
there. Sure it's easy to say, "Well, someone else will buy the
stock," but it is going to take a lot of talking and arm twisting
even to come close to the prices.of past years.
The Jones Boys conditions are beyond their control
because the dema~ brought on· them are not reasonable.
There seems to be more interest in closing their doors than in
settling the problem.
_
.
I feel that I can write freely to the youth and parents
because neither I nor any of my family have one ceDI involved
in the Jones Boys Stores, and my only hope is !bat the people
will realize how the Jones Boys problem also affects many,
IIIilllY otpers. Th!UJ!!QPie .Q!!t Iron\ are asklnti Y.OU to shop a(
other major chain .stores and not with the Jones Boys or even
other locally oVIIled stores.
.
I bave attended all the local area fairs for many, many
years, and I can't remember when thot major chains have
·given the Fair's livestock sale any support.
Supposing your money is spent with the major chains,
other than some local payroll checks, the money all goes out of
the county - never any Of it to be returned back to the local
community.
I'm sure I'll be oriticized for my thoughs, but ·the liveStock
sale needs some extra support this year and it's up to all of us
to get rosy and find some new support to fill the gap we I)OW
have. It's just a tittle hard to lind, someone to bliy those 12 or IS
steers and some hogs and lambs that the Jones Boys have been
buying each year.- A very concerned Junior Fair Supp&lt;Jrb!r,
Merrill T. Evans.

Discussion of traps continued
Dear Sir:
This letter is written because of mY' concern about a
serious threat to' Wildlife conservation efforts in Ohio. That
threat is the proposed bBn of leghold traps by organizations
such as the Hwnane Society and Frienda of Animals.
AlthoiJ8h these groups may be well-intentioned, they are
misinformed. Much of the anti-trapping campaign llteratur~

Chw-ches should work
more providing welfare

On the subject of

leg/told traps, the
strike at Jones Boys
focuses upon emotions !ism rather than fact. U the facts were
known, and these groups were honestly concerned about
wildlife, they would not oppose the use of leghold traps. Here
are some facts to consider:
First, the wildlife in our state is . a renewable natural
resource. Statistics taken · from "Wildlife Cllfl.!lervation In
Ohio," published by the Ohio Depertment &lt;if Natural
Resources, show Ohio is ranked second nationally in its
production of muskrat furs, and third nationally in total
number of furs produced. During the past 10 yelll'S, the harvest
of muskrat furs has averaged ~93,000 per year, The Division of
Wildlife reports the state's raccoon population has been
steadily increasing, while the muskrat population hss been
maintained at high Jevels. The trapping industry adds millions
of dollars to Ohio's economy ea~ year without detriment to
wildlife.
Most opponents of the leghold trap objectlo its use because
they feel it is not humane. AU animal populations riae and fall
in cycles. This mean~ that populations will increase until they
reach numbers that deplete their food supply. Then natural
mortality fa ctors, fighting, starvation, disease, and
cannabalism, take their toll. 'The sportsman's way of
harvesting wildlife is much less cruel and Jess wasteful than
natural altneratives. Trapping is recogrmed as a useful
management tool by the Ohio Division of Wildlife The
National Audubon Soc.iety's Sanctuary Department, and The
National Wildlife Federation. These are trained and
knowledgeable experts.
•
Another bit of misinformation is that leghold traps have
teeth that hold the animal. This ·is incorrect. Leghold traps.
have smooth arms which restrain the . animal. A study
conducle&lt;! by Dr. Ward Stone of the New York State
Departm~nt of Environmental Conservation required 200
foxes to he trapped. The animals were iagged and released for
further study. Dr. Stone reparted that there was no permanent
injury to any or the foxes.
.
There is also the matter of financial support of Ohio's
Division of Wildlife. No general tax moneys are used. Hunters,
trappers, and fishermen provided $9,1l0,508 during 1976. There
is an 11 percent federal tax on all traps, firearms, ammunition
bowhunting and fishiilg equipment: A portion of this money ~
returned to our Division of Wildlife each year. This means that
it is the sportsmen who willingly pays for wildlife habitat
improvement, research, enfor.cement of game laws, and In
general, the wildlife management efforts in Ohio. In addition,
sportsmen pay for ~ctuaries, recreation and camping areas,
and research on nongame species of wildlife. Everyone may
enjoy both the wildlife and recreation areas provided by the
Sjlortsman's dollar.
·
·
AlthoUgh I do not trap, I ask opponents of the leghold trap
to cons1der the consequences of their· opposition. How much
have they contributed personally or as a group to the wildlife of
our state? The record speaks for ilseH. -· John Costanzo Box
32, Minersville, Ohio 45763.
.
'

Nursinu
,..,

con~erence
J'

successful

Dear Sir:
The area nursing conference held July 7sponsored by the
Meigs County Unit of the American Cancer Society was
successful. The speakers provided a great wealth
information for those who attended. One ,highlight &lt;if the
conference was Deborah Roediger, Miss Hope of Ohio, who
spoke about her own personal experiences as a nurse working
with cancer patients.
·
The Meigs County Unit would like tn· thank those who
attended the area nursing conference held at the Meigs High
School. We hope for another conference later on. We would Uke
to give a special thanks to aU who wocked at the conference
and those who contributed In any way to the conference. Roger Bailey, PT Chairman, American Cancer Society, Meigs
County Unit.

ar

Advice to Ambassador YoungDear Sir :
Andrew Young, U. · N. Ambassador, formerly
representative from Georgia, on a - national T.V. news
broadcast last week, referring to !lie blackOut in New York illld
the widespread looting, said unemployment was at its highest
and people who are hWJgry are sometimes driven to do these
things. In other words, he sanctiOiled such ridiculous' actions.
Now a hungry person doesn't bave to steal alcoholic
beverages, clothing, furniture, even the fixtures, then wreck
the place. ·
These hoodlums·were referred ID as animals. When I was

Both sides claim victories in Ethiopia
NAIROBJ, KellY&amp; (UPI) SamaU-bac:ked guerrlllaa
. Mid ~ they captored the
lmportam. Ethiopian military
prrllon lllld ainltrlp at Gode
Ill • two-month delert ....

GLAD51'0NE, Ore. (UPI) · broktiHn-!IPiril Individual of
- Betty Abnberg, head of an that loving cart.n
Mrs. Ahnberg oversees
Ohio community center
some
20 c&lt;m~~~unity services
p;ogram, told an Oregon
centers
staffed by church
Seventh-day Adventists
volun.teers throughoUt Ohio,
mee~ that ctmehes should
be moce involved in helping heads the Medina, Ohio,
the needy because the center and is director and the
nation's weHare system ls a uAunt Sue" of the "Your
Story Hour" weekly reUglous
mess.
:'Over and over I see people radio program played on
who have been stripped of about 600 stations. She
their self~espect in their addressed the 99th annual
dealings with government Oregon Adventist . camp
weHare, '' said Mrs. Ahnberg, meeting Thursday.
Oregon's Adventist
president of the Ohio
churches
have 45 such
Advent!sts Col)ljllUnlty
i:ommunity
service centers
Federation for the past eight
11
years. The church worker which work closely with other
really cares and can assure a welfare organizations, the
church reported.
Mrs. Ahnberg cootended
the average government
weHare caseworker has not
the time to show the same
personal concern as church .
workers. ·
"For one thing, there is too
0' •
much paperwork," she said.
.
~
"When the caseworker is
bogged
down
with
paperwork, how can the
ore«:=~ anything else but a

Diplomatic obllervers said
still underway
throughout the Ogaden, a
third of the land area of
Ethiopia. But tjley could not
llult dlpkwnal:lc: IOIII'Cel NY verify the
conflicting_
hu labn hundreds of llvea. battlefield claims hy both
Ethiopia admitted large sides.
areaa of the Ogaden Deoert
'lbey said hun&lt;lredl and
were caplured, but claimed possibly thousands of pei'SOIIS
the attack wu waged by had been killed, ,.ounded or
replar l!cmall troope using left refugees In the fighting
lllld heavy thatI Dar~ Into war two

months ago.
The 3,IJOO.etrong Western

SomalllJberation Front said
its guerrillas "captuted the
town of Gode after fierce
figliting with Ethiopian
forces, a large number of
whom surrendered to the

front."
The front also said it
captured large quantities of
weapons and ammunition.
Radio Ethiopia, however,
!Did a dlfterent story.

the first lime they claimed to
have captured an important
town.
Somali Radio insists the
battle. are being waged by
guerrllla forces, despite Ethiopia's claim that its neighbor
... made."
mounted a fuU scale attack
. during the latest battle in the
50
border on ihe Webi Shebele Ogaden.
River. ·
· Ethiopia also announced a
The guerrillas previously major shalteup of its anned
have claimed success in forces in a bid to tackle the
desert battles 1 but this was

lt said govenunent troops
were "now scoring victnries
In the ealllern part" but
admitted "Before we gain full
victory, much blood must be
spilled and many sacrifices

c:: f~'7:"~~

deterioriating situation on overall commamers.
two battlefronts - the
The changes were made as
Ogaden wasteland . and the the three-year-&lt;tld MarxiBt
northern Eritrea Province, military govenunent faced
where it is fighting Moslem Its most severe crisis since
secessionists.
the overthrow of the late
Ethiopian leader U . Col. omporoc Haile Selassie.
Mengistu Haile Mariam has
The northern Moslem's
named new commanders for have grabbe&lt;t control of
four army divisions and virtually the entire region in
formed· five (livlsions of their bid for independence,
People's Militia - a 300,000- and lighting in the Ogaden
member Ioree headed hy two has been escalating almost
daily,

'

en tine

Contingent
goes Ai1 2

VOL XXVIII

NO. 70

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS ·

MONDAY, JULY 25, 1977

:

men charged ·in murder

to j amh

"Taxpayers are not paying
The
Tri-State
Area for the jumb~ed~ System, 1
Council's contingent of 36 Boy pius what a1d JS actually
Scouts and four adult leaders - given, but are also paying for ,
leaves August 2 for the 1977 all that paper.
National Scout Jamboree at
"Everyoneknowslhereare
Moraine State Park in many freeloaders while 1
western Pennsylvania. '
countless others 'who r...Uy ;
The.group will travel to the need h_elp are _left dangling.
jamboree site by chartered Much of this IS due ID the
bus. En route, according to tangle of gove,rnment
Ed Moon, the contingent will regulations.
stop In Canton Ohio to visit'
"We are constantly helping
the football H;ll of Fame.
people who are without s~The J'amboree Moon said nance because they are being
'
is a once-in-a-lifetime
op-' re-eva!ted"
ua .
.
portunity for Scouts. The
Mrs. Ahnberg satd she and,
seven days, August 3-9, are her helpe~ o£:ten take_ people
packed 'With a wide variety of temporarily mto their own
activities tbat range from homes because they have
competitioo in Scout skills to nowhere eJ:le to turn.
Advocatmg a complete
merit badge demonstratiOIIs
to special features such as a overhaul of the present
reenactment ·of Lord Baden- welfare · system,
sli,e
Powell's first Scout camp on.. emphasized that there was a
Brownsea Island and an need for more supplemental ·
Awareness TraU designed to help programs for. the needy
teach physically-able Scouts who are really trying to help
the problems of the han- themselves.
dlcapped to the opening and ·
closing gala arena shows
featuring nationaUy-known
entertainers.
BUDGET LANGUAGE
Leaders of the Trl-8tate
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Area Council contingent are Ohio Senate ThUI'llday said
Edward Moon, Jamboree "no" to House changes to a
Coordinator, · Thomas Mur· 4roilage budget language bill
phy, Jamboree Scoutmaster; and (arced the bill, as
RObert Matthews, Assistant ' expecled, into a conference .
Scoutmaster; . and David committee.
.Blanchard, Assistant
The bUI contains the
Scoutmaster. Moon said that formula for, -distribution of
Bob Cree, local Scout state aid to public schools and
Executive, is serving on the gives state bureaucrats
National jamboree staff.
directives oo how to spend the
already-enacted $13 billion,
two-year state budget.

First degree murder charges were filed over the weekend
by Gallia County sheriff's deputies against Clyde Ramey

Ratcliff, SO, Rt. 3, Athens, and Terry McCune, 28, Columbus.
They are suspects in the alleged shooting death on Sept. ,16,

1976 of Albert Thompson, Rt. 2, Cheshire.
Ratcliff, in GallipOlis Municipal Court, this morning had his
prellminary hearing continued untillO a.m. Wednesday. Bond
.

-

BOT ITEM Ia ~Ia
·ea-•a blgeat .... OD
e8rtll, u •&amp;De muter of
t•e Earopeaa Swlal

. . . . . tltnaP • rtac "
lire. 'l'lleleatla •fliP polat

Weather

growing up on the farm an animal that was uncontrolled was
locked up or restrained and. Then If they continued this,
stubborn betavior, they were destroyed . .
Some people today applaud a: criminal and the victim gets
very little attention.
·
·
. ·An'!"ew had his nose where it didn't belong,.and his mouth
IS too bJg. He may find a fist in It some day· am Jimmy well
he didn't do ex- say anything about these re~; may~ a pai
m the shoulder; shoUld have kicked his rear: political bed
partners, you know.
.
·
It disturbs me to think our officials in bigh office will
condonesuchactions.- Lewis Claude Miller, Gallipolis, Ohio.

was fixed at $250,000. William Conley was named as his court- consumed parts of it. The head was not connected to the body.
appointed attorney.
Assy. Prosecuting Attorney Ricbard C. !Wderick Jr. said
McCune was scheduled for a court appearance later today this morning both arrests came as a result of investigative
after his counsel is appOinted.
work by the Gallia County sheriff's department.
Thompson '• body was found lying in a yard near his home
Roderick declined to go into detail concerning the case.
Iss! September 14. At that time, no autopsy was taken because However, he Indicated the cbarges resulted from information
of the decomposition of the body due to wild animals having . obtained from a woman infocmant. He said robbery was the
·
apparent motive for the murder,

Carter lists new minority programsWASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter, criticized
for not fulfilling campaign
!K'Omises to blacks, today
listed his new !K'Ograms and
accmnplishments, including
a new requirement that 10 per
cent of aU s~ntracts in the
public works bill mtrst go to
minority groups.
. .
The President gave the
~ational Urban League an
ac:Jaress In which he ticked off
Ilia !K'oposals to provide jobs
and stimulate the ecooomy.
Vernon
Jordan,
the
league's executive director,
said Sunday, ''Black people,
having tasted the sweetness
of victory In November,
reaent the sour taste of
dlaappinlment in July ... We
reaent Unfulfilled (i'omises of
jobs, compr~s 1o win
conServative support and the
continued acCeptance &lt;if high
unemployment."
' Carter said the first public
PRESIDENT CARTER woclts cootracts were signed
!Alday claimed llplfteaut ooly last week for less than 1
prepesa Ia briJ1cbr1 the per cent of the $4 billion
American dream to appropriated in the bill. .
ma-lty graDJIII In • bard
"We will process 1,000 coobltlla&amp; apeeeb · to the tracts per .week and aU $4
.. NaUeul UrllaD League.

billion will be allocated by
Sept. 30," he added. "For the
first time 10 per cent of every
contract must go to a
minority subcontractor or
supplier which ~&gt;:ould mean
f400 million directly to
rnin9rity businesses."
Furthermore, he ·said, the
number &lt;if public service jobs
will be doubled from 310,000
to 600,000 by sept. 30 aad to

725,000 by next September.
Less than 25 per cent of the
increase is in effect yet since
the program began In June
and, he said, ''we're adding
15,000 jobs per week."
Carter said he soon will
send Congress proposals for
weHare reform which will
empbasize jobs. ''Our goal,"
he said." Is lor all those who
want to work to be able to lind
work, so that they can be
independent, and proud, and
self-sufficient. The President

also cited bis program to
provide $1.5 billion for jobs
for unemployed youth,
doubling of the size of the Job
Corps.
In addition, he said he
proposed Immunizations .for
poor children, intended to
present a tax refonn proposal
that would be more lair and
had proposed · $350 . million
more in federal aid to
education.
Carter also said that he Is
pushing
the
Equal
'

p

JNews • ..•zn Brzefsi · ·

Settlement proposed
in.b;roiler price fix

Youth
P

y delayed

g1lll

.·.

leg wound
ft.CCI•dental

More houses numbered
.

·3

.

threatened by

OUTDOOR FURNITURE

R eopeDJD
•

COurt actiODS .

l

'.

SALE PRICES
Drive to Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechanic $treet - Take advantage of the
special sale prices on qyality porcli- lawn or patio furniture. Well known-makes
like Floyd · Telescope and Lloyd.
·
·
thoose from cushioned furniture wlttl aluminum frames - lllldtrs, chaise
lounges - rockers - straight chlirs and swings.
Or select folding furniture. chlirs, rockets, cltaise loungel.
Sale prices, too, on spring base cltairs and 4 and 5 foot width wooden porch
·

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ltlln

Employment Opportunity
Commission to catch up on a
backlog
of
130,000
discrimination complaints.
In hls speech Sunday,
Jordan said Carter should
dramatize bis concern for
New York City in the
aftermath of the blackout and
· looting. The President, he
said, should talk with both the
looters and the looted to
"signal to the nation bis
concern for the c.ities and the
poor wllQ live· in them."

FEARS tbat elvU war
and lntreasln~ Commlllllst
block loflueoce In nelgl&gt;bottng Ethiopia pose an
lucreaalng threat to bil
own eountry bas moved the
regime of Maj. Gen. Jaalar
Numelry, president oi.
Sudan, closer le the United
Slates. Sudan, onee one of
the more mnttantly antiwestern Arab states on the
PaleStine

"" Issue,

Is

receiving U. S. Technical
help and baa Indicated
interest
In
arms
asslslence. ...

Six-- day
border
war ends

Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat has ordered his troops
to end six days of border
lighting with Libya while
Arab negotiators work out a
truce. But Ubya did not
mention a ceasefire and there
was no confirmation fighting
Clearing and
cooler
had ended.
Libya's official Arab
tonight; lows to the upper 50s.
Revolution News Agency said
SWIIly Tuesday, with highs In
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
the mid 708. Probability of
today local militimen had
Wednesday through
"repelled and aMihilated"
precipitation 50 per cent
Friday, fair Wednesday
invading . Egyptian
today, 10 per cent tonight,
and Thursday and a chance
paratrOOpers in the .hordel:
near zero per cent Tuesday.
of thundenltowen Friday.
oasis of Jaghboub, blit did not
Highs will be In the 70s or
specify whether the clashes
low 101 and lows wllll~ In
came atllll: .DPro announced
the 50s.
FA'I'IIEa ' DROWNS
Its cease-fire late Sunday
CLEVELAND (UP!) . night.
WiJile Bi'lllllts, 30, Cleveland
Three Egyptlan officers
Heights, drowned Sunday
were
captured in the fighting,
ATLANTA (UP!)- A sell- approved by Judge WiJijam and that the sales totsied
evening while trying to
the agency reported.
T ~n-~e Iemen!, calling for payment C. O'Kelley.
over 'l blllion.
rescue his aon, Gregory, 10, .
Algerian President Houari
~u
of about $10.8 million in
.The suits !lad been filed
Thosefirmsagreelngtothe
from Late Erie. Authorities
Boumedienne
left Alexandria
damages, has been proposed · separately since 1973 illld settlement were Holly Fanns
said the boy feU in the water
today
after
urgent
talks with
by nine of 37 processors named as
defendants -of North Carolina, ConAgra
wlllle flltring with bls father
Sadat.
BoumedieMe
arrived
n ...
accused in an antitrust suit of members of the National of Nebraska, and Central
near the Cleveland Municipal
in
Egypt
from
Tripoli,
where
cu."
trying to fix the price of B r o i I e r
MarketIng Soya of Indiana, and Vahnac
Ught Plant. Another son,
he
met
with
Libyan
leader
broilers.
Association of Jackson, Mias. Industries, Tyson Foods,
Jeff, I, finally pulled his
The proposed settlement &lt;if They alleged the processors Rite,.Care Corp., Peterson Col. Moammar Khadaly .
. The Pomeroy Youth
Another mediator,
brother to safety.
Baseball League party some of the suits brought by conspired to fix prices by Farms, MareU Poultry, and
scheduled for tonight . has 17 states and grocery·, controlling the number of Hudson Foods, all of Palestine Liberation
Organization leader Yasser
been postponed unto Thurs- restaurant, hotel and other broilers reaching the Arkansas.
"'::$XWQ..:::;:$:&gt;,:;':&gt;.&gt;.::=::::::::~:::::::;:::::;:::::::,~~:,:::,:;:,~_;,;;,::::::::&gt;.::::-~:$$:!::::::X:':::&gt;.Wi
~llet
day, July 28, due to the chicken purchasers was CUed fnarket.
·
Central Soya, which has Aralat, ·stayed in Tripoli
Pomeroy Yankees team in ·u.s. ,DiStrict Court here
The complaints alleged _ plants at Athens and Canton, while Boumedienne went to
playing in the finals of the where the legal actions were that the association melnbe~s denied
any
anti-trust see Sadat.
Cairo Radio annoWJced late
Kyger Creek .Little League consolhlated. Others are handled about half the violations. A spokesman at Its
Sunday
that Sadat had
Tournament.
.
expected and aU must be nation's broiler sales in 1971 Fort
Wayne,
Ind.,
.·
ByUnitedPreulntenaatloual .
The party Thursday night
·
' headquarters said the ordered a halt to "all military
NAIROBI~ KENYA- SOMALI-BACKED INSURGENTS
will be at Royal Oak Park •
settlement was aimed at operations" after conferring
have captured the Ethiopian town ofGode in the Ogaclen desert
from 6 p.m. to 9.p.m. with a 50'
avoiding "the riaks, coats and with Boumedlenne.
after fia'ce fighting with gavenunent troopo, ScmaUa Radio
The border clashes, which .
cent charge for swimming.
the lengthy litigation"
said today. The radio said guerrillas of the Western SomaUa
began
last Tuesday, erupted
Hot dogs and drink will be
involved In taking the case
Uberatlm Front "captured the town of Gode after fierce
into full-scale warfar~ ThursMeigs County Sheriff furnished by the league. . J~mes Page,. project (.TR282), Salem-8chool Lot
through the courts.
fighting with Ethiopian focces, a large n~ of whom James J. Proffitt today Trophies will be awarded to engmeer for Flemmg, Page, Road (CRl) (SR124 to
The proposed settlements, day 'with an eight-hour clash
surrendered to the frmt."
Solte, Inc., said Saturday, SR143), Park Road (TR243),
which are not expected to be Involving tanks and jet
reported the accidental· winning teams.
· The two natims were in sharp dlaagreement over who was shooting of a ReedSville man
homes on 18 more roads have Hysell Run Road (CRI5), acted on for several months, fighters. It climaxed a bitter,
doing the IJihliDC. Ethiopia drarged Sunday that SomaUa's b)' b1a younger brnther and
received new numbers:
Collums Road (TR244),
were filed in federal court four-year feud between Sadat
IDAl"PiAo:es
·reau1ar forcee had invaded the Ogaden with warplanea, heavy the investlgatloo of an inand Khadafy.
Ball Run Road (TR20A), Pet~rson Hollow Road Friday.
- •........,
artillery ahd tanks and had occupied most of the Montana- cident where fire was set to
Klng~bury Road (CRIB), (TRI73), Price Hollow Road
On Sunday, Egypt said it
sized wasteland. But Somalla today rejected the Ethiopian trash containers on CR 28.
smashed two key airfields
Carpenter-Dyesville
Road (TR172), Eastman~! ge
(CRll), Chase Road (TR232), · Hoad (TR84), Jivide
ow
and two radar stations in a
c:blrges as ."baseless," maintaining the guerrlllas are ethnic
Mill~ WoHe, Rt. I Reeds.
.
day of massive bombing
Somalia who live In Ethiopia and who are fighting for ville, was treated and
Landaker Road (TR256), Road (TR70), Smi Road
independence from the Addis Ababa government.
Romine Road (TR9), Hooper (TRI43), and Grueser Hollow
0' raids. But Libya's official
released ·Saturday afternoon
Road (TR254), Myres Road Road (TR87).
po, news agency said it was
at Camden Clark Hospital in
~~crushing" the invasion.
CLEVELAND - CLEVELAND CONTRACTOR William Parkersburg after being
The agency today quoted a
H. Seliwrlght, 70, a supparter of Mayor Ralph J. Perk am his accidentally shot In the right
One couple has filed for
military spokesman as
predecea •f Carl Stokes, has been lndictea f&lt;!l' involvement in leg by his younger brother
with a .177 pellet riDe.
diMolutlon of marriage, two
saying, "Our popular fcrces
an alletled $II mllllal numben racket.
9MWrlcbt II free 011 $25,000 bond, having been charged Flnl set to · trash con- for divorce, and a judgment
managed to repel and
ta1nen
oo
CR
28
are
proving
hal
been
granted
in
Meigs
annihilate the invading forces
witb two eow~t. eadl of gamNinc, P1 1 ion of numbers
in the oasis of Jaghboub,"
..,..l•l•tllllld enaaglng In arpnt-d crime. Pcllce said seQ"el lUI obstacle to collection County Common Pleas Court.
'lnlldmeotlrelunled Jut Wedneaday by the CUyahoga County cre'II'B wbo cannot Chince
located about 25 miles inside
FUing for dissolution were
8r&amp;l!ll jury lliemmed from raldl 011 two ealll rdde apartments empt~ the containers Into LaDonna J. Taylor and
Libya.
. ,
,
Egypt said early today
June iO. 'l1ley laid an Wtdelco•!!l' officer inflHrated the . the truck while they may still RusselL. Taylor, GalllpoUs;
be burning. The Racine Fire Norma• J. Schoonover, ·
paratroopers had hit Jaghoub
tn.•mbenrq&amp;.
.
SEOUL, South Kotea against armed attack, in
POINT PLEASANT - It to "attack saboteur camps,"
Department was called to Middleport, asked for dlvoree
PI£1SBURGH - A UNI\I'ERSITY OF. PITI'SBURGH ~ one of the fires from Nancy C. Schoonover, · (UP!) -President Carter, in accordance with the treaty, appeared . today that the but withdrew when Sadat
atuc1y sbo'II'B coal m1nen are more JII'QIIe to die d atonllidl over the· weekend.
Pikeville, Ky., ~ Wlbna a personal letter delivered to remains firm and undimini· Slinr Memorial Bridge_, !S!Iued- his- cease-fire order.
President Park Chung-bee, shed.
which ·dosed nearly three
The Libyan news agency
c:anc« than the . a-verage rate and recommends an .In other action deputies got . McDaniel has . hied ~uit today
reconfirmed
U.S.
•
"l
want
to
assure
you
weeks
ago,
may
be
reopened
lnvl!ltigat!Oll to· see If stomach cancer Is an occupational 8 repOrt from Paul Hill, ·agaln81 Robert R. McDaruels,
called on aU border villagers
deterinlnatlon to defend (Park) again that our ground next week according to Dean to arm themselves against
buard lknrard Rockette, a biolllatlclan at Pitt's Graduate Letart Falla, that he lost a all of P!JIIleroy.
Korea in event of an force withdrawal, which will Blake, deputy commissioner wbat it termed "declared
School of PubUc Health, aiiiiOUIICed U.. findings after the waUet contaiJi1Dg papers and
The Community Bank of South
attack
by North Korea~
· • talte place over a four to five- of the W. Va. Dept. of High- war" by Cairo.
na 1pJetillll oh z~ year, $181,000 lltudJ funded by the Nation~ I approximately t220 In cash. Parlteraburg was ordered to
Carter's
letter
was
year period, will be carried ways.
It reported the military
lhllll le far ()o cupetimal Slfelr lllld Health.
recover the sum of f!,439.04 deUver.d by Secretary of .out
gradually and carefully,
Blake said satisfactory spokesman said some &lt;if the
'lheitudy 11 "the 11101t CGUljiieberillve JnveeUptlon on •
•
withaut costs or interest from
Defense Harold Brown, who In a manner which will progress is being made by the - Egyptians had msnaged to
~wmlwti!'JIIIrlalltyeverlllldertakllnlntbeUmtedStatea,"
aodney D. Jones. In other
met with the Korean leader preserve peace on the American Bridge Co. in
Mid NJOSR Dlnlctar Dr. John F. Flnkles. Aceordlnil to
court action Meigs County for roore than two hours at peninsula," the President repairinti a hairline crack In ''flee Into the desert." He
identified the three captured
Rc 1 ue blutlldJllllloalJ,., aed~dll Nlllldcancer, _Ln..i--...: ... Sheriff James J. Proffitt the Blue House, the official said.
·
a· weld joining the two main Egyptians as Maj. Ibrahim
. . . . . . . two leading JijDaa. -llni'Unt aDIGIIII coal aJJQUal ~
appointed Jlllle8 w. Hob- presidential mansion ln
Brown told Park the United beams on the Ohio aide of the Ahmeil, First Lt. Adel Abdel
. 1
IIID tllele IBCIMI'.4t-n w•.r mmber Gt m1nerJ die
~tetter as a deputy sheriH.
Seoul.
States will make a ''modeat" bride.
Salam and Sergeant Ibrahim
rr. ·~ y 11, ~~"""""' · · - and Ntet a1 I;YJIIII ol Tbe Pomeroy Pt~bllc
"l wish to emphasize increase In the number of jet
"We are looking for a Dasaouki Chaaraoui.
r 1f 11 1 ilk
1, JnehMIPC bl8dllwrg.
Library will be pmznted
strongly that our ground fighters it has baaed in the posslbleopeningofthebridge
of
another
aeleetloa
''There were not losses
c.uum
TWICE
force withdrawal plans country as it withdraws the within a weektotendays,'' he amo!lg our IJOIXIlar ftrces,'~
YAIIIlNCliON-IFBDRAn'JBEVERIIESUMED, cblldren'e flJma on Tuellday,
The Pameroy E-R Squad, signify oo.cbange whataoever 33,000 ~ combat forces, said.
the spokesman said.
. . . p pW'Jidlr.,.,ltwlllblfttoiiJelale-IIIIU Ja!J ., lit 1 p.m. at the called
Satarclay at 2:54 p.m. In our commitment ID the U.S. offlCIBis said.
It Is. costing the ltate of
•
... u - . A ......-dll$ d 1171 • - I l l - ways Middleport Library. Tbe lor Plna Covert, who had a security of the Republic of
The United states now has West Virlinia •$100,000 to
Dillie ~M~terlllldln IbM 111111, -wilD up to -.4ldrd of all fllma Include Cue of the
NOW YOU KNOW
lac:erattan In her head, was (South) Kone," Carter said. 60 F4 Phantom jet lighters repair the span. Repair work
The
Magna Carta, which
==~:~==a·~~--udshoaldbe
co111111e
eomJe,
Animals:
Ia
Love I&lt; Care
of Pall,
Clrcua taklll to Veterans Memorial "'I'herrutualdofenae treaty baaed in South Kocea. The includes the bolting on nf five some COIISider the birth of
At &amp;:66 p.m: between mr two countries officials declined to give ·PIIin of sUced plates In the
BabJ and One Ega • Hospital.
3 I Ill$ ee!lld to the c.n- JWI!IIno' fully In fwce, and euct detilla, but said it aree where the craclt W8l English democracy, was
.....
t
.......,_ White, oar delarmlnatlon to provide would involve aome ~ · dlacovered. A pair of plates ill never llgnecl. It wu -led.
1111 llltlte lllloW will 1M&amp; 11178lrfar
WM taklll to VMB from the prompt IUJIPOrt to help the- in the about 7,000 U.S. airmen bolted into place about every Some IU!oriapa claim that
1b8Ut u !IDW- AU ebildnn Ctmiry Ber.
King John could not write.
Republic of Korea defend now sta~oned In the country. two days.
are welcome.
14
.. the 11'1111 edllhe of
81acllac Brt'lbers aad
Bai'JIIIIII aad Bailey Clreus.

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY
.
.
.
SUMMER SALE

ELDS

ftgiUng was

W.,...,_, ....

•

swings.

ar1.lllery.

More 61ms for

.,llllt

:

U. S. sure to ·

of bridge

d~fend

predicted .

S. Korea

�•
,_Tho Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 2S,J977

J-The Dailv Sen~!. Middlepnrt-PomeMv, 0 ., Monday, July 25, 1977

Israeli op4tiori divided
TEL AVIV, llrael (UPI) Prime Minister Menahem
Begin, returning home today
after a niJie.(Jay American
tour, is headed ·fer a fight
with the United States despite
his warm reception in
Waahingtoo, his predecessor
says.
Former Prime Minister

Yitzhak Rabin said Begin,
who left New Ycirk's Kennedy

Golden Fleece award ~
to U. S. Posb\1 Service

full«ale official welcome differences
over
the
12-bour flight home, had only incfudlng jet fighter escorts .withdrawal of Israeli fcrces
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Sen. William Proxmire, Dpostponed an inevitable a brass band and a colo; . from Arab lands captured in
the 1967 Middle East War and
Wis., gave his "Golden Fleece of the Month" award tnday
cmfrontatim with President guard of officer cadets.
to lhe U.S. Postal Service for an ad campaign ro make
The right-wing Likud o v e r P a I e s t i n ian
Carter on Middle East
Americans write mere letters - , perhaps contributing
leader was ro repcrt to the participation in renewed
JX!lices.
. more ro postal deflcits.
"The confrontation which cabinet Tuesday and the Geneva talks.
The Postal Service says the ad campaign is intended ro
In a television appearance
failed to materialize is parliament Wednesday in a
ilicrease the volume of first class mail, thereby producing
certain to occur at the speech opening a debate on SUnday, ~in reiterated his
more rev·enues.
Geneva conference," Rabin the implications of his trip. stand agalliSt wtthdrawmg
"But Postal Service representatives with wbom my
Begin's
trip
to
Washington
Israeli
troops
to
the
borders
said ln an interview on Israeli
staff
has talked indicate that aU classes of mail are, at this
and
New
Yerk
apparently
·
that
existed
before
the
1!167
radio.
lime,
losing m~ney, " Proxmire said. "lncreasin_l! the
Begin was to return ro a failed to resolve key war.
"The return to the lines of· . volume of first-&lt;:lass mail may, therefore, sunply
, 4th of June 1967 . indeed is
contributes further to Postal Service deficits."
completely undcceptable ro
Proxmire said the Postal Service spent $3.4 million on
the overwhelming majority
the' ad campaign and another $775,000 "in a seemingly
of our people," Begin said on
futile effort ro test whelher the campaign works ... a grand
NBC's "Meet the Press."
total of over $4 millioo of the taxpayers money."
Rabin said he felt Begin
"Proxmire, known for his penny1&gt;inching ways with tax·
committed a major blunder
payers' dollars, makes his monthly "award" for what he
by disagreeing. publicly with
says is "the biggest, most ridiculous or most ironio-Washington instead of trying
example of wasting federal tax funds."
to work out a oomoromise
"Spending public money trying to make Americans
'•
Senate GOP leader Howard campaign funds will give the joint U.S.-Israeli stand to
more prolific letter-writers is a dubious project at best,"
·Baker predicted nearly solid average citizen as much ·take to ·the Geneva talks.
Proxmire said. "Moreover, there is a very great question
Republican opposition ro the voice in running -for office as
"The failure ro chaUenge
of whether a goverrunenwubsidized agency should he in
bill with " substantial" a bank president or a union the
U,s. position in
the game of trying to,drum UP more business for itself."
support from Democrats, and president. ·
comprehensive ,
public
Proxmire said the Postal Service deficit in fiSC8! year
that could make it ,hard to
Under the bill, a Senate campaign in an attempt to
1976 was $1.2billion,and a $2.4 billion deficit Is expected ln
round up the 60 votes needed candidate would have a change it would put the
the 12 months begining next March 25.
,
ro curb the filibuster.
gpending ceiling of $250,000 Geneva cpnference in doubt
"The Postal ~rvice may have had good intentions when
"H that (Friday) vote faUs, plus 10 cents limes the voting even if it is convened," Rabin
it embarked on its so-caUed 'Housebold Correspondence
there wiU be another vote, JX&gt;pulation of his state. He said.
Program' ... Btit unfortunately, the road to !Jell is _pav~
then · there will be another would receive a direct grant
"How can one expect the
with good intentions, and that's what we've got m thiS
vote, then there will be from the government of 25 Arabs to adopt a more
case," Proxmire said.
another vote " until the cents of the ceiling and every moderate position than Walegislatioo is enacted, Byrd elll!tribution of $100 or less shingron? " he asked.
vowed Sunday in a television would be matched by the
interview (ABC-1V's Issues ·government.
and Ailswers ).
The program would be
Byrd sdid the plan to financed by the $1 checkoff on
provide candidates with income tax returns which
about twothirds of their also
helps
finance
KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. would go with him .in the get revenge.
presidential elections.
The shootings occu~red
(UP! ) - A onetime tavern truck. if he promised not to
hurt
me.
He
took
me
in
the
shortly
after 2 a.m. ~turday
bouncer accused of killing six
persons in a parking lot with truck and we drove way out when the victims were
leaving the bar. They were
VU
.
a semi-automatic rifle east of town.
"lie said be was going to struck with bullets from .a
threatened to kill his
estranged wife and himself kill himself in front Of me. I .23J.icaliher rifle, a model an
two days before the flipped out and ... told him to officer said could fire 10 shots
shootings, it was ,learned drop the gun. He threw it in a in three seconds. "The one he
A sununer youth camp, will offer a variety of topics SUnday.
field and we went back ro wanted to kill was hit right
DeWitt , c . Henty, 26, an town."
sponsored by the GaUta • geared to the interests and
between the eyes," a state
Jackson '· Meigs Community needs of youth. In addition unemployed truck driver,
She said a neighbor had trooper said.
Mental Health Centet, will be various recreational -a c· will be arraigned today on ~ix called the police after she and
"For the others, it was a
held August H through 20 at tivities will be offered in· counts of murder and two Henry left, and " It I had case of being in the wrong
Camp Asbury, located out- eluding swimming, voUey- counts of attempted murder. gotten the help I needed, place at the wrong time."
side of Rio Grande. baU, softball, basketball and In addition, the Klamath those shootings wouldn't have
Killed were Gary Lee
Registration is open to any hiking. .
.. Falls district attorney's happened .. Those people Anderson, 27, Klamath FaUs,
cbild who will be entering
The youth camp promises office is investigating the would not be dead."
the apparent target of the
grade 7 tbrough 12 this faU to he a fun experience and a JX&gt;ssibility of filing a seventh
State Police said Mrs. first shot; Robert D. Seater,
and who resides in GaUta, good change of pace frolll the murder charge because one Henry .was contacted later 26, Klamath FaUs; his eightJackson or Meigs counties. quiet, sometimes, duU, month victim was eight ·months and declined to press charges months pregnant wife, Carol
The purpose of the camp is of August.
against her husband.
Ann, 23; James L.' Trueman,
pregnant.
Authorities
said
Henry
had
Kndiak,
Alaska; Arairew L.
to provide an opportunity for
The cost is $15 per camper
Henry's wife, Viklti, 25, who
·
been
asked
ro
leave
Un.
c
le
Walter
23 Medford and
youth to join together in which includes lodging, had filed for divorce against
•
•
•
group discussions and meals and most supplies. her husband of five months, Albert's bar - where he had Michael C. Mortenson, 23,
recreational activities led by Special arrangements can be said be came to her home worked more than a year ago Klamath ,Falls.
State police cbased Henry
professional staff. The week made for those who cannot Thursday and threatened ro as a bouncer - Friday night
,
' after being involved· in tw.o and engaged in a gunfight
long seSsion will be fully pay the fee. For more in· kill her .
"He was .;l,ving a .gun fights. He apparently went to with him. He was captured
supervised and will offer a fonnatlon, please contact the
wide range of activities. Gallia Community Mental around ... he pointed the gun · another bar where customers after ·suffering superficial
at my head and said, 'I'm heard him say he was going · wounds from a shotgun blast.
Informal discussion groups Health Center at 446-5500.
-ADVERTISEMENT
going to kill you.' l said I to return to Uncle Albert's to
FOR BIDSAirport SUnday night for the

GOP filibuster may
.
run into Sen. Byrd
.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Senate Majority Leader
Robert Byrd vows ro outlast a
scheduled Republican
filibuster this week against
pubUc financing of senatorial
campaigns.

.

It the first attempt to cut off
debate fails Friday, Byrd
said, he will try again next
week.
On another election issue,
the House votes this week on
a watered-down version of
President carter's instant
voter registration plan.
·A compromise between
Honse leaders and Vice
President Walter Mondale,
chief . architect of the
administration's election
reform plans, may mean that
the voter registration bill will
squeeze through.
Carter's original proposal
aUowing people to register at
the poUs on election day was
narrowly approved in
cammittee. But it was so sure
to be defeated on the House
floor Speaker Thomas O'Neill
would not call it up.
So Mondale agreed to
"sweeten" the bill, making
· theplanoptionalin each slate
instead of manddrory and
giving states power to decide
what identification a voter
needs for i!Jstant registration.
Those changes have
enhanced
but not
gpjlnlnteed - progpects of
passage.
.
li\ the Senate, taJpayer
subsidies
for
Senate
campaigns face a determined
GOP filibuster. Under
agreement reached by Senate .
leaders, a motion to cut
debate will not be voted on
until Friday.

Killer had threatened wife
-

. ·outh r nm:p
to. be he' ld

HULTH
lawrence E. lamb, M.D.

Case requires
medical aid
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

''

Federal Land and Wate r
Conserva t ion
Fund
Ac t
Prolect No . 39·()0508. .
Munic i pal Park . Te11n is
Courts , Village of M iddlepor t .
Ohio.
. NEW ORLEANS (UP!) has dwindled and most of the
8ids will be received until
12 : 00
Noon
O.S.T .
on There's money to .he made
frog 's legs served in
Au~ . 8, 1977 tor the con restaurants are imported .
STrUCIIOn Ot MUn iCipal Tenn i s breeding and seUing the lowly
courts for the Vil lage Of bullfrog for
food, but Besides their value. as food,
M iddleport , Ohio , at wh ich researchers fiist must find a
the web-footed, bugeyed
time the bids shall be opened
amphibians are · used in
by the Clerk of the Village · way to cheaply satisfy finicky
and publicly read by hi m at frog eating habits . and various types of medical
the V illage Hall. 237 Race
research.
Street. Village of M iddleport , develop a fast-growing
0
Ohio .
l
imagine
every
"superfrog'' str$.
Bids may be ml!iled to the
restaurant
in
this
country
The
harvest
of
wild
Mayor's Office , Village of
Middleport , Ohio ,· 45760 , bullfrogs in the United States
would love to have them as a
Attention : Mr . Fred Hott man , Mayor .
Information for bidders,
form of contract ,- plan s,
specifications , and forms of
bid bond, performance and
payment bond . and other
documents may be examined
and are obta inable at the
Village HaiL Middleport.
Ohio. upon the payment of the
sum of sta .oo, which is not
refundable ,
All bids must be In· plain
Authorities also said
United Press International
sealed enve lopes marked on
the
outside ,
" Bid
for
Thunderstorms rambled reports were received of
Mun i cipal
Park
Tenn is
strong winds, funnel clouds
Courts , V Illage of Middleport , over much of the nation early
Ohio. " Each bil:lder must Wday, · triggering scattered lll!d hsil. There were no
have on the outside of the bid flooding ·and threatening a
reports of major damage or
tnvelope his name and ad ·
injuries.
dress , and each bid must be renewed onslaught in the
accompanied by a bid bond or flood-weary Johnstown, Pa .,
The Omaha-Douglas
cectified check In the amount
County
Civil Defense office
of 10 percent of the total bid . · 'area.
said
some
persons in La
The bid bond shall be con .
Rain stretched from
ditioned that if the. bid is southern
New England Vista, Neb., and several other
accepted a c:ontra'ct w ill be
entered into and its per . across
the Ohio and 1 areas along the Papio Creek
formance ' properly secu'red . Tennessee valleys to the
were evacuated from their
If the bid embraces both
homes because of threatening
Gr~t lakes and westward ro
labor and material such
•
items shall be separately the Plains and the northern conditions
stated with the pr ice thereof.
Police
'said
they
were
Rockies.
No bidder may withdraw
hi$ bid for a period of sixty
Flash flood watches were in investigating reports · of
daYs from the date of bid
effect for eastern Colorado personsloolingcarsstaUedin
opening .
The pro(ec·t is · federally
and western Pennsylvania. floodwaters in south Omaha
'
assisted . Contracts to be
Communities. dotting the Neb.
awarded under this Invitation
A few scattered thunderConemaugh River VaUey for bids will be subject to
Presidential Executive Order
just starting to dig out from storms alao dampened
No . 11246{ as amended ,
the werst flooding of the portions of Florida and .the
requirl ng affli'matlve action
fer equal employment ·op- • centory braced
a GuU coast
portunity . Contractors are
sea tte~ed showers
possible . ·new . round of
further advised that the
thunderstorms and flash dampened the Pacific
January 27 , 1972 Equal
Employment O'pPortunlty . floods. The National Weather ·northwest
Great Basin
Executive Order of the
the,
..;~rn
Rockies. ·
and
Service
said
·
the
most
Governor of Ohio is also
appliUbl&amp; to this bid In - vulnerable areas were those
Billows of imoke wafted
vitation .
where at least 51 persons over Los
from a
The owner reserves the
win~hipped
fire
that
killed
in
beayy
flooding
were
right to waive informalities
Or to reject any and all bids . last week.
blackened mere than 3,000
Successful bidder must
Other heaVY rains pestered acres of brush in a remote
comply with the Ohio work men ' s Compensation laws
the Plains and the Rockies. area of the Angeles National
and also comply with all
During a six-hour period Forest. The fire was reported
other state , federal and local
taxes and laws .
ending early today, Lander, "completely out of cmtrol"
Successfu ·l b idder must
Wyo. got nearly two inches of Sunday by U.S. Forest
j:lroc&amp;ed with the work within
rain - mere than the recerd Service spokesmen.
two w-e eks of the signing ot
th~ contract and the project
Another blaze charred
rainfaU fer the entire mooth
must be full )~ completed
timber
ln the Baxter stale
of July. The record for the
within 30 working devs
thereafter excepting only mooth of July is alighly Jess
Park at Mllllnocket, Maine.
such delays as may be oc Firefighters reported conlrol
casioned by strikes, un - than an Inch.
seasonable weather or acts of
Heayy ralna drenched Ne- lines around the el8hl-d&amp;Y

Acne can Be Treated, to give
· . you more infonnation. Others
DEAR DR. LAMB - I read who want this issue can send
your co1wnn about the lady 50 cents with a long, stamped,
who Stilf bad acne at age 30. self-addressed envelope for it
Mine started at age 14 with to P.O. Box 155), Radio City
pimples and blackheads. I'm Station, New York, N.Y.
a male 11ge 61 and since 30 I 10019. This issue will tell you
have eontinued to have more about· peeling agents
blackheads. They conceil- and what you can and cannot
Irate ar~d my cheek bones, do for yourself.
temple and forehead .and
Please do not try to use a
each comer of my lower Up. I diluted acid for your own
wash se.,eral times a day but face. That could cause you
itdoesnltbelp
serious problems. Vitamin A
I hawe had numerous acid stings a bit and must
sebaceous cysts removoid also be used according to
from my back and chest.
your doctor's directions. Its
The worst.part .is my face action is to cause the surface
smells ljke swiss cheese even rJ. the skin to peel off and
after I wash goOd. In about ·enable proper drairuige of the
five mmutes I can rub my sebum oil. There are other
face and it bas that sebaceous skin peeling agents that can
smeU. Or if I start to perspire be used too. I must empllasize
more sr..aU !UIIlj)ll sbow up.
again to readers that this is
I ha\le had aU kinds of not the same thing as vitamin
vitamins but not for that pur- A that . you can take in pill
pose and the lumps would form ai aU.
I'm not surprised that you
never disappear.
_ .!s there any help for this? have gotten litUe or no benefit
What kind of vitamin A acid froth -taking vitamins. There
should 1 use? Which an- are no vitamins that you take
tiblotic? Believe me I have by lllOllth that really help in
often been tempted to try a this condition unless you
diluted acid. ·
already _have a significant
DEAR READER .. I vitamin deficiency- which is
wanted to include your letter reaUy unliltely.
in my colWIUI to point out that
You will need to use drying
the problem of overactive agents: You simplv cannot
sebaceous glands is not waah · off blackheads. They
restricted to the very yOWlg. are usually below the ~urface
• Many men in particular have rJ. the skin. And washing
trouble auch as you describe won't stop the overproduction
in SOOM! degree a good part of rJ. sebum and the odor that
their lives.
has upset you. Your skin
The basic problem is the specialist can help yoli on
same - overactive sebaceous this. A mixture of half water
glands that cause. pimples, and half ordinary alcohol 115'bladlheads and whiteheadS. ed to wipe the lace very clean
In your caae I think you reaUy several times a day may help
should go see a der· to dry thingJI out until you can God .
matoJ&lt;cl". 1be eeverity and gettoseethedennatologist.
VILLAGE OF '
1on1 ,......... uture of the
Dr. Lamb answers
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
mubleR *lo b thlt you repre~ntatlve !etten .d
Bvrred Hollman,
MAYOR
Wm .-1 extn help. Of general interest in his col1!11111'11 I 01 ..tin~ you 1be umn.
Hedh Letter number &amp;-2,

'Superfrog' strain want~d

Storms threaten
more flooding

rot-

tile

Anlieles

traoka Sunday' touddng off

flalh

n~

and fercing

evacuation II. 110111e areas.
Ralsron, Neb: , received
five inches of rain in two
bolll'8.

fire 85 per cent ccmplete
today and hoped to Jftftnl
the blaze fnm aweepiDR UP
the llide of 5,21117~ Mt.
Kalabadln.

Aviation stars
are enshrined
DAYTON, Ohlo ( UPI) Ft;om the days of daring
young men ln their rickety
Dying machines to the ApoUo
moon missions, the bold
accompljshments of five new
Aviation Hall of Fame
members span 70 years of
adventurnus history.
Former astronaut Alan B.
Shepard · Jr., one of those
enshrined at the ball
Saturday, remembered the
spirit that led him to his
proudest
moment
America 's first manned
space flight.
"I think the most important
part of that first mission is
that we carried it off
successfully ln
broad
daylight, before the entire
world, exactly the way we
said we would," Shepard said
of his trip in the "Freedom 7"
Mercury capsule on May 6,
1961. " It truly was an
American triumph."
Others inducted into the
ln!ll 'were James S.
McDonnell , McDonnellDouglas Aircraft Corp.
founder; the late Will RDgers,
America's best-known
humorist and an ardent supporter of aviatioo; the !ale
Lawrence D. Bell, jet aircraft
designer, and the late Walter
H. Beech, a rrivate aircraft
designer.
McDonneU, 78, vividly recalled th.- reckless spirit of
aviation's early days. Also an
engineer and pilot, he said
tears came to his eyes when
he returned to Dayton, scene
of his early aviation career.
In 1924, McDonn&lt;iU nearly.
was killed in a parachute
jump over Dayton.
"My main chute didn't

®

BASCBAJ L

open, and I feU several

hundred feel

before

I

chute open, just a few
hundred feet from the
ground," McDonneU sald.
"Later l was arrested for
making a 'delayed jump,'
which was prohilited at the
base."

Former U.S. Rep. Will
Rogers Jr :, son of the
humorist, accepted . the
award for his deceased
father , "He never -iraa a pilot
himself,'' Rogers Jr. said.
"But he probably was the
first prominent American to
do a substantial amount rJ.
fly~; He first began flying
in 1915, and wrote about It
often in his neWSP4Per
columns." Rogers Sr. died 1n
a 1935 airplane crash wftb
legendary aviator Wiley
Post.
William G. Gisel, president
of BeU Aerospace Textron,
accepted the award fer BeU.
BeU's experimental "Xcl"
and "X-lA" supersonic
aircraft of the late 1940's
were considered far ahead of
their time.
Mrs. Ollve Ann Beech,
Beech's widow, accepted the
enshrinement medal fer ber
lmsband. Beech, fo\mder of
Beech Aircraft C«p., was
credited with designing
innovative aircraft for ·
private and commercial use.
Among other persons
attending the HaD of Fame
ceremonies were Werld War
D hero James H. DoollWe;
fOitJII!r astrooauts Donald K.
Slayton and U.S. Sen. John H.
Glenn, D-Ohlo, and movie
star Jimmy Stewart, a longtime flying enthusiast.

Bodies of women
remain hidden
YUCCA VALLEY, Calif. custody at gunpoint after he
( UPl) -Sixty sheriff's depu- took' them to the desert and
ties prowling the sizzling c o m m l I t e d w h a t
desert sands failed in their Investigators called ''an
second attempt to find the overt act." They did not
bodies of possibly 15 victims elaborate.
of an alleged pornographic
The informant, named
"snuff" filmmaker.
Diane, reportedly recruited
"We feel foirly. confident severalof15modelsaUegedly
with the number of men we hired by Douglas for lesbianhad here that the area has bondage photographs, which
been pretty weU covered," have not been found.
said sheriff's spokesman
Pollee in Garden Grove,
Richard Rhodes ' ofter - ~lif., said Douglas would
Sunday's 1111-degree-plus drive the models to the
search over 30 acres of remote desert 'shack, about
desert.
100 miles southeast of Los
Rhodes refUsed, however, Angeles, to film the sex
to conclude there were no scenes.
bodies buried in the area.
The victims allegedly were
"I can't say that," he said. tortured, dismembered and
" You never know about the killed with bone saws, knives
desert."
and guns, which were
Authorities were guided to confiscated at the time of
the site by a female Douglas' arrest.
infonnant police say helped
Police said largespikes had
recruit prostitutes for the been driven into a rafter of
alleged killer.
the shack, 'apparently to
Investigators said failure to . suspend victims as they were
locate any bodies will prevent rortured ro death for the
filing of murder charges "snuff" pictures.
against the lone suspect in the
plot, Fred B. Douglas, 49, a
11IE DAU.Y SENTINEL
'Costa
Mesa,
Calif.,
DEVOTEDT0111E
JNTF.IIE8r OF
UPholsterer and purported
MEIGSMASON AREA
minister, arrested last
WESTER L TANNEHilL
EH&lt;.Ed.
Wednesday, He was held on
ROBERTHOEFLJCH
$250,000 bail.
CII&gt;Edllor
Two police women, who
l'l!blill&gt;ed dally S.tunlay
by The Ohio Valley Publiahing Cominfiltrated the plot by posing
any, Ill COi.ut St., Pomeroy, Ohio
as models, took Douglas into
11&gt;769. DUllness Offlc&lt; Phone tb2156. Editorial Phooe !m-2117.
Second class postage paid al
frogs are research into
Pomeroy1 Ohio.
NaUonal advertilinl reprtHDcancer, heart diaease, eye
taUYe Ward • GrUfitli Company,
problems, epilepsy,
Inc,, BoltinelllllJld GaU.gber Div.,
schizophrenia and other
757 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
10017.
diseases.
SubocrlpUoo ....., DeU..rod by

standard menu item," said ·
.Dr.. Dudley Culley, a
researcher
with
the
Louisiana State University
School of Fisheries .
, As its stands now, even in
South Louisiana where you
can hear them croakilig and
see them hopping in the wild,
most of the frog's legs .8erved
in restaurants come from
overseas, Culley said in a
telephone interview from
Baton RDuge.
.
Frogs feed on animal
protein, which in their
natural habitat in the
wetlands of South Louisiana
usually means tiny fish,
shrimp .or crawfish.
Culley said he is trying to
develop a food peUet that
could be manufactured
cheaply and fed to frogs .
He said research.ers have
successfully fed froga boiled
shrimp, boiled crawfish and
fish meal, but the frogs
carrier -.jlere available 7S cents per
rejected the same Ingredients
week. By MOlor Route where carrier
aenrice not available, One ~
On this day in history:
when they were incorporated
$U$. By mail in Ohio .00. W.Va.,
In 1866, Ulysaes S. Grant
into a pellet, wblch coold be
One Year 1 $22.00; SU montba,
Tnree monthl, fl.OO;
became the first American ttl.SO;
' cheaply produced.
_.......,,
121.00 year; Six "Data indicate they have officer to reach the rank of
'13. ~; Three months, fl.IG.
definite · flavor preferences general in the U. S. Army.
SllblcripLion ~rice includes Swldly
1lmet&amp;atlntl
.
and they seem to have
preferences for the feel of the
food," Culley said.
.
~----------------·-----------1
The problem, he satd, 1
Lellen of opbdoa are weieomed, They 1boald be 1
seems to be with the bil\dlng I less thu 101 wordo loag (or be aabjeet to re6lctloa by 1
agent used to bold the food ln I Ute editor) aDd 1111111 be a!Jned wllb !be llpee'a ..r- 1
peUet form.
dreaa. Names IIIII)' be withheld upoa pabllalllaa. l
"Tbe)"U starve to death. 1 However, oa request, 118111ea wW be dlleloled. LeUent I
Tbey'lljustsilrightthereand 1 sbotihfbe In giiod taste';addreoiiig luuei, alii perlook at it and they'U starve to 1 soaalltlea.
·
1
death."
I
£)
·
" .1
Culley said 1 per cent of I
,!;}.,~- ~ ·
,
1
every biltch of _tadpoles will I
~~
1
grow to eating me -roughly I
IJII.~..
I
three-q~ af a pound or I • • •
I
larger - m about four
I
mooths. The rest wW grow to .
I
ooly a third to a half pound in
,
,
· 10.12 months.
After heJJnng both sill&amp;•••
Through a ~eedlng
July'u,Jm
program, researchers are Dear Sir:
developing a ltnlln of bil
We've aU heard from bolb llides ol the Jmes !loylllrlb.
frogs. A ct~~~blnalloll II. fast· The company lJQ told their 110ry and lbe liJIIm OW'I. Our
·growtng frogs and cbeap food demands are liCit IIIII' IMOUble llld •lbowed by OlD' pnvloue
would make ral&amp;lng and ad, are well below...,. for atber lltGnl ander ualaa CGIIInct.
selling frogs profitable.
But now we t.vea pat1ema wrillnc IIIII telllq ettJ)The prime J11111M18B of the thatweare ·~-"lt-lhllt. ..._to • ua
LSU program Ia to develop a Jorte~ Bo:YI ·~ • .,,...... fGr tbe GaiJia Ooaaty
standard
method
for Junior Fair. J ( nn41d tbe .fctnelllo)l 011 J 1 far their
cleftlopq a 110011 qulliJ, cmeem far thl fair 111111 lb ,.a.. Ia&amp; It wwJd their
fast·arowing bullfrOI for cmeem lllould biiiD wllb lllllr- ....,, 11 ~ wbo
re~earch purpoRt, Culley
can dGI'd 1o • • at tile fair, -ad .ta1aJt ..... 1o J1l1
said.
their tiiiJIIo7we • dewut ..... -..,.. ,.,., l'laal 'I
••
Among medical of cmce111ed Jcms Bo)llltrlbr.

l

''Vl•

l

·J

•

•

Tournament favorite Brian Hamllton. Tim Carman
Lancaster came from behind reached on on error and John
to down the Meigs American . Sayre forced hliii at second.
Legioo team ~turday 7-li
Rick Johnson waa hit by a
.s
behind a fine pitching per- pitch but was forced out at
formance by Robbie Rolle to second by the next batter,
'West
W, L Pet. GB advance to the next roUnd of Mike Wayland. Starting
Los Ano
60 36 . 625
American
Legion pitcher Terry· WaU drew a
Cl nci
48 6 . 516 10 /1 the
Houston
44 ·52 . .tm 15
Baseb•ll Tournament at walk to set the stage for
San Fren
46 5) .-465 lSlf2 Athens. Meigs feU to the
Hamilton's base knock. That
San Olt9o
42 57 .12.c 19'n
Atlanta
35 60 .368 2"' lJ1 lo8ers' bracket and battled single got through the left
_~
S•turday•s Results
Athens Sunday.
fielder and before the baU got
A:tliiifa 5, Chicago •
Meigs took a 3-lllead ln the back into tile infield, three
Plttsburgh 5, Cincinnati •
Philadelphia 6, san Fran 3
top of:the second on a bases- runs bad crossed the plate.
St . Louis 4, Houston 3
loaded single by first sacker
Lancaster closed the gap to
Montrea l 6. Los Angeln •
San Ole-go 4, New York 3
· 3-1 when Grundtlscb led off
Sunday's Results
the bottom of the inning with
"
'
Houston 10, Chicago , 6. lst
Houston 6, Ch!ca.oo 4, 2nd
a home run. The northern
, San Fran 3, Montreal o, 1st
boys tied it in the third on two
San Fran 5. Mil 4, 2nd. 12 Inns.
1

Pittsburgh 7, Alia 6, 13 inns.
St. Louis 3, Cincinnat i 0
Los Angeles 5. New York 3
Philadelphia 7, San Orego .o4
TOday's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT}
Houston (Bannister 4-7) at
Chicago 1Bonham 9-9}, 2: JO
p .m .
,
Atlanta ! Niekro 9-111 at
Pittsburgh ( Reuss 5 ~ 10 ), ? :J5
'P·Ill·
Clnclnn8tl { Bill ingham 8-6) at
St . Louis CFal.cone 4-6L 8: 35
p .m .
.
Phlladelpflla U.. erch li-2) at
San Diego (Shirley 6·111. 10
p .m .

New York (Swan 5-6) at Los
Anotles IRau 11 · 11 . 10:30 p.m .
Montreal !Alcala J-6) at S11n
Francisco (W illiams 4·3) , 10 : 35

p .m .

Tuesday's Gamu
Cincinnati at Chicago. 2
Houston at Plt.tsburgtl, night
Atlanta at St. Louis, night
Phlla at Los Ang , 2. twi -nlght
Mfl at San Diego, 2. twi-nlght
New York at san Francisco ,
n i o~t

Ameri~:~~eague
Baltimre

Boston

New York
Clevelnd
Detroit
Mllw.
Toronto

W- L Pet. GB
~~
1

!l

S3

li
.a

:m

« .546 2'h
~ :~~ l~:z

53 .448 12
34 61 .358 20'h
West
w. L P,ct. GB
Chicago
57 36 .613
Kan City
53
40 .510 •
Minn
54 43 .557 S
TeKas
49 44 .527 8
Calif
45 .48 .ABA 12
. Seattle
43
57 :430 17'h
Oakland
40 ss .421 18
SOturdoy•o Resulh .
Chicago 10, Toronto 3
Tex 1. Baltimore o, 13 inn!.
Cleveland 9, Boston 8
New York 3, Milwaukee 1
Minnesota 10. cantornia 4

Detroit s. Kansas city •
sunday•• Results

Seattle 10, Oakland 3

•saltlmore 3. M llw 2, 1st
Baltimore 4, Mllw 3, 2nd
Minnesota 5, Oakland 3. 1st
Minn 10. Oaklnd 9, 2nd. 12 Inns.

calilornla 3. Seattle! , "'
,California 4, Seattle 3, 2nd
DetroH 6, Toronto 2
Texas 4. Cleveland 1
New York 3, Kansas City I
;chicaoo 9, Boston 6

By CHRIS Tl.JRKEL
UP! Sports Wrtter
Mike
Flanagan's
reincarnation paraUels the
·Baltimore Orioles'
resurgence this season.
Coincidence? Not likely.
Baltimore beat Milwaukee,
3-2, behind Flanagan's fourhitter in the first game of a
doubleheader to halt a threegame losing streak and the
Orioles also took the
nightcap, 4-3.
"My slnker was effective in
the middle of the game,"
F1anagan, who woo his sixth
straight game, said.
1n the opener, designated
hitter Eddie Murray lashed
his 16th double to score Pat
KeUy with the win
. ning run in
the eighth.
I
· btcap, Ell'tot
n the mg
Maddox' eighth-inning_
sacrifice fly drOve home the
f
winning run a ter Doug
DeCinces' leadoff double, an
·outfield error, a sacr1fi1ce
bunt and an intentional walk.
In other gaffies, Qricago
downed Boston, 9-6, New
York beat Kansas City ' 3-1'
·
Detroit dumped Toronto, 6-2,
Texas scalped Cleveland, 4-1,
california swept Seattle, 3-1
and 4-3, and Minriesota took a
pair from oakland, s-a and Jll9, in 12 im!ing~.
Whit So 9 Red So 6.

·

e x •
ll :
Eric Soderholm. drove in
three runs with a pair of
·homers as Chicago, atop the
AL West, deJX!sed Boston as
the AL East leader. The
Slll'ging White Sox have now
won fourth straight and sixth
of their' last seven.
Yaokees 3, RDyals 1: .
Lou PinieUa singled tn two
unearned runs in the first and ·
Doo Gullett, 9-3, sCattered
eight singles before Dick
Tidrow came on .with two oo
and ~o
•w ou'• t'n the' ninth to
earn his fourth save . ·
Tlgen 8, Blue Jays Z:

ST. WUIS (UP!) _ Like 10, with all the •lctories being
cooling off a boxer between complete gllllles.
rounds, st. Louis catcher Ted
"He shoUldn't have finished

Simmons -used ammonia the game because it was too
water to help pitcher Eric hot," Simmons said· of
Rasmussen heat the bot, Rasmussen . "No regular
humid weather Sunday man would have with the heat
afternoon.
and their Uneup."
11
"We'd soak a towel anc;l put
But there 1s no question
it over his face and neck,'' that this was his best game
Simmons said. "It's like a . this season," Simmons said.
shock treatment. lt cools you "I knew what he wanted, I'd
off almost inunediately."
call it and it was there."
Simmonssaldtheammonla
"He had plenty left,"
intheicewalerrnakes"it even manager Vern Rapp said of
colder. "It' very, very cold Rasmussen. "Even though I
stuff,'' he added.
had people warming up in the
The between-inning bl!ths buU pen, it was his game.
aUowed Rasmussen ro go the He'd have to lose it himself."
distance and pick up a 3-ll win
Aaked whether be thought
over the Cincinnati Reds. · about coming out of the
Rasmussen allowed only four game, Rasmussen repUed,
hits in raising his record to 7· "No way. I'm not coming out
of there unless they take me
out. I sweated the hole game
but I love to go nine innings

Browns release

6 &amp;ee ~ents

·Leaders

ii: :Nr

his relievers, who have been

ineffective the past month ,
He pointed out that
Rasmussen has been a "hard
luck" pitc)ler his previous
two starts because of poor
relief help.
"He pitched a lot of games
simUar to the one today
. where we couldn't score for
him," Rapp said. "He bad a
7-!J lead I~ week and they
SC&lt;Jred five runs in the ninth
off relievers for a l'r-7 win.
Befere that I took him out of a
scoreless game with two on
and two out in the ninth and
AliJraliosky gave up a three-

run homer."

Rasmussen didn't have any
backing at the plate Sunday
until the sixth inning when
Keith Hernandez singled
home Heity Cruz with two
out. Cruz led oft the inning
with a double.
anytime."
Simmons added two insurRapp can't be blamed for ance runs in the eighth.
hesitating before turning to Garry Templeron beat out an

KENT, Ohio (UP!)
Veteran
kick
return
specialist Clarence "Jazz"
Jackson of Western KeQtucky
was one of six free agents
released Sunday by the
Cleveland Browns, who also
say veteran offensive guard
Doug Dieken has failed ro
report to camp and faces a
It will he Mason County Insurance will battle for the
.
.
$500
fine daily untll he shows.
Insurance vs. the Pomeroy title at 7:30 p.m.
Dleken, the club's co- Yankees in the 1977 chamBryan Thompson's run iii
captain last season, is the pionship game of the Kyger the fifth inning. proved to be
only veteran missing fr Olll · Creek_Little Leagne baseball the winning marker fqr
two-a-day workouts at the rournament.
Mason Insurance ~turday.
Browns'
Kent
State
Saturday
nlght, the
Kev Smith was credited
University trainlitg camp.
Yankees blanked Hannan with the win. S. Chapman and
Besides JacksQn, who also Trace 10-0 on a no-hitter in J. Wamsley hurled for the
playedfortheNewYorkJets, semifinal action while Mason losers. Rod Gleason bad two
others released included: Insurance
edged
Pt. singles for the winners.
wide receiver Howard Pleasant's Johnson Market, Robbie Albright had two
Hackley, Edinboro (Pa.)
triples and II single and Rusty
State,· guard Tom Shumate, 4-3.In the consolation tilt .at 8 Gleason
a · double. For the
St. Thomas; cornerback o'clock this evening, John· losers, J. duver bad a double.
Leonard 'Duncan, South
Ca rol'rna State ; running back son •s Market will taJ[e on S. Chapman had two singles
HaMan Trace for third place and J. Wamsley - had two
Norm Jacobs, Cincinnati;
singles.
·
and linebacker Maynard honors.
The Yankees and Mason
Richards was credited with
Stensrud, Iowa State.

~yre was credited with
rossiog a fine game in relief
by Coach Charlie Haniilton,
and. Brian Humllton led the
bitters with two singles and
three RBI's. DavenJXlrt and
B. Johnson had the other two
Meigs hits, both singles.
Lancaster pitchers fanned
10 and walked eight while
giving up just two hils. Meigs
pitchers fanned two and
walked only two, but gave up
ten hits.

M
L

030 000 DOH U

012 130 OOx- 7 10 2
WaU, Baird (3, LP), ~yre
(6), and B. Johnson. RDse
(LP), Jeffers (9) and Bates.

infleld'hit off reliever Dale
Murray to open the inning.
Tony Scott was safe on a bunt
and both runners advanced
on a passed ball by Johnny
Bench. Simmons then
blooped a single over . the
drawn-In infield to score
Templeton and Scott.
"It you get a good cut at a
pitch with the infield in like
that, you've got a good
chance .at getting the runs
in;'' Simmoos said.
Rookie pitcher Paul
Moskau started for the Reds
and allowed only one run
before leaving with two out in
the sixth inning.
However, Reds manager
Sparky Anderson refused ro
comment on Moskau - or
anything else - after the
loss.
Anderson, usuaUy talkative
even after a defeat, clutched
lin empty beer bottle and
star~ at the waU in response
to reporters' queries.

Mason lnsuranc~, Pomeroy
Yankees gain KC finals

Detroit rookie left-bander
Bob Sykes retir~ the first 17
batters and was working on a
ooe-hil shurout befoce giving
Ma 1or League Leaders
, up a two-out, two-run homer
8y United PreiS International in the ninth. Sykes, who ortly
Batting
(based on 250 at bats)
made the roster this spring
National League
" because of surgery on Mark By FRED DOWN
G.96A&amp;.
~ - Pel.
. ch's knee,. settled for a
• Parker Pit
396 134
.338 Fidry
UPI Sports Writer
: Slennen PI!
91 357m .331 two-hitter.
The Los Angeles Dodgers
' !i~:~~:: ~~~il
:.• ."gf
Rangers ~. Indians 1:
are unlikely ro score a more
Simmons sr.L
89 313 102 ,j26 . ClaudeU Washington raced emotional vicrory than they
91 359 115 · 32~ home with the -'""'"n run oo did Sunday until when- or If
Grilley
Cln
Templtn St.L
90 375 119 .317
wuau.u.~ .
Rose Cln
93 375 118 .315 a fielder's cboice in a two-nm
- they win the National
• Driessen Cln
88 310 97 .313 sixth and Doyle Ale:rander i.eaaue pennant.
r Hernndz St,L
95 330 103 .312
·
e..
•American League
scattered seven hits to pace
Davey Lopes, whose threecarew Min
G-, j"3 ~.ia P:Ji Texas its 12th Victory in the run bomer with two out ln the
Bostock Min
92 35-0 120 .339 last 15 games.
bottom of the ninth inning
Bailor Tor
83 335 109 .325 An8els 3-4, Marluen 1-3:
ensbled the Dodgen to score
: , m"~~el:~~ 681
~ ~~ :U~ Bobllr Bonds ~vein three a s-a victory over the New
, Page Oak
a. 2~ 9• .314 runs With a sacrifice fly and York Mets, and Manager
• Rice Bos
94 384 120 .3!3 his 21st bomer ro win the Tom Lasorda bad watery
:_ sannlsler Chi
91371 115 .310
f calif Ia d 'te
II
Cowens KC
93 361112 .310 opener er
om
espt
eyes and the usua y
. Fisk Bos
90"315 97.308 another outstanding unemotiooal Reggie Smith
,• NollonolHomo
Run•
Loague' Foster, Cin per f ormance bY Sea ttle admitted he was close to
; 29 : S&lt;:hmldt, Phil 26: Bur- reliever John Mootsgue, wbo · tears.
roughs, All and Garvey. LA 22 ' retired aU .20men he faced to
The dramatic victory· ,
• Bench, Cln, Luzlnskl, Phil and
~ Wlnllold, SD 21.
increase hiS streak af hitless ~bich came after ·Lopes got
, American Leaaue' .scott, Bos Innings ro 11 over two games. another chance when right
. 25; Rice, Bos 24; Hille, M•nn
the '""
olnhtca p, p··-·
•• tter fte
. -1der Bruce BoiSe
. Iair
.~ 23 : Nettles, NY 22:--Bonds. Cal lit
• ..,. .....
~ 21 .
·
Mario Guerrero's fielder's dropped his foul flY fer what
• Nallon~rt~::~~ ~~srer. ctn choice in the sixth scored the should have been the flDal out
· 90 ; Garvey, LA 81; Coy. LA 80; wlnning run and sealed the · of the game, snapped a threegame losing streak ond bullt
' Luzlnskl, Phil " ' Winfield, so sweep.
72
' Amorlcon Loogu., Hisle. Twins 5-11, A's 3-41:
Ute Dodgers' lead over the
Mlnn 85; Hobson, Dos and
In the first game, Dan Cincinnati Reds to 1012
Thofl'lps.on, Oet 70; Munson, NY F d' ._
61: v 11trzemskl. aos, Bofllls,
or s ...a-run bomer ln. the games In the National
Cal and Zlsk, Chi 65. ·
bottom of the seventh League'• Western Divisloo.
Nallona~'·~:a::!:". Taveras; sparked Mlnnesota to victory
"I hit a fastball away for
Pitt 35; Richards, SD 31; Cabell and ln the nightcap Lyman the homerun," said Lopes. "I
and Cedeno. Hou 30; Morgan. Bostock led off the bottom of don't know where I 1ot the
, •Cln,.,morteon
and Cruz, Hou 29.
the l2th with a.....,..
·- •ootn&lt;Iller JX!WBI' ... I don't think I've
~··••"' Remv. Cal
'31: Palltk, KC 30; Page, Oak to cur1!ill Oakland's agooy. · ever been so emotiOnal in my
. ~:.;, BR'fv':s~~V~'- LeFlore. Det
Ufe. My eyfll were wallrlng
'.'
Pltchlnt
whan the bill . . t over."
· : Nollon!W!..~:::'~~~...chel. ~~·w•;-,c~!~d.2 jf.~ 2~:r··
"1 prayed Lapee waald set
·' Chi 13-J; ., carlton, Phil 13-5;
American Luauo, . Tanana. a bit llld wileD be did It
·FO&lt;ICh, SI.L IH; Rau, LA 11 - Cal 2.25: Blyleven, Tex 2.52; i3rol!lht 1MnJ 1o my eyet,"
., 1; uven pitchers tied with 10 Rozema, Oet 2.t.:.: Rvan, Cal
vlctorln.
2.67; Campbell, Bos 2.10.
said Luorda.
" Amtrlcan Lutut' Ryan. Cal
.
lll'lkoouto
Tho St. Loull Cardinali
.,J3.f; Tanana, Cll 12-6; T.John Nallonol Looguo' Nlekro, All defeated the u...o. 3-CJ, the
·son, Mlnn 11·3: Aleuncler. fe)C 1"; Koosman. NY 129; Ri ..- .
' 11-5; Goltz, Mlnn 11 -6; R.MIV Chord, Hou 1:15; RCI!Ie!'J, Mil Phtladelphla PhiiJiee but the
•lftdPalmor, ..ttll-I:CotbOm. I:U/1-.Ctnns.
SID Diego Palla•, 7-4, tbe
KC 11 t
Allltrlcan LUtue: Avan, Cll
·:
i.i.- 11.., ,.,• .,,..
2•2: Tlnafta, cal 152: L-ord, Houlton Aatrol swept a
• 1 - 011" IHtel•
KC 135: E&lt;kerstey. Clov 12s: doubleheader from tile
N-1 Ltll"' R.Reutehel, Palmer, Ball lnd Blyleven, Tox
,.,..., •• --~ .._..
Chi 2.21; Hooton. LA ·2.64; 124.
Chicago '-'"""; }..., •ou ..-.,
'(

the sixth and gave up only one
hit and no runs thereafter.
Meigs ended the game with
the bases loaded and the
tying run on second.
In that ninth, pinch-hitter
Homer Smith walktl!l, aa did
Sayre. After an out, plnch·
hitter Chqck KeMedy walked
to load the bases. The next
batter fanned, but Hamllton
stroked . a ~gle· "to ·score
Smith. Jeffers replaced RDse
on the mOund and walked
Brent Johnson to force in
another run. But then the
firebaUer found the strike
zone and faMed Meigs' Mlck
Davenport to end the game.

to help shut out Reds 3-0

straight

Oakland {Lang lord 1-10) at
Minnesota {Goltz 11-6l. us
p.m.
Texas !Ellis S-9) at Cleveland
I Bibby 9-71 . uo p.m.
· Milwaukee (Augustine 10-10).
at
Baltimore ID. Martinez 8"61•
7: 30p.m.
Toronto (Byrd 1.2) at Detroit
'":i~c~s~: ·~~ ~~ rs~ittorff 8-5) at
New York !Hunter 6-41, 8'40
p.m.
Ch icago
(Stone
10-71 at
Boston {Tiant 6-71. 8' 40 p.m.
California {Ryan 13-91 at
seattle
!Abb011 6-7l• 10' 35 p.m.
·
Tuesday•s Games
Minnesota ~lit Seattle. night
california at Oakland, night
, Texas
De!roilat
Chicago,nigh!
nigot
at Toronto,
Baltimore at New. York, night
Milwaukee 01 Boston, night

•-J

triples sandwiched around a
single and a ground out. After
that big second lnning for
Meigs, Rose didn't aUow a hit
.untu the top of the eighth
while his teammates built a 7·
3 lead with runs in the fourth
and fifth frames.
Loser Steve Balrd came on
in relief in the third and
wound up with the loss.
Lancaster got one run in the
fourth on two errors and a
bases-losded walk . They then
padded their load by getting
three in the fifth on four hits.
Southern's John Sayre
· came on to relieve Baird in

Flanagan
•
wms 6th Rasmussen had chilled towels

Today's Prob•ble Pitchers
(All Times EDTJ

't

ATHENS - The Meigs
American Legion baseball
team posted a victory in its
8ec011d game of the 1977
District America n Legion
baseball tournament here
Sunday, 4-3, over the host
club, Athens.
Three r uns in the fourth

Lancaster rally Saturday defeat_s Meigs 7-5

Mlllor LtiiiM Standings
ay United Press International
National Leavue
East
w. L Pet. GB
Chicago
ss 38 .591
Phil a
55 39 . SIS
Vi
_PIIIlbgh
,. 42 .S63 211'.1
51 . Loulo
SO.o6 .521 4113
Montreal
ol9 .119 10'h
New York
38 57 .&lt;110 18

managed to get the auxllliory

l

Bair.d posts 4-3 win over .Athens in Legion tourney·

Pomeroy's win over Hannan
Trace. He aUowed no bits. R.
James was charged with the
loss.
·
The Yanks wrapped it up
with four big runs in the first
Inning.
Harrison had a perfect
night for Pomeroy with tbree
singles and a triple...
Kovalchik bad a home run
and double and Brett carl a
triple.
Hannan Trace had only one
base runner - Mike Cox led
off the second with a walk.
Richards faced · only 15
batters in the five-inning
contest.

Eastem's pony
team splits 2
There were two games this
past week in Pony League
action and Eastern played in
both.
In the first, Eastern beat
the hosts, Syracuse, 6-1. Greg
Wigal was given the win in
pitching four complete in"
nings and Mark Davis
recorded the loss while pit·
ching four and one-third
·in/lings.
The leading hitter for
Eastern was Steve Little with
a home run and a double. Dan
Spencer had a double and two
singles and B. Bissell, G.
WlgalandG . Coleeacbbada
single.
Chris Hupp was the leading
hitter for Syracuse with a
double while J. B. Hensley, C.
F. Chapman, R. Miller and B.
Cogar each bad a single.
E
301 030 o-6 8 0
s
000 100 ()-.1 5 0

in/ling held up for the victory.
The tournament is double
elimination . Meigs plays
Glouster Saturday at 11 a.m.
Meigs lost its opener
Saturday ro Lancaster, 7-5,
moving into the losers'
bracket.
In the first inning Meigs
scored the first run of the
game when B. Johnson
walked, Canl)an forced
Johnson aJ seco.nd , but
Carman stole second and the
catcher overthrew the second
baseman and the baU went
· into ·center field. Carman
went ro third on'the play and
kept on running for home.
The throw went to the culoH
man but was late at the plate.
Then in the fourth tbree
runs scored for Meigs on
three singles and tbree walks.
Also ln the fourth, Athens
picked up two of its runs on
Chonko's double driving both
in.
John Sayre was the leading
hitter for Meigs with a double
and a single. Steve Baird had
two sllll!les and Davenport, ·
WinebrenJ!I'r and Wayland
each a .single.
The 'win/ling pitcher for
Meigs was Steve Baird with
four strike outs and five
walks. Losing pitcher was P.
Ferson.
Meigs
100 300 OOD-4 8 2
Athens 000 200 01()-.3 10 2
Prevention is
the best policy ...

In the second game
Eastern lost to the Pomeroy
Royals 111-7. The winning
pitcher for Pomeroy was
Tom Owens who went all
seven innings with 13
strikeouts and seven walks.
The loslng pitcher was Dan
Spencer who also went the
distance·, fanning 11 and
walking only tbree.
Top hitters for Pomeroy
were Steye Oblinger with .a
home run and three singles
and Cliff Kennedy with a
double and two singles. David
Kennedy hit three singles
with six others each l))tting ·a
single.
B. Bissell and G. Wigal
received the only hits for
Eastern, each a single.
p
303 000 4-10 1 6
E
0500002- 726

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS women
Young men

and
often ask why they have to
pay
more for their
automobile Insurance.
Drivers In their teens and
earlier twenties cause far
more 1'han their share of
traffic accidents. Reports

the

National

Safety

Council : 21.8 percent of all
motorists ;tre 24 years of
age or under, yet these
youthful operators are
Involved \15 drivers In 38.6

per ~ent of all accidents
and 37 .3 per cent ofall fatal
mishaps.
A great many y9ung
people
are
skilled,

responsible
dr1vers .
Obviously, tho~gh. quite a
few are not.

There's no substitute for
developm.e nt

GAME TIME CHANGED
CINCINNATI
The
Cincinnati Reds aMounced
today that the starting tllne of
the game with Chicago on
Monday, Aug. 1 has been
changed to 8:35 p.m., 30
minutes ' later than the
previously announced time.
This chltnge bas been made
to accommodate ABC·TV,
which has selected tile game
to be televised natlonaUy.
The Aug, I game will not be
televised in Cincinnati or
. DaytOn.

competence

and the right aHitudes,
Including
a positive
approach

19

defensive

driving.
·
Our agency provides
financial protection and
service In case of accident!.

Involving young drivers ...
but many of these

accidents

can

preve.,ted.

say -

_ be

THat's why we

prevention Is the

best policy.

DALE C. WARNER
1~2

992-2143

W. Main

Pomeroy

Lopes' homer .winning blow
the Pittsburgh Pirates 13th when Rennie Stennett, and foUowed with the gameshaded the Atlanta Braves, 7· Ed Ott and Omar Moceno hit ending. walk to Fregosi. ·
6, in 13 innings, and the San successive singles for orte Relleyer Kent Tekulve was
Francisco Giants scered 3-ll run. Kline then walked Jerry the winner raising his record
and 5-4 vicrories over the IJalrston, filling the bases, to l'r-1.'
Montreal Expos, in the other
Natlooal League games.
American LeAane SC&lt;Jres
""D..
were Baltimere over Milwaukee, 3-2 and 4-3, Detroit 6
Toronto2, Chle&amp;II09 Boston 6,
Texas 4 Cleveland I,
~ Minnesota over Oakland, 5-3
and lo-ll, New Yerk 3 Kansas
City 1 and california over
. Seattle. 3-1 and 4-3.
l'llililel7, ~ 4:
Greg Luzlnski's two-run
single 11118pped a 4-4 tie when
. the Phillies scored four runs
in the seventh inning to
SlDPPY JOE
overtake the Padres and cut
____&amp;
--the CUba' lead in the NL West_
ro a half game. Jim Kaot ·
FRENCH FRIES ·
wentsixlnnlngs for his fourth
win while Bob Owchlnko
suffered his sixth .setback.
Aatroa 10-f, Cablll-4:
This Week's
Art Howe drove ln five runs
with a b&lt;lller and a single to
Flavon
.lead the Astros' 14-hit attack
in the first game and deal the
Cubs' .Ray "Burris hls loth
Chocolate· Vanilla
loss. Enos CabeU bit his loth
' Raspberry
homer andacored a nm after
Orange Piileabble
hitting a double ln the aecood
game as Joe Ntellro went the
dlatance with 10-hltter..
'
Dmnle Moore was the loser .
for the Cuba.
Plntlel7, Bravfll 1:
Plnch-ltltter Jim Fregosl
walked off Stave KUne with
..,_..__filled and two out in
WID'.,._
the JJth inrUts to climax a
two-run-"-,whillbpvetbe
•-.-r
Plnttaa their victory. The
Plrlltea were traillnR 8-6 with
Middleport,
992-5248
Locust Street
•.._ bo
of thP
two ~tin ""' 11om :&lt;C

THIS WEEK'S

'.

i dairY tsle ~

NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING
REACHES MORE
. PEOPLE MORE
EFFECTIVELY!
There's something in the
newspaper for everybody,
. that's-why people from all
walks of life read the
newspaper. And .unlike radio
or 1V, your ad in a ·
newspaper doesn't just
·
suddenly appear on a certain
page at a certain time for
only IO seconds and then
disappear forever. Your
printed message in the
newspaper stays around
longer - providing you
maximum exposure to a
maximum number of people
with varied interests.

PHONE

THE
DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

o.

.;

., ,.

'

'

'

�~'l'beO.UySentinel, Middleport· Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 25, 19'17

~Tbt n.lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday, July25

.......-........« .. ··x-x·······-.··· .........'.o.................... . . .

.;.:.:-:-:·:·x·:·~:::·:·:·:-:-:.-:-:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:···:-:········--

Trevino cOps (11~~~
a
A
y~
then ::~. system of inspections
Canadian Open
OAKVU.LE, Ont. (UPI) Lee Trevino had oomething to
prove, not only to him!elf, but
to those skeptics who thought
, he was through.
The 37-year-&lt;&gt;ld Trevino,
completely recovered from
hack surgery perlonned last
year, made it to the winner's
circle Sunday, for the first
time since May of 1976 by
carding a final round of 74 to
win the Canadian Open for
the second time in hili career.
Starting the day with a sixstroke lead, Trevino was
never seriously challenged.
He lost only two strokes to
par and hili lead on the Glen
Abbey course to finish with a
72-hole total of eight-under
par 1,80 and grab the first
prite of ~.ooo.
"Sometimes people who
think they're tough need to
get knocked down. Then they
remember what got them
ther.e was hard work/' said
Trevino. "When you get hurt
you want to prove oomething
- that you're not washed up.
That's the road I'm on now."
Trevino, who had earned
only ~.235 on the tour this
year prior to the tournament,
pushed his career earnings to
$1,606,851 with hili :/llth PGA
victory.
·'
.
He previously won the
Canadian OPen, ihe world's
fourth oldest national
tourney, in 1971. As a result of
his repeat performance,

Stacy held

on to edge
Carner

Trevino will join 13 other
competitors in SepiA!mber's
$300,000 World Series of G&lt;&gt;lf.
Runnerup to Trevino in the
Canadian Open was Britain's
Peter Oo.sterhuis, whose best
previous finish came as
runnerup in the 1974
Monsanto Open. Oosterhuls
came from eight strokes
behind and finished with a 70,
to close within four strokes of
Trevino with 284. He picked
up $25,650 for the secondplace finish.
"I don't know whether I
had it in my mind to catch
him," said Oosterhuis, who
now lives ill Calif&lt;rnia. "I
had a chance to finish eightunder, but I just played each
shot as II came along. I just
played with much better
concentration than I've had.
"I think we've all foniotten
how good he really is,"
Oosterhuis said of Trevino.
Tom Kite, who at one point
closed to Within three strokes
of the lead with birdies on the
first two holes, recorded a
fmal;ound 73 to finish In
third place with 285 while
Jack Nicklaus, the course's
architect, finished in a tie for
fourth with five other
players.
Joining Nicklaus at 286
were Floyd, Mike Morley,
Bill
Kratzer!,
Mike
McCullough and Charles
COody. Each picked up $7,971.

:·:·::EW YORK (UPI ) -.
cool~ see the lead we.ghts
bulgmg ,under the No. lj) on
Forego s sa~dle cloth
Saturday, weikhls which
raised the ~""';' on the huge
brown gelding s back to an
improbable l37 pounds, a
package be would haye to tote
over. a ..,Ue-and-a-half. In
seekmg his fourth stra1ght
Brooklyn Handicap at
Behnont Park.
It was, to be sure, a pound
less than he was asked fo
carr&gt;: In the Suburban
~cap ?" J~y 4, a . IYomile race, 1.11 which he drifted
out badly and almost
staggered home to be beaten
by a neck by Quiet Little
Table.
On Saturday, Forego was
beaten again, this time by 11
lengths and a horse named
Great Contractor, who
•p~oved be could go ·the
distance when he won the 1976
Jockey Club Gold Cup last
fall. However, oo Saturday,
Great Cmtractor toted U2
pounds, 25 pounds less than·
the mighty Forego, who has
been chosen as Horse of the
Year three times in a row.
No me who was at Belmont
Park for the 1976 Marlboro
Cup will ever focget the sight
of Forego charging down the
stretch like an el&lt;Jlress train
to win the Cup by a neck over
Honest Pleasure. Forego was
lugging 137 pounds over tbe
mile-and-quarter distance,
and came on with the
incredible stretch drive as if

Enterprise next
on Hood's ·Jist

the weight were nest to

nothing. No horse, however,
in modem racing history, has
ever won at a 11&gt;-mlle race
with 137 pounds, as the sevenyear.()ld Forego was l!Sked to
do Saturday.
There are those who will
protest, of course, that weight
did not beat Forego in the
SuburbanandtheBrooklynthai two very fine Through·
breds did. They will no doubt
point out that Forego beat 11
horses on Saturday, lncluding
the neet filly Our Mims, and
that to retire him now would
- be an Insult to his legion of
fans, who are hoping the big
guy will wipe out SeattiA! Slew
when, and if, the two meet in
the fall.
But is it fair to Forego, to
continually ask him to lug so
muchweighttimeaftertime?
Professionally sPeakintl. yes.
When a race secretary sits
down to handicap a field of
say, eight horses, his ideal is
to have a eight-horse dead
heat. If New York Racing
Association racing Secretary
Tommy Trotter had asaigned

FDA asked to develop new

Forego less weight.
would have had to assign less
to the other horses in the
field . "I don't think they
could have found riders light
enough to make the welghlll,
then " e'Jpiained Tro'IA!r
F~rego's owner' Mrs
Martha Gerry, will, ~o doubt;
continue to race Forego, at
least 1111tll he passes Kel!O's
all-lime money wining record
of $1,977,896. The $24,442
Forego picked up for his
second.place finish Sa~y
moves him . over the $1 .8
million mark for a tots! of
$1,818,967.
His next start will possibly
be in the $75 000 Whitney
Handicap at ~ratoga, on
Aug. 6. Maybe Trotter will
assign him a more
reasonable weight for the 1~­
mile event. Probably not.
But that won't keep Forego
from running. If the horse
had his way he'd run until his
legs gave 'out. He Is the
people 's favorite
the
consummate race ho~se who
gives a total effort every time
he steps onto the track.

that products brought into the
WASHINGTON (UPI ) COWltry
meet federal health
Only a fraction of the PI
requirements.
and
safety
billion worth of food, drugs '
"Most
imported
products
and
medical · devices
imporiA!d into the United subject to Food and Drug
Sta teo each year are AdmlnlstraUon regulationsexa!llined by health and 83 per cent in fiscal year 1975
safety
Inspectors , - are not 1n8pected," the
congressional Investigators report said.
" The FDA does not
said Saturday.
A report by the General
Accounting (lfflce - the
In vestigalive
arm
of ·
Cmgress - recommended
.
that the Food and Drug
Administration establish a
system to combat the
problem.
"The system should
guarantee thai all imported
Tuesday Morning Women
products are periodically
July 19, 1977
inspected and assess the
Mason Bowling Lanes
W L
quality of the various
.68 20
imported products," the Green Ghost
67 21
report said. It said Importers Strlkeltes
Team 5
51 37
should be required to certify Mason Furn . Co.
50 38
Erwin Cons!.
40 48
Quality Print Shop .
38 50
Team 6
20 .68
lnternatlorul League
Headquarters
18 70
United Press International
High Ind. Game - Phyllis
W L Pel. GB Gilkey 191, Connie Chapman
Pawtucket
56 40 .583
186·186, Wanda Tealord 181.
Tidewater
51 43 .543 4
High lnd. Series - Wanda
Charleston
51 45 .531 5
Teaford 515, Connie Chapman
Richmond
48 45 .516 6'1' 501, Belly Robinson Cl..
Syracuse
49 48 .505 7'12
High Team Game - Green
Rochester
A6 49 .484 9'12 Ghost 734, Quality Print Shop
Toledo
ol3 56 ,.a; 14'12 732. Strlketles 707.
Columbus
40 58 .408 17
High Team Series Sunday's Results
Quality Print Shop 2121,
ST. LOUIS (UPI)- Running back Terry Mekalf has signed
6, Tidewater .c
Green Ghost 2079, Slrlkettes
a one-year contract that could allow him to leave the St. Louis Richmond
Columbus 7, Charleston 6
2061.
Cardinals after the coming season.
Toledo a. Syracuse 4
Under a compromise agreement, the Cardinals agreed to let Pawfucket 3, Rochester 2
Merealf out of the contract which ran through the 1979 season.
But he will receive 20 per cent less salary this season than he
would have under the fonner contract.
Mewalf will be free to go to another club at the end of this
TAl.LADEGA, Ala. (UPI)
year. However, the Cardinals still have the right to keep him if - A ro.car field will be
they makhed any offers he might receive.
selected from 58 entries for
the $205,000 TaUadega 500
GREENVIllE, S.C. (UP!)- Atlanta Falcons tight end Jim Grand National stock car
MitcheU has changed his mind about being traded to another race Aug. 7 at Alabama
IA!am.'
.
International Motor
MitcheU, who reportedly wanted to leave the Falcons, met Speedway.
Sunday with General Manager Eddie LeBaron to iron out
Heading the list of favorites
differences. After the meeting; Mitchell took his pbyslcal and at the 2.66-rnile tri.()val are
practiced before some 4,500 fans.
.
Cale Yarborough
and
A team spokesman said MitcheU will stay with the team Richard Petty.
through the season.

BOWLING

Briefs in sports

ofspec~tor~~as~r
NEWPORT, R.I. (UPI) CHASKA, Minn. (UPI) _ Ted Hood's 12-rneter yacht tried to block the wind.
Turner followed the MarFor four days the crowd Independence, cheered·by Its
blehead,
Mass. sailmaker
expected yoiUig Hollis Stacy first
victory
over
into
the
flotilla,
but with a . LONG POND, Pa. (UPI) - Actor Paul Newman whose
to fold under pressure and Courageous, now faces
hobby Is racing cars, drove a D Production TIW Sunday to a
give up the lead in the U.S. ~ell NOrth's Enterprise in little less gusto. "When third-place finish at Pocono International Raceway in a benefit
Women's
Open
Golf ~~.ica,'s Cup observation you're young, you drive like a auto race for the Deborah Heart and Lung Center.
maniac. When you're old you
In the program's second event, Newman was cakhing the
Tournament to the yeteran
get
cautious," he said.
defending champion JoAnne
Independence proved
leaders
when hili car swallowed a valve, forcing him to the
The gusty winds in the
Sunday she's not always
Ca mer.
sidelineS.
nd best
final!
But when they handed out seco
as she · Ywon second race took their toll.
the .big shiny trOpby and the an America's Cup race Turner was hit by hili yacht's
PERRYSBURG, Ohio (UPI)-Beimont Country Club will
$11,000 winner's check against Cup defender boom and then by a backstay, host the LPGA's 1m swnmer qualifying school this coming
Sunday evening Stacy was Courageous, owned and· skip- a steel cable, which left l)irn · Tuesday through Friday. .
there to receive it. · The 23- pered ·by Atlanta Braves' with an eight-inch scratch
.The 49. candidates, including 13 fonner pros and teachers,
across the face.
year.()ld pro won with a four- owner Ted Turner.
will
try to earn player's cards by competing in the 7:Alole
"There were a lot of wires
over-par 292 over Hazeltine
Before
the
day's
stroke
play competition.
Nation81 Golf Course, me of competition, Independence flalling aroiUid and it's terKENT, Ohio (UPI) _ Veteran kick return spec
.
t
the toughest in the country. had lost all seven of its rifying," he said later.
One of Turner's crewmen
t
to
h
·
""
-'d
encounters
with
Courageous.
N""
er was ..,.year""
But In the first race was also almost injured Clarence "Jazz" Jackson of Western Kentucky was one of six
Nancy Marie Lopez, who was
free agents released Sunday by the Clevelaild Browns who
nmnerup two strokes back Sunday, Turn·e r lagged seriously when he got also say veteran offensive guard Doug Dieken has faUed to
l'fapped up In a jib sheet,
with a 294 in her profesionaJ · =~~
~ which has a stress of 10,000 r~tocampandfacesa$500finedailyuntilheshows.
BeSides Jackson, others released Included: wide receiver
de~r, 38, scrambled her Independence. A rousing pounds in 25 knot winds.
Howard Hackley, Edinboro (Pa.) State; guard Tom Shumate,
The observation trials
way to third with a 295 but the cheer went up from Hood's
finish Wednesday. Final St. Thomas; cornerback Leonard Duncan, South Carolina
cr~ second race was short- ' lrlalsstartAug.16andendby State; running hack Nortn Jacobs, Cincinnati, and linebacker
kids stole the show.
Stacy, cqnfident and cool in ened to four legs because the Sept. 5 when the New York Marn&amp;rd Stensrud, Iowa State..
her eighth U.S; open, led. all winds picked up, aimost up to Yacht Club must pick one
· tl!e way. LOpez tied ~r at the 25 knot mark when boat to defend the cup against . ("is~ gamel
Kan City
000 010 ooo- 1 8 1
three;over par m1dway competition is usually halted a foreign challenger.
OakJnd
102 000 ooo- 3 1 2 N.Y.
20001000x3 80
thrQUgh the final round and
.
·
Mlnn
001 001 30X- 5 10 0
Hassler and Porter ; Gullett,
A
total
of
five
~~ from
Stacy said she felt "like the , Turner pulled h1s crew
Torrealba. Lacey (6), Bair Tldrow (9) and Munson . Wcartoon of 8 mailman with a together to wm the contest by Australia, France and (7) and SanguiUen, Newman ; Gullett, 9-3. L-Hassler, 6-3.
Sweden will compete in Zahn, T . Johnson (9) and
bulldog, who wouldn't let go, 57 seconds. .
Wynegar." W- Zahn, 9-7. L- Chicgo ·
210 211 11o- 9 14 0
Coura~eous IS. still the boat separate August trials for the Lacey, 3-5. HR-Minnesota, Bos1on
202 000 002- 6 12 2
biting oo his leg." But she
Barr'ios. Hamilton (9) and
shook looae.
to beat wtth 13 Wll18 and seven right to challenge for the Ford {8 ).
Essian 1 Jenkins, Lee (5) and
Stacy and Lo1lez both fired losses. Enterprise Is 1().11, America's Cup.
(2nd g11me, 12 Innings)
Fisk . W-Barrlos-. 10-.4. LThe United S~tes has Oakland
and Independence, &amp;.12.
Jenklns, 7-7. HRs.- Chicago,
020 100 221 lCKl-- 9 12 2 Garr (1) , SOderholm 2 (12) ;
two-over-par 74s, good
The first race Sunday had never relinquished the
, Yastrzemski (19), Lynn
enough to stay ahead of an unusual start with Hood prestigious Cup since Minnesota004 010 003 101- 10 16 3 Boston
112).
Carner, who had a 73.
sailing directly ;l,to the fleet &lt;;ompetition began In 1851.
Colem~!IM , Guistl (3), Lacey
(8J ~ Bair
(9) and Newmart;
"When we were Sitting out
Schueler, 0 . Jo~nson (1), T .
there at the presen~tloo
Johnson (10) and
Bulling,
ceremmy," Stacy said, "I
wvneoar. W-T. JOhnson. 11-3.
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
L-Balr, l -1. HRs.:.....Oakland,
said to Nancy 'It's just like
Armas (10), Newman (2) ; (UPIJ In Rem won the
the
national
junior
Minnesota, Cubbage (2}. Hisle Loyally Slakes by three
Pittsburgh
Major League Results
000 003 110 000 2- 7 12 2 (23), 805lock IS) .
&amp;v Unl ed Press International
tournament' (which Stacy
lengths at Thistledown
Capra, Leon {7) , Campbell
N•tlonal
.League
Sunday,
running the five and
woo three times and Lopez {1st glme)
(9) , Hargan (11) , Solomon (13), ( 111 g1me&gt;
102 000 ooo-- 3 6 o a·half furlongs In ):06 4-5 and
twice) and she said she felt Houstn
103 040 002- 10 ,,. o Kline
(13)
and Pocoroba ; Calif
000 000 001- 1 6 1 paying $2.80.
Chicgo
100 230 ~ 6 a 1 Klson, Jones (8), Tekulve (10) Seattle
the same way.
Bold Society was second
Hartzell, Miller
(8)
and
Pentz. Sambito
(6)
and and Ott. W-Tekulv'e, 8·1. L •'Nancy was there and Amy Herrmann ; Burris, Broberg Hargan, 0-2. HR - Atlanta, Etchebarren ; House, Montague and Brent's Dancer till rd.
(3) and cox . W-Hartzell , 4-6. L · The 9-~ dally double of
Alcott ( 21, lied for fourth with (AI , MoOre (5), P . Reuschel (6), Nolan Ol.
-House. :J-4. HR- Callfornia, Martha My Love and Sport
Hernandez (9) and Mltterwald.
298) was right nearby. Beth W- Pentz, 3-1 . L-Pentt, 9-10. Clncl
000 000 ~ o .4 0 Bonds 1211.
Copy pa ld S396.
000 001 02x- 3 10 0
Daniel (the low amateur with HRs - Houston, Cabell (9), Sl.L
A crowd of 7,058 bel
Moskau. Borbon [6), Murray Und 11mel
&lt;'l.• CedenO (4). Cl'llcago,
308) was there, and Cathy Howe
001 102 ooo- 4 7 1 $791,394.
(8) and Bench; Rasmussen and Calif
Bllttner { 7 ).
010 101 ooo-- 3 10 1
SlmmoM. W-R.asmussen, 7-10. Sea !lie
Reynolds (another amateur
Simpson. LaRoche (6) and
(2nd g•me)
L-Moskau, 1-2.
. .
with 313) '
Humphrey, Etchebarren;
HoustOn
001 210 11o-- 6 10 0
''There are so many yoiUig Chlcgo
000200001-3 71 Galasso, J&lt;.eklch (6) and Jutze,
102 000 1~ 4 10 2 N.Y.
Nlekro and Herrmann ; L.A.
100 000 -013- 5 9 0 CO)(, W- Simpson, 5-7, Lpeople around."
Espinosa, ApOdaca (9) and Galasso, 0-1. HR-Seattle, MH Renko, Moore {4L .Todd (8}
Stacy left for Italy to relax
Hernandez (8) and Swisher. W Stearns; John, Hough (8) ai'ld bOurne(l) .
for a week and then plans to -Niekro, 5-3. L- Moore, 3-1. Yeager. W- Hough ,. ~-8. L000 000 002- 2 2 0
, Murcer (U}. AP!)Ciaca, 3-A. HRs-Los . An- Tronto
enter
the
European HRs..-Chicago,
Del
021 200 lOx- 6 13 0
Houston, Howe (7), Cabell (10). geles, Smith &lt;18), Lopes (6) .
J e f fer son, JOhnson (3),
Championships at Loodon a
DeBarr t61, Willis (8) · and
(1st
••me)
..,.-.Phlla
111
000
400-1--11
0
week later.
Mntral
000 000 ooo-- 0 40 San [)go
229 000 ()00-- no 1 Ashby; Sykes and May. w:;_
Lopez, rumerup in the 1975 San F:rn
000 000 1~)(- 3 51
Keat, BrusS tar ·( 7), Reed 18) Sykes, 2-3. L-Jetferson, 6-10.
·
Tw1tchell and Carter ; Barr ,and Boone; Owchinko, Sawyer HR- Toronto, Batlor (5) ,
open u an amateur, planned
an~ Hill. w-Barr, 9-7, L....__ · (7) , Tomlin (7), Splllner (7),
to celebrate and then go to the T_w,tchell, 2-6. HR:-'-San Fran- Griffin (9) and Boone. w- TeKIS
000 002 002-... '0
000 010 ooo-- 1 1 1
LPGA IIChoolln Ohio to prove CISCO , Thomas (2) .
Kaat, 4-S, L-Qwchlnko. 3-6. HR. Cleve
Alexander an~ Sundberg;
san
OieQo.
Kingman
(1-4)
.
in qualifying sh~'s good Und pme, 12 innings) ·
Garland and Kendall, Fos.,e. W
- Alexander , 11-5. L-Garland,
enough for a pro playing Montreal
Amerlcln Le1gue
7-11.
HR-Cieveland, Carl\1 (81.
IXUOOOOOOOG0-4
71
11
t
)
card.
1 glml ·
San Francisco
Mllw
002
000
ooo2
4
I
Tied with Alcott for fourth
001 100 020 001- 5 9 2 !Oit
002 000 Olx- 3 7 0
Sta"nhOuae, Alcala (4), Atkin ·
Haas, castro (8) and Hanev.
were Australian Jan StephenADMIRAL
(9L McEnaney (9] and Flanagah and Skaggs w11011, playing out of La Quinta, son
Carter; McGlothen, Heaverlo Flanagan 8-8 L-Haas 6-7
' ;__
' ·
Calif., who was &lt;Illy one (31, Williams W. MoffiH (6).
DEHUMIDIFIERS
Lavelle C8L Curtis (11} and Und game)
lllroke beblnd Stacy after Alexander.
w-curtis, 3-3. L- Mllw
000 000 030-3 7 2
Takes the dampness out of
Ulree roundl but had trouble McEnaney, 2-4. HRs - San Ball
020 010 01)(- 4 9 2
your
basement or other high
Augustine, castro (8) · and
with trees and aand in the Franelsca, Evans (9), Clark
moisture- areas for only .
1101.
Moore;
R.
May,
Drogo
(8)
and
llnal round f&lt;r 79, and Pat
pennlft a day In operating
Criscione. W-Drago, J.J. L( 1l innl1191l
Augustine, ,0-11 . HR - BalBradley.
cost. Shuts off automatically.
Atlanta
timore, Murray (U).
Humldlsteel controls. 15 pint
~~ McAllister llllot two000 020 102 000 1-6 13 0
capacity.
ander'f*' 70 on tile llnal
round to flnilh at 211. Donna
c.pon1
lllld • aac1
Jane meJoclr at 111.
BlirdMol at 112 were Judy
Rrnkln JoAm l"rrlltloe aUJDIIW)' •wllibu.1111r
MIDDLEPORT
lltlllllr WJII&amp;wwtb, and Selly
i
: alis

:!!:00

Results, line scores

.

LIBERTY, Mo. (UPI) The Kansas City Chiefs have
placed flashy running back
Woody Green on the unableto-perform list with hopes hili
injured left knee can respond
to a. crash rehabilitation

pr~~;

who has never
played a full season with the
Chiefs, required surgery but
his offseason •rehabill~llon
proliam !:arne up short and
the 26-year-old Oregon native
failed the club physical
Saturday.
The Chiefs lost one more
player
sunday
when
offensive lineman Randy
Beisler, an 11-year veteran,
announced his retirement.

CALL

-But this is how ttie fast-buck movie
makers portray Him, in current pornographic films which mock God and
suggest \hat Jesus was a fake , even ·
a pervert! See this startling expose. a
TV protest by the Interfaith Committee
Against Blasphemy.
Tune In •.• "The New
Sacrilegious Movies"

·WCHS.TY (8)

Coh••nbia's

Budget Payment Plan:
'

don't go through another winter
without it!
Nobody needs to be reminded of what frigid weather can do to heating bills.
Of course, you c•n avoid the high heating bills normally associated with winter.
Simply join the Budget Payment Plan - a free service for Columbia Gas customers.
It's easy. Your gas bill for the coming year is calculated (based on normal
weather and your past record of gas used) and then sliced up into twelve, equal,
ea!ry'-to-manage monthly bills. We will review all budget accounts periodically and
adJust them, 1f necessary, to make sure you will not have a larger payment at the end
of the budget year. The last bill will ..be plus or minus an amount to cover any
variance between lhe calculation and the actual bill.
Over.lhe course of the year you'll· p~y the same total. But come january a~d
February when those big Christmas bills are C\lming in, your gas bills will stay at the
·
low budgeted amount.
To ioin the Budget Payment Plan, simply pa)l the "Monthly Budget" amount
shown on your Augusl gas bill.

WINTER PROoF

'

\\I

YOUP..
HEATING BILLS.

..._ il'r11•
(JCde.

USe • •

~:

MONDAY
POMEROY Youth baseball
league .wiener roast and
some inter..tlnq_ changes in swimming party July 25
your anitudes. You're go(ng to (Monday) at Royal Oak Park
see thinQ$ as they are. Your 6 to 9 p.m. Hotdogs and drink
nobler Instincts wm dominate
furnished.
.
your thinking.
BEND of the River Garden
L!O (""'J 2,_A,... 22) Scuttle Club family picnic Monday at
your routine today. T1ke time to
do what you find pl•ses you Shrine Park in Racine 6:30
most. The break will refreah you p.m. Flower show at fair will
from the mundane and the be discUl\Sed.
chorea will walt. Having trouble
TUESDAY
setecttno a career1 Send lor MEIGS County Better
your copy of Aatra.Graph Letter.
Livestock Dairy 4-H Club
Mall 50 cents for each and a
Tuesday,
8:30 p.m. at John
long, sell·lddrossed, stamped
envelope to As1ro-Graph, P.O. Colwell Farm.
Box 489, Radio City Station. N.Y.
JOINT Junior and Senior
10019. Be sure to specify your Drew Webster Unit 39,
blnh sign.
American Legion Alllliliary
VIRGO (Aug. H-....... 22) Those Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Conwho challenge you where you're vention reports will be heard.
safeguardll)~ the Interests of
POMEROY Chamber of
_your loved ones today are over·
Commerce
Tuesday at noon
malched. I hope lhey don't learn
at
Meigs
Inn.
Bernie Murphy,
it the hard way!
coordinator
of continuing
LIBRA (8epl. H-Oct. 21) Thl&amp;ls
1 good day to make serious talk education at Rio Grande
wi1h those who are vital to your College - Community College
Immediate plans. Take the cue. will be guest speaker.

l!JW UW\!1!1\)
zt, 1177
Th l~ 'i""'lng year will bring about

J""

My blllband :

... Ripo the crotch ool of his pants, etc:, then expects me to
•sew them up by hand. If I IIIIIU!Ml buying a aewing machine, he
accuaes me of ''luing" him to get silly things.
... Same with furnlblre. He say1 the washer dryer and
refrigerator are ''my" ewavagances. And the ne'w range we
desperatelr is only for me, (I wouldn't need them If I didn't
have him to do for.)
... Says I aleep all day and don't "work hard" like he does
. 'l'o him, ''woman's ll'(ll'k" Is nothing.
. ·.
Wonders why I don't gef a "real" Job then turns around
and says women's place Is in th!! home. '(He makes a good
salary.)
.. . Cares imre about the opinions of strangen and co-

workers than what I think. I'm «f15tanUy put down. He's
always ''right," 110 oon't suggest a counaelor.
... Woo 't Uft a hand to help with the kids, the garden,
anything. Tbty're "my kids" whenever they need care, though
he Insisted oo having them.
... Hates my mother, though she gsve us the down payment
on our houae. Calls me a lesbian beca1111e I enjoy her company
occasionally. Alter all, he is no company!
·
... Thinks all females are stupid.
... Gives me no consideratiun, in bed or out. I'm there for
hili convenience,~! He'sgettingworseeach year. didn't
notice theae traits at first.
Set up a meeting now.
I -the but say nothing. The house and kids shine. My
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Now. U)
friends feel very sorry for me. The more Ido the less I'm Profit
and personal gain are·not
appreciated.
dirty warda to you today. If there
·Have I spoUed your husband? - WORKHORSE WIFE
Is something you truly want.
have the rortllude to go after it.

You bet your 'booties you've spoiled sir Chauvinist!
SAGITTARIUI (NOY. H-Dec.
Whether you can turn him human at this late date is 21) Recall leSsons learned the
doubtful - and you'll never do it unless you knock off the hard way and you'll not make the
mistakes again . Instead,
"seethe and say nothing" self.plty. TeD him your Door-mop same
you'll be a step or twa ahead of
days are over-fight for your rights. U that means temporary the crowd. ,
separation, or divorce, well, It's better than what you have
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.;,.,. 1t)
now.
control of a sltuatiQn
Trouble with martyrdom Is- you've got to work so hard Though
you're Involved In doesn't rest
maintaining the status. Even your frlenda won't sympathize with you today. make your poln1
much longer if you cootinue wallowing in persecution allll dOn't by appealing to the nobler in·
stlncts Of those In charge.
act foccefully to change things. - H.
+++
AQUARIUI (.Mn. 20-Feb. 18)
pear Helen: ·
Your hopes can become a reality
Tbt letter· from the woman who was dubious about today becauH you are not a
marriage bec•nse of all the news about wife beaters, divorces, wiahful thinker. You have the
ability to carry them off when
etc., struck a responsive chord.
o1hers are dubious.
I urge her to get to know the parenll t:l. the 11011 before she
(Feb. 20-M- ZO) Yoo
makes a dacisioo. Whalldnd of lllllfl'iage have they had, what PISCEI
are cleVer today without being
kind of husband Is bls father? How I wilh I'd done that!
cr!lftll. All. lhe leg~lmate angles
Had I foretold the damaging influence my father-in-law can ba u"llzed. You'll ba able to
would have on hili own, lwollld have never entered this union. gain what you go after.
My huabandhas become i1l!t like !he overbearing, selfish man Al\11!1 (ll•rch 21-Aprll 11)
he haled In his growing"'Jl years.--BA~AliREil AnylhlrllJ that bappens tOday
you're able· to take In carefree
VETERAN

Dear BSV:
ly.
. Have you told your husband this - or are you taking the
role of your mother-in-law whose meekness (am I .right?), TAURUS (April :ZO..Moy ZO) In
tan~em Is the way for you to go
helped create the dictatorship? - H.
today. You draw strength from
your harness mate. H.e, In turn,
gafns lntplration from you.

Notice is herebv given that
s,aled proposals shall be ·
.received at the office of the
Board . of Meigs CoUnty
Commissioners at the Court house In Pomeroy, OhiO, until
A:OO P .M . on Aug . 2, lt77 with
bids to be opened at 7:00 on
that date, ' for 1tle following
descri bed coun1y work :
Furnish all materials ,
labor .. "nd
appli_ances
necessary to complete In a
satisfactory
manner,
$'taping or wire bru$hhlng.
painting , reglazlng whfre
needed ,
caulk
between
frames ~md brick, apply one
( 1) coat acrylic masonry
-,..hite
paint
(Sherwin
Wllllams or: equal) to the
following exterior areas Of
the Meigs County Court house:
All of ttle front of the
building facing Second Street
In the Vllh•ge of Pomeroy .
Approximately ~o teet on the
West side to what is· known as
the "New Addition .'; Ap pro~tlmatetv 25 feet on the
East side to what is known as
the "New Addition ." Also to
be included In this bid is one
coat of Gold paint to be ap plied to the Oocne of the
Meigs County Courthouse . All
paint shall be applied bV
brush only .
, work shall begin not more
than 10 days 4fter ewardlng
of contract,. an.d completed
within 30 calend ·a r . days ,
weather perm ltting . Penally
beyond specified nm~ Sihall
be- $50.00 per day.
All bids must be ac companied by a Bond signed
by two Sureties approved by
the county Commissioners.
in the amount of $2,000.00, for
tt\e faithful performance of
.thTs contract. Bond referred
to Is a
Bidders Bond accom panylng
bid, wh lch
becomes 1 performance Bond
to Contractor receivlno
award. All other bonds will be
returned to bidders after
award of Contract.
All employees stlall be
covered by the Ohio's Work men's Compensa1ion. Your
risk; number shall be fur nished in your bid.
·
The County Commissioners
reurve the right to accept or
reject anv and all bids. .

MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS

Mary Hobstetter,
Clerk

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice 11 hereby given that
on the 1st dey of August, 1977
at 1:00 P.M. 1 public hearing
wlll be held on the budget and
Revenue Sherlng Funds
prepared by Orange TownshiP Trustees, Meigs Coun1o;,
OhiO tor the nut succeeding
fiscal v11r, ending December
• 31, 1978.
SUch hearing will be held et
~Ina Robinson, Clerk, Route
2. Coolville, Ohio.

25 . ltc

w.u.~;orr.uu:

, HOLLYWOOD (UPil -

.. rtn

pei

CotbJ,

.c(\.uM81ACIAII

•»tiea -

BW

ll:aaelbert

IN THE COI!RT
OF COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ADA YVO'NNE TACKETT
Rutland ; Ohio·
Plaintiff,

No . 15;84-t

- vs-

FREO TACKETT
c -o Anna Welch
Mid"leport . Ohio,
Defendant .
Notice by
Pvblication
To Fred Tackett, whose
last known address was c -o
Anna Welch, Middleport.
Ohio , you are hereby notified
that you tlave been named
Defendant. lo a legal action
entitled A.d a Yvonne Tackett.
Plaintiff, vs . Fred Tacke1t ,
Deferidant. T·his action has
been assigned case No. 15,8.44
and is pending in the Court of
Common Pleas ol Meigs
County, Pomeroy, Ohio ,
~5769 .

The oblect of the ·complaint
is for dlvorc,e care, cuStody,
and control of the mlflOr
children of the parties, and
other relief.
You are required to llnswer
the complaint within 28 days.
after the last publication of
this. notice , which will be
published once eillch week. for
six successive weeks. The
last publication will. be made
on Aug. '22, 1977, and ttle 28
days for answer will com menu on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as required by the Ohio Rules
ol Civil Proce.d ure, divorce
will be granted.
Oated ; f'/'.ay 2.4, 1977
larry Spencer
Cierkof Courts
Meig&amp; county
common Plen Court

171 18, 25 (8)

1,

s,

15,

22. 6tc

Q!MINI (110)'

"OTICE OF YEAR

By virtue of lhe order of
sale duly Issued out ot the
Court of Common Pleas. in
the ca$! of Racine Hme
National Bank vs . Harold E.
Wolfe, et al., being the
judgment entry rendered In
Case No. 16,.418, 1 will otter at
public sale at the door of the
Covrt House of Meigs County,
Ohlo. on the 191tl day of
Augus1, 1977, at 10 o'clock A.
M., the foUow.ino. lands _and
tenements:
Situate In the Township of
Lebanon. County of Meigs
and State of Ohio, to-wit:
Being within S.ctlon No. 10.
Townahlf No. 2. 1nd Ranoe
No, H,o thf Ohio Company's
Purchase, bounded
and
·ctescrlbed as follows: Being
on State Rovte No. 1211;-between Groundhog Creek and
~ortlend, andcomm.enclng at
. 1 point In center of State
Route No. 124, said point
belnQ on Frank AJien's North
tine; thence Nor1h a to no
center of St•t• Route No. 12-t,
a distance of 140 feet; thence
wnt 31:1 fHt 10 an iron ~n;
thence south 140 f1tet to an
Iron pin on Frank Allen's
North tine; thence east along
Frank Allen's North line 312
fftt to the place ot beglftftlng,
contalnlq one acre, more or
I HI.
The real estate lsapprals.ct

21-Ju.. 20) It

would not OCC:ur to you to act
less than fairly with others today.
As a resuH, you evoke the sarne
response.

CANCER

(Ju.. 21-.IUIJ· 22) By

application of your imagination
and creative talents today, you
can turn a sow's ear Into a silk
purse. AU you need are the raw
materials.

fl...... ,
..

Melos County, Ohio.

.• -..............

17)

-. ,-~"'-

~. ~·"···" .~

.•••

••
W~l-:: •
••

....-~1 . 1'

•

•
••

~,....-~.

~.;.(;:::,_

.••

-~~·

•••
••
••
a&amp; r:::
d T'\Qu f i..\ ""T'":Q
••
l'f\t;. 0 t" U n l'l l '
'
EARnt; .. AND SEt. ouR ••
••
DoW~·TO-E~ t)EA\.S
•
ON Q1tUl-\...,.'
A\~ h
l T' U~~\11.\R~.
••

co

~:~~~

\0

(

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0.
~~~

::..:...:·~=;;:"""' ...,

'

.
.
••
••
•
•

·········~·······~·········

"'+'

~r·.;·

oldP.r.

NOTICE is tlereby given
that In pursua"nce Of a
Resolution of the Board of
Education Qf the E.stern
Local School District, Reeds. &gt;VIIIe, Ohio, passed on the 20th
day of June, 1977, there will
be s"ubm ltted to a vote of the
people of said SchOOl District

at a Special ELECTION to be

held tn the School District,
Ohio, at the reoular places of
voting therein, on Thursday,
the 25th dav of August, 1977,
the Question of levying, In
excess of the ten m i ll
limitation , for the benefit of
Eastern Local Board of
Education tor the purpose of
Current operal1ng expenses.
Said tax being: an additional tax of 5.0 mills to run
for thrH years, which will
rllsea minimum of $55,000.00
an.nually
at a rate not exceeding S.O
millS. tor each one dollar of
valuation. which amounts to
Fifty cent$ for each one ·
hundred dollars of valuation,
tor ThrH years.
The Polls for said Election
will be · open at 6:30 o'clock
A .M. and remain open until
7:30o'clock P.M . of said day.
By order of the Board of
Elections. of Meigs County,

For 28 yurs I hive fitted
hearing aids atways
combining quality product
and professional service
with reasonable cos1. While
we will continue to serve
tttose who cannot come to
our office we will now

reward those who can by
fixing the price al $275.00
lor the best known custom
mode and Individual litttcl
hearing
aids.
Prior
medical and audiological
examination encouraged.
If you have • question or
wish an appointment call
me al 592·6238.

'300.00
leu '25.00
Cash DIKount

Ernest A . WiriQett
Chairman

Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
Dated July 11, 19!7

171 25,

(7)

1, 8, '15: l!c

- -· -

A thought .for the day:
American statesman Daniel
Webilter said, "Let our object
be our country, our whole
country, and nolhlng but our

country."

DENTURt.5- DENTISTRY
Oft.. A. J. OMtlll- DR. It H. CHUNG'_
OR. YICTOJt Y. U~- Dft. G. J. ITOM.IIIUOH

One or two day
full denture service ,
partial dentures
FOR PRICES
OHIO TOLL FREE

OR. RIVIERE •

1=800·212-6411

The heat pump is a device that heats than other ~lectric heating systems .
and cools your horne.
This more-for-your-money, energyWhen it cools, it works like ahy
• saving feature has made the he!lt pump
air conditioner.
very popular with a lot of people.
But when it heats, it works more ·
Including the federal government,
efficiently thah any other electric heating ·whose energy agencies recommend it over
system around.
·
other types of electric heat.
It captures the heat that exists in
Actually, we don't sell heat pilrnps.
outside air, even on cold days.
But, the way we figure it, every bit of
As a result, you can heat your home electric energy that can be saved these
using up to one-third less electricity
days helps all of us.

Ohio Power

RIVIERE CENTER 948 E. LiviOQIIon Ave., Columbus
WMkdlyei:30A.M. to8:30 P.M.
'You'll S,Yle TofllfltOttr'llulf) or Tulf,. t.rm• OJ Yo~o~r _1'n1fl l'&lt;JduV'

'

-

•

::Krs~~~~~:I.ed

al $15,000.00.

Sheriff of

Rub oil into cutting board

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE TEN
MILL LIMITATION

Ohio.

Ttrnta of Ute are cash on
Harold hand
on day of sale.
JAMES J. PIIOFFITT
.......... Lee II** .... IIJifl

i11!1Jrfto4 Boulnlll'll'l Walk

Polly Cramer

'RIO GRANDE - Ap· llrst year as president. Each
proximately 200 former high graduate was then asked to
school graduates and fonner stand when the year they
teachers, and their families . graduated was called out.
met at the old Rio Grande - Ruth Jones gave the
High , School
Building treasurer's report. The same
Saturday, July 16 for their officers will remain lor nest'
yearly reunion . Much time year. The reunion will be held
was spent roaming through third Saturday nell J uly at
the haUs and visiting old the same place. ,
classrooms smce this was the
Rev . John Davis gave a
first time we have met there. memorial for the departed
After registration Dr. classmates and teachers the
Charles Weed gave grace past year.
over the noon meaL
Drawing of door prizes was
The business meeting was awarded. Everyone ap·
called to order by Pledge to preciates the local merchants
.Flag and singing of America. for the part they take in the
John Wickline welcomed the . day's event. The meeting was
group and expressed thanks closed by all singing God Be
to those who helped in hili With You Till We Meet Again.

the w8$her and dryer Ior storPOLl.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLl.Y- Could you ing the food from the freezer.
give me information concern- After filling them I close the
ing , the best way to keep a lids and the frozen foods stay
wooden cutting board in a frozen for at least three hours
sanitary condition after it has or until the defrosllng is
been used? I am told that finished. -MRS. G.V.W.
DEAR POLl.Y - I keep a
because it is wooden special
big
grocery bag In my closet
care must be given to it. and when I decide a gafll!ent
PEGGY.
.
.DEAR PEGGY- Peanut or is no longer wanted it goes in·
vegetable oil shnuld be rub- to the bag 8$ do the children's
bed in every few weeks. Do clothes when they are too
this at night and in the morn- small. This way I always
ing wipe off any excess. When have something for the
necessary, a tablespoon of various charities when they
bleach in a cuP of water could call and there is no last
be rubbed in with a steel wool minute hunting Ior something ·•
•
pad, rinse weU and then re-oil to give them.
Now that com on the cob •
after it is dry. This keeps
stains from the surface and season is here I would like to I
makes daily wiping easier. pass on my easy way for • "The above is for a regular removing silks when I clean :
thick board ·made for that the corn. They can be quickly •
removed with a damp paper • .
purpose~ not ~lywood. towel.
I brush downward with •
POLI.Y.
'
the
towel
and every strand e
PAST
M.ATRONS ,
DEAR POLl.Y - Those who
Pomeroy chapter, picnic like to piece qui!~ should try comesolf.
e
To keep from getting shock- •
Tuesday 6 p.m. at home I)( cutting their patterns out of
Mrs. Glen Dill, Syracuse.
sandpaper rather than card- ed from touching a door knob •
WEDNESDAY
board or paper. My mother in cold weather I slip those lit- •
CERVICAL CANCER always did this as the pattern tie knitted stretch covers in- •
Clinic Trinity Church Wed- stays in place without slip!&gt;' tended for the bottoms of •
glasses over the knobs after •
nesday 10 to 12 and I to 6. ing. -F.K.
Appoinhnents may be made
DEAR POLLY - U Mrs. they are folded in half. - •
e
by calling 992-li832 after 5:30 R.G. will put .two coats of GLORIA.
DEAR
POLI.YI
am
only
e
p.m.
clear nail polish on both sides
nine
years
old
but
when
my
:
of the eyelets in her new
PROBLEM SEEN
shoes before she wears them, cat shed hairs on my shirt I •
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI)
that rubbing the •
The number of adults in the the eyelets will not make discovered
bottom
of a scrap of carpet on •
black
marks
on
the
tongue
Toledo area who believe the
energy
problem
has and laces of her shoes. II the
all the :
"significantly increased black s~rts to show before
Polly will send you one of •
since 1973", according to a using the nail polish it does . her
signed thank-you •
survey by two University of not work nearly as weU. - newspaper coupon clippers if •
I.V., a nurse.
Toledo professors.
DEAR POL.LY ·- My ' she uses your favorite.
Dr. james A. Brunner and
washer
and dryer are side by Pointer, Peeve or Problem in :
Dr. Gary F. Benner said a
her column. Write POLI.Y'S
1974. SW'vey in&lt;licated 18 per side along with my freezer so
cent agreed the problem was when I want to defrost the
in care of Ibis :
serious and 62 per cent freezer I remove the agitator
•
thought it was a problem. from the washer and use both
Three years laiA!r, they said
their survey was found 43 per
cent believed the problem. to
.... &gt;.,.
t, be "at least fairly serious,"
and only lOper cent thought it
was not a serious matter.
Both surveys found about
57 per cent of those surveyed
thought the problem would
last more 1han five years, but
five per cent believed it would
last less than two years.
The two said the survey
sampled 464 households last
spring..The interviews were
made by using random telephone numbers, con~cting
. persons 18 years of age and

Bamperdlak,

. MbJ Vtat. - wiB . . .
II• I I . . . ialpiUted aklll

POLLY·s POINTERS

l:lfh;N.bm
. I I

Dear Helen :

PU IILIC NOTICE
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Rio Grande reunion held

Social
Calendar

I ~l ~

By Helen Bottel

'I1Iole Uptipl Hubudi-Apla!

17)

v-.

WER FURNITURE

~

171 18, 25, 21c

992-5554

!

. Helenfi:IP _l.:!!';~~

stride.. You neither take yourself
nor your auoclates too serious-

TONIGHT! I P.M.
r-------:.:.....:.:._______________--:---

Thistledown

CRISISLINE

maintain specific enough
inCormation on the types and
volume of imports to !mow
whether all tile varlo111
imporiA!d products (types of
fish or chocolate for
I!UIIlple) are inlpected," It
said. "Without such data, the
agency cannot determine
how effective Ita import
survelllance Is nor can It
assess the extent that imports
comply with regulati~s."
The report said the U.S.
Customs Service oometimea
faUs to notify FDA when
products
under
Ita
jurisdiction arrive. The •
Investigators said Customs
has power to Issue specta1
penni~ allowing lmmedilite
delivery of imported Items
when there is .a threat t:l.
economic loss, such as frt&gt;m a
tie-up at the port of entry, or
when the importer posts a
bond;
"In some cases the FDA
wanted to Inspect productll
moved under special permit .
but could not oo oo beca1111e
the products were marketed
before samples could be
taken," the report said. "In
other caaes the FDA sampled
products and found they. did
not comply will! regulations,
but the products had already
been marketed and could not
be recovered."

1m

Working J:.ogether is the only way.

11, 25 Ill 1, a, 1S, 51&lt;

1..

•
)

'

'

�•
.,_,.oe 1.al.lJ .)ei"Ulnei.. MlQQlepon·ruo:tt=ruy, u., "'un4a y, t~wy &amp;t. J. lf~ 1
"OOM tn nke country
....,.fonld«fy lody . Co" 1ake
btd patien1', local ref.,encn.
Phone (614) 667-3305.

HAVE

L£AftN TO SEW Prof.ssionollook ·
lng ga rments wllh new techniqua.' E~ Z S.w Oanes in knits
to begin soom ot the Sew N'

Mnntl~v .lulv.,.;

7- 'Mil' Oallv Sentinel, Middlennrl·Pomerov 0

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

IQ·oo-Sonny &amp; Cher 8,1.&gt;; Auslln City Limits 33.
11 :oo-News 3A.6.1,10,t3,• S: Monty Python' s F lyiflt
Clnus 20; Black Jovrt at 33.
11 :30-Johiii'Y Carson 3,4, 1.'; Streets of San FrancillCO
4, 13; Movl" " Young Ben" I ; Mary Hariman 10;
ABC News 33.
12:oo-Movle " The Gentle Rll n" 10: Janak! 33,
12:40- Tom~ 6, 13; 1:oo-Tom01 row 3,4; 1!50--News 13

_DJ~_'ti\ACY

Business Services

FOfltD ~ ton pickup. good COAL limestone, and colctom' 3 A.NO 4 RM. fur,ished a nd un· T.P . AREA, 2 b.droom fully I
tire.l ond motor . ContCKt Elden
chloride and calcium brine for
furn ished op1s . Phone 992·
corr,eted mobile hom• in e•·
dust control and lJMKia l mhdng
Walburn, 380 S. Third, Mid5434 ,
eel em co,difion . Underpinning
Sew Fobrk: Outlet Store In
salt for formers, Excelsior SoH
dleport , OH. Phon• 992-2805 .
and 10 )( 20 ca rpeted front
Rocll'\tl , Come in and talk to
Works , Moin Street . Pomeroy , COUNTRY Mobile Home Park. Rf
1977
FOR0 4 x 4. Phon99•9-2673.
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy .
porch.
on leve l 'h ocra ''L--------------------------------~
Denise or coli 992· 7-400 . tH'
Ohio or phone 992- 389cc':..·-,-lot. 2Situated
cor ga rage . nice.
Lorge lois wilh concrete patios ,
992-~t971 FORD TORI NO oir condltion- CAMPER , $600, Also, horse
workshop , and ·2 wa te r 1':"-:-sidewalks, runners and off
WJLf(AiE for tM elderlY ir'l my 1 ed, p.b., "door. Priced to s•ll.
syllems . Priced to sell. Phone
tra iler , $450. Phone (614) 698$lreel
parking.
Phone992·
7479.
Also , 1966 Plymouth Bot ·
(614)378-6322.
hom • · Trained and ex,.-rlenc3290.
rocude. Both in excellent candiFURNISHED A PT. Aduhs only , no
ed. Phone 992-7314 .
!Of Hlgb St.
tlon . May be Slll1tn a t 288 Main SPRING GARDEN .Suppl;e•. Cabpets . Phone 992·387-4 , Mid- UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom tra iler
on 100 JC 50 lot, one block from
_Pomeroy
5i HOUSE of F0bric Ct.or(lnce
St .. Middleport of phone
bage , cauliflower , broccoli,
dlep:orl
o':"::'~:-:-::::-~-::Syracuse Recreation Pork,
Sale, Now thru Augu$1 3, T992-2051.
and heod lettuoe plants ,
$7500. Phone W2-7134 or
Weddings
Shirt knits, reg , $1. 98 yard , -·.-::::-'-::=:-::c--.h- - - - - yellow , w h ite , a nd red onion AVAIL ABLE ot Village MQno~
89, T-Sh'rt K 1-1 R
•1972 CHEVY t ree -quorter ton
APorrments- t bedroom fully
992-3495,
se ts , onion plants , Kenne~.
Portraits
---:;--;sr;9 nO.;._., S 1 .~9 yrd. ~II :~
Com~r Sp~io l , V-8 a utomatic , cobbler, Ka tahdin, Red Pontiac carpeted with kitche, op· 197A MOBILE Home,
2 bedroom,
pllonces,
furnished.
Starting
ot
Passports
hi Quo liry poly. knits reduce-d
one ow ner. Phone (30.. )
and Red Latodo seed pota toes.
12:11 65 Greenbriar, total alec .,
882 296
$ 104 per mont . Phone992 ,n2L
Bulk gorden seeds. potting $Oi l.
Anniversaries
p ric•. on• toble poly knlt1.
· ·;,-:~9-~:;;::::;:;:-;-----:---;-:-::::
Nobil Summit Roed
unfurnished, in excellent c ond i ~
Equol housing oppdrtunity .
.
peat moss . fruit trees and rose
$1.00 ya rd. 0 &amp; J s Fabric. 1 1972 GRAN TORINO Spor1, ~ .000
tlon. A$king .price, $6.500.
Rt.l
Special Occasions
bus hes . M ldwa·y · Market·, "T~A ILE R SPAC::E for rent. 5 mites
mile · sout l-l of Middleport on · miles , $950. Phone 742·27-46:
Phone 992·5771.
Midd"port, 0 .
7
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
992
-2582
,
from Pomeroy ond Middleport.
S.!!&gt;le R1, 1973 VEGA HATCHBACK, $900.
992-5724
)9JfsTAR MOBILE Home , 60x l i
Bob:s Market, Mason, W.Va.
P~ne992 ·5858.'
Complete
Sales
ud
fORRi ST RUN Methodist Church
Phone 843·2524 .
.Blob Hotfllch
excellent condition . Coli
(~ ) 773-5721.
Ice Cr9a m Social in church
Service
and
Supplies.
BUSINESS
BUILDING
In
l'lew
985·3505
alter
5.
or
985·3886
EC-'O::NO
:;,!...M
:..:..::Yc:T:.:R=
A C-TO
_
R _w_l~/1-;.
baseme n t. July 29, Friday, 7 1966 FORD CUSTOM, 500, 6 cyl. Ha~Jen , W.Va., 20 x -4 5 main
sta ndard . Good condition ,
anytime .
,L------~.:;d.lllli.:J
p .m.
toch ments . Like neW, askiAg
business
corner. Phone (b1-4)
$375 . Pho"e992·28&lt;19.
$2250. Phone (61•) 69B ~ 3290 .
742-225S.
RWARO FOR Information leoding
I
1972
4
OR
.
BUICK
LoSobre,
1967?
to the Con vic tion of person or
HANGING BA SKET~ . pots, ond FIVE ROOM Apl . bath
dr.
Ch•v.
Impa
la
.
Phone
party who sto le 2 trees full of
g er a ni u ms .
Cleland ' s
Pomeroy. Phone 992-5621 or
985-3839.
Gr ee n h o U5e ,
Gerald i ne
ri pe canning pears from the
992·220S.
'1•111111 • • .
ALMA YOUNG RESIDENCE, 1965 FORD FAIRlANE SOO,&lt;A door,
Clelond , Ra cine. Ohio .
Pomeroy Go lf Course Hill. You r
289 run • good. $ 150. Phone 'COAL NUMBER 6, STOKER OR 3 RM . AND Both furnished aport· FRIE NDL Y TOY Pa rt ie s has open·
ment , oil utili ties paid. 356 N.
nome will not be mentioned for
985-391 • .
ings fo r manogera and
LUMP DELIVERED. Coil (614 )
F.Ourth
St •• M idclleporl .
the infor~T~Qtion and you will
Electrical &amp;
d~mo n s troto rs.
Demonstrate
- --.:loure~
38&lt;1-2814 .
19,68 CHE V. V. ton pickup, 327
raceivtt o reword. Phone
TRAILER lOT lor rent on Brownell
guara nteed toys end gilts. No
"'!.'!!~' IIOGIS
Pomeroy, Ohio45769
~efrlg~~ation
engine, $350 . Phone 985-4240 .
JOHN DEERE 420 live' power, 3
~
Ave.
M id dleport. · Phone
cosh in ~Jestment · no collecling
992-72,:.26::·- - - ' - - - Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing
300
Main
St.
point h ltc h . John Deer No. 5
197 4 PONTIAC Ve ntur a , 6
or
de
li~J
ering
~
no
se
rvice
992·2625.
Concrete Potlos
mower, 7 pt. cut . John Deer 2
cylinder, $1800. No Sunday
cha rge , cor and telephone
_I'.Om'"'J· Olllo
Sidewalks
New
row cu lti~o~at or Ford - two 14 in .
calls . Phone 7-42-2-460 .
necessa ry. Coli collecl to Caro l Construction
m1 .
&amp;
·_Phone 992-6282
bottom plow. Coll247-2.l95.
Day
(518) 489-8;)95 or wr.ite
.
~
Remodeling .
_
$200 REWARD for Information 1969 DODGE 2 TON Truck w it h tilt
Friendl y Toy Pa rtre s , 20
I A.M. tv 4:30 P.M.
bed and electric wench. Phone
Ph
.
992-71190r
lf6-ID55
l.oding to return o l two mo le
185CC SUZUKI. trail and roo d- AUCliO N, EVER Y Friday, 7 p.m.
Railroad Ave. Albony, N .Y.
992-J98.4
or
985-41•9.
·
SALES
AND SERVICE
Estlmatesapplliclito
loli.
dogs token from Rt. l3 neor
bike , 10 l p&amp;ed e!e&lt;tric sfarf.
New and used merchandise.
1220:.
5
·~-:-----c---:---::-6-23-1 mo. Pd.
Ph.tt2-Jt13
6-27-J
mo.'
pd
..
Darwin . One German short
Still und e r wo rroMty , $550 . Coli
O hio River Auction in Meigs MERPI·MAC has open ings for Parhair pointer , block and white
992-5601.
Piela .409 Peorl St ., Middleport ,
t y Pla n Su perv isors and
speckled w i th whi te spot on
Ohio. Phone (304) 773·5471 .
Demonstrators
in your area.
bock . One part Sher.pord mutt , SlARCRAFT lOth anniversary sole
Vinyl. &amp; Aluminum
Highest co mm ission , no
block with brown eet. Phone
on mini -motors , trai lers , and
delivering or collecting .
Siding,
Storm
992·58.18.
folddowns . Travelstar 25 ft .
CB SPECIAL
D~P:m o n s trote top quolity toys
Automatic
Windows
&amp;
BLACK &amp; TAN Beegle, mole wear· $4400.00; 2o ft . mini-motor
Continuous one piece
ond gif ts. Co li collect to Ann
ROBYN WV-23
Transmission Service
ing a collar on Middleport Hill .
$ 10 .850.00. We sell se rv ice and
gutton. We hltnt It, or do It
Bo;~~; tel', (319) 556-8881 or write
Insulation .
quality. Camp Conley Starcraft
Ph""e 992-3361.
MERR I· MAC , 601 Jackson ,
yo..,..lf. Spitclal prlcn to
C B Mab i le Trtn sc e iver
Call Pro,essiona Is
Soles, Rt. 62 no rt h of Pt. Ple a ·
Oubuqu, , Iowa -52001 .
comp lete w ith w .e at h e r
'
builders.
...:._...!.a nt.
pr oof PA spell ker , 2 w ay
base loaded CB · an tenn a,
Phone 949-2814
JAY C0:----:C;-A
;-M
:;-:::
PI::N::G
::--:T;-r-o-:;
il-e -rs ,
for r oof to p c;r t r un k mou nt .
mode
SWISS
COlONY.
custom
9a.m.
to.spl.m.
RISING STAR Kennel Boording,
Power cord , ctJa )l, a ntenna
A local contractor
small tandems Maple leof .
cable a nd a ll hardware
lndoor·Outdoor runs, grooming
Phone 949-2801
CODNER 'S CAMPERS , Soles ,
inc luded .
all breeds, d ~n lanitory
Ren tal , Se rvi ce , Supplie s ;
ONLY
or 9.-,·2860
facilit ies oe 367·7112. Cheshire.
Meigs 28 or 32 to Bashon.
Phone (614 ) 367 -0292.
FrH EltiJnaln
S69 .95
Owner Robert Codner, long
Reedsville, 0. Ph. 37U2SO
No Su!IUy Cl!fls PIIIH
HOOF HOLLOW . Buy, soil , 1rode
Bottom , Ohio.
6-16:_1 mo. 1
S-27· TFC
• 6-13-1mo.
or train horses, RUTH REEVES ,
1975 26FT. ARGOSY Motor Home,
trainer. Phone (614) 698-3290,
3,600 ocrual miles , r oof a ir,
AKC SHETLAND sheep dog• .
motor air, built-i n AM-FM, tope
Superior
(Min,} Collies , 2 females , 7
.deck , lorced air furnace , gas .. , . . . O&lt;k W. Carsey, Mg•.
weeks old, Shots and wormed.
Phone
992
-2181
Steam
Extraction
arid electr i-c refrigerator,
Phone (614) 367-0292 -or
generator plant. Zeb ond Dee
367·7112.
A~ning , crank-up TV antenna .
Pho11e 7-42· 2211 day, 7-42 ·22-46
MEIGS 'COUNTY J:fumane .Society
ALLADOIN KEROSENE LAMPS and
evenings .
Animal Coreline, 992-7680;' or
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
f.-Ito . . .
Route 3, Pomeroy, "o.
heaters. Reploce me nt pa rts .
after6 p , m ., 992-5427 ,
' REALTOR
1975 CAMPER , 28 ft . Fle•steel
chimneys , mantles , w ick s.
-lltlto-111111111
Carpet &amp; Upholstery
. 216 E. Second Street
solo bed, 2 gaucho beds, 2 door
elc.. Stop in for de monstration
Ali11nment,
wheel
MAIN
2 SMALL Block puppies and small
refrige
rator,
furnace
,
wo.ter
ond
free
cotolog.
Mountain
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769
Phone
Mike
Young
rabbit dog to g ive awayTPhone
balancing,
tune-up,
POMEROY, O.
heater, roof a ir, Am· FM Tape
L~ther ond Genera l store ,
Phone m-J32S
992-7287.
At
brake work, minor
deck , crank up T.V. antenna ,
10.-106 W. Union St. (614)
JUST
LISTED
Th
is
2
LOVABLE mole puppies needing
992-2206
or
992-7630
C.B. antenna , rollup owning ,
592-S-478 . Ath&amp;ns .
S
bedroom
home
BIG
repair.
story home has l lf2 baths. 4
good home, Border coll ie.:
dual tonks , spore tire. Phone
w
ith
Ph
baths
,
full
Behind Rutland lirade
3
HEIFERS,
lWO
White
face,
one
Bdrms., large living room ,
"Tile Originaton
Bo)(er . Call 949·2354 after 5
742-2954 .
basement.
and
central
ScMot
Evoning wo.rk by'
Cllo
rolois
.
Phone
992-3944
.
d
in
ing
room
,
10x30
Not
The
Imitators"
p.m.
--heating . Furnished or.
1975 CAVALCADE 21 y, CAMPER ,
appointment.
Ph. 742-2005"
enclosed
si
tting
porch
and
6 KIITENS, including their motller
2-23-1 mo.
fully self -contained, 6' gas- ONE MAYTAG , one Speed Queen
unfurnished . City water
6-S-1.mo. Pd..
garage
.
Located
on
a
wrin'
g
er
type
washers.
One
old
to be given to a g_o od home.
electric refri~rator, 3 burner
and
l
..
ge
lot.
type gos ra nge . Pho n e
corner lot in a good
Please ! Cell 992 -2983 or
stove, with oven , forced air furNEW LISTING - 53 acres
HARRISON 'S T.V. Repair. Service f"'--'"""'------~-,
992-5510.
neighborhood . ,A STEAL
992-550ol.
nace , sleeps six . P"hone
.of clean fenced pasture.
Calls. 276 Sycamore. St .. Mid- SEE US FOR ALL YOUR
AT
$11
,250.00
.
98S-3356.
POOL TENDER , with 4 sweep
10 GIVE Away , ~~~ Collie, V2 Gerdlopor1. Phono992-2522.
CRAFT AND ARTIST
Nice home site, barn and 2
.
hoses
,
cleans
pool
ou
tomotical.
PRICE
REDUCED
On
man S."'epord puppies. Also, STARCRAFT END Of Y&amp;o.r Sol;;, on
~p•lngs
.
All
m
inerals.
SUPPLIES.
. .
ty , sllght\y uled, $50 firm,
thls 2 8(1rm . frame home.
Min, , l yeo.r old gr~ ~triped
mini ·trailers qnd fokt·downs .
HOMESITES for sale, 1 acre and
LIKE
NEW
All
electrlc3
Phone
992
·7680
.
CLASSES
OFFERED
IN
Dining
room .
F .A.
cats . Grey ." striped kitten , 4
Lowest prices eve.r· offered,
up. Middleport, near Rutlqnd .
bedroom
ranch
style
home
DIF'5~RENT
CRAFTS.
months old. Phone,742'·3162.
Furnace
,
carpeting
,
1
floor
fold-downs, $1825 up; · 2 used
Call 992-7481.
on quiet street. Fenced
OPE"'I DAYS A WEEK,
Starcroft trailers in stock. We
plan .
NOW
ONLY
TWO FE.MALE puppies ,"' part
10:00 to 5:00
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths , COUNTRY (armland with l&amp;dud ~
back ya•d and only yea••
sell service and qua lity, Camp NEED A WATER
S13,BOO .OO.
Beagle , .3 monthS old , short
oil elec.. I acre, Middleport,
ed woods , wotar and good acold
.
$18.500.
Conley
Starcroft
Sales,
Rt.
62
N.
hair. give to good /lome. Phone
MIDDLEPORT Good
close to Rutland. Phone 9CJ2.
cess in Monroe County, W. Va.
SOFTENER?
Pt . Pleasant.
LAND - On old Route 33.
992-7085.
older 2 story home, large
7481.
$1
,000 down, call (304) n2Buy 1 to 4'h acres. Trailers
1973 TERRY 23 Y, Fl. gas and elec.
lot, garage, up to 4 Bdrms. ,
3102 or (304) n2-3221.
Let
Pomeroy
Landmork
SMALL
farm
lor
sale
,
10%
down,
O.K.
refrigerator, forced a ir fur·
porches . A good buy ,
104 West Main Street
soften &amp; condition your"
owner financed . Monroe Cot~n· VA·FHA, 30 yr. llnancing. Ireland
NEW LISTlNG-105 acres '
noce. reor both with tub, Am$13,850.00.
Just 8elewthe J..,n
water
and
a
Co-op
wat,r
ty
,
W.
Vo
.
Phone
(304)
772Mortga_
g
e,
n
E,
State,
Athens
,
Fm tape deck built·in ; crank up
- lays well , surrounded by
Boys'
In l'llm.,oy, Ohio
BACK
ON
THE
MARKE·T·
3102 or (30&lt;1) 772-3227.
softener, Model UC-XVI.
EXCAVATING , BACKH()f; , dozer,
phone (614) 592-3051 .
T.V. ontenno; spring loaded
Southern Ohio Coal . Will
1
acre,
modern
kitchen
•
-992-2291
trencher , low ~y , dump truck
awn ing, ropf a ir conditioning,
sell lor less than $150 per
.Now Onlyi279,95 ..
6-15-1 mo.
knotty pine paneling ,
trucks , sttptic systems . Bill
rea l good condition. Phone
acre.
Pullins , phone 992-2-478 day or
carpeting, 2 Bdrm ., dining
742·2025 or 7-42·2211 .
us 'est your water
1 Let
LUXURIOUS
4
BRADFORD, AucUonoor, Comnight.
room , part basement .
.Free.
·
bedrooms
,
large
dining,
plata SetYica . Phone. 949-2-487
$16,500.00.
mode•n
kitchen
,
family
or
949·2000. Racine, Ohio, Crill
CLOSE TO TOWN - 6 31•
.
Bradford.
room
with
·fl,replace
and
acres, 3 . Bdrm.~ ., great for
PIANO TUNING , Lone Dan ie ls. 12
.
pool table. 2'4 acres . ·
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR kids. 3 acres fenced, . pole
CASH paid for all ·make$ and
yeo n ol le rv ice . Phon e l.llliii_...:..._;.P;:ho:;:n::e:.:9:.:9!;2
'-1
REASONABLE
3
Sweepers , looslers; iro(ls , oil
barn
.
NOW
ONLY
models of mobile homes.
992-2082 .
bedrooms, bath, fireplace,
Jmall appliance~. Lawn mower ,
Phone area code614..423-9531 .
$17,200.00.
WATER WELL drilling. Phone" 0 -4 CATERPILLAR End Loader wilh
nexl to State Highway Garage
utility
room
,
basement,
BRICK &amp; FRAME - V..A.
TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest ProWilliam P. Grant of 7-42·2879
on Rovle 7. Phone (614) 985and
2
car
garage
.
$17,500.
Dozer blade and removable log
approved. 1!2 acre ground,
ducts. Top price for Slonding
3825 .
'
after 6 p.m .
looding forks . 1968 Ford F-750
NEW LISTING - . Country
about 5 yrs. old ranch type.
sawtimber.. Call 992-5965 or
Cab-Over Heavy duty truck
PENNZOIL
RUTLAND
open
doily
estate
of
145
acres.
Has
a
7
REMODELING,
Plumbing,
heating
Up to 4 Bdrms., bar,
Kent Hanby , 1·4..6-8570.
with 22ft. bed, bolh fo r $7.000.
till 10. .C losed Mondays ,
and all typ.s of general rapqlr.
room house and large barn .
carpeting
, sto•age bldg .
Call 1 (304 ) 882·3205 or 1 (304)
INCORPORATEO
• COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
wrecker service , tire repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years exSome
tractor
land
and
$28,500.00.
882-2990.
pocket watches ond chains ,
Phone 742-9575 or 742-2081 .
p«lonco . Phone 992-2409.
some
fenced
for
cattle
PRIVATE - Over 3 acro!s
silver onllf gold . We need 196.4
TRIUMPH Chopper, good condi·
grazing.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
nice laying ground, about
and older silver coins. Buy. sell ,
lion . See Dwight CarL 152 Butvice , oil makes , 992-2284 . The
BROWNELL
Nicely
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,
10 yrs. old ranch type
ternut A~Je .. Pomeroy.
Fabric
Shop , Pomeroy .
located
4
bedroom
home
742-2331.
home. 3 Bdrms., dining
. Authorized Singer Sales and
FOR SALE OR TRADE fer von or 4
with
natural
gas
,
city
room , 22x23 living room , '
OlD FURNITURE , ice bo•es , brass
S.rvice. We aharpen Scissors .
wheel drive jeep; 1968 Camoro,
water, and garage. Owner
large kit ., carpeting .
beds ,
etc ., col"!lplete IF YOU haVe a Service to ·offer,
196? Chevelle. Model 12-12
EXCAVATING,
doz.er, loader and
will sell on Land Contract.
households. Write M. 0 . Miller,
Garage, Insulated cold
wOnt to buy or Sell something,
Gauge, nke one, $300. Phone
backhott
work
: dump trucks
Sl ,SSO down, balance In
Rt. -4. PomerO)", Ohio or call
ae looking for work ... or
(61.4) 667·3866.
storage bldg . 2 other barns,
~nd lo·boys for hire; will haul
moothly
payments.
992-776J.
SL.'I:D::I:N!..
:: G~P::A.::T::I~
O d"o-or-.-B-'-w---,id_e_o_n-:d ' many other teatures . Raise
whote¥er · · • you'll get results ~
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and ·
RACINE AREA 2
foster with a Sentinel Want Ad.
kids and animals here.
CASH ! I. Junk co:rs. Fry's Truck &amp;
grovel. Coli Bob or R090r Jel·
Call992-2156 .
6' 8" high . Thermo-pane, never
bedroom frame home·.
Auto , Rutland. Phone 742 ·2081
ASKING
$34,900.00.
fers
, day phone 992·7089.
been used . Priced $110 . Phone
Bath, full basement, city
or 7&lt;42~9575. Closed Mondays.
night phone 992·3525 or 992NOW
FEATURING
9•9-2674 .
water and natural gas.
5232.
PHOTO
LISTING
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small.
4 YEAR 'OLD small horse more,
Garage
and_plenty
of
SERVICE!!!
LET
US
Will buy 1 piece or complete
EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
marked pretty, gentle , good for
gaiifen space : Now$17,500.'
household . New, used , or anti·
ond dltcher. Charles R. Hat·
TELL YOU HOW THIS
advanced youth, Call9.49:2593 .
5 POINTS - Nice newer
ques . Martin's Furniture, 20 N. YHLOW FREESTONE coMi"g
field, Back Hoe Ser¥ite,
SERVICE CAN HELP
home on 1 acre, has 3
2nd St .; Middleport. Phone
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008.
SELL YOUR PROERTY.
peaches now In season .
NO. ·2oa ~ Thls home noeds a now family, praienf
992-6370.
bedrooms, lull basement,
Available at of)y quanities
IF YOU REALLY WANT
owner transferred out ot the area. Has cef)lral AC., 3
WILL do roofing , construction,
garage,
arld is In a good
Please bring containers. Mid
SMALL DATSUN Pickup. Also
plumbing and heating. No job
TO SELL, CALL TODAY.
bedrooms, family room with FIREPLACE, 2 car
family neighborhood.
way Mkt. Pomeroy, 992· 2582 or
want dry storage space for rent
too large or too small. Phone
WE
NEED
PROPERTIES.
heated
garage,
large
closets,
·formal
dlnlnt
room
,
New Co · OP water s.,t.
Bob's Market, Mason. n3.S721 .
$32,000.
or sale . Phone 992·5370.
742-~8 .
large kltchon, dishwasher, a~d eat-In space. Nice
HENRY E. CLELAND
tentrs, model VC-SVI.
SHELTER
AND
· Only $279.95
country atmosphere but still close to town (large
WANTED TO BUY Rogis1erod ASHLEY STOVE Deolers. Running
REALTOR
CARPENTER , fJooring, ceiling,
COMFORT IS WHAT WE
S1·we 150.00 on a - new .
swimming and re&lt;;reatlon area close by.). Priced right .
Special Summer. Sole. Lorge
female B!ltagle pyp·. Call
paneling. Phone 992-2759.
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Hotpoint Refrlgerltor.
ALL
NEED
AT
A
at $44,000.
·
C60. $300. Blowers, $40. Call
992-7630.
Cleland
1
New
20
cubic
ft.
Chest
MOBILE
. Home Repolr, Elec .•
mornings, (61•1·698-7191.
PRICE.
REASONABLE
· Freeutr
Associates
plumbing and h.ating . Phone
CALL 992-3325. SMALL
n.s.ao Di"ount
,. JOHN DEERE Crawler Backhoe
992-2259-992·2561
992·5858.
Now
in
stock
,
complete
line
DOWN PAYMENT.
Pomeroy
endloader and dump truck .
985-4112
804
W.
Main
PUBLIC:. :'tOTICE
HOWERY AND MARTIN Exof bulk garden seeds .
Helen L. Teoford
Phone 992-7479 .
TO Opa l R ichards
1 Good McCullough Chain
992-2298
cavotlng, sep~ic syatemt ,
c. Bruce THiord
No known address
Sew
$65
BACKHOE DUMP tr,uck and trailer
dozer , backhoe, dump truck,
2.
Sl
ORY
3
bedroom
frame
After
Hours
Call992-7133
You are hereby not ified
Associ lies
1 Good Used Poulan Chain
for sole. Phone 7.. 2-2ol51 .
limeslon•, grav•l . blacktop
house~ F.A . furnace . storm win·
that you he¥ e- been named
Slw
- S.50
Con tad: Lois Pauley
paving, R1. 143. PhOne 1 (614)
dow
s
,
f
ireplace
in
Middleport.
Defendant In a l egal action THE" BEST in wood and coal burn1 Good Used Unlco
:&gt; NOUM HUU)t: , both , 2 porches ,
_;.!!!!!!!::l!!~
698-7331.
entitled Leroy R ichards ,
Phone
992-~57.
Dryer
$80.00
ing stoves , ranges ond
one screened ln. gorage and
Pla i nt i ff ,
- vs opal .
fireplaca-stoves. ZION ·HEAT , Electric Trim . AII , cuts
2
NEW
3
BEDROOM
Houses
for
carport. Walking distance Ia.
Richards , Defendant ; that
with nylon
S29.9S
COMPANY,INC. Shade, OH
sola. On e with 2 cor goroge, · Elementary School and town.
this cause has been assigned
f n Good Refrigerator $200
..sn6 (614) 696-1187. 593·689•.
one with recreation room. Lee
Forced air furnace . Located at 2 STORY FRAME houie, 3
Case No. " ,4A3 , and Is pend bedroom , 9"'980 with 3 room
ing in the Common Pleas LIVE CATFISH for sale to stock
Cons tru ct ion , 992-345-4 or
304 Weh:goll St. , Pomeroy . call
op1. in Middleport. Phone (304)
Court of Meigs County, Ohio .
992·545S.
after
5,
99'2·3488.
lakes, ponds , etc. Phone
Pomeroy , Oh io, 1576, . Tj1e
675-4:105
before noon.
742-3167 or 949·25&lt;15 .
object of th is Complaint is for
J-.ck
\\'
.
Carsey,I'Agt:
6
ACRES
WOODED
ground, rurol
d i vorCe , division of property · REGISTERED BLACK A~gus bull , 2 ·
Phone 992-2181
area·. Coli 985-3505 after 5. or
and ot,er proper relief .
yrs . old , $600 . 8 ft . truck ·top·
' You a·r e reQyired to answer
985·3886 anytim•.
Mon., Tu.s., Wed.
p«. $90. See Paul or John
with in twenty·-elght days ·
8:00tii'S:OO
Thomas,
leading
Creek
Rood
,
afttr the last publ ication of
REDUCE aate ana fast wttn
992-5)104 .
this notice. once tach week
GoBese Tablets &amp;E·Vap ·:water
Thuricla)' ft11 Noon 1
for six successive weeks , The USED FORESTRY EQUI~MENT Marpills " Nelson Drug ~
rasr publication w ill be Oft
bark live Deck w· tlop and FORO TRACTOR wltl-1 some eq~:~ ip ~
Aug . 22, 1977 and the twenty .
looden ; John Deere 350
eight days will commence on
ment. 16 lt. boot with 45 h.p.
~o.
Crawler Looct.r; Taylor S8l ·V
that date.
motor and tilt trailer. Phone
In case Of your failure to
Detroit Diet•l Engine ; Contact
992-5487
.
answer.
or
otherwise
Oennit Smurr, pt'M)ne (614)
respond, as reQu ired by the
1976 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLH
1138-~5 .
'
OhJo
Rules ~
of
Ci v i l
1200. Black In color with OC·
Will be IOid ond pwtlally
I
Procedure , judgment bv CANNING
TOMATOES ,
cessories including tour pock.
. ·.:
financed to Nlillllt. PlriY
default will be rendered
cucumt.rs, mangoes , real
One
owner,
3000
miles
.
$3600.
or
111rties,
O!Jiy
Jnt
.
.
llfW
•aalnat yotJ for the relief
cheap. Iring cOntainer. Bar·
Phone 985-3912.
people should lntluire.
ctemanc:I4Kf in thi"a claim .
bora Talbott, next building to
&gt;
Books lhewn OR ""uest.
GRAVELY
TRAClOR,
Mowe,,
Portland Pork .
' LARRY E . SPENCER ,
doter
blade
and
dual
wlleels
,
Clerk of Courts PIGS. TOP Quali!y, 30 to 40 lb , ,
$350. Phone 992·5983. _ _
Mefos County
614-992-~92,
wormed. costrated, $30. Buy
• 742-ltll
Cotnmon PltiS C~rt
now for winter butchering. 1972 SUZUKI 550, $1750. Phone
949-2463 .
(7) '11, 25 (I) I, I, 15, 22, die
Phone (61•) 378~6311 ·- --~
I~

-

"17'1

0

MO_NDAY, JULY ~5, 1t77
5: oo-B ig Valley 3:; Brady Bunch 8; Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency One 13; Mission :
I mposslble 15.
5 : 3~Adam - 12 4; News 6; Family Altair 8; Elec. Co.
20.33.'
6:0D--News 3,4,8,10,1J,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Austin City Llmll$ 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,. , 15; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable &gt;OUP 20 .
7: oo-Truth or Con•. 3; To Tell the ruth .I; Liar' s Club
6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; To Tell the •uth 13; My
Three Sons 15; Americana 20; Montage 33.
7: 30-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3: In Search ol4:
Muppet Show 6; Gong Show 8; MacNeil-Lehrer
. Report 20,33; P•lce Is Rl9ht 10; CandldCamera13;
·
Nashville on the Road 15.
S:oo-Little House on the Prairie 3,A,15; Pilot " Con·
stantlnople" 6, 13;' New Movies 8; Tenn is 20; Jeffersons 10; Once Upon a Classic 33.
8: »-Baseball 6,13 ; Shields &amp; Yarnell 10; Jean
Shepherd's America 33 .
9: oo-Movle "Sssssssss" 3,4,15; Maude 8, 10; West
VIrginia Journal 33.
9:30-AII's Fa I• J1 10.

THE PtmO _P_LU

J;;-

--

DAVID BRICKLES

CARTER'S

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

•

CAPTAIN EASY
' liAN6 IT ALL. !
HOlY MUCH ·LON6&amp;R
AR&amp; WE TO 810 1-E~T
O,t,NeLI!olG 1111..
!IU~PE~U

·-

..
...--·rn ta.....,

a,

ltft~~ f) !1)11 ~ ntAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~.,

byHenriArnolclandBobLae

Unscramble theM lour Jumbles;
form

one letter 10 each square, to

lour ordinary words.

••

am1:

'WR~pi

SWAIN'S

I KJ

GUTTER SERVICE

BISSEll SIDING

GUARANTEED

REASONABlE

MeiNE

RATES

DUGM'$

TEAFORD

Young's; fapeting

service

LITTLE ORPHA.,. _ 'ANNIE-THE:
'THEY MUST
COMf fOR

'

VANISHING UNAMERICANS

SURPRISED fiE

THAl FORMIJ&lt;A--

DIOH'T COME

I!UT HOW DID

WHH

Saturday's

lHE:JI~·

)'

'

'fiR'S 'lOUR~.~
~.A FOOt.. AAO IllS
~~N1-6~~D!

~ ... llQVJ G.AIJ "

F&lt;Xll.

""~ .......
W1

~·f~..,......

i

~

·-

STROUT

·

New-!; neeq -t worli, on
· his curve! Th' fella' ~··
almos' hit

--

9~ _

lllil.

FOR SALE

Pilgrim Motel property located on U. S. Route

50, formerly advertised for sale at

••
•
•
,. . . . . .____-f:
A-1 BUSINESS
. and BUILDING

$45,000.00, price now reduced. For information

contact Fred W. Crow, Attomey at Law, Pomeroy,
Ohio, Day

Night 614-992-2562.

CALL 992·2259

'--------~

'

'

•

•~

'••
•

Yesterday's Answer

35 "-in My

22 Inner
Hebrides
island
23 Prayermeeting
refrain
24 Cravat
fabric
26 Suffix with

cannon

'

fluff, etc.
38 " - Note
Samba"
39 Lambkin's
cry

..

40 Coffee
dispenser

n
Went ahead. -~~~~~~-:====-==~--~......:~~
43 Cowboy's

director
34 Sigh for
Yorick

niclmame

~=--+---+-+-----1 Lead

signals spade .etup

NORTH
.A2

25

•J95
+AH843

.95
WEST

EAST

=-+--+-1--+--il• J9 7 53
• Q 10 4

• K Q·4

• 8 76 2
+K6
.J83
.QI078
SOUTH !D) .
..10 86
•AK3
• Q 10 5
.AK4,2
.
North-Sonth vulnerable

+72

•

"
1 Bini's crop
2 Detest
bz:+-t--i3 Resting

.

"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR

to

work it:

Is L 0 N G FELL 0 W
One leiter simply .~tands for another., In this .sample A Is
used for ·the three L s, X for the two 0 s, .etc. Stngle letlers,
a~ostrophes, the length and formn\ton of I he words arc all
hmls. Each day Lhe code letlers are d11Tcrent.

. Weat

Nortll Eoot

Pass
Pass

3N.T. Pass

-

. I N.T.
PIN

Openlns lead - ••

iHATS A lAUGH!
~CAN'T EVEN

HELP MYSELF!

e,ur I

'THOUGHT

YOU WE/2E INA
HIToHOW!

I lf~/. !lUT 1HAT
MOtvtll5 AOO... AND
I. ONLY HAD A BIT
PAIZHMONEY
GOES FAST IN
'rnl&amp; I(MIN!

KNOW YOU

WERE DOWN
ON

')OUR.

UJCK/ ·

ByOowald&amp;JameeJa.-,
Olwald: ''While 1. am · the
oldest syndicated columnist,
you happen to be the yoUnleot.
I have noted that there is a

modern tendency to lead
fourth best against notrump,
YBSYTB
T L V P B D "&lt; provided your suit is beaded
GFDAER
H
by the jack or better. With' a
D
S
E
I
H
E
B
V
mit
like 1(}.8-7-S-3 the-modem
E
B
H
V'
S
0,
PS
DS P
lead is the 8.'' o B o P Jim: "It certainly is and it
LV
DSE
C F V P L I B.
NSE
certainly complicateS the
v B D B t H same for. the ordinary playe~.
YEHRBEV HDR
OR
It alia complicates It for the
Saturday'sCryploquole:THEREISNOMOREDANGEROUS expert, but if he can't handle
ILLUSION THAN THE FANCIE~ Of' WHICH PEOPLE TRY comptlcat!ons be sbouldn}
TO AVOID ILLUSION .-FRANCOIS DE FENELON
consider bun~elf an expert.
.·

,

.

@ 1971 KincFe.t.uresSyndicate,lnc,

.

Oswald :

It . does

plicate thlqs sometil'iMI. On '
other occulons it really llelps
the defenae."
Jim: · "When modernist
Weal oPelll the five of lilades
agalnlt SoVIh's normatlllreenotrump contract declater
ducks In cl!unmy . East wins
the Irick with the q~een and
alnct he is sure that his
PlfiDer bu led from !be jack
·he leads tbe kin~ right ;back.
Later on be gets in wilh the
king of dlainon&lt;!s and the .
defense 1athers in eaough
·trtcks to lflve poor South a

headache."
Olwaid; "Even withoul this
convention an alert East
ww1c1 ttlll aet rid ·of thai king
of · IP~, IIId hope 10(. the
best. 'l'lllii:'~nventiOII • just

made lllt'Pfay a cbich.'\

CRYPTOQUOTES

COP\·

"
A Nlbraalra reader
know if the Ruslnow
are
named' after their inventor.
Yes. Back In the 30s tilt late

I

Sidney Rusinow. did lftvent
them.
(Do rou hllvo a qutlllolt lor
the experto? Write- "Atk· tho
Jacobyt" cere of this
no-per. The Jocobya
on,...r indlvlrlual qu..llolto If
stamped, ulf-add"elled
on~peo ,,. oncloHd. Thll
moot lnttrea~ng qu..~ will
be U4od In ttl/a COIU/1111 Mf/ will
r•Qeivo copl•• ol JACJOIY
MODERN.)
I

will

&lt;;'

l
I

FRIDAY TIL.5·

1(-_ .......

Arms''
36 Imitator
37 Thread;

33 "Chicago"

.•

'i

Heroes 15.

5:ro-Big Valley 3; Star Trek4; Brady Bunch 8; Mister ·
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; EmtrgMcy One 13:'
Mission : Impassible 15.
.
;
5:»-Adam-12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8: Elec. Co{
20,33.
'
6:oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20: Bil~
Moyers' Journal 33. .
t
6:»-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News!~; Andy Griffith 6; •
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20. -"
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Liar's Club
6; Country Carnival 8; News 10: To Tell the Truth .
13; My Three Sons 15: Anyone for ,-ennyson? 20: .
Lqwell Thomas Remembers : JL '~
.
&lt;'
7:30-Hollywood Sq-ts 3,.1; ~~ .
' Wlltl ~It
6;·
Match Game PM I; MacN••'I.Ifi
,
rt •.l:l; ·
Wild Kingdom 13i Music l:.Ji¥ IJ , · •
',, · ·,
8:oo-Baa Baa BlackShtepUJJ: l.4,1it. Happy
.
6, 13; CBS News Special 8, 10; ln Performance at'
Wolf Trap 20,33.
•
8:30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,i3.
9:oo-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Movie "TI)e Wrecking
Crew" 6, 13; Mash 1, 10; Play of the Month 20; Opera
Theater 33.
9 :3D-One Day at a Time 8, 10.
.
.fo:oo-:-Poilce Story 3,4,15; Kolak 8,10; lolews 20: Piccadilly Clrcua Jl.
1
ll:~News 4,6,8, 10,1.3,l5,3.
n:»-Jofinny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "TI\e Red Tent''
6,131 Mary Hartman 10; "Movie" "'Pat Garrett &amp;
Billy the .Kid" 8: ABC News 33.
.
12:ro-Movle ' ;Honeymoon Hotel" 10; Janakl 33.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 2:oo-News 13.
Movie Channel4.:.sand 9p.m.- Bite the Bullet.
1 tnd 11 P.M.-Silent Movie. ·

0

that'un!

l ______

Pomeroy Landmarll

(Answers tomorrow)

Jumbles: DOUSE BASIS PURPLE TORRID
Answer: Talk-given to a cabdriver-"ADORESS"

by THOMAS JOSEPH
4 Opposite
ACROSS
of max.
1 Ali
5 Burger
6 Normandy
town
shape
6 Before Ocl.
10 Asian
7 Tennessee's
peninsula
11 Monkeys'
pride
(abbr.)
taboo
8 Adjective
12 Dormant
for Abner
1"3 Pa Hid
9 "This14 OverHouse" :
whelmed
8 15 Asian
19~~ soflli
tO Wing
~ holiday
16 Printing
17 Lili St. goofs
· • 18 Quantity
17 Case for
(abbr .)
cigarets
.; 21 Headdress
18
Won a
~ 25 A.J . Foyt
tennis
~
-is one
point
ii 27 Father of
~-.
poetry
-19 Announce,
in pinochle
L...;:;..._ _ _.::___ _ __... 28Author
Sl. Johns
20 Sandwich
29 Unfit ·
holder
~----~~~--~~·: 30
21 Dilute

FOR SALE

•.

"CI I I I I X J"

t

MMDICRAFT

•

gesled by lhe above cartoon.

MA'f·8E HE IN"ERITED ITI•

mr cast.l'T MAl$

C1W1Y lADIES

•.

I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise an1wer. as sug·

~

ABOUT -IT?

s

.

Prfntanswerhere:

Of COURSE··

THEY kNOW

fRONT END

ALIGNMENT

KJ I 'J

UTILE OJtPHAN ANNIE

SHOP

Pomeroy Landmark

'

a,

ITHRUNEj

PARTS • LABOR

~r.:ke:c;a~~~,
~~
·;:;2,::18~1'--··

-.

YORAF

TUESDAY, JUL1l6, 1977
6:oo-Summer Semester 10: 6 ls-Ferm Report 13.;
6 : 2~Not for Women Only 13.
6:30-Focus on Columbus 3: News 6: Summer
semester 8; Concerns &amp; Common!&amp; 10; 6 :45Mornlng Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning, West
Vlrglnla 13; 6:5.1-Good Morning, Trl State l:i.
7:oo-Today 3,4,1 5;· Good Morning America 6,13&gt; CBS
News 8: Chuck White Repor11 10; 7:05--Porky Pig 1
10.
7:»-Schoolles IO.Schoolles 10.
B:oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 10; SeSame
Sl. 33.
·
. 8:30-Big Valley 6'. ,
9:oo-&lt;:ross-Wits 1: Phil DonahUe 4,13,15i Andy
Griffith 8: Biography 33.
.
9:»-A.M. 3; Edge of Night 6; Ce&gt;ncentrat lon 8; Unto
the Hills 33.10:oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, IS; Dinah 6:
Here's Lvcy B,IO; Mike Douglas 13; Sudlo See 33.
IO : J~Hollywood Squores 3,4,15; Jean Shepherd's
America 33; Prl'" Is Right 8, 10.
11 :ro-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Communilty of Living Things 33.
11 :2G-Biographv 33.
11 :3G-It' s Anybody' s Guess 3,.1, IS; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10; 11 :A5---Measuremetrlc 33; 11 :55CBS News B; Ms. Flxlt 10.
'
l:l:QO-News J,.t,6,10; Shoot for the Stars 15.; OJvorce
Court 8; Midday 13; Forsyte Saga 33.
12:3D-&lt;:hlco &amp; the Man 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search lor Tomorrow 8.10.
1:oo-Gong ShoY( 3; All My Children 6,13; News ai,
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 15~
Masterpiece Theatr&amp; 33.
.
\ ·
1:»-Days of Our Lives 3,.,15; As Tht World Turns
8.10.
;•
2;00-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; l.eonlrd llernsteln Clllh ,
ductS 33.
.!' . .
.f
2 : 3~Baseball3,• : One Life to Live 6$U; Doctors 151
Guiding Llg~t 10. ·
.
J :oo-Another World 15; All In the Family 8, 10; Co!lsumer Survival Kit 20: What's Cooking? 33.
•
.
3:15--General Hospital 6,13 .
3 : 3~Match Game 8,10; Llllas Yoga &amp; You 20; An{
tlques 33"4:110-Gong Show 15; New Mickey Mous4·
Club 6; Gilligan's Is. 8; Movie "The Hangman" 10;
Dlnah 13.
4 : 3~Emergency One 6; Andy Griffith B; Hogan's

HI,CHVCK.

I NEED A
UTTLE
RELP...

a. Sll. At--5 p.M. .

Mil DAD'S GOING OUT
OF TOWN A6AIN ... CAN
SNOON COME OVER AND
6E Mlf WATCHDOG?

Ali

CONTRAiRE! I'M
QUITE 6Li5'f 5TORtN6

liP SOLAR ENERG'f' ~

,_

...
:",;:==
...

...••

•

'

�II-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, q., Mooday, July 2:i, 1977 _

News •• ,in Briefs

HOSPITAL NEWS

Commanches celebrate
peace treaty signing

(Continued from page I)
Bach, said the U.S. military should experiment with women In
e«nbat roles in Anny and Marine corubat battalions and Navy
Slips, and In Ute Air Force by placing women in missilelaupch
crews, a fighter sq\18dron and a bomber .Squadron .
MILLINOCKET, MAINE - FIREFIGHTERS IN
BAXTER State Park had completed about 85 per cent of a
control line todi!Y around an eight&lt;lay-old forest fire, Ute state
Forest Service said. Tbe encircled area Includes between 5,000
and 6,000 a&lt;res of state land and property owned by the Great
Northern Paper Co., more than half of which has burned, a
spokesman said.
·
To em lain the fire - and to prevent it from sweeping up
the side of 5,2117-foot Mount Katahdin -officials are prepared
to sacrifice all Ute acreage within the control lines, he said.
"Bu• tllat doesn 't necessarlly mean we're going to lose aU
of that area. We ba ve men and planes working to save as much
as we can. We just want to contain Ute fire," he said. Tbe
. Fore5t Service.estimated the blaZe has already consumed 3,500
acres of park land and property owned by tbe paper company.
ALTADENA, CAUF.- WIND-WHIPPED FLAMES have
charred lliOre than 3,000 acres of dense tinder-dry brush in a
remote, uninhabited area of Angeles National Forest and sent
billows of smoke over the Los Angeles Basin. Two helicopters
fi~ting the blaze collided late Sunday while hovering over tile'
Mill Creek Sununit Station 17 miles northeast of Pasadena.
Two fire fighters reportedly suffered head injuries and were
rushed to County-USC Medical Center.
Condition of the injured fire fighters was unknown.
Thirteen aircraft bombarded the flames Sunday aiding tbe
1,000 fire fighters manning three fronts. Low humidity
readings and temperatures nearing 100 degrees were
hampering efforts to douse the blaze.

Bible .school dates are set
The Pomeroy Community
Daily Vacation Bible School
has been set for August 1 ·
through 5 to be held at the
Lutheran
Church
in
Pomeroy. Three churches,
the Trinity, Methodist, and
Lutheran .are associated in

IGNACIO, Colo. (UPI) Comanche braves armed
with lance3, boWl and rlfii!IJ
celebrated the signing of a
historic peace treaty with the
Ute Nation this weekend by
perfmning their Black Knife
Dance for only the fourth
Iinne in nearly 10 yean.
The Tu-w~ (Black Knife)
Dance, perfprmed ID four
parts, honors the crow, whoee
squawking
traditionally
warned Indians of intruders
in their camps.
Leaders of the Comanche
and Ute Nations gathered In a
sacred white tepee Sunday to
sign a treaty officially ending
centuries of warfare between
their trl bes . After the
ceremony, welded from the
eyes of white qten by an

honor guard of warri ors
ringlllg the tepee, a
Comanche
elder
told
- mbled Indians of the
treaty's slgnlllcanee.
''Oar blood Is red and we
are red," aald MelviD ·
'IUEISS ASSIGNED
Kerchee, head of the
RACINE - AlrmaD
Comanche . War Dance
Barry A. Tbelu, seD of
Society, lp"8!riJlg from the
Mn. Betty L Tllelu of
center of an . . - farmed by
BadDe bu - · aulped
a pine-log arbor bowed lrlth
to Lowry. AFB, Colo., after
upen branches.
~mpletiDg Air Force baste
"Now we areaUu me," he
lniiiiiD&amp;. AlrmaD Tbelas
said. "May the gnilil never
will
Dow
receive
grow on the path between ua.
SJIO"Iallzed traiDhlg ID tile
I want you to tell your
mllDIUoaa aad weapoDs
chlbhn whit hapPOIMd here
maiDieDaD« field. He Is a
today."
1174 p-aduate ol Southem
According to folklore, Utes
Loeal Hlcb SehooL His
and Comandlel ptb«ed In
father, Roger G. Tbelsa,
the T - Plnhandle 100
realdet at R.D. ; , RaciDe.
yean qo to sign ·I treaty
elldlnc a century of war. But
~- - - - - - - --- - - - ----- ~ - ~--- -- 1 a rifle sbot, fired . by an
unknown brave, dilpel aed
the Indians and tlie treaty
never Will CODcluded.
I
Before •ter!Dg the tepee,
BOBBY WESTFALL
Bobbv Lee Westfall, 42, a CanaiiCbe and Ute leaden
resldenl of Rt. 1, Gallipolis, were purified by 11110lar from
died in ttle Pine Crest Care a cedar fire, wafted over
Center, Monday morn ing .
them by Cllmancbe medicine
He was born July 5, 1935, In Man Mlltm Sovo Sr. using a
Roane County, W. Va. , son of
Hurl Westfall and the late handful of eagle . feathe111.
Ruby Boggs Westfall . .

!

Area

D~aths

He

married

!

'Patr icia

Ballengee In Virginia on May
24, 1H9. She survives. along
with one son, Brett Lee and
one daughter, Bobbi Jean.
Frank ; Cheshire ; Jack,
Hampton, Va .; Joe, Cold·
water. Mich. ; one sister, Mrs.
Lorrene Bayliss. Belle, W.
Va.
Mr. Westfall was a retired

,.,~N DR. IN
July -25-26

Double Feature

Program
Clint Eastwood
THE
ENFORCER

Ir onworker and a member of
lhe Cheshire F and AM

Lodge, Gallipolis York Riles
and the Columbus Shrine
Club. .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
McCoy . Wetherholt-Moore
Funeral Home In Gallipolis
with Rev. William Uber of·
ficlatlog. Burial will be In
Ohio Valley Memory Gar·
dens.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Tuesday
from 2-4 and 6:30 untll9 r .m.
Masonic: services wil be
held 6: 30 p.m. Tuesday.

R

R

KENNETH SOVEL .
REEDSVIl LE The
obituary notice In the Sunday
Tlmes.sentinel for Kenneth

E. Sovel should have Included

as a sur.v lvor the name of 1

half-brother, John Hetzer. of
Reedsville.

American -artist Maxfield
Parrlah and actor Walter
Brennan were born on July
25, the artist In 1870 and
Brennan In 11194.

Youngster home. safely
after Huck Finn trip
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Jason Gusler, 8, Ute object of
a search by hundreds of
pollee and civilians returned
borne Sunday. He had been
miasing since Thursday and
told pollee lie had been In the
company of a man he
identified ooly aa Jalm.
H&lt;moclde Delcllve Tom
JoJ1'!8 lllid the boy had not
been assaulted or held
against his will. Jmes said
the youth walked Into his
borne Sunday and told his
mother he was all right.
" It waa just a Tom sawyer
adventure to the boy," said
Jones.
Jones said the youth had
scratcbes on his legs, anns
and face and bllsten on his
feet and Will still wearing the
green IIWimnlq trunks and
blue tennil m- he had oa
wben he diupeared.
Jones said lbe youth and
the man left the Olentangy
RIYI!I' area where the boy had
been swllliming abollt 9 p.m.
Thunday.
The boy told pollee the man
-~ Friday aulhoritles were
looking for him and waa
afraid to take him home.
Y 0UJ18 Guajer sald he and
John went to Ute borne of a
friend of Jalm's and got a ·
glass of water and . then
walked to a swllliming pool
and watched the IW!mmen
until they cot lunir)'.

They tben went to a ch11rch
and had ftee fish, beans and a
roll for dinner.
Police said Ute boy and Ute
man slept in weeds along the
river Friday night and on
Saturday night they slept In a

wooded area near the old
Ohio Penitentiary.
Tiley had douglillllll for
breakfast and then Jalm told
Ute yoUth to go hanie, pollee
said.
"It II just a matter of time
before we caleb the man,"
said Jones. "He wOald be
better off turning hlmaelf In
at pollee headqllBrters .
Somebody knows hlm and II
going to Call us." .

'

Liquid gas
explodes
m Florida
'

JAcKSONVILLE ,
(UPI) - Two large

Fla .

tanb of

Uquld petroleum
gas
exploded
In
North
Jackaonvllle today, endangering nearby chetillcal
storage tanka. Police ordered
about 2,000 periODS fr(IJII the
area.
First reports indicated
there were PO lnjuriee when
twp LP tanka, each of 30,000
gallon capacity, bunt open
about $ a.m. EDT and sent
names Into the illy that were
visible for two miles.
Pulice Capt. J.w. Wingate
Sllld firemen were holing
down nearby storage tanka,
"but_it's still a powder keg."
The eiJikleion occurred at
the FiarGas Co., acr018 the
street from the Allied
a.emlcal Co. plant.
Pollee and firemen blocked
Off all roads iettdbw to the
area llld beglll orderlog
about l,OQO peraons from the
lndiLitrtal-reslde area.
One of' the LP gu tanU
which broke open waa about
50 per cent fall of the·wlaUie
fuel and the olher waa about
35 per cent full; Qlft~ said.

Inalde

the teDt, the
participant&amp; I!Mted a HI!
~
peace
pipe while nearly 3,500
onlooten waited outalde
under tbreatening stltll.
Ita the Bilek Knife J:lliDot
bepn,thetlntlnvellltoU.
are111 carried a oootle4 hotlr
and arrow to l)rinhollite the
lllnt for villlge dop.
"'lbe crow does not Jib
doss, " aald Leon Motah, .
official historian for tile
Qlrl•t.wna Ovnandles. "Thr
leading brave will shoot any
clog he-. 10 the croft will
be sale."
Behind I pi'\JOeJIIllll of twt
dozen women dr~ In red
and
white
eoatumea
cll!:wated with beadl and
1n11 C11!111 a dozen IU;ea
with blacli: breechclothl,
~ the crow, Thr
braves farmed a wide circle
and DlOWJd fonrard a few
1tep1 and then beck a few ,
denoting the crow'a nmlng
mo;emente tn1m htanch ID
branch.
The WillDen, boldlng Qlpe
in fnmt of them, then ciiJiced
the Scalp Dance to bonor
braves victorious in battle
and the Black KDlfe llllnce
ooncluded with the braves
and squaws joining In tile'
VIctory Dance.
The dance had been perfOl'llled anly three Iinnea sin«
1911.
•

Divers search ·•
for man's body
LANCASI'ER, Ohio ( UPI)
- Scuba divers JrAned ~
search today for Jeffery:
Fletcher, liD, Lancaster, whet
J.a milelng_ and (It fS Ill' '«1
droWDed In a lake at 811
outdoor education anter
IIOUtli of he" which Ia owned
by ano Slate unmrslty.
Authorities said Fletcher
. and aeven other periODS were
at the lake at Barnaby Center
wben ooe man waa lltrldten
with Cl'lllllpll.
Fletcber and the otben
Jumped Into the lalar to .aid
the llricken man. HoWever,
Fletcher went under arid
newr surfaced.
'

.

~

Singh
'

er Tanlny Ol'flando

-~!'

e • retir g rom ....,,
hnot·ea to apend more Ume

. with his family and to bondr
the .....,.,.. 1 a( lila late frleDd,
011 ..,.,.... Fnsddle Prlna
Orlllldo, 33, Wlil 1114 rle
would oa1y per'.um ~r
beneftta In llie futUre made
·
•
the IUI'(Il'la Rllll~
cb1n&amp; a perfcnnance at the
South Shore Mu.lc arcua In

~~~':,\~by sur-

pr11e .. Frank

the

imser•s

Uebenn&amp;n

publlclat,

ilaid:

STEREO ALBUM SALE

•

Special group of albums Including country, classical;.
pop, religious and easy listening music.

REG. '6.79 AllUMS ........... SAU '4.ft
'.

.

REG. '7.79 ALBUMS ........... SAU •s.M

NACOGDOCHES, Tex.
Veteran defenalw
end Elvill Bethea ml rd the
first practice SUnday for
Houston Oilers veterans, and
C9ach BIDil Phillips said he
would be fined $500 for each
day misaed.
·Bethell - the anly player
Ph WP~ M. pl'DI!IICIJ WJI&amp;
tllNagli. ~ 'IJGI'Iriout
in 10Cklel!ree heat•
(UPI) -

•

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 71

By Ulllted Press lnternatlonal
ARAB MEDIATORS ATTEMPI'ING TO PREVENT A
NEW outbreak of warfare between' Ubya and Egypt have
returned to Tripoli to meet Ubyail leader Col. MOiSIIIIIl8r
Knadafy and win his acceptance of a cease-lite. There were no
reports of fighting Monday or today along the ti50&lt;nlle desert
border between the two Arab nations after Egyptian President
.Anwar Sadat Sunday unilaterally declared a cease-flte to end
six days of warfare. ·
·
But Ubya so far has faUed to announce agreement on the
cease.fite .and Arab mediators - Palestinian Chief Vasser
Arafat and Algerian President Houari Boumedienne - met
·
Khadafy Monday.
Political sources in Caito said today Ubya has not yet
agreed · to Ute case-fire because she is still studying an
Egyptian demand that sophisticated Soviet equipment near
the common frontier be pulled hack. The sources said Egypt
had told Ubya through mediators that the only purpose of
highly Sensitive electronic, radar and missile equipment near
the Egyptian .border could be to spy on or attack Egypt and
they must therefore be removed.
N,\JROBI, KENYA ..;. ETffiOPIA'S LEFTIST military
governrnenl and two guerrilla groups have issued new claimS
of victory in conflicts that threaten to tear the country apart.
Less than three years after deposing Emperor Halle Selassle,
the government finds itself cut off from Ute sea to the north by
Eritrean guerrillas and by Somali-backed rebels to the
southeast.
The Eritreans, waging Africa's longest war and the
world's largest ongoing conflict with more than 60,000 troops
on b«h sides, said Monday they captured Ute town of Agordat,
one of the few outposts the government still controlled in the
region. In a series of spectacular v~ctories in recent months,
the Eritreans said they hlid captured at least 110 per cent of the
province and were preparing for a major drive toward a
decisive victory. ·
· '
DETROIT ~ THE U.S. AUTO INDUSTRY, HEADiNG .
toward its second best year ever, stumbled in mid-July with

sales of domestic automobiles slipping 8.3 per cent below last
year's level. Tbe reports, issued Monday by the four U.s , auto
companies, marked the Jir~ year-IO'year sales decline in two
montha and the lowest mid-month sales period since March,
despite record sales by the Ford Motor Co.
· Only Ford among Ute four U. S. compallies was able to
rep«! it topped Its year-«go level in the July 11·20111 period,
mostly because of a sales cantest lhat endedJuly ?Al in Its Ford
Division. General Motor&amp;' Chevrolet Division, on tlie other
hand, saw salee drop 40 per cent tnlm.last year due to a sales
contest that ended In early July. Instead of its normal 2:i per·
cent Of aU domestic auto sales, Oievy took only 16 per cent
compared with a 38 per cent grab in early July. ·
TWO MORE STEEL COMPANIES HAVE FOLLOWED
Ute lead of the industry giants and raised prices on structural
shapes and tin mill l'l'oducts despite criticism frqm the Carter
.administratiOn.
Armco Steel Corp., based in Middletown, Ohio, said
Monday it was boosting prices for structural shapes used in
heavy construction by about $20 a ton, effective Sept. 4. Armco
Sllld the Increase was similar to the 6 per cent hikes announced
last -11: by the two largest steelmakera, U. S. Sieel Corp. 811d
Bethlehem steel Corp. Wheeling - Pittsburgh Steel Corp. of
Plttlburgh Sllld It will hike prices of tin mill products in line
with the 1per cent price boosts on tin products also announced
last week by U. S. Steel and Bethlehem.
..

CHICAGO

•

REG; '10.79 A 1 'UMS ..........SAU ..M

..

JAMIEJOBB

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1977

The board' hired Mrs.
Roberta Maidens as vocal
instructor, Miss Marianne
McQuire 8$ primary special
education teacher at Port·
land, Miss "Daisy Crawley as
French and biology teacher;
Daniel Riffle as regular bus
. driver, Ruth Smith, part-time
custodian at the junior high
and Roger Hill as regular bus
driver.
Bobby Ord, superintendent,
told the board that board
members Denny Evans and
Roger Adams has resigned.
The hoard agreed to enter
into a contract agreement
with the Meigs County Board
of Education for the services

•

(UPI)

·

·
Ho-et, be left lila fluget
belilnd, Pollee were ~
print.l fnm It In an effoJ1 to
identify the gunman.
·
..

fiiiDIIIIII robbing the Pekin
a-.-., ut11 he llbot hll
fllrcer ott. Pollee said the
budlt woandld himaelf
M ay wb1a be ..,. trying .
to 111o1r 1111 Yldlml the .2&amp;~~ automatic was . (Jlesr and cool tonight, !on
to ~ he meant between 56 and 80. Sunny,
Cllli&amp;lnued cool WedDesdliy,
the bllbl_, a. ProliabllltY of
01111- pncl&amp; II ""' ..., 11n1 per
will I t:llllt todaJ ... &amp;PI'fllto 10 per

Weather

~

and

P. ceat Wednelday.

There have ~n 11 speCial
COLUMBUS . (UPI ) Proponents used a sound
!natant voter registration has elections held in parts of 12 truck, reminding residents
not caused any major counties since the court they could go to the polls to
problems so far , but neither ruling. In them , 16,174 re gister and vote. This
was it an instant success, persons cast ballots, and of reminder enticed 228 persons
according to 13 report;&gt; . that total, 690 were instant to take advantage of the law.
submitted to Ohio Secretary registrants.
Even this drive, however,
Ohioans now can register to failed to ensure victory for
of State Ted W. Brown after
special elections around the vote · on election day, ~der Ute tax levy, which lost by
Ute law. In the past, an nearly 3110 votes,
state.
" 'l'here is nothing illegal in
Eleven special elections individual had to register 30
were held following the July 8 days before an election io be using sound equipment to
remind voters they could
Supreme Court of Ohio 111ling eligible to cast a ballot.
that the Instant Voter · The largest turnout of 'register and vote on the same
Registration Law was instant voters occurred in day ," said Brown. "In fact,
County,
where under the law, there are no
effective inunediately. The Clark
residents
in
18
precincts
of restrictions.
effective date of Ute law
Ute
New
CarlisleBethel
Local
" People could be bused to a
became an Issue because
Brown had ruled it would not School District balloted July polling place to register and
go into effect until Aug. 30. 19 on an additional tax levy. vot e. However, use of such
things
( bus,
sound
equipment) must be reported
if an expense is incurred," he
said.
.Assistant Clark County
'Board .of Elections Clerk
Norma Johnson said 201 of
the 228 persons who took

Middleport to
get radar gun

In another 60 to 90 d8ys it
won 'I be so ·much fuq

speeding through Middleport.
That's how long it l'ill he
before the police department
puts Into operation a handheld raJiar gun that records
speed of an approaching or
departing vehicle. What the .
gun records will stand up in
Mayor Fred Hoffman's court.
That's how Mayor Hoffman
described for town council at
a regular meeting Monday
night operation of the radar
gun which is being obtained
through a federal grant
program and the Ohio State
Patrol. A unit, valued at $543
will cost Middleport only $163
under
the
assistance
program.
In other business Mayor
Hoffman reported numerous
complaints being received
from people who contend that
access to the Middleport
Marina is virtually impossible by boat via Leading
Creek. Hoffman said that be
has contacted the u. s. Corps
of Engineers In an effort to
acquire funds for the
dredging and Improvement of
the Leading Creek access but
found that with 25,000 visitors
to the Marina during 1976,
Middleport's fa~y receives

~}~~~~~tr:r:~~:t:::r::::I)f}~:~t~::::g:::t

only li percent of the total
GRIDDERS TO MEET
vlslta.tion to four area
marinaS;
including
There wm be a meeUng
Gallipolis' access levee.
for all boys who want to
An estimated $75,000 would · play vanity football at
have to he appropriated for Meigs High School on
the needed repairs and the Friday, July 29, ai 6:30
Corps cannot forecast when ·p.m. at Meigs High School.

n:~m:r·:rrec::

in
mape, was prepared through
1be cooperation of federJI,
Ule ~local agencies.
• On lt8t everae llide Ia a text
briefly describing characterlslica of the domlnaiK 101ls
1n each of "the collllty's 10ll
areu. AlloiDcluded Ia a table
giving llmllatlons of each soil
area for some selected ~nd

uses.

The
map and accom... nylnll d•crlptml
lttfonali&amp;IGn will b1 of ... ota1
laterelt to qlneera, far.
mets.
bomebuildera,

Plans made

.

A qharge of possession of
Seneca Cowtty Board of ·
Elections
Director Louis F .
WAVE'"Y,
marijuana . filed against
. ,... Ohio (UPI) Vicky Lee, .19 , Middleport, Kummerer . submitted t~~ The $4.5 billion expansion of
was dismissed In Meigs · only adverse report. He sa•
the ur.anium enrichment
Col.lllly Court Monday ac- there . ;was "confusion at plant at Piketon was
cording to Charles Knight, polling places, precinct discussed by about 250
workers were very unhappy" citizens and state officials
attorney.
(cOntinued on page 10)
during a planning session In
·
_ ·
Waverly Mmday.
Acting as co-ehaitmen for
the meeting were Gov. James
.
.
. A. RbodesandHouseSpeaker
S.herlff James J. Profiitt's being questioned by deputies Vernal
Riffe,
D-()jew
Dept.lsloolting.forthe person In connection with a breaking ~ston.
.
and his motive in an early and entering at Hockory
~· and Riffe .SBid the
morning shooting incident Lakes, Reedsville. The owner meeting was held to assme
today.
of the property, Ethel "IX'der~y p~inf for the
· Raymond Priddy, 35, Morlan, said .. a pinball e1J18mnon which IS expected
Rutland; was southbound on machine and pool table were to me~n . about . 6,000
SR 7 at the junction of SR 124 broken up and a small constructioo JObs while the
when lour shots were fired amount of change was stolen ne~ additioos to Ute plant are
into the windshield of his at approximately 9 a.m. hemg buill and about 2,000
vehicle. Priddy was not in- Monday.
permanent J?bs.

Gunman want ed

':,.

if~~~~ll~:!.!~~~ . 1:-'::~n andw~~:~ie?cf.n ~! ·: : : : : : : &gt;.: : : ::::::::m:::::::::::,;::::&lt;::::::::::~,:::::~/ pe:r~ =~~ ":~~

Hoffman.
.

Public offered
Meigs soil map
COLUMBUS - -A map
showing Ute soU areas of
Melga County publlshed by
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources (ODNR)
is available to the pubDc.

advantage of the law were
"new registrations." The 17
others
had
changed
addresses.
·
" The presiding judge or an
extra worker handled the
people wanting to register. I
think it went pretty well," she
said.
The next largest turnout of
instant voters occurred in the
Lorain County community· of
Avon Lake .July 19 during an
election on an additional lax
levy . The Lorain County
Buard of Elections said 150 of
the 1,976 persons who voted
were instant voters.
The bond issue was
approved by a margin of
nearly 8-1.
Voters in the Southwest
·Local School District in
Hamilton and Butler cowtties
balloted on a bond Issue that
·was soundly trounced four
days after the court ruling.
Of the 1,960 persons who
voted in Hamilton County, 66
were instant voters, while
only four feU in that category
ol Ute 56 persons .who cast
their ballots in the part of the
district that slipped over into
Butler County.
"There was no trouble at
aU, " said Butler County
Board of Elections Pitector
Margaret Coi&lt;. ''Only one was

The possibility loomed
today that the body of Albert
Thompson, 70, Rt. 2,
Cheshire, may be exhumed
from its resting - place at
Gravel Hill Cemetery for
pathological study at the
Franklin County Coroner's
Office in Columbus.
Thompson, a Cheshire
Twp. farmer, may have been
murdered last September.
However, at the time
Thompson's body was found,
the euct cause of death was
not determined. · ·
According to the · death
certificate, no · autopsy was
performed due to decomposition of Ute body because
wild animals had consumed
parts of it .
Thompson was believed to
have died Sept. 14, although
the body was not foWid untU
two weeks later. The head
was not connected to the
body. If the corpse Is
exhumed, an order to do so
would have io be Issued ~y
either Prosecuting Attorney
Joe Cain or Galli&amp; County
Coroner Dr. Donald R.

for 6;000
::~~n~~.: ~~r:~~~~ ::r~~~:;~;::~::;:~:~~~ ~ ~: : ~:::e~:a!~~. .~~~: area jobs

l!lgniflcant reduction In Ute
number of heavy truc.ks
travelling through . town
recently: He said there ts a
need for the posted signs at
all times, not just while the
Silver Memorial Bridge is
closed.
He also comme~ded
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
.Andrews for his recent public
statement which King
thought, "took .a responsible
and intelligent view on the
(traffic) situation."
.
In final business Hoffman
reminded council that street
resurfacing In Middleport
began Monday and will
continue through most of the
week.
· Present were CounCilmen
Carl Horky, WUDam Walters,

dan~~~ge was done to the car.

While the person or persons
responsible are not known at
this time , the Sheriff's
department is conllnulug Its
investigation.
·
Iii other action Sheriff
Proffitt said two juveniles are

EXTENDED OUTLOOK .
.Tb a ra day 1h r oa g b
Saliirdlly, fair 'l'lianday
andS!IIilnlaylllldacliance
of &amp;bowen Friday. Hlgbs
wm be ID Q1e BOa am1 lows
wiD be ID tile 50s 'l'lulraday
and In the 601 by Saturday.

Oldtime fiddlers
A
26
an::~·copiesof"AGeneral compete ug.
developers and realtors in.
County, according to .,
Richard B. Jones, Chief of
ODNR's Division of Lands
Melg~

Soli Map of 1!feig&amp; CoWitY"

can be obtained . without
charge from the Division of
Lands and Soli, Ohio
Department of Natural
Reaolll'l:ell, Fountain Square,
Columboa 43224.
The publication is also
available from the Meigs
County Cooperative Ex~enalon Service. County
Home Building, Pomeroy
417811 and the Meig.l County
Soil and Water Conservation
Dil&amp;rlcl, Agrleal&amp;ural Service
Ctater, Ul West Second
Street, P. 0. Box 432,
Pomtiroy 457811.

.

Netaonvme, home of the
Parade pf the Hilll, wlll again
host the Oblo Slate CllanlpiOiilhlp Old-Time Fiddlers'
Contest; The competition,
sponsored
by
Ohio's
Lieu~ Governor, will be
Friday, Aug. 26, at 8 p.m. on
the Public Square In
Nelsonville.
In case of
the event
will be beld In Ute NelsonvllleYork Jllnlor High School,
near the Square.
The Flddlr e· Coatest flltracta many flnt Dllllk:laiil
from ohio, West Vlrglnla and

rain

· •

Kentucky. Fiddlers from
each state have In years past
won highest awarda at the
gathering, and a crowd ·of
thoUIBnds from Ute Tri-state
area who are admirers of oldtime Appalachian music,
gather for an evening of
entertainment.
Musicians and other Interested persons may obtain
further information by
writing to The Old-Time
Fiddlers' Contest, 334 W.
Wasbliigton Si., Jtlelsonvil'e,
Ohio 45784.

of a work study coordinator.
The short-handed board
adopted the salary schedule
for non..:ertlfied employes,
renewed a depository contract with Racine Home
Natio nal
Bank
and
authorized the clerk to aak for
bids on tires, gas, fuel oU,
coal and lunch room suppUes,
all bids are to be opened Aug.
5 at noon.
The next regular meeting
will he on Aug. 4 at 7: 30p.m.
Attending were Robert
Sayre, president; Jack
Bost ick and Dallas Hill,
board members; Ord, and
Linda Spencer, clerk.

Exhumation of
body p·o ssihle

'

Eftr7t!dlil went fine fGr the

REG. '9.79 ALlUMS............ SAU '7.M

RACINE - William Jewell, head football coach at
Southern High School and Mrs. Lee Lee, vocal music teacher,
and several other staffers resigned Monday night when the
Souttlem Local Board of Education met in regular session.
Mrs. Evelyn Moore resigned as cook, and Chart.. Cornell,
Jr., resigned as bus driver.
·

Instant registration results mixed

.

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Evidence left for the polke ·

REG. '1.79 AI'VMI••••••••••• SAII'th99

scores for a Middleport school basketball tournament. ~·r~m
there f went on to become a sportswriter at the Miami Herald
in Florida."
Pursuing journalism, Jobb worked after graduation from
the University of Florida for the Gainesville, Fla. Sun and was
a stringer fiX' the St. Petersburg Times in Ute same state. He
also worked for a summer in Aspen, Colorado where he was a
photo news photographer.
·
Though jobb has lived in Virgiuia, Alabama, Florida,
Colorado and California, always in centers much larger than
Middleport, he "still considers Middleport his hometown ."
.Today's generation is loose and flexible in its search for '
opportunity. The power estabtishment toda y lame nts that big
government, big philantropby, big industry, big everything,
has erased opportunity for the young man or woman. Jamie
Jobb surely proves {,pportunity only has to be sought out. Said
Jobb:
"When my wife and I moved to California in 1970, I was
wtable to find newspaper work. So I got a job at a teacher
center in San Francisco, where I edited ~ newsletter and
helped teachers with classroom innovations. From there I
(Continued on l"llle 10)
·

enttne

SEOUL, SOtml KOREA- DEFENSE SECRETARY
Harold Brow•*tlded two days of security Ialka today but failed
to allay Soujh Korean fears that U. S. ground troope will be
withdrawn before militacy aid can be pushed through
~gr- .
Senior U. s. officials ·in Seoul said the South Koreans
"obvioiiBiy" were concerned about the reaction in Congressmany of whose memben are under Investigation for receiving
favors from South Kurean lobbyists :.... to a proposal for $2
billion In miUtary aid and credit.

REG. '5.79 ALBUMS .. ~ .........SALE '3.ft. --

'

•

•"

ANEW NAME
RALEIGH, N,C. (UPI) JoaD little, the black WIDIBD
acquitted two years ago of
ldllllitl hrr wlite jalla' ahr
said tried to rape her, Ia
!£ H . . . to duinge her D81De.
The ~:rear-old - - 8J)'
plied to the clsk ct Wne
&amp;lperlar Court to chance her
name Ill Hadlyah Joan N.ur,
an Arabic IIIJIIe. '
"'lbe naaJ ... Is .thai ahr
pref!!l'l
to Wle a 11111111! that
BACK TO 11fE TRACK ... ·
better
describes · her
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
ancestry,"
says
the
- Country and Western
singer Marty ·Robbin!J, who appDcation llli fOe In the
quit racing cars as a bobby clerk's office.
two years ago after three A NEW DAWN
wrecks, has changed his
COHASSET, Mass. _

said this weekend
that he will enter the Aug 7
•
Tlllladega 500. Ironically, it
Will at Talledep two yean
ago that Robblnuulferedbla
,thlrdand .most-- crelb,
which · prompted
bla
announced
retirement from
rkmg
'~'I PO i!pi!ClallligDifi•
cance to llie factlhat I'll be
ending my racing retirement
~t Talladega," Robbins said.
... The Talledega 000 waa the
next race on the schedule."

About ?Al years ago Jamie Jobb delivered copies of The
Daily Sentinel oo ~t, Second and Third Streets in
Middleport. His route led hlm past Ute Middleport Public
Ubrary.
Thia week Jobb, 31, of San Rafael, Calif., drove past the
Middleport Ubrary. The experience led him to tell us:
"I've been busy, but I'm not flllllOU8. Each year 30,000
books are published in the United Slates. Many of them get
buried before they reach Ute bookstore shelves. I don't know if
any of my books can be fowtd around southeastern Ohio,
although they are all published by big east coasl publishing
houses. All I hope is thaLthe library here in Middleport will get
a copy."
Jamie telephoned Monday to inform that he was In
Middleport visiting two llunts, Mrs. WUDam Morris, South
Second St., and Phyllis Mullen, Front St., and an uncle, Roger
Dillard, Pomeroy.
And he recalled another fact that never will make the
Anlholoi!Y of lmp&lt;rtant Events In Ute History of Sports
Writing, to whit:
..... YOUgave me my first journalism experience calling In

Jewell, Lee
resign jobs

.

.

By Cbet Taa.aehlll

Three brothers survi ve :

Elliott Gould
Diane Keaton
I WILL,
I WILL
FOR NOW

Author Ja1nie· Johb .w ants his
hooks in-Middleport Library

Warehime. It would then he
sent for examination by
forensic experts.
First degree . murder
charges were filed over the
weekend against Clyde
Ramey Ratcliff, 50, R( 3
Athens, and Terry McCune,
28 , Columbus. They are
suspects In the alleged
shooting death. Their arrests
were based upon information
given to Gallia County
sherifrs deputies by a woman
informant. Butb men entered
l!Ot guilty pleas Monday In
Gallipolis · Municlapl Court.
A preliminary hearing was
set at 10 a.m. Wednesday for
Ratcliff.
Acting Judge Thomas
Moulton Monday afternoon
set Aug. 1 at 11 a.m. for the
preliminary bearing of
McCune. Atty. Marshall
Douthett of Jackson was
appointed to represent Me. Cune while Ratcliff will be
represented by c.ourt• appOinted Willlarri COnley.
Bonds were fixed at $250,000
In each case.
·
Due to the complexity of
Ute case, Prosecutors "Cain
and his assistant Richard C:
Roderick, Jr. have declined
to give a complete account.
Robbery was ll possible
motive for murder.

Title 9 jobs

available til
A~t8th
The time has been extended
to August 8 for low-Income
pei'SOns to apply for part-time
employment under Title IX of
the Older Americans Act.
These joba will be assisting
elderly persons in areas such
as chore services, bornehealth aides, out-rl!i'ch, cooks
In nutrition program; escort ·
service, clerical and bonkkeeping work in agency offlees. Persons must be 55
years of age or older and
heve an income of $2,970 or
less per year for a single
person, or $3,930 or less for a
couple. An additional $960 is
allowed for . each dependent
other than a couple. According to federal guidelines
persons over 60 will be given
priority consideration;

JSbemg.plaiilled with the construction but be also wanted
them to be part of that
plaRhodnning. ld th
f
es sa
e peop1e o
the area and federal and state ·
offlcllils had worked together
to get the plant to t.he area
now they must agam work
·together ·to assure orderly
These persons will be
planning.
,
placed with different agenThe group was divided into cies which serve-the elderly
about 1$ different committees such as the· Community
to discuss what has been done · Action Agency, Community
so far and what can be Mental Health Center, Home
expec\ed.
Health Services, Leading
Each
committee
is Creek Conservancy District
composed of a state official, a and the Meigs CoWi!y Council
chalnnan from one of Ute five on Aging. AppUcants muBt be
area counties and ·interested able to ,paas a physical, and
citizens. The committees will be willing to work whatever
cover such topics as equal days or bours are specified by
opportunity employment, , Ute agency to which they are
housing, recreation and assigned.
resources , public
This program is adinformation, education and ministered through the
training and public health. Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Counties represented Valley Regional Developinclude Ross, Scioto, Pike, ment District, the · Area
Brown and Adams.
·
Agency on Aging, and will
Aliother meeting has been begin as aoon aa funds are
scheduled for Aug. 4 to available. Applications are
clscU8II what federal aid will available at the- Senior
be avllllable to the area and Citizens Center, East Main
bOw it may be obtained.
street, Pomeroy.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="792">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11327">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48712">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48711">
              <text>July 25, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5678">
      <name>major</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="35">
      <name>nelson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4265">
      <name>sovel</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1782">
      <name>westfall</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
