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                  <text>32- The Sunday Times. Sentinel. Sunday. June 6, 1976

AUTO SMOKED
GALLIPOLIS
No
damage resulted from a
smoke scare at 12:02 p.m.
Friday in an auto owned by
Be lly aoone, Gallipolis.
Accordi ng to Fire Chief
James A. .Northup,. smoke
was coming from Mrs
Boone's 1975 Ford Thunder:
bird due to oil on the hot
manifold. Seven men
responded to the 98th alarm
of the year.

AFTER more than five months of campaigning by local ,
district and state ROlilicians, round one of the atcentennial
Year elections will be climaxed following Tuesday's prirru~ ry
in the Buckeye State .
·
~ ~

BAD AIR ALERT
CLEVELAND · fUPI I
Clevelanders remained under
an air pollution alert
Saturday because of hi gh
readings for sulfw dioxides
and particulates from power
' plants. The aled was
dechired at noon Fnday by
Gov. James A. Rhodes when
the city 's air pollution index
tose to 213. The index had
dropped only seven poin ts by
4 p.m.

-1

BY early Wednesday (probably around 6 a.m .) individual
party contests and local issues will ha ve been settled.
Republicans, Democrats and Independents will then start the
long grind on round two - the November (presidential)
election.

1'ou r 'Vole and l nflu~ nce Apprerlat ed

Rlehard II!'. 11llloh15

+H

ON U1e surface, it appea rs action in local contests is quiet,
but undernea th It ail, you can bet candidates of both major
political parties have been burning the midnight oil with
various factions in an ali-&lt;Jut effort to earn fail nominations.
+ +~

IT is a policy of both parties not to endorse toea l

ca ndidates befor. a pri1nar)' election. GOP and Democrat
Centra l Committeemen, however, go all out to support
primary nominees in general elections.

++ +

ALTHO UGH incwnbenl officials usually have a n
· advantage in a primary, history has proven that not all
incumbents are renominated by GalJia voters. With such a
large number of sheriff 112) and county commission 111 )
candidates seekin g nomination in both parties, you can expect
some surprises Tuesday. Upsets, if you may, beca use it
appea rs neit her party has no clear cul favorites in those
contests.

COMMANDER RAY ROBEH'l'S demonstrates proper

JOIIIS

use of the handgun to Leon Stollings, Ernest Thompson,
Gil Plants, Tom Werry and Larry Hudson,
-

Law enforcement class finishing training on firiitg range ·

Republican candidate F or -

student will receive a cer- Education and will be certificate from the State of tified by the Slate of Ohio,
Ohio, Trade and Industrial Peace Office r Trai ning
Division of Voca tional Council.

Full Term

B ~gtnnl ng

January a,

Primary Election - June I, 1178
Pd . Po l. Ad v , b y th e Candid at e

custom
draperies

BESIDES local contests and issues, Gallia Countians will
also be called upon to select presidential delegates and
alternates for both parties. Democrats will have a contested U.
S. Senate primary and both parties will have contests for each
of the Ohio Supreme Court seats that will be up for election In
November.

+++
GAI.LI A vote rs will be fa ced with eight constitutional
amendment questions. Too, voters will nominate senate,
congressional, representative, supreme court and court of
appeals candidates.

Save 30%
On ·Custom Draperies
For Your Home or
Office.

+~-+

SE:CRETARY of State Ted W. Brown said earlier this
year, " If Ohio's eligible voters do not vote in the primary, and
unfortunate ly man y will not, they have no right to complain
because they do not like the selection of candidates at general
election time."

+++

CLEVELAND (UP! ) High · level Ohio Belle
Telephone Co. offi cials met
Friday with striking Com. muni ca ti ons Workers of
America, but the meeting
wa s recesse d without
resolution of their conflict
star ling in Cleveland last
Friday when members of
CWA Local 4309 protested a
.decision by the company to
allow service representatives
to assemble and se ll

telephones in new Ohiu Bell
retail stores.
A Local 4309 spokesman
said telephone assembly "is a
primary job responsibility of
a telephone installer or
repairman." There are 7,000
CWAmembers on strike. The
company maintained that the
issue was not covered by Ohio
Bell's contract with the CWA
because the retail stores are
a new venture.

Choose From Over 700 Fabrics
and Cokrs in Our Collection.

PAUL KIESLING

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Kiesling will
enter college

On Matching Custom
Bedspreads During
This Sale.

of Optometry
GA LLIPOLIS · Paul
Daniel t Dan 1 Kiesling, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kiesling,
1066 First Ave ., Gallipolis,
has been accepted to the 197677 class of the Ohio State
University College of Optometry . A 1973 graduate of
Gallia Academy high school,
he attended Ri o Grande
College for two years, where
he was a member of Chi Beta
Phi Science fraternity . He
transferred to Ohio State
University last fall .
Recently , he was amnng a
~ roup
of s tu~ent s receiving
the
Summa
Award Cer tifi cate for
high academic scholarship
while in University College at
Ohio State.
He will complete his junior
year in Art.; and Sciences in
June and begin claS!oes in the
College of Optometry in
September .

Please bring window sizes with ,ou.

MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND
WAREHOUSE OPEN
FRIDAY, 9:30 to 8, and
SATURDAY 9:30 to 5 PM.

••
~

Canol K. Snowden
24 Slate St., Gallipolis
Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518

"See me for Homeowners Insurance
from State FarnHhe.world's largest~'
Uke agood neighbor,
Slate Farm is there.
P7172

tlATI 'AIM

A

Slttt Ftrm ' ~•
llldC....Itr ~

Mom.~

II'UUIAHCI

omc.: ~- llinoll

OVRDC TO MEET
PORTSMOUTH - Th e
quar terly meelin_g of the full
co mmiss ion of the Ohi o
Valley Reg ional Development Commission will be
held Tuesday, June 15 at the
Elks Country Club, Portsmouth, beginning at 7 p.m.
The dinner meeting will be
preceded by a social hour ,
with a business meeting to
folluw lhe dinner.

MANAGEMENT
t would like to lake this opportunily lo
ask you for
your support .
I feel my candidacy is worth your sincere
consideration as I have no axes to grind, owe no
favors to anyone or any special interest group. It
was I alone, who made the decision to enter -into
politics; now t find I must obtain your support.
My candidacy rests in the beha If of these issues
- Drug Traffic and Drug Abuse, Rural
Protection , Upgrading th• Sh"iff's Department,
~ Kpose you to some of my view.s and

Community Co~peration , as elaborated in my

PAUL PLYMALE
t

platform ; THE FIRST CANDIDATE FOR
SHERIFF TO PLATFORM HIS CANDIDACY.

·(

"

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

"THE PERFECT MATCH"

l.

LAW ENFORCEMENT

On e candidate would ha\le yolJ and I beli eve

hi s term of office was without fault. You be th e
jud,, ,~ ! Some c~ndidates boa st their many years

of law enforcement background, but fail to state
their opinion of the proble ms or intended
programs. I remind vou, this ele ttion is not a
quiz on hi story but a test for the future of Gallia
County .
We need not expound on problems and
po ssibl.e cures but tO unite tl'le people, organize
the Sher iff' s office in such a manner as to have
unit y and co .operation between the
Commi ssioners, the judicial oHices and other
law enforc ement agencies . I fe el my past

e

tm

ELBERFELD;$ IN POMEROY

.

No progress in strike talks

2,550,000 voters will visit the
state's 13,000 polling places,
compared will! 2,228,555 in
1972.
One reason may be the
intense interest in the Ohio
presidential balloting where .
each party has a "pure"
primary contest for the first
time his history.
Prior to 1972, Ohio usually.
went the ~~ favorite " son
ro~te .
Voting was for
delegates
instead
of
presidential candidates.
This time, however, there
will be a six-way statewide
contest for Democratic
presidential popularity and a

two-way Republican race.
President Ford will be
tryifl! to ice his nomination at
the Republican National
Convention by soundly
defeating former California
Gov . Ronald Reagan In the
Republican primary, which
will produce 28 at-large
delegates and another 69
congre.ssional
district
delegates .
Former Gov . Jimmy
Carter of Georgia is hopilig
Ohio, joining .California and
New Jersey · as the final
primary states of 1976, will
put a cap on his marathon
campaign for the Democratic

ba ckground , best qualifies me for this difficult
ta sk. It government is to operate in a business
fa shion , then busines smen and business
t echnique s must be employed . Management and
CJdmlnistration is the key to any succ~ssful
business . I not only have youth nd management
qualiti es to be a fu II time Sheriff - but I will be a
full term Sheriff.
.
My sincere thanks for allowing me to give
vvu my support if elected to the office SHERIFF OF GALLI A COUNTY .

PAUL ·J.
PLYMALE
REPUBLICAN ~OR SHERIFF
Pd . Pol. Ad v.

VOL XXVIII

NO. 35

presidential nomination by Tall Jr .. . HUhiu. Taft Is
awarding him a major share unopposed for the ltcpublican
of the 152 delegates at stake. nomination.
His major challengers in
- Nine cootesb in volving
Ohio are Rep . Morris K. incumbent L'O ngrcssmen,
UdaU of Arizona and Sen. including Wayne 1.. Hays , ().
Frank Church of Idaho .
Flushing, who is e•pecteu to
" As Ohio goes, so probably win renomination despite a
goes the convention," said scandal which already has
Church in underscoring the cost him a commi ttee
importance placed on the chairmanship.
state's primary .
- Contests for nomination
: The primary ballot will also in all 99 Ohio House districts
include :.
and 16 state Senate districts.
- A contest between four
- Races !Or pllrty norrilnaCleve landers
for
the tions for two Ohio Supreme
Democratic nomina lion to Court seats being vacated by
run for the U.S. Senate seat the retiring Justices J.J.P.
now occupied by Sen. Robert Corrigan and Leonard J .

•

"EIGB COUNTY

RIO GRAN DE - Students exam will be given on J une
of the Adult Education Basic 14.
Law Enforcement class at
Upon sa tisfac torily com Buckeye Hllls Career Center ple tin g the c o urs~ each
tell the classroom last week

SALE I

PRE-ELECI'ION BRIEFS - More than 2,500,000 Ohioans,
an all4ime primary turnout, are expected to go to the polls
Tuesday ... Galila County now ha s 11,887 registered voters. If
more than.8,000 Gallians cast ballots Tuesday, it will be a new
primary turnout for this county . Gallia's record primary ·vote
was establish ed in 1972 when 7,920 persons went to the polls ...
Gallia has 36 of Ohio's 13,000 polling places, thus it's going to be
another lorig hard day and night for local precinct workers and
election board officials. In 1972, the first precinct to report in
during that record primary turnout four years ago was 2-A, at
10:20 p.m. Final results trickled 'in from Addison Pet. at 5:10
a.m. the next da y .. . Polls will be open from 6:30a .m. until 7:30
p.m. Tuesday, giving everybody enough time to go to the polls
... Both GOP and Democrat leaders encourage all registered
voters to cast ballots Tuesday. It 's a simple acl which requires
little time. Your vole, however, is very important for the
future of Ga llia County. See you at the polls Tuesday '

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Staltltouae Repurler
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Ohio
voters will cast their ballots
Tuesday for ooe of the most
Impressive
lists
of
presidential candidates ever
to appear on a Buckeye St;l te
primary election ballot.
Voters will also be able to
cast ballots on a variety of
issues and one of the most
heated
U.S.
Senate
campaigns in recent years in
the race between James
Stanton
and
Howard
Metzenbawn.
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown has foreca st that

COMMI$$/fJNEI

for firearms
class,
consistingtraining.
of loca l The
law , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . ,
en force ment offi cers will
complete 24 hours of handgun
and riotgun training at the
local firing range.
The course sl&lt;lrted last
+++
5 and will be comJanuary
MOST candida!es have slated their position on various
pleted
June
14 . Classes are
issues. B ac k~ round information of each candidate appeared in
being
held
each Monday,
the Tribune and Sunday Times.Sentinel during the filing
Tuesday,
and
Thursday
period earlier this year . Now, it's up to Gallia 's 11,887
evenings
from
6
p.m.
lo 10
registered voters to decide who will advance to the ~ ene ral
subjects
being
p.m.
Basic
election this all. 1See general wrapup of Tuesday's election
taught in the class include
elsewhere in today's paper. )
law and procedures,
criminal
H~
rules
of
evidence,
search and
TWENTY -TWO Republicans are seeking Gallia positions.
se
izure,
cour
t
structures
in
There are 10 Democrats and two Independents for a total of 34
Ohio, federal civil · rights,
hopefu ls.
prowler calls, mob and riot
++ ~
THERE are three contests for GOP Central control, and traffic accident
Committeemen seats and one contest on the Democrat ticket. investigation .
Commander of Basic La w
Residents in the city school district will vote on a 4 mill
Ray Robert•
Enforcement
operating levy. We support the city school levy wholean
nounced
that
th e fi nal
heartedly.
H -J

Over 2¥2 million Ohio votes expected Tuesday

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Stern , a pair of Republicans
originally appointed by G&lt;&gt;v .
James A. Rhodes.
- Eight statewide issues Incl uding a controversial
proposa l to require the
governor and lleuten11nt
Kovernor candidates to run
for election in teams starting_
in 1978.
- A variety of local
con tests, bond issues and
operating levies.
Many of the presidential
candidates with a chance at
winning were expected to
saturate the state with radio
and television adverli!ing ap-

proaching $1 million.
Reagan, Carter and Udall
were etpected to use.particularl y
heavy
media
coverage.
Reagan fielded a full slate
of at-la rge delegates but
conceded Ford 24 districts
delegates by competing for
only ~ In 15 congressional
districts.
Carter, Udall and Church
will be joined on the
statewide Democratic ballot
by Sen. Henry M·. Jackson of
Washington and Alabama
Gov. George Wallace, neither
of wh001 has campaigned

acUvely for a month.
Also competing for the 38
allarge De moc rati c
de legates is state Treasurer
Gertrude W. Donahey, who
heads_an uncommitted slate.
Any candida te fa ili ng to
achieve IG per cent of the
statewide vote wiU be shut
out of at-large delegates.
Mrs. Donahey has no delegates II] any of the 2.1 the
co ngress ional dis tric t s.
Carter has a full complement
of IH In all the dlsirlcts,
Udall has filed In 22 and
Wallace a nd J ackson are on
the ballot In 21.

en tine
PRICE FifTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JUNE 7, 1976
::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;::

Extended service
ordered July 16
Extended ·area service be·
tween the General Telephone
Co. customers of Pomeroy,
. Middleport, ·Racine and
Rutland and the 965 nwnbers
of the Chester exchange of
the
Western
Reserve
Telephone Co., headquartered at Quaker City, Ohio,
will go into effect on July 1$.
Learning of the extended
service from the Western
ll.eserve Co. was Mrs. Sandra
Sheets Griffith who headed
the, move three years ago to
receive extended service be·
tween the eastern part and
the balance of Meigs County.
The service will involve .
for
additional
costs
customers of the Western
Reserve Co. including :
Business, one party, $1.60

increase
per
month;
business, two party, $1.35;
pay station , $2';" private
residential phone, 8ti cents;
two party line, 65 cents a
month and four party
residential, 60 cents.
·
The new directory to be
issued on July 26 wiD include ·
the new .nwnbers which 9115
customers can call without
paying toll into the General
Telephone Co. area . Kenneth
Krinn of the Athens office of
The General Telephone Co.
said this morning there apparently will be no additional
costs for subscribers of the
company in Pomeroy,
Middleport, !lacine and
Rutland- 992, 949 and 742
nwnbers - who will now be
able to phone 985 numbers of

the .Western Reserve Co. In
the Chester area without a
.toll.
Mrs, Griffith instigated the
extended area service three
years ago and filed a nwnber
of petitions from residents
asking for the service. A
public hearing resulted at the
coUrthouse in Pomeroy and it
was ruled that the extended
area service would be Instigated.
Mrs. Griffith said this
morning she is "delighted"
with the word that the extended area serVice wlll be
effective on July 16. She
extended thanks to her
committee and to all
residents who ·helped on the
project.

p 0lice
ffNews • • •zn Brzef~
.

w~*w,:~,~~~:::::m~:::~:$;::::::~::::~~:::::::~:::::::::~~~:::::::~~:,~:~~·:::::::&gt;.&gt;.&lt;

·

ByunltedPresslnterilatlonat
BEIRUT, LEBANON - TWO COLUMNS OF Syrian army
tanks and troops advanced Into Lebanon's central mountains
todaY, clash!Jig for the first time with Moslem militiamen and
threatening a major confrontation with leftist and Palestinian
forces .
Moslem gunmen fought Syrian-backed Saiqa guerrillas in
the streets of Beirut, prompting authrrities to close Beirut
International airport "until further notice." It was one of the
bloodiest battles of the 14-month-&lt;Jid civil war. A Syrian strike
force ol several hundred troops moved west from positions
near Dahr .el Baider, on the Beirut-Damascus highway 30
miles east of the capital toward leftist strongholds in the
mountains.

WASHINGTON
CITING " INEFFECTIVE"
management, Air Force auditors say officials who are
responsible for financing varsity sports at the Air Force
Academy lost '$549,803 in the stock market over a four ·year
period. "The securities speculation was a terrible disservice to
cadets who pay fees and servicemen wbo pay dues into the
athletic asaociation," said Rep. Les Aspin, 0-Wis., wbo
released the audit Sunday.
Aspln also said tile Air Force Academy Athletic
Association might have lost. an additional ~.000 on its
purchase of speculative seciD'itles of the Government National
Mortgage Association. That transaction, according to the
audit, resulted In a "bilge dispute" with Merrill Lynch, Pierce,
Fenner &amp; Srrilth, Inc., the nation's largest stock brokerage
firm . In a settlement with Merrill Lynch, the association ended
up losing $113,000 rather than $463,000.
LONDON - BILUONAIRE J. PAUL GETI'Y, who died
Sunday at &amp;'1, always disliked being called one of the world's
richest men -: not out of sensitivity, but because he felt it
classified him as "some sort of freak."
The Minnesapolls-born attorney's son, who made his flrt
mililon by the age of 24, died one minute after midnight,
succumbing to a heart attack a this !J!Bnsion, Sutton Place. He
had been in falling health for some time.
Trans World Airlines was flying today as negotiators
discussed details of an unsigned tentative contract averting a
strike by 5,500fllghtattendants. But a bevy of disputes plagued
other American industries. A strike was planned against a
railroad and contract disputes tied up shipping in northern
California and the San Francisco Bay area, and threatened
medical services in New York and Connecticut.
A tentative agreement was reached Saturday between
TWA and Local 551 of the Air Transport Division-Transport
Workers Union. Althou~h the agreement was not sil!ned and
negotiators were still going over the language, a union
spokesman said the chances of a strike appeared "very slim."
Union secretary · treasurer Jim Tuller said picketers were
sent home late Saturday. TWA carries SOI)Ie 43,000passengers
a day.

log .tour
ll
.

mishaps
Four auto accidents were
investigated by Pomeroy
Police over the weekend.
At 4:13 p.m. Sunday on
Route 7 near the Beacon
Service Station, a car driven
by Paul Clark, 47, Middleport, struck and broke up
a utility pole. Damages to the
vehicle were medium; Clark
was cl ted for leaving the
scene of an accident.
At 6:28p.m. Saturday, cars
driven by Mildred Riley,
Mason, and Kenneth Klein ,
Pomeroy, collided on West
Main St. near the parking lot.
Damages were minor. There
were no arrests and no injuries.
There were only minor
damages to two vehicles
SatiD'day on CoUrt St., when a
car driven by Arnold
Snowden, Pomeroy, backed ·
from a parking space into a
car driven by George Korn,
Jr . There were no arrests and
no injuries.
At 5:17 a.m. Sunday on
Union Ave., a car driven by
Robert L. Dugan, Rutland,
traveling west, went out of
control and struck a steel
guard
railing
fence,
sideswiped a tree, and then
struck the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Phil Globokar , incurring damages to its porch
and basement.
Dugan is charged with
driving while intoxicated and
driving · while
under
suspension. There were no
. injuries. Damages were
heavy to the car.

This baby wouldn't wait
;;Heave"n Can Walt" as the saying gqes,
However, new bablea can't, and don't, memben of the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad _foqod out early one morning
last week.
Enroute to Pleasant VaHey H111pltal witb Mrs. Monad
(Jean) Goode, a matemlty patient, aquadmen Cbarlea
Bartels, Howard Mullen and George Kom, Jr., found ·
themaelves with a baby who wouldn't walt and so
deUvered the child In front of the Captain's Louage In
Gallfa County. Mra.Goode and her baby were taken on to
Pleasant Valley and both ~ doing fine, squadmen
repurt.
'

B&amp;E PROBED
Pomeroy police are In·
vesligatlng a breaking and
entering at the offices of
Midwest Steel Co., E. Main
St., Pomeroy, Police said the
offices were ransacked and
between $300 and $400 stolen.
li was believed that entrance
was gained through a rear
window. The incident was
discovered at 6:58 a.m.
Monday morning.-

Dateline 1776
PHILADELPIJIA, June 7
- Rlchard Henry Lee of
Virginia lutroduced In
Congress three resolulloos.
One called for total Independence· from Britain;
the others for preparations
for a plan of colonial
confederation and the
entering Into · of foreign
alliances. Delegates were
"enjoined to attend punetually at 10 o'clock" the
next day to begin debate on
them.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Property
APRIL AND AU.EN KING DEMONSTRATE judo
technique .

damages
heavy
Three accidents were investigated by- the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
over lh~ weekend ,. none
causing personal Injuries.
Saturday at 6: IS p.m. in
Sutton Township on Snowball
Hill-, Lorraine Patro Aeiker,
26, Pomeroy, was traveling
east when her car's right
front lire blew out, causing
her to lose control in loose
gravel, go off the road to the
right, and hit a parked car
owned by Ronnie Hubbard.
There was severe damage
to the Aeiker car. Hubbard's
vehicle was demolished. No
citation was iSsued.
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. In
Lebanon Twp . on CR 31
Gregory K. Circle, 17, Rt. I,
Racine, traveling east
collided with li car backed
Into his path by Michael A.
Fleming, 19, Rt. I, Portland.
There was slight to moderate
damage.
Sunday at 5 p.m. In Rutland
Twp., Pansy G. Ohlinger, 17,
Middleport, traveling west
and Donald L. Hysell, 24,
Rutland, _ traveling east,
collided. Ohlinger was cited
to court for left of center.
There
was
moderate
property damage.

APRIL AND AlLEN KING •re junior Judo
champions of West Virginia having won gold medals in a
tournament at Charleaton this sp,rlng. The two .won
trophies at .earlier meets held at Parkersburg, a.~W MrU..
age 12, went on to win the regional gold medal at
Rochester, Mich. Her age prohibits her from entering the
national competition.

April King is
gold winner
Middleport's April King was a gold medal winner in the
Junior Olympics regional competition of the United States
Judo Assn. held recently at Oakland University In Rochester,
.

M~ .

Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Lee King, April qualified
to compete by taking the gold medal first place award for the

Weather
Clear and mild tonight.
Lows around 60. Sunny and
hot Tuesday. Highs in mid
and upper 80s. Chance of rain
near zero through Tuesday.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday through
Friday, fair and warm
through period. Highs In
80s and lows In tiOs.

Entries invited for
battle of hands
RUTLAND
Registrations are being
accepted for the " Battle of
the Bands" to be staged at
6:30p.m. on Monday, July 5,
at the Rutland Community
Park in conjunction with the
expanded July 4th weekend
activities planned for the
holiday in Rutland .
· The Rutland Fire Department and the Rutland
Bicentennial Committee are
working together on the
several day celebration of
which the "Battle of the
Bands" is a part.
Each band taking part will
make · a 15 minute presen-

tation and the band selected
as first place winner will
receive $100. Second place Is
$5() and third place $25.
Registration is $10 and must
be sent In with the
registration form . The fee
will be forfeited if the band
does not compete. Deadline
for registering is July I.
Registration forms are to
be sent at once to Mrs. Joan
Stewart, Bicentennial
Chairman, P. 0 . Box ltl,
Rutland, Ohio 45775. Bands
are to send their fee along
with the completed form
below .

NAME OF BAND
PERSON IN CHARGE
·ADDRESS OF, PERSON IN CHARGE
PHONE OF PERSON IN CHARGE
TYP~:

.

OF MUSIC BY BAND
.~

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state of West Virginia In a conies! staged In Charleston.
At the regional competition, April competed agalnat
contestants from Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Illinois,
. Indiana and Michigan, a total of 186, all first , second and third
place state winners In the several age, weight, and sex
categories.
Although she Is the regional judo champion In her
category, she canitot compete in the national contest due to her
.age, .Ryles specify that she.must be 13 to enter. In addition to
her gold medals, April has al8i&gt; won two trophies, both last fall
in Parkersbur~. W. Va. meets.
Her 10-yearo(l]d brother, Allen, also won three trophies, both
at the Parkersburg tournaments, and also received a medal at
the Charleston, W. Va , state competition.
April and Allen, who belong to the Tan! Judo Club at Point
Pleasant, for the past 2 years have been takh1g Instruction
there. Their practice sessions are on each Wednesday from
September to April.
While they are both currently "white belt," this fall April
will try for lhe blue bell which Is the eighth degree In junior
judo, and Allen wjll try for the "orange ~ell, " or the sixth
degree. These are the maxlmwn degrees they can lake at their
ages. The promollona In junior ranka L'Ome on the basis of judo
ability, contest wins and close attendance. The highest belt
. which can be achieved In junior judo Is the purple belt.
Emphasis of .the program on the junior level Is physical
conditioning, recreation, fellowship and enjoyment. April and
Allen belong to the United States Judo Assn. and the Amateur
Athletic Union of the West Virginia Assn .

.::·.

Upper Snake Valley
made disaster.area
iDAHO FALLS, Idaho
About 7,000 homes were exact death count may never
(UPI) - No one paid much ruined in the rush of water, be known . "We're not going
attention when water began mud and debris, some 30,000 to get all the bodies," he said
seeping through the 3lt)..foot persons were evacuated, ·and In Rexburg, the town hardest
Teton Dam. [!ut then a thousands of head of cattle hlfby the flood.
whirlpool appeared were drowned .
''They're gone. They are
. ominously near one corner '!'hose who could returned burled under the mud."
. and the earth-fill dam burst, to mud-filled homes and
Officials said most of the
sending millions of gallons of farms today to find other missing probably had taken
water racing through the danges awaiting them - refugee at other homes and
Uwer Snake River Valley. pes tlcldepoisoned water, locationa.
Daryl Grleg was fishing rattlesnakes and diseases
Two federal officials said
Saturday wben he looked up caused by the decaying Sunday night a preliminary
to see a "giant wave that cattle.
Investigation disclosed a
looked like It was 30 feet
President Ford declared · corner of the dam began
high" rushing at him. Grieg, the valley a disaster area, crumbling because water
22, rode a logjam In the making federal recovery seeped through three grout
flooded Teton· River until he funds available.
curtains between the fill and
climbed to !;Bfety in a tree.
Officials said two of the the rock bottom of the Teton
By the time the water level dead were fishermen who had River, bot that Initially the
over 300 flooded square miles been below the dam when It seepage had attracted little
dropped Sunday, at least six ruptured Saturday. Another attention.
persons were reported dead was a 62-year~ld woman wbo
Then a whldpooi appeared
because of the disaster and suffered a fatal heart attack. near the corner just before
.numerous others were listed
Civil Defense operations the break, Commissioner
as missing.
officer Kent Marlor said the Gilbert Stamm of the Bureau
'1.1.!~~~.
. .. ····· .,. . . -~:::::::::::·:::::~·::::::::~:::::.:-:.~:-:::~~~~::::·:;::::::::~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:· of Reclamation and assistant
...........::!··~·-0:·.·······
. . •.0:•:0'~·:·.···········».•.•.•.•.•
·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: Interior Secretary Jack
•••••. •~-•• • ... '· .. .:!... .•.i!. •...........
.•. ·······················0:
0:•,•,•,•,•...•.•,•,•,•,•,·,•.0:•.•.•.•.•.•.•.•.
Horton told an Idaho Falls
Airport news conference.
But, they said, valley residents had been given a
Middleport Village oHlclala urge all resldenll to vote warning In ample time .
Tuesday for the 3-a!IU levy for current e~pe~~ses.
Stamin and Horton denied
This levy will provide $h,DOO per year over a 5-yetr a report a "ground shift "
period for contlltned use of village street Ughta and for street caused the break.
malnteaance and lmprovemellls. They said this levy Is
The dam had been built for
dellpfrately needed by the village.
the Bureau of Reci81118tlon as .
Resldenll are reminded that Middleport has no an Irrigation and flood
operatlooallevy of any kind and has one of ·the lowest tax control project: Ecology
. rates Ia tile coWJty,
groups fought unsuccessfully
"Y011r vote and aupport wUI be greatly appreciated by in the couris to ,block Its
your village uHiclala," the mayor (Fred HoHman) and
construction on grourds it
council said.
was ecooomically pnfeasible
and ·, dangerous . to the ·
~l~~~;~l~l~lli;~~~~~~ml;~lll~l~llil~l~l~l~l~l;l:~:~@~t~~~~~~l~ll;l~~l;m~~~l~!~i~i~l~~~l~l~lf:~~l;l~~~~~~~~l~l;~~§t: environment .

Vote for

,1 ,

levy urged

~

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,,i

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, .June 7. 1976

2-Tl Daily Sentinel, MJddleport-Porneroy, 0_, Monday, June 7, 197!

Scott sparks Celts to sixth game win and title

Western Ohio toured by Ford
CINCINNATI (UP!) President Ford, searching for
a decisive, much-needed win
over Ronald Reagan, spends
12 hOUrs touring western Ohio
by motorcade today .
Amid speculation over a
poll which Indicates Reagan
may do better in Ohio than
anticipated - perhaps even
win it - the Pl'estdent flew to
Cleveland Sunday mght, hot
on the heels of Reagan's twoday blitz of the state.
For Ford, expected to lose
to Reagan in the former Californla governor's home state
but win tn New Jersey, Ohio's
97 delegates were considered
pivotal in his struggle to win
the nomination In Kansas
City In August.
In sharp contrast to the

tense, at times bttter GOP
battle, state Democratic
leaders in Ohio - including
the state chalnnan - viewed
Jimmy Carter as the clear
favorite to pick up the biggest
share of Ohio's 152 delegate
votes, perhaps as many as 100
or more.
Carter's chief rivals in ihe
Democratic contest, Morris
Udall and Frank Church,
conceded that if the former
Georgia governor wins in the
Buckeye State, he Will be the
party's nominee. ·
"U Jimmy Carter wins big
here in Ohto, it's all over,"
Udall told a crowd in
Parma.
Church left the state to
VIew flood damage in Idaho
but returned Sunday night, as

did Carter, for a final round
of campaigning.
Ford addressed the
National Conference of
Christians and Jews in
Cleveland Sunday night, then
flew to Cinicnnatl where his
250-mlle barnstorming
motorcade through territory
co nsidered
'' Reagan
country" was lo begin
Ford's election eve trip to
Ohio followed a poll published
&amp;lnday by the Columbus
Dispatch in which 35li GOP
voters split 55 per eent to 45
per cent in support of Reagan
for
their
party 's
nomination.
The survey was taken in six
Ohio counties, with the paper
conceding a 5 per cent error
margin either way .
In the Democratic contest,
the poll gave Carter 55 per
cent, Udall 13 Pl'r cent,
Church and George Wallace
10 per eent each, Henry
Jackson 8 per cent and an
uncomnutted delegate slate 4
per cent.
However accurate the poll,
its findings were partially
reflected by some GOP party
profesionals who held
privately Reagan could wm
between 20 to 40 P!'r cent of
the delegates in Ohio.
Ford
suggested
in
Cleveland Sunday night
Reagan's election might be a
threat to world peace and
that
his
Republican
presidential opponent IS "poisoning the political debate."
Ford said he approved the
concept of
campaign
advertlsmg depictmg Reagan
as a threat to peace "to set
the record straight." Reagan
called that advertisin~

---------------------------1
J.etters of opinion are welcomed. They sboald be 1
less tbaD 300 words loog (or be subjeet lo reduetlcll b1
the editor) aDd must be signed wltl die slpee'l .tdreas. Names may be witllheld apoa publle~tloa.
However, oo reque~l, uamea will be dlaelosed. Letten
sbould be lu good taste, addresslnjj Issues, aot
119nalltles.

PI'•·

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1
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Credit given for improvements
Dear Sir
There has been completed at the Southern Local Htgh
School a new baseball field and the old baseba ll held at the
Jumor High School has been unproved by the additiOn of two
concret• block dugouts, replacement of the wire on the
blackstop, and ti1e addition of a restroom . A third baseball
diamond ts expected to be completed within the next few
weeks.
Cooperation of many institutions in the county and citizens of
U1e commumty is directly responsible for this accomplishment.

A spectal note of thanks should be given to Tom Wolfe and
The Racine Home National Bank, Rich Jones of The Athens
County Savmgs &amp; Loan Company ; Ted Reed of The Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Company; the Dale C. Warner Agency, Eber
Pickens, and Eber's Gulf Station ; Babe Htll , and others who
financtally contrtbuted to the project.
Too much cannot be said for Don Beegle who worked for
many hours and suffered more than one brutsed thumb. A
spet1al note of thanks should be gtven to the Southern Athletic
Boo;1ers, parttcularly Danny Brown and Ronnte Salser.
Milford Fredertck, Jim Rees, Tootle Htll, Roger Adams, and
many others donated llietr labor, and Red Glasgow survey
work
Fo~t Run Cement Block Company, La ndmark, TriState
Matertals, and others donated matenal.
The Su tton Townshtp Trustees, the County Htghway
Department, and the Village of Racme deserve a special note
of gratttude for llie asststance which they rendered.
On behalf of the children of the Southern Local School
District area, mterested parents and friends, this letter
expresses our gratitude to aU who made thts project
successful. - BILJ, PORTER, R. D 3, Racme.

"totally dishonest" and said
"it has no place in
llj!publican politics."
Reagan, accompanied by
actor Jimmy Stewart, was
enthusiastically received at
rallies in five ctties Saturday
and Sunday in which he
condemned
the
administration's deficit
spending polictes and
promised " to make the
United States No. I militarily
again."
Reagan criticized Ford for
being "for 25 years a part of
lhe
Wa s hin gto n
establishment'' which be said
be would seek as president
"to reduce in size and in

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPJ S[IOI'II Edllor

THE SOUTHERN IDGH SCHOOL Band was the only

band to take part In Saturday's wagon train parade from
MJcldlCJ!lOI'l and was a fine addition to the parade nnet"P.

power.''

He also told his audiences
his ability to win Democratic
voles showed he could
"broaden the base of the
party" and win the general
election
"I want to go to Washington ," he said. "And I believe
wtth all my heart that I am
the best chance of vtctory m
November."
Udall continued to hanuner
away
at Carter
in
appearances around the
state.
Calling TUesday 's primary
a "judgment day," Udall
said, "This is not some kind
of athletic event It is not a
personality contest.
"You can dectde for the
country, for the Democratic
party, whether we're going to
have an open convention,
whether we're going to move
this country the way it ought
to move, or whether 1t is
going to be all over and the
Democratic convention is
going to be a kind of social
event," be said.

More wagon train parade scenes from
Middleport to Pomer(Jy
during Saturday's Meigs visit

·t
,•• &amp;."' 1

-~

~

-~rt"'l

k -

ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE took part in ihe National Bicentennial Wagon Train
Saturday morning.

.,/'

/......-)

(

'

Bad attitUlle explained
, Dear Mr. (Fted) Crow·
I would like to explain the negative altitude you may have
received when you spoke to our group at Racme
Your promotion for the preservation of bull frogs is
outstandin g and promotmg the frog jump at the Big Bend
Regatta has always brought great interest.
Howeve1, I wtsh to e&lt;plain llie negative aU Itude Firemen
are always close regardless of the department they come from
and after you had left the meetmg it was discussed why the
resporse was so negattve
Some of the members felt that tf each department entered
a frog in the jump 11 would be unfair to our fellow firemen in
West Virgima who belong to the association.
One Pomeroy fir eman, who IS a known frog JOCkey ,
clauned tile West Vtrgmta frogs wc~e for eatmg. Now who ever
heard of eatmg a frog He further stated that all the JUmping
frogs come from Ohio and that our fellow firemen in West
Virginia would be working at a disadvantage.
I assured lliem that arrangements could be made to allow
the West Virginia ftrem en to obtain jumpmg frogs and all
seemed to be m agreement and enter the frog jumps.
However, most departments present clammed up as to
any plans they had smce they felt 11 would be doing themselves
an injustice as to thetr chances of winning.
I have contacted Prof Charles Wayland to assist the
association in the training of the frogs for the various
departments and arrangements are bemg made now to handle
the needed detatls
Yours truly, AREA VOL FIRE &amp; EMERG ASSN., Bob E.
Byer, prestdent

DR. LAMB

FIVE POINT Star Stitchers also took part in the National Bicentennial Wagon Train
Saturday morning.
AFTERWARDS - Following the parade the white mules were unhitched from the Ohio
wagon . Restdents took advantage of the wagons to snap pictures oltheir families in front of
them .

Up~et

is possible in Ohio

CINCINNATI (UP!) Former California Gov.
Ronald Reagan, pubhcly
conceding the majority of
Ohio's Republican delegates
to President Ford, but armed
wtth a newspaper poll that
says there could be an upset,
ended a weekend bhtz of the
Buckeye State Sunday.
Reagan, accompanied by
actor Jtrnmy Stewart, drew
enthusiastic audiences at
rallies in five citl)!s during the
weekend.
Reagan is expected to capture California's mother lode
of 167 delegates m the
wtnner-take-all
ra ce
Tuesday. But a poll published
Sunday in the Columbus

Dispatch may have given htrn
addiltonal hopes for Ohto as
well.
The poll checked the
opinions of 355 GOP voters in
si&lt; Ohio counties, and split 55
per cent to 45 per cent in
support of Reagan for their
party's nomination. The
paper said there was a aper
cent error margm etther way .
The C alifornia
conservative condemned the
Ford administration's deficit
spending polictes at his Ohio
stops and promised "to make
the Umted States No. I
militarily again."
He also sharply attacked a
Ford campaign advertising
campaign m Califorma which

Specific goals in weight loss
By J.awrence E. J.amb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - Thts
letter IS from someone who
needs help. I have a couple of
problems that you can help
, me solve. To start with, about
two years ago I started
weight training and jogging
But now my legs are smaller
than they should be and my
chest IS bigger. It just seems
like whatever I do my watst
on down does not grow.
On the other hand my chest
and stomach have gotten fat.
My stomach has a lot of fat
hangmg around the stde.
' What can I do to get my legs
bigger and my stomach and
chest smaller?
DEAR READER - While
you deserve an E for effort
the problem is that you also
need some knowledge about
how to shape your body. The
type of exerctses a person
does should be destgned lo
help meet spectflc goals. You
are a good case m pomt.
J ogg ins is wonderfu l
exercise,
when
done
#

~

properly It helps develop the
capactty of the heart and
lungs It also helps you burn
off calories to preven t
obestty . It does not help you
develop large leg muscles. It
is an endurance exercise. The
muscles will develop to a stze
needed to support your body
wetght while joggmg and no
more.
Weight hfting or any
strength exercises, mcluding
calisthenics load the muscles
and the muscles will enlarge
enough to be strong enough to
lift your body, or physical
wetght. These are strength
exercises used to increase the
size of the muscles.
There is a right and wrong
way to do strength exercises
to help your muscles grow.
For mdre details on thts r am
sendmg you The Health
Letter number S-4, Wetght
Trammg For Energy and
Weight Control. Others who
want this information can
send in 5() cents and a long,

stamped, self-addresse d
envelope for matlmg. Address yow- letter to me in
care of this newspaper, P. 0
Box 1551, Radio City Statton ,
New York, NY 10019 You do
need to do enormous numbers
of weight hits or calisthenics
to
gradually
develop
muscles.
Women can profit from
such exercises too . A woman
is less inclined to develop big
bulgmg muscles because she
IS born with fewer muscle
fther s. The strength exercises
cause the mdivtdual £ibers tn
the muscles to enlarge. Smce
men are born with more
fibers they develop large
strong muscles easier than
women. The muscle mass you
develop helps to prevent the
obesity problem you are
complaining about .
You may need to go to an
exercise facility to use
eqwpment to work your leg
muscles Half-knee bends
(full knee·bends may strain

the knee) may help you
develop the thigh muscles.
Ratsmg up on your toes, one
foot at a hme, may help
develop the calf muscles
Machines that help load the
leg muscles wtli help you
develop larger stronger leg
muscles. Many professtonal,
and some not so professional
athletes use such training
methods.
You have fat over the upper
part of yow- body because you
are consummg more calortes
than you use. Most people do
not need to add large
amounts of protein sup·
plements to thetr diet or
consume half and half cream
to build stron g muscles
These measures lead to
developmg fat mstde the
muscle and tf you want to get
your body ready for the fat
stock show they are all right.
But if you want to deyelop a
healthy , strong "'body
relatively free of fat you want
lo avoid these gimmtcks.

says: "Gov. Reagan colild
not go to war - President
Reagan could."
" It is totally diahonest,''
Reagan told reporters in
Cincinnati, "and it has no
place in Republican politics."
Reagan said he hoped Ford
"has dismissed ihe person
responsible for the cornrner-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - True
to the youthflilness of the
girls High School State Track
Meet Saturday, records were
set in nearly half the events
held and three new teams
gamed state champtonshtp
crowns.
Winning
the
team
championships of the second
annual event at the Ohio
Sladtum were. Dayton
Stivers Patterson wtth 38
points in Class AAA, Dayton
Jefferson with 6ll points in
Class AA competitior and
Minster with 55 points in

Reagan criticized Ford for
being "for 25 years a part of
t he
Washington
establishment" which he said
he would seck as president
"to reduee in size and in
power.''
"I have often thought that if
government would just Jock
the doors and slip away for a
vacation, it might be a while
before the PI'OPie missed it,"
he said Sunday.
Reagan also pointed to his
showmg in stales where
Democrats were able to
crossover and vote for hun.

-

MIDDLEPORT Mayor Fred Hollman presenfll certificates of rededication to I\J1lel'lca
signed by Middleport residents to lhe master of the National Wagon Train, Rolle Hebel,
Saturday. The certificates will be taken to Valley Forge.

Jhe. DailY·-Sentinel.

DEVOTEU I 0 THE

iNTEREST OF

ME llloS· M ASJ!.!LA!J! E A
TANNEHTi: L'

Eloc . Ed.

~OBERT HOEFLICH

1

Clld I! dllor
.
Publlshe dally exc~p
. Sa turday by The Ohio
Volley Publishing Com .
pony. 111 coutt st,

Dirty tricks charge made

Pomeroy , 01\fo 45769
Buslrn!SS. Office Phone 992
21.56 Editorial Phone 992
1151
•

,Second class

~ostege

pold -.1 ,Pomeroy, Ohio.
NaHbnal

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Class A
Sattmg records in Class
AAA were: Sharon Clarke,
North Rtdgeville, Bl).yard low
hu~dles; the Springfield
North 88tJ.yard relay team;
Julie Stibbie, Solon, one-mile
run and 88tJ.yard run; the
Toledo Scott 441&gt;-yard relay
team; the Toledo Start onemile relay team; Debbie
Williams, Euclid, discus;
Robin Shaw, Dayton Stivers
Patterson, high jump and
Brenda Wilson, Marietta,
shot put.
New records In Class AA

month, 1

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Sunday Times .sentlnel

CINCINNATI (UP!) John
Sears,
national
campaign manaager for
Rmald Reagan, said today
President Ford is "guilty of a
flagrant abuse" of his office
by
approving
of
a
controversial radio
commercial which implies
Reagan favors ' war with
Africa.
Sears, in remarks prepared
for a news conferenee in
Cincinnati, said Ford's
approval of ihe commercial
is "an attempt to set up a
smokescreen between the

American voters and the real
issue that has emerged in this
campaign, m Ohio and
elsewhere."
He said that Issue was the
"contlnuatlm of Dr. Henry
~er as secretary o!
state for the next five years'
and the continuation of the
discredited policies Dr.
Kissinger cmceived and ls
still carrying out."
The radio commercial,
aired In CaiHornla, focuses on
Reagan's statements last
week that he would cmsider
the possible use of American

troops in Rhodesia. The aua
say · "Governor Rea(!n
could not go to war President Reagan could."
"Because he ,knows full
well that lhe statements In
the commercial are Ues "
Sears said, "Mr. Ford i.s
guilty of a flagrant abuse of
his high office."
•.
Sears said the President's
"admission of his own role"
in lhe making of the
commercial "has raised
ethical questions of ihe kind
that cannot be ignored."

,

COLUMBUS (UPI) Summary of final events
Saturday In the second
annual Girls State High
· School Track and Field
' ChampiorshtPS:
CLASS AAA
446-yard relay-!, Toledo
Scott (Selina Sherer, Janice
Jones, Joyce Adams, Lesie
Mosby), :48 .8 (Record.
Breaks old record of · 49.5 set
by Toled~· Scott in 1975); 2,
Cincinnati Woodward, :49.2;
3, Cincinnati Princeton, :49.4.
880-yard relay , !,
Sprmgfield North (Kelly
, . , Busarow, Lizette Browning,
"" Saundra Fallen, Antoinette
,
Browning) 1:40.9 (Record.
Breaks old record of I: 42.7
set by Toledo Scott in 1975) ; 2,
~· Toledo Scott, I :41.7; 3,
"' Middletown, I :44.1.
, 220-yard dash -! ,
•• Antoinette Browntng,
:. Springfield North, :24.5; 2,
Karen Jell, Dayton Stivers
. ... Patterson, :25.1; 3! Uzelte
Browning, Springfie d North,
~- :2$,5. r
""" 441&gt;-yard dash- !, Debbte
L. Wernert, Toledo Start, .57.2
t:- ~ (Ties own record sel in 1975);
2, Dawn Woodruff, Euclid,
:57.4 ; 3, Paula Corbtn.

Shaker Heil!hts, ·57.6.
80-yard low hurdles- !,
Sharon Clarke, North
Rtdgeville , 10.3 (Record.
Breaks own record of :10.6
~~ in 1975) ( 2, Uz Wolmoth,
Toledo Whttmer, .10.4; 3,
J.eslie
Palmer,
East
Liverpool, :10.5.
88tJ.yard medley relay- !,
Toledo Start (Gail Rerung,
Dori Ransford, Sheila
Gordon, Debbie Wernert),
1:5().2; 2, Upper Arlmgton,
1:52.0; 3, Cincinnati Green
Hills, I 53.1.
lOO.yard dash- !, Kermetta
Folmer, Lorain Admiral
King, :11.0; 2, Jane Guilford,
Toledo Rogers, :11.0; 3,
Karen Jett, Dayton Silvers
Patterson ·11.1.
One-mile run- 1, Julie
Stibbie 1 Solon , a: 04 .9
IRecore. Breaks old record of
5:20.7 set by Shirley Russell,
Kent Roosevelt, 1975); 21
Marte Kastrop, Cincmnall
Mount Notre Darnel S.D:i.2; 3,
Shirley Russel , Kent
Roosevelt, 5:18.7.
Long lump- !, Karen Jett,
Dayton ~livers Patterson, IJI.
8; 2, Myrtle Chotce, Newark,
18·8; 3, Sue Cowman,
Gahanna Lincoln, 17-11 •,
'&gt;

~Dave I down low.u

·

Cowens scored 21, White 15
and John Havlicek and Paul
Silas 10 aptece as all hve
Celtic starters lui double
figures Boston got only six
points from its bench
Rookie of the year Alvan
Adams led Phocmx with 2()
poinls whtie Ricky Sobers
added 19, Paul Westphal 14
and Gar Heard 11.
"The post posttion gets a lot
of emphasts," explained
Adams. "Somebody as good
as Cowens ISa btg factor. The
key is trying to keep htm off
the boards.! didn't do bad the

Elida claims AA
state title, 4-1
COJ.UMBUS (UPI) Shaker Heights won the Class
AAA htgh school baseball
title, Ehda won the Class AA
championship and Leipstc
took the Class A crown at
Ohio State University's
Trautman
Field
here
Saturday .
Shaker Hetghts spotted
Youngstown Chaney a 4~
lead but came hack to wm the
championshhip 5-4 in extra
Innings. Two of the Shaker
Heights runs came on a
double by shortstop David
Schwartz m the third.
John Stickley hit a run
scoring single m the ninth
inning to gtve the Cleveland
area team the big school title.
Elida scored once In the
bottom of the seventh inning

L1nescores of Sa turd ay's
fmal s of the state htgh sc hool

baseball !ourmanment
CLASS AAA
You ngstown Chaney
031 000 000- 4 6 3

M eve r , Kevtn Domzal skt
Paul Foote { 7I and Da ve
Shub ert
W P - Maag t 10 0 ) LP Domza lskt (6 3)

Plummer has best day
as Reds rip St. Louis
ST LOUIS I UP I) - For
Cmcinnati reserve catcher
Btll Plummer, it was a
dream. For the St Louis
Cardmals, it was a
nightmare.
" It was one of those days
you dream about," satd
Plummer, who drove in seven
runs wtth a homer, triple and
smgle Sunday to lead the
Reds to a 13-2 shellackmg of
the Cardinals.
Plummer, who played the
last four games because
Johnny Bench has been
havmg muscle spasms,
added, "It was a dream day.
In llie first place, you don't
expect to play that much with
Johnny. In the second place,
you don't expect that many
RBIS "
Plummer singled in a run

tn the second, tnpled in three
runs to htghltght a stx-run
thtrd and blasted a three-run
homer in the stxth. The 29year-old tiad only five RBis
and two homers and was
battmg .278 going mto the
game.
The wm gave the Reds a
sweep of the three-game
series m which they
outscored St Louis 29-5.
Tony Perez also hit a tworun homer followmg Joe
Morgan's smgle m the fourth
mnmg to g1ve wmner Pat
Zachry a !H) lead.
Zachry gave up four hits
before being replaced for the
final two innings by Wtll
McEnaney and Rawly Eastwick.
"He's pttched well for us,
by far the best on the staff

were esta bhshed
by
Robinson, Montpelier, 80Evangeline Carr, Dayton yard low hurdles ; Becky
Jefferson, 80-yard low Colopy, Chillicothe Zane
hurdles;
the
Dayton Trace, one-mtle run and the
Jefferson 880-yard relay Olillicothe Huntington oneteam;
Karen
Hixon, mile relay team.
Youngstown Liberty, oneFinishing second in the
mile run ; Karen Bradley, Class A competition was
Dayton Jefferson , 446-yard Pitsburg Franklm Monroe
dash, Joanne Schenck, wtth Montpelier m third .
Trenton Edgewood, 880-yard Youngstown North and
run and Mara Mundell, Olmsted Falls hmshed
Dayton Jefferson, long Jump. second and third respectively
New Class A marks were in Class A. Euchd and Toledo
set by Kim Winner, Minster, Start tied for second in Class
high jump; Regina Harney, AAA .
Crestlme, long jump; Cathy

Shotpul- 1, Brenda Wtlson,
Marietta, 40-9 1Record .
Breaks old record of 38-8¥.
set by Michele Stevens ,
Cleveland J F. Kennedy,
1975); 2, Debbte Williams,
Euclid, 39-7%; 3, Vickie
Carnicornb, Port Clmton, 38-

9~~~.

Dis cus - !,
Debbie
Williams, Euclid, 125-5
(Record. Breaks old record of
113-10 set by Kerrill Denms,
Logan, 1975); 2, Kelly
McGovern, Toledo Bowsher
123-3; 3, Lmda MeliS , Oxford
Talawanda, 117-3.
880-yard run- 1, Julie
Stibbte, Solon,
2:18.2
!Record. Breaks old record of
2:21.4 set by Terry Jarboe
Worthingtor, 1975) ; 2, Cathy
Art , Westlake, 2:18.4; 3,
Annette Coiner, Columbus
Eastmoor, 2:20.7.
One-mile relay- 1, Toledo
Start INancy Dinkelman,
Jerry Babmore, Debbie
Wernert, Holly Maullc),
4 04 2 IRecord. Breaks own
reco~d of 4:05.8 set in 1975 )i 2,
Elyna, 4:00.1; 3, Euc td,
4068.
CLASS AA
441&gt;-yard relay- I, Dayton
Jefferson 1 Mara Mundell,

ftrst four games, but I didn't
too well the last two. He got 17
rebounds. he JUst seemed to
he in the right place."
Boston Coach Tommy
Heinsohn refused to describe
his team as old, but adnutted
they were ''not young guys.
"You ran press defensively
and run for 48 nunutes when
you' re young," the Celtlcs'
coach said. " But we aren't.
We've just got a spunky
bunch of guys. We were
determmed out there. They
ca ught up and could have
gone ahead with a couple of
steals, but hke the CeltiCII of
old, 1\e kept going at tl."
Hemsohn, who collapsed
after FridaY's trtple overtime
wm m game ft ve, satd, "My
doctor told me I had to settle
down. It was difftcult and you

Indians score
early, hold on

The Syrac use lndtans
scored lOW' big run s m the
to edge Orrville 4-3 for the Shaker He tgh Is
003 oou 101 5 9 1 ftr st wning and then held on
Class AA tiUe.
Don Yankl e, Ttm Fen1sey
Elida scored its winning (7) and Don Fcdorstn , Bob to defeat the host Racine A's
7-4 last Thursday.
run on three stratght bunts Bartlett and Jerry Cyn
cy natus H R - Don Lesko
The Indians were outhit,
after taking a 3-0 lead only to Youngs town Chaney , thi rd
but
wmnmg pttcher C. T.
none
on
WP
-mn
1
n
g
,
see Orrvtlle tie the game wtth
Bartl
et
t
{
11
I) LP ~ Fentsey
Chapman
struck out seven
two runs m the stxth mning (7 3)
and tssued only fiv e walks to
and another m the top of the
CLASS AA
notch lhe wm Losmg pitcher
seventh.
Or rvil le
000 002 1- 3 5 2
John
Porter also struck out
Leipsic held off Cuyahoga Elida
300 000 1- 4 8 1
J tm
Haun ,
F r ank
seven, bul gave up a costly
Heights for a 6-5 win in the
te ( 6 ) an d Denn1 s
twelve walks. Chapman had
Class A championship Ch1rumbo
Brock . Cre tg Bower s. Rtck
game.
the only extra base htt for the
Rumer
{6)
and
Roge r
ker WP - Rum er (9 1)
wmners, a double.
Laipsic scored three of tts LBec
P - Chtrumbole
runs without a hit.
Racine's Kent Wolfe had a
CLASS A
smgle, double. and triple and
Cuyahoga Hetghts, mean.
Porter had three singles
while. had 13 hits but coultl l e ipS IC
300 011 1- cl 4 l
not manage any more runs Cuyehoga Heigh ts
s
400 021- 7 6
003 000 2- 5 13 J
R
101 002 - 4 II
COLUMBUS
IUPI I
Den ny Maag and Bruce

Second annual girls track, field results .
.

'!:HESTER l

they went 1n when we needed
them.
" I had made up my mind I
was going to stay in this
game," Scott satd " It is
really a thrill, and I think a
lot of people fmally
under stand what a good
hackcourt combination we
have "
"I was almost out of gas
after Friday," added Whtte
"It was up lo Charhe, and he
played well. We were trymg
to do basically the same thmg
as in the other games
although we tried a few new
things , such as getting

R.e cords fall in meet

Clal."

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Ballplayers have butlt-m radar
systems. They have a way of sensing they're about to be traded
and usually they know before anybody else Ken Brett could
feel in his bones the Yankees were about to deal him. When
they ship you to the bullpen, pttch you less than three innings in
two,months and tell you don't call them, they'll call you, you
don t have to read tea leaves to ftgure out you're gomg to take
a tnp pretty soon.
If Ken Brett was going to leave, the place he wanted to go
was Kansas City because then he could be with hts kid brother,
George, the Amertcan League's leading hitter right now with a
357 average. So he called him and asked him to work on the
Royals a little and George told Ken he'd take care of 11 whtch
he did . The Royals could use some additional lefthanded
pitchmg. They assured George they'd try to get Ken
When the Yanks traded him three weeks ago, though, Ken
Brett went to the While Sox, not the Royals, and Ken told
George the Yankees informed him the Royals didn 't 11ant him.
It didn't matter that 11 was four o'clock in the mornmg when
Ken told George the Royals turned him down, George got nght
on the phone and called KC Manager Whitey Herzog.
"Whadd'ya mean you don't want my brother?" he demanded to know.
Whitey Herzog Isn't exactly used to answering questions hke
that at four m the morning, but he said the Yankees had gtven
the Royals a list of players they were wtllmg to trade and Ken
Brett wasn't on it. J.arryGura was, but not Ken Brett.
"We would've taken him if he was," said Herzog, and
George Brett, knowing how straight Whitey Herzog is, four
o'clock m the mornmg or four o'clock in the afternoon, had his
answer right .there .
The White Sox are still congratulatmg themselves over
getting \{en Brett. Paul Rtchards has slowed hts motion and
mtroduced him to the palm ball. Brett has won three games,
ptcking up his latest win in a 5-0 nightcap .VIctory over
Cleveland Sunday. He set down the lndtans on two hits before
his arm stiffened and was relieved m the etghth. His earned
run average now is down to 1.61.
In Hermosa Beach, Calif., where he hves, Jack Brett, the
father of Ken and George as well as two other sons, John and
Bobby, roots as hard for the White Sox now as he does for the
Royals. He wasn't getting the scores from tv and radio as
qutckly as he hked Sunday so he called up the ore of the
newspapers In the area and asked the lady who answered how
the second White Sox game had come out.
"Houston, ftve, Chicago, one/' she said.
"Look again, dear," Jack Brett said. "I thtnk you're giving
me the Cubs' score, not llie White Sox' "
"Oh, yes," she corrected herself "Chicago, five , Cleveland,
nothmg."
Jack Brett didn't want to trouble the woman fw-lher by
asking her who pitched for the White Sox. It was enough for
him that they had won the ball game.
He thanked the woman and hung up, and tf anybody saw his
hps move, he was only saying a little prayer to himself that his
son had pitched.
Jack Brett isn't the kmd of father to buttonhole you, pomt
over to thtrd or the mound, and tell you "that's my ktd out
there" Naturally, though, he'scrazy about hts boys, all low- of
them, and he's honest enough to tell you how good he feels
about the way George and Ken are performing now
Last year, George's first full year in the majors, he hit 308
for the Royals, led the Amertcan League m hits wtlh 195, also
in triples with 15, and had Ia homers and stole 13 bases. He
thought he should've made the All.Star team at third base, at
least as a backup man, but he didn 't. He can hardly miss thts
year
When the Royals were 10 Anaheim two weeks ago, Jack
Brett sat behmd a group of Me&lt;tcan fans filling out their AllStar ballots. When 11 came to third base m the American
League, they voted for JorgeOrta of the Whtte Sox, whtch ISn't
so hard to understand because he's Mexican also and does a
consistently good job, too.
"! was 'tempted to tell them, 'hey, wrong guy,"' laughs Jack
Brett, "but I didn't "

PHOENIX, Artz. t UPil Charlie Scott corserved hts
energy until JUSt the rtght
time.
The 6-loot.S guard, who had
fouled out of the ftrst five
games m lhe NBA champtonshtp senes, scored 25 pomts
lo lead Boston to an 87~
VICtory over the Phoenix &amp;Ins
Sunday, giving U1e Celttcs
thetr 13th NBA crown in 19
years.
"It was about time," Scott
satd "! knew JoJo IWhtte)
was ttred after playing 61
minutes Friday night. I was
not shooting real well, but

Apryle Ford, Karen Walder,
Evangelme Carr), :5().3; 2,
Youn~stown North, ·5() 6; 3,
Vemulior, :5().6.
880-yard run- 1, Joanne
SchehCk, Trenton Edgewood,
2:21.6 1Record. Breaks old
record of 2· 25 7 set by Perri
Martin, Ashville Teays
Valley, 1975); 2, Perri
Martm, Ashville Teays
Valley, 2:23.3; 3, Diane
Wright, Eaton, 2.28.5.
220,yard dash- !, Jody
Wynn, Youngstown North,
:25.3; 2, Evangeline Carr,
Dayton Jefferson, ·25.9; 3,
Robm Keels, Youngstown
North, . 26.2.
880-yard ~eiay- 1, Dayton
Jefferson (Mara Mundell,
Karla Burchamp, Apryle
Ford, Karen Walder) , 1:45 6
(Record. Breaks old record of
1:46.1 set by Marton River
Valley in 1975); 2, Dayton
Dunbar,
1:45.9,
3,
Youngstown North, 1:46.3
Shotput- I, Tract Tripp,
Dayton Jefferson, 41-11 %; 21•
Sue Klembarsky, Olmstea
Falls, 41-11 1,; 3, Deanna
Howard, Morrow Little
Mi"'nt 41-2
I ,tnlJ.! turnp- 1. Mara
( (:ontinucd un Pngl' 41

this year," Reds Manager
Sparky Anderson said of
Zachry "He got beat 2-1 at
Houston and shouldn't have
lost that one etther. He should
be 6-0 right now."

Visitors put
down 9to 1
Vtsiting Portland fell to the
hands of host Letart, 9-1, m a
little league contest last
week. Wmmng pttcher Jtm
Hupp allowed only four htts
and fow- walks while fanning
13. Losmg pttcher Troy Ward
had 10 strtke-outs and four
walks.
Palil Roush led the attack
w1th a homer and double
while catcher Dave Rhodes
had a double and smgle Chns
Hupp had two smgles, Randy
Tucker and Tony Rtffle had
doubles, and John Young had
one single Latart's record ts
now 3-1.
Wade Connally led the
losers wtth a double and
single, and Dave Bryant and
Steve Souder had a single
each.

Young Salser
sharp on hill
In Pee Wee actton Mark
Salser pttched a five mmng
no-httter to lead the Syracuse
B team to an 11-1 vtctory over
the Syracuse A' s. Salser
struck out 11 1 walked six, and
hit one batter He allowed
only seven men to reach base
His team chipped m with
errorless defense , and only
one batter reached base the
last three mmngs.
The B team had only three
htts, but collected 16 walks to
take the wtn Salser had a
home run and a single while
Rtchard Davts had the other
hit.
'
Mtke Chancey and Greg
Nease shared the mound
duties for the losers and
fanned nine batters. June 8
finds the B team at Letart
and Portland at Syracuse A
Chancey I LP), Nease and
Nease, Chancey. Salser,IWP)
and Baker

Braves now
at 3-0 in

was feelin~ it, too . We were
worn down, physica lly, bbt
our mental attitude was
great. We had the chanees in
the fourth quarter, but a
couple· of good shots just
wouldn't fall .
"The key to the game was ,
on the boards. Look at
Cowens, Silas and Scott, all in
double figures in rebounds.
It's hard to combat an effort
like that." Boston took a·~
advantage on the boards.
With both teanl$ sluggish
after ~'riday, Bostilll moved
out to a 3lh'l3 halftime lead
ufter PhocniK went six
minutes In the second quarter
with only a pair of free
Utrows.
The Suns came hack to tie
the score late In the lhlrd
quar ter and tratled 57-56
entering the fourth . Phoenix
moved to Its only lead of the
second half, 67~, but two
goals by Cowens put the
Celtics hack on lop.
The Suns were within 73-71
with 4:23 left before Bostnn
broke loose for eight straight
points for a 81·71 advantage
at the two minute mark. The
closest the Suns could gel was
84-80 with 23 seconds left.

loop action ------r~rr.
Thursday at Harrisonvtlle
Ltttle League play the
vtsthng Middleport Braves
ratsed thetr record to J.j) by
rolling over the Harrison ville
Bobcats,
15·4.
Dave
Demoskey and Tim "Justis
both had a trt ple, double, and
smgle, to lead the hittin g Jeff
Wayland and Jtm Boyer had
lrtples and singles, Terry
Wayland and Dan Hysell had
iloubles and singles, Chris
Burdette had two doubles,
and Dave Reuter collected a
smgle
T. Wayland got credit for
the wm, allowing one run and
three hits whtle strlktng out
stx Bobcats and tssuing but
one walk. Jeff Wayland went
two Innings, gtvin~ up two
rt.ms on one hit, had six strike
outs, and walked two Dan
Hysell went the final fram e
and walked three . With no
outs, the Braves turned a
double play after a single by
Large, and she got thrown out
trying to steal third.
Wtllie Donahue went four
mnings for the Bobcats giving
up nine runs and nine hits .
Brtan Haney came on in the
fifth and gave up stx runs on
eight hits Donahue had five
stnke outs and three walks
while Haney got one better to
fan
Monday's games: Bob~ats
At Pirates, Indians at Braves,
and Reds at Dodgers.
10

Like a
good neighb r,
StateFarm 1
is there.- - For help with ell your
family insurance needs,
see:

BILL FLETCHER
1251 Powell 51.

Middleport, 0 .
PH. 992-7155

UAII fAIM

INI~IAN(I

•

Sllte Form
lnturance Compan111
Home Olllctl'
Bloo,.•· "" llltnole

Mason record
is now at 2-0

Pony League acuon Thursday saw Mason ratse tts
record to 2·0 by downing
visiting Syracuse 11·4.
Winntng pitcher Don Russell
went low- and two·thirds
mnmgs before giving way to
Mark Johnson who got the
save by fannmg seven and
walking only two .
Mark Smtth blasted a
homer and single to lead the
Mason attack, and Bodle
Kite wins in
Davis chipped in with a
double and single Kreig
Sayre, Chns Davis, David
'sudden death'
Camp, and Chuck Stanley
each got a single.
Mark Forbes took the loss
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) as
he struck out eight and
It takes a little momentum to
walked
six while giving up
get a kite gomg and one
eight
hits
Bub Patterson and
named Tom is no exception .
Ronnie
Davis
collected a
Atded by some verbal
double
each
m
the losing
shoves from a few of hts
cause,
and
John
Davts had
fellow golfers , 26-year-old
two
singles.
Forbes,
Mark
Tom Kite won the ftrst pro
Davis,
and
Kevin
Knapp
each
golf tournament ($40,000) in
stroked
a
smgle.
hts four-year career Sunday
by defeatmg Terry Diehl
DORTMUND, West
($22,800) in the fifth hole of a
Germany
(UPI) - Ivo van
sudden death playoff at the
Darnme
of
B~lgium wor a
Bicentennial Golf Classic .
men's
800
meter
run in 1·4S.l
. Kite shot a five-under-par
SundBy
for
a
world
season
66 and Diehl had a 68 to lie at
best
time
during
an
Invitation
277, seven under par after
regulation and forced the track and field meet.
The official world record of
sudden death which Kite won
1:43.7
was set by Mareello
when he parred the fifth extra
Flasconaro
of Italy June 27,
hole 11r1d Diehl bogeyed
1973, at Milan.

Giants bang down Tigers 16-5
In Metgs County Little
League acltiln Thursday,
Powell 's Gtanls rolled to an
easy 16-5 vtctory over the
visiting Pomeroy Tigers.
Winnmg pitcher R Stewart
gave up four htts and lhree
walks while fannmg three He
also collected two singles.
J. Ftelds led all hitters at
the plate · as he socked two
homers and a smgle whtle J .
Beaver had a homer and two
smgles. T. Jewell and J.

may not believe It but I was
workmg at it. I didn't feel too
good after the last win but I
feel great now.''
Hav licek, a 14-year
veteran, played over an
injured foot throughout the
playoffs and looked forward
to the rest and relaxation
be flU mg a champion.
" It feels like worlds of
pressw-e com lng off," he
explamed. "I don't have to
have any more lee on my foot,
get m a whirlpool or ta~e
me&lt;hca tion ."
John MacLeod, whose Phoenix team was the Western
Conference wtld card entry in
the playoffs, said the triple
overtime loss and crosscontinent flight with just one
day off in between took its tot!
on both teams.
"Friday night's game deft.
nitely had on effect, "
MacLeod said. "But Boston

Sheets had a'tl'lple and single
each, C. Allen had a triple,
and J McKinney and M.
Boyd each had a smgle
B. Whaley, T Adkins, J
Evans, and B. Wtli each had a
smgle for the Tigers . Losing
pitcher C Icenhower fanned
three Gtants and walked two
while gtvlng up 16 hits.
Ttgers
003 2- 5 4 1
Gtants
547 x- 16 14 2
Ic en hower and Smtth,
Stewart and Bnyd

NAME Dn u ~l a s Ftt
ALIAS l'.c lldotlllg&lt;l tll c n : ll'S II
AG~ 'I yenr
HEIGHT 4 mchc·s
HEIGHT AT MATUR IT) 110 to 1ll 0 feet
WH ERE FOU ND Knm1 n "' tnh.thllthl'
Pactftc Coast .tnd the R,,:k \ Mount.nns
The D0u~las Fit rrodlll'l'S 111l!fl' 1Un1hc·r
than any other s111glc tree 111 till' ssorld h, till'
most popuLu Cl m~rrn.1~ trl'(' ~l f .1ll. .tnd I! ·~

th e State Trcl.' of Ort )!\ m

If )'tlU 'L' L' the: Oou~J.t, f ii,L' Xl' rl'!'l' l'Xtll me
wt th m.Hrlw, u~. l rL'Itl'" .md L.Hn p ·
(n L· ~ Smt,h·r Bcm th,mk . . )t 'll fnt Yi.lur

C.\Utlllll

-·

••

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, .June 7. 1976

2-Tl Daily Sentinel, MJddleport-Porneroy, 0_, Monday, June 7, 197!

Scott sparks Celts to sixth game win and title

Western Ohio toured by Ford
CINCINNATI (UP!) President Ford, searching for
a decisive, much-needed win
over Ronald Reagan, spends
12 hOUrs touring western Ohio
by motorcade today .
Amid speculation over a
poll which Indicates Reagan
may do better in Ohio than
anticipated - perhaps even
win it - the Pl'estdent flew to
Cleveland Sunday mght, hot
on the heels of Reagan's twoday blitz of the state.
For Ford, expected to lose
to Reagan in the former Californla governor's home state
but win tn New Jersey, Ohio's
97 delegates were considered
pivotal in his struggle to win
the nomination In Kansas
City In August.
In sharp contrast to the

tense, at times bttter GOP
battle, state Democratic
leaders in Ohio - including
the state chalnnan - viewed
Jimmy Carter as the clear
favorite to pick up the biggest
share of Ohio's 152 delegate
votes, perhaps as many as 100
or more.
Carter's chief rivals in ihe
Democratic contest, Morris
Udall and Frank Church,
conceded that if the former
Georgia governor wins in the
Buckeye State, he Will be the
party's nominee. ·
"U Jimmy Carter wins big
here in Ohto, it's all over,"
Udall told a crowd in
Parma.
Church left the state to
VIew flood damage in Idaho
but returned Sunday night, as

did Carter, for a final round
of campaigning.
Ford addressed the
National Conference of
Christians and Jews in
Cleveland Sunday night, then
flew to Cinicnnatl where his
250-mlle barnstorming
motorcade through territory
co nsidered
'' Reagan
country" was lo begin
Ford's election eve trip to
Ohio followed a poll published
&amp;lnday by the Columbus
Dispatch in which 35li GOP
voters split 55 per eent to 45
per cent in support of Reagan
for
their
party 's
nomination.
The survey was taken in six
Ohio counties, with the paper
conceding a 5 per cent error
margin either way .
In the Democratic contest,
the poll gave Carter 55 per
cent, Udall 13 Pl'r cent,
Church and George Wallace
10 per eent each, Henry
Jackson 8 per cent and an
uncomnutted delegate slate 4
per cent.
However accurate the poll,
its findings were partially
reflected by some GOP party
profesionals who held
privately Reagan could wm
between 20 to 40 P!'r cent of
the delegates in Ohio.
Ford
suggested
in
Cleveland Sunday night
Reagan's election might be a
threat to world peace and
that
his
Republican
presidential opponent IS "poisoning the political debate."
Ford said he approved the
concept of
campaign
advertlsmg depictmg Reagan
as a threat to peace "to set
the record straight." Reagan
called that advertisin~

---------------------------1
J.etters of opinion are welcomed. They sboald be 1
less tbaD 300 words loog (or be subjeet lo reduetlcll b1
the editor) aDd must be signed wltl die slpee'l .tdreas. Names may be witllheld apoa publle~tloa.
However, oo reque~l, uamea will be dlaelosed. Letten
sbould be lu good taste, addresslnjj Issues, aot
119nalltles.

PI'•·

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1
I

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Credit given for improvements
Dear Sir
There has been completed at the Southern Local Htgh
School a new baseball field and the old baseba ll held at the
Jumor High School has been unproved by the additiOn of two
concret• block dugouts, replacement of the wire on the
blackstop, and ti1e addition of a restroom . A third baseball
diamond ts expected to be completed within the next few
weeks.
Cooperation of many institutions in the county and citizens of
U1e commumty is directly responsible for this accomplishment.

A spectal note of thanks should be given to Tom Wolfe and
The Racine Home National Bank, Rich Jones of The Athens
County Savmgs &amp; Loan Company ; Ted Reed of The Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Company; the Dale C. Warner Agency, Eber
Pickens, and Eber's Gulf Station ; Babe Htll , and others who
financtally contrtbuted to the project.
Too much cannot be said for Don Beegle who worked for
many hours and suffered more than one brutsed thumb. A
spet1al note of thanks should be gtven to the Southern Athletic
Boo;1ers, parttcularly Danny Brown and Ronnte Salser.
Milford Fredertck, Jim Rees, Tootle Htll, Roger Adams, and
many others donated llietr labor, and Red Glasgow survey
work
Fo~t Run Cement Block Company, La ndmark, TriState
Matertals, and others donated matenal.
The Su tton Townshtp Trustees, the County Htghway
Department, and the Village of Racme deserve a special note
of gratttude for llie asststance which they rendered.
On behalf of the children of the Southern Local School
District area, mterested parents and friends, this letter
expresses our gratitude to aU who made thts project
successful. - BILJ, PORTER, R. D 3, Racme.

"totally dishonest" and said
"it has no place in
llj!publican politics."
Reagan, accompanied by
actor Jimmy Stewart, was
enthusiastically received at
rallies in five ctties Saturday
and Sunday in which he
condemned
the
administration's deficit
spending polictes and
promised " to make the
United States No. I militarily
again."
Reagan criticized Ford for
being "for 25 years a part of
lhe
Wa s hin gto n
establishment'' which be said
be would seek as president
"to reduce in size and in

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPJ S[IOI'II Edllor

THE SOUTHERN IDGH SCHOOL Band was the only

band to take part In Saturday's wagon train parade from
MJcldlCJ!lOI'l and was a fine addition to the parade nnet"P.

power.''

He also told his audiences
his ability to win Democratic
voles showed he could
"broaden the base of the
party" and win the general
election
"I want to go to Washington ," he said. "And I believe
wtth all my heart that I am
the best chance of vtctory m
November."
Udall continued to hanuner
away
at Carter
in
appearances around the
state.
Calling TUesday 's primary
a "judgment day," Udall
said, "This is not some kind
of athletic event It is not a
personality contest.
"You can dectde for the
country, for the Democratic
party, whether we're going to
have an open convention,
whether we're going to move
this country the way it ought
to move, or whether 1t is
going to be all over and the
Democratic convention is
going to be a kind of social
event," be said.

More wagon train parade scenes from
Middleport to Pomer(Jy
during Saturday's Meigs visit

·t
,•• &amp;."' 1

-~

~

-~rt"'l

k -

ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE took part in ihe National Bicentennial Wagon Train
Saturday morning.

.,/'

/......-)

(

'

Bad attitUlle explained
, Dear Mr. (Fted) Crow·
I would like to explain the negative altitude you may have
received when you spoke to our group at Racme
Your promotion for the preservation of bull frogs is
outstandin g and promotmg the frog jump at the Big Bend
Regatta has always brought great interest.
Howeve1, I wtsh to e&lt;plain llie negative aU Itude Firemen
are always close regardless of the department they come from
and after you had left the meetmg it was discussed why the
resporse was so negattve
Some of the members felt that tf each department entered
a frog in the jump 11 would be unfair to our fellow firemen in
West Virgima who belong to the association.
One Pomeroy fir eman, who IS a known frog JOCkey ,
clauned tile West Vtrgmta frogs wc~e for eatmg. Now who ever
heard of eatmg a frog He further stated that all the JUmping
frogs come from Ohio and that our fellow firemen in West
Virginia would be working at a disadvantage.
I assured lliem that arrangements could be made to allow
the West Virginia ftrem en to obtain jumpmg frogs and all
seemed to be m agreement and enter the frog jumps.
However, most departments present clammed up as to
any plans they had smce they felt 11 would be doing themselves
an injustice as to thetr chances of winning.
I have contacted Prof Charles Wayland to assist the
association in the training of the frogs for the various
departments and arrangements are bemg made now to handle
the needed detatls
Yours truly, AREA VOL FIRE &amp; EMERG ASSN., Bob E.
Byer, prestdent

DR. LAMB

FIVE POINT Star Stitchers also took part in the National Bicentennial Wagon Train
Saturday morning.
AFTERWARDS - Following the parade the white mules were unhitched from the Ohio
wagon . Restdents took advantage of the wagons to snap pictures oltheir families in front of
them .

Up~et

is possible in Ohio

CINCINNATI (UP!) Former California Gov.
Ronald Reagan, pubhcly
conceding the majority of
Ohio's Republican delegates
to President Ford, but armed
wtth a newspaper poll that
says there could be an upset,
ended a weekend bhtz of the
Buckeye State Sunday.
Reagan, accompanied by
actor Jtrnmy Stewart, drew
enthusiastic audiences at
rallies in five citl)!s during the
weekend.
Reagan is expected to capture California's mother lode
of 167 delegates m the
wtnner-take-all
ra ce
Tuesday. But a poll published
Sunday in the Columbus

Dispatch may have given htrn
addiltonal hopes for Ohto as
well.
The poll checked the
opinions of 355 GOP voters in
si&lt; Ohio counties, and split 55
per cent to 45 per cent in
support of Reagan for their
party's nomination. The
paper said there was a aper
cent error margm etther way .
The C alifornia
conservative condemned the
Ford administration's deficit
spending polictes at his Ohio
stops and promised "to make
the Umted States No. I
militarily again."
He also sharply attacked a
Ford campaign advertising
campaign m Califorma which

Specific goals in weight loss
By J.awrence E. J.amb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - Thts
letter IS from someone who
needs help. I have a couple of
problems that you can help
, me solve. To start with, about
two years ago I started
weight training and jogging
But now my legs are smaller
than they should be and my
chest IS bigger. It just seems
like whatever I do my watst
on down does not grow.
On the other hand my chest
and stomach have gotten fat.
My stomach has a lot of fat
hangmg around the stde.
' What can I do to get my legs
bigger and my stomach and
chest smaller?
DEAR READER - While
you deserve an E for effort
the problem is that you also
need some knowledge about
how to shape your body. The
type of exerctses a person
does should be destgned lo
help meet spectflc goals. You
are a good case m pomt.
J ogg ins is wonderfu l
exercise,
when
done
#

~

properly It helps develop the
capactty of the heart and
lungs It also helps you burn
off calories to preven t
obestty . It does not help you
develop large leg muscles. It
is an endurance exercise. The
muscles will develop to a stze
needed to support your body
wetght while joggmg and no
more.
Weight hfting or any
strength exercises, mcluding
calisthenics load the muscles
and the muscles will enlarge
enough to be strong enough to
lift your body, or physical
wetght. These are strength
exercises used to increase the
size of the muscles.
There is a right and wrong
way to do strength exercises
to help your muscles grow.
For mdre details on thts r am
sendmg you The Health
Letter number S-4, Wetght
Trammg For Energy and
Weight Control. Others who
want this information can
send in 5() cents and a long,

stamped, self-addresse d
envelope for matlmg. Address yow- letter to me in
care of this newspaper, P. 0
Box 1551, Radio City Statton ,
New York, NY 10019 You do
need to do enormous numbers
of weight hits or calisthenics
to
gradually
develop
muscles.
Women can profit from
such exercises too . A woman
is less inclined to develop big
bulgmg muscles because she
IS born with fewer muscle
fther s. The strength exercises
cause the mdivtdual £ibers tn
the muscles to enlarge. Smce
men are born with more
fibers they develop large
strong muscles easier than
women. The muscle mass you
develop helps to prevent the
obesity problem you are
complaining about .
You may need to go to an
exercise facility to use
eqwpment to work your leg
muscles Half-knee bends
(full knee·bends may strain

the knee) may help you
develop the thigh muscles.
Ratsmg up on your toes, one
foot at a hme, may help
develop the calf muscles
Machines that help load the
leg muscles wtli help you
develop larger stronger leg
muscles. Many professtonal,
and some not so professional
athletes use such training
methods.
You have fat over the upper
part of yow- body because you
are consummg more calortes
than you use. Most people do
not need to add large
amounts of protein sup·
plements to thetr diet or
consume half and half cream
to build stron g muscles
These measures lead to
developmg fat mstde the
muscle and tf you want to get
your body ready for the fat
stock show they are all right.
But if you want to deyelop a
healthy , strong "'body
relatively free of fat you want
lo avoid these gimmtcks.

says: "Gov. Reagan colild
not go to war - President
Reagan could."
" It is totally diahonest,''
Reagan told reporters in
Cincinnati, "and it has no
place in Republican politics."
Reagan said he hoped Ford
"has dismissed ihe person
responsible for the cornrner-

COLUMBUS (UPI) - True
to the youthflilness of the
girls High School State Track
Meet Saturday, records were
set in nearly half the events
held and three new teams
gamed state champtonshtp
crowns.
Winning
the
team
championships of the second
annual event at the Ohio
Sladtum were. Dayton
Stivers Patterson wtth 38
points in Class AAA, Dayton
Jefferson with 6ll points in
Class AA competitior and
Minster with 55 points in

Reagan criticized Ford for
being "for 25 years a part of
t he
Washington
establishment" which he said
he would seck as president
"to reduee in size and in
power.''
"I have often thought that if
government would just Jock
the doors and slip away for a
vacation, it might be a while
before the PI'OPie missed it,"
he said Sunday.
Reagan also pointed to his
showmg in stales where
Democrats were able to
crossover and vote for hun.

-

MIDDLEPORT Mayor Fred Hollman presenfll certificates of rededication to I\J1lel'lca
signed by Middleport residents to lhe master of the National Wagon Train, Rolle Hebel,
Saturday. The certificates will be taken to Valley Forge.

Jhe. DailY·-Sentinel.

DEVOTEU I 0 THE

iNTEREST OF

ME llloS· M ASJ!.!LA!J! E A
TANNEHTi: L'

Eloc . Ed.

~OBERT HOEFLICH

1

Clld I! dllor
.
Publlshe dally exc~p
. Sa turday by The Ohio
Volley Publishing Com .
pony. 111 coutt st,

Dirty tricks charge made

Pomeroy , 01\fo 45769
Buslrn!SS. Office Phone 992
21.56 Editorial Phone 992
1151
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~ostege

pold -.1 ,Pomeroy, Ohio.
NaHbnal

advertising

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available, One
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Class A
Sattmg records in Class
AAA were: Sharon Clarke,
North Rtdgeville, Bl).yard low
hu~dles; the Springfield
North 88tJ.yard relay team;
Julie Stibbie, Solon, one-mile
run and 88tJ.yard run; the
Toledo Scott 441&gt;-yard relay
team; the Toledo Start onemile relay team; Debbie
Williams, Euclid, discus;
Robin Shaw, Dayton Stivers
Patterson, high jump and
Brenda Wilson, Marietta,
shot put.
New records In Class AA

month, 1

Ohio and
w va ., otle Year, $22.00; ·
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Sunday Times .sentlnel

CINCINNATI (UP!) John
Sears,
national
campaign manaager for
Rmald Reagan, said today
President Ford is "guilty of a
flagrant abuse" of his office
by
approving
of
a
controversial radio
commercial which implies
Reagan favors ' war with
Africa.
Sears, in remarks prepared
for a news conferenee in
Cincinnati, said Ford's
approval of ihe commercial
is "an attempt to set up a
smokescreen between the

American voters and the real
issue that has emerged in this
campaign, m Ohio and
elsewhere."
He said that Issue was the
"contlnuatlm of Dr. Henry
~er as secretary o!
state for the next five years'
and the continuation of the
discredited policies Dr.
Kissinger cmceived and ls
still carrying out."
The radio commercial,
aired In CaiHornla, focuses on
Reagan's statements last
week that he would cmsider
the possible use of American

troops in Rhodesia. The aua
say · "Governor Rea(!n
could not go to war President Reagan could."
"Because he ,knows full
well that lhe statements In
the commercial are Ues "
Sears said, "Mr. Ford i.s
guilty of a flagrant abuse of
his high office."
•.
Sears said the President's
"admission of his own role"
in lhe making of the
commercial "has raised
ethical questions of ihe kind
that cannot be ignored."

,

COLUMBUS (UPI) Summary of final events
Saturday In the second
annual Girls State High
· School Track and Field
' ChampiorshtPS:
CLASS AAA
446-yard relay-!, Toledo
Scott (Selina Sherer, Janice
Jones, Joyce Adams, Lesie
Mosby), :48 .8 (Record.
Breaks old record of · 49.5 set
by Toled~· Scott in 1975); 2,
Cincinnati Woodward, :49.2;
3, Cincinnati Princeton, :49.4.
880-yard relay , !,
Sprmgfield North (Kelly
, . , Busarow, Lizette Browning,
"" Saundra Fallen, Antoinette
,
Browning) 1:40.9 (Record.
Breaks old record of I: 42.7
set by Toledo Scott in 1975) ; 2,
~· Toledo Scott, I :41.7; 3,
"' Middletown, I :44.1.
, 220-yard dash -! ,
•• Antoinette Browntng,
:. Springfield North, :24.5; 2,
Karen Jell, Dayton Stivers
. ... Patterson, :25.1; 3! Uzelte
Browning, Springfie d North,
~- :2$,5. r
""" 441&gt;-yard dash- !, Debbte
L. Wernert, Toledo Start, .57.2
t:- ~ (Ties own record sel in 1975);
2, Dawn Woodruff, Euclid,
:57.4 ; 3, Paula Corbtn.

Shaker Heil!hts, ·57.6.
80-yard low hurdles- !,
Sharon Clarke, North
Rtdgeville , 10.3 (Record.
Breaks own record of :10.6
~~ in 1975) ( 2, Uz Wolmoth,
Toledo Whttmer, .10.4; 3,
J.eslie
Palmer,
East
Liverpool, :10.5.
88tJ.yard medley relay- !,
Toledo Start (Gail Rerung,
Dori Ransford, Sheila
Gordon, Debbie Wernert),
1:5().2; 2, Upper Arlmgton,
1:52.0; 3, Cincinnati Green
Hills, I 53.1.
lOO.yard dash- !, Kermetta
Folmer, Lorain Admiral
King, :11.0; 2, Jane Guilford,
Toledo Rogers, :11.0; 3,
Karen Jett, Dayton Silvers
Patterson ·11.1.
One-mile run- 1, Julie
Stibbie 1 Solon , a: 04 .9
IRecore. Breaks old record of
5:20.7 set by Shirley Russell,
Kent Roosevelt, 1975); 21
Marte Kastrop, Cincmnall
Mount Notre Darnel S.D:i.2; 3,
Shirley Russel , Kent
Roosevelt, 5:18.7.
Long lump- !, Karen Jett,
Dayton ~livers Patterson, IJI.
8; 2, Myrtle Chotce, Newark,
18·8; 3, Sue Cowman,
Gahanna Lincoln, 17-11 •,
'&gt;

~Dave I down low.u

·

Cowens scored 21, White 15
and John Havlicek and Paul
Silas 10 aptece as all hve
Celtic starters lui double
figures Boston got only six
points from its bench
Rookie of the year Alvan
Adams led Phocmx with 2()
poinls whtie Ricky Sobers
added 19, Paul Westphal 14
and Gar Heard 11.
"The post posttion gets a lot
of emphasts," explained
Adams. "Somebody as good
as Cowens ISa btg factor. The
key is trying to keep htm off
the boards.! didn't do bad the

Elida claims AA
state title, 4-1
COJ.UMBUS (UPI) Shaker Heights won the Class
AAA htgh school baseball
title, Ehda won the Class AA
championship and Leipstc
took the Class A crown at
Ohio State University's
Trautman
Field
here
Saturday .
Shaker Hetghts spotted
Youngstown Chaney a 4~
lead but came hack to wm the
championshhip 5-4 in extra
Innings. Two of the Shaker
Heights runs came on a
double by shortstop David
Schwartz m the third.
John Stickley hit a run
scoring single m the ninth
inning to gtve the Cleveland
area team the big school title.
Elida scored once In the
bottom of the seventh inning

L1nescores of Sa turd ay's
fmal s of the state htgh sc hool

baseball !ourmanment
CLASS AAA
You ngstown Chaney
031 000 000- 4 6 3

M eve r , Kevtn Domzal skt
Paul Foote { 7I and Da ve
Shub ert
W P - Maag t 10 0 ) LP Domza lskt (6 3)

Plummer has best day
as Reds rip St. Louis
ST LOUIS I UP I) - For
Cmcinnati reserve catcher
Btll Plummer, it was a
dream. For the St Louis
Cardmals, it was a
nightmare.
" It was one of those days
you dream about," satd
Plummer, who drove in seven
runs wtth a homer, triple and
smgle Sunday to lead the
Reds to a 13-2 shellackmg of
the Cardinals.
Plummer, who played the
last four games because
Johnny Bench has been
havmg muscle spasms,
added, "It was a dream day.
In llie first place, you don't
expect to play that much with
Johnny. In the second place,
you don't expect that many
RBIS "
Plummer singled in a run

tn the second, tnpled in three
runs to htghltght a stx-run
thtrd and blasted a three-run
homer in the stxth. The 29year-old tiad only five RBis
and two homers and was
battmg .278 going mto the
game.
The wm gave the Reds a
sweep of the three-game
series m which they
outscored St Louis 29-5.
Tony Perez also hit a tworun homer followmg Joe
Morgan's smgle m the fourth
mnmg to g1ve wmner Pat
Zachry a !H) lead.
Zachry gave up four hits
before being replaced for the
final two innings by Wtll
McEnaney and Rawly Eastwick.
"He's pttched well for us,
by far the best on the staff

were esta bhshed
by
Robinson, Montpelier, 80Evangeline Carr, Dayton yard low hurdles ; Becky
Jefferson, 80-yard low Colopy, Chillicothe Zane
hurdles;
the
Dayton Trace, one-mtle run and the
Jefferson 880-yard relay Olillicothe Huntington oneteam;
Karen
Hixon, mile relay team.
Youngstown Liberty, oneFinishing second in the
mile run ; Karen Bradley, Class A competition was
Dayton Jefferson , 446-yard Pitsburg Franklm Monroe
dash, Joanne Schenck, wtth Montpelier m third .
Trenton Edgewood, 880-yard Youngstown North and
run and Mara Mundell, Olmsted Falls hmshed
Dayton Jefferson, long Jump. second and third respectively
New Class A marks were in Class A. Euchd and Toledo
set by Kim Winner, Minster, Start tied for second in Class
high jump; Regina Harney, AAA .
Crestlme, long jump; Cathy

Shotpul- 1, Brenda Wtlson,
Marietta, 40-9 1Record .
Breaks old record of 38-8¥.
set by Michele Stevens ,
Cleveland J F. Kennedy,
1975); 2, Debbte Williams,
Euclid, 39-7%; 3, Vickie
Carnicornb, Port Clmton, 38-

9~~~.

Dis cus - !,
Debbie
Williams, Euclid, 125-5
(Record. Breaks old record of
113-10 set by Kerrill Denms,
Logan, 1975); 2, Kelly
McGovern, Toledo Bowsher
123-3; 3, Lmda MeliS , Oxford
Talawanda, 117-3.
880-yard run- 1, Julie
Stibbte, Solon,
2:18.2
!Record. Breaks old record of
2:21.4 set by Terry Jarboe
Worthingtor, 1975) ; 2, Cathy
Art , Westlake, 2:18.4; 3,
Annette Coiner, Columbus
Eastmoor, 2:20.7.
One-mile relay- 1, Toledo
Start INancy Dinkelman,
Jerry Babmore, Debbie
Wernert, Holly Maullc),
4 04 2 IRecord. Breaks own
reco~d of 4:05.8 set in 1975 )i 2,
Elyna, 4:00.1; 3, Euc td,
4068.
CLASS AA
441&gt;-yard relay- I, Dayton
Jefferson 1 Mara Mundell,

ftrst four games, but I didn't
too well the last two. He got 17
rebounds. he JUst seemed to
he in the right place."
Boston Coach Tommy
Heinsohn refused to describe
his team as old, but adnutted
they were ''not young guys.
"You ran press defensively
and run for 48 nunutes when
you' re young," the Celtlcs'
coach said. " But we aren't.
We've just got a spunky
bunch of guys. We were
determmed out there. They
ca ught up and could have
gone ahead with a couple of
steals, but hke the CeltiCII of
old, 1\e kept going at tl."
Hemsohn, who collapsed
after FridaY's trtple overtime
wm m game ft ve, satd, "My
doctor told me I had to settle
down. It was difftcult and you

Indians score
early, hold on

The Syrac use lndtans
scored lOW' big run s m the
to edge Orrville 4-3 for the Shaker He tgh Is
003 oou 101 5 9 1 ftr st wning and then held on
Class AA tiUe.
Don Yankl e, Ttm Fen1sey
Elida scored its winning (7) and Don Fcdorstn , Bob to defeat the host Racine A's
7-4 last Thursday.
run on three stratght bunts Bartlett and Jerry Cyn
cy natus H R - Don Lesko
The Indians were outhit,
after taking a 3-0 lead only to Youngs town Chaney , thi rd
but
wmnmg pttcher C. T.
none
on
WP
-mn
1
n
g
,
see Orrvtlle tie the game wtth
Bartl
et
t
{
11
I) LP ~ Fentsey
Chapman
struck out seven
two runs m the stxth mning (7 3)
and tssued only fiv e walks to
and another m the top of the
CLASS AA
notch lhe wm Losmg pitcher
seventh.
Or rvil le
000 002 1- 3 5 2
John
Porter also struck out
Leipsic held off Cuyahoga Elida
300 000 1- 4 8 1
J tm
Haun ,
F r ank
seven, bul gave up a costly
Heights for a 6-5 win in the
te ( 6 ) an d Denn1 s
twelve walks. Chapman had
Class A championship Ch1rumbo
Brock . Cre tg Bower s. Rtck
game.
the only extra base htt for the
Rumer
{6)
and
Roge r
ker WP - Rum er (9 1)
wmners, a double.
Laipsic scored three of tts LBec
P - Chtrumbole
runs without a hit.
Racine's Kent Wolfe had a
CLASS A
smgle, double. and triple and
Cuyahoga Hetghts, mean.
Porter had three singles
while. had 13 hits but coultl l e ipS IC
300 011 1- cl 4 l
not manage any more runs Cuyehoga Heigh ts
s
400 021- 7 6
003 000 2- 5 13 J
R
101 002 - 4 II
COLUMBUS
IUPI I
Den ny Maag and Bruce

Second annual girls track, field results .
.

'!:HESTER l

they went 1n when we needed
them.
" I had made up my mind I
was going to stay in this
game," Scott satd " It is
really a thrill, and I think a
lot of people fmally
under stand what a good
hackcourt combination we
have "
"I was almost out of gas
after Friday," added Whtte
"It was up lo Charhe, and he
played well. We were trymg
to do basically the same thmg
as in the other games
although we tried a few new
things , such as getting

R.e cords fall in meet

Clal."

.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Ballplayers have butlt-m radar
systems. They have a way of sensing they're about to be traded
and usually they know before anybody else Ken Brett could
feel in his bones the Yankees were about to deal him. When
they ship you to the bullpen, pttch you less than three innings in
two,months and tell you don't call them, they'll call you, you
don t have to read tea leaves to ftgure out you're gomg to take
a tnp pretty soon.
If Ken Brett was going to leave, the place he wanted to go
was Kansas City because then he could be with hts kid brother,
George, the Amertcan League's leading hitter right now with a
357 average. So he called him and asked him to work on the
Royals a little and George told Ken he'd take care of 11 whtch
he did . The Royals could use some additional lefthanded
pitchmg. They assured George they'd try to get Ken
When the Yanks traded him three weeks ago, though, Ken
Brett went to the While Sox, not the Royals, and Ken told
George the Yankees informed him the Royals didn 't 11ant him.
It didn't matter that 11 was four o'clock in the mornmg when
Ken told George the Royals turned him down, George got nght
on the phone and called KC Manager Whitey Herzog.
"Whadd'ya mean you don't want my brother?" he demanded to know.
Whitey Herzog Isn't exactly used to answering questions hke
that at four m the morning, but he said the Yankees had gtven
the Royals a list of players they were wtllmg to trade and Ken
Brett wasn't on it. J.arryGura was, but not Ken Brett.
"We would've taken him if he was," said Herzog, and
George Brett, knowing how straight Whitey Herzog is, four
o'clock m the mornmg or four o'clock in the afternoon, had his
answer right .there .
The White Sox are still congratulatmg themselves over
getting \{en Brett. Paul Rtchards has slowed hts motion and
mtroduced him to the palm ball. Brett has won three games,
ptcking up his latest win in a 5-0 nightcap .VIctory over
Cleveland Sunday. He set down the lndtans on two hits before
his arm stiffened and was relieved m the etghth. His earned
run average now is down to 1.61.
In Hermosa Beach, Calif., where he hves, Jack Brett, the
father of Ken and George as well as two other sons, John and
Bobby, roots as hard for the White Sox now as he does for the
Royals. He wasn't getting the scores from tv and radio as
qutckly as he hked Sunday so he called up the ore of the
newspapers In the area and asked the lady who answered how
the second White Sox game had come out.
"Houston, ftve, Chicago, one/' she said.
"Look again, dear," Jack Brett said. "I thtnk you're giving
me the Cubs' score, not llie White Sox' "
"Oh, yes," she corrected herself "Chicago, five , Cleveland,
nothmg."
Jack Brett didn't want to trouble the woman fw-lher by
asking her who pitched for the White Sox. It was enough for
him that they had won the ball game.
He thanked the woman and hung up, and tf anybody saw his
hps move, he was only saying a little prayer to himself that his
son had pitched.
Jack Brett isn't the kmd of father to buttonhole you, pomt
over to thtrd or the mound, and tell you "that's my ktd out
there" Naturally, though, he'scrazy about hts boys, all low- of
them, and he's honest enough to tell you how good he feels
about the way George and Ken are performing now
Last year, George's first full year in the majors, he hit 308
for the Royals, led the Amertcan League m hits wtlh 195, also
in triples with 15, and had Ia homers and stole 13 bases. He
thought he should've made the All.Star team at third base, at
least as a backup man, but he didn 't. He can hardly miss thts
year
When the Royals were 10 Anaheim two weeks ago, Jack
Brett sat behmd a group of Me&lt;tcan fans filling out their AllStar ballots. When 11 came to third base m the American
League, they voted for JorgeOrta of the Whtte Sox, whtch ISn't
so hard to understand because he's Mexican also and does a
consistently good job, too.
"! was 'tempted to tell them, 'hey, wrong guy,"' laughs Jack
Brett, "but I didn't "

PHOENIX, Artz. t UPil Charlie Scott corserved hts
energy until JUSt the rtght
time.
The 6-loot.S guard, who had
fouled out of the ftrst five
games m lhe NBA champtonshtp senes, scored 25 pomts
lo lead Boston to an 87~
VICtory over the Phoenix &amp;Ins
Sunday, giving U1e Celttcs
thetr 13th NBA crown in 19
years.
"It was about time," Scott
satd "! knew JoJo IWhtte)
was ttred after playing 61
minutes Friday night. I was
not shooting real well, but

Apryle Ford, Karen Walder,
Evangelme Carr), :5().3; 2,
Youn~stown North, ·5() 6; 3,
Vemulior, :5().6.
880-yard run- 1, Joanne
SchehCk, Trenton Edgewood,
2:21.6 1Record. Breaks old
record of 2· 25 7 set by Perri
Martin, Ashville Teays
Valley, 1975); 2, Perri
Martm, Ashville Teays
Valley, 2:23.3; 3, Diane
Wright, Eaton, 2.28.5.
220,yard dash- !, Jody
Wynn, Youngstown North,
:25.3; 2, Evangeline Carr,
Dayton Jefferson, ·25.9; 3,
Robm Keels, Youngstown
North, . 26.2.
880-yard ~eiay- 1, Dayton
Jefferson (Mara Mundell,
Karla Burchamp, Apryle
Ford, Karen Walder) , 1:45 6
(Record. Breaks old record of
1:46.1 set by Marton River
Valley in 1975); 2, Dayton
Dunbar,
1:45.9,
3,
Youngstown North, 1:46.3
Shotput- I, Tract Tripp,
Dayton Jefferson, 41-11 %; 21•
Sue Klembarsky, Olmstea
Falls, 41-11 1,; 3, Deanna
Howard, Morrow Little
Mi"'nt 41-2
I ,tnlJ.! turnp- 1. Mara
( (:ontinucd un Pngl' 41

this year," Reds Manager
Sparky Anderson said of
Zachry "He got beat 2-1 at
Houston and shouldn't have
lost that one etther. He should
be 6-0 right now."

Visitors put
down 9to 1
Vtsiting Portland fell to the
hands of host Letart, 9-1, m a
little league contest last
week. Wmmng pttcher Jtm
Hupp allowed only four htts
and fow- walks while fanning
13. Losmg pttcher Troy Ward
had 10 strtke-outs and four
walks.
Palil Roush led the attack
w1th a homer and double
while catcher Dave Rhodes
had a double and smgle Chns
Hupp had two smgles, Randy
Tucker and Tony Rtffle had
doubles, and John Young had
one single Latart's record ts
now 3-1.
Wade Connally led the
losers wtth a double and
single, and Dave Bryant and
Steve Souder had a single
each.

Young Salser
sharp on hill
In Pee Wee actton Mark
Salser pttched a five mmng
no-httter to lead the Syracuse
B team to an 11-1 vtctory over
the Syracuse A' s. Salser
struck out 11 1 walked six, and
hit one batter He allowed
only seven men to reach base
His team chipped m with
errorless defense , and only
one batter reached base the
last three mmngs.
The B team had only three
htts, but collected 16 walks to
take the wtn Salser had a
home run and a single while
Rtchard Davts had the other
hit.
'
Mtke Chancey and Greg
Nease shared the mound
duties for the losers and
fanned nine batters. June 8
finds the B team at Letart
and Portland at Syracuse A
Chancey I LP), Nease and
Nease, Chancey. Salser,IWP)
and Baker

Braves now
at 3-0 in

was feelin~ it, too . We were
worn down, physica lly, bbt
our mental attitude was
great. We had the chanees in
the fourth quarter, but a
couple· of good shots just
wouldn't fall .
"The key to the game was ,
on the boards. Look at
Cowens, Silas and Scott, all in
double figures in rebounds.
It's hard to combat an effort
like that." Boston took a·~
advantage on the boards.
With both teanl$ sluggish
after ~'riday, Bostilll moved
out to a 3lh'l3 halftime lead
ufter PhocniK went six
minutes In the second quarter
with only a pair of free
Utrows.
The Suns came hack to tie
the score late In the lhlrd
quar ter and tratled 57-56
entering the fourth . Phoenix
moved to Its only lead of the
second half, 67~, but two
goals by Cowens put the
Celtics hack on lop.
The Suns were within 73-71
with 4:23 left before Bostnn
broke loose for eight straight
points for a 81·71 advantage
at the two minute mark. The
closest the Suns could gel was
84-80 with 23 seconds left.

loop action ------r~rr.
Thursday at Harrisonvtlle
Ltttle League play the
vtsthng Middleport Braves
ratsed thetr record to J.j) by
rolling over the Harrison ville
Bobcats,
15·4.
Dave
Demoskey and Tim "Justis
both had a trt ple, double, and
smgle, to lead the hittin g Jeff
Wayland and Jtm Boyer had
lrtples and singles, Terry
Wayland and Dan Hysell had
iloubles and singles, Chris
Burdette had two doubles,
and Dave Reuter collected a
smgle
T. Wayland got credit for
the wm, allowing one run and
three hits whtle strlktng out
stx Bobcats and tssuing but
one walk. Jeff Wayland went
two Innings, gtvin~ up two
rt.ms on one hit, had six strike
outs, and walked two Dan
Hysell went the final fram e
and walked three . With no
outs, the Braves turned a
double play after a single by
Large, and she got thrown out
trying to steal third.
Wtllie Donahue went four
mnings for the Bobcats giving
up nine runs and nine hits .
Brtan Haney came on in the
fifth and gave up stx runs on
eight hits Donahue had five
stnke outs and three walks
while Haney got one better to
fan
Monday's games: Bob~ats
At Pirates, Indians at Braves,
and Reds at Dodgers.
10

Like a
good neighb r,
StateFarm 1
is there.- - For help with ell your
family insurance needs,
see:

BILL FLETCHER
1251 Powell 51.

Middleport, 0 .
PH. 992-7155

UAII fAIM

INI~IAN(I

•

Sllte Form
lnturance Compan111
Home Olllctl'
Bloo,.•· "" llltnole

Mason record
is now at 2-0

Pony League acuon Thursday saw Mason ratse tts
record to 2·0 by downing
visiting Syracuse 11·4.
Winntng pitcher Don Russell
went low- and two·thirds
mnmgs before giving way to
Mark Johnson who got the
save by fannmg seven and
walking only two .
Mark Smtth blasted a
homer and single to lead the
Mason attack, and Bodle
Kite wins in
Davis chipped in with a
double and single Kreig
Sayre, Chns Davis, David
'sudden death'
Camp, and Chuck Stanley
each got a single.
Mark Forbes took the loss
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) as
he struck out eight and
It takes a little momentum to
walked
six while giving up
get a kite gomg and one
eight
hits
Bub Patterson and
named Tom is no exception .
Ronnie
Davis
collected a
Atded by some verbal
double
each
m
the losing
shoves from a few of hts
cause,
and
John
Davts had
fellow golfers , 26-year-old
two
singles.
Forbes,
Mark
Tom Kite won the ftrst pro
Davis,
and
Kevin
Knapp
each
golf tournament ($40,000) in
stroked
a
smgle.
hts four-year career Sunday
by defeatmg Terry Diehl
DORTMUND, West
($22,800) in the fifth hole of a
Germany
(UPI) - Ivo van
sudden death playoff at the
Darnme
of
B~lgium wor a
Bicentennial Golf Classic .
men's
800
meter
run in 1·4S.l
. Kite shot a five-under-par
SundBy
for
a
world
season
66 and Diehl had a 68 to lie at
best
time
during
an
Invitation
277, seven under par after
regulation and forced the track and field meet.
The official world record of
sudden death which Kite won
1:43.7
was set by Mareello
when he parred the fifth extra
Flasconaro
of Italy June 27,
hole 11r1d Diehl bogeyed
1973, at Milan.

Giants bang down Tigers 16-5
In Metgs County Little
League acltiln Thursday,
Powell 's Gtanls rolled to an
easy 16-5 vtctory over the
visiting Pomeroy Tigers.
Winnmg pitcher R Stewart
gave up four htts and lhree
walks while fannmg three He
also collected two singles.
J. Ftelds led all hitters at
the plate · as he socked two
homers and a smgle whtle J .
Beaver had a homer and two
smgles. T. Jewell and J.

may not believe It but I was
workmg at it. I didn't feel too
good after the last win but I
feel great now.''
Hav licek, a 14-year
veteran, played over an
injured foot throughout the
playoffs and looked forward
to the rest and relaxation
be flU mg a champion.
" It feels like worlds of
pressw-e com lng off," he
explamed. "I don't have to
have any more lee on my foot,
get m a whirlpool or ta~e
me&lt;hca tion ."
John MacLeod, whose Phoenix team was the Western
Conference wtld card entry in
the playoffs, said the triple
overtime loss and crosscontinent flight with just one
day off in between took its tot!
on both teams.
"Friday night's game deft.
nitely had on effect, "
MacLeod said. "But Boston

Sheets had a'tl'lple and single
each, C. Allen had a triple,
and J McKinney and M.
Boyd each had a smgle
B. Whaley, T Adkins, J
Evans, and B. Wtli each had a
smgle for the Tigers . Losing
pitcher C Icenhower fanned
three Gtants and walked two
while gtvlng up 16 hits.
Ttgers
003 2- 5 4 1
Gtants
547 x- 16 14 2
Ic en hower and Smtth,
Stewart and Bnyd

NAME Dn u ~l a s Ftt
ALIAS l'.c lldotlllg&lt;l tll c n : ll'S II
AG~ 'I yenr
HEIGHT 4 mchc·s
HEIGHT AT MATUR IT) 110 to 1ll 0 feet
WH ERE FOU ND Knm1 n "' tnh.thllthl'
Pactftc Coast .tnd the R,,:k \ Mount.nns
The D0u~las Fit rrodlll'l'S 111l!fl' 1Un1hc·r
than any other s111glc tree 111 till' ssorld h, till'
most popuLu Cl m~rrn.1~ trl'(' ~l f .1ll. .tnd I! ·~

th e State Trcl.' of Ort )!\ m

If )'tlU 'L' L' the: Oou~J.t, f ii,L' Xl' rl'!'l' l'Xtll me
wt th m.Hrlw, u~. l rL'Itl'" .md L.Hn p ·
(n L· ~ Smt,h·r Bcm th,mk . . )t 'll fnt Yi.lur

C.\Utlllll

-·

••

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 7, 1976

Chisox blanks Tribe
By BIU.. MADDEN
been helpin~ me to slow my
UPI SpoMs Wrller
motion and ge t a more.
That old Paul Richards effective changeup. I now
magic is working new have a different grip and it's
miracles with the much- basically a new pitch."
maligned Chicago White Sox
Jorge Orta 's fourth inning
pitchers.
triple scored Lamar Johnson
Richards, once Ha11 of with the only run Brett and
Farner Carl Hubbe11 's Jefferson needed in the nightfavorite batterymate who cap, while in the opener, the
later contributed largely to White Sox eked out a 3-2
the success of the White Sox ' vlcwry when Bucky Dent
Virgil Trucks and Billy broke an ().for-32 slump with a
Pierce in the !9:i0s and the fourth inning triple and then
Baltimore "Baby Birds" of scored what proved to be the
Steve Barber, Jack Fisher, winning run on Jim Essian 's
Jerry Walker and Mill single. .
Said Richards l who serves
Pappas of the 1960s, is
making new winners of as his own pitching coach )
cas toffs and unproven after the latest success bv his ·
youngsters like Jesse Jeffer- und e r - rated pupils :
son, Pete Vuckovich and Ken "Vuckovich, Brett and
Brett.
Jefferson probably wouldn't
said have gotten their chance unlil
As · Vuckovich
recently : "! figure if Mr . the doubleheaders began
Richards caught behind Babe moun ting · up . But when
Ruth, then I ought to listen w Wilbur Wood go hurt, they got
him."
· their opportunity and they're
. Sunday,. V~ckovich pitched all taking advantage of it."
s1x plus mmngs m the ftrst
Elsewhere in the American
game of a doubleheader I.eague, New York defeated
sweep by the White Sox over Oakland S-2 after dropping
the Cleveland lnd1ans to gam the first game to the A's 3-2·
his fourth win in rive Minnesota swept two fro~
decisions. In th e second Baltimore, 3-2 and ll-6;
game, Brett and Jefferson Boston put away California 4combined on a three-hitter as 1; Milwaukee .edged Kansas
the Chisox blanked the Tribe City 4·3 and Texas mauled
H.
Detroit 16-6.
The double victory put the
surprising White Sox four Yankees 2-5, Athletics 3-2
games over .500 (25-21) in the
Oscar Gamble's three-run
. American League West and homer capped a four-run
lent more credent'e wthe fa ct ninth inning rally in the
that the 67-year old Richa rds, nightcap which earned the
in his second term as Chicago Yankees a split in the
manager, ha sn't lost hi s doubleheader after they had
touch.
dropped three straight to the
" The big difference in A's. Dave Pagan went the
coming here from the distance and spaced six hits
Yankees is that I'm getting a for his first victory of the
chance," said Brett who is year . Phil Garner 's two-run
now 3-0 with a 1.61 earned run second inning single helped
average after being acquired the A's to the first game
by Richards from New York victory as Vida Blue went 7 1three weeks ago. "Paul has 3 innings for his sixth win.

National L eague Standings
By Un ited Pr ess International
East
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
New York
Ch ic ago
Sl . Loui s
Mon tr eal

W L. Pet. GB
33 14 .702 -

2a n .s6o 6' •

26 28 481 10 1 •
22 29 . 431 13
12 '19 .4'1 1 13
17 76

.378

15

We st

Cinc innati

LOS Ang e le s
San D iego

Houston
Allanta
San Franc

W. L. PeL

GB

J1 19 .627
31 22 .585

2

26 23 .53 I
5
'll 28 .491 · 7

20 JO .400 11 1 2
21 JJ .389 12 1 2

. Saturday's Results

San ·Francisco 4 Philadelphia

l

Houston 4 Chicag o 3.
Atlant a a Montreal 0.
San Diego 11 Pill s.bu rgh 9. IS
innings .
Cinci nnat i 5 St . Lou i s 1.
N ew York 3 Los Angeles I.
Sunday's Results
A tl anta hi Montreal a
Sa n Diego 6 P-l ll sburgh 1
Ci cncinnati IJ St . Louis 2
Philadelphia 9 San Fran cisco

Tuesday 's Games
Detroit at Kansa s Ci ty , night
Chicttgo at M ilwaukee, nig ht
Minnesota al Clevela nd , night
Texas at Balt imore , nigh!
Ca li fornia at New York. , nigh t
Oakland at Bosron , night
Sunday's Baseball Results
By Un ited Press International
Natlana l League
San Di ega
030 OOJ 000-- 6 10 0
Pittsburgh
000 100 000-- I 7 1
Strom
16-3)
and
Da vis !
Candelaria , 1ekulve (6 ) , Dem .
ery
(BI
and
Dyer .
LP .
Candelaria (d 4 ) .
Cincinnati
016 203 IOG-13 17 0
St. lau is
000 100 001 - 2 7 1
Zachry . M c Enaney {8 ), East
wick {9t and Plummer ; Fat
cone . Rasmussen (JI , Fr isell a
( 6 ), Wa lla ce (71 , Gr eif (B ) and
Simmons. WP -Zac hr y (5 -l l . LP
Fa lcone D -51 . HR S-Ci ncinna ti ,
Plumm er [3) , Perez (61.

( 1st Gaf11e)

Chicago
ooo·ooo 000- o 2 o
Haustan
110 000 OOx- 2 7 o
Bonham , Sch ult z (7), Garman
(8 1 and Sw i!.her ; An dujar (2 2)
and Johnson . LP -Bonham (4·31.

Los Angeles 10 New York J
Houston 7 Ch icago o, 1st
Houston 5 Ch icago 1, 2nd
(2nd Game)
Todav 's Games
Chica9a
000 000 100- 1 7 1
(All T i mes E DT l
Hou stan
400 000 lOx- s 10 o
Cincinnati ( Billingham 5-J l at
Frailing , P. Reusc hel 15 ),
Pit tsburgh (K ison 4 41, 8:JO
Sutter (7) and Mlt terwald ;
p .m .
St. Louis (Cu rt is (J -5) at Rondon , Pen tz (1) and Jutze.
Houston (Nie kro ( 3 5), 8:35 W P -Rondon (2-1). L P -Frailing
( 1.11. HR -Chicago. Summers
p m.
Ill.
Philadelph ia (Reed 4l l a t
Los Ang eles (RhOden 4-0) , 10 : 30 Phila
000 000 S40- 9 11 0
p.m .
Fran
001 ooo 200- l ~ 2
New York (Swan 2-51 at · San San
Ka at 14 -2) and Boone ; Mon Diego (Fos ter 0-2). 10 p .m .
tefu sco, Lav elle (7) , Heave rlo
I on ly games sc hedul ed)
18 1, Caldwell (B ) and Hill . LP Tuesday's Games
Moi1 tefusco (6 -5) . HR -Sa n Fran
A tl anta at Chicago
cisco , Hill (2) .
Ci nci nna ti
at
Pittsburgh .
night
Atlanta
llO 104 140- t4 12 o
St. Louis at Houston, night
Mantreal
112 110 200-- 1 13 2
Philadelphia -a t Los Angeles,
Moret , Morton (3 ). Devine (7)
nigh'!
New Yo rk at" San Di ego , night and Williams ; wart hen, Dun Montrea l at San Francisco , ning (1 ), Scherma n (7) , Murray
191 and Foore . WP Devine (1 .1).
nigh t
LP -Ounning (0 1). HRS -AIIan ta ,
Paciorek. ( I ) , OHice (4 1.
American L ea gue Standings
By United F'ress International
New York 002 000 001 - . "3 B 0
East
Los Angel ll~ 201 lOx- 10 IS I
w. L. Pet. GB
Koosman , Baldwin (31 , Sa nd .
New York
28 19 .560
er s P f, ·Apod aca (81 and
Baltimore
24 24 .500 41 1 Hod ges ;
Suflon
( 5 61
and
Bos ton
22 24 .478 S' 1 YeMe r . LP . Koosman (6 31. HR .
Cleveland
22 25 .468 6
N ew York , M ilner (71 .
Detroit
21 26 .447 7
M ilwauk('e
19 26 .409 81 1
American League
:· West
(1st Game)
W. L. ·Pet. GB Cleveland
000 000 200- 2 12 1
Kansas Ci ty
30 IB .625
Chicago
020 1oo OOx- 3 a o
Te)(ftS
27 20 .574 2' ~
Brown . Bibby (4) and Ashby ,
Chicl!g o
25 21 .543 4
Fosse (8 ) ; Vuckovich . Hamilton
M innesota
24 24 .500
6
(7 ). Ba rrios (9) and Esslan .
Oa kland
14 28 .d62 8
WP ·Vuck.ovich ( 4 11 LP .Brown
Californ ia
21 32 .407 11
15 l l.
Saturday ' s Results
Boston 4 Ca l iforn ia 3
I 2nd Gamel
Ba lt imore 5 Minnesota 1
Clevelilnd
ooo 000 ooo- 0 J 1
Oakland 7 N ew York 6
Chicago
000 120 11 x- S 9 1
Cleveland 5 Chicago 3, 10 Hood , Buskey (5) , Kern 18l and
inning s
Fosse ; Breit , Jim erson (8 ) and
Kansa s City 5 Milwaukee 4, Downing . WP Brett CJ -Ol . L PI st.
Hoad (1 -4). HR -Ch icago, Brlld ·
Ka nsas CHy 7 Milwaukee 2, ford 12 1
2nd.
. ( I st Game)
· Detroit 3 Texl!s 2, 11 innings .
Oakland
030 ooo ooo- l so
Sunday's Results
New York
100 000 OIG- 1 8 o
Boston 4 Californl(l 1
Blue , Fingers (81 and Han ey ;
Milwaukee 4 Ka nsas City 3, Figueroa , Lyl e (8 ) and Munson .
14 inning s
WP Blue (6 -5). LP .Figu eroa (6 . ·
Minnesota 3 Baltimore 2, l SI
41.
Minnesota 11 Baltimore 6, 2nd
Oaktand 3 New Yortc. 2, 1st
(2nd Gamel
1
New York 5 Oakland 2, 2nd
Oaklilnd
011 000 000- 2 6 0
Chicago J Cleveland 2, lsi
New Yark
000 000 01 4- S 8 0 ,
Chicag o 5 Cleveland 0, 2nd
Bahnsen. Lindblad (8). Fin ·
Texas 16 Detroit 6.
ger s (9 ) and Haney ; Pagan (1 .
Today ' s Games
OJ and Munson . LP ·Lindblad (2I All Times EDT J
1) . HR N ew York , Gambl e (5 l.
Detroit (Ruh le 4-11 at Ka nsas
City ( Busby J. lJ . 8 :30p .m .
· , ·
· &lt;1st G1me1
Minnesota !Goltz 5·1 ) at Mmnesota
002 ooo 001 - 3 a 1
Cleveland (Waits 0-0), 7 :30p.m . Baltimore
000 001 010-- 2 s 1 ·
Texas ( Umbarger 5-41 ' at
Singer ( 5: 1) and Wynegar
B!JII imor e (Gr imsley 1-31 , 8: 30 Palmer (6-6) and Dunciln HW
p .m .
Minnesota , Ford (91.
(only ~ames scl'1eduled)

N. ~oWJ~u

.D.

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to '12; 2 to 5 CCLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT
ST., POME OY.

Property damage

Red Sox 4, Angels I
Cecil Cooper and C~rl
Vastrzemski knocked in two
runs apiece as the Red Sox
knoc ked out Nolan Ryan
after 3 1-3 innings.
Yastrzemski 's RBI single in
the seven., was his 4,000th
total base. Dick Pole, 2-3,
went ~even innings for the
win.
Twins 3-11, Orioles Z1
Larry Hisle hit a three-run
homer to spark a 17-hit
Twins' attack in the nightcap,
while Dan Ford's solo homer
with one OU\ in the ninth won
the opener. Ford, who now
has 33 RB I, also had a a pair
of two-run singles in the
second game. Bill Singer, in
his first start since coming
over from Texas in the Bert
Blyleven trade, won the
opene r, outdueli ng Jim
Palmer.
Brewers 4, Royals 3
Sixto Lezcano 's two-out
t4\h Inning single brought
home Don Money w end the
near-four hour see-saw game.
Money opened th e 14th by
walking on four straight
pitches from loser Marly
Pattin. The Brewers took a 32lead in the 11th only to blow
it when Kansas City tied the
score in the bottom of the
inning on a triple by John
Mayberry and a single by Hal
McRae.
Rangers 16, Tigers 6
Bill Fahey's two-run single
and Lenny Randle's two-run
double highlighted a sevenrun filth inning off three
Detroit pitchers to back the
eight-hit pitching of Nelson
Briles 15-2). The Rangers
batted around in the fifth as
well as seventh but the only
two home runs of the game
came by Tigers, Ben Oglivie
151and Jason Thompson 13 ).

(2nd Game
Minnesata
310 013 021
1
Baltimore
100 001 Jl G- 6 11
Hughes, Ca mpbell (7) and
Raof; Cue llar . Garland (I J. G.
Jac kson (7l. Miller (Bl an
Hen dri ck s. WP -Hughes (2 .
LP.Cue llar
(26 1.
t!IR S
neso ta , Histe (5) ,· Balli
r e,
May 19 1. Dec;nees (J)
Calilarnia
ooo o 10- 1 9 o
Baston
10~ o lO x- 4 7 0
Ryan , Ha ssler 4 ), Drago f7l.
Scoll
(Bl
a d
Herrm ann ,
Garr ett (8 ) ; P6 e, Cleveland (8 )
and Fisk . W Pole (2 -3). L P
Ryan (d -7) .

heavy in wrecks

FlSHING DERBY - !{enGIIkey and E. A. !Ted) Dean, l-r, go over plans for thellshing
derby that will beheld on Saturday, ~ uly 19, during Regatta weekend atlO a.m. Dean is with
the Dievision of Wildlife, education officer of District four. Registra tion will be held at the
llpiscopal Church. The derby will be in two age groups, 5 through II and 12 through 15.
Prizes of fish ing equipment will be awarded.

Fibak and

Dibbs clash drop Giants, 9-3
By
DOWN
as well as pitch - and Kaat is
UPI
Sports
Writer
first time The Philadelphia
an excellent hitter. He went 3Phillies for-4 and knocked in three
~' RED

PARIS I UP!) - Wojtek
Fibak, riding an incredible
string of upsets in recent
months , today stood between
American Eddie Dibbs and a
quarter-final berth as the
seeds at the $210,000 French
Open Tennis Championships
clashed lor the first time.
Dibbs, the No. 5 seed, was
scheduled to meet the ninth
seeded Fibak in the first of
four matches over the next
two days as lour American
seedecj players try to clinch
places in the final eight - an
unprecedented show of
strength by U.S. players at
the world 's top clay court
wurnament.
The play of Fibak has put
Poland on the tennis map. In
a span of two months
recently, he beat Guillermo
Vilas w win the Swedish
Open, Bjorn Borg in the
Monaco Open and Manuel
Oranles to carry off the
British hard-court title in
Bournemouth . Also, he
amed with West German
Karl MeiJer in Kansas City to
win the WCT doubles title.

Last week the hos t Reedsville No . 1 team eked out a Hi
victory over Chester No. 2.
Both teams played 18
players. Reedsville led all the
way until the top of the sixth
when Chester scored to tie it
up. But the victors came b•u&lt;
in their la st at bats with the
winning run.
Pitchers Jerry Larkin s,
Ricky Putman. and Larry
Harris shared the mound
chores while Gene Jones and
Mark Holter worked behind
the plate for the winners. No
batting slats were avilable,
but D. Durst, B. Collins, J .
Wells , J. Connally, M. Holter,
and J. Larkins all scored

(1) ,

Oe,roit
DOD 200 03 1- 6 9 1
Texas
001 371 40)(- 16 16 1
Co leman. Gr il li ( 5 ). Cr aw ford
(5 J. Bare (7) and Fr eehan ;
Briles (5-2) and Fahey . L P
Coleman (2 ·51. H Rs -Detroil .
Oglievie (5 ), J . Thompson l3 l.

Major Leilgue Leaders
By United Press International

38; ~unson , NY 37 ; Otis , KC
35 ; Horton , Del , Ford , Mlnn ,
Rud i. Oak and Grieve . Tel( ll.
Stolen Bases
National League : . Cedeno ,
Hou 2~ ; . Morgan, Cin 21 ;
~!i ff ey , Cin 16 ; LoR~~ · LA 13 ;

may have the "steal of the
year" in pitcher Jim Kaat.
The Phillies' National
League rivals all recognized
the potential of Philadelphia
power and defense before the
start of the season but agreed
that their pitching was
suspect.
Now Philadelphia pitching
is lookin g st ronger a nd
stronger almost every day and one reason is the 37-yearold Kaat, winner of 2.19 major
leag ue games who th ey
acquired from the Chicago
White Sox during the winter
for infielder Alan Bannister
and pitchers Dick Ruthven
and Roy Thomas.
Kaa t got off to a faltering
start in the Na tional League
but won his second straight
ga me and raised his record w
4-2 Sunday when he went the
distance to give the Phillies a
9-3 triumph over the San

Charlie Ritchie, John
Ridenour , and T. Sayre
Buckner , LA, Mangual, Mil and
Brock , SI.L 12
Am ('rican Leagu e: . Nort h,
Oa k 28 ; Pa tek , KC 27 ; Baylor .
Oak 15 : Campaneris, Oak 21.
Ca r ew. Min n 19.
Pitching
Mo ~ t Victories
National League : Jones , SO
10 1: Lon borg , Ph i l B-1; Houg h,
LA 7.0 ; MaTlack. , NY 6 1;
Chr istenson , Phi l and Rooker ,
Pill 6-2: Fryman , Mil , Koos
man . NY and Sl ro m, SO 6·3;
Reuss , P itt 6..4 ; Ruthven , All ,
Richard , Hou and Mont ef usco,
SF 6·S;.
American League : . Slatan ,
Mill -2; Tiant , Bos 7-l . Tanana ,
Cal 7 4; Bird . KC 6-L Fitl mor
r is , KC, Trave r s, Mil and
Camp bel L Minn 6 -2; Figueroa ,
NY 6·4; Hunter . NY , Torr ez
and Blue, Oak 6-5; Palmer ,
Ball~ · ~ ­

Earned Ru'n Averag e
( basE!d on 4S innings pitched)
National League: Zachry , Cin
1.3 2; Forsch , Hou 2.00; Jones,
SO 2.46; Ruthven , All 2.54;
Ra u, LA 2.61.
Am erican League : . Carroll .
Chi and Travers, Mi l 1. 9li ;
Kern , Cl ev 2. 11 ; Br own . Clev
2.15 ; Wood , Chi 2.25.
, . • • • • • • • • • •·• • • • • • • • • • • . .
Slrik eo uh
National Leagu e: Seave r . NY
78 ; Montelusco, SF 63 ; Ri
chard , Hou 62 ,· Messersm ith ,
All 57 ; Lolich . NY 56.
American League : . Tanana ,
Ca l
103 ;
"van. Ca l 94 ;
Bl ylevf' n. Tcx ~4 : Hunter

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Play it eare ancii!W'e
It may be time to
have your preeent ·
policy updated.

l•t's Talk. Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102

W. 'Main

Pomeroy

iI

For Your Winter

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

J'ur ·

St~ra6S
';! ·

1
1
1

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All
Garments
Insured

Fur garments cleaned, furrier method. Cold
storage for furs, modest charges .

WOULD BE PRINCESSES - Seven more young
ladies chosen and the schools represented are, 1-r, Pollie
Chadwell, Middleport; April McGrath, RuUand; Mandy

BICENTENNIAL

~
June 7 thru June 12

riSh
Sandwich
French Fries &amp;

!I

THIS WEEK
H;~.mburger, French Fries &amp; Sm•ll
Drank . .. .. .......
................
.
.
•

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1

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POMEROY

·----------------------·
I

........... . 99c

McCI.ure'$
DAIRY ISLE
Middleport,
Ohio .

Riverview; Missy l,ongstreth, Sa lem Center ; Theresa
Barber, Portland; Cathy Jones, Harrisonvllle; Mary
Cunninl!hr:un. Salisburv: bac~k . Svrnrnsf' M swnr HPrmAn
London, Freddie the Frot;, and RAchel Downie .

Tadpoles, or whatever, they'll ride
in the Frogmobile on day of parade

•

Small Drink

HOPEFUL ROYALTY' - Chosen as print"ess and the
schools they represent are 1-r , Karen Grover, Pomeroy ,
special education; Kelly Clark, Syracuse ; Jody Nestor ,

Hill, Racille ; Trudy Jones . Letart: Dedra Sanders.
Tuppers Plains; Jennifer Grover, Chester; Lisa Rider
.
.
'
Pomeroy; back , Mayor Herman London, Freddie the
Frog, and Rachel Downie .

!1

100-yard dash- !, Susan
Cox, Pitsburg Franklin
Monroe, : lL!i 2, Connie
Ha1r, Cedarvwe, :11.1; 3,
Chris Sauber, Defiance
Tin ora, : 11.1.
.On e-mile run- !, Becky
Colopy, Chillicothe Zane
Trace, 5:28.5 (Record.
Breaks own record of 5:43.0
set in 1975); 2, Theresa
. Walton, Lancaster Fisher
Catholic, 5:32.7; 3, Marilyn
Hull, Dola Hardin-Northern,
5:36.3.
88().yard relay- !, Pitsburg
Franklin Monroe (Rena
Thompson, Kim Thompson,
Sue Sease, Susan Cox),
I :46.8; 2, Frankfort Adena,
1:48.4; 3, Minster, 1:49.0.
Discus- !, Deb FiSher, 1164 (Record. Breaks old record
of 114-4 set by Nancy Francis,
Frankfort Aderii!J 1975); 2,
Sue Cramer, Blunton, 112-10;
3, Kim Winner, Minster, lll5. .
Highjump- 1, Kim Winner,
Minster, 5-5 (Record. Breaks
own record of S-4 set in 1975);
2, Iris Wooster, Baltimore
Uberty Union, S-4; 3, Shirley
Barlage, Russia, S-3.
441l-yard dash-!, Jackie
Thompson, Cleveland
HeightsLutheranEast, :58.7;
2, Cathy Dull, Summit
Station Licking Heights,
:60.1 ; 3, Karen Cleveland,
Old Fort, :60.4.
440-yard relay-!, Minster
(Tina Slonkonsky, Lisa
Roetgerman, Jess1e Klowkosky, Cindy Brown), :51.5; ,
2, Bucyrus Wynford, :5i.8; 3,
Haviland Wayne Trace,
:51.8; 4.
880-yard run-1, Robyn
Andrews, Lewisburg Twin .
Valley North, 2:26.1 (Record. ,
Breaks old record of 2:27.5
set by Kathy Huebner, .
Mechanicsburg, 1975 )f· 2,
Sharon Hoke, Versai les;•
2:27.3; 3, Kellie Snyder,
North Jackson Jackson- •
Milton, 2:27:6.
One -mile telay-1, •
Chillicothe Huntington "
!Bonita
Cozy,
Faith
Strausbaugh, Terri Haines, :
Robin Haines ), 4:11.7 :
(Record. Breaks old record of • ·
4: 15.1 set by Frankfort Adena ··
in 1975); 2, Minster, 4:12.3; 3,
Frank!:ort Ade_na, 4:13.6.
.
DURHAM, N.C. (UP! ) - ~
Coach Leroy Walker of the
U.S. Olympic track team •
says "it's hard to justify :
spending a billion dollars" for •~
the Olympics in the face of •
growing world economic
problems.
" If we have the Olympics
beyond 1984 in their present
form, I'll be surprised," said
Walker, the former coach at
!'forth Carolina Centra! :

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PH. 992 -3426

operated by Roger L. Barnett, 20, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
was
moderate
There
damage .
Richard M. DeMoss, 311,
Pomeroy, was cited for excess speed for conditions .
following an accident at 12:40
p.m. Saturday on Rt. 588, five
and eight tenths miles east of
Rt. 35.
According to the , report,
DeMoss lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the highway striking a
parked vehicle owned by
Virgil L. Saunders, Rt. 3,
Galli polis . There was
damag e
to
moderate
DeMoss's car while the other
vehicle was demolished.
No one was cited following
a rear end mishap at 11: 15
a.m. Saturday in Rutland
where an auto driven by
Karen S. Hart, 19, Rt. I,
Rutland, struck the rear of a
car operated by Ralph E.
Searls, 18, .Rutland.

Second annual

Indians sweep
pair of games

fWlS.

-

•'

runs Sunday and in his last
two games has lour hits,
including a homer and two
doubles, iri seve n at bats.
Kaat contributed a two-run
single in the seven th and a
run-scoring double in the
eighth as the Phillies dealt
John Montefus co his fifth loss
aga inst .s ix victories and
restored their NI. Eastern
Division lead to 6 1-2 games.
Gary Thomasson had three
hits for the Giants.
The San Diego Padres
defeated th e Pittsburgh
Pirates 6-1, the Cincinnati
Reds routed the St. Louis
Cardinals 13-2, the Los
Angeles Dodgers topped the
New York Mets 10-3, the
Atlanta Braves bea t the
Montreal expos 14-11, and the
Houston Astros scored 2-0 and
5-1 victories over the Chicago
Cubs in other NL games.
Padres 6, Pirates I
Enzo Hernandez and Ted
Kubiak each drove In two
runs and Brent Strom pitched
a seven-hitter for his sixth
win for the Padres, who dealt
the Pirates' John Candelaria
his fourth setback. A "Jacket
Day" promotion helped the
Pirates set a home crowd
record of 51,726. Hernandez
and Dave Winfield had three
hits each for San Diego.

1Continued from Page 31
Mundell, Dayton Jefferson,
18-3Y.. (Record. Breaks old
record of IS-8 set by Linda
Boyan , Doylestown
Chippewa, 1975 ); 2, Linda
Boyan, Doy l e stown
Chippewa , 111-1 V.; 3, Kathy
Aman, Clyde, 17~'14.
High jump- 1, Kelli Aman,
Clyde, S-4; 2, Susan Harlan,
Lorain Brooltside, S-4; 3,
Deanna Madden, Zanesville
West Muskingum, 5-4.
881l-yard medley relay- !,
Aurora (Barb Lewis, Lori
McAfee, Kim Schuster, Beth
Brewer), 1:51.6 (Record.
Breaks old record of 1:54.8
set by Oberlin in 1975); 2,
Dayton Dunbar, 1:52.2; 3,
Twin sbur g Chamberlin,
1:52.6.
100-yard dash- !, Mary
Rita Copeland, Springfield
Catholic Central, :11.4; 2,
Fran c isc o Gi a nts . What's
Lisa Pinion, Newton Falls,
:11.5; 3, Linda Boyan,
more, Kaat is discovering
Doylestown Chippewa, :11.5.
that it's more fun to play in
One-mile run-1, Karen
the NL where there is no
Hixon,
Youngstown Liberty,
designated hitter rule.
5:
23.1
(Record.
Breaks old
In the NL, pitchers can hit
record of 5:25.5 set by Darcy
Tomlinson, Sherwood
Fairview, 1975 ); 2, Sally
Higgins, Avon , 5:28.2; 3, Kim
Weaver, Paulding, 5:29.2.
worked on the mound for
80-yard low hurdles- !,
Chesler while Jim Newell and
Evangeline Carr, Dayton
Nicky Leonard shared the
Jefferson, :10.5 (Record.
Breaks old record of : 10.7 set
catching chores. Scoring runs
by Robin Hartman, Cortland
for Ches ter were T. Crow, Dodgers 10, Mels 3
Lakeview, 1975); 2, Sheila
Lea Ann Gaul, R. Gaul, L.
Bill Russell and Steve Stubbs , Leavittsbur~
Koenig, and N. Leonard .
Garvey had three hits and LaBrae, :10.6; 3! Shan
L.
002 031 - 6 three RBI each w lead a 15-. Hladis, Olmsted Fa! s, : 10.8.
R
211 201 - 7 hit attack which enabled Don
44!l-yard dash- !, Karen
Sutton to win his fifth game Bradley, Dayton Jefferson 1
and handed Jerry Koosman :58.7 (Record. Breaks ola
his third loss. Russell ga ve record of :59.3 set by
the Dodgers a 6-2 lead in the Rabecca Hubbard, Belpre ,
19751; 2, Jill Clemens, Lima
third with a two-run double Shawnee,
:58.8; 3, Margaret
and doubled in the ninth Los Hanunond, New Lexington ,
Saturday baseball action
Angeles run in the sixth. :58.9.
sa w the Syracuse Indians
Dave Kingman, who hit four
One-mile relay- !, Van
sweep a pair fro m the homers in the first two games
Wert (Peg Rickner, Mary
Pomeroy Pirates in Little
of the thr~e-game series, Bickner, Diane Thompson,
l.eag ue to the tun es of 11 -5 went ().for-3.
Cindy Eickholt ) 4:13.1 ; 2,
and 16-3 at Pomeroy.
Oberlin Firelands, 4:14.2; 3,
Although winning pitcher Braves 14, Expos 8
Wellington, 4:14.4.
Cogar fanned three while
Rowland Office drove in
CLASS A
walking six and losing pitcher four runs, three with a
80-yard
low hurdles- ! ,
Todd File struck out 12 and homer, and stretched his
Cathy
Robinson,
Montpelier,
walked only three, the In· hitting streak to 12 games, in :10.7 (Record. Breaks
own
dians played errorless ball to Atlanta' s victory that swept a record of :11.0 set in 1975) · 2,
notch the victory. Hemsley three-game set with the Greta Slagle, Tipp c'ity
led the winning attack with Expos.
Bethel, :10.9; 3, Kim Pierce,
two doubles while Ash,
Marion Pleasant, :11.0.
llll().yard medley relay- !,
Patterson, Chapman, Brown ,
and Chancey each had one and Ash's doubles. Winning Jamestown Greeneview
(Lori Wallace, Cathy Maine,
double .
pitcher Cunningham fanned Gail Taylor, Jeane Orhood),
Randy Murray hammered eight Pirates while walking 1:55.0; 2, Strasburg-Franklin,
a homer and triple to pace only lour and giving up only 1:55.6.
Pomeroy, and Manley three hits.
220-yard dash- !, Susan
collected a double.
Manle y, Thomas, and Cox, Pitsburg Franklin
s
053 03--11 11 0 Riggs shared the mound Monroe, :25.3; 2, Chris
p
020 31)._ 5 5 2 chores for the Pirates and Sauber, Defiance Tinora,
C
d Ch
F'f
ogar an
apman. 1 e issued nine walks while :25.5; 3, Miriam Boes ,
Arcadia, :25.7.
and Murray.
fanning none . Todd Fife
coilecled a tripile wpace the
SYRACUSE EXPLODED losers at the plate.
·
for eight big runs in the p
2011)._333
second inning enroute to their S
365 x- 16 10 0
16-5 second game victory.
Man ley, Thoma , Riggs and
The team collected 10 hits , Murray . Cunnin gham and
led by Hemsley's ·chapman's, Chapman .

Reedsville boys eke out 7-6 win

( 14 innings)
Mlwk 000 00! 000 010 01- 4 16 2
Kn Cty 100 010 000 010 OG- l II 0
Colborn, Sa deckl ( 111. Ro .
dr iguez ( 11 ), Augustine ( 11)
and Parl er : Bird. Mingori (1 1),
Pallin ( 11 ) and Stinson. WP A ugust ine ( 1 t l . L P Paltin (I
6) . HR -Kansas City , Wohlfor d

Batting
(based on 100 at bats)
National League
G. Ab . R. H. Pel.
Robinsn , Ptl 35 116 18 43 .371
McBrid , SI.L 33 128 20 46 .359
Griffey , Cin 46 175 45 61 . 349
Rose, Cin
51 208 d5 71 .J.s t
Torre , NY
44 118 18 40 .339
Foster , Cin 46 181 28 61 .337
Milner. N Y J6 119 2 1 40 .336
Cey , LA
50 I8 J 19 61 .333
Morgan . Cin 45 151 J9 49 325
Crw rra , St .L 43 139 22 45 .324
American League
G. Ab . R. H.. Pet.
Bre tt , KC
48 199 29 71 .357
L ynn , Bos 38 142 19 49 .345
L eFlore , Dt 42 170 26 58 .34 1
Bslck . Mnn 37 139 21 47 .338
M c Ra e, KC 48 183 29 ~1 .J JJ
Staub . Del 47 166 20 53 .319
Carty , Ctev u 160 2d 51 .31 9
Munson . NY 47 201 28 64 .318
Carew , Mnn 47 185 27 58 .3 14
Yount , Mil 4.4 166 21 52 .3 13
Home Runs
Na!ianat League : Kingman ,
NY 21: Schmidt , Ph il 15;
Foster , Cin 11 ; Monday , Chi 10 ;
Cey , LA 9.
American League : Otis , K c
10; May , Ball , Bando, Oak and
For d, M inn 9; Yes trzemski,
Bas. Hendrick , Clev and Bur
roughs , Te x 8.
Runs Batted In
National League : Foster , Ci n
50; Kingman , NY 1.1 ; Perez ,
Cin 38 ; Morgan , Cin and
Schmidt , Phil ]7
American League : Bur roughs , Tex 39 ; Chambl iss , NY

Phils end slump,

Larry C. Justice , 27,
Middleport , was injured in a
coyision at 6:25 p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 7, one mile
south of the Athens-Meigs
County line.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Justice lost control of his car
which ran off the highway
striking a parked vehicle ·
owned by James C. Hacker,
44, Jackson.
Justice was inj ured, but not
immediately treated . There
was moderate damage to his
car while Hacker's vehicle
was demolished. The accident is sti ll under in vestigation.
Earl R. Murdock, 68,
Chesapeake, was cited lo
Meigs County Court for hitskip following an accident
Sunday on Rt. 7, three tenths
of a mile south of the Rt. 143
junction . The patrol said
Murdock's car struck a
vehicle making a left turn

Phone
'

POMEROY - The Socie ty
for the Promotion of the Bull
Frog under the chairm anship
of Rachel Downie and Mary
Lou Johnson have chosen
from each elementary school
in Meigs Coun ly and two
primary special educH tion
classes a Frog prince and
princess.

The evening'sta rs are Mara
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Gemini.
British fa shion expert
George " Beau " Brummel
was born June 7, 1778.

FROG WORLD - Chosen as Frog prince and the
schools they represent are 1-r, Kevin Mowery, Salisbury;
Mike Lance, Tuppers Plains; Brian Willis, Harrisonville:

David Powell, Racine ; Scott Foster, Riverview ; Gene
Mankin, Pomeroy; Davey Conlin, Rutland special
education; back, Mayor Herman London, Freddie the
Frog and Rachel Downie.

The boy and girl chosen
from each school was don e by
drawing of names. The boy
and girl chosen is the prince
and pri ncess of their

GOSPEL

MEETING
CHURCH OF
CHRIST

respective school.
The youngsters will tide in
the rrogmobilc in the parade
on Friday, ,Jun e 18, und on
Saturday evening u county
rrog prince unct princess will
be drawn from the names of
those who have been namc1i
prince and p1·tncess.

We Have A ·
Good Selection o~

SANDALS
For The
Whole Family

heritage nouse
Middleport , 0.

FRIGIDAIRE

On Success Road

Tested &amp; Proven in the Home

JUNE 7 THRU 16

Economic Rooms of Our Local High Schools

7: 30p.m .
Joseph Hoskinn,
Speaker

Save

•so to '100

On These Uke New Frigidaire
UJ

w

0~. f~fEIMN IMI.ll
FOR PRICES CALL COLLECT

LAREA
coot
252·3181

(114&gt;~

a:

One or Two Day Full Denture

t-

Service, Partials, Extractions,
X- Rays, Cleaning

:J

z

tREFRIGERA TORS
eFREEZERS
eRANGES
•WASHERS
tDRYERS
eDISHW ASHERS

0~. A. J. SlAfHU

w
0

A Once A Year Opportunity

AVE.

BAKER FURNITURE

COLUMBUS, GiiO 432o5
T~morrow/{YoiJ Tak e Cure OJ You, Tr.r lh l"od&lt;JV '

MOI\OAY THROUGH FRtD'IY
8:30 A.W

Middleport, Ohio

6:30P.M.

We have ways .
to make you talk.
PRINCES OF FROGDOM - Other youngsters
chosen as Frog prince and the school they represent are
1-r, Lee Cornell, Portlarid ; Deron Stafford, Syracuse;
Scott Frazier, Middleport ; Harold Roush, Letart Falls;

Eric Miller, Chester; back, Mayor Herman London,
Freddie the Frog and Rachel Downie. Abaent were Tim
Zeigler, Salem Center, and Hawthorne Murphy, Rutland.

Independents in action over holiday weekend
Holiday Independent
baseball
action
saw
Syracuse, MU!er Homes, and
.J. D. Drilling come out victors.
On Sunday, Miller defeated
Middleport 11-3 behind the
outstanding pitching of Rusty
Tucker who fanned 18 batters
while walking only one. A
home rWI by Bill Sheppard in
the eighth with two men on
put the game on ice.
Tucker held the home team
to only three hits. Miller
players getting singles were
Boss Edwards, Sheppard,
Melvin Lawrence, Tucker,
Steve Hupp, and Brady
Huffman. Steve Jenkins got a
double.
Two of Middleport's three
hits were doubles by S.
Clonch and Reed. Their
pitchers yielded live walks
and fanned only five batters.
M.H.
010 020 032--11 9 2
M·
001 000 002-3 3 1

hitters were Ray Proffitt and
Dave Snodgrass. The team is
coached by Terry Brewer.
Ronnie Clonch and ,lmhoden l~d Minersville with
two hits apiece while . R.
Hawley, E. Haggy, and Wyatt
each had one.
THIS PAST Sunday Portland (J. D. Drilling ) picked
up another win by downing
visiting Rock Springs 7-5.
"&gt;Pete Sayre pitched and hit his
way to the win as he struck
out seven and walked only
three while hitting a triple, a
double, two singles, and
knocking in two runs . Greg
Roush had two singles and
lour big RB!s. Dave Snodgrass had two singles while
Keith Fitch had a double and
single.
·
For Rock Springs Moon had
two doubles and Abbott a
double and two singles. Other
hitters for the losers were
Wood (two singles), and
McKinney, B. Marshall, C."
Marshall, and Blackston .
each with a single. Lostng
pitcher Young fanned seven
and walked six.
R.S.
010 000 202-5 11
p
100 131 lOx-7 10
Young and Abbott. Sayre
and Bachtel.

AT PORTLAND on May 23
Jim Diddle Drilling rolled
over Minersville 9-2. The
winning pttcher was Pete
Sayre with John Salser
behind the plate. Taking the
loili for Minersvllle was Jed
Will pitchlll8 and Bill Hawley
catching.
Greg Roush led the winners
at the plate with three hits,
ON MEMORIAL ay,
while Pete Sayre, {!ill Knapp, . Syracuse sco;ed two ~uns m
Red Wallbrown and Salser the Sixth mnmg to Win over
each had two ' hits. Other Tuppers Plains 7-5 in a game

I

that was slopped after the
H. Caldwell and Burke.
sixth due to rain . In the top of Hubbard , Cunningham (6,
that sixth, Tuppers Plains' WP) and Ash.
Jerry Burke socked a long
Umpires for next week's
three-run homer w knot the games are, Bill Maynard at
score at 5-5. Jeff Hubbard had Point Pleasant, Greg Bailey
a one-hitter going into that at Pomeroy, Spike Berk-·
final inning, but alter two himer at Middleport and John
singles and the homer, gave Dudding at Portland.
way to winning pitcher Bob
Cunningham.
' ·
.---In the bottom of the sixth,
clutch hits by Mick Ash and
Give your
Gary Clark scored two runs
before rain forced umpire
Roy Arms to call the game.
Syracuse is now 4-0 and
Cunningham has three of
those victories .
a solid
The1·e were fine d ~fensive
foundation
plays in the game by Gary
Mobile home1 ere IPKIII
, Wolle and Tom Karr of
hom" encl nMd IPKIII
lnturane1 prottctlon. SO, 1
Tuppers Plains, and by, Jim
N1tlonwlcle M•ltt Hom.
Hubbard, Jim Hemsley , and
owner's pallcy tliMI
Rudy Stewart of Syracuse . ·
yOY compttte OOYeftte tor
Jim Hubbard led the
yovr IPidll lfob*nl-tl.ke
Mltd end lire dlfftltl. AM
winners with three hits in
W. t lve MrviGI r..t, whtn
four trips, while brother Jeff
"f'O~ Mtd It mot!. Aak 1
was two for three. Burke had
NIIIOfiWidl ...,., lbOut I
the homer lor Tuppers Plains
tolid foundi:Uon for '"'
while Jim Caldwell had a
double .
TP
100 103--5 5 3
s
210 022-7 12 3
804 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Today Is Monaay, Junr 7,
Ph. 992-2318
the !59th day of 1976 with 207
to follow.
The moon ~ between its
first quarter and lull phase.
u~~~'!c!
The mornin g stars are
Mercury,
Venus
and
Jupiter.

mobile

home

--.
..

P. J. PAULEY

~

.NlTIONWIDE

We have the clcg am European-style CraJkphon~ .
for cm1lincnlal chit chat. And the nostal gic Candlestick Phone, one of the few practical in vention s of
the Roaring 20's.
We al so hal'c the Styldin c' Ph one. de vcrly disgui se d as a pi ece nf modern sculpture. AnJ the comp:~ct St;~rlitc "' Phnn~. 11ith a li &gt;htcd d ial to eliminate

nocturnal groping.

1

Finall y, th ere's our hand some . wood-grain Chestphone. the on ly phone in the world that comes with
a place to keep it.
If you'd lik e to have one of th ese special phones,
we have ways to make it easy. Ju st call our business
office.

liji#t

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , June 7, 1976

Chisox blanks Tribe
By BIU.. MADDEN
been helpin~ me to slow my
UPI SpoMs Wrller
motion and ge t a more.
That old Paul Richards effective changeup. I now
magic is working new have a different grip and it's
miracles with the much- basically a new pitch."
maligned Chicago White Sox
Jorge Orta 's fourth inning
pitchers.
triple scored Lamar Johnson
Richards, once Ha11 of with the only run Brett and
Farner Carl Hubbe11 's Jefferson needed in the nightfavorite batterymate who cap, while in the opener, the
later contributed largely to White Sox eked out a 3-2
the success of the White Sox ' vlcwry when Bucky Dent
Virgil Trucks and Billy broke an ().for-32 slump with a
Pierce in the !9:i0s and the fourth inning triple and then
Baltimore "Baby Birds" of scored what proved to be the
Steve Barber, Jack Fisher, winning run on Jim Essian 's
Jerry Walker and Mill single. .
Said Richards l who serves
Pappas of the 1960s, is
making new winners of as his own pitching coach )
cas toffs and unproven after the latest success bv his ·
youngsters like Jesse Jeffer- und e r - rated pupils :
son, Pete Vuckovich and Ken "Vuckovich, Brett and
Brett.
Jefferson probably wouldn't
said have gotten their chance unlil
As · Vuckovich
recently : "! figure if Mr . the doubleheaders began
Richards caught behind Babe moun ting · up . But when
Ruth, then I ought to listen w Wilbur Wood go hurt, they got
him."
· their opportunity and they're
. Sunday,. V~ckovich pitched all taking advantage of it."
s1x plus mmngs m the ftrst
Elsewhere in the American
game of a doubleheader I.eague, New York defeated
sweep by the White Sox over Oakland S-2 after dropping
the Cleveland lnd1ans to gam the first game to the A's 3-2·
his fourth win in rive Minnesota swept two fro~
decisions. In th e second Baltimore, 3-2 and ll-6;
game, Brett and Jefferson Boston put away California 4combined on a three-hitter as 1; Milwaukee .edged Kansas
the Chisox blanked the Tribe City 4·3 and Texas mauled
H.
Detroit 16-6.
The double victory put the
surprising White Sox four Yankees 2-5, Athletics 3-2
games over .500 (25-21) in the
Oscar Gamble's three-run
. American League West and homer capped a four-run
lent more credent'e wthe fa ct ninth inning rally in the
that the 67-year old Richa rds, nightcap which earned the
in his second term as Chicago Yankees a split in the
manager, ha sn't lost hi s doubleheader after they had
touch.
dropped three straight to the
" The big difference in A's. Dave Pagan went the
coming here from the distance and spaced six hits
Yankees is that I'm getting a for his first victory of the
chance," said Brett who is year . Phil Garner 's two-run
now 3-0 with a 1.61 earned run second inning single helped
average after being acquired the A's to the first game
by Richards from New York victory as Vida Blue went 7 1three weeks ago. "Paul has 3 innings for his sixth win.

National L eague Standings
By Un ited Pr ess International
East
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
New York
Ch ic ago
Sl . Loui s
Mon tr eal

W L. Pet. GB
33 14 .702 -

2a n .s6o 6' •

26 28 481 10 1 •
22 29 . 431 13
12 '19 .4'1 1 13
17 76

.378

15

We st

Cinc innati

LOS Ang e le s
San D iego

Houston
Allanta
San Franc

W. L. PeL

GB

J1 19 .627
31 22 .585

2

26 23 .53 I
5
'll 28 .491 · 7

20 JO .400 11 1 2
21 JJ .389 12 1 2

. Saturday's Results

San ·Francisco 4 Philadelphia

l

Houston 4 Chicag o 3.
Atlant a a Montreal 0.
San Diego 11 Pill s.bu rgh 9. IS
innings .
Cinci nnat i 5 St . Lou i s 1.
N ew York 3 Los Angeles I.
Sunday's Results
A tl anta hi Montreal a
Sa n Diego 6 P-l ll sburgh 1
Ci cncinnati IJ St . Louis 2
Philadelphia 9 San Fran cisco

Tuesday 's Games
Detroit at Kansa s Ci ty , night
Chicttgo at M ilwaukee, nig ht
Minnesota al Clevela nd , night
Texas at Balt imore , nigh!
Ca li fornia at New York. , nigh t
Oakland at Bosron , night
Sunday's Baseball Results
By Un ited Press International
Natlana l League
San Di ega
030 OOJ 000-- 6 10 0
Pittsburgh
000 100 000-- I 7 1
Strom
16-3)
and
Da vis !
Candelaria , 1ekulve (6 ) , Dem .
ery
(BI
and
Dyer .
LP .
Candelaria (d 4 ) .
Cincinnati
016 203 IOG-13 17 0
St. lau is
000 100 001 - 2 7 1
Zachry . M c Enaney {8 ), East
wick {9t and Plummer ; Fat
cone . Rasmussen (JI , Fr isell a
( 6 ), Wa lla ce (71 , Gr eif (B ) and
Simmons. WP -Zac hr y (5 -l l . LP
Fa lcone D -51 . HR S-Ci ncinna ti ,
Plumm er [3) , Perez (61.

( 1st Gaf11e)

Chicago
ooo·ooo 000- o 2 o
Haustan
110 000 OOx- 2 7 o
Bonham , Sch ult z (7), Garman
(8 1 and Sw i!.her ; An dujar (2 2)
and Johnson . LP -Bonham (4·31.

Los Angeles 10 New York J
Houston 7 Ch icago o, 1st
Houston 5 Ch icago 1, 2nd
(2nd Game)
Todav 's Games
Chica9a
000 000 100- 1 7 1
(All T i mes E DT l
Hou stan
400 000 lOx- s 10 o
Cincinnati ( Billingham 5-J l at
Frailing , P. Reusc hel 15 ),
Pit tsburgh (K ison 4 41, 8:JO
Sutter (7) and Mlt terwald ;
p .m .
St. Louis (Cu rt is (J -5) at Rondon , Pen tz (1) and Jutze.
Houston (Nie kro ( 3 5), 8:35 W P -Rondon (2-1). L P -Frailing
( 1.11. HR -Chicago. Summers
p m.
Ill.
Philadelph ia (Reed 4l l a t
Los Ang eles (RhOden 4-0) , 10 : 30 Phila
000 000 S40- 9 11 0
p.m .
Fran
001 ooo 200- l ~ 2
New York (Swan 2-51 at · San San
Ka at 14 -2) and Boone ; Mon Diego (Fos ter 0-2). 10 p .m .
tefu sco, Lav elle (7) , Heave rlo
I on ly games sc hedul ed)
18 1, Caldwell (B ) and Hill . LP Tuesday's Games
Moi1 tefusco (6 -5) . HR -Sa n Fran
A tl anta at Chicago
cisco , Hill (2) .
Ci nci nna ti
at
Pittsburgh .
night
Atlanta
llO 104 140- t4 12 o
St. Louis at Houston, night
Mantreal
112 110 200-- 1 13 2
Philadelphia -a t Los Angeles,
Moret , Morton (3 ). Devine (7)
nigh'!
New Yo rk at" San Di ego , night and Williams ; wart hen, Dun Montrea l at San Francisco , ning (1 ), Scherma n (7) , Murray
191 and Foore . WP Devine (1 .1).
nigh t
LP -Ounning (0 1). HRS -AIIan ta ,
Paciorek. ( I ) , OHice (4 1.
American L ea gue Standings
By United F'ress International
New York 002 000 001 - . "3 B 0
East
Los Angel ll~ 201 lOx- 10 IS I
w. L. Pet. GB
Koosman , Baldwin (31 , Sa nd .
New York
28 19 .560
er s P f, ·Apod aca (81 and
Baltimore
24 24 .500 41 1 Hod ges ;
Suflon
( 5 61
and
Bos ton
22 24 .478 S' 1 YeMe r . LP . Koosman (6 31. HR .
Cleveland
22 25 .468 6
N ew York , M ilner (71 .
Detroit
21 26 .447 7
M ilwauk('e
19 26 .409 81 1
American League
:· West
(1st Game)
W. L. ·Pet. GB Cleveland
000 000 200- 2 12 1
Kansas Ci ty
30 IB .625
Chicago
020 1oo OOx- 3 a o
Te)(ftS
27 20 .574 2' ~
Brown . Bibby (4) and Ashby ,
Chicl!g o
25 21 .543 4
Fosse (8 ) ; Vuckovich . Hamilton
M innesota
24 24 .500
6
(7 ). Ba rrios (9) and Esslan .
Oa kland
14 28 .d62 8
WP ·Vuck.ovich ( 4 11 LP .Brown
Californ ia
21 32 .407 11
15 l l.
Saturday ' s Results
Boston 4 Ca l iforn ia 3
I 2nd Gamel
Ba lt imore 5 Minnesota 1
Clevelilnd
ooo 000 ooo- 0 J 1
Oakland 7 N ew York 6
Chicago
000 120 11 x- S 9 1
Cleveland 5 Chicago 3, 10 Hood , Buskey (5) , Kern 18l and
inning s
Fosse ; Breit , Jim erson (8 ) and
Kansa s City 5 Milwaukee 4, Downing . WP Brett CJ -Ol . L PI st.
Hoad (1 -4). HR -Ch icago, Brlld ·
Ka nsas CHy 7 Milwaukee 2, ford 12 1
2nd.
. ( I st Game)
· Detroit 3 Texl!s 2, 11 innings .
Oakland
030 ooo ooo- l so
Sunday's Results
New York
100 000 OIG- 1 8 o
Boston 4 Californl(l 1
Blue , Fingers (81 and Han ey ;
Milwaukee 4 Ka nsas City 3, Figueroa , Lyl e (8 ) and Munson .
14 inning s
WP Blue (6 -5). LP .Figu eroa (6 . ·
Minnesota 3 Baltimore 2, l SI
41.
Minnesota 11 Baltimore 6, 2nd
Oaktand 3 New Yortc. 2, 1st
(2nd Gamel
1
New York 5 Oakland 2, 2nd
Oaklilnd
011 000 000- 2 6 0
Chicago J Cleveland 2, lsi
New Yark
000 000 01 4- S 8 0 ,
Chicag o 5 Cleveland 0, 2nd
Bahnsen. Lindblad (8). Fin ·
Texas 16 Detroit 6.
ger s (9 ) and Haney ; Pagan (1 .
Today ' s Games
OJ and Munson . LP ·Lindblad (2I All Times EDT J
1) . HR N ew York , Gambl e (5 l.
Detroit (Ruh le 4-11 at Ka nsas
City ( Busby J. lJ . 8 :30p .m .
· , ·
· &lt;1st G1me1
Minnesota !Goltz 5·1 ) at Mmnesota
002 ooo 001 - 3 a 1
Cleveland (Waits 0-0), 7 :30p.m . Baltimore
000 001 010-- 2 s 1 ·
Texas ( Umbarger 5-41 ' at
Singer ( 5: 1) and Wynegar
B!JII imor e (Gr imsley 1-31 , 8: 30 Palmer (6-6) and Dunciln HW
p .m .
Minnesota , Ford (91.
(only ~ames scl'1eduled)

N. ~oWJ~u

.D.

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to '12; 2 to 5 CCLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.)-EAST COURT
ST., POME OY.

Property damage

Red Sox 4, Angels I
Cecil Cooper and C~rl
Vastrzemski knocked in two
runs apiece as the Red Sox
knoc ked out Nolan Ryan
after 3 1-3 innings.
Yastrzemski 's RBI single in
the seven., was his 4,000th
total base. Dick Pole, 2-3,
went ~even innings for the
win.
Twins 3-11, Orioles Z1
Larry Hisle hit a three-run
homer to spark a 17-hit
Twins' attack in the nightcap,
while Dan Ford's solo homer
with one OU\ in the ninth won
the opener. Ford, who now
has 33 RB I, also had a a pair
of two-run singles in the
second game. Bill Singer, in
his first start since coming
over from Texas in the Bert
Blyleven trade, won the
opene r, outdueli ng Jim
Palmer.
Brewers 4, Royals 3
Sixto Lezcano 's two-out
t4\h Inning single brought
home Don Money w end the
near-four hour see-saw game.
Money opened th e 14th by
walking on four straight
pitches from loser Marly
Pattin. The Brewers took a 32lead in the 11th only to blow
it when Kansas City tied the
score in the bottom of the
inning on a triple by John
Mayberry and a single by Hal
McRae.
Rangers 16, Tigers 6
Bill Fahey's two-run single
and Lenny Randle's two-run
double highlighted a sevenrun filth inning off three
Detroit pitchers to back the
eight-hit pitching of Nelson
Briles 15-2). The Rangers
batted around in the fifth as
well as seventh but the only
two home runs of the game
came by Tigers, Ben Oglivie
151and Jason Thompson 13 ).

(2nd Game
Minnesata
310 013 021
1
Baltimore
100 001 Jl G- 6 11
Hughes, Ca mpbell (7) and
Raof; Cue llar . Garland (I J. G.
Jac kson (7l. Miller (Bl an
Hen dri ck s. WP -Hughes (2 .
LP.Cue llar
(26 1.
t!IR S
neso ta , Histe (5) ,· Balli
r e,
May 19 1. Dec;nees (J)
Calilarnia
ooo o 10- 1 9 o
Baston
10~ o lO x- 4 7 0
Ryan , Ha ssler 4 ), Drago f7l.
Scoll
(Bl
a d
Herrm ann ,
Garr ett (8 ) ; P6 e, Cleveland (8 )
and Fisk . W Pole (2 -3). L P
Ryan (d -7) .

heavy in wrecks

FlSHING DERBY - !{enGIIkey and E. A. !Ted) Dean, l-r, go over plans for thellshing
derby that will beheld on Saturday, ~ uly 19, during Regatta weekend atlO a.m. Dean is with
the Dievision of Wildlife, education officer of District four. Registra tion will be held at the
llpiscopal Church. The derby will be in two age groups, 5 through II and 12 through 15.
Prizes of fish ing equipment will be awarded.

Fibak and

Dibbs clash drop Giants, 9-3
By
DOWN
as well as pitch - and Kaat is
UPI
Sports
Writer
first time The Philadelphia
an excellent hitter. He went 3Phillies for-4 and knocked in three
~' RED

PARIS I UP!) - Wojtek
Fibak, riding an incredible
string of upsets in recent
months , today stood between
American Eddie Dibbs and a
quarter-final berth as the
seeds at the $210,000 French
Open Tennis Championships
clashed lor the first time.
Dibbs, the No. 5 seed, was
scheduled to meet the ninth
seeded Fibak in the first of
four matches over the next
two days as lour American
seedecj players try to clinch
places in the final eight - an
unprecedented show of
strength by U.S. players at
the world 's top clay court
wurnament.
The play of Fibak has put
Poland on the tennis map. In
a span of two months
recently, he beat Guillermo
Vilas w win the Swedish
Open, Bjorn Borg in the
Monaco Open and Manuel
Oranles to carry off the
British hard-court title in
Bournemouth . Also, he
amed with West German
Karl MeiJer in Kansas City to
win the WCT doubles title.

Last week the hos t Reedsville No . 1 team eked out a Hi
victory over Chester No. 2.
Both teams played 18
players. Reedsville led all the
way until the top of the sixth
when Chester scored to tie it
up. But the victors came b•u&lt;
in their la st at bats with the
winning run.
Pitchers Jerry Larkin s,
Ricky Putman. and Larry
Harris shared the mound
chores while Gene Jones and
Mark Holter worked behind
the plate for the winners. No
batting slats were avilable,
but D. Durst, B. Collins, J .
Wells , J. Connally, M. Holter,
and J. Larkins all scored

(1) ,

Oe,roit
DOD 200 03 1- 6 9 1
Texas
001 371 40)(- 16 16 1
Co leman. Gr il li ( 5 ). Cr aw ford
(5 J. Bare (7) and Fr eehan ;
Briles (5-2) and Fahey . L P
Coleman (2 ·51. H Rs -Detroil .
Oglievie (5 ), J . Thompson l3 l.

Major Leilgue Leaders
By United Press International

38; ~unson , NY 37 ; Otis , KC
35 ; Horton , Del , Ford , Mlnn ,
Rud i. Oak and Grieve . Tel( ll.
Stolen Bases
National League : . Cedeno ,
Hou 2~ ; . Morgan, Cin 21 ;
~!i ff ey , Cin 16 ; LoR~~ · LA 13 ;

may have the "steal of the
year" in pitcher Jim Kaat.
The Phillies' National
League rivals all recognized
the potential of Philadelphia
power and defense before the
start of the season but agreed
that their pitching was
suspect.
Now Philadelphia pitching
is lookin g st ronger a nd
stronger almost every day and one reason is the 37-yearold Kaat, winner of 2.19 major
leag ue games who th ey
acquired from the Chicago
White Sox during the winter
for infielder Alan Bannister
and pitchers Dick Ruthven
and Roy Thomas.
Kaa t got off to a faltering
start in the Na tional League
but won his second straight
ga me and raised his record w
4-2 Sunday when he went the
distance to give the Phillies a
9-3 triumph over the San

Charlie Ritchie, John
Ridenour , and T. Sayre
Buckner , LA, Mangual, Mil and
Brock , SI.L 12
Am ('rican Leagu e: . Nort h,
Oa k 28 ; Pa tek , KC 27 ; Baylor .
Oak 15 : Campaneris, Oak 21.
Ca r ew. Min n 19.
Pitching
Mo ~ t Victories
National League : Jones , SO
10 1: Lon borg , Ph i l B-1; Houg h,
LA 7.0 ; MaTlack. , NY 6 1;
Chr istenson , Phi l and Rooker ,
Pill 6-2: Fryman , Mil , Koos
man . NY and Sl ro m, SO 6·3;
Reuss , P itt 6..4 ; Ruthven , All ,
Richard , Hou and Mont ef usco,
SF 6·S;.
American League : . Slatan ,
Mill -2; Tiant , Bos 7-l . Tanana ,
Cal 7 4; Bird . KC 6-L Fitl mor
r is , KC, Trave r s, Mil and
Camp bel L Minn 6 -2; Figueroa ,
NY 6·4; Hunter . NY , Torr ez
and Blue, Oak 6-5; Palmer ,
Ball~ · ~ ­

Earned Ru'n Averag e
( basE!d on 4S innings pitched)
National League: Zachry , Cin
1.3 2; Forsch , Hou 2.00; Jones,
SO 2.46; Ruthven , All 2.54;
Ra u, LA 2.61.
Am erican League : . Carroll .
Chi and Travers, Mi l 1. 9li ;
Kern , Cl ev 2. 11 ; Br own . Clev
2.15 ; Wood , Chi 2.25.
, . • • • • • • • • • •·• • • • • • • • • • • . .
Slrik eo uh
National Leagu e: Seave r . NY
78 ; Montelusco, SF 63 ; Ri
chard , Hou 62 ,· Messersm ith ,
All 57 ; Lolich . NY 56.
American League : . Tanana ,
Ca l
103 ;
"van. Ca l 94 ;
Bl ylevf' n. Tcx ~4 : Hunter

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Play it eare ancii!W'e
It may be time to
have your preeent ·
policy updated.

l•t's Talk. Soon

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102

W. 'Main

Pomeroy

iI

For Your Winter

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

J'ur ·

St~ra6S
';! ·

1
1
1

I

All
Garments
Insured

Fur garments cleaned, furrier method. Cold
storage for furs, modest charges .

WOULD BE PRINCESSES - Seven more young
ladies chosen and the schools represented are, 1-r, Pollie
Chadwell, Middleport; April McGrath, RuUand; Mandy

BICENTENNIAL

~
June 7 thru June 12

riSh
Sandwich
French Fries &amp;

!I

THIS WEEK
H;~.mburger, French Fries &amp; Sm•ll
Drank . .. .. .......
................
.
.
•

~

1
1
1

I

POMEROY

·----------------------·
I

........... . 99c

McCI.ure'$
DAIRY ISLE
Middleport,
Ohio .

Riverview; Missy l,ongstreth, Sa lem Center ; Theresa
Barber, Portland; Cathy Jones, Harrisonvllle; Mary
Cunninl!hr:un. Salisburv: bac~k . Svrnrnsf' M swnr HPrmAn
London, Freddie the Frot;, and RAchel Downie .

Tadpoles, or whatever, they'll ride
in the Frogmobile on day of parade

•

Small Drink

HOPEFUL ROYALTY' - Chosen as print"ess and the
schools they represent are 1-r , Karen Grover, Pomeroy ,
special education; Kelly Clark, Syracuse ; Jody Nestor ,

Hill, Racille ; Trudy Jones . Letart: Dedra Sanders.
Tuppers Plains; Jennifer Grover, Chester; Lisa Rider
.
.
'
Pomeroy; back , Mayor Herman London, Freddie the
Frog, and Rachel Downie .

!1

100-yard dash- !, Susan
Cox, Pitsburg Franklin
Monroe, : lL!i 2, Connie
Ha1r, Cedarvwe, :11.1; 3,
Chris Sauber, Defiance
Tin ora, : 11.1.
.On e-mile run- !, Becky
Colopy, Chillicothe Zane
Trace, 5:28.5 (Record.
Breaks own record of 5:43.0
set in 1975); 2, Theresa
. Walton, Lancaster Fisher
Catholic, 5:32.7; 3, Marilyn
Hull, Dola Hardin-Northern,
5:36.3.
88().yard relay- !, Pitsburg
Franklin Monroe (Rena
Thompson, Kim Thompson,
Sue Sease, Susan Cox),
I :46.8; 2, Frankfort Adena,
1:48.4; 3, Minster, 1:49.0.
Discus- !, Deb FiSher, 1164 (Record. Breaks old record
of 114-4 set by Nancy Francis,
Frankfort Aderii!J 1975); 2,
Sue Cramer, Blunton, 112-10;
3, Kim Winner, Minster, lll5. .
Highjump- 1, Kim Winner,
Minster, 5-5 (Record. Breaks
own record of S-4 set in 1975);
2, Iris Wooster, Baltimore
Uberty Union, S-4; 3, Shirley
Barlage, Russia, S-3.
441l-yard dash-!, Jackie
Thompson, Cleveland
HeightsLutheranEast, :58.7;
2, Cathy Dull, Summit
Station Licking Heights,
:60.1 ; 3, Karen Cleveland,
Old Fort, :60.4.
440-yard relay-!, Minster
(Tina Slonkonsky, Lisa
Roetgerman, Jess1e Klowkosky, Cindy Brown), :51.5; ,
2, Bucyrus Wynford, :5i.8; 3,
Haviland Wayne Trace,
:51.8; 4.
880-yard run-1, Robyn
Andrews, Lewisburg Twin .
Valley North, 2:26.1 (Record. ,
Breaks old record of 2:27.5
set by Kathy Huebner, .
Mechanicsburg, 1975 )f· 2,
Sharon Hoke, Versai les;•
2:27.3; 3, Kellie Snyder,
North Jackson Jackson- •
Milton, 2:27:6.
One -mile telay-1, •
Chillicothe Huntington "
!Bonita
Cozy,
Faith
Strausbaugh, Terri Haines, :
Robin Haines ), 4:11.7 :
(Record. Breaks old record of • ·
4: 15.1 set by Frankfort Adena ··
in 1975); 2, Minster, 4:12.3; 3,
Frank!:ort Ade_na, 4:13.6.
.
DURHAM, N.C. (UP! ) - ~
Coach Leroy Walker of the
U.S. Olympic track team •
says "it's hard to justify :
spending a billion dollars" for •~
the Olympics in the face of •
growing world economic
problems.
" If we have the Olympics
beyond 1984 in their present
form, I'll be surprised," said
Walker, the former coach at
!'forth Carolina Centra! :

I
I
I

I ROBINSON'S CLEANERS I
I
I
PH. 992 -3426

operated by Roger L. Barnett, 20, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
was
moderate
There
damage .
Richard M. DeMoss, 311,
Pomeroy, was cited for excess speed for conditions .
following an accident at 12:40
p.m. Saturday on Rt. 588, five
and eight tenths miles east of
Rt. 35.
According to the , report,
DeMoss lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the highway striking a
parked vehicle owned by
Virgil L. Saunders, Rt. 3,
Galli polis . There was
damag e
to
moderate
DeMoss's car while the other
vehicle was demolished.
No one was cited following
a rear end mishap at 11: 15
a.m. Saturday in Rutland
where an auto driven by
Karen S. Hart, 19, Rt. I,
Rutland, struck the rear of a
car operated by Ralph E.
Searls, 18, .Rutland.

Second annual

Indians sweep
pair of games

fWlS.

-

•'

runs Sunday and in his last
two games has lour hits,
including a homer and two
doubles, iri seve n at bats.
Kaat contributed a two-run
single in the seven th and a
run-scoring double in the
eighth as the Phillies dealt
John Montefus co his fifth loss
aga inst .s ix victories and
restored their NI. Eastern
Division lead to 6 1-2 games.
Gary Thomasson had three
hits for the Giants.
The San Diego Padres
defeated th e Pittsburgh
Pirates 6-1, the Cincinnati
Reds routed the St. Louis
Cardinals 13-2, the Los
Angeles Dodgers topped the
New York Mets 10-3, the
Atlanta Braves bea t the
Montreal expos 14-11, and the
Houston Astros scored 2-0 and
5-1 victories over the Chicago
Cubs in other NL games.
Padres 6, Pirates I
Enzo Hernandez and Ted
Kubiak each drove In two
runs and Brent Strom pitched
a seven-hitter for his sixth
win for the Padres, who dealt
the Pirates' John Candelaria
his fourth setback. A "Jacket
Day" promotion helped the
Pirates set a home crowd
record of 51,726. Hernandez
and Dave Winfield had three
hits each for San Diego.

1Continued from Page 31
Mundell, Dayton Jefferson,
18-3Y.. (Record. Breaks old
record of IS-8 set by Linda
Boyan , Doylestown
Chippewa, 1975 ); 2, Linda
Boyan, Doy l e stown
Chippewa , 111-1 V.; 3, Kathy
Aman, Clyde, 17~'14.
High jump- 1, Kelli Aman,
Clyde, S-4; 2, Susan Harlan,
Lorain Brooltside, S-4; 3,
Deanna Madden, Zanesville
West Muskingum, 5-4.
881l-yard medley relay- !,
Aurora (Barb Lewis, Lori
McAfee, Kim Schuster, Beth
Brewer), 1:51.6 (Record.
Breaks old record of 1:54.8
set by Oberlin in 1975); 2,
Dayton Dunbar, 1:52.2; 3,
Twin sbur g Chamberlin,
1:52.6.
100-yard dash- !, Mary
Rita Copeland, Springfield
Catholic Central, :11.4; 2,
Fran c isc o Gi a nts . What's
Lisa Pinion, Newton Falls,
:11.5; 3, Linda Boyan,
more, Kaat is discovering
Doylestown Chippewa, :11.5.
that it's more fun to play in
One-mile run-1, Karen
the NL where there is no
Hixon,
Youngstown Liberty,
designated hitter rule.
5:
23.1
(Record.
Breaks old
In the NL, pitchers can hit
record of 5:25.5 set by Darcy
Tomlinson, Sherwood
Fairview, 1975 ); 2, Sally
Higgins, Avon , 5:28.2; 3, Kim
Weaver, Paulding, 5:29.2.
worked on the mound for
80-yard low hurdles- !,
Chesler while Jim Newell and
Evangeline Carr, Dayton
Nicky Leonard shared the
Jefferson, :10.5 (Record.
Breaks old record of : 10.7 set
catching chores. Scoring runs
by Robin Hartman, Cortland
for Ches ter were T. Crow, Dodgers 10, Mels 3
Lakeview, 1975); 2, Sheila
Lea Ann Gaul, R. Gaul, L.
Bill Russell and Steve Stubbs , Leavittsbur~
Koenig, and N. Leonard .
Garvey had three hits and LaBrae, :10.6; 3! Shan
L.
002 031 - 6 three RBI each w lead a 15-. Hladis, Olmsted Fa! s, : 10.8.
R
211 201 - 7 hit attack which enabled Don
44!l-yard dash- !, Karen
Sutton to win his fifth game Bradley, Dayton Jefferson 1
and handed Jerry Koosman :58.7 (Record. Breaks ola
his third loss. Russell ga ve record of :59.3 set by
the Dodgers a 6-2 lead in the Rabecca Hubbard, Belpre ,
19751; 2, Jill Clemens, Lima
third with a two-run double Shawnee,
:58.8; 3, Margaret
and doubled in the ninth Los Hanunond, New Lexington ,
Saturday baseball action
Angeles run in the sixth. :58.9.
sa w the Syracuse Indians
Dave Kingman, who hit four
One-mile relay- !, Van
sweep a pair fro m the homers in the first two games
Wert (Peg Rickner, Mary
Pomeroy Pirates in Little
of the thr~e-game series, Bickner, Diane Thompson,
l.eag ue to the tun es of 11 -5 went ().for-3.
Cindy Eickholt ) 4:13.1 ; 2,
and 16-3 at Pomeroy.
Oberlin Firelands, 4:14.2; 3,
Although winning pitcher Braves 14, Expos 8
Wellington, 4:14.4.
Cogar fanned three while
Rowland Office drove in
CLASS A
walking six and losing pitcher four runs, three with a
80-yard
low hurdles- ! ,
Todd File struck out 12 and homer, and stretched his
Cathy
Robinson,
Montpelier,
walked only three, the In· hitting streak to 12 games, in :10.7 (Record. Breaks
own
dians played errorless ball to Atlanta' s victory that swept a record of :11.0 set in 1975) · 2,
notch the victory. Hemsley three-game set with the Greta Slagle, Tipp c'ity
led the winning attack with Expos.
Bethel, :10.9; 3, Kim Pierce,
two doubles while Ash,
Marion Pleasant, :11.0.
llll().yard medley relay- !,
Patterson, Chapman, Brown ,
and Chancey each had one and Ash's doubles. Winning Jamestown Greeneview
(Lori Wallace, Cathy Maine,
double .
pitcher Cunningham fanned Gail Taylor, Jeane Orhood),
Randy Murray hammered eight Pirates while walking 1:55.0; 2, Strasburg-Franklin,
a homer and triple to pace only lour and giving up only 1:55.6.
Pomeroy, and Manley three hits.
220-yard dash- !, Susan
collected a double.
Manle y, Thomas, and Cox, Pitsburg Franklin
s
053 03--11 11 0 Riggs shared the mound Monroe, :25.3; 2, Chris
p
020 31)._ 5 5 2 chores for the Pirates and Sauber, Defiance Tinora,
C
d Ch
F'f
ogar an
apman. 1 e issued nine walks while :25.5; 3, Miriam Boes ,
Arcadia, :25.7.
and Murray.
fanning none . Todd Fife
coilecled a tripile wpace the
SYRACUSE EXPLODED losers at the plate.
·
for eight big runs in the p
2011)._333
second inning enroute to their S
365 x- 16 10 0
16-5 second game victory.
Man ley, Thoma , Riggs and
The team collected 10 hits , Murray . Cunnin gham and
led by Hemsley's ·chapman's, Chapman .

Reedsville boys eke out 7-6 win

( 14 innings)
Mlwk 000 00! 000 010 01- 4 16 2
Kn Cty 100 010 000 010 OG- l II 0
Colborn, Sa deckl ( 111. Ro .
dr iguez ( 11 ), Augustine ( 11)
and Parl er : Bird. Mingori (1 1),
Pallin ( 11 ) and Stinson. WP A ugust ine ( 1 t l . L P Paltin (I
6) . HR -Kansas City , Wohlfor d

Batting
(based on 100 at bats)
National League
G. Ab . R. H. Pel.
Robinsn , Ptl 35 116 18 43 .371
McBrid , SI.L 33 128 20 46 .359
Griffey , Cin 46 175 45 61 . 349
Rose, Cin
51 208 d5 71 .J.s t
Torre , NY
44 118 18 40 .339
Foster , Cin 46 181 28 61 .337
Milner. N Y J6 119 2 1 40 .336
Cey , LA
50 I8 J 19 61 .333
Morgan . Cin 45 151 J9 49 325
Crw rra , St .L 43 139 22 45 .324
American League
G. Ab . R. H.. Pet.
Bre tt , KC
48 199 29 71 .357
L ynn , Bos 38 142 19 49 .345
L eFlore , Dt 42 170 26 58 .34 1
Bslck . Mnn 37 139 21 47 .338
M c Ra e, KC 48 183 29 ~1 .J JJ
Staub . Del 47 166 20 53 .319
Carty , Ctev u 160 2d 51 .31 9
Munson . NY 47 201 28 64 .318
Carew , Mnn 47 185 27 58 .3 14
Yount , Mil 4.4 166 21 52 .3 13
Home Runs
Na!ianat League : Kingman ,
NY 21: Schmidt , Ph il 15;
Foster , Cin 11 ; Monday , Chi 10 ;
Cey , LA 9.
American League : Otis , K c
10; May , Ball , Bando, Oak and
For d, M inn 9; Yes trzemski,
Bas. Hendrick , Clev and Bur
roughs , Te x 8.
Runs Batted In
National League : Foster , Ci n
50; Kingman , NY 1.1 ; Perez ,
Cin 38 ; Morgan , Cin and
Schmidt , Phil ]7
American League : Bur roughs , Tex 39 ; Chambl iss , NY

Phils end slump,

Larry C. Justice , 27,
Middleport , was injured in a
coyision at 6:25 p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 7, one mile
south of the Athens-Meigs
County line.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Justice lost control of his car
which ran off the highway
striking a parked vehicle ·
owned by James C. Hacker,
44, Jackson.
Justice was inj ured, but not
immediately treated . There
was moderate damage to his
car while Hacker's vehicle
was demolished. The accident is sti ll under in vestigation.
Earl R. Murdock, 68,
Chesapeake, was cited lo
Meigs County Court for hitskip following an accident
Sunday on Rt. 7, three tenths
of a mile south of the Rt. 143
junction . The patrol said
Murdock's car struck a
vehicle making a left turn

Phone
'

POMEROY - The Socie ty
for the Promotion of the Bull
Frog under the chairm anship
of Rachel Downie and Mary
Lou Johnson have chosen
from each elementary school
in Meigs Coun ly and two
primary special educH tion
classes a Frog prince and
princess.

The evening'sta rs are Mara
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Gemini.
British fa shion expert
George " Beau " Brummel
was born June 7, 1778.

FROG WORLD - Chosen as Frog prince and the
schools they represent are 1-r, Kevin Mowery, Salisbury;
Mike Lance, Tuppers Plains; Brian Willis, Harrisonville:

David Powell, Racine ; Scott Foster, Riverview ; Gene
Mankin, Pomeroy; Davey Conlin, Rutland special
education; back, Mayor Herman London, Freddie the
Frog and Rachel Downie.

The boy and girl chosen
from each school was don e by
drawing of names. The boy
and girl chosen is the prince
and pri ncess of their

GOSPEL

MEETING
CHURCH OF
CHRIST

respective school.
The youngsters will tide in
the rrogmobilc in the parade
on Friday, ,Jun e 18, und on
Saturday evening u county
rrog prince unct princess will
be drawn from the names of
those who have been namc1i
prince and p1·tncess.

We Have A ·
Good Selection o~

SANDALS
For The
Whole Family

heritage nouse
Middleport , 0.

FRIGIDAIRE

On Success Road

Tested &amp; Proven in the Home

JUNE 7 THRU 16

Economic Rooms of Our Local High Schools

7: 30p.m .
Joseph Hoskinn,
Speaker

Save

•so to '100

On These Uke New Frigidaire
UJ

w

0~. f~fEIMN IMI.ll
FOR PRICES CALL COLLECT

LAREA
coot
252·3181

(114&gt;~

a:

One or Two Day Full Denture

t-

Service, Partials, Extractions,
X- Rays, Cleaning

:J

z

tREFRIGERA TORS
eFREEZERS
eRANGES
•WASHERS
tDRYERS
eDISHW ASHERS

0~. A. J. SlAfHU

w
0

A Once A Year Opportunity

AVE.

BAKER FURNITURE

COLUMBUS, GiiO 432o5
T~morrow/{YoiJ Tak e Cure OJ You, Tr.r lh l"od&lt;JV '

MOI\OAY THROUGH FRtD'IY
8:30 A.W

Middleport, Ohio

6:30P.M.

We have ways .
to make you talk.
PRINCES OF FROGDOM - Other youngsters
chosen as Frog prince and the school they represent are
1-r, Lee Cornell, Portlarid ; Deron Stafford, Syracuse;
Scott Frazier, Middleport ; Harold Roush, Letart Falls;

Eric Miller, Chester; back, Mayor Herman London,
Freddie the Frog and Rachel Downie. Abaent were Tim
Zeigler, Salem Center, and Hawthorne Murphy, Rutland.

Independents in action over holiday weekend
Holiday Independent
baseball
action
saw
Syracuse, MU!er Homes, and
.J. D. Drilling come out victors.
On Sunday, Miller defeated
Middleport 11-3 behind the
outstanding pitching of Rusty
Tucker who fanned 18 batters
while walking only one. A
home rWI by Bill Sheppard in
the eighth with two men on
put the game on ice.
Tucker held the home team
to only three hits. Miller
players getting singles were
Boss Edwards, Sheppard,
Melvin Lawrence, Tucker,
Steve Hupp, and Brady
Huffman. Steve Jenkins got a
double.
Two of Middleport's three
hits were doubles by S.
Clonch and Reed. Their
pitchers yielded live walks
and fanned only five batters.
M.H.
010 020 032--11 9 2
M·
001 000 002-3 3 1

hitters were Ray Proffitt and
Dave Snodgrass. The team is
coached by Terry Brewer.
Ronnie Clonch and ,lmhoden l~d Minersville with
two hits apiece while . R.
Hawley, E. Haggy, and Wyatt
each had one.
THIS PAST Sunday Portland (J. D. Drilling ) picked
up another win by downing
visiting Rock Springs 7-5.
"&gt;Pete Sayre pitched and hit his
way to the win as he struck
out seven and walked only
three while hitting a triple, a
double, two singles, and
knocking in two runs . Greg
Roush had two singles and
lour big RB!s. Dave Snodgrass had two singles while
Keith Fitch had a double and
single.
·
For Rock Springs Moon had
two doubles and Abbott a
double and two singles. Other
hitters for the losers were
Wood (two singles), and
McKinney, B. Marshall, C."
Marshall, and Blackston .
each with a single. Lostng
pitcher Young fanned seven
and walked six.
R.S.
010 000 202-5 11
p
100 131 lOx-7 10
Young and Abbott. Sayre
and Bachtel.

AT PORTLAND on May 23
Jim Diddle Drilling rolled
over Minersville 9-2. The
winning pttcher was Pete
Sayre with John Salser
behind the plate. Taking the
loili for Minersvllle was Jed
Will pitchlll8 and Bill Hawley
catching.
Greg Roush led the winners
at the plate with three hits,
ON MEMORIAL ay,
while Pete Sayre, {!ill Knapp, . Syracuse sco;ed two ~uns m
Red Wallbrown and Salser the Sixth mnmg to Win over
each had two ' hits. Other Tuppers Plains 7-5 in a game

I

that was slopped after the
H. Caldwell and Burke.
sixth due to rain . In the top of Hubbard , Cunningham (6,
that sixth, Tuppers Plains' WP) and Ash.
Jerry Burke socked a long
Umpires for next week's
three-run homer w knot the games are, Bill Maynard at
score at 5-5. Jeff Hubbard had Point Pleasant, Greg Bailey
a one-hitter going into that at Pomeroy, Spike Berk-·
final inning, but alter two himer at Middleport and John
singles and the homer, gave Dudding at Portland.
way to winning pitcher Bob
Cunningham.
' ·
.---In the bottom of the sixth,
clutch hits by Mick Ash and
Give your
Gary Clark scored two runs
before rain forced umpire
Roy Arms to call the game.
Syracuse is now 4-0 and
Cunningham has three of
those victories .
a solid
The1·e were fine d ~fensive
foundation
plays in the game by Gary
Mobile home1 ere IPKIII
, Wolle and Tom Karr of
hom" encl nMd IPKIII
lnturane1 prottctlon. SO, 1
Tuppers Plains, and by, Jim
N1tlonwlcle M•ltt Hom.
Hubbard, Jim Hemsley , and
owner's pallcy tliMI
Rudy Stewart of Syracuse . ·
yOY compttte OOYeftte tor
Jim Hubbard led the
yovr IPidll lfob*nl-tl.ke
Mltd end lire dlfftltl. AM
winners with three hits in
W. t lve MrviGI r..t, whtn
four trips, while brother Jeff
"f'O~ Mtd It mot!. Aak 1
was two for three. Burke had
NIIIOfiWidl ...,., lbOut I
the homer lor Tuppers Plains
tolid foundi:Uon for '"'
while Jim Caldwell had a
double .
TP
100 103--5 5 3
s
210 022-7 12 3
804 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0.
Today Is Monaay, Junr 7,
Ph. 992-2318
the !59th day of 1976 with 207
to follow.
The moon ~ between its
first quarter and lull phase.
u~~~'!c!
The mornin g stars are
Mercury,
Venus
and
Jupiter.

mobile

home

--.
..

P. J. PAULEY

~

.NlTIONWIDE

We have the clcg am European-style CraJkphon~ .
for cm1lincnlal chit chat. And the nostal gic Candlestick Phone, one of the few practical in vention s of
the Roaring 20's.
We al so hal'c the Styldin c' Ph one. de vcrly disgui se d as a pi ece nf modern sculpture. AnJ the comp:~ct St;~rlitc "' Phnn~. 11ith a li &gt;htcd d ial to eliminate

nocturnal groping.

1

Finall y, th ere's our hand some . wood-grain Chestphone. the on ly phone in the world that comes with
a place to keep it.
If you'd lik e to have one of th ese special phones,
we have ways to make it easy. Ju st call our business
office.

liji#t

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

�Trinity Church fetes graduates

Polly's Pointers

Graduates were honored
Sunday at the morning
worship service at Trinity
Church In Pomeroy.
Presented gifts were Jar
Wilson, Eastern High School
graduate; Terri Russell, Usa
Thomas, Douglas Rosenbaum and Don Smith. Meigs
·High School graduates; Jan
Holter and Alan McLaughlin
who received associate
BECKY ANN HAWK,
degrees from Hocking
Technical College; Patty
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Struble, master 's degree
Paul (Tony! Hawk of
Woodstock, Ill. recenlly
from Ohio University;
observed her first birthMichael Struble, bachelor's
degree from Ohio University;
day . Her grandparents are
Mrs. Mae Hawk of
Alan Holter, ba chelor 's
Pomemy, and Mr . .and
degree from Ohio State, and
Mrs. Richard Westphaln of
Rick Werner , master 's
degree from Ohio State
Cry stal Lake, Ill. She
University.
received gills from
Also honored and presented
relatives and friends.
owl replicas were retired
teachers, Mrs. Mae Mora,
Orange Township Fii·e House Mrs: Neva Seyfried, Freda
sponsored by the Tuppers Grueser, Chester Knight,
Mary Virginia Reibel, and
Plains Community Club.
ELECTION Day dinner
Tue sday at Racine Fire
House beginning at 9 a.m.
by
Ladies
sponsored
Auxiliary .
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesday at Forest Run
Uni ted Methodist Church.
Men u includes bean and
vegetable soup, sandwiches,
pie and cake .
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Co nservation League, old
fashioned family picnic at
Route 33 roadside park, 6:30
p.m. Tuesday.
White
elephant sale to be held and
new offi cers to be installed.
Everyone to take a covered
dish and table service .

Perk up your coffee
with organdy filters
Small Gripes Department
Dear Helen :
When our baby was born , the newspaper noted , "Born to
Mr . and Mrs. John Smith." My first name wasn't important
enough to mention though I did the work.
Several months later, much to my dismay, I wa s listed in
the Municipal Court Occurrences column 1careless driving J.
But TillS time, it was Mary Doe Smith (not even "wife of ... ").
So if "Mary" makes it when I do wrong , why doesn't
"Mary " make it when I do right'' - MARY SM ITII
Dear Mary :
Good question - aod one lhill ha s b!'"n put to~ number of
newspapers. Result : more and more vttal sta l!Sl1cs columns
now include the mother's first name.
So call your local editor! - H.
-ti-t
Dear Helen:
My husband spoiled our daughter rotten. I stood it while
she was growing up, and hoped her marriage would free us of
her endless impositions.
.
Naturally divorce t.tppened, and nowshe calls constan tly,
asking us to babysit our grandson while she practically lives
with another man . Whatever goes wrong (and something
always does ), she expects her lather to drop everything and
rush right over. He does '
· When I suggest she manage her own life, she tells me to get
lost and makes her father feel sorry for her.
We love little Nick, but I don't think we should be his
parents. Yet my husband cancels our plans whenever he is
summoned as a sitter.
Last Sa turday I said, "Enough !" So .1went with friends to
a dance and t.td a marvelous time . I've announced that I'll
attend every week , and would love to t.tve my husband
accompa ny me, but if he'd rather cave in to his daughter, I'll
manage very well alone.
Since he enjoys dancing, it may work, but if it doesn't
should I be the dutiful dumped-&lt;Jn grandmother or go DANCIN8 at the Starlile Ballroom
Dear DSB :
Head for the Star lite Ballroom! This doling (sho uld I say
dolly ? ) father needs his priorities reshuffled ; a firm stand ca n
hopefuUy mnke him to dance to YOUR tune. - H.
-t -t-t
Dear Helen:
My husband left me - for another man. I've tried to be
modern about this. He's a good person, but he should never
have married. He's not a flaming queen, but lives quietly with
his friend . No wild parties, etc.
The problem is he loves our son very much and Charlie
cares for him . He 's a well-adjusted youn gster of 12 and knows
the situation. I don 'llhink he should be deprived of a fathe r, so
they get together often. But my parents think that by allowing
visiting privileges I will somehow twist Charlie into gay
behavior. Your Opinion ? - CRITICIZED
Dear Criticized:
Your parents should r ealize that homosexuality isn't a
corrununicable disease. Charlie won't "catch" it by conl&lt;lct
with his father - not if he's a well-adjusted, aware,
heterosexual yoWJg man.
Gay people can be excellent parents. It's lo your credit
that you understand this. - .H.

Auxiliary plans dinner
'

. da y
RACINE - An electton
dinner will be served by the
Racine Firemen 's Auxiliary
at the fire station annex
beginning a·t 9 a. m. Tuesday.
The menu will consist of
soup, chicken salad sand·
wiches , baked beans, cake ,
pie, coffee and homemade ice
cream. it was noted that the
zip code directories are now
being sold by members for
$2.95. An electric roaster will
be purchased by the group.
Plans were made to have a

Party honors

concession stand at a public
auction on June 25 at Sloler's
Pool Hall in Racine. The next
meeting will be JWJc 23 to
make fin al plans for the July
1 activities.
The birthdays of Grace
Roush, Mar y Siotcr and
Beverly
Dowell
were
celebrated. Mae Cleland and
Gene Lyons will be honored
a! the next meeti ng. Attending besid es !hose named
were Jea n Clela nd , Tin a
Stoler, Pal Forrester and
Tina, Mrs . Judy Bird and
Son ny, Beulah Au lherson ,
Maxine Rose and Dian e
Cleland.

Rick Cole
A going-away party was
held recently at the Bunker
Hill home of Mr . and Mrs.
Di ck Cole ,
Pomer oy ,
honoring their son, Rick , who
is joining the Air f'orce.
The evening included a
light buffet, a Wiener roast.
ic e cream, ca ke and
beverages. Guests were Mr .
and Mrs. R. L. Moore and
Noah, Mr. and Mrs. Brady
Knotts, Timothy and Brad,
Mr. and Mrs . J erry
Wilkinson , Mr . and Mrs.
Sherman White, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Hatfield, An gela,
Barbara and Wally, Nev
While , Jerri and Beverly
Faulkner, Richard
Carruthers, James Howard,
Lori Wyne, Cathy Howard,
ard Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Rife, Milzy and Shelly.

SALON TO MEET
Members of the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty are to meet at the home
of Mrs. Mary Martin at 4:15
p.m., Wednesday, to go to
Lan caster for a meeting.

INFI.A'l'ION f'lf :liTER
perspirant roll~ •n top ~ottle,
IJEAH. PO J.J.Y - My fill wi th cologne, replace the
husband thinks my ingenui ty roll-on lop and cap securely. I
warrant s my sharing it with find thi s roll-on is as easy to
the ot her readers. Our coffee use as a spray••n bottle and
maker requires filters that none of the liquid is wasted . l
are no longer available. I hud save money this way and
some white orgundy left fr om hope others will , too . making cw·tairls nwny years EVELYN.
a~o . Us in~ my pinkin g
Polly will send you one of
shears, I made several dozen her "peachy" thank-you
rtlters at one s ittin ~ . Th ey arc cards, ideal lor framing or
even better than the original plat•ing In your famil y
ones. much cheHper , discolor scrapbook, if she uses your
less and car1 be rinsed without lavorltc Pointer, Peeve or
removing.
Problem In her coluinn. Writ&lt;:
Another use I (oWJd fur Polly's Pointers in care uf
some of this organdy was

making jelly bags lo line my
colander when straining juice

from the frui t und this works
well. lou. My motto is "Use
what you ha ve where you
arc." - .fEINKS.
DEAR POLLY - I buy the
large size tubes of too thpaste.
When I think the y arc empty,
I start at the bo ttom and·-cut
off about an inch and a
quarter from lhe bottom of
the tube, open one side and
can get anywhere from lO to
12 addi tional brushings. EDA H.
DEAR POLLY - Alter
roll i n ~

out ct pie crust, I
freeze the (' UI uff scraps in a

plastic bag . When enough
accWJlul ale , I crum~le them
over th e lop of a f1·ui l pie and
am saved using a lop crust.
Bake as usual. - RUTH .
DEAR POLLY - One day
my neighbor was hanging her ·
was h and br ea king in numera ble 11ew rou nd
wooden cloth espins 1 quite
expen sive nowt. So I shared
with her a hint my mother
taugh t me ove r 50 years ago .
HoWJd wooden clothespins
are cut from dry hardwood
that should last many years.
But when using them (IS they
come from the store, the
pressure on the clothes and

line breaks them in half due
lo the dryness of the wood .
Before us in ~. put all new pins

in a pan. completely cover
w1th water and let soak WJtii
they are wet through. Do not
dry off bul put each one on the
clothesline to dry in the sun.
Thi s expands the pi ns so they
wi ll not snap in half. Happy
wash days' - Jean .
DEAR . POLLY - My
inexpensive tip for cleaning
spots from carp ets is to use
club sod a. Always save that
lillie bil left in a bottle.
Sponge or brush on a little
club soda and as it dries the
spol will disappear. I find this
works better than some of the
expensive products one buys
jusl for that purpose. 1 Polly's
note - Club soda has long
been a favorite for removing
wet spots pels might make on
rugs. 1 - K. K.
DEAR POLLY - Since
cologne is less expensive in
I he splash-on conta iners than
in I he spray-&lt;Jn ones. ! buy the
s plash•m kind . Perfume
~tomizer s are . almost impossible to buy now , so I
lhorougl1iy clean an anti-

this newspaper.

r··· - soci~li· ..
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I Calendar
ij

MONDAY
TRI.COUNTY C-B meeting
Monday , 7 p. m. at motorcycle club, Peach Fork Road,
county road 19. Potluck
. dinner lu follow. Bring
cove red di sh, beverages .
l&lt;lble servi ce. Coffee will be
provi ded. Members and
guests invited.
BIBLE School a t th e
Middleport United Pentecosl&lt;!l Church,·South Third
Ave ., Middleport, 9:30 to
11 :30 a .m. Monday through
ELECTION DAY dinner
Friday .
Tuesday
at
Syracuse
MIDD LEPORT Garden
Mw1icipai
building
sponsored
Club , 7:30 Monday at the
by the ladies of the
home of Mrs. J . W. Morris,
Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Charle s McDani el,
assisting hostess.
WEDNESDAY
SPE CIAL MEETIN G.
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
Sout hern
Loca l
Band I: 30 Wednesday afternoon at
Boosters , 7:30p.m. Monday the American Legion Hall in
at high school. Final plans for Midilleporl .
CB Radi o Roundup and
discussion on band camp and
other matters. Ali interes ted
parents invited.
NE WLY FORMED
Western Boot Ci lizcns Band
Radio Club will hold a
meeting, 8 p.m . Monday at
Roush Landing, one mile
LA FF A DAY
west of Racine on Route 124; ~•
•
sign posted; those interested
in joining are welcome.

MEIGS COUNTY Fa ir
Board

meeti ng,

Monday at. secreta ry 's offi ce ,
Rock Springs FairgroWJds.
REVIVAL at Zion Church
of Christ, 7:30p.m. Monday
through Friday. Tony Maple,
Norlh Terrace Church of
Christ, Zanesville , speakin g;
public invited .
DGE B'
POMEROY LO
I •,
F&amp;AM. special meeting, 7: 30
Monda . Ma ster
p. m. . . Y'
Masons mv1led.
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
OES, regular meelmg, 8 p.m.
Monday at temple ; plans for
75th annual inspection to be
made.
TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 F&amp;AM, regular meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
ELECTION DAY dinner
and bake sale Tuesday at

{'

I'

·:,,.

Republican C&amp;ndt!J•te J'or - ·

CIMMIIIIIIEI
111:109 COU!I'I'Y

!'ull Tenn Belinnlnc Janua!'J I. 1971
Prtmi.ry Election - 1une I, 1171
·

Pd . Po!. -Adll . by the c and ldeal e

TALENTED CINDY PATTERSON was a standout In
several appearances In the recital of the Mid-Porn School
of Dance.

haw always attempted

.'\

to be:

I

• Competent .
•Concerned
• Considerate
• Dedicated
Mll.S. JUDY FRASER, left, pictured with roses

• Effective

presented by her students Friday night when the Mid-Porn
School of Dance recital was held. Mrs. Fraser presented
well received tap and toe routines during the recital~ At
the right is Mrs. Fraser's daughter, A)H'il, who was also
presented a gift. April hRs been serving as an inatructor
_and ~d the c_hoceography for some of the numbers.

• Impartial

. ~,

~ - .~ .

COLUMBUS
Ohio
motorists who are interested
in reserving speical "Per·
sonalized" licen~e plates,for
'1977 have until August .31 to
file a written request ~ith the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
(BMV) in Columbus.
Under the personalized
plate program, any Ohio
passenger car . owner may
order official license tags
bearing his or her own hardpicked combination of four,
(,ve, or six letters and
numerals. An extra yearly
fee of $35 over ard above
normal license taxes is
;,charged for each set of
· ~~rsonalized plates. This ·
' extra fee must be paid each
·year, whether or not new
metal tags are being issued.
BMV Registrar Curtis
.Andrews said this year's
change to a multi-year
, registration system will not
• prevent the Bureau from
• filling new personalized plate
; orders next year. He explained that, while most
motorists are renewing their
current plates with validation
stickers next Spring, new
personalized plate applicants
· will receive new tailor-made

REELECT BERNARD V. FULTZ
MEIGS COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY

.,

--

. . .
I d ltke to dedrcale lom~hl s

concert lo the cn11c who sa1d of
my tas l saxophone concerl. 'He
could have golten bener music
fr om a section or bathroom
drain pipe hooked up to an aslh ·
ma lic bellows.' "

BERNARD Vi FULTZ

i

(Paid For By The Candidate)

UNOFFICIAL REPUBLICAN SAMPLE BALLOT
ISSUED BY THE MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

For Justice of Supreme Court

For Judge of the Court of Appeals
(4th District)

(Full Term Commencing January 1, 1977)

Full Term Commencing February 9, 1977
(Vote for not more than one)

X John W. Potter
For Justice of Supreme Court

At The Primary Election June 8

ELECT

Vote for not more than one

Ronald R. Calhoun
Thomas W. Mitchell
Donald

A TTENTIONI ·

X

(92nd District)

Plans fOr a complete &amp;. IOta I Emergency Medical
Service have been formutlfed by muluol co-operolion
and agreement of all Volunloor SqUids, County
Commissioners ond 5. E.O. E. M.S.

COURT OF APPEALS
Qualified:
- 20 years as Common Pleas Judge,
Jackson County.
.
- Sat. on Court of Appeals by Assignment.

Republican

Sheriff Meigs County
Experienced in law Enforcement

Your Vote and lnffuence Greatly Appreciated

THANK YOUI

...
Candidates Marked With An "X" Have Been Endorsed by the

Endorsed:

Republican Executive' Committee

- By Scioto Co. Bar Association
-By Jackson Co. Bar Association
- By Newspapers in Three Counties
- Seven Awards from Supreme · Court of
Ohio .

•

..•
•

'

·,;·Clip This Ballot
IT IS LEGAL TO TAKE IT INTO THE VOTING BOOTH WHEN YOU VOTE ON ELECTION DAY

"
lo·

•·
'•'•
••

Pd. Pol. Adv .

Pd. Pol. Adv .

..•

M

~

t

'

i

'

'·

I,

~~'JQ\t f ~~'
.

AM YOUR
CHILD!
••• AND I DESERVE AGOOD
EDUCATION
MY NAME ISN1 ON THE RAIIOT,
BUT AVOTE

If your properly Is worth $9,000. It will cost YDII
approximately 60 cents per yaar. II will be used for
Invalid and emergency transfers and as a back-up
squad fOr any of !he votuniHr squads. Ambulance and
Invalid transfer service Is much noedod service. With
the conllnuallqn of this servl~e, service will once again
be reslorod to the Tuppers Plolns ond RHdsvllle area.

For State Representative

CITIZENS
OF
SOUtHERN
LOCAL
SCHOOL
DISTRICT

'(0

As concerned citizens of Meigs County, we
are asking you to support &amp; VOTE FOR this
Tax Levy.

··~

· JUDGE 4th DISTRICT

BRUCE DAVIS

red and white tags by mail along with a 1977 validation
sticker.
Andrews said all requests
should be mailed to the Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehlcles, P.
0. Box 1199, Columbus 432I6,
Attention:
Reservations
Section. He said no telephone
orders can be accepted , and
added that available combinations will be assigned on
a "first-come" basis as
requests are received at BMV
headquarters.
The motor vehicles chief
emphasized that the August
31 deadline applies only to
new four, five, and six-letter
requests. He said the Bureau
will take new orders for two
and three-letter "initial"
plates later in the year.
Persons who already hold
special plate reservations
need not rue new requests,
since their renewal applications are mailed out
automatically at the end of
each year .
New personalized plate
applicants are advised to
submit more than one
preferred letter • number
combination, since some
10,000 combinations have

(Full Term Commencing January 2, 19771

IX I Thomas W. Mitchell I

BY BOB HOEFLICH
J ean Horton, Paula Horton,
Attractive
costuming, Ruth ,\nn Fry, Suellen Fry,
110111e Interesting highlight Kay Hart, Jennifer Meadows,
numbers and a variety of Marcia Sisaon.
presentations spelled out
The receptive audience
another bit Friday night loveq the clown act which
when the 12th annual dance concluded ·with blacklighting
recital of the Mid·Pom School and a boola hoop routine by
of Dance was presented atthe Barbara Grueser, Sharon
Meigs Junior High School Griffin and Andrea Batey.
Auditorium in Middleport. Marcia Sfsson was excellent
Taking an active part in the in her acrobatic .routine to
·show - to the delight of the " AUey Cat." Another
large audience - was Mrs. outstanding number was
Judy
Jacobs
Fraser, "Oliver," a take off Cll the
instructor of the school. Mrs. chimney sweeps of Oliver.
Fraser received interrupted
The choreograph oo the
applause as she presented a number was by Aprtl Fruer.
toe number and returned . Making up the line waa " shortly later to do a well-4one Horton, Angela Cllffard,
tap routine. Mrs. Fraser also Terry Johnson, Melanie
joined advanced students Sisson, Amber Warner, Ubby
Esther. Lowery, June Warns- Watkins, .Tammie Starcher,
ley Suzy Sal!Uiels and her Lynne Oliver.
da~ghter, April, who has
The attractive costuming of
assisted during the past year Lauu McCullough , Erin
with
instruction
and Anderson, JodyHarrlson ~d
choreography, in a comedy Judi Mees for a. cheerleadi~g
Shirley Temple type number, type routine with pom-pons
"Good Ship Lollipop," given also was ·enhancM Dy
an excellent reception by tue blacldlghting.
audience. .
Adding to the variety of thiB
Mrs.
Fraser
was year's recital, and .well
traditionally honored by her received by the audience
students being presented a also, was a karate type
gift and a bouquet of roses, demonstration by Scott
and Miss Fraser also was Fraser (son of the school's
presented a gift from the director), Mark Slater and
students.
Tim Rawlings.
If the show bad a "star" it
Effective stage settings
was in the person of talented, were created by the Dale
versatile Cindy Patterson. Jacobs family and Scott
A veteran - though young Fraser. Members of . the
-performer, Mlss Patterson family were at yanous
was featured ln several str~;~tegic spots m the
outstanding numbers aUditorium helping handle
including a baton routine, a various assignments to help
modern jazz type number to the recital move along
"Cabaret" and clever fast smoothly. Ernie Fraser,
moving tap to "Yakklty Sax" husband of the schoors
and was the standout of "The Instructor, was also again m
Monster
Mash,"
the charge of the music and was
concluding dance number. in his usuhl post backstage to
Backing Miss Patterson in help with a number of
the final number whicl) "ahores" to help insure a
featured · blackllghted successful show.
skeleton designed costuming SEEKING ROAD FIRST
and horror wigs was an
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
effective line which included The defending world Team
Tennis champion Pittsburgh
Triangles, with only a 5·12
record, will be looking for
their first win on the road
Wednesday night when they
play the Cleveland Nets at
Cleveland.
The Triangles will be
coming off their third
consecutive defeat of the
season
to the San Diego
already been reserved during
Padres,
losing to the
the first two years of the
California
team
211-26 at the
program.
Civic
Arena
here
Saturday
Registrar · Andrews noted
night.
The
Friars'
mixed
that four-letter combinations
doubles
team
of
Betty
Ann
like JACK can be ac·
Stuart
and
Ross
Case
companied by any number
from 1·99, while five-letter · provided the margin of
combinations like BETTY victory with a 1-' win over
can only be accompanied by a Bernie Mitton and Sue Slap,
one digit number (1·9). Six· after Pittsburgh had swept
letter combinations (G the women's matches and
San Diego the men 's
JONES, for example) carnot
be ~ccompanied by a number matches.
since the maximum number
Applicants should not
of characters that can appear
on a plate is six. This means ~ubmit any fees when filing a
six-letter plates must be request. Ooce a plate has
issued on a one-of-a-kind been assigned, the Bureau
basis to the first person will' notify Its holder when
requesting them, Andrews and how to complete the
application process.
explained.

Requests invited ·for
.personalized plates.

In . 1972, the Supreme Court of Ohio honored my
performance as Prosecuting Attorney with an aw~rd_ for
"excellent service in the advancement of cnmmal
justice". I pledge to continue my dedication to Meigs
County if reelected. Your support is appreciated.

~

. . . .... . ..... .. .. . _

.. .

-

For Meigs County,

-o
·"' • ·-- - - __---1

JORIS

I, Bernard V. Fultz,
as Prosecuting Attorney

1

:

•••••11••

LESLIE F. FULTZ, 110 HIGH StREET, POMEROY, OHIO, CHAIRMAN

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr . and Mrs . Forrest
Bachtel , Phoe nix, Ari z.,
announce'birlh of their first
child , a son, weighing ~ lbs.,
10 oz., Friday, JWJe 4 at I:20
p.m . in Good Samaritan
Hospital. He has been named
Jeremy Colin . Grand~arents
are Mr . and Mrs. Paul .Scott
and Mrs. Juanita Bachtel.
and a great-grandparent is
Mrs . Ida Childs, all of Middleport.

Please Vote For

"'

8 p.m.

l'nar Vote aad latlaeaee Apprt!elated.

Rloh•rd 1.

BECKENHAM, _.Enclml
(UPI) -.Jimlny U1M1n II
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Pen- not lettlruf hll lbaoelv .trl
sive Bret took over at the
"""encl. fonnr~ "'" World
quarter pole and led all the Marjex1e
W•lllce, dlllract
way Saturday night to win the hlm 11'001 hla major priorityfeatured $8,000 pace at Scioto regaining hie posltloo 11 the
Oo\ms.
world's top player.
Pensive Bret covered the
Connors, who arrived In
mile in 1:59 1-5, good for London Saturday with
payoff of $12.60, $5.20 and Wallace ln tow, bet!lrw hll
$Ul. The win also makes the Wimbledon bulldup toc;lay In
horse eligible fQr the Little the
Robettaon
Cup
Brown Jug.
tournament. Still smarting at
Two and one-half lengths the loss of his Wimbledoo
behind was L.R . Baron crown to Arthur Ashe laat
returning $3.60 and $3.20 and year, Connors bas opted for
third was Dlxles Pacesetter an extra week of practice Cll
paying $3.20.
(!!'ass rather than play ln the
big-money Frerich bard COIIft
championships In Paris
LEADS LATE

·Fraser family
has another hii

about a better world. The
choir wider the direction of
Mrs Marvin Burt sang "Just
One · Day at a Time" 'with
Mrs . Ben Neutzling at the
organ .

Mary Skinner.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin
talked on life's accomplish·
ments admonishing that it 's
not the long life which counts
but the life which brings

'I

~~~~~y~~~:!'~:~:-:e 7, 1978

I

FOR
the LEVY •
•

Pleasell I
Vote fOR

[i] is a VOTE fur ME

The Tax Levy June 8

(Pd. Pol. Adv.)

.. '--~--------I

Paid For by Friends of

Vote For and Retain

VETERAN STI.IDENTs of the Mid·l'om School ~! ·

RALPH WARDEN

Dance, Esther Lowery, Suzy Samuels and JWJe Wamsley
team for a fast tap and all were presented in solo
numbers.

for

County Commissioner
Rt:I'U IIUCAN

ln 1973, President Richard

MEIGS COUNTY

Nixon nominated Kansas City
Police Chief Clarence Kelley
Your Y ote and Jnfluence Appreciated
to be director of the FBI. ' . '---------.wilooltilllio~;;,';~t;,:he~C::an:::d:::ld:::a:.:.te:ll

VoU-;~, ~ Judge John Donald Ratcliff
Vote For

DONALD RATCLIFF
Republican Candidate For

4TH DISTRICT
COURT OF .APPEALS
Ar•r: • ~•• ~ t t l

ot 7 awtrds from Ohio Suprema Court

tor Outnandlng Judicial Sttrv ice.
Qu.1Jiried E:xpm·icnced ~ ~epend~tble ,_ ~ftiaienl

/M Fourth District Court of Appeals
lEGAL EMPERIENCE
Admitted IQ p! K i ict ltw, Oh li1 , 1~4 1 • 14 vemrt jlt lv• tt III IIC I I~e ol l1w •
Activt tppe11att tnd trltl pr ~e t lu " Adm itled hl practlct ~ tore US . Slllll~rne

srorr FRASER WAll

Court, U. S. TtiC Court , tnd 2 Ftdtrll Dhuict Cou rt• • Stf\tt(l 8 't'll!'l 11
A11i111nt ProNCul lf'111 Atlor nt~ In Rou County • Serving ~~~Gond U!tlll 11 Jud1141,

featured with Tim
Rawlings and Mark
Slater in karate type
demonstrations at the
Friday recital of the Mid·
Pom School til Dance.

Comm on Ploa1 Court, Rou County • E.tJblhhlld Our111u ol Supjourt • Auhtvtl
l 01mt t ioo un llllld Probl t ton Departmen t 1nd unllltd Ccurt 1~ 111111 tor 1ll Cwr11
ol Rou Cou11ty • Meu\btr Moder u Ccurtt Cumrnllll!'ll ul Oh iu State B1r At~lt
tiuu • 1 ynr u Chiel Leg1\ OIIQ r 1nd O ~~tk Cou ll Oll lcer, Grn t L1k11 Navel
61111 • 5JIIII;ial lgllll\ uf tht f .6 .1. 1or 9 yeart ir~~: lud ir111 3 V1811 II AdntlnilllttiVII
Auilllll\ to J. Edillr HOO'III 1nd re1id11n t ~g~~rll In Ron, ~lllhllrld. Pike. JICkl(tn.
Hocking, VInton . Mei95 lrld Galtla Counties durlflll CO!lllfUCt lon ot A PI.Ot. Thee
countln IIOI'IIJ with Athlllll , Adarm , Br awrl , l i WIII'ICI , Pk:k iWIV , Sr:lo to 111!1
With ing ton Counlln loc tudld llh Olttrlct Court ot AP!Mtalt.
PERIOIIIIAL BAC'ItOROUJIID
Oetctnd~nt p ~neer bm ily • Rt1 id1nt ol Chlll lto the • Mtrrltd , 4 chllrtrar •
B.S. d~rfll from O.S.U. 1nd Jur is Ooctdr't ~ree tram Ohio St1111 L1w !)(;lwol
• Seried 4 y11r1 lrt U. S. Nnv, 2 ynrs combtr t ~tv In South P ~~:ll io on Mlr11
Mftptr1 • M ~ mber at St. f'aul 't E pl~~.:opa l Chu rch wtit:rl Mrvtd 6 yeirt 11
\lutryman and 8 ye111 M Church School Te.•cher • Itt 6oerd Of Truttem, Ohio
Unlwmh'I·Ch lllloothe, lflllut1r l•l O~ti 9J)ment Auoolat lon, Unltfd Furwt , •tid K1w•nlt

NOW YOU KNOW
Members of the Jain sect in
India are so averse to killing
that they wear veils over
their mouths to avoid inad·
vertentiy swallowing insects.

Judge
John

Dotad .
Ratcliff

*A
Lifetime
of
Public
Service

Vote Crow for Prosecuting Attorney

PROGRAM

I will bear down on drug violators,
especially pushers or sellers of
drugs.
I wi II cooperate with the Sheriff's
Office, County Officials, Township
Trustees, school officials, and all
other interested individuals.
It is my opinion that more police
protection should be provided for
Meigs County . There are 26 miles in
area from the East end of the County
to the West. Under the Ohio Revised
Code Meigs County can establish
Township Police Districts. If the
Township officials desire, I will
assist them in establishing Township
policemen.
There are also additional federal
monies available for additional
police protection. I will do
everything I can to obtain same for
the County.

--

·----

TERM OF OFFICE
1 am seeking my first term as
Prosecutor of Meigs County.
My opponent has held this office for
16 years and is seeking a fifth term
for four additional years in office.
He has qualified for a State
Employees Retirement Pension.
The Prosecutor should be a young
man and should devote full time to
the job.
My sole employement · is that of
practicing law, and I will devote full
time to the practice of law.

-------------My Name Stands For lblesty and
Integrity

FliED "llcl• W.

BACKGROUND

Lifelong resident of Meigs County, except
for working three years in Dayton, Ohio.

CROW III

Raised in Syracuse and now lives in Letart
Falls.

Republlcon
Candidate For

.

MEIGS COUNTY
Proud of his family's contribution to Meigs
County:
Great Grandfather, Charles Crow, was
County Commissioner;
Great Grandmother, Mary D. Hayman.
Grandfather, Judge Fred W. Crow, was
County Prosecutor and Common Pleas
Judge;
Grandfather, Irving Karr, was County
Commissioner;
Father, Fred .W. Crow, Jr., is attorney
and active in civil affairs;
Mother, Eleanor Karr Crow, was a public
school teacher for many years .

I am a member of the Meigs County
Jaycees; M.A. R. C.; Board of Mental
Retardation; a Pee Wee baseball coach;
and has farmed for the last three years.

i

~rosecuting
Your Support &amp; Influence Would

flltomeg

Be Appreciated:

QUALIFICATIONS
Graduate of Oh io University and Ohio State University
Law Shoot.
First pollee legal advisor In the Slaleot Ohio,
Dayton Pollee Academy Instructor.
Sole legal advisor lor the City of Dayton's Pollee
Department 425 man force .
Graduate of Poll ee Community Relations Training
Program given by Xavier University.
Graduate of Special Training Program for Pollee
Legal Advisors given by the International Association
of Chiefs of Pollee, Inc. and Norlhwtstern University .
Served as Ohio Ass istant Attorney General.
Now a pract icing attornoy with the firm of Crow, Cro.,.,
&amp; Porter.

FREDERICK W. CROW, Ill

I

Pd. Pol. AtJv. by the Candidate

f

�Trinity Church fetes graduates

Polly's Pointers

Graduates were honored
Sunday at the morning
worship service at Trinity
Church In Pomeroy.
Presented gifts were Jar
Wilson, Eastern High School
graduate; Terri Russell, Usa
Thomas, Douglas Rosenbaum and Don Smith. Meigs
·High School graduates; Jan
Holter and Alan McLaughlin
who received associate
BECKY ANN HAWK,
degrees from Hocking
Technical College; Patty
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Struble, master 's degree
Paul (Tony! Hawk of
Woodstock, Ill. recenlly
from Ohio University;
observed her first birthMichael Struble, bachelor's
degree from Ohio University;
day . Her grandparents are
Mrs. Mae Hawk of
Alan Holter, ba chelor 's
Pomemy, and Mr . .and
degree from Ohio State, and
Mrs. Richard Westphaln of
Rick Werner , master 's
degree from Ohio State
Cry stal Lake, Ill. She
University.
received gills from
Also honored and presented
relatives and friends.
owl replicas were retired
teachers, Mrs. Mae Mora,
Orange Township Fii·e House Mrs: Neva Seyfried, Freda
sponsored by the Tuppers Grueser, Chester Knight,
Mary Virginia Reibel, and
Plains Community Club.
ELECTION Day dinner
Tue sday at Racine Fire
House beginning at 9 a.m.
by
Ladies
sponsored
Auxiliary .
ELECTION Day dinner
Tuesday at Forest Run
Uni ted Methodist Church.
Men u includes bean and
vegetable soup, sandwiches,
pie and cake .
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Co nservation League, old
fashioned family picnic at
Route 33 roadside park, 6:30
p.m. Tuesday.
White
elephant sale to be held and
new offi cers to be installed.
Everyone to take a covered
dish and table service .

Perk up your coffee
with organdy filters
Small Gripes Department
Dear Helen :
When our baby was born , the newspaper noted , "Born to
Mr . and Mrs. John Smith." My first name wasn't important
enough to mention though I did the work.
Several months later, much to my dismay, I wa s listed in
the Municipal Court Occurrences column 1careless driving J.
But TillS time, it was Mary Doe Smith (not even "wife of ... ").
So if "Mary" makes it when I do wrong , why doesn't
"Mary " make it when I do right'' - MARY SM ITII
Dear Mary :
Good question - aod one lhill ha s b!'"n put to~ number of
newspapers. Result : more and more vttal sta l!Sl1cs columns
now include the mother's first name.
So call your local editor! - H.
-ti-t
Dear Helen:
My husband spoiled our daughter rotten. I stood it while
she was growing up, and hoped her marriage would free us of
her endless impositions.
.
Naturally divorce t.tppened, and nowshe calls constan tly,
asking us to babysit our grandson while she practically lives
with another man . Whatever goes wrong (and something
always does ), she expects her lather to drop everything and
rush right over. He does '
· When I suggest she manage her own life, she tells me to get
lost and makes her father feel sorry for her.
We love little Nick, but I don't think we should be his
parents. Yet my husband cancels our plans whenever he is
summoned as a sitter.
Last Sa turday I said, "Enough !" So .1went with friends to
a dance and t.td a marvelous time . I've announced that I'll
attend every week , and would love to t.tve my husband
accompa ny me, but if he'd rather cave in to his daughter, I'll
manage very well alone.
Since he enjoys dancing, it may work, but if it doesn't
should I be the dutiful dumped-&lt;Jn grandmother or go DANCIN8 at the Starlile Ballroom
Dear DSB :
Head for the Star lite Ballroom! This doling (sho uld I say
dolly ? ) father needs his priorities reshuffled ; a firm stand ca n
hopefuUy mnke him to dance to YOUR tune. - H.
-t -t-t
Dear Helen:
My husband left me - for another man. I've tried to be
modern about this. He's a good person, but he should never
have married. He's not a flaming queen, but lives quietly with
his friend . No wild parties, etc.
The problem is he loves our son very much and Charlie
cares for him . He 's a well-adjusted youn gster of 12 and knows
the situation. I don 'llhink he should be deprived of a fathe r, so
they get together often. But my parents think that by allowing
visiting privileges I will somehow twist Charlie into gay
behavior. Your Opinion ? - CRITICIZED
Dear Criticized:
Your parents should r ealize that homosexuality isn't a
corrununicable disease. Charlie won't "catch" it by conl&lt;lct
with his father - not if he's a well-adjusted, aware,
heterosexual yoWJg man.
Gay people can be excellent parents. It's lo your credit
that you understand this. - .H.

Auxiliary plans dinner
'

. da y
RACINE - An electton
dinner will be served by the
Racine Firemen 's Auxiliary
at the fire station annex
beginning a·t 9 a. m. Tuesday.
The menu will consist of
soup, chicken salad sand·
wiches , baked beans, cake ,
pie, coffee and homemade ice
cream. it was noted that the
zip code directories are now
being sold by members for
$2.95. An electric roaster will
be purchased by the group.
Plans were made to have a

Party honors

concession stand at a public
auction on June 25 at Sloler's
Pool Hall in Racine. The next
meeting will be JWJc 23 to
make fin al plans for the July
1 activities.
The birthdays of Grace
Roush, Mar y Siotcr and
Beverly
Dowell
were
celebrated. Mae Cleland and
Gene Lyons will be honored
a! the next meeti ng. Attending besid es !hose named
were Jea n Clela nd , Tin a
Stoler, Pal Forrester and
Tina, Mrs . Judy Bird and
Son ny, Beulah Au lherson ,
Maxine Rose and Dian e
Cleland.

Rick Cole
A going-away party was
held recently at the Bunker
Hill home of Mr . and Mrs.
Di ck Cole ,
Pomer oy ,
honoring their son, Rick , who
is joining the Air f'orce.
The evening included a
light buffet, a Wiener roast.
ic e cream, ca ke and
beverages. Guests were Mr .
and Mrs. R. L. Moore and
Noah, Mr. and Mrs. Brady
Knotts, Timothy and Brad,
Mr. and Mrs . J erry
Wilkinson , Mr . and Mrs.
Sherman White, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Hatfield, An gela,
Barbara and Wally, Nev
While , Jerri and Beverly
Faulkner, Richard
Carruthers, James Howard,
Lori Wyne, Cathy Howard,
ard Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Rife, Milzy and Shelly.

SALON TO MEET
Members of the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty are to meet at the home
of Mrs. Mary Martin at 4:15
p.m., Wednesday, to go to
Lan caster for a meeting.

INFI.A'l'ION f'lf :liTER
perspirant roll~ •n top ~ottle,
IJEAH. PO J.J.Y - My fill wi th cologne, replace the
husband thinks my ingenui ty roll-on lop and cap securely. I
warrant s my sharing it with find thi s roll-on is as easy to
the ot her readers. Our coffee use as a spray••n bottle and
maker requires filters that none of the liquid is wasted . l
are no longer available. I hud save money this way and
some white orgundy left fr om hope others will , too . making cw·tairls nwny years EVELYN.
a~o . Us in~ my pinkin g
Polly will send you one of
shears, I made several dozen her "peachy" thank-you
rtlters at one s ittin ~ . Th ey arc cards, ideal lor framing or
even better than the original plat•ing In your famil y
ones. much cheHper , discolor scrapbook, if she uses your
less and car1 be rinsed without lavorltc Pointer, Peeve or
removing.
Problem In her coluinn. Writ&lt;:
Another use I (oWJd fur Polly's Pointers in care uf
some of this organdy was

making jelly bags lo line my
colander when straining juice

from the frui t und this works
well. lou. My motto is "Use
what you ha ve where you
arc." - .fEINKS.
DEAR POLLY - I buy the
large size tubes of too thpaste.
When I think the y arc empty,
I start at the bo ttom and·-cut
off about an inch and a
quarter from lhe bottom of
the tube, open one side and
can get anywhere from lO to
12 addi tional brushings. EDA H.
DEAR POLLY - Alter
roll i n ~

out ct pie crust, I
freeze the (' UI uff scraps in a

plastic bag . When enough
accWJlul ale , I crum~le them
over th e lop of a f1·ui l pie and
am saved using a lop crust.
Bake as usual. - RUTH .
DEAR POLLY - One day
my neighbor was hanging her ·
was h and br ea king in numera ble 11ew rou nd
wooden cloth espins 1 quite
expen sive nowt. So I shared
with her a hint my mother
taugh t me ove r 50 years ago .
HoWJd wooden clothespins
are cut from dry hardwood
that should last many years.
But when using them (IS they
come from the store, the
pressure on the clothes and

line breaks them in half due
lo the dryness of the wood .
Before us in ~. put all new pins

in a pan. completely cover
w1th water and let soak WJtii
they are wet through. Do not
dry off bul put each one on the
clothesline to dry in the sun.
Thi s expands the pi ns so they
wi ll not snap in half. Happy
wash days' - Jean .
DEAR . POLLY - My
inexpensive tip for cleaning
spots from carp ets is to use
club sod a. Always save that
lillie bil left in a bottle.
Sponge or brush on a little
club soda and as it dries the
spol will disappear. I find this
works better than some of the
expensive products one buys
jusl for that purpose. 1 Polly's
note - Club soda has long
been a favorite for removing
wet spots pels might make on
rugs. 1 - K. K.
DEAR POLLY - Since
cologne is less expensive in
I he splash-on conta iners than
in I he spray-&lt;Jn ones. ! buy the
s plash•m kind . Perfume
~tomizer s are . almost impossible to buy now , so I
lhorougl1iy clean an anti-

this newspaper.

r··· - soci~li· ..
..

······:.·-:···:&lt;·!:':=·:&gt;O:·:·:·:·~*:::•:•:='~;::::•::::-:·:··

I Calendar
ij

MONDAY
TRI.COUNTY C-B meeting
Monday , 7 p. m. at motorcycle club, Peach Fork Road,
county road 19. Potluck
. dinner lu follow. Bring
cove red di sh, beverages .
l&lt;lble servi ce. Coffee will be
provi ded. Members and
guests invited.
BIBLE School a t th e
Middleport United Pentecosl&lt;!l Church,·South Third
Ave ., Middleport, 9:30 to
11 :30 a .m. Monday through
ELECTION DAY dinner
Friday .
Tuesday
at
Syracuse
MIDD LEPORT Garden
Mw1icipai
building
sponsored
Club , 7:30 Monday at the
by the ladies of the
home of Mrs. J . W. Morris,
Presbyterian Church.
Mrs. Charle s McDani el,
assisting hostess.
WEDNESDAY
SPE CIAL MEETIN G.
WHITE ROSE LODGE,
Sout hern
Loca l
Band I: 30 Wednesday afternoon at
Boosters , 7:30p.m. Monday the American Legion Hall in
at high school. Final plans for Midilleporl .
CB Radi o Roundup and
discussion on band camp and
other matters. Ali interes ted
parents invited.
NE WLY FORMED
Western Boot Ci lizcns Band
Radio Club will hold a
meeting, 8 p.m . Monday at
Roush Landing, one mile
LA FF A DAY
west of Racine on Route 124; ~•
•
sign posted; those interested
in joining are welcome.

MEIGS COUNTY Fa ir
Board

meeti ng,

Monday at. secreta ry 's offi ce ,
Rock Springs FairgroWJds.
REVIVAL at Zion Church
of Christ, 7:30p.m. Monday
through Friday. Tony Maple,
Norlh Terrace Church of
Christ, Zanesville , speakin g;
public invited .
DGE B'
POMEROY LO
I •,
F&amp;AM. special meeting, 7: 30
Monda . Ma ster
p. m. . . Y'
Masons mv1led.
RACINE CHAPTER 134,
OES, regular meelmg, 8 p.m.
Monday at temple ; plans for
75th annual inspection to be
made.
TUESDAY
RACINE MASONIC Lodge
461 F&amp;AM, regular meeting,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
ELECTION DAY dinner
and bake sale Tuesday at

{'

I'

·:,,.

Republican C&amp;ndt!J•te J'or - ·

CIMMIIIIIIEI
111:109 COU!I'I'Y

!'ull Tenn Belinnlnc Janua!'J I. 1971
Prtmi.ry Election - 1une I, 1171
·

Pd . Po!. -Adll . by the c and ldeal e

TALENTED CINDY PATTERSON was a standout In
several appearances In the recital of the Mid-Porn School
of Dance.

haw always attempted

.'\

to be:

I

• Competent .
•Concerned
• Considerate
• Dedicated
Mll.S. JUDY FRASER, left, pictured with roses

• Effective

presented by her students Friday night when the Mid-Porn
School of Dance recital was held. Mrs. Fraser presented
well received tap and toe routines during the recital~ At
the right is Mrs. Fraser's daughter, A)H'il, who was also
presented a gift. April hRs been serving as an inatructor
_and ~d the c_hoceography for some of the numbers.

• Impartial

. ~,

~ - .~ .

COLUMBUS
Ohio
motorists who are interested
in reserving speical "Per·
sonalized" licen~e plates,for
'1977 have until August .31 to
file a written request ~ith the
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
(BMV) in Columbus.
Under the personalized
plate program, any Ohio
passenger car . owner may
order official license tags
bearing his or her own hardpicked combination of four,
(,ve, or six letters and
numerals. An extra yearly
fee of $35 over ard above
normal license taxes is
;,charged for each set of
· ~~rsonalized plates. This ·
' extra fee must be paid each
·year, whether or not new
metal tags are being issued.
BMV Registrar Curtis
.Andrews said this year's
change to a multi-year
, registration system will not
• prevent the Bureau from
• filling new personalized plate
; orders next year. He explained that, while most
motorists are renewing their
current plates with validation
stickers next Spring, new
personalized plate applicants
· will receive new tailor-made

REELECT BERNARD V. FULTZ
MEIGS COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY

.,

--

. . .
I d ltke to dedrcale lom~hl s

concert lo the cn11c who sa1d of
my tas l saxophone concerl. 'He
could have golten bener music
fr om a section or bathroom
drain pipe hooked up to an aslh ·
ma lic bellows.' "

BERNARD Vi FULTZ

i

(Paid For By The Candidate)

UNOFFICIAL REPUBLICAN SAMPLE BALLOT
ISSUED BY THE MEIGS COUNTY REPUBLICAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE

For Justice of Supreme Court

For Judge of the Court of Appeals
(4th District)

(Full Term Commencing January 1, 1977)

Full Term Commencing February 9, 1977
(Vote for not more than one)

X John W. Potter
For Justice of Supreme Court

At The Primary Election June 8

ELECT

Vote for not more than one

Ronald R. Calhoun
Thomas W. Mitchell
Donald

A TTENTIONI ·

X

(92nd District)

Plans fOr a complete &amp;. IOta I Emergency Medical
Service have been formutlfed by muluol co-operolion
and agreement of all Volunloor SqUids, County
Commissioners ond 5. E.O. E. M.S.

COURT OF APPEALS
Qualified:
- 20 years as Common Pleas Judge,
Jackson County.
.
- Sat. on Court of Appeals by Assignment.

Republican

Sheriff Meigs County
Experienced in law Enforcement

Your Vote and lnffuence Greatly Appreciated

THANK YOUI

...
Candidates Marked With An "X" Have Been Endorsed by the

Endorsed:

Republican Executive' Committee

- By Scioto Co. Bar Association
-By Jackson Co. Bar Association
- By Newspapers in Three Counties
- Seven Awards from Supreme · Court of
Ohio .

•

..•
•

'

·,;·Clip This Ballot
IT IS LEGAL TO TAKE IT INTO THE VOTING BOOTH WHEN YOU VOTE ON ELECTION DAY

"
lo·

•·
'•'•
••

Pd. Pol. Adv .

Pd. Pol. Adv .

..•

M

~

t

'

i

'

'·

I,

~~'JQ\t f ~~'
.

AM YOUR
CHILD!
••• AND I DESERVE AGOOD
EDUCATION
MY NAME ISN1 ON THE RAIIOT,
BUT AVOTE

If your properly Is worth $9,000. It will cost YDII
approximately 60 cents per yaar. II will be used for
Invalid and emergency transfers and as a back-up
squad fOr any of !he votuniHr squads. Ambulance and
Invalid transfer service Is much noedod service. With
the conllnuallqn of this servl~e, service will once again
be reslorod to the Tuppers Plolns ond RHdsvllle area.

For State Representative

CITIZENS
OF
SOUtHERN
LOCAL
SCHOOL
DISTRICT

'(0

As concerned citizens of Meigs County, we
are asking you to support &amp; VOTE FOR this
Tax Levy.

··~

· JUDGE 4th DISTRICT

BRUCE DAVIS

red and white tags by mail along with a 1977 validation
sticker.
Andrews said all requests
should be mailed to the Ohio
Bureau of Motor Vehlcles, P.
0. Box 1199, Columbus 432I6,
Attention:
Reservations
Section. He said no telephone
orders can be accepted , and
added that available combinations will be assigned on
a "first-come" basis as
requests are received at BMV
headquarters.
The motor vehicles chief
emphasized that the August
31 deadline applies only to
new four, five, and six-letter
requests. He said the Bureau
will take new orders for two
and three-letter "initial"
plates later in the year.
Persons who already hold
special plate reservations
need not rue new requests,
since their renewal applications are mailed out
automatically at the end of
each year .
New personalized plate
applicants are advised to
submit more than one
preferred letter • number
combination, since some
10,000 combinations have

(Full Term Commencing January 2, 19771

IX I Thomas W. Mitchell I

BY BOB HOEFLICH
J ean Horton, Paula Horton,
Attractive
costuming, Ruth ,\nn Fry, Suellen Fry,
110111e Interesting highlight Kay Hart, Jennifer Meadows,
numbers and a variety of Marcia Sisaon.
presentations spelled out
The receptive audience
another bit Friday night loveq the clown act which
when the 12th annual dance concluded ·with blacklighting
recital of the Mid·Pom School and a boola hoop routine by
of Dance was presented atthe Barbara Grueser, Sharon
Meigs Junior High School Griffin and Andrea Batey.
Auditorium in Middleport. Marcia Sfsson was excellent
Taking an active part in the in her acrobatic .routine to
·show - to the delight of the " AUey Cat." Another
large audience - was Mrs. outstanding number was
Judy
Jacobs
Fraser, "Oliver," a take off Cll the
instructor of the school. Mrs. chimney sweeps of Oliver.
Fraser received interrupted
The choreograph oo the
applause as she presented a number was by Aprtl Fruer.
toe number and returned . Making up the line waa " shortly later to do a well-4one Horton, Angela Cllffard,
tap routine. Mrs. Fraser also Terry Johnson, Melanie
joined advanced students Sisson, Amber Warner, Ubby
Esther. Lowery, June Warns- Watkins, .Tammie Starcher,
ley Suzy Sal!Uiels and her Lynne Oliver.
da~ghter, April, who has
The attractive costuming of
assisted during the past year Lauu McCullough , Erin
with
instruction
and Anderson, JodyHarrlson ~d
choreography, in a comedy Judi Mees for a. cheerleadi~g
Shirley Temple type number, type routine with pom-pons
"Good Ship Lollipop," given also was ·enhancM Dy
an excellent reception by tue blacldlghting.
audience. .
Adding to the variety of thiB
Mrs.
Fraser
was year's recital, and .well
traditionally honored by her received by the audience
students being presented a also, was a karate type
gift and a bouquet of roses, demonstration by Scott
and Miss Fraser also was Fraser (son of the school's
presented a gift from the director), Mark Slater and
students.
Tim Rawlings.
If the show bad a "star" it
Effective stage settings
was in the person of talented, were created by the Dale
versatile Cindy Patterson. Jacobs family and Scott
A veteran - though young Fraser. Members of . the
-performer, Mlss Patterson family were at yanous
was featured ln several str~;~tegic spots m the
outstanding numbers aUditorium helping handle
including a baton routine, a various assignments to help
modern jazz type number to the recital move along
"Cabaret" and clever fast smoothly. Ernie Fraser,
moving tap to "Yakklty Sax" husband of the schoors
and was the standout of "The Instructor, was also again m
Monster
Mash,"
the charge of the music and was
concluding dance number. in his usuhl post backstage to
Backing Miss Patterson in help with a number of
the final number whicl) "ahores" to help insure a
featured · blackllghted successful show.
skeleton designed costuming SEEKING ROAD FIRST
and horror wigs was an
PITTSBURGH (UP!)
effective line which included The defending world Team
Tennis champion Pittsburgh
Triangles, with only a 5·12
record, will be looking for
their first win on the road
Wednesday night when they
play the Cleveland Nets at
Cleveland.
The Triangles will be
coming off their third
consecutive defeat of the
season
to the San Diego
already been reserved during
Padres,
losing to the
the first two years of the
California
team
211-26 at the
program.
Civic
Arena
here
Saturday
Registrar · Andrews noted
night.
The
Friars'
mixed
that four-letter combinations
doubles
team
of
Betty
Ann
like JACK can be ac·
Stuart
and
Ross
Case
companied by any number
from 1·99, while five-letter · provided the margin of
combinations like BETTY victory with a 1-' win over
can only be accompanied by a Bernie Mitton and Sue Slap,
one digit number (1·9). Six· after Pittsburgh had swept
letter combinations (G the women's matches and
San Diego the men 's
JONES, for example) carnot
be ~ccompanied by a number matches.
since the maximum number
Applicants should not
of characters that can appear
on a plate is six. This means ~ubmit any fees when filing a
six-letter plates must be request. Ooce a plate has
issued on a one-of-a-kind been assigned, the Bureau
basis to the first person will' notify Its holder when
requesting them, Andrews and how to complete the
application process.
explained.

Requests invited ·for
.personalized plates.

In . 1972, the Supreme Court of Ohio honored my
performance as Prosecuting Attorney with an aw~rd_ for
"excellent service in the advancement of cnmmal
justice". I pledge to continue my dedication to Meigs
County if reelected. Your support is appreciated.

~

. . . .... . ..... .. .. . _

.. .

-

For Meigs County,

-o
·"' • ·-- - - __---1

JORIS

I, Bernard V. Fultz,
as Prosecuting Attorney

1

:

•••••11••

LESLIE F. FULTZ, 110 HIGH StREET, POMEROY, OHIO, CHAIRMAN

FIRST CHILD BORN
Mr . and Mrs . Forrest
Bachtel , Phoe nix, Ari z.,
announce'birlh of their first
child , a son, weighing ~ lbs.,
10 oz., Friday, JWJe 4 at I:20
p.m . in Good Samaritan
Hospital. He has been named
Jeremy Colin . Grand~arents
are Mr . and Mrs. Paul .Scott
and Mrs. Juanita Bachtel.
and a great-grandparent is
Mrs . Ida Childs, all of Middleport.

Please Vote For

"'

8 p.m.

l'nar Vote aad latlaeaee Apprt!elated.

Rloh•rd 1.

BECKENHAM, _.Enclml
(UPI) -.Jimlny U1M1n II
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Pen- not lettlruf hll lbaoelv .trl
sive Bret took over at the
"""encl. fonnr~ "'" World
quarter pole and led all the Marjex1e
W•lllce, dlllract
way Saturday night to win the hlm 11'001 hla major priorityfeatured $8,000 pace at Scioto regaining hie posltloo 11 the
Oo\ms.
world's top player.
Pensive Bret covered the
Connors, who arrived In
mile in 1:59 1-5, good for London Saturday with
payoff of $12.60, $5.20 and Wallace ln tow, bet!lrw hll
$Ul. The win also makes the Wimbledon bulldup toc;lay In
horse eligible fQr the Little the
Robettaon
Cup
Brown Jug.
tournament. Still smarting at
Two and one-half lengths the loss of his Wimbledoo
behind was L.R . Baron crown to Arthur Ashe laat
returning $3.60 and $3.20 and year, Connors bas opted for
third was Dlxles Pacesetter an extra week of practice Cll
paying $3.20.
(!!'ass rather than play ln the
big-money Frerich bard COIIft
championships In Paris
LEADS LATE

·Fraser family
has another hii

about a better world. The
choir wider the direction of
Mrs Marvin Burt sang "Just
One · Day at a Time" 'with
Mrs . Ben Neutzling at the
organ .

Mary Skinner.
The Rev. W. H. Perrin
talked on life's accomplish·
ments admonishing that it 's
not the long life which counts
but the life which brings

'I

~~~~~y~~~:!'~:~:-:e 7, 1978

I

FOR
the LEVY •
•

Pleasell I
Vote fOR

[i] is a VOTE fur ME

The Tax Levy June 8

(Pd. Pol. Adv.)

.. '--~--------I

Paid For by Friends of

Vote For and Retain

VETERAN STI.IDENTs of the Mid·l'om School ~! ·

RALPH WARDEN

Dance, Esther Lowery, Suzy Samuels and JWJe Wamsley
team for a fast tap and all were presented in solo
numbers.

for

County Commissioner
Rt:I'U IIUCAN

ln 1973, President Richard

MEIGS COUNTY

Nixon nominated Kansas City
Police Chief Clarence Kelley
Your Y ote and Jnfluence Appreciated
to be director of the FBI. ' . '---------.wilooltilllio~;;,';~t;,:he~C::an:::d:::ld:::a:.:.te:ll

VoU-;~, ~ Judge John Donald Ratcliff
Vote For

DONALD RATCLIFF
Republican Candidate For

4TH DISTRICT
COURT OF .APPEALS
Ar•r: • ~•• ~ t t l

ot 7 awtrds from Ohio Suprema Court

tor Outnandlng Judicial Sttrv ice.
Qu.1Jiried E:xpm·icnced ~ ~epend~tble ,_ ~ftiaienl

/M Fourth District Court of Appeals
lEGAL EMPERIENCE
Admitted IQ p! K i ict ltw, Oh li1 , 1~4 1 • 14 vemrt jlt lv• tt III IIC I I~e ol l1w •
Activt tppe11att tnd trltl pr ~e t lu " Adm itled hl practlct ~ tore US . Slllll~rne

srorr FRASER WAll

Court, U. S. TtiC Court , tnd 2 Ftdtrll Dhuict Cou rt• • Stf\tt(l 8 't'll!'l 11
A11i111nt ProNCul lf'111 Atlor nt~ In Rou County • Serving ~~~Gond U!tlll 11 Jud1141,

featured with Tim
Rawlings and Mark
Slater in karate type
demonstrations at the
Friday recital of the Mid·
Pom School til Dance.

Comm on Ploa1 Court, Rou County • E.tJblhhlld Our111u ol Supjourt • Auhtvtl
l 01mt t ioo un llllld Probl t ton Departmen t 1nd unllltd Ccurt 1~ 111111 tor 1ll Cwr11
ol Rou Cou11ty • Meu\btr Moder u Ccurtt Cumrnllll!'ll ul Oh iu State B1r At~lt
tiuu • 1 ynr u Chiel Leg1\ OIIQ r 1nd O ~~tk Cou ll Oll lcer, Grn t L1k11 Navel
61111 • 5JIIII;ial lgllll\ uf tht f .6 .1. 1or 9 yeart ir~~: lud ir111 3 V1811 II AdntlnilllttiVII
Auilllll\ to J. Edillr HOO'III 1nd re1id11n t ~g~~rll In Ron, ~lllhllrld. Pike. JICkl(tn.
Hocking, VInton . Mei95 lrld Galtla Counties durlflll CO!lllfUCt lon ot A PI.Ot. Thee
countln IIOI'IIJ with Athlllll , Adarm , Br awrl , l i WIII'ICI , Pk:k iWIV , Sr:lo to 111!1
With ing ton Counlln loc tudld llh Olttrlct Court ot AP!Mtalt.
PERIOIIIIAL BAC'ItOROUJIID
Oetctnd~nt p ~neer bm ily • Rt1 id1nt ol Chlll lto the • Mtrrltd , 4 chllrtrar •
B.S. d~rfll from O.S.U. 1nd Jur is Ooctdr't ~ree tram Ohio St1111 L1w !)(;lwol
• Seried 4 y11r1 lrt U. S. Nnv, 2 ynrs combtr t ~tv In South P ~~:ll io on Mlr11
Mftptr1 • M ~ mber at St. f'aul 't E pl~~.:opa l Chu rch wtit:rl Mrvtd 6 yeirt 11
\lutryman and 8 ye111 M Church School Te.•cher • Itt 6oerd Of Truttem, Ohio
Unlwmh'I·Ch lllloothe, lflllut1r l•l O~ti 9J)ment Auoolat lon, Unltfd Furwt , •tid K1w•nlt

NOW YOU KNOW
Members of the Jain sect in
India are so averse to killing
that they wear veils over
their mouths to avoid inad·
vertentiy swallowing insects.

Judge
John

Dotad .
Ratcliff

*A
Lifetime
of
Public
Service

Vote Crow for Prosecuting Attorney

PROGRAM

I will bear down on drug violators,
especially pushers or sellers of
drugs.
I wi II cooperate with the Sheriff's
Office, County Officials, Township
Trustees, school officials, and all
other interested individuals.
It is my opinion that more police
protection should be provided for
Meigs County . There are 26 miles in
area from the East end of the County
to the West. Under the Ohio Revised
Code Meigs County can establish
Township Police Districts. If the
Township officials desire, I will
assist them in establishing Township
policemen.
There are also additional federal
monies available for additional
police protection. I will do
everything I can to obtain same for
the County.

--

·----

TERM OF OFFICE
1 am seeking my first term as
Prosecutor of Meigs County.
My opponent has held this office for
16 years and is seeking a fifth term
for four additional years in office.
He has qualified for a State
Employees Retirement Pension.
The Prosecutor should be a young
man and should devote full time to
the job.
My sole employement · is that of
practicing law, and I will devote full
time to the practice of law.

-------------My Name Stands For lblesty and
Integrity

FliED "llcl• W.

BACKGROUND

Lifelong resident of Meigs County, except
for working three years in Dayton, Ohio.

CROW III

Raised in Syracuse and now lives in Letart
Falls.

Republlcon
Candidate For

.

MEIGS COUNTY
Proud of his family's contribution to Meigs
County:
Great Grandfather, Charles Crow, was
County Commissioner;
Great Grandmother, Mary D. Hayman.
Grandfather, Judge Fred W. Crow, was
County Prosecutor and Common Pleas
Judge;
Grandfather, Irving Karr, was County
Commissioner;
Father, Fred .W. Crow, Jr., is attorney
and active in civil affairs;
Mother, Eleanor Karr Crow, was a public
school teacher for many years .

I am a member of the Meigs County
Jaycees; M.A. R. C.; Board of Mental
Retardation; a Pee Wee baseball coach;
and has farmed for the last three years.

i

~rosecuting
Your Support &amp; Influence Would

flltomeg

Be Appreciated:

QUALIFICATIONS
Graduate of Oh io University and Ohio State University
Law Shoot.
First pollee legal advisor In the Slaleot Ohio,
Dayton Pollee Academy Instructor.
Sole legal advisor lor the City of Dayton's Pollee
Department 425 man force .
Graduate of Poll ee Community Relations Training
Program given by Xavier University.
Graduate of Special Training Program for Pollee
Legal Advisors given by the International Association
of Chiefs of Pollee, Inc. and Norlhwtstern University .
Served as Ohio Ass istant Attorney General.
Now a pract icing attornoy with the firm of Crow, Cro.,.,
&amp; Porter.

FREDERICK W. CROW, Ill

I

Pd. Pol. AtJv. by the Candidate

f

�.'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. Q., Monday , Junf 7, l9it;
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
P M
Da v
Oe t or e
Put:Jil cil ion
Monday D('adlltH' 9

For Fast Results Use· The Sentinel Classifieds

,, nl

- Bermce Bade Osol

Cancet1at1on
Co rr ec 110n s will b(' a&lt;
ccp1ed un111 9 am for
nay o l Publl c at1on
REGULATIONS
lh e Publ is her rcst' r 'H'S
'hP rrght to t'dit or ! Cjcc t
&lt;my ads dee m ed ob
t{'(I IOnat Th e publ 15h(tr
Nill not be r espo nsible lor
rno r e than one 1ncorrcct
•nscr t,on

Tuesday, June 8, U78
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Take nothlrig for granted rn any

commmcntl dealrngs you have
today Fail•ng ta stay on l OP o f
mailer s could be a c;os tly mi Stak e

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)

\

For Want Ad Serv 1ce

l

down the hardest today It's
bes t you rely mm e on yourself
and tess on others

ce n 1s

per

word

one

•nser '•on
M•n '"lU ll I Charg(') I 00
1·1 ce n 1s per wo r d thr ee
( 01 / SCCUitVC

GE MINI (Ma y 21 -Juno 20)

l ll SC rl tOil S

76 r Pn rs per wore! s•x
! On SCCUI IVf:.'
rnseri i011 S
7~ P e r Cl• r1t 01S Co unt on
pa1d ad s .lr1d • ad s pn1d
Wfl h 1n 10 clay s
CARD OF THANKS

Ril!her than work or1 a tas k you
wsen t do111g to clny set 11 as1de
to r the rnomcnt You NOn 't do a
qoocJ )Ob rl yo~n heart 1sn I m 1!

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

~~ OU

&amp; OBITUARY

for
~0
word
!!11n1111Um
Ea c h addil10n.tl word 3
cc n l!i

Dorl' l at!a ct1 stnng s 10 a favor
yolr do lo r anoH1cr toda y Achurrs ol !t11s ty p o will br ee d
re sPntment and put the
rt'lrl l1 01l 'i hrp Ill fRO panly

ATTN : ! !

ALLit,OUSEW IV ES
All Yard Sa l es, Rummage ,
Porc h an d Basemen t Por ch
and Basement Sales , et c .
m ust b e pa id •n advance .
Ge t yo ur 1n in eQ rl }l by
stopping by our off ice at
Th e Daily Se nt inel, 111
Co ur t St or wri t ing Bo x
729 , Po me r oy Oh10 &lt;15769
with your r emillanc e

11s •;u rp to IJe knocked o ff
Wl:!• qh your words c mefully
fllld &lt;1VOir1 Clili CI/111 9 0 H1ers

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You
can be QUI!(' ~onero u s when
dcil~lllQ wl\11 1r 1ends but today
you re lrkoly to br more of a
lakrr than &lt;1 qrver

SCO RPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov . 22)

:akes Dor1 I put good money
aft er bild rna Stllratron th at rsn 't
p&lt;lylng oil Be pruden t where
tmances a re co ncerned

AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 19)
Goals that yo u hope to ach 1eve
today rnay st rp by the boards
becau se you won t be wrlhng to
put forth the necessary effo rt

PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20)
Don 1 do anyth rng aga1nst your
better 1udgmen t today It you
teet sornetnrng rsn t good for
you , chan ces are you 're rig ht.

~Your
\l}'Birthday
June 8, 1976
Subst an ti al rewards wrll be
there thi s co m•ng yea r . 11 you 're
wrlhng to pay the pnce Be mdustrrou s and ta ke the long
rang e vrew. Don 't look fo r
somethmg for noth ing

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
E st a t e

ol

Ca se No 11 , 8JO

MARC I A
1.
HARR ISON , Decease d
Noti ce IS h er eb y Q•ve n tllat
Ch arl otte A Br ow n , Ol J J 2
Beech Srreer , Middl epor t ,
Ohio . ha s b een du l y appo1n tc d
Executrrx of th e Est at e o f
Ma r c• a I Harrison , dec eased ,
tare ot M eig s Coun ,..,. , Ohio
Cr ed i tor s ar c r cqu .r ed Jo
111e the ir claims w1lh sa 1d
f •duc•ary with rn thr ee months
Dar ed thi s Jrd day of June
19 76
Mann111g D We bster
Ju d ge
Cour1 of Comm on Pl ea s.
Proba te D IV ISIOn
( 6 \ 7, Ll. 2 1, ) IC

Meigs
Property

Card of Thanks
THE fa mi ly of Ja mes D Ahles
wi~he.s to ex pres'&gt; 1he1r thank s
to Hoc krng Volley Hos p1tal and
staff . th e 'Hein lein ar1d Brown "
and Ew mg Funeral Homes ; the
Revere nd E. H Martin , song s
by Mr . Jame s Ba il ey , Uor ol of lenng s, k ln drHl-SS l rom frrends
111 our li me of sorrow
Th e Abi es Fom rly

Notices
RACINE Fire Deportment w 1ll
ho ve a gull shoot Sa turday at
6.30 p .m at iheir new buildin g
off Bo shan Rood .
NOW open for Bu smcss . " The
l awn K iln ' 1'10 1 l Ea st Mo111 St. .
Pomeroy Oh1o Greenware ,
po •nt s, ce ro mlc sup pl ies ,
classes . Monday.
Tuesda y .
Weds . and Fr1day , 10 h112 p m .
E...enmgs by appoin tment Co lt
992 -5954, L111do Moy er
D&amp;J s Ho use of Fobrt cs Sa le
to
make room fo r 11ew sh1prnen t
ollobr ics, Jun e 7 1hru 12, 1 m•l e
5 ol M•ddl epor t, Stol e Rt. 7

LOST ·Tom Cat , bla ck and whit e .
por t S1o mese, Syracuse, Ash
and Co ll ege St or eo . N om e Shu
Shu phone 997-2837

Norman 0 . Weber, Vera A.
Weber to Melvm C. 'Murphy.
~l(c M. Murphy, Parcel,
:Diivt .
Mina Lewis to Charles F .
f;i es, Shirley Lorene Pyles.

..

•.•Lot,
, Racine .

•• · Ira E. Van Cooney, Hazel
B"n Coo ney to Herma n
\~o~t, Roseen Fay Trout
45.2a A., Salisbury.
1
! Roy D. Cremeans, Doris F .
P emeans to Carl E. Smi th,
~be ., Ease ., Orange.
Lloyd Harris to Janice E .
Gibbs, Joyce K. Circle, Lots,
Middlepor t.
,Elbert E. Eddy, Marie E.
Eddy to Cle lus Mac Eddy, 100
A , Olive.
Myrtle Grover, Gregory S
rover. Linda Grover,
"l'a tricia D. Humphrey, Lew1s
".1.\lunphrey, Esther Loraine
.,YJ!noy, Robert Venoy , Marcia
[Jane Houdashcll, Robe r t
'"Houdashell , Andrew E .
1"Crover , Ne ll ie Grove r .
Da lton B. Grove r , Ann
Grover to Andrew E. Grover,
Nell ie Gr over , 18' , A.,
Salisbury .

Wil l DO odd JObs, roofing . pa•n ·
l •ng houhng. lreework, and
mow1ng . Phone 992 7409.
WIL L core l or elderl y person mmy
horne Ph one 1 (bl 4) ~85 - 3849
or9q2 .J 410
Will do baby si tM g
Phone 9q2 -714J .

onyt1me

CAS H po1d for oil makes and
mod els of mobile homes
Phone area rod e 614 -423 953 l .
$$Cosh$$$ for junked outo Frye 's
Tru ck Auto Ports . Rullond.
Phone 742-2061 .
DEA LER S in jur1k cars scrap iron ,
me tal s Phone 992 -5468,
JENNY ly nn or ~p ool tw in bed ,
red mapl e . Phone 992 .2860.

I

I' On th1s day in

hi story :
:In 1664, delegates meeting
1p Ba lti mor e nomin aled
1braham
Lin co ln a nd
Andrew Johnson to head the
Jtepubli ca n
presidenti al
tlckel.

1972 Ford one.holf ton p1 c ~up ,

$1 35{) Coll {614 !378-6349.

IF YOU ho ve a se rviCe to off er , 1973 M on te Ca rlo sil ver . low
won t to buy or se ll some thing ,
rndeo ge , excel len t cond 1tion .
or e l_ook1ng for wo rk
. or
Phone 992-2035 or ~92 - 29:7 1
whate'.'er .
you'll ge t resu lt s
1973 O lds Cu tlass Su preme,
faster w11 h o Sen tinel Want Ad
31.000 mdes. $3:300, ex ce ll errl
Ca ll 992 2 I 56.
condition Phone (6 14) 84 3·
&lt;t f o111i l y Yard Sole . Tu ppers
~ 621.
Pla1 ns m the Arbaugh Addil1 qn.
June 7, 8and91rom9a .m td 14 1%9 VW bug . $550 Phone 9927797 .
p m . For infornmlion phone
{614 )667-3933.
1970 Dodge Po lara 4 dr . o c ,
p s. p b , o .t. ~h one 992 -5048.
FI VE Fom1ly Yord Sole June 7 to
11 , doth mg, d1 shes , fu rnrtu re, 2 power tok e-ofl units fo r Dodger
cra ft s I mile southeas t o f Hor
truck . $250 Right and lef 1
r1sonvi lle . Ohio on Stol e Rt
Ph o n e 9~2 511t
J&lt;tl , 81o 6p m
1969 Roadrunner . very good con d•llon . Phone lb 14 ) 367 -7 153 .

Pets for Sate

1972 Novo 350 eng 1ne w ith
header wil l sowh ce a t $12C(t
Phone 843 -2624.

TO GIVE AWAY--M eig s Cou nty
Humane Socie ty has one mol e
dog med rum s1ze, about 10 1964 Ca ta lina 4 dr , f loor , l
speed $95 or bes t off er Co li
rnonfh s o ld , 2 ~oll e n s about 8
anytim e Sunday and after 6
mon ths old , one block . one
p m on weekdays Phone 992blo ck and wh1 te . Ju st sho ts and
2958.
worm1ng wi ll be fu rn 1shed . Call
991 -5427 ofter b·OO p rn
195t;, Chevy Belo1r 53.00 actual
mi les . Ph one 992 6092
A.K C Doberman Pin sc her pup·
p1es. 6 wee ks old . Shots 011d
wormed . Co il (6 14) 533 -076 1

For Rent

Help Wanted
DEPENDABLE bo by silhH to m re
for 2 g1rl s o'ges 5 an d 8 m rny
home in evenmgs . Phone 992 -

35 II

Business Opportunities

TRAIN FULL OR·
PART TIME
You don ' t haw e to qu 1t you r
pre sent JOb to t ram t o d"ve a
tract or-tr a1ler. In on ly 7 to 8
wet~ke nd s PART T IME tra1 nmg
!Sa turd ays &amp; Sunday) ) a qual lfred drJver can be earning

per yea r and up (3 weeks in a
FUL L TIME resid en t tr a1 ning
progra m) .

NOT ICE OF

CLORENCE CO NADAY ,
Adm1n 1t. tr t~ lr i ;.c
ot th e
E stat C' ot P c lp ht~
Cum m •n , Dt' CC' ased
'

(6 )

~.

11, , , ,

FURN ISHED , 2 bedrm oportmenl ,
adult s on l y, 1n M•dd leporl .
Phone 992 -3874 .

TURF TILL
TILLERS

Dan and evening s excep t

mg. Inc. wi ll tram you on mod ern, profe ssional equ1pm en t,
and placement assistance is
ava •table upon graduation.

CALL NOW !

422-40 80

AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

Tues. and Wed . or by
conta cting R. Codner ,

owner.

5-21- 1 mo .

2 Bcdrm . mobile home
99~ · 2834 .

Camping Equipment
9th ANNIV ER SAR Y SALE . On Star cr aft
m•n 1·mo t o r s, tr av e l
lrarle rs. camper s new and us ed, be st pnces m tri -stat e
area . Sto p rn a nd compare .
Carnp Conley Sro rcraft Sales .
Rl 6:l N . PI Pleo sant .

Wanted to.Rent

2400 sq fr . of otf iCe space. As IS
or will remodel with l ease to
suit ten nan t , Phone 992 -5786.
MOBILE home , adults only . Phone
99~ · S53S.

4

rm . l urn •s hed oparl men t,
eve rything paid , upsfoirs apo rt ·
rnen t. no pel s or children
Adult s on ly Phone 9'12 5610 , or
con be 5een at 814 E. Mom St.,
Pome roy

dor. Coll992-2659

FARMALL Super C cul!i votors,
plow s, d isk , corn planter , No .
2500 mower , McCorm1ck No. 2,
hay cond1 110ner. No
250
Pho"e (6 1.4 ) 378-6205.

Phone (6 14 )667-3519

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

FOR THE
135 ac res.

Min e r a l s. some timber .

ava il able

( No

bu itd;ngsl On blacktop Rd .
16,600.
PRIVATE - 7•, htlly acres
lgreal fo r baby far m).
Home has 5 8 R, bath , own
wat e r w.softener ,

N.G. hot

wa ter · heat, carpeting &amp;

Ne ed new root or aid
repaired? Hou se, roof.
barn, ~ hingtes , build up,
pamting , electrrcal work ,
gutters &amp; • downspouts ,
fuq1aces , water heaters,
wa1er soffners, 1nstalled &amp;
repa1red, Sewa1e .
Call us at 949-2882

or 949-2203

q 8-1 mo

Siding Center

7537
YOU NG robbils, $2 00 Call {614)
378 -626 1, Reedsv1 lle , Ohio .
5 h p . ro tot iller . S60 Call A t h ~ns
(614 ) 592 -2 158 , 33 To wmend
Pl ace .

Virgil 8. Sr., Realtor
110

Mechanic PomerDy,O.

Phone 992-3325
INVESTMENT - Business
roo m dow n and 5 room ap t .
up. Br ick , tile con st ., nat.
gas &amp; city water. $13.500.
POMEROY - 3 br . home
with l 1 2 baths, hot wate r
heat, basement &amp; niCe v iew

of river .

MIDDLEPORT - 7 Rm s..
2 ba th s, 2 corner Jots wi th

w-kitchen, ut ilit y &amp; garage

LOCATION . $~7.500 .
BARGAIN - Ni ce 3 Brs .,
bath , large kil. and living .
Family room &amp; all utilities
On ly $8,500.
SOLID - 1 ~ Rms oo l lots,

Lan csca ped , p,~ ac r es .

saver

kitch en

(ea t

in) ,

H W flo ors (ca rpe ted),
ba th . Full basemen t wutiltty. $18 000.

view of r iver

A REAL

5 Brs., 2 baths , enormou s

Mod. kil . w;th cook &amp; bake
un1t s

Man y extras . $25, 000.

4 ACRES -

Near school.

House has been

renova ted .

2 car garage and lois ol
pines. $29,500.

CHESHIRE - Mod . 6 rm .
venee r ranc h home
Patio, lo ve ly kit , fu ll

br i ck

b asement

and

3

lots.

$46,500.
LARGE OLD HOME - 4
Brs., ll/2 baths. 2 livings,
din ing . utility, basement
with ga rage Large yard.
$ ~ 0 . 000 .
RUTLAND - 3 Brs., ba th ,

99?-396S .

One 9 mon th old ~ :e r e f o rd bull .
con be reg istered Phone 992·

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

TWIN CITY

HANDS TIED FOR
LACK OF CASHf
you like to mak• 1
lchan&lt;lo but can't do a thing
II your preHnf
THEN LIST
where a const~.nt
proce ssion of buyers will
bring action .
A CALL WILL BRING ALL
DETAILS
992-2259 or 992-2568
3 bed rm . house both . cellar , and
outbu rldrngs almos t 4 acres of
fon d , sou th end of Rut lan d. See
Bill Smi th. at Smi th 's Body Shop
o r phone 742 -3 135 or Q9'2 -7708 .

• K tO 7 5 4

t6 5
.Q8 2
Both vulnerable

&lt;

West

High prices for scrap
autos , · motors and
other meta Is. Phone
992-2228. Monday thru
Friday 8-3, Saturday
8-12.

Pass Dbl.
Pass 3•
Pass 6 •
Pass
Opening le•d

1-.[1'TLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE OR.PHAN·
1Uit'IM:RWIH
All ARGUMEHT OR
CDfNil'(Cf TH'
Girl JUST

MACHINE SHOP
17 ·Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Telephone 16141992-3768
We Deliver
4-25-1 mo.

JUNE SPECIAL

6 CANS OF RC

'1.00

+Tax
au;· .)4.00 purchase
and this ad. Good through
6-30-76.
With

OONELli'S PIZZA
Middleport, Ohio
991-6167
6-1-76-1 month

RACINE
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'6.95

Square Yard Installed

Dave Parsons. Owner

1Free estimates on car~·

1&gt;et1ng and installation.
. We'll bring samples to your

Swee pers, toas ters, irons , all
small oppl rances . lown mower ,
next to Slate Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985 38~5.

REMODELING , Plumbing heottng
ond oil typ es of gen eral repa ir .
Work guaran teed 20 years ex·

no

obligatiO!"!.
reall~

save.

Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
614-992-'2'206
1._14 1 Ilia

I

J:

RIDERS SALVAGE
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-5468

p e ri e nc e . I n sured
fre e
es11mates . Coli 992-2384 or

.. ~ 1_4_1 ~98.:_7~~_A~t,o~!:_ -- -SEWING MACHINE Repairs , se rvice , all make s, 992-2284. The
Shop , Pomeroy.
Fa b ri c
Authomed S•nger Soles and

~e~~~~.:_ ~~ !~o~~:~ ~~~~~:_
EXCAVATING, dozer, looder and
back hoe work ; dump trucks
and fa-boys for hire; will haul
fill drrt, top sotl, lime sto ne and
gro\lel. Col i Bob or Roger Jef ·
day phone 992·7089,
fers
n1ght phone 992 -3525 or 992 -

GAsoLJNF: ALLF:Y

Clovia. Slim
and Chipper
just walked
to wor~!

Congratulations
Gradum
Let OONELLI'S make tile
PIZZa for your oflu
graduation porl'f. Coli us at
99'1-6167 and we will moko
your Plrty somelhinv to
remember. Check our
porty rifts.

Donelll's Pizza
lcldleport, Ohio

5232.

WILL do roof •ng, cons truction ,
plumb ing and healing. No job
too large or tao small Ph one

WE'VE 60T
T061fOUfA
TH/5 PLACE;-

742-2348,

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
end dircher Charl es R Hotf iel d , Bock Hoe Servi ce
Rutlond . Ohi o. Phone 742-2008.'

yo' TAKE: c:;t.&gt;_f&lt;E 0' TH' CHILt=

MACRID 15 VERY

'TH' v.GRLD

·allcK"H"ois-

licensed
in stall e r . Shepard
Contrac tors. Phone 7.42-2409.

.JU5TABI !.
THCIJGHT...HES
STAKING ME
OUT IN THE:
LDBBY!

Br s, 2 ba t hs, healo lalor
f tr epta ce, ni ce k it.. full
basem en t , 2 ca r garage, 2

porche s. &amp; la rg e tot.
$34 ,000.
NEW LISTING - 4 Brs,
bath , na t. gas hea l. new kit
with stove &amp; refrigerator at
Rutland . $13,000.
COME
TO
SUNNY
SOUTHERN OHIO .
START A HAPPY AND
BETTER WAY OF LIFE .

- Jt

(Do you have a question
lo r the e•perts? Writs "Ask
the Jacobys" care ol this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
tl stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
will be used m th is column .
and w11/ receive copies of
JA COBY MODERN.)

10
16
19
22

'

Cuddle
Yield
Coloration
Hungarian
dog
23 Milun's
opera
house
12 wds.)
24 Curse;
scourge

2:0tl-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; To Be Announced 33.
2:3ti-Doctors 3,4,15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
~:00---Anothr World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In he Family 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 ; To Be
Announced 33.
3 :J~e Life to Live 13; MtckeyMouseCiub 6; Match
Game 8,10; Inner Tennis 20.
4:tl0-Mister Cartoon 3t Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club I ; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "The 11angman" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3()-Bewltched 3; Mod squad 6; Andy Griffith 11
Setame St. 20,33; Filntsto~ea 15.
5:0D-Bonanza ·3; Partridge Farrylly 8; Minton : Impossible 15.
S:Jti--Adam-12 4; News6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,331 Aam-12 13.
6:0D-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom !0,33.
6:3ti-NBC !"ews 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoge
&amp; You 33. '
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Country Place 8; News 10; Name That
Tune 13; Family Affair 15; Undlrstandlng Afrltll
20: Wild Wild World of Animals J3.

25 Prickly herb
26 Lurch
28 Wlnnle-lhePooh's
creator
29 Slocklng
thread
30 Slage
direction
35 Shadowy
3t Klnd of dog

7:3ti-Baseba(l3,4; Let's Deal with It 6,1 Match Gamo
PM 8; Price is Right tO; To Tell the Truth 13: Nuhvllle on the Road 15; Evening Edition wllh Marlin
Agronsky 20; Family Theatre JJ. 8 :OD-Happy Dav•
6, 13; Movln' On 151 R11l ly Rosie: Starring The
Nutshell Kids 8, 10; Burglar -Proofing 20; Burgler.
Proollng 33.
8:3ti-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,1 3; Good Times 8,10;
Consumer urvlval' 20,33.
9:0D-Movte " Prudence &amp; the Pill" 13; Pollee Woma~
15; Movie "The Sundowners" 6; MASH 8,10;
Evening at Symphony 20; Rachel, La Cubana 33.
9:311'-0ne Day at a Time 8,10.
10:D0-City of Angels 3, 15; To Be Announced 4; Switch
8, 10; News 20.
·
10 :3o-NFL Action '76,4: Black Perspective on the
News
ll :OD-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :lti-Presldentlal Prlmarles3,4,8, 13, 15; Movie "Cry
Terror" 10; Janak! 33.
12:0D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mystery of the Week 131
News 6; Movie "Nicky's World" 8.
1:3ti-News 13.

~l]JM@~;JJ..J !::::!:!:! ...J ~.
" &gt; Ht,H\&gt;\\OfJ '

b+--+-

FOR~h;b~!;n-~ot;r-;;11-~ill:
Drill ing

HA-u~LtNG~- Ori;e:_.-;,;,--;al;rioi

JUBT HOW EFFECTIVE
MY DIBGUISE t5 i

to

work It:

- ~~!:~~·..:'::.!'~~.!: 742 -2850.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Son•tat •on . 992-3954 or 992- CARPENTER , f loori,-;-g~ - ~;J;'n~g~
paneling . Phone 992·2759,
~428 .

CRYPTOQUOTE

I

GC

GQ

QTIMTM

YIMXTQ

YL X ' C

KE I Q

I
I I I t)

E TIM K

IQPN E TMT

DURN SNUFFVS
01: DOCS!!
HE'S BEEN DI661N'
HOLES IN MV
BACK-

I.

Q

T I M K E. -

X L M I. K E P

YWMQ'fP
Yesterday's Cryptorjuote: ONE OF THE STRIKING DIF·
FERENCES BETWEEN A CAT AND A UE IS THAT A CAT
HAS ONLY NINE LIVES. - MARK TWAIN

I'LL GIT EVEN
WIF THAT
VARMINT!.'

~

· LEMWID •

V' ~

THE GOOC&gt;·IJYE$ CAN'T
IJE 5-AI!? UN"TIL.
THEY'IItE PA'""c:!' '

I I I

"
Now arranre lht elrtltd !tUM
to form the oul)lrioo IM1I'tr, II ·

;:::::::~~.,1~==~-==~-=·~·u~r~reoted=~b' the..,_~
I
..w .. - - - .
(XIIli
I

TFC'I'

~ •lu,.,..,.

.

.•

J•••bl••' HtKEII

I

Alll&gt;''lf"r

LINEN THIIEIH

'J'ru&amp;iblecf tilt llof•IIO-JOIU'f
adrt•- HER UNEI

1'1 , , , l"t

I HAVE TO FiND OJT
MO~E

'IARD

AG'IN-

,.

.,

•

III

ISPIVLE

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

~~_,p · LQ'I'

I
C)

MALFE

One Iotter simply slonds for another. In lhls sample .1\ Is
used for tho three t;,, X fu1· the two O's, olo. Sin~!&lt; Iott er•.
.:t)lostrophcs, the l&lt;'n~t h nnct rornmt ion of 1It(' \m nls am all
hint•. F.nrh lilly the &lt;'mle letters nrc dltrercnt.

and limest one or gravel , farm

o, !I • ' ,

form four ordinary word1.

A X Y D I, 8 A. A X R
I, 0 N G F E J, 1. 0 W

Ia

•I&gt;

Unorrambl• the .. four Jumblu,
one letter to each 1quare, to

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;IUOTE- Here's how

NOW I'LL FIND OUT

large lol. $12.000.
49 ACRES - New 2 Br
hom e, 3 yrs . old, birch kit.
NEW LISTING - Mod. 3

A Missouri reader wants to
know if the experts spoil
bridge with special com plicated conventions.
We don 't think so . Jack
Nicklaus is allowed to attempt
golf shots that the average
player can't make. Jimmy
Connors Is allowed to hit a
tennis ball as hard as he
wishes . In world competition
a player should be allowed to
use his full skills

34 Cavalryman's need
36 Ultimate 1=-t--+-f'--+--t-:17 "Aslotat"
maid
L.:~ioi;;;!;;;.._.:.:Z::=:::..-=....----__;,__~~~~~- ::18 Ironwood

2438.
excA"vA"riNG.
AND
DOZER, LARGE AND SMALL
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED . BILL
PUlliNS, PHONE 9'1~ - 2478 , DAY
OR NIGHT .
sEPTIC-- S~ ~e~~ - ~;;-stall;d-bv

new gas F A . furn ace, 2
po rc h es , ba se ment and

wi th stove &amp; refrigerator .
Carport &amp; lull basemen t.

Pass 4•
Pass Pasa

Z5 Bakery
product
ze Baby whale
%7 "C' - Ia

11ME
F6' DAISY' ___.. ,_.,,TL YEAR- BUT 21 ~=~t of a
MAE - 50 15 TIBEr. ON
Roman
TbTHEI&lt; HAND
legion
THAR:S .MOSCOW- u - htnunel!
3Z Ill-temper
v; /'.._""'"E~-:_...-;~;d~il)- 33
One (Ger.)

WHILE AH SASHAYS THRCV6H

--

wm 's Gu lf' Se rv ice, Midd lepo rt , Oh1o. Phone 992-

-

2.

--~L~-....ol~~;t;1J_ Z4 Life or
=
breeches

Open 4 p.m . daily
CIOseCioll day Mondays

. in g. Pho ne Lemley
Compa ny , 742-2003 .

7:3ti-Schoolleo 10.
8:0D-Lassle 6; Copt. Kengoroo 8,10; Sesame St. JJ,
B:3ti-Big Valley 6.
9:0D-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4.15: Lucy Show I ; Mlkt
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13; Mister Rogort
33.
9:3ti-Cross-Wils 3; One Lite to Live 6; Tattletales I;
Mike Douglas 13; Carrascolendas lJ .
10 :0D-Celobrlly Sweepolakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Bit With Knit 33.
10 :3ti-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Dinah 6: Lllas Yoga &amp; You
33.
11 :tlO-Wheet ot Fortune 3,15: Weekday 4; Gambit'
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; ~oweil Thomas
Remembars 33.
11 :»-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13; Lollt
of Ute 8,101 Biography 33.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:0D-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Lef'a Make a
Deal 13; Newo 6,8,10; Sesame St. 33.
12 :31)-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search for .Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :55--NBC News 3, 15.
1:OD-Newt 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 11
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 151
Elee. Co. 33.
1:3ti-Days of Our Llveo 3.4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As The World Turns B, 10; Family Theatre ll.

Pass

I N.T.

br THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
39 Nonprofes1 H.H. Munro sionals
s Make more 40 Equal ·
intense
DOWN
II Mlngled
I Witch-trial
with
site
12 Unwilling
2 Critic,
13 Solitary
Qeveland It Deserves
3 Monarch's
15 Work unit
natal day
16 Medii.
12 wds. 1
island
4 Chemical
1abbr.)
suffix
17 Word with 5 Donizetti's
·· L'elisir - ''
meg or
6 Each
chesl
18 "'!'he - of
and all
Edwin
7 Suffix for
Drood"
profit
!0 President's 8 Christ
nickname
13 wds.J
U Remuin;
9 Inlet
endure
!2 Falher
(Fr.)
!3 "I Walk
the - "

10 - '1

-- ~e~~~&lt;_! - ~h_o~ -:_!9~~~~ :_ __ _ GREG 'S CB SALES, located at Er·
0&amp;0 TREE Trr mming 20 years ex -

6:tl0-Summer Semester 10.
6:15--Form Report 13.
6:20--Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13.
6:3ti-Columbuo Today 4; News 6; Su mmer Semestll!"
8; Concer ns &amp; Comments 10.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
6:5()-Good Morning , Weol VIrginia 13.
6:55--Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13 .
7:0D-Today 3,4, 15: Good Morning, America 6, lJ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

~DUMCfH'I

6-3-1 month

--·-

TUESDAY, JUN E 8, 1976

Souih

Oswald : "Starting in 1975,
New York's Cavendish Club
ANNIE-LET
THE WIND BLOW,
runsaninvitationtoumament
r:;r====:--=-=~7~~::=""""-'==-~-, for the benefit of the
BIJ'T WITH All !ME LIGHT·
'DADDY' 5A15 IT'S ACTIOI&gt;I
Children 's cancer fund . Jim
WfiGiiT, TWO·FOR*NICl&lt;eL , MOT 6AB. TlfAT GETS .JOtls
Jacoby won it last year with
WINDeAGS 1UH HfAR BI.OWIN
DOHE llHD COHVIHCfS
Off THEIR YAPS IT'S PRETT1 OPPOHEHTS·· HE'S JUST
Jeff Westheimer. This year it
HARI&gt; SOME TIMES HOT TO
SAV1H' HIS WIHD AHD
was WOn by Allen Sontag and
CUT LOOSE 014' SET
PtlTTIH' IT tHTO WORK ·
Peter Weischsel, one Of ·the
'EM RKitfT besl young pairs today ."
Jim : " I was unable to play
this year, but judging by the ·
way Peter and Allen played , I
doubt very much if we could
have repeated ."
Oswald : "Allen and Peter
gained a lot of pomts when an
opponent's attempt to fix
them backfired East's one

Junk Batteries $1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper·J5c
Car Bodies.
Scrap-Iron.

949-2814 6_7_1mo
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

AIR -

SLOAN'S
_CARPETING
how you can

notrump was pure whimsy
and gave Peter a chance to bid
two hearts. Allen tried a threeclub cue bid. Peter JUmped to
four hearts and All en bid six ."
Jim : " There wasn't any
real problem in the play.
Peter drew trumps and attacked spad es by cashing
dummy 's ace and his own
queen. When East showed out
!obviously East's notrump
had been pure whimsy), Peter
was able to finesse against
West's jack . He had to lose a
club at the end. but he could
afford it."

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

5-26-1 mo.

See

North Eall
l •

SALVAGE

. I home wilh

t KQ 43
.AKJ974

• Q8 3

l'HW'U.. RE'VO~
MYt..la;~.

HALLS

• 32

SOUTH

.

&lt;IIITll HOI"

CARPET SHOP

etc. Slorage bldg. $1S,OOO .
RT. 143 - Close in . Mobtle

$8,300 .
DETAILED
FOR
COMFORT - 3 BR Wtfe

~- lt.l· LAIIJ ~

Estimates

5-5-1 mo.

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

EAST IDI

• 86
t J l09 2
•to 6 5

BORN LOSER

OIHER

Racine, Ohio

TEAFORD
Wat er

MTD

.7

WEST
• J 9$2

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

ond furniture . Con ta ct Todd
Rhodes , Rocme.

IN Da sh 13 channel CB am -fm mpx rod1 o , B !rock stereo . Call

9'1~ - 7258

Riding
Tractors.

4 r oom hous e '" l etart. Also . coal

ONE dmette se t, exce ll en t condi ·
t ~o n . Two end tobles matchng
an rique bed and buff e r dr esser
Pho"c 992 ·6092 .

For Sale, Rent or Trade

Rl . 1&lt;3.

ROOMY 7 yr . old Of1e story wood
f rame, lwo bedrm . horne
loc(] ted between Coolv1lle ond
Tuppers Plom s. One acre lot,
two cor gorag e, ci ty water . gas
h e at ,
ha rdwo od
floors ,
carp etd , hv~n g r oom , n~ee v1ew ,

.3

MowersTillers-

498 Locust St.
Middleport, Ohlo 99:Z ·l092

Roror li•msioJ

Free

7

• A K tO 61
• AQJ9
t A87

A~D

5 -26 -2 mo .

JUST fr es h . Guernsey milk cow
wi th co if $350 f1rm . Con tact
Jam es Roy Parsons off Racine Bo sho " Rood

3 s pe~ stereo, all wood cabinet
mahogany , eJCcellen t ployinQ
condi tiOn. $50, cof19q2- 2376

1q7 1 J D 350 8, f1rs t h o u ~e po sr
Wesleyan Ho liness Church on

l

Phone992-7648

NORTH

't'U'R£; A S.AH Wlli~R ,

Lawn

Merry
Tillers,
Mow er s .

741-2331

WIN AT BRIDGE
:-:---:---:--=---East's deception backflree

Rutland
742-2328
All Work Guaranteed '

Saws-

mowers,

Rol~nd,

WILL YOU 'SHO W OUR
TVCAMERA THE R!SULT5
PLEASE, Ml ~5 HAMWORT ?

SO--

.,0~ IIDFi ~

Eng .

Mc:Cullo&lt;ugh chain
saws, Boltn ' s Mowers ,

R&amp;J COINS
Ohio

4 ROOMS totally furn•shed on
lincoln Hg ts , eKce ll e nt shape .
ust need s po int l arge lotchen ,
arge ba se m ent , $ 10, 900 .

"MIRA CLE FORMULA"
HAS HAD TIME TO
WORK OIJ BOTH OF
LITA HAMWORT'5
FAMOU$ LE 6~!

ARE; 40J QlXTE CWTA!IV

Repair
Chaln

BuJ, Sell 01 Trade

ReaiEstate for Sale

'7 ... BY NOW, OUR.

AI. TROMM OONST.

s

II

WELJ., J.ADit:~

OF TH" PRE-55 ..

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

.;, r. _

-~ 10 1

CAPTAIN EASY

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, GutteiS,
Painting and .Repair

STORM
•
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS

$6Sll. Phone 99'1·3843

A HONEY
MONEY -

-1174

Ph . 992 -39'3

"'"""~-

Noble summit Rd .,
Middleport
PHONE 99'1-5724
5·3-1 mo.

Finan cing Availa ble
Blown in to Wall s &amp; AttiCS

4-30-t mo.

1973 450 Pro totype Kowasok 1
motorcross, good condi tion

992 -5011 .

1973 Honda 350. f o~.rr cylinder.
like new less than 2700 m1l es
and ex tras . $895 or best offer .
Phone 949 -2 181.

3122

991-1726

9'12-2789.

OlDER , remode led aU elec 3
bed rm . home, $12,500. Ca ll

1969 Novo 350, 4 speed , bl oc k
v1n yl
l o p , chrome
rim s
headers . r ebuilt en gm e , A- 1
cond• tion , $1 ,000. Al so , 1974
Kowosoki 100, $275. Phone

~h. m

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Ot) io

8ron Till&gt;mos

REG ISTERED Angu s herd . Phone

added . Own &amp; ci ty waler.

WANT to r en t dock :space on Ohio
side of ri ver w1th elec lr ic1 ty.
Phone 992 -6061 .
l

FOP Sole or ren t b0x 12 2 bed rrn
mobrl e horn e, lf.lrge yard ond
garden spot To ren! $ 11 0 mon ·
th, plu o;, depos il Phone 742-

91~3105

"' GRAPEFRUIT PILL ' w1 th D ro da ~&lt;
plan more conveni ent than
gr apefr uit s, Ea r sar• sfy1ng
meals and lose we 1ght. Ne lson
Drug.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

rtn&gt; .. 1... c-.. o('ol•• -

AND 6~N T LEM E N

D. BUMGARDNER

AlUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Phono An111 Bbokwood

99~ - 2348 .

· FQI''Sale ~- - ,
Mobile HOmes for Sate ___
·

1970 Comm unity Car avan . 12x52 .
1 bedrm , good cond1t1 on .
Phone 1614 ) 985 4294.

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversary Services

2 bedrm . ond 1 bedrm furni&lt;;hed
apart ment . Phone 992·2288 or

5 ROOMS and both on 212 Con -

lond 3 bed rm ve ry good condl hon , $8,000 Phone 992 -5491
or 992 -5972 .

F'" Consullltion

LOCUST pos ts. ro un d or spl1t .
Phone949 -277 4

LARGE 3 rm . furn 1shed opt ., alf
con ditioning . 12 miles from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 A v01loble
June 15. Phone 992 6161 .

- U,OOO. For details and

1968 Sky line !railer . 12K60, and

Service

~

1o

Above and below ground
pool kits for the do-ityourself man .
,
All pool supplies available,
100.

Blown
Insulation Services

And Annivtrury

Phone , . . . - - - - - - - - - --.,

ONE bed rm . furn1shed opt. 134 V7
Mulberry A ve . Phone 992 -5436

Adams
1-304-375-4893 evenings.

MAKE spring cl ean ing pr of1toble ,
turn unwonted 1tems IIllo cas h .
Advert1 se 1n the Want Ads.

SWIMMING
POOLS

FREE ESTIMATES

Complete Bridal

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS 3 bedrm . house in Middleport
Sales &amp; Service
Convenient to shopp i ng on
near Pork . Swimm ing pool , and
2013 10ih Ave.
lh1 rd and M1ll Stree ts m M•dstores Phone 992 7b67
Parkersburg, W. Va .
dl epo rt Brand new high qual i·
ty apartme n ts
See t he HO USE FOR SALE , 15 m il es f rom
304-485-0386
Pomeroy , 3 BR ra nch, 2 ba th s,
manoger at R1vor s1dc A part614-423-6474
DR on to redwood deck FR w ith
men ts or ca ll 992 -327 3 . Fur·
Aluminum-Vinyl . Steel
woodburning f lreplac~ . 11 K14
nished
oportmenls
al so
Continuous Gutter
storage building on 1 acre lot,
ova1loble .
Replacement
$~7 .000. Phone {614 ) 667-3862.
Windows and Doors
One bedrm and 2 bedrm fu r·
ru shed apartment s.
Ph one 6 r oo rn hou se very welt kept , 3 ·
Free Estimates
.Q~rm s ., modern kitchen, woll
992-31~9 m 992-5434.
We re commend and
ta 'woll ca rpe l , H.W floors , lull
Sell Quality
TRA ILER space for ren l 1n M•d·
ba se ment , new gas fu rnace ,
5-9 76
dlepor l . Ph one 992 -S434 .
small lo t to mow ideal for
o ld er cou pl e or S!f!OII farn1l y m
FURNI SH ED 2 room apartment,
BRAD FORD. Au sti oneer
Com good
ne•ghb orhoo d
1n
126 M ulberry A ve , ad u lt s and
plete Se rvice Phone 949 -2487
Pomeroy . Ca ll fo r oppo•nlmen t.
references. Phone 992-2030
or 949-2000 . Racine , Ohio , Crilt
Phone 992 -3097 .
evenm gs or 992 -21 67
Bradford .

For aggresstve indtYtdual
who is willing to work long
hours for good prolits.
Small investment requtred
intervtew ca ll Mr.

COAL, limestone and o il types of
sa lt and 'roc k salt lor ice and
snow removal . Excelsiof Salt
Work s, Eo st Mom St., Pomeroy ,
Ohio Phone q92.3591

$~ 1 . 000 .

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ...-- ...
Service

OP EN

7 rrn house w 1th both , portly
carpeted, ne w lumoce, hot
water heoter . large lo t on lm 3 AND 4 RM . f urmshed and un •
c.o ln Hil l Pho ne 992 -207 1.
furn ished opts . Ph one 992
3 acres, I .8 m1 les or Coun ty Rood
5434
4. Ou l of Dexter Ph one (6t4 )
COUNTR Y Mobil e Home Pork , Rt.
982-41 23
33 , ten m1le5 north ol Pome roy
l mge lo ts W1th concre t pollos , 2 bedrm horne , f ull y furnis hed,
close to schoo l and shopp ing
Sidewa lk s, runn ers and off
lnqu1r e 89.4 Pearl 5 1., Midstree t parking Phone 9'12 -7479
dleport. Ohio
ONE bedroom apartment s at
A
Iorge home on Ash Street 1n
VILLAGE MANOR i" M iddlepor t
Midd leport fo r sole or trade for
l or $104 rnon rhly plus e lec or
smaller home . Phone 992-7797.
$ 130 mdudmg electnc . LOWER

REVCO Trac tor Trail er Train-

1966 12x 65 Vmdo le , 3 bedrm .
mobile home with e)l pondo .
Port ly f urnished . Phone 992 2821 or 992 2&lt;137 .
PUBLIC SALE
I wilt off er for sa te at pub tic
aucli on on the 15th day ol
June. 1~76 , at 10 : 00 AM , al
the law o ft •ccs of Cr ow , Cr ow
&amp;. Por t e r , th e fo l l owi n g
described
r eal
es tat e·:
Sr tvated rn the Co unty o f
Me1gs , Stat e ot Oh10 , Town
sh ip of Letart , and deH ribed
a s f ollows : 11 being Lo t N o.
Thr ee D l of Savrc 's Pltt t ot
Letarrsville i n Cou nt y o f
M e1gs and Slate of Ohio , l or
fur ther de scription see the
Plat of Let arr svllle on l i te 1n
the
Auditor ' s
olf lce
at
Pome r oy . Oh io
Fo r •n
spec li on pri or 10 sa te conta cr
Ally Fr ed w Crow . Ill , at
991 5 132 .
Sa•d pr em1ses w ill not be
solo tor tess than !.600.00
T er ms ot sa l e are 10 per ce nt
down on day of sale in cash .
certified c h ec k o r mo n ev
ord er , balan ce upon del iver y
ol deed . R ea l es tat e taxes and
assessme nt s pr or ated to oay
at sal e N ot re spon!ii ble for
acc1 dents

SALES &amp; RENTAL
Travel Trailers

,P OMEROY LANDMARK
9._Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
llltiilll Phone 992-2181 '

Business Franchise

OLD fu rn1 ture. ICC baKes , bro s~
beds, old wall telep hones and
por ts. or comple1e households.
Wr~ t e M . D M iller Rt . 2.
Pomeroy Ohio Call 9qJ .7J61J .

( Bashan

30", 3 HP, 8&amp;S Eng .
$89.95

3'1, H. P., 8&amp;S Eng .
$163.95

soli d ca b, c olor w hi te .

Will do bu1ldmg and rernodeiu,g , Pa r~&lt;ersburg
raof mg . plurnbmg, furnace
repa1r , gas or oi l or general
repair
Free es l1 rnote s an d
remonob l e rate s
Ph one
Charl es Sm clo" (b1 4) 985 -412 1
or992 -2221

J

•

S2895

i97J INT ERNATIONAL 1600
$3895
102" C. A.. V-8. 5 speed. 18,500 2 speed R. ax le, 900 tires.

$12,000

Situations Wanted

RAINBOW RIDGE
Area l
LONG ~OTTOM

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS

8' F lee l sl de, wh. over red , clea n interior , 350 V 8,
au tomatrc, powe r st eering &amp; bra kes, good t ires, step
bumper, r adio, custom tr im &amp; m irror s

Lost and Found
LOST, weddmg ring engro~ed on
ms1de Sus1e and John , Marc h
3 1915 at Sy-racuse Ceme tery ,
Pme Grove Ceme tery or Beech
G1 ave Ceme tery Phone 949 :l l lO.

CODNER'S CAMPERS

U995

1973 CHEVROLET C10

TH E Po1n l BoK Now Open Solem
Sr , Rut land, Oh1 o . F1bergloss
repai r , body wor k s, cus tom
pointrng Phone 742 -3053 or
74:2 -3008 .

Wanted to Buy

Transfers

1974 FORD FIOO

8' Styleside, green finish , good tires, R bumper,
chrornegrills &amp; fits bumper , 6 cy l, &amp; std . trans .

Yard Sale

NOTICE S

VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sepl. 22 )

CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Pr olrt trom '{our past mrs -

Racine

OFFI CE HOURS
1:1 1U a m ro S oo p m
Dady , t1 10 a 111 to 17 oo
Noo n Sa tu r d.l y
Phone 1ortay 99 7 / 1 ~6

Don t go .::t rounc1 ca rryrng a
ch•o on yOur s ~lO ltldeltoday as

21) You have a talent today fo r
crerll lll9 you r own problems
Stop and th rnk Abou t th e
1Jen al \1e s a ssoc ri'lt erl w1th
e•r at• c ac trons

Pomeroy
· QUALITY Motor Co.

BLIND ADS

you c &lt;~n be ra ther op trmr st•c
rt&gt;Q iHd lnQ tt1e. o ut co me of
PvPn ts tha t you tak e a hand 111 .
hu t today yo u're likely to be
vr r 'r ur1surP ol your-.elf

SAGITTARIU S (Nov 23-Dec.

@ 2 s~~NS

d• fleren l varieties of tomatoe s .
including non -o d d while
tomato Very Iorge seleclion o f
bodd1ng
plants
Al so
Geranium&amp; and othHr poll&amp;d
plants . Hang ing baskets .
Cle lorld for ms and Green house . Gerald ine CJe lond ,

8:0D-Bobby Vinton 3; Viva Veldez 13; John Davtdao~
~. 15; Gunsmoke 8: U.S.A.: People &amp; Politics 20,33;
Rhoda 10.
B:Jti-We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball 6;
Phyllis 10; Movie "Cool Hand Luke" 13.
9:0D-Joe Forrester 3,4,15 ; All In The Famllv 8,10;
Wellspr lngs 33; Man Who Played Sprock 20
9:311-Maude 8,10.
10:0D-Jigsaw John 3,4, 15; f&gt;Aed lcal Center I ; Hlll"b
Alper! &amp; the Tijuana Brass 10; News 20; Bl-Wavs
33.
.
10 :3ti-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch-33 33
10 : ~5-- Testimony Time Today 9.
11 :0D-News 3,4,6,8,110,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :»-Johnny Cfrson 3,4,15: World Champi onship of
Trivia 6, 13 ; Movie "Mayer ling" 8; Movie " The
Gatllny Gun" 10; Janak! 33 .
I:OD-Tomorrow 3,4; Newo 13.
Chlnntl Five
9 a.m. 700 Club lei
7 p.m. High and Wild lei
7:30 - Music Connectllon It)
8:oo---cab le Journal (c)
9:0D-Washlngton Debates lei
lO:OD-700-Ciub {c)

MONDAY, JUNE 7,1f76
5:00-Bonanza l ; Partridge Family 8; Mission : Impossible 15.
5:»-Adam ·12 4; News 6; Family Aflalr 8; Elec Co.
20.33; Adam-12 13.
6:0D-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6:»-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News ll; Andy Griffi th 6;
CBS New• 8, 10; Hodgepodge . Lodge 20 ;Carrascolenclas JJ .
7:0D-Truth or-Cons. 3; To Tell the Trulh 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; Teaching Children to Read
20; Resourceful Wesl VIrginia 33.
7:»-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Bobby Vinton
4; Space : 1999 6; Prl~e Is Rlght8 ; Evening Edition
with Marlin Agronsky 20; High Road to Adventure
10; To Tell the Truth 13; Friends of Man 15; Tennis
for Everyone 33.

Business Services

VEGE TABLE plants of all kmds . 10

I'

Television log for easy viewing

For Sate

l1 ddrl•ona1 1Sc ChiHll'-'
p&lt;· r Ad v eri•St'lllC ri t

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Usually

fry 1101 lo pu t you r sell -In terest
too l&lt;l r Jbove cithers today Benet only concf'rned about No 1
wrll turn people o!l

Auto Sates

RAT ES

Your usualtv dependable allre s
may be the ones wh o let you

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l'umcrov. 0 ., Montlav, June 7, 197ti
DICK TRACY
.
.

DETAILS

I .WONDER IF lf'OU
HAVE TO SltiN6 ALONe
A CAN OF SALLS...

�.'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. Q., Monday , Junf 7, l9it;
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
P M
Da v
Oe t or e
Put:Jil cil ion
Monday D('adlltH' 9

For Fast Results Use· The Sentinel Classifieds

,, nl

- Bermce Bade Osol

Cancet1at1on
Co rr ec 110n s will b(' a&lt;
ccp1ed un111 9 am for
nay o l Publl c at1on
REGULATIONS
lh e Publ is her rcst' r 'H'S
'hP rrght to t'dit or ! Cjcc t
&lt;my ads dee m ed ob
t{'(I IOnat Th e publ 15h(tr
Nill not be r espo nsible lor
rno r e than one 1ncorrcct
•nscr t,on

Tuesday, June 8, U78
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
Take nothlrig for granted rn any

commmcntl dealrngs you have
today Fail•ng ta stay on l OP o f
mailer s could be a c;os tly mi Stak e

TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20)

\

For Want Ad Serv 1ce

l

down the hardest today It's
bes t you rely mm e on yourself
and tess on others

ce n 1s

per

word

one

•nser '•on
M•n '"lU ll I Charg(') I 00
1·1 ce n 1s per wo r d thr ee
( 01 / SCCUitVC

GE MINI (Ma y 21 -Juno 20)

l ll SC rl tOil S

76 r Pn rs per wore! s•x
! On SCCUI IVf:.'
rnseri i011 S
7~ P e r Cl• r1t 01S Co unt on
pa1d ad s .lr1d • ad s pn1d
Wfl h 1n 10 clay s
CARD OF THANKS

Ril!her than work or1 a tas k you
wsen t do111g to clny set 11 as1de
to r the rnomcnt You NOn 't do a
qoocJ )Ob rl yo~n heart 1sn I m 1!

CANCER (June 21 -July 22)

~~ OU

&amp; OBITUARY

for
~0
word
!!11n1111Um
Ea c h addil10n.tl word 3
cc n l!i

Dorl' l at!a ct1 stnng s 10 a favor
yolr do lo r anoH1cr toda y Achurrs ol !t11s ty p o will br ee d
re sPntment and put the
rt'lrl l1 01l 'i hrp Ill fRO panly

ATTN : ! !

ALLit,OUSEW IV ES
All Yard Sa l es, Rummage ,
Porc h an d Basemen t Por ch
and Basement Sales , et c .
m ust b e pa id •n advance .
Ge t yo ur 1n in eQ rl }l by
stopping by our off ice at
Th e Daily Se nt inel, 111
Co ur t St or wri t ing Bo x
729 , Po me r oy Oh10 &lt;15769
with your r emillanc e

11s •;u rp to IJe knocked o ff
Wl:!• qh your words c mefully
fllld &lt;1VOir1 Clili CI/111 9 0 H1ers

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You
can be QUI!(' ~onero u s when
dcil~lllQ wl\11 1r 1ends but today
you re lrkoly to br more of a
lakrr than &lt;1 qrver

SCO RPIO {Ocl. 24-Nov . 22)

:akes Dor1 I put good money
aft er bild rna Stllratron th at rsn 't
p&lt;lylng oil Be pruden t where
tmances a re co ncerned

AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 19)
Goals that yo u hope to ach 1eve
today rnay st rp by the boards
becau se you won t be wrlhng to
put forth the necessary effo rt

PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20)
Don 1 do anyth rng aga1nst your
better 1udgmen t today It you
teet sornetnrng rsn t good for
you , chan ces are you 're rig ht.

~Your
\l}'Birthday
June 8, 1976
Subst an ti al rewards wrll be
there thi s co m•ng yea r . 11 you 're
wrlhng to pay the pnce Be mdustrrou s and ta ke the long
rang e vrew. Don 't look fo r
somethmg for noth ing

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
E st a t e

ol

Ca se No 11 , 8JO

MARC I A
1.
HARR ISON , Decease d
Noti ce IS h er eb y Q•ve n tllat
Ch arl otte A Br ow n , Ol J J 2
Beech Srreer , Middl epor t ,
Ohio . ha s b een du l y appo1n tc d
Executrrx of th e Est at e o f
Ma r c• a I Harrison , dec eased ,
tare ot M eig s Coun ,..,. , Ohio
Cr ed i tor s ar c r cqu .r ed Jo
111e the ir claims w1lh sa 1d
f •duc•ary with rn thr ee months
Dar ed thi s Jrd day of June
19 76
Mann111g D We bster
Ju d ge
Cour1 of Comm on Pl ea s.
Proba te D IV ISIOn
( 6 \ 7, Ll. 2 1, ) IC

Meigs
Property

Card of Thanks
THE fa mi ly of Ja mes D Ahles
wi~he.s to ex pres'&gt; 1he1r thank s
to Hoc krng Volley Hos p1tal and
staff . th e 'Hein lein ar1d Brown "
and Ew mg Funeral Homes ; the
Revere nd E. H Martin , song s
by Mr . Jame s Ba il ey , Uor ol of lenng s, k ln drHl-SS l rom frrends
111 our li me of sorrow
Th e Abi es Fom rly

Notices
RACINE Fire Deportment w 1ll
ho ve a gull shoot Sa turday at
6.30 p .m at iheir new buildin g
off Bo shan Rood .
NOW open for Bu smcss . " The
l awn K iln ' 1'10 1 l Ea st Mo111 St. .
Pomeroy Oh1o Greenware ,
po •nt s, ce ro mlc sup pl ies ,
classes . Monday.
Tuesda y .
Weds . and Fr1day , 10 h112 p m .
E...enmgs by appoin tment Co lt
992 -5954, L111do Moy er
D&amp;J s Ho use of Fobrt cs Sa le
to
make room fo r 11ew sh1prnen t
ollobr ics, Jun e 7 1hru 12, 1 m•l e
5 ol M•ddl epor t, Stol e Rt. 7

LOST ·Tom Cat , bla ck and whit e .
por t S1o mese, Syracuse, Ash
and Co ll ege St or eo . N om e Shu
Shu phone 997-2837

Norman 0 . Weber, Vera A.
Weber to Melvm C. 'Murphy.
~l(c M. Murphy, Parcel,
:Diivt .
Mina Lewis to Charles F .
f;i es, Shirley Lorene Pyles.

..

•.•Lot,
, Racine .

•• · Ira E. Van Cooney, Hazel
B"n Coo ney to Herma n
\~o~t, Roseen Fay Trout
45.2a A., Salisbury.
1
! Roy D. Cremeans, Doris F .
P emeans to Carl E. Smi th,
~be ., Ease ., Orange.
Lloyd Harris to Janice E .
Gibbs, Joyce K. Circle, Lots,
Middlepor t.
,Elbert E. Eddy, Marie E.
Eddy to Cle lus Mac Eddy, 100
A , Olive.
Myrtle Grover, Gregory S
rover. Linda Grover,
"l'a tricia D. Humphrey, Lew1s
".1.\lunphrey, Esther Loraine
.,YJ!noy, Robert Venoy , Marcia
[Jane Houdashcll, Robe r t
'"Houdashell , Andrew E .
1"Crover , Ne ll ie Grove r .
Da lton B. Grove r , Ann
Grover to Andrew E. Grover,
Nell ie Gr over , 18' , A.,
Salisbury .

Wil l DO odd JObs, roofing . pa•n ·
l •ng houhng. lreework, and
mow1ng . Phone 992 7409.
WIL L core l or elderl y person mmy
horne Ph one 1 (bl 4) ~85 - 3849
or9q2 .J 410
Will do baby si tM g
Phone 9q2 -714J .

onyt1me

CAS H po1d for oil makes and
mod els of mobile homes
Phone area rod e 614 -423 953 l .
$$Cosh$$$ for junked outo Frye 's
Tru ck Auto Ports . Rullond.
Phone 742-2061 .
DEA LER S in jur1k cars scrap iron ,
me tal s Phone 992 -5468,
JENNY ly nn or ~p ool tw in bed ,
red mapl e . Phone 992 .2860.

I

I' On th1s day in

hi story :
:In 1664, delegates meeting
1p Ba lti mor e nomin aled
1braham
Lin co ln a nd
Andrew Johnson to head the
Jtepubli ca n
presidenti al
tlckel.

1972 Ford one.holf ton p1 c ~up ,

$1 35{) Coll {614 !378-6349.

IF YOU ho ve a se rviCe to off er , 1973 M on te Ca rlo sil ver . low
won t to buy or se ll some thing ,
rndeo ge , excel len t cond 1tion .
or e l_ook1ng for wo rk
. or
Phone 992-2035 or ~92 - 29:7 1
whate'.'er .
you'll ge t resu lt s
1973 O lds Cu tlass Su preme,
faster w11 h o Sen tinel Want Ad
31.000 mdes. $3:300, ex ce ll errl
Ca ll 992 2 I 56.
condition Phone (6 14) 84 3·
&lt;t f o111i l y Yard Sole . Tu ppers
~ 621.
Pla1 ns m the Arbaugh Addil1 qn.
June 7, 8and91rom9a .m td 14 1%9 VW bug . $550 Phone 9927797 .
p m . For infornmlion phone
{614 )667-3933.
1970 Dodge Po lara 4 dr . o c ,
p s. p b , o .t. ~h one 992 -5048.
FI VE Fom1ly Yord Sole June 7 to
11 , doth mg, d1 shes , fu rnrtu re, 2 power tok e-ofl units fo r Dodger
cra ft s I mile southeas t o f Hor
truck . $250 Right and lef 1
r1sonvi lle . Ohio on Stol e Rt
Ph o n e 9~2 511t
J&lt;tl , 81o 6p m
1969 Roadrunner . very good con d•llon . Phone lb 14 ) 367 -7 153 .

Pets for Sate

1972 Novo 350 eng 1ne w ith
header wil l sowh ce a t $12C(t
Phone 843 -2624.

TO GIVE AWAY--M eig s Cou nty
Humane Socie ty has one mol e
dog med rum s1ze, about 10 1964 Ca ta lina 4 dr , f loor , l
speed $95 or bes t off er Co li
rnonfh s o ld , 2 ~oll e n s about 8
anytim e Sunday and after 6
mon ths old , one block . one
p m on weekdays Phone 992blo ck and wh1 te . Ju st sho ts and
2958.
worm1ng wi ll be fu rn 1shed . Call
991 -5427 ofter b·OO p rn
195t;, Chevy Belo1r 53.00 actual
mi les . Ph one 992 6092
A.K C Doberman Pin sc her pup·
p1es. 6 wee ks old . Shots 011d
wormed . Co il (6 14) 533 -076 1

For Rent

Help Wanted
DEPENDABLE bo by silhH to m re
for 2 g1rl s o'ges 5 an d 8 m rny
home in evenmgs . Phone 992 -

35 II

Business Opportunities

TRAIN FULL OR·
PART TIME
You don ' t haw e to qu 1t you r
pre sent JOb to t ram t o d"ve a
tract or-tr a1ler. In on ly 7 to 8
wet~ke nd s PART T IME tra1 nmg
!Sa turd ays &amp; Sunday) ) a qual lfred drJver can be earning

per yea r and up (3 weeks in a
FUL L TIME resid en t tr a1 ning
progra m) .

NOT ICE OF

CLORENCE CO NADAY ,
Adm1n 1t. tr t~ lr i ;.c
ot th e
E stat C' ot P c lp ht~
Cum m •n , Dt' CC' ased
'

(6 )

~.

11, , , ,

FURN ISHED , 2 bedrm oportmenl ,
adult s on l y, 1n M•dd leporl .
Phone 992 -3874 .

TURF TILL
TILLERS

Dan and evening s excep t

mg. Inc. wi ll tram you on mod ern, profe ssional equ1pm en t,
and placement assistance is
ava •table upon graduation.

CALL NOW !

422-40 80

AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

Tues. and Wed . or by
conta cting R. Codner ,

owner.

5-21- 1 mo .

2 Bcdrm . mobile home
99~ · 2834 .

Camping Equipment
9th ANNIV ER SAR Y SALE . On Star cr aft
m•n 1·mo t o r s, tr av e l
lrarle rs. camper s new and us ed, be st pnces m tri -stat e
area . Sto p rn a nd compare .
Carnp Conley Sro rcraft Sales .
Rl 6:l N . PI Pleo sant .

Wanted to.Rent

2400 sq fr . of otf iCe space. As IS
or will remodel with l ease to
suit ten nan t , Phone 992 -5786.
MOBILE home , adults only . Phone
99~ · S53S.

4

rm . l urn •s hed oparl men t,
eve rything paid , upsfoirs apo rt ·
rnen t. no pel s or children
Adult s on ly Phone 9'12 5610 , or
con be 5een at 814 E. Mom St.,
Pome roy

dor. Coll992-2659

FARMALL Super C cul!i votors,
plow s, d isk , corn planter , No .
2500 mower , McCorm1ck No. 2,
hay cond1 110ner. No
250
Pho"e (6 1.4 ) 378-6205.

Phone (6 14 )667-3519

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

FOR THE
135 ac res.

Min e r a l s. some timber .

ava il able

( No

bu itd;ngsl On blacktop Rd .
16,600.
PRIVATE - 7•, htlly acres
lgreal fo r baby far m).
Home has 5 8 R, bath , own
wat e r w.softener ,

N.G. hot

wa ter · heat, carpeting &amp;

Ne ed new root or aid
repaired? Hou se, roof.
barn, ~ hingtes , build up,
pamting , electrrcal work ,
gutters &amp; • downspouts ,
fuq1aces , water heaters,
wa1er soffners, 1nstalled &amp;
repa1red, Sewa1e .
Call us at 949-2882

or 949-2203

q 8-1 mo

Siding Center

7537
YOU NG robbils, $2 00 Call {614)
378 -626 1, Reedsv1 lle , Ohio .
5 h p . ro tot iller . S60 Call A t h ~ns
(614 ) 592 -2 158 , 33 To wmend
Pl ace .

Virgil 8. Sr., Realtor
110

Mechanic PomerDy,O.

Phone 992-3325
INVESTMENT - Business
roo m dow n and 5 room ap t .
up. Br ick , tile con st ., nat.
gas &amp; city water. $13.500.
POMEROY - 3 br . home
with l 1 2 baths, hot wate r
heat, basement &amp; niCe v iew

of river .

MIDDLEPORT - 7 Rm s..
2 ba th s, 2 corner Jots wi th

w-kitchen, ut ilit y &amp; garage

LOCATION . $~7.500 .
BARGAIN - Ni ce 3 Brs .,
bath , large kil. and living .
Family room &amp; all utilities
On ly $8,500.
SOLID - 1 ~ Rms oo l lots,

Lan csca ped , p,~ ac r es .

saver

kitch en

(ea t

in) ,

H W flo ors (ca rpe ted),
ba th . Full basemen t wutiltty. $18 000.

view of r iver

A REAL

5 Brs., 2 baths , enormou s

Mod. kil . w;th cook &amp; bake
un1t s

Man y extras . $25, 000.

4 ACRES -

Near school.

House has been

renova ted .

2 car garage and lois ol
pines. $29,500.

CHESHIRE - Mod . 6 rm .
venee r ranc h home
Patio, lo ve ly kit , fu ll

br i ck

b asement

and

3

lots.

$46,500.
LARGE OLD HOME - 4
Brs., ll/2 baths. 2 livings,
din ing . utility, basement
with ga rage Large yard.
$ ~ 0 . 000 .
RUTLAND - 3 Brs., ba th ,

99?-396S .

One 9 mon th old ~ :e r e f o rd bull .
con be reg istered Phone 992·

ARE AVAILABLE
AT

TWIN CITY

HANDS TIED FOR
LACK OF CASHf
you like to mak• 1
lchan&lt;lo but can't do a thing
II your preHnf
THEN LIST
where a const~.nt
proce ssion of buyers will
bring action .
A CALL WILL BRING ALL
DETAILS
992-2259 or 992-2568
3 bed rm . house both . cellar , and
outbu rldrngs almos t 4 acres of
fon d , sou th end of Rut lan d. See
Bill Smi th. at Smi th 's Body Shop
o r phone 742 -3 135 or Q9'2 -7708 .

• K tO 7 5 4

t6 5
.Q8 2
Both vulnerable

&lt;

West

High prices for scrap
autos , · motors and
other meta Is. Phone
992-2228. Monday thru
Friday 8-3, Saturday
8-12.

Pass Dbl.
Pass 3•
Pass 6 •
Pass
Opening le•d

1-.[1'TLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE OR.PHAN·
1Uit'IM:RWIH
All ARGUMEHT OR
CDfNil'(Cf TH'
Girl JUST

MACHINE SHOP
17 ·Cole Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Telephone 16141992-3768
We Deliver
4-25-1 mo.

JUNE SPECIAL

6 CANS OF RC

'1.00

+Tax
au;· .)4.00 purchase
and this ad. Good through
6-30-76.
With

OONELli'S PIZZA
Middleport, Ohio
991-6167
6-1-76-1 month

RACINE
Racine, Ohio

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

'6.95

Square Yard Installed

Dave Parsons. Owner

1Free estimates on car~·

1&gt;et1ng and installation.
. We'll bring samples to your

Swee pers, toas ters, irons , all
small oppl rances . lown mower ,
next to Slate Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985 38~5.

REMODELING , Plumbing heottng
ond oil typ es of gen eral repa ir .
Work guaran teed 20 years ex·

no

obligatiO!"!.
reall~

save.

Mike Young , Manager
Sales and Installation
Rt . 3, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone day or night
614-992-'2'206
1._14 1 Ilia

I

J:

RIDERS SALVAGE
St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-5468

p e ri e nc e . I n sured
fre e
es11mates . Coli 992-2384 or

.. ~ 1_4_1 ~98.:_7~~_A~t,o~!:_ -- -SEWING MACHINE Repairs , se rvice , all make s, 992-2284. The
Shop , Pomeroy.
Fa b ri c
Authomed S•nger Soles and

~e~~~~.:_ ~~ !~o~~:~ ~~~~~:_
EXCAVATING, dozer, looder and
back hoe work ; dump trucks
and fa-boys for hire; will haul
fill drrt, top sotl, lime sto ne and
gro\lel. Col i Bob or Roger Jef ·
day phone 992·7089,
fers
n1ght phone 992 -3525 or 992 -

GAsoLJNF: ALLF:Y

Clovia. Slim
and Chipper
just walked
to wor~!

Congratulations
Gradum
Let OONELLI'S make tile
PIZZa for your oflu
graduation porl'f. Coli us at
99'1-6167 and we will moko
your Plrty somelhinv to
remember. Check our
porty rifts.

Donelll's Pizza
lcldleport, Ohio

5232.

WILL do roof •ng, cons truction ,
plumb ing and healing. No job
too large or tao small Ph one

WE'VE 60T
T061fOUfA
TH/5 PLACE;-

742-2348,

EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
end dircher Charl es R Hotf iel d , Bock Hoe Servi ce
Rutlond . Ohi o. Phone 742-2008.'

yo' TAKE: c:;t.&gt;_f&lt;E 0' TH' CHILt=

MACRID 15 VERY

'TH' v.GRLD

·allcK"H"ois-

licensed
in stall e r . Shepard
Contrac tors. Phone 7.42-2409.

.JU5TABI !.
THCIJGHT...HES
STAKING ME
OUT IN THE:
LDBBY!

Br s, 2 ba t hs, healo lalor
f tr epta ce, ni ce k it.. full
basem en t , 2 ca r garage, 2

porche s. &amp; la rg e tot.
$34 ,000.
NEW LISTING - 4 Brs,
bath , na t. gas hea l. new kit
with stove &amp; refrigerator at
Rutland . $13,000.
COME
TO
SUNNY
SOUTHERN OHIO .
START A HAPPY AND
BETTER WAY OF LIFE .

- Jt

(Do you have a question
lo r the e•perts? Writs "Ask
the Jacobys" care ol this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
tl stamped, self-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
will be used m th is column .
and w11/ receive copies of
JA COBY MODERN.)

10
16
19
22

'

Cuddle
Yield
Coloration
Hungarian
dog
23 Milun's
opera
house
12 wds.)
24 Curse;
scourge

2:0tl-$20,000 Pyramid 6,13; To Be Announced 33.
2:3ti-Doctors 3,4,15; Break the Bank 6,13; Guiding
Light 8,10.
~:00---Anothr World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6, 13; All
In he Family 8, 10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 ; To Be
Announced 33.
3 :J~e Life to Live 13; MtckeyMouseCiub 6; Match
Game 8,10; Inner Tennis 20.
4:tl0-Mister Cartoon 3t Merv Griffin 4; Somerset 15;
Bewitched 6; Mickey Mouse Club I ; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "The 11angman" 10; Dinah 13.
4:3()-Bewltched 3; Mod squad 6; Andy Griffith 11
Setame St. 20,33; Filntsto~ea 15.
5:0D-Bonanza ·3; Partridge Farrylly 8; Minton : Impossible 15.
S:Jti--Adam-12 4; News6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,331 Aam-12 13.
6:0D-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom !0,33.
6:3ti-NBC !"ews 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoge
&amp; You 33. '
7:oo-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling tor
Dollars 6; Country Place 8; News 10; Name That
Tune 13; Family Affair 15; Undlrstandlng Afrltll
20: Wild Wild World of Animals J3.

25 Prickly herb
26 Lurch
28 Wlnnle-lhePooh's
creator
29 Slocklng
thread
30 Slage
direction
35 Shadowy
3t Klnd of dog

7:3ti-Baseba(l3,4; Let's Deal with It 6,1 Match Gamo
PM 8; Price is Right tO; To Tell the Truth 13: Nuhvllle on the Road 15; Evening Edition wllh Marlin
Agronsky 20; Family Theatre JJ. 8 :OD-Happy Dav•
6, 13; Movln' On 151 R11l ly Rosie: Starring The
Nutshell Kids 8, 10; Burglar -Proofing 20; Burgler.
Proollng 33.
8:3ti-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,1 3; Good Times 8,10;
Consumer urvlval' 20,33.
9:0D-Movte " Prudence &amp; the Pill" 13; Pollee Woma~
15; Movie "The Sundowners" 6; MASH 8,10;
Evening at Symphony 20; Rachel, La Cubana 33.
9:311'-0ne Day at a Time 8,10.
10:D0-City of Angels 3, 15; To Be Announced 4; Switch
8, 10; News 20.
·
10 :3o-NFL Action '76,4: Black Perspective on the
News
ll :OD-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 33.
11 :lti-Presldentlal Prlmarles3,4,8, 13, 15; Movie "Cry
Terror" 10; Janak! 33.
12:0D-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Mystery of the Week 131
News 6; Movie "Nicky's World" 8.
1:3ti-News 13.

~l]JM@~;JJ..J !::::!:!:! ...J ~.
" &gt; Ht,H\&gt;\\OfJ '

b+--+-

FOR~h;b~!;n-~ot;r-;;11-~ill:
Drill ing

HA-u~LtNG~- Ori;e:_.-;,;,--;al;rioi

JUBT HOW EFFECTIVE
MY DIBGUISE t5 i

to

work It:

- ~~!:~~·..:'::.!'~~.!: 742 -2850.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Son•tat •on . 992-3954 or 992- CARPENTER , f loori,-;-g~ - ~;J;'n~g~
paneling . Phone 992·2759,
~428 .

CRYPTOQUOTE

I

GC

GQ

QTIMTM

YIMXTQ

YL X ' C

KE I Q

I
I I I t)

E TIM K

IQPN E TMT

DURN SNUFFVS
01: DOCS!!
HE'S BEEN DI661N'
HOLES IN MV
BACK-

I.

Q

T I M K E. -

X L M I. K E P

YWMQ'fP
Yesterday's Cryptorjuote: ONE OF THE STRIKING DIF·
FERENCES BETWEEN A CAT AND A UE IS THAT A CAT
HAS ONLY NINE LIVES. - MARK TWAIN

I'LL GIT EVEN
WIF THAT
VARMINT!.'

~

· LEMWID •

V' ~

THE GOOC&gt;·IJYE$ CAN'T
IJE 5-AI!? UN"TIL.
THEY'IItE PA'""c:!' '

I I I

"
Now arranre lht elrtltd !tUM
to form the oul)lrioo IM1I'tr, II ·

;:::::::~~.,1~==~-==~-=·~·u~r~reoted=~b' the..,_~
I
..w .. - - - .
(XIIli
I

TFC'I'

~ •lu,.,..,.

.

.•

J•••bl••' HtKEII

I

Alll&gt;''lf"r

LINEN THIIEIH

'J'ru&amp;iblecf tilt llof•IIO-JOIU'f
adrt•- HER UNEI

1'1 , , , l"t

I HAVE TO FiND OJT
MO~E

'IARD

AG'IN-

,.

.,

•

III

ISPIVLE

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

~~_,p · LQ'I'

I
C)

MALFE

One Iotter simply slonds for another. In lhls sample .1\ Is
used for tho three t;,, X fu1· the two O's, olo. Sin~!&lt; Iott er•.
.:t)lostrophcs, the l&lt;'n~t h nnct rornmt ion of 1It(' \m nls am all
hint•. F.nrh lilly the &lt;'mle letters nrc dltrercnt.

and limest one or gravel , farm

o, !I • ' ,

form four ordinary word1.

A X Y D I, 8 A. A X R
I, 0 N G F E J, 1. 0 W

Ia

•I&gt;

Unorrambl• the .. four Jumblu,
one letter to each 1quare, to

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;IUOTE- Here's how

NOW I'LL FIND OUT

large lol. $12.000.
49 ACRES - New 2 Br
hom e, 3 yrs . old, birch kit.
NEW LISTING - Mod. 3

A Missouri reader wants to
know if the experts spoil
bridge with special com plicated conventions.
We don 't think so . Jack
Nicklaus is allowed to attempt
golf shots that the average
player can't make. Jimmy
Connors Is allowed to hit a
tennis ball as hard as he
wishes . In world competition
a player should be allowed to
use his full skills

34 Cavalryman's need
36 Ultimate 1=-t--+-f'--+--t-:17 "Aslotat"
maid
L.:~ioi;;;!;;;.._.:.:Z::=:::..-=....----__;,__~~~~~- ::18 Ironwood

2438.
excA"vA"riNG.
AND
DOZER, LARGE AND SMALL
SEPTIC TANKS INSTAllED . BILL
PUlliNS, PHONE 9'1~ - 2478 , DAY
OR NIGHT .
sEPTIC-- S~ ~e~~ - ~;;-stall;d-bv

new gas F A . furn ace, 2
po rc h es , ba se ment and

wi th stove &amp; refrigerator .
Carport &amp; lull basemen t.

Pass 4•
Pass Pasa

Z5 Bakery
product
ze Baby whale
%7 "C' - Ia

11ME
F6' DAISY' ___.. ,_.,,TL YEAR- BUT 21 ~=~t of a
MAE - 50 15 TIBEr. ON
Roman
TbTHEI&lt; HAND
legion
THAR:S .MOSCOW- u - htnunel!
3Z Ill-temper
v; /'.._""'"E~-:_...-;~;d~il)- 33
One (Ger.)

WHILE AH SASHAYS THRCV6H

--

wm 's Gu lf' Se rv ice, Midd lepo rt , Oh1o. Phone 992-

-

2.

--~L~-....ol~~;t;1J_ Z4 Life or
=
breeches

Open 4 p.m . daily
CIOseCioll day Mondays

. in g. Pho ne Lemley
Compa ny , 742-2003 .

7:3ti-Schoolleo 10.
8:0D-Lassle 6; Copt. Kengoroo 8,10; Sesame St. JJ,
B:3ti-Big Valley 6.
9:0D-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4.15: Lucy Show I ; Mlkt
Douglas 10; Morning with D.J . 13; Mister Rogort
33.
9:3ti-Cross-Wils 3; One Lite to Live 6; Tattletales I;
Mike Douglas 13; Carrascolendas lJ .
10 :0D-Celobrlly Sweepolakes 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Bit With Knit 33.
10 :3ti-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Dinah 6: Lllas Yoga &amp; You
33.
11 :tlO-Wheet ot Fortune 3,15: Weekday 4; Gambit'
8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13; ~oweil Thomas
Remembars 33.
11 :»-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Happy Days 13; Lollt
of Ute 8,101 Biography 33.
11 :55--Take Kerr 8; Dan !mel's World 10.
12:0D-Magnlflcent Marble Machine 3, 15; Lef'a Make a
Deal 13; Newo 6,8,10; Sesame St. 33.
12 :31)-Take My Advice 3,15; All My Children 6,13;
Search for .Tomorrow 8,10.
12 :55--NBC News 3, 15.
1:OD-Newt 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Phil Donahue 11
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not for Women Only 151
Elee. Co. 33.
1:3ti-Days of Our Llveo 3.4, 15; Rhyme &amp; Reason 6,13;
As The World Turns B, 10; Family Theatre ll.

Pass

I N.T.

br THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
39 Nonprofes1 H.H. Munro sionals
s Make more 40 Equal ·
intense
DOWN
II Mlngled
I Witch-trial
with
site
12 Unwilling
2 Critic,
13 Solitary
Qeveland It Deserves
3 Monarch's
15 Work unit
natal day
16 Medii.
12 wds. 1
island
4 Chemical
1abbr.)
suffix
17 Word with 5 Donizetti's
·· L'elisir - ''
meg or
6 Each
chesl
18 "'!'he - of
and all
Edwin
7 Suffix for
Drood"
profit
!0 President's 8 Christ
nickname
13 wds.J
U Remuin;
9 Inlet
endure
!2 Falher
(Fr.)
!3 "I Walk
the - "

10 - '1

-- ~e~~~&lt;_! - ~h_o~ -:_!9~~~~ :_ __ _ GREG 'S CB SALES, located at Er·
0&amp;0 TREE Trr mming 20 years ex -

6:tl0-Summer Semester 10.
6:15--Form Report 13.
6:20--Rev. Cleophus Robinson 13.
6:3ti-Columbuo Today 4; News 6; Su mmer Semestll!"
8; Concer ns &amp; Comments 10.
6:45--Mornlng Report 3.
6:5()-Good Morning , Weol VIrginia 13.
6:55--Chuck White Reports 10; Good Morning, Trl
State 13 .
7:0D-Today 3,4, 15: Good Morning, America 6, lJ; CBS
News 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.

~DUMCfH'I

6-3-1 month

--·-

TUESDAY, JUN E 8, 1976

Souih

Oswald : "Starting in 1975,
New York's Cavendish Club
ANNIE-LET
THE WIND BLOW,
runsaninvitationtoumament
r:;r====:--=-=~7~~::=""""-'==-~-, for the benefit of the
BIJ'T WITH All !ME LIGHT·
'DADDY' 5A15 IT'S ACTIOI&gt;I
Children 's cancer fund . Jim
WfiGiiT, TWO·FOR*NICl&lt;eL , MOT 6AB. TlfAT GETS .JOtls
Jacoby won it last year with
WINDeAGS 1UH HfAR BI.OWIN
DOHE llHD COHVIHCfS
Off THEIR YAPS IT'S PRETT1 OPPOHEHTS·· HE'S JUST
Jeff Westheimer. This year it
HARI&gt; SOME TIMES HOT TO
SAV1H' HIS WIHD AHD
was WOn by Allen Sontag and
CUT LOOSE 014' SET
PtlTTIH' IT tHTO WORK ·
Peter Weischsel, one Of ·the
'EM RKitfT besl young pairs today ."
Jim : " I was unable to play
this year, but judging by the ·
way Peter and Allen played , I
doubt very much if we could
have repeated ."
Oswald : "Allen and Peter
gained a lot of pomts when an
opponent's attempt to fix
them backfired East's one

Junk Batteries $1.25
Motor Cast Clean
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper·J5c
Car Bodies.
Scrap-Iron.

949-2814 6_7_1mo
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

AIR -

SLOAN'S
_CARPETING
how you can

notrump was pure whimsy
and gave Peter a chance to bid
two hearts. Allen tried a threeclub cue bid. Peter JUmped to
four hearts and All en bid six ."
Jim : " There wasn't any
real problem in the play.
Peter drew trumps and attacked spad es by cashing
dummy 's ace and his own
queen. When East showed out
!obviously East's notrump
had been pure whimsy), Peter
was able to finesse against
West's jack . He had to lose a
club at the end. but he could
afford it."

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

5-26-1 mo.

See

North Eall
l •

SALVAGE

. I home wilh

t KQ 43
.AKJ974

• Q8 3

l'HW'U.. RE'VO~
MYt..la;~.

HALLS

• 32

SOUTH

.

&lt;IIITll HOI"

CARPET SHOP

etc. Slorage bldg. $1S,OOO .
RT. 143 - Close in . Mobtle

$8,300 .
DETAILED
FOR
COMFORT - 3 BR Wtfe

~- lt.l· LAIIJ ~

Estimates

5-5-1 mo.

Medical Oxygen
and Supplies

EAST IDI

• 86
t J l09 2
•to 6 5

BORN LOSER

OIHER

Racine, Ohio

TEAFORD
Wat er

MTD

.7

WEST
• J 9$2

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

ond furniture . Con ta ct Todd
Rhodes , Rocme.

IN Da sh 13 channel CB am -fm mpx rod1 o , B !rock stereo . Call

9'1~ - 7258

Riding
Tractors.

4 r oom hous e '" l etart. Also . coal

ONE dmette se t, exce ll en t condi ·
t ~o n . Two end tobles matchng
an rique bed and buff e r dr esser
Pho"c 992 ·6092 .

For Sale, Rent or Trade

Rl . 1&lt;3.

ROOMY 7 yr . old Of1e story wood
f rame, lwo bedrm . horne
loc(] ted between Coolv1lle ond
Tuppers Plom s. One acre lot,
two cor gorag e, ci ty water . gas
h e at ,
ha rdwo od
floors ,
carp etd , hv~n g r oom , n~ee v1ew ,

.3

MowersTillers-

498 Locust St.
Middleport, Ohlo 99:Z ·l092

Roror li•msioJ

Free

7

• A K tO 61
• AQJ9
t A87

A~D

5 -26 -2 mo .

JUST fr es h . Guernsey milk cow
wi th co if $350 f1rm . Con tact
Jam es Roy Parsons off Racine Bo sho " Rood

3 s pe~ stereo, all wood cabinet
mahogany , eJCcellen t ployinQ
condi tiOn. $50, cof19q2- 2376

1q7 1 J D 350 8, f1rs t h o u ~e po sr
Wesleyan Ho liness Church on

l

Phone992-7648

NORTH

't'U'R£; A S.AH Wlli~R ,

Lawn

Merry
Tillers,
Mow er s .

741-2331

WIN AT BRIDGE
:-:---:---:--=---East's deception backflree

Rutland
742-2328
All Work Guaranteed '

Saws-

mowers,

Rol~nd,

WILL YOU 'SHO W OUR
TVCAMERA THE R!SULT5
PLEASE, Ml ~5 HAMWORT ?

SO--

.,0~ IIDFi ~

Eng .

Mc:Cullo&lt;ugh chain
saws, Boltn ' s Mowers ,

R&amp;J COINS
Ohio

4 ROOMS totally furn•shed on
lincoln Hg ts , eKce ll e nt shape .
ust need s po int l arge lotchen ,
arge ba se m ent , $ 10, 900 .

"MIRA CLE FORMULA"
HAS HAD TIME TO
WORK OIJ BOTH OF
LITA HAMWORT'5
FAMOU$ LE 6~!

ARE; 40J QlXTE CWTA!IV

Repair
Chaln

BuJ, Sell 01 Trade

ReaiEstate for Sale

'7 ... BY NOW, OUR.

AI. TROMM OONST.

s

II

WELJ., J.ADit:~

OF TH" PRE-55 ..

The Complete
Remodeling Service
For Your Home

.;, r. _

-~ 10 1

CAPTAIN EASY

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, GutteiS,
Painting and .Repair

STORM
•
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS

COINS
CURRENCY
SUPPLIES
METAL
DETECTORS

$6Sll. Phone 99'1·3843

A HONEY
MONEY -

-1174

Ph . 992 -39'3

"'"""~-

Noble summit Rd .,
Middleport
PHONE 99'1-5724
5·3-1 mo.

Finan cing Availa ble
Blown in to Wall s &amp; AttiCS

4-30-t mo.

1973 450 Pro totype Kowasok 1
motorcross, good condi tion

992 -5011 .

1973 Honda 350. f o~.rr cylinder.
like new less than 2700 m1l es
and ex tras . $895 or best offer .
Phone 949 -2 181.

3122

991-1726

9'12-2789.

OlDER , remode led aU elec 3
bed rm . home, $12,500. Ca ll

1969 Novo 350, 4 speed , bl oc k
v1n yl
l o p , chrome
rim s
headers . r ebuilt en gm e , A- 1
cond• tion , $1 ,000. Al so , 1974
Kowosoki 100, $275. Phone

~h. m

lARRY
lAVENDER
Syracuse, Ot) io

8ron Till&gt;mos

REG ISTERED Angu s herd . Phone

added . Own &amp; ci ty waler.

WANT to r en t dock :space on Ohio
side of ri ver w1th elec lr ic1 ty.
Phone 992 -6061 .
l

FOP Sole or ren t b0x 12 2 bed rrn
mobrl e horn e, lf.lrge yard ond
garden spot To ren! $ 11 0 mon ·
th, plu o;, depos il Phone 742-

91~3105

"' GRAPEFRUIT PILL ' w1 th D ro da ~&lt;
plan more conveni ent than
gr apefr uit s, Ea r sar• sfy1ng
meals and lose we 1ght. Ne lson
Drug.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

rtn&gt; .. 1... c-.. o('ol•• -

AND 6~N T LEM E N

D. BUMGARDNER

AlUMINUM
SIOING-SOFFITT
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

Phono An111 Bbokwood

99~ - 2348 .

· FQI''Sale ~- - ,
Mobile HOmes for Sate ___
·

1970 Comm unity Car avan . 12x52 .
1 bedrm , good cond1t1 on .
Phone 1614 ) 985 4294.

Ann's Bridal and
Anniversary Services

2 bedrm . ond 1 bedrm furni&lt;;hed
apart ment . Phone 992·2288 or

5 ROOMS and both on 212 Con -

lond 3 bed rm ve ry good condl hon , $8,000 Phone 992 -5491
or 992 -5972 .

F'" Consullltion

LOCUST pos ts. ro un d or spl1t .
Phone949 -277 4

LARGE 3 rm . furn 1shed opt ., alf
con ditioning . 12 miles from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 A v01loble
June 15. Phone 992 6161 .

- U,OOO. For details and

1968 Sky line !railer . 12K60, and

Service

~

1o

Above and below ground
pool kits for the do-ityourself man .
,
All pool supplies available,
100.

Blown
Insulation Services

And Annivtrury

Phone , . . . - - - - - - - - - --.,

ONE bed rm . furn1shed opt. 134 V7
Mulberry A ve . Phone 992 -5436

Adams
1-304-375-4893 evenings.

MAKE spring cl ean ing pr of1toble ,
turn unwonted 1tems IIllo cas h .
Advert1 se 1n the Want Ads.

SWIMMING
POOLS

FREE ESTIMATES

Complete Bridal

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS 3 bedrm . house in Middleport
Sales &amp; Service
Convenient to shopp i ng on
near Pork . Swimm ing pool , and
2013 10ih Ave.
lh1 rd and M1ll Stree ts m M•dstores Phone 992 7b67
Parkersburg, W. Va .
dl epo rt Brand new high qual i·
ty apartme n ts
See t he HO USE FOR SALE , 15 m il es f rom
304-485-0386
Pomeroy , 3 BR ra nch, 2 ba th s,
manoger at R1vor s1dc A part614-423-6474
DR on to redwood deck FR w ith
men ts or ca ll 992 -327 3 . Fur·
Aluminum-Vinyl . Steel
woodburning f lreplac~ . 11 K14
nished
oportmenls
al so
Continuous Gutter
storage building on 1 acre lot,
ova1loble .
Replacement
$~7 .000. Phone {614 ) 667-3862.
Windows and Doors
One bedrm and 2 bedrm fu r·
ru shed apartment s.
Ph one 6 r oo rn hou se very welt kept , 3 ·
Free Estimates
.Q~rm s ., modern kitchen, woll
992-31~9 m 992-5434.
We re commend and
ta 'woll ca rpe l , H.W floors , lull
Sell Quality
TRA ILER space for ren l 1n M•d·
ba se ment , new gas fu rnace ,
5-9 76
dlepor l . Ph one 992 -S434 .
small lo t to mow ideal for
o ld er cou pl e or S!f!OII farn1l y m
FURNI SH ED 2 room apartment,
BRAD FORD. Au sti oneer
Com good
ne•ghb orhoo d
1n
126 M ulberry A ve , ad u lt s and
plete Se rvice Phone 949 -2487
Pomeroy . Ca ll fo r oppo•nlmen t.
references. Phone 992-2030
or 949-2000 . Racine , Ohio , Crilt
Phone 992 -3097 .
evenm gs or 992 -21 67
Bradford .

For aggresstve indtYtdual
who is willing to work long
hours for good prolits.
Small investment requtred
intervtew ca ll Mr.

COAL, limestone and o il types of
sa lt and 'roc k salt lor ice and
snow removal . Excelsiof Salt
Work s, Eo st Mom St., Pomeroy ,
Ohio Phone q92.3591

$~ 1 . 000 .

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ...-- ...
Service

OP EN

7 rrn house w 1th both , portly
carpeted, ne w lumoce, hot
water heoter . large lo t on lm 3 AND 4 RM . f urmshed and un •
c.o ln Hil l Pho ne 992 -207 1.
furn ished opts . Ph one 992
3 acres, I .8 m1 les or Coun ty Rood
5434
4. Ou l of Dexter Ph one (6t4 )
COUNTR Y Mobil e Home Pork , Rt.
982-41 23
33 , ten m1le5 north ol Pome roy
l mge lo ts W1th concre t pollos , 2 bedrm horne , f ull y furnis hed,
close to schoo l and shopp ing
Sidewa lk s, runn ers and off
lnqu1r e 89.4 Pearl 5 1., Midstree t parking Phone 9'12 -7479
dleport. Ohio
ONE bedroom apartment s at
A
Iorge home on Ash Street 1n
VILLAGE MANOR i" M iddlepor t
Midd leport fo r sole or trade for
l or $104 rnon rhly plus e lec or
smaller home . Phone 992-7797.
$ 130 mdudmg electnc . LOWER

REVCO Trac tor Trail er Train-

1966 12x 65 Vmdo le , 3 bedrm .
mobile home with e)l pondo .
Port ly f urnished . Phone 992 2821 or 992 2&lt;137 .
PUBLIC SALE
I wilt off er for sa te at pub tic
aucli on on the 15th day ol
June. 1~76 , at 10 : 00 AM , al
the law o ft •ccs of Cr ow , Cr ow
&amp;. Por t e r , th e fo l l owi n g
described
r eal
es tat e·:
Sr tvated rn the Co unty o f
Me1gs , Stat e ot Oh10 , Town
sh ip of Letart , and deH ribed
a s f ollows : 11 being Lo t N o.
Thr ee D l of Savrc 's Pltt t ot
Letarrsville i n Cou nt y o f
M e1gs and Slate of Ohio , l or
fur ther de scription see the
Plat of Let arr svllle on l i te 1n
the
Auditor ' s
olf lce
at
Pome r oy . Oh io
Fo r •n
spec li on pri or 10 sa te conta cr
Ally Fr ed w Crow . Ill , at
991 5 132 .
Sa•d pr em1ses w ill not be
solo tor tess than !.600.00
T er ms ot sa l e are 10 per ce nt
down on day of sale in cash .
certified c h ec k o r mo n ev
ord er , balan ce upon del iver y
ol deed . R ea l es tat e taxes and
assessme nt s pr or ated to oay
at sal e N ot re spon!ii ble for
acc1 dents

SALES &amp; RENTAL
Travel Trailers

,P OMEROY LANDMARK
9._Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
llltiilll Phone 992-2181 '

Business Franchise

OLD fu rn1 ture. ICC baKes , bro s~
beds, old wall telep hones and
por ts. or comple1e households.
Wr~ t e M . D M iller Rt . 2.
Pomeroy Ohio Call 9qJ .7J61J .

( Bashan

30", 3 HP, 8&amp;S Eng .
$89.95

3'1, H. P., 8&amp;S Eng .
$163.95

soli d ca b, c olor w hi te .

Will do bu1ldmg and rernodeiu,g , Pa r~&lt;ersburg
raof mg . plurnbmg, furnace
repa1r , gas or oi l or general
repair
Free es l1 rnote s an d
remonob l e rate s
Ph one
Charl es Sm clo" (b1 4) 985 -412 1
or992 -2221

J

•

S2895

i97J INT ERNATIONAL 1600
$3895
102" C. A.. V-8. 5 speed. 18,500 2 speed R. ax le, 900 tires.

$12,000

Situations Wanted

RAINBOW RIDGE
Area l
LONG ~OTTOM

TURF TRIM
PUSH MOWERS

8' F lee l sl de, wh. over red , clea n interior , 350 V 8,
au tomatrc, powe r st eering &amp; bra kes, good t ires, step
bumper, r adio, custom tr im &amp; m irror s

Lost and Found
LOST, weddmg ring engro~ed on
ms1de Sus1e and John , Marc h
3 1915 at Sy-racuse Ceme tery ,
Pme Grove Ceme tery or Beech
G1 ave Ceme tery Phone 949 :l l lO.

CODNER'S CAMPERS

U995

1973 CHEVROLET C10

TH E Po1n l BoK Now Open Solem
Sr , Rut land, Oh1 o . F1bergloss
repai r , body wor k s, cus tom
pointrng Phone 742 -3053 or
74:2 -3008 .

Wanted to Buy

Transfers

1974 FORD FIOO

8' Styleside, green finish , good tires, R bumper,
chrornegrills &amp; fits bumper , 6 cy l, &amp; std . trans .

Yard Sale

NOTICE S

VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sepl. 22 )

CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan.
19) Pr olrt trom '{our past mrs -

Racine

OFFI CE HOURS
1:1 1U a m ro S oo p m
Dady , t1 10 a 111 to 17 oo
Noo n Sa tu r d.l y
Phone 1ortay 99 7 / 1 ~6

Don t go .::t rounc1 ca rryrng a
ch•o on yOur s ~lO ltldeltoday as

21) You have a talent today fo r
crerll lll9 you r own problems
Stop and th rnk Abou t th e
1Jen al \1e s a ssoc ri'lt erl w1th
e•r at• c ac trons

Pomeroy
· QUALITY Motor Co.

BLIND ADS

you c &lt;~n be ra ther op trmr st•c
rt&gt;Q iHd lnQ tt1e. o ut co me of
PvPn ts tha t you tak e a hand 111 .
hu t today yo u're likely to be
vr r 'r ur1surP ol your-.elf

SAGITTARIU S (Nov 23-Dec.

@ 2 s~~NS

d• fleren l varieties of tomatoe s .
including non -o d d while
tomato Very Iorge seleclion o f
bodd1ng
plants
Al so
Geranium&amp; and othHr poll&amp;d
plants . Hang ing baskets .
Cle lorld for ms and Green house . Gerald ine CJe lond ,

8:0D-Bobby Vinton 3; Viva Veldez 13; John Davtdao~
~. 15; Gunsmoke 8: U.S.A.: People &amp; Politics 20,33;
Rhoda 10.
B:Jti-We Think You Should Know 3; Baseball 6;
Phyllis 10; Movie "Cool Hand Luke" 13.
9:0D-Joe Forrester 3,4,15 ; All In The Famllv 8,10;
Wellspr lngs 33; Man Who Played Sprock 20
9:311-Maude 8,10.
10:0D-Jigsaw John 3,4, 15; f&gt;Aed lcal Center I ; Hlll"b
Alper! &amp; the Tijuana Brass 10; News 20; Bl-Wavs
33.
.
10 :3ti-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Catch-33 33
10 : ~5-- Testimony Time Today 9.
11 :0D-News 3,4,6,8,110,13,15; ABC News 33.
11 :»-Johnny Cfrson 3,4,15: World Champi onship of
Trivia 6, 13 ; Movie "Mayer ling" 8; Movie " The
Gatllny Gun" 10; Janak! 33 .
I:OD-Tomorrow 3,4; Newo 13.
Chlnntl Five
9 a.m. 700 Club lei
7 p.m. High and Wild lei
7:30 - Music Connectllon It)
8:oo---cab le Journal (c)
9:0D-Washlngton Debates lei
lO:OD-700-Ciub {c)

MONDAY, JUNE 7,1f76
5:00-Bonanza l ; Partridge Family 8; Mission : Impossible 15.
5:»-Adam ·12 4; News 6; Family Aflalr 8; Elec Co.
20.33; Adam-12 13.
6:0D-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6:»-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News ll; Andy Griffi th 6;
CBS New• 8, 10; Hodgepodge . Lodge 20 ;Carrascolenclas JJ .
7:0D-Truth or-Cons. 3; To Tell the Trulh 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6; Buck Owens 8; News 10; Candid Camera
13; Family Affair 15; Teaching Children to Read
20; Resourceful Wesl VIrginia 33.
7:»-That Good Ole Nashville Music 3; Bobby Vinton
4; Space : 1999 6; Prl~e Is Rlght8 ; Evening Edition
with Marlin Agronsky 20; High Road to Adventure
10; To Tell the Truth 13; Friends of Man 15; Tennis
for Everyone 33.

Business Services

VEGE TABLE plants of all kmds . 10

I'

Television log for easy viewing

For Sate

l1 ddrl•ona1 1Sc ChiHll'-'
p&lt;· r Ad v eri•St'lllC ri t

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Usually

fry 1101 lo pu t you r sell -In terest
too l&lt;l r Jbove cithers today Benet only concf'rned about No 1
wrll turn people o!l

Auto Sates

RAT ES

Your usualtv dependable allre s
may be the ones wh o let you

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-l'umcrov. 0 ., Montlav, June 7, 197ti
DICK TRACY
.
.

DETAILS

I .WONDER IF lf'OU
HAVE TO SltiN6 ALONe
A CAN OF SALLS...

�10 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Munda y, June 7, 1976

PLEASANT VALLEY
Mon ld Good, daughter ,
LOflg Boffom ; Edwin Bass,

Legion wins twice at home Local news, in·briefs
By Greg Bailey
The Meig s Amer ican
Legion learn Saturday swept
a double header at Syracuse
from Lowell by the counts or
11-1 and 6-5 making its record

4-o.

Sayre llad two singles each,
Minnis had a double and
s in~l e, and John son and
Brian Hamilton ~ach had a
single.
I L
000 001 li-'1 5 I
M

The first game belonged to
Meigs right !rom the very
start. The local learn plated
one run in the lirst when Wall
was sale on an error , stole
second, moved to third on a
fly to the outli eld , and
scampered home on Mike
Nesselroad's sacrifi ce.
What proved to he the
winning tally crossed the
plate in tlte second on three
straight sing les by Gary
Swain , Calvin Minnis, and

John Sayre. Lowell got il'
only run in the si xth on a
single, a base on bal ls, and a
passed ball.
Winning pitcher Brent
Johnson and reliever Steve
Baird combl n~d to fan

~ix

and

walk a like number. Losing
pikher Hicc struck out only
two and walked one .
Mick DaYenpurl led lhe
local leam '.al the plate by
slamming two doubles. Greg
Smith had a triple, Swain and

-~-~
by

113 003 x- 8 II I

Ri ce and !.oa r. Johnson (wp ),
Baird (71 and Hamilton .
THE SECOND GAME
proved lo be a little different
as the game wasn·~ decided
until lhe bottom of the last
inning. Meigs jwnped out lo a
HI lead in the -~econd on a
double by Davenport and a
single by Minnis.
But Lowell went ahead for
the first lime in the afternoon
when they plated three runs
in the fourth on three singles,
a walk , a stea l, and a wild
pitch. Meigs tied it in their
turn at bat when Johnson
singled 1 stole second, and

scored on a single by Davenpor t. Davenport then also
stole second and rode home
un Gary Swain's base hil.

" Thf!n~

ar~

alwavs two

lfhina s out ior your blood ;
the I.R . S. and the
mosquitoes . One can't be
avoided, the other we
c.creens for ."
The job of r..u•1 ing 'em up
and taking 'em down can
be av o ided with self s tor ing
storm and screen win dows
doors from
t he

"F RIEND LY ONES."

CEMEN1
BLOCK
The Department Store of
191l.

M

010 220 1-6 9 I

Ullman and Loar. Smith,
Minnis'( wp, 4) and Hamilton,
Johnson (6J.

A TWO-TENJHS of one
mill levy to be voted upon
Tuesday In Meigs Coun ty lor
con tinuation of operations of

fhe Southea ster n Ohio
Emergency Medica l Se.rv lce
woold be In effect for live
years rather than 10 years as
reported earlier .

~

GREG BAILEY
The loca l American Legion·
team Sunday took a long trip
to Ashland and dropped their
first two games or the season
as U•ey managed to collect
only six hils all afternoon.
dropping the two contests by
scores or 6-4 and 11-4. The
double Joss put the ir record at

single~

and four walks in the
third. Meigs tied il in the
fourth , but the hosts put the
game on ice in the firth when
Sleve Skaggs stroked a tworun homer.
Besides his homer , Nesselroad had a single, as did
Johnson and Calvin Minnis.
The hosts' pitchers fanned 10
and gave up eight walks while
Meigs' pitching lanned six
and walked seven.
M
101 200 0-4 4 1
A
004 020 x-6 8 1
Minnis, Huffman (3),
James (lp, 3), Nesselroad (5)
and Johnson.
Hamilton, Welch (wp, 4),
Skaggs ( 6), Smith (7) and
MacKenzie .

In the first game. Meigs
juntped out to a 1-0 lead in the
fi1· st lr ame when Brent
Johnson led orr with a single
and stole second . He stole
second and was followed by
two wa lks and a wild pikh
that let him run home. The
lead was increased to 2~ in
the third on a long h9me run
by Mike Nesselroad.
But the hosts caught fire
AFTER JUMPING oul \o a
and plated four runs on three quick three run lead in the
first inning, Meigs lost steam
and let the hosts come back
for a big 11-4 win.
The visitors got those three
Tonight fhru Thursday
runs
on a hit batter, four
NOT OPEN
walks, and Brian Hamilton's
single that drove In two runs.
Fri., Sat., Sun .
Hamilton had both of Meigs'
June 11 -12 -13
two hits in the second contest,
SKY RIDERS
James Cobur n, Susannah
both singles.
York , Robert Culp, Cha rles
Steve Skaggs hit another
Aznavour. Har r y Andrews.
homer, this time a three-run
It 's a Thriller!
shot, in the bottom of the first
(PGJ
to tie the game, and from
Show Starts 7 p.m.
then on it was all downhill ror
the hosts. They scored four ·

MEIGS THEATRE

ME tG S

A
MEN'S
double
elimination ASA sanctioned
softbal l tournament will be
held In Racine June 2l, 26, 27,
s ponsored by Southern
Athletic B095fers. En try lee
Is $40 and two Dudley soffballs. For addit iona l in formation c~ lt .Bill Jewell af
949-23-46.

A MARR !AGE license was
issued fo Timmy Leo Smith,
22, Rf. 1, Reedsville, and
Pauline Frances McGrew, 18.
Liffte Hocki ng.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonvi ll e Order
of
Eas tern Stars will meet

Thursday af 8 p. m. Members
are to br ing

homemade

times in the second to give
themselves some breathing
room .
Losing pikher Steve Baird
and . Brady Huffman combined to strike out 10 and
walk seven while winner
Feltrop and reliever Smith
fanned six and walked a
whopping twelve batters, but
Meigs ju.st couldn't seem to
get that timely hit .
Coach George Nesselroad's
boys have a full schedule this
week as they host Wellston at
Syracuse Wednesday, Athens
comes in for a doubleheader
Saturday, and Lancaster,
always a strong opponent,
comes to town for two on
Sunday.
M
3000101i-4 21
A

342 002 x- 11 8 I

Baird (lp ), Huffman (&gt;)
al)d Hamilton. Feltrop (wp ),
Smith (51 and Blair.

Area
Death

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

Staa t s,

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Woodard. Point Pleasant ;

RALPH Warden Our ~.
Chesler , a can didate for

De ibert Yo ung , Clifton ;
Erma Hart, Gallipolis Ferry ;

Meigs County Com missioner

Mrs . John Grimm,

In Tuesday's etecflon, Is a

New

Haven ; Susan Bush. Point
Pleasant; Ray Suphtn, Sf.
Albans; Lillian Robbins, Ben
Somervi lle, Poin t Pleasant;
Edward Myers, Gallipolis;
Benjam in Barnell. Leon ;
Mrs . Marlin Sande, Sf.

medical patient at Veterans

Memor ial Hospital .

John' s,

N.

D. ;

Sun Day
Best

Lydia

McKinney, Point Pleasant;
Diana Da lly, Gallipolis; Leo
Hotly , Gallipolis; Bane
Crtfes, West Colum bia ;

THE
POMEROY
Emergency Squad answered
a call fo the Nathan Biggs
residence on Rutland Road at
9:35 p. m. Sunday for James
Biggs, who was II t. He. was
taken fo Hol zer M&lt;dica l
Center . AI 9.: SO p. m.
Saturday, the sq uad went fo
fhe Lewis Smith residence on
Shade Road for Mrs. Smith, a

Ohio voters can end Ford-Reagan battle today
....
By CLAY F. RICHARDS
.
United Press laternatiooal
President Ford and Ronald Reagan coold end the long and
sometimes raucoUII primary sea10n today close to a dead heat.
On the Democratic side three Western liberals have one last
big chance to stop J"lllll1ly Carter.
.
1hls Is the day Calliornia, Ohio and New Jersey elect 540
I Democratic and 331 Republican delegates - about on~lrd
the number needed to win the presidential nomination in both
parties.
· CalliornJa, the biggest prize, Is expected to go for two men
who have served as ils governor - Democrat Edmund G.

He len

Will la m s,

Point

Pomeroy ; Mr s. Roy Brewer ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

daughter, Point Pleasant;
Arizona Osborne. Point
Pl easant ; Mrs . David
Makham , daughter,
Gall ipol is; Mary Paflerson,

matern i ty patient, who was

taken fo Holzer Medical
Center also.

Henderson .

Tuesday, June 8, 1976

en tine

Invalid transfer
set up in Meigs

!
residents of Meigs County between hospitals.
The commissi one r s
released to SEOEMS $3,000 to
operate the service. Meeting
with the commission on the
matter were Wiliiam Taylor,
execut ive
direc tor
of
SEOEMS, and Ted Turner ,
linance director . Attending
were Henry Wells, a nd
Bernard Gilkey , cornmiss ioners, and Mar tha
Chambers, clerk.

Syria joins
peace-move
TONI TODD
Bubbling with excitement ... Tani Todd's tanktop cooler
merges ring• of stripe• to an appliqued "A" skirt, .belted
in stripes, bordered in solid. Have yours in polye.ter
double knit, machine wash-dry. Black/White
8-18.
Main Store. Annex and Warehouse
open weekdays and Saturday , 9: 30 to 5.
Shop Fridays 9: 30 to 8 p.m .

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

CAIRO (UPI ) - Syria has
decided to join an Arab
foreign ministers' emergency
conference tonight on
collective action to halt the
all-cut war fhat has engulfed
Lebanon, a spokesman for
the Arab League said. ·
Tbe Damascus government
advised it was sending a
"high level" delegation to the
session of the 21ktation Arab
League, the spokesman said.
The Cairo meeting, called
at the request of ihe Palestine
Uberation.Ofganization, was
moved up a day "in view of
the steady deterioration of
the Lebanon situation and
intensified fighting," Arab
League Secretary-General
Mahmoud Riad said.
Syria's decision was a surprise to League officials, who
had expected a boycott of the
conference in line . with
Damascus'
apparent
determination to continue

unilat e ral
military
Intervention. Syria also is
opposed· to collective Arab
peace-making efforts.
PLO officials said an
immediate cease-fire and
IUiconditional wiithdrawal of
Syrian troops from Lebanon
headed the list of demands
they would submit to the
conference.
Arab League officials said
the Syrians may have thought
'It more advisable to come to
Cairo and defend their role lit
I.Albanon against charges from
the
·mainly
Palestlnlans, Egypt and Iraq
- that liquidation of the PW
was the invading troops' goal.
Including Syria, 17 of the
Arab League nations have
agreed to attend the
conference, No word has been
received yet from Lebanon,
Jordan or Ubya, the officials
said.

JNews • • •zn Brzefs;

fJAM/FM
CLOCK RADIO

when you
buyanrs~
.
•
Belnco Ouiltorama lbsture I or
lbsture IT®mattress set.
[very Pos(urc I and Posture II has
Bcmco·s exclusive 1-feahh -0-Matic'"
Construction to give your body firm
suppott. It's" sou11d system of
in ncrsprings 1hat acUusts and
readjusts to your we ight, shape and
posit.ion while yo u slee p. And if you
bu v right now, you' I! get a free C.E.
A :Vf/FM clock rad io to so und-oil inthe morning! Quamities are limited ,
so hurry. Buy now. bef(tre we run out
of t.ime.

Holzer Medical Cebler
(Births, June f)
Mr . and Mrs. William
Adkins, son, Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs: Robert Reed, son ,
Point Pleasan t; Mr . and Mrs.
Robert Gill, son, Northup;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Byler;
daughter, Jackson .
(Births, June 5)
Mr . and Mrs . Timothy
Wam s ley , daughter,
Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

MOMENTUM WINS
NORTHFIELD, Ohio
lUPI) - Dale Ross guided
Momentum to the fastest
mile of the year Saturday
night at Northfield Park,
covering the mile in 1:58 4-6
to post a t•.,-!ength victory
over Missouri Time in the
$5,000 Gold Standard Pace.
The winner returned $3.60,
$2.80 and $2.20. Natural
Ability showejl.
In the loth~ace trifecta,
the 4--2-9 combination paid
$240.90. Attendance was 5,938.
The hancile was $431,766.

not. concentrating oo the Issues.
I
Udall, who bought a series of television cornmerclab depicting Carter as taking one position in one part of the country and
another position to a different audience, predicted he would
finish a strong second in Ute race .
Frank Oturch said he had been unable to campaign
extensively in the state and indcated he thought Carter would
win it.
Brown campaigned In New Jersey where he hoped to pull
another "uncommitted" coup agalilst Carter, as he did In
Rhode Island last week. Brown pushed uncommltted slates
that favor either him or Hubert HUinphrey - or both .

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 211. Nu. :16

.

HEADING NORTH
Births. June s, a daughter
ZANESVILLE, Ohio (UP! I fo Mr. and Mrs. David
- The Lorena stern wheeler, Markham , Gallipolis; a son
Mr. and Mrs . Will iam
Zanesville 's
$100 ,000 fo
Karper, Point Pleasa nt, and
Bicentenni~l project, is
a daughter fo Mr. and Mrs.
moving northward to Ohio Edwin
Putn ey,
Poin t
a fte~ a successful transler Pleasant.
Sunday at the mouth or the
Mississippi.
The boat is to arrive in
Marietta June H in time for a
In 1939, King George VI and
trlwnphant journey up the
· Musklngwn River for the Queen Elizabeth became the
zane Trace Commemoration first British monarchs to visit
the United Stales.
June 111-20.

The Meigs Coun ty Commissioners today signed an
agreement to institute invalid
transfer service by the
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Service (SEOEMS )
in .coopera ti on with the
volunteer
squads
or
Pomer oy,
Midd leport ,
Racine and Syracuse.
The invalid ER transler
system
will
provide
scheduled transportation at ·
ph ysici ans' orders for

at y

e

Pleasant; Bonnie McDade.
Leon : Mark Clark, Gallipolis
Ferry ; Mrs . Alexander May,

That means he could pick up more than 200 additional
.delegates, putting him well over the 1,100 mark In his quest for
flte 1,505 needed for nomination.
As the candidates headed into the home stretch, issues were
dropped and the rhetoric turned increasingly to personal
attacks on opponents.
"You don't want a candidate for president who can't win,"
Ford yelled into a microphone to a crowd of 14,000 In Dayton.
In California, Reagan said Ford's television conunercials
labeled him a warmonger and were "totally dishonest."
In Ohio, before his last-hour swing to New Jersey, Carter
accused Morris Udall of conducting a n~~ative campaign and

•

Owa tn Young, New Haven ;

Mrs , ReK Vance. Pomeroy ;

to :·

her husband, Howard,
Lucedale ; fwo daughters,
Mrs. Edwin (Mary Janel
Roush. Rf. I. Letart, and Mrs.
Robert (Salty) Tucker,
Lucedale, Miss.; two sons,
Howard, Jr .. and Jeff Rust,
both of Lucedale ; a brother,
James Slallsmifh , Salt Lake
City, Utah, and six grandchi ldren.
Friends wilt be received at

Brown Jr., and Reagan, hi$ RepubUcan predecessor.
That leaves New Jersey and especially Ohio as the major
battlegrounds, and Ford and Carter are favored in both states.
With Reagan favored to capture all 167 California delegates,
and Ford out in front for most of the '11 in Ohio and 77 in New
Jersey, the GOP primary season could ~nd in a virt~al
deacilock. Tbe President held a-82U90 edge m delegates gomg
into today, with 1,130 needed for nomination.
On the Democratic side Carter was far ahead with 911
delegates. Despite the fact he was expected to get only 20 per
cent of California's 280 delegates, he was f~vored to win many
of Ohio's 152 and New Jersey's 107.

Orville Graham , Pomeroy ;

E. Rust ot Lucedale, Miss ..
formerly of Mason County,
who died Saturday in Mobile,
Ala .. will be held Tuesday af
10 a.m. from fhe Foglesong

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Crestlyn Hill, Racine ; Violet
McDonald, Dexter ; Ralph
Durs, Long Bottom.
Saturday Discharges Denzil Boggess , Margaret
McKenzie, Frieda Fields.
Sunday Admissions Virginia Musser, Long
Bottom ; Louise Eshelman,
Pomeroy ; Sally Ukhlield,
New Haven; EIUiice Christy,
Middleport; Craig Dorst,
Shade.
Sunday Discharges Curtis Riffle , Ross Kent,
Rosalee Clarke, Bertha
Hobstetter.

PC;., ;: ROY, OHIO

Refreshments witt be served.

Eugene

Basfrlck, Fla.; Andrew Coib,
South Field, Mich. ; Mrs.
Kenna Birmingham, Alpha

services for Mrs . Marcedus

Hospital News

Farmers 8 an-k

Lakin ;

sale .

MARCEDUS E. RUST
MASON , W. Va . - Funeral

the funeral home from 2 to t4
7 to 9 p.m. today.

'

candy

~~'l':m::m~:::::~~:':-::::::;:::::::::~:·:·:&lt;:::::~~~::&lt;::::::::::::~~&lt;=:=::~:::::m=~~~

and

1848: The golden years.
What I uck! Just as a weakened Mexico turns over California
to us, one of Captai n S utter'~ men finds a few pieces of gold
in t~e sand a long the Sacramento River. The men don't stop
look mg. They find more gold and cross their fingers while
it's being tested . It's_gold, a ll right. In such rich deposits that
~ prospector could gather $500 worth in just a few hours.
rhe word spreads. Doctors, lawyers, farmers, merchants,
·even s_ervants leave their jobs and rush for the gold fields.
Some sa il around Cape Horn . Others risk their lives to plod
their "prairie schooners" across deserts and mountains. By
the end of 1850, San Francisco is transformed from a sleepy
Spanish village to a city of 15,000. By 1853, California
boasts 250,000 people. All looking for the rich lifd

a

County

Funeral Home in Mason.
Mrs . . Rust Is survived

Frorn a Great Ame1·~can

for

ESTHER BARBER, Beech
Humane Society will meet Sf .. was taken to Veterans
Thursday, June 10, af Mid- Memorial Hosplfal af 10: 59 p.
dleport Village Halt af 7:30 p. m. Sunday by the Middleport
m. All members urged fo Emergency squad . She was
sulferlng wifh chest pains.
attend .
THE

Ashland deals double loss

4-2.

c

They then went ahead by two
in the firth .
But Lowell wasn't "dead .
·They lied the game in the
sixth on a base on balls and a
home rUil by Smithburger.
The winning run came
when Hamilton led the
seventh of! with a bunt single.
Mike Nesselroad was hit by a
pikh. Hamilton was erased
at · third, but Swain then
singled Nesselroad home to
end the game.
Minnis led the second game
attack with two ·singles and
three RB!s while Swain also
had two singles and two runs
balled in. Davenport had a
double and single, -and
Johnson , Hamilton , and
Sayr~ had a single each.
Meigs pikhing fimried nine
and walked three while losing
pitcher Ullman struck out ror
four and walked two .
L
000 302 0-5 6 0

candy

.
.
BY UNITED PRI!;SS INTERNATIONAL
CIDPINGA, RHODESIA - RHODESIAN NATIONAI.JliT
guerrillas have kUiedfive white civilians in the past three days
.in their campaign to force Prime Minister Ian.Smith to accept
J)laclt majority rule. A land mine planted by the Soviet-armed
insrtlgenlsexploded Mnday ~nder a car about 50 miles north or
Otiplnga near the border with Mozambique, killing a mother
and her two young daughters.
. Security forces conununlques said two quarry workers
were Killed Saturday In the Mtoko area, about 100 miles north·
east of Salisbury. An Mrican school teacher also was kUied.
Fanners said Elizabeth Botl18 and her daughters Marianne,
it, and Louberlie, 8, were killed near the border village of
Melsetter. Mrs. Botha's hu.sband, Louis, and two other
{lllssengers were injured in the blast.
.
The attacks by the guerrillas, based across the border in
Mozambique 20 miles east of here, have not frightened local
farmers and tea planters from their farms .
AKRON, OIDO - FIRESTONE TIRE &amp; RUBBER Co.
made $33(1,1100 in improper domestic political contributions
from 1970 to late 1973 and tens of thousands of dollars worth of
"Improper" foreign payments, the giant rubber finn admitted
Monday.
.
·
Richard A. Riley, JX:~sident and chief executive officer of
Firestone, said the revelations were contained in a summary
ffied in respi&gt;nse to a letter of inquiry from the Security and
~xchange Conunission (SEC).
WESTPOINT,N. Y. - THE U. S. MILITARY Acallerny's
much publicized cheating scandal, which has brought scrutiny
to the school and Its honor code, has now touched nearly a fifth
of the junior class.
Internal review panels Monday handed up accusations
against 34 more cadets, !ringing the total charged thus far to
168 out of the class of about 870. The charges may be the last
large group of accusations to come out of the inquiry, however,
since second-classmen, who were heine kept so they would be
available for questioning, have now been released for S1UJUDer
leave.
SYRIAN TANKS AND TROOPS BACKED BY MIG jet
fighters fought leftists and Palestinian guerrillas today along
the mountain road to Beirut in what may be the heaviest battle
of Lebanon's It-month civil war, the leftists' Beirut radio
reported today. The fighting alon·g the strategic Damascus·
Beirut highway, which overlooks the Lebanese capital from
the flank of 5,000-foot Mount Lebanon, has advanced little since
the all-out war began Monday, according to battlefield reports.
Pillestinian officials in Cairo for an emergency Arab
League peace meeting said the highway battle Monday night
.was marked by the artillery exchange that unleashed 100
llhells a minute. They confirmed the fighting continued today,
but they gave no details beyond the ~!rut radio reports. :ntere
·were no casualty figures from either side, but the leftists'
battlefield reports indicated !.Albanese civ!Uans once again
(Continued on page 2)

BANK RATE FINANCING ·
MIDDLEPORT

By PETER P. SPUDICH Jr.
CLEVI':I.AND (UP! ) - Jimmy Carter, hoping to
wind up wtlh at least 1,200 delegates after toclay's thre.e
Important primaries, predicted MoJlday the
Democratic party would "come out of the primaries
with a harmonious party."
"Ali the candidates that have already withdrawn
from the election are oow favorably incllned toward
me " Carter said during an impromptu news
co~feren·ce at Burks Lakefront Airport. "They're very
close friends of mine. And I think we'll come out of the
primaries with a harmonious party.
"It's heen the first chance in the history of our
.... country when a majority of the voters of this country
OVER 50 YEARS - Alumni of Chester High &amp;hool
who graduated more than 50 years ago recognized were
alumni banquet held at Chester Elementary, left to right,

,\

front, Grace Hawley, Mae Lambert, Tillie Baum; back
row, F.Jossie Allensworth , James Weber, Earl Knight,
Bertha Smith, Howard Knight, Buell Ridenour, Helen
Knight Wilson and Alba Radford.

206 return to Chester High
By KaUe t;row
CHESTER - Two hundred
and six persons attended the
Chester High School alumni
banquet and dance Saturday
.evening
at · Chester
Elementary &amp;hool. Chester
High was consolidated with
Tuppers Plains to become
Eastern in 1957.
The fifty ye~r reunion class
was honored and presented
gifts fr om the alumni
association . Fifty year
members were Mildred Well
and Victor and Nola will.
Also recognized were
alumni members who
graduated over 50 years ago .
They were Howard Knight ,
Alba· Radford, Helen , Knight
Wilson , Earl Knight, Mae
Lambert, Bertha Smith,
James Weber, Flossie
Allensworth, Grace Hawley,
Goldie Wolfe, Tillie Baum,
and Buell Ridenour.
Wanda Young Adams
traveled the
greatest
distance having arrived from
California. Others were from
Arizona and New York.
Officers elected for . next
year were Bertha Smith,
president; Howard Knight,
first vice president; Blaine
Milhoan, second vice
president; Roger Keller , ·
third
vice
president ;
Rosemary Keller, secretary;
Norma Hawthorne , assistant
secretary; John Riebel ,
treasurer and Clarice Allen ,
assistant treasurer .
Named to the decorating
committee were Dale Kautz,
chairman, Robert Wood,
Betty Dean, Donald Mora and
Maxine Goeglein .
John Will, president,
con ducted the business
session . Esther Ridenour
gave the secretary's report
and Kathryn Windon the
treasurer's report. Will ex\ended thanks to the Chesler
PI'A who prepared the dinner
and the yotJng ladies who
served. He also extended
thanks to those who made
donations, Fick and Karr
Construction, Dale Kautz for
the programs, Chester Fire
Department for flte tables
and chairs, the decorating
committee and all others who
helped. Mfs. Dlive Weber,
pianist, provided music

Resurfacing
project on

CR 1 imderway

Preparations are underway
to resurface CR 1 from &amp;ilem
Center School on SR 124 to
Columbia &amp;hool Lot on SR
· Oblomls voted In appareat recerd aumbera •today to 113 and to the Athens County
dloote tbelr party candidates lor preaideat, Senate, line, according to county
Coagresa, tbe Geaeral Assembly aDd the Ohio Supreme engineer Wesley Buehl.
Coo, the UPI reponed.
County Roads 27 and I·A
Secretary of State Ted W. BroWD bad predicted a record are also Included In the
z,seo,ooe voten would taro out for ooe of tbe molll batted project. Eighty percent of the
primary electloo fa tbe state's ~'-'tory·
project ($480,000) wlii be paid
. ''!be voila&amp; Is Jli'Obebly gotug to be.pretty havy aDd It · through a federal grant,
. will probably mate my estimate," Bnnm uld today.
percent ($120,000) by
:;o Eleet!Oil beard worten In MlboitiDg, Trumbull· aotl twenty
the county and the Southern
Summit eoantlel deeertbed the voter turnout 11 "fairly Dhio Coal Co. The Southern
heavy" whUe tbe l111'11011t of before-work voten In Cuyahoga
Ohio. Coal Company 's portion
. Couaty wu reported to be ''brisk."
Is $75,000, the COUilty to pay
·.·:·...·.·.·.•,•,:,:,,;:::: the balance of $120,000.

.Voting heavy in Ohio

INGELS FURNITURE

Hannonious party possible

during the dinner hour .
Chesler School. ·
Will presented John Riebel
Round and square dancing
with ail American Flag !rom followed the banquet with
the alumni to be flown at the music by the Khord Kings.

George Theiss was the caller
for the square dance. Th e,
banquet next year will be
held on June 4.

50 YEAR CLASS REUNION - The fifty year reunion class of Chester High School was
honored Saturday -night at the annual alumni banquet · and dance held at Chester
Elementary School. Shown I~ are Mildred DaUey Well Nola Knight Will and her husband
Victor Will. They were presented gifts !rom the Alumni ~ssociatlon .

,:;

~~:Ut~~~~~;th:'~n:~~~~. !fth:~ur~f:'~:~:

::

: , , :~:i:i::rE:~~:,~::~~,,~~~~,~~~:~:~~~::::,,JI:
Scholarship will help
Pu11ins study ·Physics

REEDSVILLE - Diana
Lynn Pullins, Reedsville, has
bee n awarded a yearly
renewable $600 scholarship
by Modern Woodmen or
America. a lraternal Insurance society with home
offices in Rock Island, m.
Tbe daughter or Mr . and Mrs.
Edgar Pullins, Reedsville,
she will major In Physics at
Ohio University.
High school seniors from
thro1J8hout the United States
receive the merit awards,
which total $66,400 for the
four-year scholarship period.
· Diana , like the other
winners ,
earned
her
schoiarshlp in open competition with other high
school seniors In one of six
geographic areas of ap,
proximately equal Modern
Woodmen Junior membership. College aptitude of
the applicants was judged by '
a panel of eminent educators.
Evaluation criteria Included
scores on college aptitude
tests, scholastic·records, and
leadership and char acter
trait,..
She
ranked
first
academi ca lly
In
her
graduating class at Eastern
High School, was secretary.
treasur~r of the National

I

'

'

I
DIANA PULLINS
Honor Society. In the school
band, on the school newspaper Stafl. participated In
student government, and was
a member or 4--H.
NOW YOU KNOW
Former Brltlsh Prime
Minlsler Harold Macmillan
once appoln\ed a cabinet that
Included 13 relatives by blood
or marriage.

Elderly workers needed

I

~-

••
OFFICERS OF CHESTER ALUMNI - Officers· of Otester alumni who presided
Saturday night' at the annual alwnnl dinner at Chester Elementary are, center, front,
Starling Massar and Esther Ridenour ; back, and left to right, Betty Gaul, Kathryn Windon
Richard Fick, Reid Young, Dale·Keutz, and John Will.
'

Tbe Meigs County Council
on Aging and the Gallla,
Jackson , Meigs Mental
Health Center are seeking
persons age 60 or over to
serve as paid workers In the
new Senior Friends Project
for geriatric patients.
Tbe Senior Friends will
work 20 hours per week and
receive 12 an hour plus
transportation expenses. A
training period will start
soon.
Senior Friends will help
geriatric patlen\,9.

Tbe Senior Friends wlii
work 20 hours per week and
receive $2 an hour plus
transportation expenses. A
training period will start

soon.
Senior Friends wlii help
geratrlc patients In an in·
tenslve
enrichment
resociallzatlon program that
is federally funded through
the Ohio Commission on
Aging . Information ls 1
available from Doug Uzon at
the Senior Citizens Center,
Pomeroy (992-7884).

Pomeroy has fo~r parcels for sale
Pomeroy VIllage Council
Monday ni~ht approved a
resolution to sell four pieces
of property owned by the
village.
Meeting with council was
Judge Robert E. Buck who
prepared and read the ordinances. The property that
will be advertised for sale arc
lots 12 and 13 in the V. B.
Horton addition across from
the White House, the city hall
building, the second ward fire
house on Condor St ., and the
first ward fire house on Nye
Ave.
·
The third reading was
given an ordinance fixing
salaries of village employes .
Judge Buck advised council
that the present ordinance on
the books in regard .to driving
left of center should be
rewritten.
Meeting with coWtcil were
(

Dan Will and Dan Thomas,
memhers of Boy &amp;out Troop
249 in regard to making and
placing an attractive sign
"Welcome to Pomeroy" as .
part of ·their project of Ob·
taining their rank or Eagle.
The two boys suggested the
sign lie placed at the in·
tersection of East Main
Street and Nye Ave. Council
agreed that this was a good
location but advised the boys
that they would have to ob·
tain permission from the
State Highway.
Council discussed the man y
signs in the area of Nye and
East Main and felt that the
signs deflnilefy are an "eye

sore.11

•

Lou Osborne advised that
he has learned the rate for
gas trucks to cross the ferry
has been increased from $3
one way to $12.

Council agreed It did not
have jurisdiction over the
rates charged by the operator
of the ferry . Mayor Clarence ·
Andrews agreed to talk to
Doc McCoy, the operator of
the ferry . and also Fred
Taylor, the mayor of Mason.
Councilman Harold Brown
said the vacant lot next to the
Daily Sentinel Office was
unsightly and unsafe. He .
asked If there was an ordinance to control the
situation and if so, it should
be,enforced.
Harry Davis, councilman,
reported that the sa fety
committee had met and
discussed purchase or hose
for the ladder truck and back
up hose at a cost of $1 ,800,
Council agreed to rebuild the
breathalyzcr since this was
much cheaper than buying a
new machine.

Mayor Andrews told
council If th ey are considering placing on the ballot
in November the permissive
auto license fee ($5) an ordinance should be drawn up
to this effect.
Davis also reported that
several trees had blown down
at Beech Grove Cemetery In
a recent storm and several
were In bad shape and should
come down . He will Investigate.
It was reported that H &amp; P
Sanitation Is not fulfilling Its
agreemen t and council
suggested Basil Haynes, one
of the owners, be contacted
and meet with council soon.
It was announced that
chemicals have been added to
the new water system to help
control the hardness of the
water but it would take 90
days to test the result to see if
the chemicals were helping.

J

Chuc k · Bartels, councilman, SIJ8gested that a
chain link fence be placed
where the Iron bars are on the
. upper parking lot wall. He
noted that a youngster sitting
on the wall could very easily
slip thro1J8h over the side.
Bartels also noted that the
gas company be contacted to
repair the holes made on Ann
Street when pipe lines were
laid. Bartels also hoped to aet
some support from the
citizens or Pomeroy for a
recreation area·.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews, Ralph Werry, Lou
Osborne,
Davis,
Phil
· Globokar, Bartela, Brvwn,
Phyllis Hennessy, treasurer,
who acted as clerk in the
absence of Jane Walton ,
Judge Buck and Henry
Werry . The meeting was
opened by prayer by-the Rev.
William Midcileswarth.
·,,
t

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