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                  <text>32 - The Sunday Times- Sentinel, Sunday, June 13, 1976

Summer

Denials flow full tide

workshops
•
,mart
set
RIO GRANDE - Two
special workshops in art
scheduled for this First
Summer Term , at Rio
Grande College-Conununity
College, both taught by Carl
Salmons, are fig~~ drawing
and landscape pam tin g. Each
will carry two hours credit.
Figure drawing will be
concerned with the un derstanding of form , mass,
weight and space through
drawing the posed human
!tgure. Models will be clothed
in leotard, street clothing,
and costumes. Drawing wtu
be generally In black and
white and neutral colors with
perhaps some work wi th
color. More advanced
students may utilize color
and painting media if they
wish. No prerequisite .
Landscape painting wiU be
taught out-d-doors. Students
may con.centrate on sttU-ltle
on rlltny days. Students may
choose a variety of medta~u.
acryltc, watercolor, pastel,
etc., but the course wiD be
primarily concerned with
color, both perceived and
resolved ; together with form
and composition using landscape as a stimulus. Students
should have had at least one
class in drawing and
preferably have had some
experience in painting.
Figure drawing will be
o!!ered Tuesdays between
noon and 4 p.m. Landacape
painting wtll be offered
Wednesdays between noon
and 4 p.m. Each Friday between noon and 4 p.m. wiU be
uttltzed as a workshop with
special instruction for both
workshops. Each workshop
includes six to eight hours
instruction per week for five
weeks.

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~

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DR. FREDto;lllt;KSNUF~
, Snuffer

awarded

study fellowship

PROST .
·cLEAR

RIO GRANDE - Dr .
Frederick Snuffer, Assistant
Professor of Sociology at Rio
Grande College has been
awarded
a
National
Humanities Fellowship to
study the original cultural
traditions and associated
community types which have
contributed to American
clvtltzation.
The eight week summer
seminar will be .at the
University o! Florida, Gainsvtlte, under direction of
anthropologist Dr. Solon T.
Kimball. Dr. Snuffer, who
teaches courses in Appalachia Cui lure Wld Social
Change in Rural Appalachia,
wtll study the plantation
system and land settlement
pattern of rural Appalachia.

FINAL PLANNING - Mrs. Betty Lane, transportation coordinator ; Mrs. Judy Werry, director ; Mrs,
Pat Thomas, assistant director, and Mrs. Margaret
· Parker, emergency contact person lor the Big Bend Girl

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WASHINGTON (UPI) The Supreme Court today
upheld the power of tbe
Environmental Protection
Agency to order reduction in
lead additives to gasoline to
protect the health of citizens.
'The decision cleared the
way for enforcement Qf
regulations requiring a
steady reduction in tbe lead
content of gasoline and was

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'I'll e M1.d d I e p o r t
Emergency Squad answered
·tour calla Sunday and.
Monday. ·
At 7:14 a.m. Sunday, the
1111114!1 tltiiWered a caD to
Laurel St., Pomeroy, for the
Pomeroy unit which was on
another call, for Audrey
Arnold, 103 Laurel, who was
having difficulty breathing.
She wu taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
.
At!O:Ih.m. Sunday, to the
Mlddlepctrt Church of Christ

WI1H TRADE..

At the Mechanic Street Warehouse

j

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'

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made over the objections of
refiners and manufacturers
of lead additives.
The justices rejected
'without comment four
separate appeals from a
ruling by the U.S. Court of
Appeals in Washington in
December, 1973. The EPA
acknowledged there was no
definitive proof leaded
gasoline was responsible for
,

•high levels oflead in the blood
of ctty dwellers, but said the
evidence was at least
sufficient to
warrant
.Protective action.
EPA ctled its congressional
authority to control fuel
emissions and additives when
they threaten the nation's
bealth.
The new regulations.called
for a reduction In lead
additives beginning in 1976
anct.conttnuin~ through 1979.
·for Mike Stewart who was m. •Other regulall.ons, uphel~ In
He was taken to Holzer other lawsuits, required
Medical Center. '
refmers to . pro~tde an
At 8, 29 p.m. Sunday to unleadedgasohne thlll year to
catalytic
North Second Ave. for Hattie protecttethe delicate
hl h ed
to
Balttnger, who was iU. She conver rs w c r uce au
was taken to Veterans pollution.
Several refiners, the
Memorial Hospital where she National Petroleum Refiners,
was admitted.
.
. A s 5 0 c i a t 10 n a n d
At 1:15 a.m. Mopday to manufacturers . of lead
Page St. for John L. Parsons, additive had challenged the ,
IU, possible heart attack, add it i v e red u c ·u 0 n
taken to Veterans Memorial regulations in court.
Hospital.

Four responses made by wut

10FT. WIDTH ... '22.95

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The Middleport Recreation
Commission is announcing
summer night swimming
hours every Monday and
Wednesday from 6-9 p.m.
On these days, the pool wtU
be closed betwe.en S and 6.
Regular admission prices
wUI be charged for evening
swimming ,. Season ticket

L

I I

Howe, 48-year~ld father of
five, said he was "irulPCent of
any wrongdoing" and begged
his "friends and all t11e good
people of Utah to withhold
their judgment."
Howe said be was lured u,
(Continued on page &amp;)

Fifteen .Cents
Vol. 28, No. 40

"To Jimmy Carter, then,
goes the credit not only of
reuniting the Democratic
Party, but of reuniting the
country itself," Church
added. "He is truly a
candidate whose time has

come."
On his own campaign ,
Church said, "Ours was a
clean campaign which met
with more success than we
had any right to anticipate,
and we shall always look
back upon It with no regrets."
ERIC F. OTSTOT

Damascus' . latest truce
proposals to Palestinian and
leftist leaders today.
·
But Palestinian spokesmen
charged that, far from
negotiating to withdraw Its
estimated 15,000 troops from
Lebanon, Syria was using the
talks to "stall for time while
its forces continue their
advance with the aim of
surrounding our positions" in.
the mountains east of Beirut
and the rocky countryside
southeast of the southern port
of Sidon.
Leftist sources said
Jalloud's latest proposal
included Syria's promise to
withdraw its troops east of
Beirut and south o! Sidon into
the eastern Bekka Vallev

once agreement is reached tO
send a pan-Ara!&gt; peacekeeping force into Lebanon.
But that was not expected to
happen before Saturday.
In another development,
Beirut radio said leftist
leader Kamal Jumblatt met
with Arab ambassadors
tod~y to brief them on the
"grave proportions that the
Syrian-Palestinian confrontation has now reached
following Damascus' stalling
tactics."

PHILADELPHIA, June
- While Congren
marked lime on the Issue,
lbe colonial lectslalures
were takliic their stands
oa .tadependence. The
Delaware Asse111bly at
Newciulle aalllorfzed II•
delegation at Philadelphia
to vote lor bldepeadenee.
The CoDDeellcul Auembly
lllllrueled Its delegates to
work for a declaration that
Congreu declare the
"Ualted American
Colonies free and In·
dependent stateo."
Maryland leaders put off
any action until the
provincial auembly
convened.

Udall, Brown
hang in there'

By EI..IZABETII WHARTON
United Press International
Democratic presidential ·
contenders Morris Udall and
Jerry Brown still' sought
holders wtU be admitted free delegates today despite
on Mondays and wtll be J i m m y c a r t e r ' s
charged 25 cents on Wed- overwhelming lead, but the
only other holdout, . Frank
nesdays.
Church,
was said to be ready
Sign-up for swimming
to
yield.
lessons are be.tng accepted at
Connecticut's Gov . Ella
the pool through Sunday,
Risso
abandoned
her
J~JI~e 27. Lessons wlll begin on
longtime
support
of
Henry
Monday, June 28. Cost of
Jackson to endorse the
instruction is $5.
former
Georgia governor
If enough interest Is shown,
and
most
of her state'~
a night session for those 21
delegation
was
expected to
and older will be held during
wind
up
in
Carter's
corner.
the month of July. If InOn
the
Jrei;Ubltcan
stde,
terested, call 992-9900 bePrestdentF..-dlostanetof 13
tween 1 and 6.
delegates, over the weekend
- 18lost in Missouri and live
UNIT CALLED
SYRACUSE
The
.
Syracuse ER squad was ,
called Saturday at 2:50 p.m.
for Wesley Clark, Dorcas. He
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital Oris '
·
Hubbard reported.
'

Copter Water
drop will be

:::::::::::::::::::·:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
1Nedaesday lbrougb
Friday, chance of showers
eacb day. Htgbs In 80s and
upper 70s. Lows mostly In
60s.

Weather
Cloudy, warm and humid
today and tonight. Higha to
94, lows in 70s. Chance of
thundershowers Tuesday .
Highs In upper 80s and low
90s. Chance of rain 20per cent
today and tontghl, and 40 per
cent Tuesday.

Otstot joins mental
health center staff
Ally. Thomas S. Moulton,
chairman of the Gallla Jacluton - Meigs Conununtty
Mental Health Center Board,
today announced the em·
ployment of Eric F. Otstot,
M.S.W., to practice marital
counseling and · Individual
'

Hearing
•
IS reset

,:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·

in Middleport are set

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''But beyond the mending
of a ~plin(ered perty; Jimmy
Carter has brought an end to
the regional prejudices that
have marred our national
politics for more than a
century," Church said.
His victories in states far
removed from his native
Georgia have, at long last,
healed the wound of the war
between the states, thus making the new South "a fullfledged partner tn the
choosing of a president," be
said .

'

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You can save the difference if
you act now. Here's what you get~

enttne

14

Night swimming hours

BARNESVILLE, OHIO - AS THE CONGRESSIONAL
payroll-eex scandal widened during the weekend with the
Implication of two more lawmakers, Rep. Wayne Hays, !).
· Ohio, at the center of the scandal, was rapidly improving from
a drug overdose.
The powerful head of th~ House Administratrion
Committee, accused by a former clerk of J,aytng for sex with ·
her out of public funds, was reported in satisfactory condition
In the Barnesvtlle Hospital and allowed visits by his immediate
(Continued on p.ge 8)

.,...

,

JUNE 141!'

•

Power grab charged ·in Dateline 1776
b
Syrza n Le anon advance
.,

By DOYLE MCMANUS
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)
- Palestinians charged that
Syrian
troops
were
advancing west and south
across Lebanon today to grab
more territory during truce
negotiations.
CINCINNATI - THE U. S. SIXTH CffiCUIT Court of
The capital was quiet again
Appeals today was scheduled to bear arguments by the following ·an overnight exJefferson County, Kentucky, Boarct'of Education and Jefferson change of rocket and artiUery
County Judge Todd Hollenbach seeking to have the county's fire that killed at least 70 and
court~rdered iorced busing program overturned. Hollenbach wounded 105 since midday
wants the appellate court to replace Federal Judge James F. Sunday in the "traditional
Gordon's mandatory busing program which went into effect war" between Lebanon's
last September with a voluntary one.
rival Christian and Moslem
Both Hollenbach and the school board of the merged factions.
LoutsviliNefferson County school district contend Gordon
Libyan Premier · Abdel
went far beyond the mandates of the U. S. Supreme Court in Salam Jalloud, who mediated
ordering Jefferson County to implement Its busing plan last a twoday~ld truce between ,
fall. The plan caused rioting last Sept. 5 at several suburban Palestinian and pro,Syrian
high schools as blacks from the inner ~ity were bused to the !actions in Beirut, . brought
formerly all white schools, forcing Gov. Julian M. Carroll to
caD in Kentucky State Police and the Kentucky National
Guard to restore order.
Many parents who kept their children home rather than
have them bused back into the inner city were brought Into .
court on charges of causing children to be truant, and some
were fined.

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LUANDA, ANGOLD- A Vietnam WBI' veteran seeking
to save himself from a firing squad accused the CIA .today of
financing and providing weapons for the · American
mercenaries who fought iri Angola. "They paid us in new $100
bills," said Gutavo Grillo, an Argentine-born naturalized
American . "It
_logical that it came !rom the CIA. We also
had American mtlitary equipment."
Under lengthy cross examniatton by the tribunal, Grillo
said he also believed there were CIA agents inside northern
Angola "to see how their money was spent and see what was
happening." The husky ex-Marine, who rose to become a
platoon sergeant in Vietnam in 1968, said he joined the
mercenaries solely for the money and adventure and blamed
the American "rat race " for wealth for luring him into the
situation.

majtll" pert ot that job was male workers also are
going to bed wtth her boss. subjected to presaures for
Gravel labeled the charges sex.
"ridiculous" and said he was
She said In an Interview
never on the boat. The that "men are very affected
houseboat was owned by Rep. by this system, as much as
Ken Gray, D-111., who the women are." She added,
supposedly was being "Some men are oppresaed
entertained by Mrs. Gardner. sexually, and other men are
Gravel called on the Justice oppresaed In different way ."
Department, which Is investiWhen asked If men as well
gating the Hays affair, to look as women were forced to
into his fonner secretary's have sex with their
charges.
congressional bosses, Mrs.
Mrs. Gardner said sex was Gardner replied, "Some men,
the main reaslln she was a~le yes." She said it was not
to draw an a,nnual salary of widespread but that "II does
$26,000 - more than double exist."
the average pay for women
Rep. Allan Howe , 0-Utah,
staffers at the Capitol. Miss returned to Washington
Ray, who said her federal Sunday alter being arrested
peycheck was for being a in Salt Lake City Saturday
mistress, was paid $14,000 a night on charges of soltclting
year, also above the average sex !rom two undercover
of around $10,000.
policewomen posing as
Mrs. Gardner says some prostitutes.

~arter

By DONALD LAMBRO
delegates he won in primary
WASHU:IGTON (UPI) - elections and urged them to
Sen. Fra~k Church, D-Idaho, support · Carter's candidacy .
:=~.1 j ·
• • •
·
.
&gt; today withdrew from the
Prior to Church's announc~;
' ·Democratic pre~identtal race ment, Carter had 1,314 of too
·
and endorsed Junmy Carter 1,500 delegates need for the
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
.
as "a candiate whose time nomination.
TORNADOES AND THUNDERSTORMS BATTERED has come ."
Church, who won primaries
metropolitan Chicago Sunday night, killing three persons,
Church told a news confer- in Idaho, Montana, Nebraska
injuring 24 others, leveling an eight-block area in one suburb, ence he believed Carter had
flooding major eXpressways, and touching off a minor crime "won entitlement to the and Oregon, said Carter "has
proved himself a candidate
wave on the city's South Side.
nomination by taking his behind whom all Democrats
The storm was blamed for one murder and 15 assaults candidacy to the people in all
can and should unite, thus
Involving motorists forced to detour through an area of the perts of the country."
ending the divisions that have
city's South Side because of floo&lt;ltng on the Dan Ryan ExpressThe Idaho lawmaker said plagued our p.arty in the past
way, one of the world's busiest highways. A twister leveled an he was releasing the 74
two national election•.
eight-block area in Chicago's suburban Lemont, about 30 miles
south of the Loop, tearing roofs from houses and demolishing
cars.
·

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Regular $59995 Value

· The dates of the first
summer term are June 15,
1976 to July 16, 1976.
Registration for the workshops and other ·courses offered first summer term is
June 14, 1976. For further
Information, contact the
office of admissions and
records at Rio Grande
College- Community College,
phone 614·245-5353.

SCULLY RESCUED
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Vince Scully, Los Angeles
Dodgers announcer , was attacked by an angry b;lseball
fan who was shot by police.
Ofiicers said that as Scully
and his wife were leaving
Dodger Stadium alter a game
that went into extra innings
late Wednesday night.
Low rates wouldn·t mean
Rosendo
Trevino, 22, blocked
much without our first
their
way,
grabbed the door
class service. Drop by, or
handle
of
their car and
give me a call.
·poured beer on the car's roof
while trying to get at them,
CARROL K. SNOWDEN pollee
sa_id.
Gallipolis
14 State 51 .
Six
off-duty policemen,
Phone ~~6 - ~190
· moonlighting as guards,
Home 446·4518
came to Scully's aid. Trevino
Likeacood lUll JAIIM
slashed one of the officers
nel&amp;hbor,
with a rawr box cutter, they
StateFann
said, and two of them shot
tNiU.AHtl
ilrhere• .
'•
him in the chest. Trevino, in
•·7451
stable condition, was charged
STATE FARM FIRE
AND CASUALTY CO MPANY with assault with a deadly
Home Office: Bloomington, Illinois
weapon.

at y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Jane 14, 1978

'.

'

Scout Day Camp at Camp Kiashuta next month met
recently with other staff personnel to plan the camp
program. Over 150 girls have registered. See story on
page 5.

WASHINGTON (tJPI) Denials are pouring from
congressmen accused in a
growing sex scandal that
includes tales of a houseboat
sex party, a Utah lawmaker
arrested for propositioning a
decoy streetwalker and a hint
of forced homosexuality.
Sen . Mike Gravel, DAiaska, Sunday dented
participe ting In a houseboat
sex party with EUzabeth Ray ,
the former congresstoqal
secretary who first took the
covers riff the scandal and
told of escapades with. Rep.
Wayne Hays, Mto.
CoDeen Gardner, a 2&amp;-yearold blonde divorcee, said she
watched Gravel's sexual
adventures at a party on the
Potomac during the early
1970s. Mrs. Gardner, a
former secretary for Rep.
John Young, D-Tex., said a

demonstrated

A demonstration of the
Ohio Division of Forestry
helicopter and the water drop
which is used to extinguish
forest and bnish fires wiD be
given at the Ravenswood
Community Park at 7 p.m.
Tuesday.
The demonstration Is
-sponsored by · the · Area
Volunteer
Fire
and
Emergency Association.
West Virginia officials are
· expected to be on hand to see
the .helicopter in qperatlon.
Host chief will be Earl Wolfe
of the Ravenswood department. The public is Invited to
view the demonstration.

picked up In IIUnois - but
maintained a lead of 106
delegates over Ronald
Reagan as the uncommitted
lists narrowed.
. After set~lng his family
mto a vacation retreat at Sea
Island, Ga., Carter was flying
to New York to join Udall and
Brown in the search for
uncommitted delegates
!her~ . He also scheduled a
speech to a Dallas, Tex.,
fundraiser before rejoining
his family to spend Jhe rest of
the week relaXing at the
island resort off the Georgia
coast.
Church was returning to
Washington from a brief
vacation and reportedly was ·
ready to release his delegates
and endorse Carter. Church
defeated Carter In four
primaries - Nebraska,
Oregon, Montana, and Idaho
- but acquired only 74
delegates in doing so.
Carter pjcked up a handful
of delegates over the
weekend, making his total by UPI'stabulatlon - 1,314 of
the 1,505 needed for the
nomination
at
the
Democratic convention In
New York next month.
Missouri was a disaster for
Ford, who lost 18 of the 19 atlarge delegates chosen there
Saturday. But he picked up a
handful of at-large delegates
In IUinots and the UPI tab
showed him retaining a 106vote
lead with 987
commitment&amp; to Reagan's
891.
It takes 1,130 to nominate.
There are 133 uncOmmitted,
and the remainder have yet
to be selected.
(Continued OD pege I)

psychotherapy.
Mr . Otslnt is a recent
graduate from West VIrginia
University Graduate Studies
In Psychiatric Social Work.
A native or Cleveland, he
earned his Bachelor o.f Arts
Degree In Social Work In 1972
from Rio Grande College.
F'ollowtng graduation he was
employed by the Scioto
County Children Services
Board at Portsmouth·. Before
entering graduate school, Mr.
Otshot was employed by J.
Vac Vocational Services for
the handicapped, mentally
retarded and culturally
deprived or Jackson and
VI to Co tt
n n Otstot
un ea.
' Mr.
and his wife,
Ellen, reside in Galllp~Us.
Mr; Otstot will be 1n the
Gallta Mental Health Center
each Monday and Wed·
nesday tn the Jackson
Mental ' Health· Center on
Thursday and Friday, and tn
Pomeroy on Tuesday.

A public hearing to discUss
Middleport's "comI " wUlbeh eld
pre henaive Pan
at 7:30p .m. Wednesday, June
2:!, at Middleport Village
Council chambers, a week
later than announced Sunday.
The project was made
possible by a grant from the
federal government through
the Ohio Department of
Economic Development and •
Is being prepared by Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development
Planning Commtsaton and
the Middleport Planning
Commission.
•
(1:
All Interested citizens are
invited to attend and offer
any suggestions to the plan
The Mel!ll County Sheriff's
which must be submitted by department investigated two
June .:JO.
minor accidents Sunday.
At 11 a.m.,.ln the vtllage of
Racine Paul K. Van Cooney,
2:!, Rutland, pulled off Vine
NOW YOU KNOW
A chameleon's tongue Is as St. ontp SR 338 Into the path of
a car driven by Clar·a J.
long as Its body ,
~oweD, 57, Rt. 2, Racine.
VanCooney was cited to
court on charges of failure to
yield right of way. There was
heavy damage to the VanCooney car and moderate to •
the PoweD vehicle. At 6:5!1
a.m. in Letart twp. (Tanners
Run), Steven G. Manning, 17,
Highland
Heights, Ohio,
Throwing E.P.A. mileage .
backing
from
a. driveway,
and pollution ligures to the
apparenUy
lost
control,
went
wind, the Middleport Dairy
over
an
embankment,
and
Isle, !pealed at Locust and
rolled
over
three
to
four
Fourth Sta., Is offering a
genuine 1948 Packard as times. He was not Injured.
Grand Prize In a Bicentennial
Sweepstakes sponsored by
Commissary Corporation, the
LAWSUIT FILED
national franchise company
A suit tor money has been
for Dairy lllle soft-eerve tee flied by the Tri-County Bank,
cream outleta.
Coolville, agalnat W1lllam E.
Kauff, Chesler, in the amount
The slivery grey beauty Is of $535.5&amp; In Melga County
In excellently restored Common Pleas Court. Nancy
condition and runs weD.
E. Aetker, Racine, fUed for
Local Dairy Isle operator, divorce against Charlea R.
Sonny McClure, invites all Aetker, Pomeroy; and Mary
area residents to atop In and E. Roush, Kanauga, and
register to wtn the Packard . Allen Roush, Mlnersvtlle,
No purchase Is necessary. have illed for dlsaoluilon of
The contest closes July 15.
marriage.

Autos collide
at junction
of Vme, 3.38

'48 Packard
is prize offered
at Dairy Isle ·

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.2- 'I'll!~ Sentinel, MlddleJI(Irt.-!~oy, O,,Monday, June 14, 1976

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Picnic held
.
in city park

RAY CROMI.EY

Goof offs many in_public .sector
.
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - Shortly alter lhe expose on
Representative Wayne L. Hays (l){)hio) and Elizabeth Ray, a
tongue-lrK:heek story "\)read throUf!h the Clpital that 434
congressional secretaries had now quietly enrolled in typing
classes,
This sorry joke: of course, does a disservice to hundreds of
hard-working straight women working in tile Senate and
House.
But there are enough congres.unen who call on their
secretaries for extracurricular intimate services that it is now
speculated that Hays may have a fighting chance to hang on to
or regain one or more of his assortment of powerful posts after
the hallabaloo dies down a bit. Hays could do this by quietly
threatening to expose his rolleagues with dates and Incidents
In their own lives, proposing tllus to drag them all down with
him when he falls.
,
In this Instance the pressure on Coogress to act may be too
great, If the publicity continues In full force, even tllough it is
no secret that numbers of congressmen brag privately - and
sometimes not so privately - of their personal prowess with
members of their staffs.
And it is well known, too, that on Capitol Hill there are
considerable numbers of male and female employes who are
unable to type, file or do research, employes who, in fact, do
little or nothing . Most of tllese skimpy workers hold jobs
because they are relatives or friends af Influential constituents .
or of the Congressman or his wife.
For a considerable period of Urne cine legislator is known
to have kept a former state trooper on the payroll who kindly
didn't arrest him on a quite serious traffic charge.

The amount of work turned out on some committees is so
meager that on numerous occasions, Pentagon officials, for
example, have required secretaries, analysts and researchers
to do the work of congressional conunittees because of the
unwillingness or Inability of members of congressional staff~
to carry out the necessary .work .
. In all fairness it must be stated that anyone wb41 regularly
visits congressional rommittee offices knows there are Senate
and House Committees whose staffs dlllgently work for long
hours, frequently .without much recognition.
But there are also commit~s and considerable numbers
of committee staff merilhers who do litUe all day but read
newspape&lt;s, polish fingernails, phone friends, Unger over
lunch and interoflleal snacks, gaze out tile window and office
hop.
Time and again tllis reporter has been appalled at the
·ignorance of many congressional staff members on matters
concerning tile agencies and specific subjects they are, by
assignment, supposed to monitor.
My shock at the small amount of work done by some
congressional committees needs to be put into perspective. I
am not, after all tllese years, easily amazed by "donothingness" in Washington. My first experience was during
World War U in the Army, having been assigned to the
Pentagon for a number of months before being sent overseas.
In tile of(ice in which I worked during that period, I estimated
the outputcould be Increased by 20 per cent by cutting tile staff
in half. This eliminated tllose who not only did no work but got
In tile way ofthose who did . The chief clerk in this particularly
busy office propped a newspaper in front of her face each day
after lunch and slept away much of the afternoon.

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unpopularity. Yours is tile
more interesting search and the more outrageous. I
1
preswne you believe, as did
Tagore, tllal it is better to
make people angry than
ashamed, and I agree, I
guess; well, actually I'm not
sure. What do I get for my
$17.50? Sinus trouble and high
blood pressure.
I'm told The Nation has
always done this to sub·
scribers. Twain, was it not,
said in the last century that
your literary reviews were
'' the . weekly Day Of
Judgment." And one can not
imagine any president since
Grant - whom, my God, The
Nation supported - allowing
the postman to bring copies
direct to the front door. You
refuse even the small
seductions - publishing on
newsprint, no photographs,
and limiting advertisements
for such enticements as a
book of American labor songs
of the Sam Gompers era.
Still you are addict! ve for a
few of us. What iconoclast
can ignore a periodical that
pinched pennies with the likes
, of . Lowell, Longfellow and
Wh_ittier? And though your
• luminaries of the present are
of dimmer light (I refer to
Michael Harrington ) it
remains true that if educated
comment is going out of style
you choose to disregard that
trend. Praise be. This in
mind, I forgive you even if the
ink on your pages is so heavy
it dries on my shirtcuffs.
Yet I write not to praise or
protest, but merely to bring a
matter of importance to your
desk. If I have been paying
attention correctly you have
now editorialized against
everything in the universe as
we know II. From God to his
friend Jimmy Carter there is
«)1 976byNEA. mc ~~
nothing against which you
"Send in some experts who have rosy views
have not either raged or
about the eooliOmy end stuff like that!"
worried.
..UU • - • '.
I believe you passed this
extraordinary milestone witll

your handling of Clarence
Kelley's public apology for
past FBI abuses. Here you
were faced with a delicate
moment, that of axing a man
who was begging forgiveness.
But when you said his was not
" the most elegant of
apologies" you became the
first periodical to close its
press to forgiveness and
tllereby write off all the
acli viles of man.
I salute you, I suppose.
Totality is something of an
accomplishment in an expanding society, even when
it's insolent. And, too, I un·
derstand something of your .
predelictions. I, too, ride the
misery circuit of print
commentary. I believe it is
not the duty of this wretched
indus try to promot.e but
expose, particularly as
regards governments and
politics. Besides, as the·
British publisher George
Allardice Riddle told us, all
journalists are alarmists, this
is their way of making
themselves interesting. This
is not tllen a brief for
Clarence Kelley, or anything
else you've blown over.
But I confess to some pause
regarding
your
accomplishment. I have
believed for some time that
many leaders are wrong,

Berry's World
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sufferable - but aU of them? .
Which brings me at last to my
second motive for writing. It
occurs .to me after two
decades of reading The
Nation that although I know
exactly what you are against
I haven't yet the faintest
notion what you are for.
- Cheers (the worst is yet
to come) T. T.

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That day 1 had seven in bowel habits for
movementa and the last two no good reason can mean
were filled with blood. This cancer of the colon. Do you
continued for about three realize that cancer of the
days and then my stomach colon and rectwn is the
was real nervous so I thought second most common cause
I had ulcen. I've had them . of death from cancer m bOUI
bef.ore. So I went back to my men and women?
nerv' pills and took a small
The second point Is that you
amount of Mylanta which should never resort to harsh
seemed to help some and lt laxatives. It ·Is entirely
seemed to Oush out what possible that ' the strong
looked like dried blood. I do chemicals In the laxative
feel better, but still have Irritated your colon so badly
some pain In my right side. I that It caused the bleeding.
would like to slick 14 your Those forceful contractions
bulk diet. Whet do you think are damaging. Whetller or
happened? Where could the ·. not that is so, anyone who has
blood have come from? It's bleeding In his bowel
not from the hemorrhoids. movements that is not ex·
DEAR READER - The plalned must tee a doctor at
ilnt point I want to make Ia once. That too can be a sign of
that anyone with a significant cancer of the colon.
change In bowel habit for no
I am glad the bulk diet
known reason should aee a helped. It Is too bad you dldlt'l
dociDr. Your sudden con- have such a program years
stipation alter having had ago. Some inve~Ugators think
normal funcUons for a month that bulk diets that straighten
Is definitely a change. out spasUc colon problems
Why see a
docll!r? may help prevent cancer of
Because sudden changes - the ,colon. I don't tlllnk your

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Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wood and Carrie Anne· of
Rickenbacker Air Force Base
spent the week here with his
parents , Mr. and Mrs .
Norman Wood and Ronnie.
They also visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Webber Wood, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Lynch,
Albany, and on Saturday
attended the wedding of his
cousin, Geneva King to Tom
McElroy: The. Nor111an Wood
family and Mrs. Steve
Brickles, Springfield,''
recently spent · S\lllle time
with the Kenneth Wood
family at Rickenbacker and
attended the open house there
and viewed the performance
of the U.S.A.F. Thunderbirds.

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Marooned

.WASffiNGTON (UP!) - A
report that some alcoholics
tan ·safely resume social
drinking is misleading and
harinful, says Rep. Wilbur
Mills, whose political career
was ruined by the hottle.
The report, by the Rand
Corp ., was financed by

·Man ch~rged with
DWI after wreck

,.,

D·;nner pa·&gt;¥t~1i
stara.ed
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bulk diet had a' thing to do
with your sudden attack of
constipation and tile complications you had after
taking a harsh laxative.
The bowel program for a
person with a spas!Jc colon '
Includes more than just using
a bulk diet. I am sendlrig you
a copy of The Health Letter
number ·1, Irritable or
Spastic Colon and ConstlpatiOil. Others who . want
this lnlormaUon can forward
50 centa and a long, sliunped,
self-addressed envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me In care of tl!is newspaper, P. 0. Box 1441, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.
'
If you have not aeen your
doctnr yet see him without
delay, For the rest of my
readers please remember
that if you have a change of
bowel habit It can be align of
cancer. If you bleed don't try
to diagnose It yourself, see
your doctot without delay.

I

Members of the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, were In Lancaster
recently for 8 dinner party
staged by Fairfield County
Salon 21.
The evening featured joint
Installation of new officers of
both the Fairfield Salon 451
and the Perry County Salon
750. Installing officer was
Mrs. Marcy Huston, departe·
mental of Ohio chapeau,
assisted by Mrs. Mavis
Medderer, departemental Ia
secretalre; Mrs. Mary
Martin, of Meigs County,
national finance conunlttee;
Mrs. Audrey Glaub, deml
chapeau premiere, and Arree
Marshall, past national demi
chapeau, Central Division.

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Chapeaus recognized were
Mrs. 'Lula Hampton, Meigs
County; Mrs . Martha
Waddell and Mrs. Corene
Mohler. Mrs. Irene Jenkins
was Installed as chapeau of
the Perry County Salon, and
Mrs. , Esther Garrett,
chapeau of the Fairfield
County Salon.
Gifts were presented to the
distinguished guests. Going
from •MelgsCountywere Mrs .
Martln, Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs. Wa Hampton; Mrs.
Julia Hysell, Mrs. Eileen
Searles, Mrs. Eunle Brinker,
Mrs. , Rhoda Hackett, Mrs.
Iva Powell, Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith, Mrs. Catherine Welsh
and )irs. Veda Davis.

"

Susan Loper feted
MASON, W. Va. - Miss
The """1 Sentinel· 1 Susan
Loper, bride-elect of
Jerry Lee Coleman, Rutland,
o~~~n~l~oTtE
washonoredMondayevening
MEIGS·MASON Aoll EA
with•a shower at the home of
e_':!ESTER L. T-ANNEH!tL Mrs. Ella Ford hosted by the
Exec Ed
• ,.
·
ROBERT HOEFLICH ; women of the Faith Baptist
City Editor
• Church. .
s.~~~~!hedbr~te
Games were played with
Volley ~ubllshlng com . Bobbi Pauley assis!Jng. Two
Pony.
Court · st9• Pri_i
PomeroyIll
, Ohio
zes were won by Sue
4576
Business Office Phone ,992: Daugbet.;ty and the door prize
m~: Edllorlol ~hone 992. went to Mrs. Joyce Pauley.
Cake Ice cream and punch
. second closs postoge
Pifer at , Pomeroy, Ohio
•'
NotiOnal odvertlslng were served to Sue
G~~;;~,shenc!:~'-:ny
' I. Daugherty, Dorothy, Queen,
Bottlnelll &amp; Gaftuher Dlv ' • Bunny Russell, SU1811 Loper,
lFY T~:,OV•• ·· Now York: Kalhy Stobart, Betty Pauley,
bscrlptlon rotes : Joann Harmon, Lorraine
Des11uvered
avell•bte tiy75corrler
centswhore Barne tte, Lorra 1ne Mc·
w!e~ . By Mqtor . Route'
Cauley, Doe Coleman, Betty
w.. ero corrlerOne
aet~lce not , y
M
Bobbl .p au1ey,
available,
month, '
a~ e1er ,
~ : 2~ 0S,Y~:~~~a~hl~2~o'l,d Cch e_ryl Van MMete~.VJane
She months, 111.50; Thl'e~,
o1oc:;man,
rs .
anna
m,2•6n00ths, S7 .oo. Elsewhere Samples Mrs. Joyce Pauley·
·
Vllr 1 llx months
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st3.so, three m'""ths, 17 .so. and Amy, Vtrglnla Wears,
Byer
Sh'rley
Subscription prf~t Includes Donna
Sunday Tlmes .sentlntl
c 'r,'r.''
I
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On:man, Debbie Branham
·....._· and. Ella Ford
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Bv Polly Cramer

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always keep it with my other
cleaning supplies. Wipe once
over with a soft dampened
cloth and then dry with paper
towelB, crwnpled newspaper
91' a dry clotll. The soda cuts
all grease, cooking stains,
nicotine stains, etc. and the
glass really sparkles. This is
an old bartender's trick. Mrs. E.F.P.
DEAR POLLY - My old
rotary lawn mower could not
be used any more, si I
removed the motor, throttles
and gas tank. I placed a
board over the platform,
drilled holes In the board and
bolted it on where the motor
had been. This made a handy
cart.for hauling things such
as baskets of clothes around
the yard. - MARY C.
DEAR POLLY - I never
throw away anything that can
possibly be usee[ ReeenUy, I
used some leftover pieces of
carpet to make coasters by
using ad!Jesive backed paller
on the underside~. These can
be cut w any size, Leftover
carpet.lsidealforuslngunder
legs of heavy 'furniture, Be
sure to cut two pieces for
each leg and put the rubber
sides togetller with the right
sides to the floor and furniture .
DEAR POLLY - To save
When I cook chicken beef
fuel I plan my menu so an etc.Tuse lhesldn, scraps, fat:·
entire meal can be cooked In etc, for dog and cat food. I fW
tile oven. I even find ·thai baby food jars, freeze and
fl:ozen vegetables can be put tills saves buyfug expensive
in a ca115erole.with a lid. Add dog food to mix with dry food.
a small amount of•water and ,My pets love II. - THERA.
cook alonB with the lilaln
Polly will sead yoa oae ef
dish. -MRS. J. J.
ber "peacby" lbaak·you
DEAR POLLY - The carda, ldelll for framlq or
cheapest and easiest .wya I placillc ill yoar flllllly scnphave diiCovered to 'Clean 00.11, Ulite uses your lavortle
mirrors, windows, etc. Ia to Polater, Peeve or l'nlblem Ia
use regular club soda. I find It ' ber col1111111. Wrlle Pelly's
the most•reaiOIIBble cleaning (lllultn Ill eare of w. •agent ,on tile IIUII'ket and "paper.

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SCOREBOARD. ..!~~~~;:· . . lf'

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No. 2 teams in 19-8 score

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hadn't beaten the team from
up nCl'tll since 1973, but put it
on them by scores of 7-2and 114.
Steve Baird came on In
reli' f of.wlnner Calvin Minnis
In the fifth frame of the first
1game and shut the d9Qr on the
visltora in a tight altilation.
They combined to fan three
and walk eight,
·
Meigs scored ali iIa runs In
the first two lnnin11s after
spotting Lancaster 1.() lead
to start the ·game. In the
bottom of the first the local
boys scored three and didn't
need any more .
·Hamilton reached on an
error, and Mike Nesseiroad
and Mlck Davenport followed
with singles. After a balk,
Greg James singled, stole
second, and tllen scampered
home on John Sayre 's single,
They picked up four in·
surance runs In the second,
but from then on, Lancaster
held Meigs to just one hit, •
single by Minnis. They picked
up those four tallies on a
single by Minnis, a fielder 's
choice, a single by
Neaselroad, an error, and a
triple by James who cime on
home on a mental mistake by
Lancaster on tile throw ,
Lancaster pitching gave up
no walks, but struck out only
three. They yielded a triple
and a single to · James, two
singles each to Neuelroad
and Mlnnla, and singles each
to Davenport, Sayre and
Gary Swain .

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"* plebd.Muatanp
two Irina.

over !he l'omaroJ Anaeltt l-1.
Rich Gilmonl fiiiiiiCIIf of the
15 Antal outa and 1a~ •
only two hila, • double to
Ryiln Ollvar 8lld a linlle to
loainl pltchar Doldge, who
1truck out ten 111d walked
nine.
Sha-" Baller lid the hitting
deparlinent with 1 three-for.
three nl&amp;bt, lncludinl a llome .
run . SCot Gheen and John
Bacon .-ch had 1 llolle.
Muatanp
tlOII~ 0 0
Angela
000 01- 1 2 2
ON FRIDAY lhl Muatanp
rolltd.to an eaay 11-4 win over
the Pomeroy Rlda. Shawn
Baker had the mound duty
this time 8lld 1lruck out
twelve 111d walked three.
Baker crackld a lfUd llam
In the llrat lnnlnc to lead the
hitting; he alto had two
sinales. Other hltten trere
. Bob Southern who went 3 for
3, Rich Gllmcn, 8lld Gell'Cil
JuaUce.
.
Jaclde Welker and Bret
Korn pltehed for the Redl and
struck out elcht while
walld1111 ~even ..Welker, Joe
P'leldl, Rodney Roush and
Sha'III\.Gclegleln ~ch had one
hit, ~·

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Hidden patches
.prot,ect clothes

· INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLy - So as to
get the most wear out of
garments we buy a good
quality. Then I Immediately
turn the sleeves of shirts, etc.
(wool, synthetics ' but, of
course, not sheers ) Inside out
and baste in 11!1 oval of china
silk, pre-washed inustln or
other thin material over the
elbows and do the same with
pants over the knees. The
stitches do not show on tile
outside so no one elae knows
about tl!ese pieces that a~
sorb some of the wear on
elbows ·and kneeS. I do not
wash' ·~uch items· In the .
washer, but soak them in 't/le
cold water cleanser for wool
rinse and hang In the showe;
to dry. By actual check my .
husband's clotlles wear~ to
100 per cent longer than I
similar· clotlles without this
protection and washed 1n tile
machine . on . the delicate
cyCle.' ·, ~ ., .
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We saVed an old ,leather
jacket and when elbows on
jack~la wear, .we put on an
outSide patch of this !eater,
l}@.ving • first tested It for
washability. I usually put the
suede side Of the leather on
the outside. - LAURA.

runners , 111d he followed
them home on two successive
errors on his sinBle:
Athens tried to Come back
with a rally in the 5tll when
they plated a run on two
'errors, a wild pitch, and a
sincle. But that's as far as
they got,
Brent Johnson . picked up
the win, but had to have relief
help from Baird In the fifth .
Together they struck out sil
and walked five while lOlling
pitcher Arnie Chonko fanned
five 111d walked three.
Johnson and Jlll!les led the
hitting wltll two apiece while
Brian Hamilton, Davenport,
and Metzner each had one,
Athens
010010Q...;.2 6 6
Meigs
013 000 J-4 7 3
Chonko and B.rooker .
Johnson (WP), Baird (5 ) and
HamUton, Soulsby (5) . ·
SUNDAY GAMES
Meigs continued on its
winning ways Sunday af.
ternoon by sweeping a
doubleheader from Lancaster at Syracuse. Meigs

The

lut

Mason blanks
Racine 7-0
in pony action

•I H

Polly's Pointers

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· alcohol became public in 197f ·
with a series of Incidents
involving stripper Fannie
Foxe.
"A responsibility on the
Congress is indicated to be
certain that the small
amounts of money made
available through tile federal
govenunent for alcohol abuse
and alcoholism are properly
used and awarded for
scientific st~dies that will be
helpful and not harmflil to
alcoholics," Mills said.
He suggested the new head
of Rand, Dr. Ernest Noble,
should ''see there is not a
repeat of this type of
dalllilge."
Mills, who said he cut
drinking entirely once he
understood his illness, said It
is harder wcure a return to
drinking tllan the initial· al·
. coholisin.
Mills lost his position of
power as chairman of the
House Ways and Means Com·
mittee after tile incidents. He
has anno~nced that he will
not run for re-election.

bill. Brady Huffman 8lld
Greg Smith teamed up to fan
three and walk nine.
Athena
12020011-5 7 0
Melga
000 000~ 3 0
Dalley and Baldwin.
Huffman (lJ'), Smith (2) and
Hamilton.
BEHIND SOME fine team
play and the third-Inning
Slugging of Greg Jamea, the
Melp team turned the tables
In the second game, winning
it t-2.
After spotting Athena a 1-4
lead In the top of tile second
on a double and two singles,
the local club lied it up when
after . one was out, James
singled .
John
Sayre
sacrificed him to second
arid Bill Metzner singled
to send James home wltll the
. tieing run.
.
Meigs won tile game in th.e
third. Mick Davenport got on
via a walk, and Mike
Nesselroad reached on an
error. After Calvin Minnis
fanned, . James cracked a
single to drive In the two

Cards .split ·series

Alcoholics don't drink again ever

federal funds through the
National Ins.titute on Alrohol
Abuse and Alcoholism. Mills
Sunday said It may represent
an imp~ope'r spending of
taxpayers' money.
According to the study,
some alcoholics who get
away from abusive drinking
can resume social drinking
and are n~ more likely to
become abusive drinkers
than alcoholics who stay
away from drinkirlg entirely.
The "so-called scientific
research" that went Into the
report probably ignored the
difference between an
Robert D. Wallis, 19, .accidents occw-red at 4 p.m. alcoholic and a heavy
Gallipolis, was charged wfth on County Road 29, one mile· drinker, said Mills, an
DWI following an accident south'of Rt. 141 whe•e a child Arkansas Democrat. A heavy
early Saturday morning on in a parked vehicle owned by drinker may be able to quit
Brick Rd. In Addison Twp. Myron Nibert, Gallipolis, and drink socially again,
The Gallia-Melgs Post opened a door Into the path of Mills said.
State Highway Patrol sa\d a car driven by Sheri N.
" But the 'only way
Wallis IOf!t.control of hill ,cl!" . ~~~~P, ~; Point Pleasant. alcoholism can be . cured is
which struck a briclge ralting
Anolller accident occurred through total abstinence,"
causing moderate .damage. on Rt. 7, one and four tenths Mills said. "This has been
A cow was killed In another miles north of Gallipolis proven time and time again
early morning accident where an auto driven by by people who are alcoholics
Saturday on Pleasant Valley · Debra K. Canter, 19, and attempt to drink again."
Rd. tllree tenths of a nlije Syracuse, lost control and
Mills' own trouble with
nortll of Rt. 325 where th~ skidded toward a ·vehicle
animal owned by Arthur driven by Thomas A.
Cennamo ran Into tile Path of Schoonover, 40, Rutland. The
a ca'r operated by Danny ~;t. Schoon.over car slid into a
Maynard, 20, Rt, 2, Bidwell. guardrail to avoid a collision .
The first of two Sunday There ; was minor damage.

See doctor for this problem By Llomace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - For
the last 20 years the doctors
said I had a spastic colon and
kept me on a very bland diet.
This affected my bowel
movementa and I had to take
enelll88 and put up with a lot
of pain, I never had ~ natural
bowel movement until I read
your attlcle about eating tile
bulk foods and cerealB and
breads made of bran or,whole
wheat.
You stated If one could
1tand the gaa for three weeks
she could overcome the
problem. Well at this point I
. wu willing to try anything
· and believe me it worked
beaulllully and all my pains
disappeared. I felt like a new
woman. I even stopped taking
my nerve pills. ..
This continued ·for a whole
month and all of a sudden for
two days I dldn.'t bave a
bowel movement. Dtimb me,
I took a lautive I got from
the hellth food st«e. I tool!
two llllleta with no resulla
8lld then nut day two more.

-

WEEK SPENT

•

••
•
•j'

.. ''

~­

r

DR.• LAMB

'

~­

'' A centUry's worth of elegant lament
modesty nor !.act: "I am a
Protestant, a Republican and
a free enterpriser, which
means I am biased in favor of
God, Eisenhower and tile
stockholders of Time, Incorporated." If anyone objected, he went on, "then why
the hell are they still buying
the magazine ?"
I am not quite sure why
your issue has reminded me
of Luce, except thai I appreciate dedication whatever
the cause. For Luce it was the
accumulation of influence.
For you it rtlay be, as The
·New Republic said on your
centennial , the quest for

.' ',' '

.,.. i:,w

TOM TIEDE

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - The
Nation, established in 1865, is
one of the oldest magazines in
America, and no doubt the'
world. Its circulation is approximately 30,000. Its editor
Is Blair Clark.
Dear Editor,
As I put down another of
your Issues I am reminded of
Henry Luce, late chief of one
of the most powerful
publishing empires in our
history. Uke you, he played
many of his cards face up. On
questions of philosophy, he
once said with neither

'

The Meigs American
Legion team raised Its
overall record to 8-3 over the
weekend by laklnl three out
of four iame~ . '11ley dropped
the first game Saturday and
·then went on to score three
s~igbt triumpbs In the back·
to-back doubleheaders Saturday 111d Sunday.
In the first BalDI of the
doubleheader Saturday at
SyraCUie, the local team wu
the vlcUm of a tfiree.hllter by
Athens' Scott Dalley, ~. In
chalking up the shutout,
Dalley fanned 10 and walked
only three as he went the
distance, giving up only three
hila, all singles, to Meigs'
Brian Hamilton, Bill Melz·
ner, and Steve Baird.
. Dalley got all the runs he
needed In the first Inning
when Chadwell walked,
advanced on a ground out,
and scored on Arnie Chonko's single. Meigs had opportunillea to score, but just
couldn 'I get the Urnely hit.
Both teams played errorless

up two wins
in Peewee play

COA C H G EO RG E
Neuelroad waa well11lealled
by the performance of the
younger boys who atarted the
second game. '11ley held the
"Look," he safd to left-bander George Stone, a guy
everybody Instinctively liked because he was unselfl,lh and
vlslton In check while they
were In the game and scored
had worked like a dog to 11t111110unl a crippling Injury they all
said nobody ever came back hun, "this Is the toughest thing I ·
enOUIJh runs to enable pltchar
Brady Huffman wpick up the
have to tell anybody, but we can't uae you. H you like, we'll
8SIIgn you to a Triple A club. Maybe there's a job for you
wtn, this Ume with relief help
there."
from Baird and James. ·
George Stooe had a question .
Lancaater held a 1-G lead
for the flnt two Innings
"Tell me the truth," he said to the manager of the Texas
Rangers. "UI go down to the Triple A now, ta there a chance I
before Meigs Ued It In the
may be back here In a mmth or so?"
second when Mark Mitch
"No way In the world," anBWered Frank Lucchesi, looking
sq~ homt Baird who
George Slone straight in the eye. "We bave three other
had sinaled and adv111ced to
pitchers who just missed making tllecluband they'reall ahead
third. They went 8head with a
of you."
lingle run In the third when
More than two months have gone by since Lucchesi told
Huffman walked, was
stone there was no more room for him with the Rangers and
sacrificed to second by Sayre,
the episode stW Is fresh In his mind because It cut up the little
went to third on a single by
Texas manager Inside to ·say what he did.
SWain, and scoced on a
"Whet should I have done, lied to' George Stone? I wouldn't
sacriftce Oy by Jame.s.
do that. That's the toughest part of this job," says the fll..yearThey broke tile Baine open
old Luechesl, who has been managing professional baseball
IJ1 the fourth when they platad
club&amp; tile past 25 years or what amounta to IIIDl'e than half his
four runs on absolutely no
IUetlme.
hits. They had the wcaster
"I've never hadalotofrule~, but there's one I firmly believe
team shook up by bunting,
In when It ccmes to dealing with a ballplayer: Tell him the
steallnl, walklna, squeeslng
truth. Don't con them. Ballplayers know when you're cooninB
rtrlfM!I'I! borne, and forcing
them. To me, the most Important part of managing ls handling
the vfal!ora wcommit errors.
your men. The rest, the baseball part, is e~sy." ·
They picked up two more
Most managers like to convey the occasiooal impression
1'11111 !n1the fttth on a walk, a
they are Infinitely ahead of mere mortals in the cerebral
ttlple 6y Hamilton, and a lleds
lOSOO- 4 4 7
department and come specially anointed to the job. Frank
single by Brent Johnson.
1231113 I 1
Muatanc•
llicchesl doesn't belong to that school. He habltuaUy plays
Hamilton led the hitting
himself down and plays up his ballplayers, which ls the way 11
attack with three singles,
crnCINNATI (UPI) - Bill and final run of a ninth Inning straight, set by the late Mel
should be,
.
while M•tzner, Swalit, Baird,
Ott. Morgan, however, wound
His players don't think he's God, but they respect him Plununer claimed St. Louis uprising.
and
Johnson each gol one,
because be never cons th~ and is always honest with them. first baseman Ted Simmons . Anderson'~ charitable up drawing a walk.
TOURNEY NOTED
Meigs
plays Parkersburg
attitude came alter Quick
Tony Perez then stepped to
Mare than that, they like him, and where once some of these "didn't even tag me."
"The
Second Annual
North
wnlght
at
the
new
"If Simmons did tag Plum· had thumbed the manager the plate as a pinch hitter for
very same playen were exceptionally critical of the men who
Security Bank SJo.Pitch Sofl.
Meigs
High
School
field
.
Driessen
and
managed them, now they have nothing but good things to say mer," Reds first base coach from the game In tile third llilnny
we.
100 010 Z--4 6 2 ball Tournament wW be held
about Frank Lucchesi, who isn't at all flashy b~t ls doing an Russ Nixon sald, "then he hit inning for "no justifiable slanuned a three-run homer.
Meigs
011420x-8
5 2 Cl1 Satll'day June 18 and
excellent job keeping the Rangers battling for first place In the him high ... and after Plum- reason," Anderson claimed. That was when Cardinals
Sunday June 20 at the Wut
Stover
(LP),
Houk,
Turbett
mer's foot was already on the
The Reds trailed tile Cards relief pitcher Mike Wallace, a
American League West.
·
State
Street Scftball Ftelda In
and
Bate~
.
Huffman
(WP),
12-4 when Davey Coocepcion, left bander, made his exit.
His two biggest thrills so far both are associated with the bag."
At.htns.
The entry fee for this .
ilalrd
(5),
James
(7),
Baird
"I saw a replay on video pinch hitting for Rawly EastPhiladelphia Phlllies.
Bill Greif, the Cards' third
ASA
sanctioned,
double
(7)
and
Soulaby.
The first one came when they named him their manager in tape and It was such a close wick, singled to center to pitcher of the game, struck
elimination
tournament
Is
1970 after he managed 19 years In the minors anq the fans In play, I can't argue about it," open the bottom of the nintll out Bob Bailey, hut George
fOG.
To
enter
111d-or
for
Philadelphia gave him a standing ovation on Opening Day that was the SUI')II'Iaing cmunent inning of the last game. Pete Foster followed with a double
fl!l'ther lnfonnatJon, call Jim
of manager Sparky Anderson Rose followed with a single to to right center. It was then
year. Tears came to Lucchesi's eyes.
Eberle, The Security Bank,
Reedsville has
His serond biggest kick ls the way Larry Bows has made It after the Reds split a left, sending Concepcion to that Plummer dropped a pop
Athe111,
Ohio 46701 (phone 1·
with the Phlllies. Lucchesi never gave up on Bowa when doQbleheader . with the. St. third. And after Coocepcion Oy single Into center field,
614-593-7781
frOift. 9 a.m. to t
Louis Cardinals Sunday, scored on Ken Griffey's. scoring Foster with tile fifth . Pony League action Friday 26·14'·victory " ,,, p.m.)
. .
everybody elae said he ~ould.
,
saw Mason continue ··ns
dropping
the
second
12-11
after
sacrifice
fly,
Rose
stole
run
of
the
Inning.
"I wa.s hurt, but I was never bitter against the Phlllies,"
winning ways· by downing
SE!!Ond.
List week Rodney 'Spurlock
Plwruner, however, made host Racine M behind the
Lucchesi says regarding his being fired by P!liladelphia four taking the opener ~.
Tile
controversial
play
"I
wanted
to
get
Into
the' mistake of rounding first two-hit pitching of Mike led his visiting Reedsville
years ago. "Bob Carpenter? I love the man; He gave me my
chance.Irememberwhen he told me he was making a change. came when rookie wnplre scoring position ... give Joe too far. While attempting to Johnson. Johnson fanned 14 team to a 26-14 come-from.
He said, 'It's easier to fire the general than the hole army."' Jim ·Quick ruled out (Morgan)onemorechance to return to tile base, Plummer, . batters and dldn 't give up a behind victory over Tuppen , SAIUSOAT FATALRY
Plummer, to end tile last tie that record," Rose according to Quick, was
Now Frank Lucchesi cim laugh about it,
Plains I. Spurlock bluled· a · TOLEDO (UPI) _ Mary
game
as the Reds catcher explained.
tagged out by Sinunons, after single free "paSS.
"People ask me how I feel about the way the Phillie~ are
~=e~
and pitched a good last Green, 22, 0re1on, was killed
Mason scored all the runs
Morgan had driven home the Cards first baseman
go~ now," he says. "I say 'beautiful.' I'd like to see them go trted to scramble bact to first
.
ninBs to pick liP the Saturday when northeast
they
needed
when
they
plated
home one or more runs in 10 grabbed Don Kessinger's
all the way. Wouldn't it be something If It was them and us In base after sin~
4
Ills
teammate. ~- winds on Lab Erie blew the
four .In the first on 3 walks
George Fostet \ritli the 'filth · consecutive games . The relay throw.
the World Series?"
three
triple~ and aven mast of her aluminum
and
two
singles,
c.
Davia
was
·
Nation~ League record is 11
All a player, Lucchesi never got to the majors. He started as
doublea.
Ullboat Into a · high-voltage
the
leading
hitter
with
a
long
a outfielder In the Yankees' chain and after a few years, one af
'
J.
Llrkiu, R Putnam, and . Une at a marina eut of here.
home
run
and
a
single
,
their scouts, the late Joe Devine, advised him to forget abo¥t ~::;:;:;:;::::::~~:::::::~:::::::::::::::~:f!'%:~:::~;:;:;:~;:;:;:::::::::~::::::;:~;:;:::;:;:;:;::::~~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!~·i·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!-!·!·!·!·!·!·!·~=·!·!{•!•!t!f:
Catcher K. Hankinson L. Harrison shared the She suffered electrical shock
playing and concentrate on managing,
.
chipped In wllh a double; mound duties for Tuppers and burna over most of her
"The closest you'll ever get to Yankee Stadiwn is with 8 1
Johnson and the desig!lated Plains, The slugfest aaw the body .
postcard," Devine said.
teams get a total of 61
Erhest A. Fisher, ss, of
hitter Fowler liad alngles.
Last Friday night when he came In with the Rangers for a ~·:
Results
:;:; Losing pitcher Dan Dud· RIa.
North~ood, 11 boat pauenger,
three-game series was the first time Frank Lucchesi has ever
067
706-llll
36
4
was
reiaaled after treatment
ding
was
shelled
In
that
first
Ntllontl Ltolut S1ondlnus
been In Yankee Stadium with a uniform on.
Oatet ; Splllner, Folkers ~ (6h frame and was relieved by T
072 500-14 26 4 for burns.
ly United Pr111 International
Boston 10 Minnesota 2
Metrger (7) and B, D11vis,
"I finally made It," he laughed. "I never really gave up."
l!ast
.
Kansas City 8 Baltimore •
Kendell 111. WP-F,otkers 12-11. Jim O'Brien who· finished up
w. L. Pet. GB Mllwoukee 5 Oakland 4
LP-Chrlsltnson (7-31.
Monaty'l RtSUIII
Phllodolphla 38 17 .691 and fanned eight, walked
32 25 .561 7
(All Times EDTI
Pittsburgh
three and gave up only three
Montreal
2ot
ooo
0013
9
I
30
32
.U4
11
v,
Boston
(Wise
4-31
at
Mln
New York
032 001 OGx- 6 9 0 hila. John West and Jack
26 3r :456 .13 nmta IDecker 2-5), 9:00p.m. Los Angel
Chicago
Fryman, Dunning, Murray
25 33 .431 14'h
Colllornlo ITonena 8·4) o1
Attention, coaches, managers
St. LOUIS
19 32 .373 16'h Mllwoukee 1Au;usllnel ·21.7 :00 (7) and Foote 1 John 13-41 end Lyons got tile only hits for
MOntreal
Yeoger. LP -Frymon 17·&lt;1. HR · Racine.
Wtst
.
p.m.
ill order for the SeiiiiDel to provide belter and more apotoKansas Cit~ (F itzmorris 7.2) Los Angeles•. Cey (11).
W
L
P
I
Mason
402100G-7 5 0
·
·
c
.
GB
date covenge 011 local sports, PI- illclade lbe follow!Dg oa Clnclnnoll
37 22 .627 ol Detroit McCormick 0·01.
Racine
000
ooo ~ 2 3 ,
yo... bueball report form~: Name of yoar Ieape, wbea Los Angeles 35 25 .583 2'1• 8:30p.m.
S.n
Diego
.
31
26
.544
s
I
only
gameucheduled)
.
Amn;f~".~•:,auo
Johnson
and
Hankinson .
played, where played, aDd type ol bill (little league, pee wee, Houtton
29 32 .•75 9
·
Tuesday's Games
Chicago
DID
001110.
l
t
4
PtlddlnB
(LP
),
O'Brien
(1)
etc.)
A!Iento
22 3~ .393 13'!2 · Clevelond ot Texu, night ,
Clovolon~
DID
112
3Dx-,.
111
3
and
Robinson
San
Francisco
23
38
.377
15
New
York
11
Mlnnnota,
nl;ht
Also, In order lot' us to be up-to11ate, ple•e IUbmlt yOIII'
Johnson, Barrios 171 and
,
•
Saturday'i Results
Baltimore at Ct)lcago, night
Downing, Varney (81 ; Dobson, IN ANOTHER game, the
fomil as100n as poulhle. Gamea turued Ia more than foar
Chicago S Houston 2
K1n111 City II D,trolt, night
Buskey (7), LaRoche 191 ·~d host Rutland Rangers
New York 3 San Francisco 1
.Boston at oaklafjd, night
days after the playlllg dale cunot be paillllbed. We
Ashby. W~ · Dobson (7.5). LP·
'-• b S .
St.
Loula
s
Cincinnati
4
M
II
w
•
u
k
e
e
ot
Collfornlo
,
appftclate your coopenttoa, and so d9 lbe fa•.
John!Ofl 13·11 . HRS-Chlcooo. squea..ou Y yraCUie t-2, D.
Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 2, 11 night
Kelly W ; Clevelond, Corty w , Kennedy picked up the win
Dulfy 11 I·'
while J . Davia was charged
:::::::~::::::::::::::::=:~::::::::::::::::::~::?.:::~:::~:::~:~:::~:::::::::::::::::::: :::::: :::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::~::::::· ln~~:delpl'11a 3 San Diego 2, 15
Inning&amp;
Sundoy'slluob.tin' itesulli
(2nd
Game
l
with the losa,
Los Angeles 4 Mon1reol 3
ly Unltlld Prtll lnttrn•tlonal
Clllcogo
202
DOO
1111'14
2
Scorina for Rutland were
Sunday's Results
National L••eue
Cltvoland DID lOG Dh- t U 2
°
Clnclnnotl ~St . Louis o, 1st
· (1st Game)
Jefferson , Htmllton (2) , cor . M. Wayland , J . Morris,
St.
Louis
12
Cincinnati
9,
2nd
,St. Louis
000 000 0011- 0 I 0 roll Ill. Fors1er (81 end Kennedy and V, ·WUford
A strong Cheater U team three hits each· for the wlnChicago 8 Houston 3
Clnclnn•tl
100 201 oox- 4 1 o Downing; Eckersley, Kern (41, M k Da •
d.
·
1
that just couldn't aeem wdo nen while c. Ritchie and K.
PIHsburgh 6 Atlanta 5
Curtis, Solomon (61 , V.:tlllct Thomes 191 , LoRoche (91 and ar
v
..
an
K.
Knapp
,,,
!"'ew York ,4 San Francisco 2, 161. Hrobolky (I) and Rudolph : Ashby , WP-Kern (6-21. LP· scored for Syraclile.
anything wrong blasted host Newell· . got two apiece .
1sr
Norman
,
McEnaney
(7)
and
Jefferson
(3.3
).
HR
.(hl
cago,
c.'
ReediVWe U In Utile Laague Getting one hit each were
New York 4 San Francisco 1, Bench . WP-Normon (~ · IJ . LP ·
. .• • •
·acuon '111ursday nglht lU. J. Sayre, T. Crow, and J. Hlbbll. 2nd
C..-tls (4-6) . HR·Cinclnnotl, Spencer (5) .
Los
Angeles
6
Montrul
3
Bolley
13J.
Texos
130 OGO OID-7 I D
Ridenour, D. Wolfe, and Cheater's record 18 now 2-1, . San. Diogo 5 Phlladelphlo o,
Ntw York
000 101 D- I 5 I
GALLIPOLIS
1St ..
Terry Sayre ccmblned to the same as Reedlvllle's.
Umberger 17 -~1 ond Sund .
Son
Diogo
4
Phllodelphlo
3,
I
2nd
gamoJ
berg ; Hunter 18-61 end Munson .
Klmea and Mike Hauber 2nd
atrike out HVen hosta while
WED., JUNE 16 ·
St. LOUii 302 142 000- 12 15 0 HR
.Texas, Hargrove (4) .
· glvlnB up nirie walks. For the led tile hosta' attack with
Mondoy's Gtmts
Clnclnnoll 000 OIO,lOJ-. 913 1
CAll TlmtsiDTI
Forach, Wolloce (7), Grell 191
6 &amp; 8 PM
1-n, Scotty Van Meter, three hits each .while Gary
110 004 202- 1012 1
Chicago (Colem•n o.l) at and Simmons; Alcala , Darc:y Colli
Dotroll
004
000
OlD-.
7
13
2
County
Fairgrounds,
Rl . J5
~ Kimes, and Jeff Jones Griggs got the other two.
Cincinnati INolan 5-31 , S:30 (31. BorbOn 151 , Eostwlck .181
Kirkwood.
Drago
(81
on~
p.m.
end
Plummer.
WP-Forsch
12·
struck out seven Cheater
Etcheberrin~ · R'otierts, 88rt
t03 ~lilA ,
Atlonlo (Mnsersm lth HI II 2). LP-Aicelo 16-21 . HRS·SI . 161,
Grilli (8) ond Wockentuu.
batters and walked only five. C
• • St. Loula (Forsch 1·21, 8:30 Louis, Kessinger Ill, Brock WP
(2-6). LP-RoDert&amp;
620 10- a a 13 p.m.
(1) J Cincinnati, Plu"lmer (41. (5-SI.-Kirkwood
R. Gaul, J. Newell, N. R
HRS-Calllornla, Alverez
Pllllburgh
IRIUII
HI
a1
Rose
(6),
PoreziiO)
.
Leonard, and J. Riebel had
(21, Jockson 131 ; Detroit,
Houlton (Richard 7-SJ, 8:30
Rodriguez
131 .
p.m .
. HOuston
200 001 0011- 3 II o
Montrul (Stanhouae 3-21 ot' Chicago
020 o.. 02~-111 o Boston
007 000 3- 10 12 o
So.mn , Diego (Stro.m 6-4), 10:00 . Dierker, Nllkro (6), Pentz Ill ' Mlnntooll
000 200 000- 2 t S
and Herrmann; Burris, P.
P
Jones 11-01end Fisk; Hughes,
l""lygamuscheduledl
Reuschel 161 and SwLthor . WP - Burgmeler
(1), Luebber Ill ond
Tutsdly'a Gom11
KBurrll ("IJ . P - Oier~er (6-61 . Wyneger . LP-Huohes
12-71. HR.
Atlontt ot St. Louis, night
HR -Chlcago, LoCoc~ 121 .
Boston, Yntrzemskl 1111.
Chicago at Cincinnati, nl~ht
gomel
Pittsburgh ot Houston, n hi
Now York nst 010
DOl , _ 4 4 I Boltlrtloro 000 20112- 4 ' 1
Montreal at San Ol~o. n ght
NAME: White
'""
200 ooo ooo- 2 63 Kans Clly 221 030 OGx- 1 11 1
Los Angtlll II Ntw York, ·sanLollch
Apoc!oco (7) ond
Flonouan, . G. Jec~oon (3),
night
·,
ALIAS: Quercus al
· SCAilBOROUGH, Ont, she would need a 88 or better
Grote; 'oressler , Lavelle (8) • Grimsley (7) and Duncan ;
Son Francisco ot Phllodtl· • end
Hill
,
Sodo~
181
.
WP
-Lollch
Leonerd
l6·2l
ond
Mtrtlnez.
phlo,
night
(UP!) - Donna Caponi to win the tournament.
AGE: I year
{3-ll LP -Ornsllr 11-41 HR· LP -Fionogen I0-2). HRS-Kansos
Y&lt;~~q wu shouting over the
"I did just what I wanted,"
New
'vork
Grote
(21
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City,
Martinez
131,
Breit
(31
1
HEIGHT: 6 inches
Amtrlun LIIIUt Stencllngt
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Bolllmore, Bumbry (21, Single·
long dlatallce wires . to her she said after firing a By United Press lnternetlonel
ton
131
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!2nd Gamel
HEIGHT AT MATURITY : 80 w 100 feet
husband In Los Angelea,
toumamentlow 67 on the parNow York
010 002 Itt- 4 10 OOkltnd
W. L. Pet. GB Stn
100
D00
0124
6
1
"Hello, Ken," she 1111d, 72, 6,-.yard Ceder Brae New York
Fran
000 000 DOl- I 5I
WH ERE FOUN D: From Maine to
!I 22 .ses 400 010 OOx- 515 I
SHver, Lockwood · (91 end Mllwaukto
before laking a lmg pauae. Golf Club course.
Cleveland . 27 27 ,SO() 4'h
Torrez,
Bosmon·
121,
Lindblad
Florida,
and as far west as Mlnncsom
Boston
I ·25 27 .U1
5'h Grote; Borr, Coldwell (71 end 161, Bahnsen (61 and Hosley
''011, shoot, you've heard, I
While Carner IOired to a 78 oerrol
WP·Seovor 16·51. LP- Sloton. Castro (91 tnd M-t.1
nnd Tl·xns .
t
. 24 29 .453 7 Roder.
Berr (4 -5).
really wanted to tell you and Blalock to a 75, Young Baltimore
24 31 .436 8
WP - Sial~n 11·31. LP-Torrez (6·
21 2V .420 I'IJ
The Whit&lt;· Oak is one of the most vnluable
7).
myself."
picked up birdie after birdie, Milwaukee
"ltsborlh
120
000
m'
12
1
w..t
hardwood
trees in &lt;he United States. It help•
A11tnlo
030
110
00...
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2
'lbellflllltntwl Y01q had getting seven In all, lncludln&amp;
w. L· l'ct. 01 Rooltor, Longford 151, Dtmt·
us build floors, and cabinets, and furniture
Wll tbatlhe had jlllt Will a a crucial five-looter at the KonNI City 36 1t .655 (1), Maost (91 ond Over,
32 21 . ~4 3 ry.
and barrels.
playolf 0\'S' Judy Rankin for final hole to put her In the TOXII
Slngulllon (91: Nltkro, Loon
Chlcogo
27 26 .509 I
the tl2,000 lint prilt In tbe clubbouse at four-under.,... MlnniiOtt
27 27 .500 . l 'h (9J and Wlllloma . WP-Oomory
If you sec it, pleaS&lt;' be cxlracarcful with
Dliklond
27 S1 .466 1~'" 13·11. LP-Lton ~1 -3) . HR- '1iREt WINS
...,000 Peter Jaeuon 212 after 14 holes.
fi
re.
Smokey
Bear woul d like to remind you
Collfornlo
24 U ,400 1~'h Pittsburg~, Rooker 11 .
NORTH
·
Wcmen'a Golf Clulle, her
But Rankin, the leading
. hturdey's lltUitt !
t -l
FIELD, Ohio
th
at
trccs·ar(•
our friends- n&lt;&gt;t our enemies.
0
Cltvtlond 3 Ch lcilgo 0
lint LPGA tour Ulle In men ll!&lt;lley winner on.the LPGA
lioftlll
tat 0:7la
ooo- 16 L (UPI) - Dort Irvine Jr.
lban I Jill',
Stn Ditto ooo 100 211- 5 to guided Osborne's Bret to a
tour lhll year, atayed riiJIIIn
=~ ~~~~:0~!02
KIIIHI Cl1y 7 lllllmort 6 . Lon borg, McOrow 171, half-length victory •Over
Y011111 11art1t1 tbe flnll the toarname~ lolnc 011 a
Twltchtlt (8) and lloont 1 Jonn Mluourl Time
TtXII 2 NfW York 1
, A Public SttVICI Ol Tllll NtwtPIPtl ' lht Ad~erNs•ng Courte~
niUIId amday at one Dftr birdie ..... of her own112-21 end Kendell . L~-Lonborg
In Saturday
Oaklllld 2 MllwaukH 1
per, tine ..... otr the (llc:t lhrte In flw bolea In lbe bllell
18·31.
night'~ featured $8,000
1-y's lltsulll
Cltvtlond I Clltcago 5, 111
(2nd
uomol
Painesville
Pace
at
- ., Rankin; -llllllnl '*- before llkll1 1 COIIly
Cltvtlond t C111tl90 7, 2nd
,.hill
ooo 201 00...1 11 o Noctllfleld Park, Pickwick
chlmplon JoAnne ean. and bogey 111 the par-t, •yard
Colllornll10 DtlrOII 7
511 DittO
lOG 002 OGx- 4 I 0 Baron showed
TeJCII' 7 New York I
Jane flllloek. YOUIIfl fiaured 17th,
\
l!au-l!,t~""' ~~~-IJ.fl~r f~t --n ~
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NEW YORK (UP!) - Frank Lucdiill didn't want to do it,
but he knew he had to, so what it came right down to Is be had
no other choice.

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Sport Parade

MASON, W. Va.- A picnic
was held recently In the
Mason Ci ty Park by the
Sunday school of tile Faith
Baptist witll an attendance of
54. Volleyball was enjoyed by
all.
Awiener roast and hay ride
was held Saturday evening,
June 5, at the farm of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Coleman, Rutland,
by the Youth fellowship class.
Approximately 30 attended.
The Faith Baptist Church Is
meeting In lhe Steelworkers
Vnlon Hall on Railroad St.
between Horton and Pomeroy
Sis. In Mason.
Sunday school Ia at 10 a.m ..
Services each Sunday, 11
a.m. and 7:30 p.m. by Ivan
Cardwell, Athena. Bible study
by Ivan Cardwell Is on
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone 1$ Invited to all
services ,

Legion divides with Athens,
sweeps _Lancaster, 7-2, 8-4

MU8taug8 .pick

.

DOnna YOung ha d
news of $12,000

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.2- 'I'll!~ Sentinel, MlddleJI(Irt.-!~oy, O,,Monday, June 14, 1976

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Picnic held
.
in city park

RAY CROMI.EY

Goof offs many in_public .sector
.
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - Shortly alter lhe expose on
Representative Wayne L. Hays (l){)hio) and Elizabeth Ray, a
tongue-lrK:heek story "\)read throUf!h the Clpital that 434
congressional secretaries had now quietly enrolled in typing
classes,
This sorry joke: of course, does a disservice to hundreds of
hard-working straight women working in tile Senate and
House.
But there are enough congres.unen who call on their
secretaries for extracurricular intimate services that it is now
speculated that Hays may have a fighting chance to hang on to
or regain one or more of his assortment of powerful posts after
the hallabaloo dies down a bit. Hays could do this by quietly
threatening to expose his rolleagues with dates and Incidents
In their own lives, proposing tllus to drag them all down with
him when he falls.
,
In this Instance the pressure on Coogress to act may be too
great, If the publicity continues In full force, even tllough it is
no secret that numbers of congressmen brag privately - and
sometimes not so privately - of their personal prowess with
members of their staffs.
And it is well known, too, that on Capitol Hill there are
considerable numbers of male and female employes who are
unable to type, file or do research, employes who, in fact, do
little or nothing . Most of tllese skimpy workers hold jobs
because they are relatives or friends af Influential constituents .
or of the Congressman or his wife.
For a considerable period of Urne cine legislator is known
to have kept a former state trooper on the payroll who kindly
didn't arrest him on a quite serious traffic charge.

The amount of work turned out on some committees is so
meager that on numerous occasions, Pentagon officials, for
example, have required secretaries, analysts and researchers
to do the work of congressional conunittees because of the
unwillingness or Inability of members of congressional staff~
to carry out the necessary .work .
. In all fairness it must be stated that anyone wb41 regularly
visits congressional rommittee offices knows there are Senate
and House Committees whose staffs dlllgently work for long
hours, frequently .without much recognition.
But there are also commit~s and considerable numbers
of committee staff merilhers who do litUe all day but read
newspape&lt;s, polish fingernails, phone friends, Unger over
lunch and interoflleal snacks, gaze out tile window and office
hop.
Time and again tllis reporter has been appalled at the
·ignorance of many congressional staff members on matters
concerning tile agencies and specific subjects they are, by
assignment, supposed to monitor.
My shock at the small amount of work done by some
congressional committees needs to be put into perspective. I
am not, after all tllese years, easily amazed by "donothingness" in Washington. My first experience was during
World War U in the Army, having been assigned to the
Pentagon for a number of months before being sent overseas.
In tile of(ice in which I worked during that period, I estimated
the outputcould be Increased by 20 per cent by cutting tile staff
in half. This eliminated tllose who not only did no work but got
In tile way ofthose who did . The chief clerk in this particularly
busy office propped a newspaper in front of her face each day
after lunch and slept away much of the afternoon.

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unpopularity. Yours is tile
more interesting search and the more outrageous. I
1
preswne you believe, as did
Tagore, tllal it is better to
make people angry than
ashamed, and I agree, I
guess; well, actually I'm not
sure. What do I get for my
$17.50? Sinus trouble and high
blood pressure.
I'm told The Nation has
always done this to sub·
scribers. Twain, was it not,
said in the last century that
your literary reviews were
'' the . weekly Day Of
Judgment." And one can not
imagine any president since
Grant - whom, my God, The
Nation supported - allowing
the postman to bring copies
direct to the front door. You
refuse even the small
seductions - publishing on
newsprint, no photographs,
and limiting advertisements
for such enticements as a
book of American labor songs
of the Sam Gompers era.
Still you are addict! ve for a
few of us. What iconoclast
can ignore a periodical that
pinched pennies with the likes
, of . Lowell, Longfellow and
Wh_ittier? And though your
• luminaries of the present are
of dimmer light (I refer to
Michael Harrington ) it
remains true that if educated
comment is going out of style
you choose to disregard that
trend. Praise be. This in
mind, I forgive you even if the
ink on your pages is so heavy
it dries on my shirtcuffs.
Yet I write not to praise or
protest, but merely to bring a
matter of importance to your
desk. If I have been paying
attention correctly you have
now editorialized against
everything in the universe as
we know II. From God to his
friend Jimmy Carter there is
«)1 976byNEA. mc ~~
nothing against which you
"Send in some experts who have rosy views
have not either raged or
about the eooliOmy end stuff like that!"
worried.
..UU • - • '.
I believe you passed this
extraordinary milestone witll

your handling of Clarence
Kelley's public apology for
past FBI abuses. Here you
were faced with a delicate
moment, that of axing a man
who was begging forgiveness.
But when you said his was not
" the most elegant of
apologies" you became the
first periodical to close its
press to forgiveness and
tllereby write off all the
acli viles of man.
I salute you, I suppose.
Totality is something of an
accomplishment in an expanding society, even when
it's insolent. And, too, I un·
derstand something of your .
predelictions. I, too, ride the
misery circuit of print
commentary. I believe it is
not the duty of this wretched
indus try to promot.e but
expose, particularly as
regards governments and
politics. Besides, as the·
British publisher George
Allardice Riddle told us, all
journalists are alarmists, this
is their way of making
themselves interesting. This
is not tllen a brief for
Clarence Kelley, or anything
else you've blown over.
But I confess to some pause
regarding
your
accomplishment. I have
believed for some time that
many leaders are wrong,

Berry's World
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sufferable - but aU of them? .
Which brings me at last to my
second motive for writing. It
occurs .to me after two
decades of reading The
Nation that although I know
exactly what you are against
I haven't yet the faintest
notion what you are for.
- Cheers (the worst is yet
to come) T. T.

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That day 1 had seven in bowel habits for
movementa and the last two no good reason can mean
were filled with blood. This cancer of the colon. Do you
continued for about three realize that cancer of the
days and then my stomach colon and rectwn is the
was real nervous so I thought second most common cause
I had ulcen. I've had them . of death from cancer m bOUI
bef.ore. So I went back to my men and women?
nerv' pills and took a small
The second point Is that you
amount of Mylanta which should never resort to harsh
seemed to help some and lt laxatives. It ·Is entirely
seemed to Oush out what possible that ' the strong
looked like dried blood. I do chemicals In the laxative
feel better, but still have Irritated your colon so badly
some pain In my right side. I that It caused the bleeding.
would like to slick 14 your Those forceful contractions
bulk diet. Whet do you think are damaging. Whetller or
happened? Where could the ·. not that is so, anyone who has
blood have come from? It's bleeding In his bowel
not from the hemorrhoids. movements that is not ex·
DEAR READER - The plalned must tee a doctor at
ilnt point I want to make Ia once. That too can be a sign of
that anyone with a significant cancer of the colon.
change In bowel habit for no
I am glad the bulk diet
known reason should aee a helped. It Is too bad you dldlt'l
dociDr. Your sudden con- have such a program years
stipation alter having had ago. Some inve~Ugators think
normal funcUons for a month that bulk diets that straighten
Is definitely a change. out spasUc colon problems
Why see a
docll!r? may help prevent cancer of
Because sudden changes - the ,colon. I don't tlllnk your

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Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Wood and Carrie Anne· of
Rickenbacker Air Force Base
spent the week here with his
parents , Mr. and Mrs .
Norman Wood and Ronnie.
They also visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Webber Wood, Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Lynch,
Albany, and on Saturday
attended the wedding of his
cousin, Geneva King to Tom
McElroy: The. Nor111an Wood
family and Mrs. Steve
Brickles, Springfield,''
recently spent · S\lllle time
with the Kenneth Wood
family at Rickenbacker and
attended the open house there
and viewed the performance
of the U.S.A.F. Thunderbirds.

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Marooned

.WASffiNGTON (UP!) - A
report that some alcoholics
tan ·safely resume social
drinking is misleading and
harinful, says Rep. Wilbur
Mills, whose political career
was ruined by the hottle.
The report, by the Rand
Corp ., was financed by

·Man ch~rged with
DWI after wreck

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D·;nner pa·&gt;¥t~1i
stara.ed
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bulk diet had a' thing to do
with your sudden attack of
constipation and tile complications you had after
taking a harsh laxative.
The bowel program for a
person with a spas!Jc colon '
Includes more than just using
a bulk diet. I am sendlrig you
a copy of The Health Letter
number ·1, Irritable or
Spastic Colon and ConstlpatiOil. Others who . want
this lnlormaUon can forward
50 centa and a long, sliunped,
self-addressed envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me In care of tl!is newspaper, P. 0. Box 1441, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.
'
If you have not aeen your
doctnr yet see him without
delay, For the rest of my
readers please remember
that if you have a change of
bowel habit It can be align of
cancer. If you bleed don't try
to diagnose It yourself, see
your doctot without delay.

I

Members of the Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, were In Lancaster
recently for 8 dinner party
staged by Fairfield County
Salon 21.
The evening featured joint
Installation of new officers of
both the Fairfield Salon 451
and the Perry County Salon
750. Installing officer was
Mrs. Marcy Huston, departe·
mental of Ohio chapeau,
assisted by Mrs. Mavis
Medderer, departemental Ia
secretalre; Mrs. Mary
Martin, of Meigs County,
national finance conunlttee;
Mrs. Audrey Glaub, deml
chapeau premiere, and Arree
Marshall, past national demi
chapeau, Central Division.

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Chapeaus recognized were
Mrs. 'Lula Hampton, Meigs
County; Mrs . Martha
Waddell and Mrs. Corene
Mohler. Mrs. Irene Jenkins
was Installed as chapeau of
the Perry County Salon, and
Mrs. , Esther Garrett,
chapeau of the Fairfield
County Salon.
Gifts were presented to the
distinguished guests. Going
from •MelgsCountywere Mrs .
Martln, Mrs. Pearl Knapp,
Mrs. Wa Hampton; Mrs.
Julia Hysell, Mrs. Eileen
Searles, Mrs. Eunle Brinker,
Mrs. , Rhoda Hackett, Mrs.
Iva Powell, Mrs. Zuelelia
Smith, Mrs. Catherine Welsh
and )irs. Veda Davis.

"

Susan Loper feted
MASON, W. Va. - Miss
The """1 Sentinel· 1 Susan
Loper, bride-elect of
Jerry Lee Coleman, Rutland,
o~~~n~l~oTtE
washonoredMondayevening
MEIGS·MASON Aoll EA
with•a shower at the home of
e_':!ESTER L. T-ANNEH!tL Mrs. Ella Ford hosted by the
Exec Ed
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ROBERT HOEFLICH ; women of the Faith Baptist
City Editor
• Church. .
s.~~~~!hedbr~te
Games were played with
Volley ~ubllshlng com . Bobbi Pauley assis!Jng. Two
Pony.
Court · st9• Pri_i
PomeroyIll
, Ohio
zes were won by Sue
4576
Business Office Phone ,992: Daugbet.;ty and the door prize
m~: Edllorlol ~hone 992. went to Mrs. Joyce Pauley.
Cake Ice cream and punch
. second closs postoge
Pifer at , Pomeroy, Ohio
•'
NotiOnal odvertlslng were served to Sue
G~~;;~,shenc!:~'-:ny
' I. Daugherty, Dorothy, Queen,
Bottlnelll &amp; Gaftuher Dlv ' • Bunny Russell, SU1811 Loper,
lFY T~:,OV•• ·· Now York: Kalhy Stobart, Betty Pauley,
bscrlptlon rotes : Joann Harmon, Lorraine
Des11uvered
avell•bte tiy75corrler
centswhore Barne tte, Lorra 1ne Mc·
w!e~ . By Mqtor . Route'
Cauley, Doe Coleman, Betty
w.. ero corrlerOne
aet~lce not , y
M
Bobbl .p au1ey,
available,
month, '
a~ e1er ,
~ : 2~ 0S,Y~:~~~a~hl~2~o'l,d Cch e_ryl Van MMete~.VJane
She months, 111.50; Thl'e~,
o1oc:;man,
rs .
anna
m,2•6n00ths, S7 .oo. Elsewhere Samples Mrs. Joyce Pauley·
·
Vllr 1 llx months
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st3.so, three m'""ths, 17 .so. and Amy, Vtrglnla Wears,
Byer
Sh'rley
Subscription prf~t Includes Donna
Sunday Tlmes .sentlntl
c 'r,'r.''
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On:man, Debbie Branham
·....._· and. Ella Ford
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Bv Polly Cramer

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always keep it with my other
cleaning supplies. Wipe once
over with a soft dampened
cloth and then dry with paper
towelB, crwnpled newspaper
91' a dry clotll. The soda cuts
all grease, cooking stains,
nicotine stains, etc. and the
glass really sparkles. This is
an old bartender's trick. Mrs. E.F.P.
DEAR POLLY - My old
rotary lawn mower could not
be used any more, si I
removed the motor, throttles
and gas tank. I placed a
board over the platform,
drilled holes In the board and
bolted it on where the motor
had been. This made a handy
cart.for hauling things such
as baskets of clothes around
the yard. - MARY C.
DEAR POLLY - I never
throw away anything that can
possibly be usee[ ReeenUy, I
used some leftover pieces of
carpet to make coasters by
using ad!Jesive backed paller
on the underside~. These can
be cut w any size, Leftover
carpet.lsidealforuslngunder
legs of heavy 'furniture, Be
sure to cut two pieces for
each leg and put the rubber
sides togetller with the right
sides to the floor and furniture .
DEAR POLLY - To save
When I cook chicken beef
fuel I plan my menu so an etc.Tuse lhesldn, scraps, fat:·
entire meal can be cooked In etc, for dog and cat food. I fW
tile oven. I even find ·thai baby food jars, freeze and
fl:ozen vegetables can be put tills saves buyfug expensive
in a ca115erole.with a lid. Add dog food to mix with dry food.
a small amount of•water and ,My pets love II. - THERA.
cook alonB with the lilaln
Polly will sead yoa oae ef
dish. -MRS. J. J.
ber "peacby" lbaak·you
DEAR POLLY - The carda, ldelll for framlq or
cheapest and easiest .wya I placillc ill yoar flllllly scnphave diiCovered to 'Clean 00.11, Ulite uses your lavortle
mirrors, windows, etc. Ia to Polater, Peeve or l'nlblem Ia
use regular club soda. I find It ' ber col1111111. Wrlle Pelly's
the most•reaiOIIBble cleaning (lllultn Ill eare of w. •agent ,on tile IIUII'ket and "paper.

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SCOREBOARD. ..!~~~~;:· . . lf'

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No. 2 teams in 19-8 score

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hadn't beaten the team from
up nCl'tll since 1973, but put it
on them by scores of 7-2and 114.
Steve Baird came on In
reli' f of.wlnner Calvin Minnis
In the fifth frame of the first
1game and shut the d9Qr on the
visltora in a tight altilation.
They combined to fan three
and walk eight,
·
Meigs scored ali iIa runs In
the first two lnnin11s after
spotting Lancaster 1.() lead
to start the ·game. In the
bottom of the first the local
boys scored three and didn't
need any more .
·Hamilton reached on an
error, and Mike Nesseiroad
and Mlck Davenport followed
with singles. After a balk,
Greg James singled, stole
second, and tllen scampered
home on John Sayre 's single,
They picked up four in·
surance runs In the second,
but from then on, Lancaster
held Meigs to just one hit, •
single by Minnis. They picked
up those four tallies on a
single by Minnis, a fielder 's
choice, a single by
Neaselroad, an error, and a
triple by James who cime on
home on a mental mistake by
Lancaster on tile throw ,
Lancaster pitching gave up
no walks, but struck out only
three. They yielded a triple
and a single to · James, two
singles each to Neuelroad
and Mlnnla, and singles each
to Davenport, Sayre and
Gary Swain .

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"* plebd.Muatanp
two Irina.

over !he l'omaroJ Anaeltt l-1.
Rich Gilmonl fiiiiiiCIIf of the
15 Antal outa and 1a~ •
only two hila, • double to
Ryiln Ollvar 8lld a linlle to
loainl pltchar Doldge, who
1truck out ten 111d walked
nine.
Sha-" Baller lid the hitting
deparlinent with 1 three-for.
three nl&amp;bt, lncludinl a llome .
run . SCot Gheen and John
Bacon .-ch had 1 llolle.
Muatanp
tlOII~ 0 0
Angela
000 01- 1 2 2
ON FRIDAY lhl Muatanp
rolltd.to an eaay 11-4 win over
the Pomeroy Rlda. Shawn
Baker had the mound duty
this time 8lld 1lruck out
twelve 111d walked three.
Baker crackld a lfUd llam
In the llrat lnnlnc to lead the
hitting; he alto had two
sinales. Other hltten trere
. Bob Southern who went 3 for
3, Rich Gllmcn, 8lld Gell'Cil
JuaUce.
.
Jaclde Welker and Bret
Korn pltehed for the Redl and
struck out elcht while
walld1111 ~even ..Welker, Joe
P'leldl, Rodney Roush and
Sha'III\.Gclegleln ~ch had one
hit, ~·

:'d

'

Hidden patches
.prot,ect clothes

· INFLATION FIGHTER
DEAR POLLy - So as to
get the most wear out of
garments we buy a good
quality. Then I Immediately
turn the sleeves of shirts, etc.
(wool, synthetics ' but, of
course, not sheers ) Inside out
and baste in 11!1 oval of china
silk, pre-washed inustln or
other thin material over the
elbows and do the same with
pants over the knees. The
stitches do not show on tile
outside so no one elae knows
about tl!ese pieces that a~
sorb some of the wear on
elbows ·and kneeS. I do not
wash' ·~uch items· In the .
washer, but soak them in 't/le
cold water cleanser for wool
rinse and hang In the showe;
to dry. By actual check my .
husband's clotlles wear~ to
100 per cent longer than I
similar· clotlles without this
protection and washed 1n tile
machine . on . the delicate
cyCle.' ·, ~ ., .
'
.
We saVed an old ,leather
jacket and when elbows on
jack~la wear, .we put on an
outSide patch of this !eater,
l}@.ving • first tested It for
washability. I usually put the
suede side Of the leather on
the outside. - LAURA.

runners , 111d he followed
them home on two successive
errors on his sinBle:
Athens tried to Come back
with a rally in the 5tll when
they plated a run on two
'errors, a wild pitch, and a
sincle. But that's as far as
they got,
Brent Johnson . picked up
the win, but had to have relief
help from Baird In the fifth .
Together they struck out sil
and walked five while lOlling
pitcher Arnie Chonko fanned
five 111d walked three.
Johnson and Jlll!les led the
hitting wltll two apiece while
Brian Hamilton, Davenport,
and Metzner each had one,
Athens
010010Q...;.2 6 6
Meigs
013 000 J-4 7 3
Chonko and B.rooker .
Johnson (WP), Baird (5 ) and
HamUton, Soulsby (5) . ·
SUNDAY GAMES
Meigs continued on its
winning ways Sunday af.
ternoon by sweeping a
doubleheader from Lancaster at Syracuse. Meigs

The

lut

Mason blanks
Racine 7-0
in pony action

•I H

Polly's Pointers

,

It

· alcohol became public in 197f ·
with a series of Incidents
involving stripper Fannie
Foxe.
"A responsibility on the
Congress is indicated to be
certain that the small
amounts of money made
available through tile federal
govenunent for alcohol abuse
and alcoholism are properly
used and awarded for
scientific st~dies that will be
helpful and not harmflil to
alcoholics," Mills said.
He suggested the new head
of Rand, Dr. Ernest Noble,
should ''see there is not a
repeat of this type of
dalllilge."
Mills, who said he cut
drinking entirely once he
understood his illness, said It
is harder wcure a return to
drinking tllan the initial· al·
. coholisin.
Mills lost his position of
power as chairman of the
House Ways and Means Com·
mittee after tile incidents. He
has anno~nced that he will
not run for re-election.

bill. Brady Huffman 8lld
Greg Smith teamed up to fan
three and walk nine.
Athena
12020011-5 7 0
Melga
000 000~ 3 0
Dalley and Baldwin.
Huffman (lJ'), Smith (2) and
Hamilton.
BEHIND SOME fine team
play and the third-Inning
Slugging of Greg Jamea, the
Melp team turned the tables
In the second game, winning
it t-2.
After spotting Athena a 1-4
lead In the top of tile second
on a double and two singles,
the local club lied it up when
after . one was out, James
singled .
John
Sayre
sacrificed him to second
arid Bill Metzner singled
to send James home wltll the
. tieing run.
.
Meigs won tile game in th.e
third. Mick Davenport got on
via a walk, and Mike
Nesselroad reached on an
error. After Calvin Minnis
fanned, . James cracked a
single to drive In the two

Cards .split ·series

Alcoholics don't drink again ever

federal funds through the
National Ins.titute on Alrohol
Abuse and Alcoholism. Mills
Sunday said It may represent
an imp~ope'r spending of
taxpayers' money.
According to the study,
some alcoholics who get
away from abusive drinking
can resume social drinking
and are n~ more likely to
become abusive drinkers
than alcoholics who stay
away from drinkirlg entirely.
The "so-called scientific
research" that went Into the
report probably ignored the
difference between an
Robert D. Wallis, 19, .accidents occw-red at 4 p.m. alcoholic and a heavy
Gallipolis, was charged wfth on County Road 29, one mile· drinker, said Mills, an
DWI following an accident south'of Rt. 141 whe•e a child Arkansas Democrat. A heavy
early Saturday morning on in a parked vehicle owned by drinker may be able to quit
Brick Rd. In Addison Twp. Myron Nibert, Gallipolis, and drink socially again,
The Gallia-Melgs Post opened a door Into the path of Mills said.
State Highway Patrol sa\d a car driven by Sheri N.
" But the 'only way
Wallis IOf!t.control of hill ,cl!" . ~~~~P, ~; Point Pleasant. alcoholism can be . cured is
which struck a briclge ralting
Anolller accident occurred through total abstinence,"
causing moderate .damage. on Rt. 7, one and four tenths Mills said. "This has been
A cow was killed In another miles north of Gallipolis proven time and time again
early morning accident where an auto driven by by people who are alcoholics
Saturday on Pleasant Valley · Debra K. Canter, 19, and attempt to drink again."
Rd. tllree tenths of a nlije Syracuse, lost control and
Mills' own trouble with
nortll of Rt. 325 where th~ skidded toward a ·vehicle
animal owned by Arthur driven by Thomas A.
Cennamo ran Into tile Path of Schoonover, 40, Rutland. The
a ca'r operated by Danny ~;t. Schoon.over car slid into a
Maynard, 20, Rt, 2, Bidwell. guardrail to avoid a collision .
The first of two Sunday There ; was minor damage.

See doctor for this problem By Llomace E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - For
the last 20 years the doctors
said I had a spastic colon and
kept me on a very bland diet.
This affected my bowel
movementa and I had to take
enelll88 and put up with a lot
of pain, I never had ~ natural
bowel movement until I read
your attlcle about eating tile
bulk foods and cerealB and
breads made of bran or,whole
wheat.
You stated If one could
1tand the gaa for three weeks
she could overcome the
problem. Well at this point I
. wu willing to try anything
· and believe me it worked
beaulllully and all my pains
disappeared. I felt like a new
woman. I even stopped taking
my nerve pills. ..
This continued ·for a whole
month and all of a sudden for
two days I dldn.'t bave a
bowel movement. Dtimb me,
I took a lautive I got from
the hellth food st«e. I tool!
two llllleta with no resulla
8lld then nut day two more.

-

WEEK SPENT

•

••
•
•j'

.. ''

~­

r

DR.• LAMB

'

~­

'' A centUry's worth of elegant lament
modesty nor !.act: "I am a
Protestant, a Republican and
a free enterpriser, which
means I am biased in favor of
God, Eisenhower and tile
stockholders of Time, Incorporated." If anyone objected, he went on, "then why
the hell are they still buying
the magazine ?"
I am not quite sure why
your issue has reminded me
of Luce, except thai I appreciate dedication whatever
the cause. For Luce it was the
accumulation of influence.
For you it rtlay be, as The
·New Republic said on your
centennial , the quest for

.' ',' '

.,.. i:,w

TOM TIEDE

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - The
Nation, established in 1865, is
one of the oldest magazines in
America, and no doubt the'
world. Its circulation is approximately 30,000. Its editor
Is Blair Clark.
Dear Editor,
As I put down another of
your Issues I am reminded of
Henry Luce, late chief of one
of the most powerful
publishing empires in our
history. Uke you, he played
many of his cards face up. On
questions of philosophy, he
once said with neither

'

The Meigs American
Legion team raised Its
overall record to 8-3 over the
weekend by laklnl three out
of four iame~ . '11ley dropped
the first game Saturday and
·then went on to score three
s~igbt triumpbs In the back·
to-back doubleheaders Saturday 111d Sunday.
In the first BalDI of the
doubleheader Saturday at
SyraCUie, the local team wu
the vlcUm of a tfiree.hllter by
Athens' Scott Dalley, ~. In
chalking up the shutout,
Dalley fanned 10 and walked
only three as he went the
distance, giving up only three
hila, all singles, to Meigs'
Brian Hamilton, Bill Melz·
ner, and Steve Baird.
. Dalley got all the runs he
needed In the first Inning
when Chadwell walked,
advanced on a ground out,
and scored on Arnie Chonko's single. Meigs had opportunillea to score, but just
couldn 'I get the Urnely hit.
Both teams played errorless

up two wins
in Peewee play

COA C H G EO RG E
Neuelroad waa well11lealled
by the performance of the
younger boys who atarted the
second game. '11ley held the
"Look," he safd to left-bander George Stone, a guy
everybody Instinctively liked because he was unselfl,lh and
vlslton In check while they
were In the game and scored
had worked like a dog to 11t111110unl a crippling Injury they all
said nobody ever came back hun, "this Is the toughest thing I ·
enOUIJh runs to enable pltchar
Brady Huffman wpick up the
have to tell anybody, but we can't uae you. H you like, we'll
8SIIgn you to a Triple A club. Maybe there's a job for you
wtn, this Ume with relief help
there."
from Baird and James. ·
George Stooe had a question .
Lancaater held a 1-G lead
for the flnt two Innings
"Tell me the truth," he said to the manager of the Texas
Rangers. "UI go down to the Triple A now, ta there a chance I
before Meigs Ued It In the
may be back here In a mmth or so?"
second when Mark Mitch
"No way In the world," anBWered Frank Lucchesi, looking
sq~ homt Baird who
George Slone straight in the eye. "We bave three other
had sinaled and adv111ced to
pitchers who just missed making tllecluband they'reall ahead
third. They went 8head with a
of you."
lingle run In the third when
More than two months have gone by since Lucchesi told
Huffman walked, was
stone there was no more room for him with the Rangers and
sacrificed to second by Sayre,
the episode stW Is fresh In his mind because It cut up the little
went to third on a single by
Texas manager Inside to ·say what he did.
SWain, and scoced on a
"Whet should I have done, lied to' George Stone? I wouldn't
sacriftce Oy by Jame.s.
do that. That's the toughest part of this job," says the fll..yearThey broke tile Baine open
old Luechesl, who has been managing professional baseball
IJ1 the fourth when they platad
club&amp; tile past 25 years or what amounta to IIIDl'e than half his
four runs on absolutely no
IUetlme.
hits. They had the wcaster
"I've never hadalotofrule~, but there's one I firmly believe
team shook up by bunting,
In when It ccmes to dealing with a ballplayer: Tell him the
steallnl, walklna, squeeslng
truth. Don't con them. Ballplayers know when you're cooninB
rtrlfM!I'I! borne, and forcing
them. To me, the most Important part of managing ls handling
the vfal!ora wcommit errors.
your men. The rest, the baseball part, is e~sy." ·
They picked up two more
Most managers like to convey the occasiooal impression
1'11111 !n1the fttth on a walk, a
they are Infinitely ahead of mere mortals in the cerebral
ttlple 6y Hamilton, and a lleds
lOSOO- 4 4 7
department and come specially anointed to the job. Frank
single by Brent Johnson.
1231113 I 1
Muatanc•
llicchesl doesn't belong to that school. He habltuaUy plays
Hamilton led the hitting
himself down and plays up his ballplayers, which ls the way 11
attack with three singles,
crnCINNATI (UPI) - Bill and final run of a ninth Inning straight, set by the late Mel
should be,
.
while M•tzner, Swalit, Baird,
Ott. Morgan, however, wound
His players don't think he's God, but they respect him Plununer claimed St. Louis uprising.
and
Johnson each gol one,
because be never cons th~ and is always honest with them. first baseman Ted Simmons . Anderson'~ charitable up drawing a walk.
TOURNEY NOTED
Meigs
plays Parkersburg
attitude came alter Quick
Tony Perez then stepped to
Mare than that, they like him, and where once some of these "didn't even tag me."
"The
Second Annual
North
wnlght
at
the
new
"If Simmons did tag Plum· had thumbed the manager the plate as a pinch hitter for
very same playen were exceptionally critical of the men who
Security Bank SJo.Pitch Sofl.
Meigs
High
School
field
.
Driessen
and
managed them, now they have nothing but good things to say mer," Reds first base coach from the game In tile third llilnny
we.
100 010 Z--4 6 2 ball Tournament wW be held
about Frank Lucchesi, who isn't at all flashy b~t ls doing an Russ Nixon sald, "then he hit inning for "no justifiable slanuned a three-run homer.
Meigs
011420x-8
5 2 Cl1 Satll'day June 18 and
excellent job keeping the Rangers battling for first place In the him high ... and after Plum- reason," Anderson claimed. That was when Cardinals
Sunday June 20 at the Wut
Stover
(LP),
Houk,
Turbett
mer's foot was already on the
The Reds trailed tile Cards relief pitcher Mike Wallace, a
American League West.
·
State
Street Scftball Ftelda In
and
Bate~
.
Huffman
(WP),
12-4 when Davey Coocepcion, left bander, made his exit.
His two biggest thrills so far both are associated with the bag."
At.htns.
The entry fee for this .
ilalrd
(5),
James
(7),
Baird
"I saw a replay on video pinch hitting for Rawly EastPhiladelphia Phlllies.
Bill Greif, the Cards' third
ASA
sanctioned,
double
(7)
and
Soulaby.
The first one came when they named him their manager in tape and It was such a close wick, singled to center to pitcher of the game, struck
elimination
tournament
Is
1970 after he managed 19 years In the minors anq the fans In play, I can't argue about it," open the bottom of the nintll out Bob Bailey, hut George
fOG.
To
enter
111d-or
for
Philadelphia gave him a standing ovation on Opening Day that was the SUI')II'Iaing cmunent inning of the last game. Pete Foster followed with a double
fl!l'ther lnfonnatJon, call Jim
of manager Sparky Anderson Rose followed with a single to to right center. It was then
year. Tears came to Lucchesi's eyes.
Eberle, The Security Bank,
Reedsville has
His serond biggest kick ls the way Larry Bows has made It after the Reds split a left, sending Concepcion to that Plummer dropped a pop
Athe111,
Ohio 46701 (phone 1·
with the Phlllies. Lucchesi never gave up on Bowa when doQbleheader . with the. St. third. And after Coocepcion Oy single Into center field,
614-593-7781
frOift. 9 a.m. to t
Louis Cardinals Sunday, scored on Ken Griffey's. scoring Foster with tile fifth . Pony League action Friday 26·14'·victory " ,,, p.m.)
. .
everybody elae said he ~ould.
,
saw Mason continue ··ns
dropping
the
second
12-11
after
sacrifice
fly,
Rose
stole
run
of
the
Inning.
"I wa.s hurt, but I was never bitter against the Phlllies,"
winning ways· by downing
SE!!Ond.
List week Rodney 'Spurlock
Plwruner, however, made host Racine M behind the
Lucchesi says regarding his being fired by P!liladelphia four taking the opener ~.
Tile
controversial
play
"I
wanted
to
get
Into
the' mistake of rounding first two-hit pitching of Mike led his visiting Reedsville
years ago. "Bob Carpenter? I love the man; He gave me my
chance.Irememberwhen he told me he was making a change. came when rookie wnplre scoring position ... give Joe too far. While attempting to Johnson. Johnson fanned 14 team to a 26-14 come-from.
He said, 'It's easier to fire the general than the hole army."' Jim ·Quick ruled out (Morgan)onemorechance to return to tile base, Plummer, . batters and dldn 't give up a behind victory over Tuppen , SAIUSOAT FATALRY
Plummer, to end tile last tie that record," Rose according to Quick, was
Now Frank Lucchesi cim laugh about it,
Plains I. Spurlock bluled· a · TOLEDO (UPI) _ Mary
game
as the Reds catcher explained.
tagged out by Sinunons, after single free "paSS.
"People ask me how I feel about the way the Phillie~ are
~=e~
and pitched a good last Green, 22, 0re1on, was killed
Mason scored all the runs
Morgan had driven home the Cards first baseman
go~ now," he says. "I say 'beautiful.' I'd like to see them go trted to scramble bact to first
.
ninBs to pick liP the Saturday when northeast
they
needed
when
they
plated
home one or more runs in 10 grabbed Don Kessinger's
all the way. Wouldn't it be something If It was them and us In base after sin~
4
Ills
teammate. ~- winds on Lab Erie blew the
four .In the first on 3 walks
George Fostet \ritli the 'filth · consecutive games . The relay throw.
the World Series?"
three
triple~ and aven mast of her aluminum
and
two
singles,
c.
Davia
was
·
Nation~ League record is 11
All a player, Lucchesi never got to the majors. He started as
doublea.
Ullboat Into a · high-voltage
the
leading
hitter
with
a
long
a outfielder In the Yankees' chain and after a few years, one af
'
J.
Llrkiu, R Putnam, and . Une at a marina eut of here.
home
run
and
a
single
,
their scouts, the late Joe Devine, advised him to forget abo¥t ~::;:;:;:;::::::~~:::::::~:::::::::::::::~:f!'%:~:::~;:;:;:~;:;:;:::::::::~::::::;:~;:;:::;:;:;:;::::~~:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!~·i·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!-!·!·!·!·!·!·!·~=·!·!{•!•!t!f:
Catcher K. Hankinson L. Harrison shared the She suffered electrical shock
playing and concentrate on managing,
.
chipped In wllh a double; mound duties for Tuppers and burna over most of her
"The closest you'll ever get to Yankee Stadiwn is with 8 1
Johnson and the desig!lated Plains, The slugfest aaw the body .
postcard," Devine said.
teams get a total of 61
Erhest A. Fisher, ss, of
hitter Fowler liad alngles.
Last Friday night when he came In with the Rangers for a ~·:
Results
:;:; Losing pitcher Dan Dud· RIa.
North~ood, 11 boat pauenger,
three-game series was the first time Frank Lucchesi has ever
067
706-llll
36
4
was
reiaaled after treatment
ding
was
shelled
In
that
first
Ntllontl Ltolut S1ondlnus
been In Yankee Stadium with a uniform on.
Oatet ; Splllner, Folkers ~ (6h frame and was relieved by T
072 500-14 26 4 for burns.
ly United Pr111 International
Boston 10 Minnesota 2
Metrger (7) and B, D11vis,
"I finally made It," he laughed. "I never really gave up."
l!ast
.
Kansas City 8 Baltimore •
Kendell 111. WP-F,otkers 12-11. Jim O'Brien who· finished up
w. L. Pet. GB Mllwoukee 5 Oakland 4
LP-Chrlsltnson (7-31.
Monaty'l RtSUIII
Phllodolphla 38 17 .691 and fanned eight, walked
32 25 .561 7
(All Times EDTI
Pittsburgh
three and gave up only three
Montreal
2ot
ooo
0013
9
I
30
32
.U4
11
v,
Boston
(Wise
4-31
at
Mln
New York
032 001 OGx- 6 9 0 hila. John West and Jack
26 3r :456 .13 nmta IDecker 2-5), 9:00p.m. Los Angel
Chicago
Fryman, Dunning, Murray
25 33 .431 14'h
Colllornlo ITonena 8·4) o1
Attention, coaches, managers
St. LOUIS
19 32 .373 16'h Mllwoukee 1Au;usllnel ·21.7 :00 (7) and Foote 1 John 13-41 end Lyons got tile only hits for
MOntreal
Yeoger. LP -Frymon 17·&lt;1. HR · Racine.
Wtst
.
p.m.
ill order for the SeiiiiDel to provide belter and more apotoKansas Cit~ (F itzmorris 7.2) Los Angeles•. Cey (11).
W
L
P
I
Mason
402100G-7 5 0
·
·
c
.
GB
date covenge 011 local sports, PI- illclade lbe follow!Dg oa Clnclnnoll
37 22 .627 ol Detroit McCormick 0·01.
Racine
000
ooo ~ 2 3 ,
yo... bueball report form~: Name of yoar Ieape, wbea Los Angeles 35 25 .583 2'1• 8:30p.m.
S.n
Diego
.
31
26
.544
s
I
only
gameucheduled)
.
Amn;f~".~•:,auo
Johnson
and
Hankinson .
played, where played, aDd type ol bill (little league, pee wee, Houtton
29 32 .•75 9
·
Tuesday's Games
Chicago
DID
001110.
l
t
4
PtlddlnB
(LP
),
O'Brien
(1)
etc.)
A!Iento
22 3~ .393 13'!2 · Clevelond ot Texu, night ,
Clovolon~
DID
112
3Dx-,.
111
3
and
Robinson
San
Francisco
23
38
.377
15
New
York
11
Mlnnnota,
nl;ht
Also, In order lot' us to be up-to11ate, ple•e IUbmlt yOIII'
Johnson, Barrios 171 and
,
•
Saturday'i Results
Baltimore at Ct)lcago, night
Downing, Varney (81 ; Dobson, IN ANOTHER game, the
fomil as100n as poulhle. Gamea turued Ia more than foar
Chicago S Houston 2
K1n111 City II D,trolt, night
Buskey (7), LaRoche 191 ·~d host Rutland Rangers
New York 3 San Francisco 1
.Boston at oaklafjd, night
days after the playlllg dale cunot be paillllbed. We
Ashby. W~ · Dobson (7.5). LP·
'-• b S .
St.
Loula
s
Cincinnati
4
M
II
w
•
u
k
e
e
ot
Collfornlo
,
appftclate your coopenttoa, and so d9 lbe fa•.
John!Ofl 13·11 . HRS-Chlcooo. squea..ou Y yraCUie t-2, D.
Pittsburgh 4 Atlanta 2, 11 night
Kelly W ; Clevelond, Corty w , Kennedy picked up the win
Dulfy 11 I·'
while J . Davia was charged
:::::::~::::::::::::::::=:~::::::::::::::::::~::?.:::~:::~:::~:~:::~:::::::::::::::::::: :::::: :::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::~::::::· ln~~:delpl'11a 3 San Diego 2, 15
Inning&amp;
Sundoy'slluob.tin' itesulli
(2nd
Game
l
with the losa,
Los Angeles 4 Mon1reol 3
ly Unltlld Prtll lnttrn•tlonal
Clllcogo
202
DOO
1111'14
2
Scorina for Rutland were
Sunday's Results
National L••eue
Cltvoland DID lOG Dh- t U 2
°
Clnclnnotl ~St . Louis o, 1st
· (1st Game)
Jefferson , Htmllton (2) , cor . M. Wayland , J . Morris,
St.
Louis
12
Cincinnati
9,
2nd
,St. Louis
000 000 0011- 0 I 0 roll Ill. Fors1er (81 end Kennedy and V, ·WUford
A strong Cheater U team three hits each· for the wlnChicago 8 Houston 3
Clnclnn•tl
100 201 oox- 4 1 o Downing; Eckersley, Kern (41, M k Da •
d.
·
1
that just couldn't aeem wdo nen while c. Ritchie and K.
PIHsburgh 6 Atlanta 5
Curtis, Solomon (61 , V.:tlllct Thomes 191 , LoRoche (91 and ar
v
..
an
K.
Knapp
,,,
!"'ew York ,4 San Francisco 2, 161. Hrobolky (I) and Rudolph : Ashby , WP-Kern (6-21. LP· scored for Syraclile.
anything wrong blasted host Newell· . got two apiece .
1sr
Norman
,
McEnaney
(7)
and
Jefferson
(3.3
).
HR
.(hl
cago,
c.'
ReediVWe U In Utile Laague Getting one hit each were
New York 4 San Francisco 1, Bench . WP-Normon (~ · IJ . LP ·
. .• • •
·acuon '111ursday nglht lU. J. Sayre, T. Crow, and J. Hlbbll. 2nd
C..-tls (4-6) . HR·Cinclnnotl, Spencer (5) .
Los
Angeles
6
Montrul
3
Bolley
13J.
Texos
130 OGO OID-7 I D
Ridenour, D. Wolfe, and Cheater's record 18 now 2-1, . San. Diogo 5 Phlladelphlo o,
Ntw York
000 101 D- I 5 I
GALLIPOLIS
1St ..
Terry Sayre ccmblned to the same as Reedlvllle's.
Umberger 17 -~1 ond Sund .
Son
Diogo
4
Phllodelphlo
3,
I
2nd
gamoJ
berg ; Hunter 18-61 end Munson .
Klmea and Mike Hauber 2nd
atrike out HVen hosta while
WED., JUNE 16 ·
St. LOUii 302 142 000- 12 15 0 HR
.Texas, Hargrove (4) .
· glvlnB up nirie walks. For the led tile hosta' attack with
Mondoy's Gtmts
Clnclnnoll 000 OIO,lOJ-. 913 1
CAll TlmtsiDTI
Forach, Wolloce (7), Grell 191
6 &amp; 8 PM
1-n, Scotty Van Meter, three hits each .while Gary
110 004 202- 1012 1
Chicago (Colem•n o.l) at and Simmons; Alcala , Darc:y Colli
Dotroll
004
000
OlD-.
7
13
2
County
Fairgrounds,
Rl . J5
~ Kimes, and Jeff Jones Griggs got the other two.
Cincinnati INolan 5-31 , S:30 (31. BorbOn 151 , Eostwlck .181
Kirkwood.
Drago
(81
on~
p.m.
end
Plummer.
WP-Forsch
12·
struck out seven Cheater
Etcheberrin~ · R'otierts, 88rt
t03 ~lilA ,
Atlonlo (Mnsersm lth HI II 2). LP-Aicelo 16-21 . HRS·SI . 161,
Grilli (8) ond Wockentuu.
batters and walked only five. C
• • St. Loula (Forsch 1·21, 8:30 Louis, Kessinger Ill, Brock WP
(2-6). LP-RoDert&amp;
620 10- a a 13 p.m.
(1) J Cincinnati, Plu"lmer (41. (5-SI.-Kirkwood
R. Gaul, J. Newell, N. R
HRS-Calllornla, Alverez
Pllllburgh
IRIUII
HI
a1
Rose
(6),
PoreziiO)
.
Leonard, and J. Riebel had
(21, Jockson 131 ; Detroit,
Houlton (Richard 7-SJ, 8:30
Rodriguez
131 .
p.m .
. HOuston
200 001 0011- 3 II o
Montrul (Stanhouae 3-21 ot' Chicago
020 o.. 02~-111 o Boston
007 000 3- 10 12 o
So.mn , Diego (Stro.m 6-4), 10:00 . Dierker, Nllkro (6), Pentz Ill ' Mlnntooll
000 200 000- 2 t S
and Herrmann; Burris, P.
P
Jones 11-01end Fisk; Hughes,
l""lygamuscheduledl
Reuschel 161 and SwLthor . WP - Burgmeler
(1), Luebber Ill ond
Tutsdly'a Gom11
KBurrll ("IJ . P - Oier~er (6-61 . Wyneger . LP-Huohes
12-71. HR.
Atlontt ot St. Louis, night
HR -Chlcago, LoCoc~ 121 .
Boston, Yntrzemskl 1111.
Chicago at Cincinnati, nl~ht
gomel
Pittsburgh ot Houston, n hi
Now York nst 010
DOl , _ 4 4 I Boltlrtloro 000 20112- 4 ' 1
Montreal at San Ol~o. n ght
NAME: White
'""
200 ooo ooo- 2 63 Kans Clly 221 030 OGx- 1 11 1
Los Angtlll II Ntw York, ·sanLollch
Apoc!oco (7) ond
Flonouan, . G. Jec~oon (3),
night
·,
ALIAS: Quercus al
· SCAilBOROUGH, Ont, she would need a 88 or better
Grote; 'oressler , Lavelle (8) • Grimsley (7) and Duncan ;
Son Francisco ot Phllodtl· • end
Hill
,
Sodo~
181
.
WP
-Lollch
Leonerd
l6·2l
ond
Mtrtlnez.
phlo,
night
(UP!) - Donna Caponi to win the tournament.
AGE: I year
{3-ll LP -Ornsllr 11-41 HR· LP -Fionogen I0-2). HRS-Kansos
Y&lt;~~q wu shouting over the
"I did just what I wanted,"
New
'vork
Grote
(21
·
City,
Martinez
131,
Breit
(31
1
HEIGHT: 6 inches
Amtrlun LIIIUt Stencllngt
'
·
Bolllmore, Bumbry (21, Single·
long dlatallce wires . to her she said after firing a By United Press lnternetlonel
ton
131
.
·
!2nd Gamel
HEIGHT AT MATURITY : 80 w 100 feet
husband In Los Angelea,
toumamentlow 67 on the parNow York
010 002 Itt- 4 10 OOkltnd
W. L. Pet. GB Stn
100
D00
0124
6
1
"Hello, Ken," she 1111d, 72, 6,-.yard Ceder Brae New York
Fran
000 000 DOl- I 5I
WH ERE FOUN D: From Maine to
!I 22 .ses 400 010 OOx- 515 I
SHver, Lockwood · (91 end Mllwaukto
before laking a lmg pauae. Golf Club course.
Cleveland . 27 27 ,SO() 4'h
Torrez,
Bosmon·
121,
Lindblad
Florida,
and as far west as Mlnncsom
Boston
I ·25 27 .U1
5'h Grote; Borr, Coldwell (71 end 161, Bahnsen (61 and Hosley
''011, shoot, you've heard, I
While Carner IOired to a 78 oerrol
WP·Seovor 16·51. LP- Sloton. Castro (91 tnd M-t.1
nnd Tl·xns .
t
. 24 29 .453 7 Roder.
Berr (4 -5).
really wanted to tell you and Blalock to a 75, Young Baltimore
24 31 .436 8
WP - Sial~n 11·31. LP-Torrez (6·
21 2V .420 I'IJ
The Whit&lt;· Oak is one of the most vnluable
7).
myself."
picked up birdie after birdie, Milwaukee
"ltsborlh
120
000
m'
12
1
w..t
hardwood
trees in &lt;he United States. It help•
A11tnlo
030
110
00...
S
IJ
2
'lbellflllltntwl Y01q had getting seven In all, lncludln&amp;
w. L· l'ct. 01 Rooltor, Longford 151, Dtmt·
us build floors, and cabinets, and furniture
Wll tbatlhe had jlllt Will a a crucial five-looter at the KonNI City 36 1t .655 (1), Maost (91 ond Over,
32 21 . ~4 3 ry.
and barrels.
playolf 0\'S' Judy Rankin for final hole to put her In the TOXII
Slngulllon (91: Nltkro, Loon
Chlcogo
27 26 .509 I
the tl2,000 lint prilt In tbe clubbouse at four-under.,... MlnniiOtt
27 27 .500 . l 'h (9J and Wlllloma . WP-Oomory
If you sec it, pleaS&lt;' be cxlracarcful with
Dliklond
27 S1 .466 1~'" 13·11. LP-Lton ~1 -3) . HR- '1iREt WINS
...,000 Peter Jaeuon 212 after 14 holes.
fi
re.
Smokey
Bear woul d like to remind you
Collfornlo
24 U ,400 1~'h Pittsburg~, Rooker 11 .
NORTH
·
Wcmen'a Golf Clulle, her
But Rankin, the leading
. hturdey's lltUitt !
t -l
FIELD, Ohio
th
at
trccs·ar(•
our friends- n&lt;&gt;t our enemies.
0
Cltvtlond 3 Ch lcilgo 0
lint LPGA tour Ulle In men ll!&lt;lley winner on.the LPGA
lioftlll
tat 0:7la
ooo- 16 L (UPI) - Dort Irvine Jr.
lban I Jill',
Stn Ditto ooo 100 211- 5 to guided Osborne's Bret to a
tour lhll year, atayed riiJIIIn
=~ ~~~~:0~!02
KIIIHI Cl1y 7 lllllmort 6 . Lon borg, McOrow 171, half-length victory •Over
Y011111 11art1t1 tbe flnll the toarname~ lolnc 011 a
Twltchtlt (8) and lloont 1 Jonn Mluourl Time
TtXII 2 NfW York 1
, A Public SttVICI Ol Tllll NtwtPIPtl ' lht Ad~erNs•ng Courte~
niUIId amday at one Dftr birdie ..... of her own112-21 end Kendell . L~-Lonborg
In Saturday
Oaklllld 2 MllwaukH 1
per, tine ..... otr the (llc:t lhrte In flw bolea In lbe bllell
18·31.
night'~ featured $8,000
1-y's lltsulll
Cltvtlond I Clltcago 5, 111
(2nd
uomol
Painesville
Pace
at
- ., Rankin; -llllllnl '*- before llkll1 1 COIIly
Cltvtlond t C111tl90 7, 2nd
,.hill
ooo 201 00...1 11 o Noctllfleld Park, Pickwick
chlmplon JoAnne ean. and bogey 111 the par-t, •yard
Colllornll10 DtlrOII 7
511 DittO
lOG 002 OGx- 4 I 0 Baron showed
TeJCII' 7 New York I
Jane flllloek. YOUIIfl fiaured 17th,
\
l!au-l!,t~""' ~~~-IJ.fl~r f~t --n ~
'

NEW YORK (UP!) - Frank Lucdiill didn't want to do it,
but he knew he had to, so what it came right down to Is be had
no other choice.

.....

••
'"

Sport Parade

MASON, W. Va.- A picnic
was held recently In the
Mason Ci ty Park by the
Sunday school of tile Faith
Baptist witll an attendance of
54. Volleyball was enjoyed by
all.
Awiener roast and hay ride
was held Saturday evening,
June 5, at the farm of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Coleman, Rutland,
by the Youth fellowship class.
Approximately 30 attended.
The Faith Baptist Church Is
meeting In lhe Steelworkers
Vnlon Hall on Railroad St.
between Horton and Pomeroy
Sis. In Mason.
Sunday school Ia at 10 a.m ..
Services each Sunday, 11
a.m. and 7:30 p.m. by Ivan
Cardwell, Athena. Bible study
by Ivan Cardwell Is on
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Everyone 1$ Invited to all
services ,

Legion divides with Athens,
sweeps _Lancaster, 7-2, 8-4

MU8taug8 .pick

.

DOnna YOung ha d
news of $12,000

•..,

4'

e!1

�--

5- The Deily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pcmeroy, 0., Mlllday, JW!e 1~,18'11 ·

4- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 14, 1976

East Stars win 2 of 3

Jones blanks Phillies
By JACK SAUNDERS
UP! Sports Writer
Randy Jones pitched two
teams Into the National
League pennant race Sunday.
Jones, who's setting the
Natlooal League ablaze in a
fierce determination to earn
the NL Cy Young award that
eluded him last year, earned
his 12th victory Sunday with a
six-hit, first game~ decillion
over one of his favorite
opponents, the Philadelphia

PhUiles.
· Combined with another
standout performance by
Butch Metzger, who picked
up his seventh save with 2 1-3
innings of one-hit scoreless
relief in the Pactres' 4-3
second-game victory , the
Padres hal ted a three-game
losing streak with a
doubleheader sweep of the
Phlls. This put the Padres,
the NL West's traditional
doormat, only five games
behind the division-leading
Cincinnati Reds.
The Phils' double loss also
did the Pittsburgh Pirates a
big favor . The Pirates
completed a three-game
sweep of the Atlanta Braves
with a 6-5 victory and picked
up.l'k games on Philadelphia
to within seven games of the
Phillies in the NL East race.
Two of Jones' three
shutouts this season have
come against the Phils, the
only times Philadelphia has
failed to score all season.
No one in the major leagues
is within three victories of the

San Diego left-bander, who run, Del Unser doubled in two
had a 20-12 record and and Wayne Garrett singled
league-leading 2.24 earned 1 home the fourth run. In the
run average In 1975. This year first game John Milner's linehe's a phenomenal 12-2 and ! drive single scored two
his ERA is again impressive, unearned runs and Grote
2.10.
later homered.
Elsewhere Sunday, in addi- Cards ~ ll, Red&amp; 4-9
ti.on to Pittsburgh's victory,
Don Kessinger and Lou
New York captured a double- Brock each hit their first
header from San Francisco, home runs of the season and
4-2 and 4-1, St. Louis split two Mike Tyson added two triples
games with Cincinnati, losing and a double to account for
W then winning 12-9, Chicago eight rbi In the hlgh«:orlng
beat Houston 8-3 and Los se&lt;:ond game to give St. Louis
Angeles downed Montreal 6-3. a split of the d.oubleheader.
In the American League, . Bob Bailey hit a two-run
Cleveland
took
a homer and Fred Norman and
doubleheader from Chicago, Will McEnaney learned up on
6-5 and 9-7, Texas whipped .an eight-hitter In Cincinnati's
New York 7-1, California first-game shutout.
outlasted Detroit 10-7, Boston Cubs 8 Astros 3
trounced Minnesota 10-2,
Manny TrUlo doubled home
Kansas City defeated three runs to break a 2-2 tie
Baltimore 8-4 and Milwaukee and give Chicago its fourth
edged Oakland &gt;4 .
straight win. Ray Burris
Pirates 6 Braves 5
picked up his third win
Dave Par·ker 's ·two-out, against eight losses, and Paul
two-run triple off reliever Reuschel finished up for his
Max Leon climaxed a three- second save.
run 9th inning rally. Leon Dodgers 8 Astros 3
replaced starter Phil Niekro
Ron Cey cracked a two-run
after Manny Sangulllen homer to back up Tommy
singled and got two outs John's first complete game in
before surrendering singles two years, completing Los
to Richie Hebner and AI Angeles' three-game sweep
Oliver and then Parker's hit. over Montreal. Left-bander
Mets 4-4, Giants 2-1
John,
continuing
his1
Tom Seaver pitched a five- comeback after missing all of
hitter for 8 2-3 innings, getting last season following elbow
lasl-&lt;lut relief help from Skip surgery, went the distance
Lockwood in the second for the first time since June 4,
game. Seaver, now 6-5, 1974 to improve his record to
retired the first 16 batters 3-4 and aided his own cause
before Dave Rader's single. with a run-scoring double.
Jerry Grote doubled in one

CAWWELL HONORED - Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College recently honored students chosen for
Who's Who Among Students In American Universities and
Colleges at i.ts Alumni Banquet on May 29. The award is
tnade to CQilege seniors nationwide for outstanding
accomplishments in academic and leadership activities.
The awards were presented by Dr. Paul D. Hines,
President of the College. Among those chosen from this
local area was Robert caldwell, Route I, Reedsville.

Bandages to be made
. Arrangements to roll
bandages for miS.ionaries
before the next meeting were
made when the Hysell Run
Missionary Society met
Tuesday night at the home of
June Dewhilrst.
Prayer and reading of
Psalm I, verse 21 opened the
meeting with the officers
reports being given. Refreshments were served to Mrs.
Audrey Patterson, Mrs. Mary
Neville, Mrs. Shelby Davill,
Mrs. Betty Hutchison, Mrs.

Rose Patterson, Mrs. Pauline
Tillis, Mrs. Bea Dugan, Mrs.
Carrie Moore , and Mrs.
Annie Frank.
ESKEW ILL
Gene Eskew, Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, was admitted to
the St. Mary's Hospital in
Hunington, W. Va. early
~unday morning where the
diagnosis of cerebral
hemorrhage has been made.
· He is in Room 6Q(J3.

·Helen Help

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Schi!'tzinger of westervtlle blows in a wild 14-hit attack
West team iicored a 1-0 South tallied on a throwing that carried- his team to
shutout In the fin;d game of error by Canton Central victory. He went two for four
Lou and had two rbi's.
the 21st East-West All.Star Catholic catcher
The opening contest wu
baseball series Sunday to DiAntonio in the opening
avert an East sweep of the inning. Schirtzinger drew the decided when East got four
most valuable player honors runs in the third In~, to
weekend play.
on
the West team.
end a 1-1 first Inning tie.
Fairmont West's Tom
The
East squad had '!~ken Three more runs In the next
Hawk went six innings and
Delaware's Jay Coffman the opener IH and the prior frame assured the victory.
East had won Saturday's
pitched the final three frames day's game 4-3. DiAntonio got
of the game. The single run most valuable honors In East series opener on a seventh
play on his opening game inning rally that scored two
came
when
Ste~e
runs , the winner coming
when Ed Risdon singled
home Sandy VaUey's Emery
Hunt. The "nightcap was
rained out.
Recent guests of Mr . and grandchildren, and -great·
Mrs. Victor Young, Jr. of great·grandchildren with
Pomeroy 'liave been· her Mrs. Esenhuth who will be 90
grandmother; r.~rs·. Mary in Nove!llber. Mrs. Esenhuth
May Esenhuth, of East returned home Tuesday.
I..iverpool who came in May
especially for her great·
SEASON CAMPSITES '
granddaughter's graduation
from Meigs High School, and
AVAILABLE
their son, Victor Chuck
DAY-WEEKYoung .III, wife, Kathy and
The District II office of the
MONTHLY
their son, Victor IV of In· Watercraft Division of the
Under
New
dianapolls, Ind.
Ohio Department of Natural
Management
On Sunday a patio dinner Resources IS at . Governor 's
Rt . 144
·was served and' joining the Manor, T~rrace Level F!ve,
Hockingsport, Ohio.
group 1were the Young's son· • 1200 E. High St., Sprmgfield
in-law and daughter, Mr. and 45505.
Mrs. Bill Harris , and l ....l!!!lllli!I!!!'IIIIIJ!~fl!
children, Kim, Tim and
Mindy, Middleport; another
daughter, Diana Brewer and
•
son, Charlie, Jr., Chester;
OFFICE
RS: 9:30 to" ' ~ to 5 (CLOSE
Janice and Bradley Young,
AT
NOON
ON
THURS.l - EAST COl!.RT
both at home, and Mrs.
Audrey Young, Pomeroy.
Pictures were taken ·of the
grandchildren, p;reat·

., Us •••

PICNIC ENJOYED
Mr : and Mrs. Kenneth
Wyant, Ken and Tim, entertained recently with a
family picnic. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Lynch,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood, Ronnie Wood, Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Gilliam,
John, Terri a~d Eddie, Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas DeBord,
Tammie · and
Vicky,
Pomeroy; Mrs. James
Haning, Jim, Jeff, Mike and
Chris, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gilliam and Terri,
Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Wood and Carrie,
Rlckenbacker Air Force
Base, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brlckles, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Cadle, Jason and Stacey, Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Raster,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kaye and
Mickey, Springfield, and
Darlene Barrett, Rutland.

.Ybungs entertain guests

+++

RIVERS BEND
CAMPGROUND

Dear Helen:
I had been fond of this man for a long Ume, though I never
considered becoming his lover. Then It happened. I'd been
feeling depressed becauae of my husband's lack of sexual
interest, and we fotmd ouraelves ingether at the right (or
wrong) monient .
We know what we are doing is terribly wrong and
deceitful. Both of us love our spouses, but we can't break off;
our love Is too strong. (Yes, you CAN lovemorethanone.)
I'm In constant fear of being caught. I hate sneaking,
trying to avoid "him" in public because my eyes might give
me away, never being able .to respond to him unlCIIS we're
alone.
But we couldn't break up two marriages. Our mates and
children suspect nothing; In fact, everyone aees us as very
happUy marrted people.
.
I'm not asking advice: I know what! should do, and I know
what I'D probably conUnuedolng. Just a word to thoee who are
tempted: don't start! Unless you want divorce, take your
yearnings out in daydreams. They aren't nearly so painful! Regretful
•

N

'.

Over 150 girls
register for camp
Over 150 Meigs County girl
scouts have registered for the
Big Bend Day Camp to be
;1eld at Camp Kiashuta near
Chester, July 12-16.
Final plans for the camp
program were made at a
meeting of personnel Thursday night with Mrs. Judy
Werry, camp director, and
Mrs. Pat Thoma, · assistant
director and registrar.
II was noted that 18 troops
will be participating in the
camp program and that three
ovemlghta have been planned. .Juniors may stay all
three of the overnights, while
Brownies are limited to one.
The junior scouts will sleep In
tents·while the Brownies wiD
sleep inlllde the cabin.
While much of the time wiD
be spent on outdoor crafts
and hiking around Camp
Kiashuta, several special
acUvitil'!l.have been planned.
On Wednesday Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets will present a
program of folk music on her

..

,-COO( (61.,
252·3181

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

I

)'oo'IISIOiil• TowwrrmulfY·· T~. Cqr• (IJ

r ••, 1'r&lt;lh l'odov'

..

'

-

P.M.

'"

dulcimer and autobarp, Sandi
Rodman wiD work with the
scouts in natural clay, and
there wiD be a demonstration
on wood ecology- and woodworking.
Bicycling, IIC]uare dancing
and Philippine pole dancing
are also planned along with
baaketweavlng and tie dytng.
The final day of camp there
wiD be an award&amp; eeremony ·
and parents wiD be Invited to
attend.
Scouts are to take a nose
bag ltmch on the first and last
day of the camp. Mrs. Pat
Harmon, R.N. of Rt. I,
Rutland wiD be the camp
nurae and the emergency
contact person wiD be Mrs.
Margaret Parker.
Other personnel Include
Mrs.· Belly Lane, transportation coordinator; Mrs.
Carolyn Reeves, finance
director; Mrs. Vera Johnson,
program director; and Mrs.
Delores Gaus, equipment
cbalnnail.

'Tecumseh ' to open

MOIIDAY THROUGH FRIDo\Y

Or•n111 Township
Twp. Cltrk
Meig1 County
R. R. 2
_
Coolville. Ohio 4S723

+++

Dear M.A.:
Only If you are stranded alone on a desert Island!
!cotton to the man who.writes: "My wife and I are 100 per
cent faithful. But we trust each other enough to be "open" In
our associations with friends Of the opposite sex. If she were no
longer attractive to other men, I'd feel sad for her and myself,
and the same goes for me where she's concerned. Our
'harmless flirtatlons' make us much more desirable to each
other. They ·make us feel - CHALLENGED

01 . flll!AAN MAUl

AVE.

Keeping the electricity corning is a big job.
requires planning, new facilitie~, and unfor
Its more than JUSt taking care of the
tunately, a lot of money. · .
. day-to-day problems of supplying power. It's . · ·,. And frankly, we can't do 1t all by our~
also making sure we have enough fuel and · selves,
. . , '· · ·
.
facilities to keep up with the increasing needs
That's why we .need yoll!' ?Oop~ration.
of our area. ·
You can help by usmg electric1ty wtsely. And
And the needs are growing. For instance, by your understanding of the jomt responour electric requirements are almost double sibility for suppl~g our future electric
what they were ten short years ago. Simply neepg. It's a critical ingredient in our power
stated, electric power continues to be called partnership.
·
upon to do more and more things in our
We know that asking you to work
work and in our homes.
with us is asking a lot. But when you get
Keeping up with this increase 'is 'tough.
right down to it, working together is the only
It re~s the best of everyone. It ~so
way. ·

Ohio Power
Working,together is tne only way.
r

history . and culture of. Congressman Clarence E.
southeastern Ohio. The · Mlller and the National Park
program Is Intended to bring Service Invited the gruop to
entertainment and an un- perform In Washington, D.C.
derstandlng of native culture On that trip, Green Parks
to the people. The group performed for more than
travels throughout Ohio and 3,000 people In Lafayette
surrounding areas presenting Park and Dupont Circle. ·
a variety of concerts 1n order
During the swnmer of 1974,
to share with the audience the the Appalachian Green Parks. '
same spirit that the early Project was designated an
Ohio settlers shared with official performing .group of
each other.
the
Ohio · American
The Appalachian Green Revolution Bicentennial
Parks
Project
was Advisory Commission. It has
established in the summer of also received the Governor's
1973 as a joint venture of the Award·for Community Action
Ohio Valley Theater, Inc. and and was recognized and
the Ohio University School of ,honored by the Ohio Hou~ of
Theater with the support of ' Representatl~es.
·
A children s show wiD be
· the Ohio Department of
Na !ural Resources . Since performed at ·t ' 30 In the
then the group has expanded afternoon an!) the evenmg
Its
tour areas to Include the show w1ll begin at 8. I..ibby
MONDAY
schools
slate parks college Willis and Matthew Griffin,
VACATION BIBLE
camp~s
co~unltles. both of Gallipolis, are
SCHOOL
Portland-Racine In the and
fall
of 1973 , members of the Project.
Reorganized Latter Day
Saints Monday through June
18 from 7 to 9:15p.m. Theme
"God's Love is Jesus:•. Bus
se.rVice available. For additional information call 8432711.
.
MEIGS ATHLETIC
RACINE - A family Mrs. Sylvia M. Wolfe,
BooSters Monday, 7:30 p.m. reunion was held June 6 at the Racine; Bob and Kathy
at high school.
home of Mrs. Ethel Sarson. It Meredith and Jason, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs . Tpm Klpps,
WINDING TRAIL Garden was the first time all her Terri and Amy, Porterfield;
Club, 6 p.m. Monday at the children were together since Mrs. Louise Meredith, Toni
home of Mrs. Dollie Hayes. August, 1958.
Preaent were Mr. and Mrs. and John, Belpre; Mrs.
Members are to take a
Brenda Pettit and Jamie, Mr.
·covered dish. ·Mrs. Wilma Paul Justis, Jr. and Kerry and Mrs. William Justis and
Ten'ell will give the program Lynn, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. David, Mrs. Juanita Justis,
on gardening without poisons Wheeler Sarson, Grandview, all of Middleport; Mr . and
and there will be a tour of the Mo.; Mrs. Ethel E. Adkins Mrs. Lewis Sarson, Letart
flower garden of Mrs. Dora and Wanda Lea, Racine; Falls; Barbara Sarson an!l
Heaton.
Tom Lane, Racine; Mrs.
TUESDAY '
Cheryl Milliron, Letart Falls;
GRouP
united
Mr. and Mrs. Rlcliard Ours,
Presbyterian Church,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolfe and
Middleport, 7:30 Tuesday at '
rt
children, Racine; Drusilla,
the home of Mrs. William
Tammy and I..inda Hart, New
Morris. Mrs. Robert WoodHaven, W. Va.; Connie.
ward will be Mrs. Morris' co. ·
6 •
Milliron and Sammy Sarson,
hoetess. Mrs. ·Myron Miller,
Rllclne; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
devotional leader. Members
"Bicentennial Babies" Sarson of Scottown.
to take their Bible study born at Holzer Medical
books.
Center during 1976 will be
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter, receiving Bicentennial Birth
American Cancer Society Notices to commemorate the
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday historic year In which they
at headquarters, S. tbtrd were born.
for
Ave;, Middleport. Regular
These.certlflcates prepared
·'
service station
and new members Invited. by the hospital are printed In
owners
RACINE MASONIC Lodge red, white and blue, and are
44!1 Tuesday 7 p.m. Work In signed by James A. Rhodes,
Nalloo.OIIo 11111 tolltf··
master mason degree. All Governor of Ohio, Hugh P.
master masons are Invited. Klrkel, Executive . Vice
";.President and the attendfng
WEDNESDAY
*'-0001--Mphysician for the baby's
ROSE GARDEN CLUB birth.
... Gllrtd bJ f' I"
annual picnic Wednesday at
Each child born at Holzer
....., ot•trlll ht ......
the home of Mrs. Floyd Stout, Medical Center during the
. . . wltlf CO'WIIf'. . . . . . . .
5 p.m. for members and their year will be receiving . the
Collo
rlr
.....
-lo.
famllles.
certificates In the mail as
PAST PRESIDENTS, they are prepared. From
American Legion Auxiliary, January through May nearly
IMW. MAIN
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 550 babies were born and thus
,.m.,.y,O.
Wednesday at the home o! eligible to receive the special
Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mld- birth notice. By december an
dl•nort.
estimated 1,000 certificates
BOSWORTH Council 48, will be Issued.
Royal and Select Masters will
In future years these
bave a apeclal meeting at 7 p. certificates wiD become a
. _ . . . . . 1_ _ _
m. Wednesday at the lreaJured memento of the
. _ . . : ........ Ollie
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. ]llrth of a baby during the
The royal and lielect master nation's 200th anniversary .
degree will be conferred.

••'
••

••

The '76 season of
"Tecumseh!," outdoor
drama, gets off with a
"bang" Monday, June 21 ...
And that's no joke. Five new
rifles are being added to the
drama's formidable arsenal
of 30 fllnUocke and three
cannons. New staging
techniques wtll surround the
Bicentennial audience with
the sights and sounds of the
Indian wars. In one batUe
~ene alone over 90 actors
aild a herd of horaes will
perform on the drama's 12
huge stages. But the new
"bang'' of "Tecumaeh!" goes
much . deeper than tbe
drama's combat scenes.
Headlining the drama's ,
company and crew .of 130 ·11 ·
Mel Cobb, the noted
televlslon and stage actor .
who created the role of .
TeCumseh In 187:1-74. Cobb II
supported by beaatlful
Engllah aclnlll, Jane Ridley
aa Rebecca Galloway. "Work
has been waderway for 10
montha on reblocking
characten In scenes and
tightening the script of tbe
drama," according to
producer-director "Rusty"
Mundell, "We have cut
hundreda of wordl from the
scriP! In ordlr lo live the flow

l

of action a faster pace. We
are looking forward to a more
engagingandgrlpplngdrama
than we have ever been able
to give OlD' audience."
Another new "bang" In
"Tecumaeh!" '76 Is vlalble
from the moment you enter
the amphitheatre. The
drama 'a huge arllflclal cUffs
and rock formations have ·
been enlarged by nearly 30
percent. OVer 740 board feet
of de1111e-core Polyurethane
foam have ,gone Into the
construe ton of the huge new
formations. This marks the .
first large acale uaea of this
dense-core foam In the
nation. Robert Ramsey,
Plastics and Set Dealgn
speclalllt from Montevallo,
Alabama, de•laned and
IUPfrVIIed conslrucUon of
the nwnmoth addlUona.
"Tecumaeh!" II the faatest
growing of America's 52
outdoor dramas, ahowlng
nearly 90 percent attendance
Increase between its '73 and
'75 seaaona. Eighty lliousand
persona are expected to at·
tend the drama this summer.
For Information call toll free:
800-282·2015 or write :
"Tecumaeh!," P. 0. 8ol 73,
ChUilcothe, Ohio 45801.
'

''

Social
Calendar

Give Father a
pair of boat
shoes
ltluroup 011)

Navy or whlfe

'6 •50

heritage house

ANOTHER GOOD BUY
FROM
BAKER'S BUDGET SHOP

·

SlJSPECl' ARRAJGNED
CL.EVELAND (UP!.)
Paul H. Hlxen, 38, Sheffield,
ohio, charged in the Jline 3
robbery of the ~range
branch of the -Elyria Savings
and Trust National Bank, was
arraigned today before a
federal magistrate.
Hlxen 's arrest
was
announced Saturday by the
FBI, which said some of the
money taken In the heist was
recovered.

Concert in the park planned .

. Dear Helen :
You said the married woman who Is tempted toward an
affair should "settle for a harmless fllrtatlon ."
Since when is flirtation "harmless'? Every time my wife
attracts other men with what she calls meaningless skirting
aroun~. I feel rejected. Awoman's interest should be directec:J
only toward her mate. - MINE AWNE

FOil PRICES CAU COWCT

COLlNEIUS, CJilO 43205

THREE MEMBERS of the Appalachian Green Parks Project company: John Koetz,
Ross Moore, Alex Lullnan.

'

Marie Walker a family In
Nevada, Mrs. Adams, one In
Haiti, and Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm, a family In India.
Mrs . Yost gave the
program on aervlce and Mn.
Barbara Gheen sang a verse
of "Make Me a Blessing."
Mrs. Adams assisted by Mrs.
Gheen and Mrs. Mary L.
Beegle aerved refreshmenta.

MEETING SET
A county-wide prayer
meeting has been aet for June
20at 2p. m. at White's Chapel
Church by the leader, Glen
Bissell.

The Appalachian Green
Parks Project will present a
concert In the Gallipolis City
Park at 1:30p.m. on June 21.
The Project Is composed of
musicians, singers and actors
who, with the use of
tradl tiona! Appalachian
lruttruments, help to preserve
the herl tage of Appalachian
music and folklore.
Dear Regretful:
The program preaented by
You didn't ask advice, so I'll simply ask a question&lt;Would the Appalachian Green Parks
you he as drawn.to this other man If your husband ~ere more. Pr~ject Is ]lased on the
attentive. I'd guess what you feel isn't so much "love" but the
need for love.-'andyou mightflnd It at home If you'd work oo
the problem together, perhaps with the help of a CQunaelor. -

and suffered the loss for the
Orioles - now in fifth place,
eight games out of first place.
The Cleveland Indians
swept the Chicago White Sox,
6-5 and 9-7; the california
Angels defeated the Detroit ·
Tigers, 10-7: the Texas
Rangers beat the New York
Yankees, 7-1 ; the Boston Red
Sox topped the Mimesota
Twins, 10-2, and the ~
Milwaukee Brewers shaded
the Oakland A's, &gt;4, in other

RIVIERE CENTER 949 t

By Helen Bottel

Dear Joe:
Maybe If you came halfway toward your wife's liberation,
you'd discover it Isn't so frightening after all - especlaUy If
she came halfway back toward being a BiKlaUed "&amp;eX object."
-H.

Indians win double bill
in two runs in the seventh
inning. Dave Roberts was the
loser.
Rangers 7, Yankees I
Mike Hargrove hit a threer.un .homer and Jim
Umbarger pitched a fivehitter for his seventh win for
the Rangers, who dealt the
Yankees' Jim Hunter his
sixth setback against seven
victories. Umbarger walked
three and struck out three
enroute to his sixth complete
AL ~ames .
game. Hunter gave up seven
Indians 8-9, White Sox 5-1
· earned runs in a game for
Homers by Rico Carty and only the third time in his
Frank Duffy paced an 11-hit career.
Red Sox 10, TwlDB 2
Cleveland attack which
enabled Pat Dobson to win his
Steve Dillard, Denny
seventh game in the opener at Doyle, Jim Rice and Carlton
Cleveland. Carty came back Fisk each singled home a run
in the second game to deliver in a sevenrun, third inning for
a pinch-hit, bases-loaded the Red Sox. Rick Jones,
double and Larvell Blanks hit inaking his first major league
a two-run triple in a six-run start, went the distance
eighth inning rally. Reliever although touched for nine
Jim Kern won hls .slxth game hits. Jim Hughes lost his
in the nightcap. Bart Johnson seventh game against two
and Clay Carroll were the ,. wins1or the Twins.
losers for the WhiteSox.
, :..:Ptewers 5, A's 4
Angels 10 Tigers 7
··~,;11m Slaton allowed five hits
Orlando 'Alvarez and Ron fn 8 1-3 innings and won his
Jackson each hit a homer and eighth game for the Brewers
a double to lead \he Angels' with the ninth-inning relief of
12-hit attack, which brought Bill Castro. Slaton, Luis Ti~nt
Don KirkWood his second and Frank Tanana are tied
victory. Four other Angels for the AL lead in victories.
also hit doubles, including Sixto Lezcano had three hits .
Tommy Davis who knocked for the Brewers.

RACINE- Mu. Mary Kay
Yoet reported on the recent
Ohio . Baptist Women's
Convention recently In
Columbus at the Thursday
ntcht meeUng of the Ruth
Mlaalonary Circle of the
Racine Firat Baptlst Church.
Mrs. Emma Adams hoeted
the meeting at her borne.
Included In her report on
the
conventlon
were
missionary activities of Ohio
Baptista. She had letters from
missionaries which were
read by members Including
Mrs. Nondus Hendricks,
from a family In Alaska, Mrs.

He'a Got lbe Uberated ·Blue. ...
Dear Helen:
For 30 years my wife and I had a beautiful marriage. We
raised four ldds who aU turned out weD, aU collet!e educated.
Six years ago my wife became "liberated." We bave both
been mllerable ever since. But she is happier being mllerable
and a "liberated person" than being a wife and "sex object."
Maybe I'm nuts. - JOE

H

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
George Brett, the Kansas
City Royals' star third baseman, has an easy explanation
for his impressive .351
batting
average
and
outstanding all-around
batting statistics.
••von must remember,''
Brett said Sunday ar.ter
leading Ute Royals to an 8-4
· victory that extended the
Baltimore Orioles ' los ing
streak to nine games, "that I
hit bet ween Amos Otis and
John Mayberry. The pitchers
can't afford to walk me. They
have to throw me str ikes."
Brett homered, triple and
doubled and drove in three
runs to lead Kansas City 's 11hit attack and Dennis
Leonard pitched a ninehitter, with nine strikeouts,
for his sixth win as the Royals
maintained their three-game
lead in the American
League's Western Division.
Brett hit a two-run triple in
the first inning, his third
homer of the season in the
third inning and doubled and
scored on a double by Jim
Wohlford in the fifth inning.
Mike Flanagan was ripped
for five runs in 2 1-3 innings

Convention report heard

SOFA
BEDS

·Whdll pay you .the

intetest

on your savings?

Family has reunion

n.

B'teente nnta. I
bi h. nottces
•
to be aiv.en

__
---....._....
......,_."'"...
.,.._.

'"''""""--

··'*·
No-...,.

P. J~ PAII!Y
P1L 912-2311

__ _

·~
Q .............
... -...·

no mattefwhat you~ looking
for in savings or investment
certificates...
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

5~. 5:J:~%

s~~.%

• Pa~t~l l

Ray E. Ad8Jils, t;'orest T.
Adam' .to Clyde A. Adams,
Ullle M. Adams, 2 acres,
OUve.
Uzzle McKnight, dec. to
Otho McKntcht, Cert. for
trans., Columbia.
UWe B. Ledlle to Larry B.
Haynes·, Paula J, Haynes,
Parcels, Rutland.
Amedee L. Lefebre,
Racheal L. Lefebre to Donna
Rae Spencer, Lot, PomerOy.
·William Qulvey to David
Howard BarnhOUJe, I acre, 5
acres, Bedford.
Rachel Simon to Andrea L.
Schmidt, Joaeph W. Mariano,
28'1. acres, Scipio.
,.

II
I

II

I

GARMENTS

••

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

All

G.::~,:~ts

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

II
~II

Durttrlr • M&lt;lljnum $) ,00000

3-VEAR CERTIFICATE

6~.

6~~.%

Rll(

onrU,rly • Minimum 11 .oouo

UIF

P1y1~ lt

1 Pl~lllt ~UiriiiiW 1 ll!lnlllliHII SI.OOQ DO

• Ptyl-11 Owt;rl, • Minhn111 I I .OGO 00

4·YEAR CERTIFICATE

6•YEAR CERTIFICATE

And In tddlll~n to all · t~l• ... monltltw or

7:~.%

7~~.%

lour, or al• 1..1 ctrtln"tn. l~ternt pty·
tbll monlllly 11 You llttlrt on ct111f1CI1tt
with lttt am~unt ul l$.1)00.00 01 mOlt,

• 'tytllll Qurtuly •

Jl l ~ lmwm

11 ,000.00

• hyt.re Ourtttly •

Jll~ll•umli . DOO.OO

~UIIIUIY

IMOJN .. , paid

Of\

0111, IWD, IIHM,

Ftdlftl 1\~V~JitliDrtl !~Iff I IUI!IItn11tl
,wrt-; for prfmlturt wlthdrtwtl ol cerllll·
c111 run~t .

you'll find it at

OhioValley Batll&lt;.

I

II ltll'•t•
,.,,.
I

I

•

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

?..

I

For Your Winter

s.'*. '

'.

UTE

.I ---------·· ----------..I

Meigs
Property I~
Transfers I

• Pay;'h Q~llierll 1 lll r ~ • mum $1 ,00D 00

Darl' !

1·YEAR CEATIF.ICATE

~

I

'

Cen~gew•~d

s~~.%

'

u,n

UTE

•

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

Why settle for less than the best? ·
When it comes to yu ur savings, you
want a fair return , the highest le·
ga ily possible, with a guaran tee of
safety for your funds, and access1bility to these funds

-

Qn reasonable notice of wfthdrawat .
This i! exactly what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their de·
positors. No wonder savings deposits ~ntin~e to be at an
all-t1me high.

'

~ OhioValley Bank
Ga tllpollll , Ohio

Member FDIC

at
I ROBINSON'S CLEANERS I
L:.~!~!S.. ,_____ .:_ __~~~ 0!_! L--""':'"----------,.---:------:;=-"-...;__-;-..J
.
:rhe leading savings plans are

the leading savings bank.

�--

5- The Deily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pcmeroy, 0., Mlllday, JW!e 1~,18'11 ·

4- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, June 14, 1976

East Stars win 2 of 3

Jones blanks Phillies
By JACK SAUNDERS
UP! Sports Writer
Randy Jones pitched two
teams Into the National
League pennant race Sunday.
Jones, who's setting the
Natlooal League ablaze in a
fierce determination to earn
the NL Cy Young award that
eluded him last year, earned
his 12th victory Sunday with a
six-hit, first game~ decillion
over one of his favorite
opponents, the Philadelphia

PhUiles.
· Combined with another
standout performance by
Butch Metzger, who picked
up his seventh save with 2 1-3
innings of one-hit scoreless
relief in the Pactres' 4-3
second-game victory , the
Padres hal ted a three-game
losing streak with a
doubleheader sweep of the
Phlls. This put the Padres,
the NL West's traditional
doormat, only five games
behind the division-leading
Cincinnati Reds.
The Phils' double loss also
did the Pittsburgh Pirates a
big favor . The Pirates
completed a three-game
sweep of the Atlanta Braves
with a 6-5 victory and picked
up.l'k games on Philadelphia
to within seven games of the
Phillies in the NL East race.
Two of Jones' three
shutouts this season have
come against the Phils, the
only times Philadelphia has
failed to score all season.
No one in the major leagues
is within three victories of the

San Diego left-bander, who run, Del Unser doubled in two
had a 20-12 record and and Wayne Garrett singled
league-leading 2.24 earned 1 home the fourth run. In the
run average In 1975. This year first game John Milner's linehe's a phenomenal 12-2 and ! drive single scored two
his ERA is again impressive, unearned runs and Grote
2.10.
later homered.
Elsewhere Sunday, in addi- Cards ~ ll, Red&amp; 4-9
ti.on to Pittsburgh's victory,
Don Kessinger and Lou
New York captured a double- Brock each hit their first
header from San Francisco, home runs of the season and
4-2 and 4-1, St. Louis split two Mike Tyson added two triples
games with Cincinnati, losing and a double to account for
W then winning 12-9, Chicago eight rbi In the hlgh«:orlng
beat Houston 8-3 and Los se&lt;:ond game to give St. Louis
Angeles downed Montreal 6-3. a split of the d.oubleheader.
In the American League, . Bob Bailey hit a two-run
Cleveland
took
a homer and Fred Norman and
doubleheader from Chicago, Will McEnaney learned up on
6-5 and 9-7, Texas whipped .an eight-hitter In Cincinnati's
New York 7-1, California first-game shutout.
outlasted Detroit 10-7, Boston Cubs 8 Astros 3
trounced Minnesota 10-2,
Manny TrUlo doubled home
Kansas City defeated three runs to break a 2-2 tie
Baltimore 8-4 and Milwaukee and give Chicago its fourth
edged Oakland &gt;4 .
straight win. Ray Burris
Pirates 6 Braves 5
picked up his third win
Dave Par·ker 's ·two-out, against eight losses, and Paul
two-run triple off reliever Reuschel finished up for his
Max Leon climaxed a three- second save.
run 9th inning rally. Leon Dodgers 8 Astros 3
replaced starter Phil Niekro
Ron Cey cracked a two-run
after Manny Sangulllen homer to back up Tommy
singled and got two outs John's first complete game in
before surrendering singles two years, completing Los
to Richie Hebner and AI Angeles' three-game sweep
Oliver and then Parker's hit. over Montreal. Left-bander
Mets 4-4, Giants 2-1
John,
continuing
his1
Tom Seaver pitched a five- comeback after missing all of
hitter for 8 2-3 innings, getting last season following elbow
lasl-&lt;lut relief help from Skip surgery, went the distance
Lockwood in the second for the first time since June 4,
game. Seaver, now 6-5, 1974 to improve his record to
retired the first 16 batters 3-4 and aided his own cause
before Dave Rader's single. with a run-scoring double.
Jerry Grote doubled in one

CAWWELL HONORED - Rio Grande CollegeCommunity College recently honored students chosen for
Who's Who Among Students In American Universities and
Colleges at i.ts Alumni Banquet on May 29. The award is
tnade to CQilege seniors nationwide for outstanding
accomplishments in academic and leadership activities.
The awards were presented by Dr. Paul D. Hines,
President of the College. Among those chosen from this
local area was Robert caldwell, Route I, Reedsville.

Bandages to be made
. Arrangements to roll
bandages for miS.ionaries
before the next meeting were
made when the Hysell Run
Missionary Society met
Tuesday night at the home of
June Dewhilrst.
Prayer and reading of
Psalm I, verse 21 opened the
meeting with the officers
reports being given. Refreshments were served to Mrs.
Audrey Patterson, Mrs. Mary
Neville, Mrs. Shelby Davill,
Mrs. Betty Hutchison, Mrs.

Rose Patterson, Mrs. Pauline
Tillis, Mrs. Bea Dugan, Mrs.
Carrie Moore , and Mrs.
Annie Frank.
ESKEW ILL
Gene Eskew, Lincoln Hill,
Pomeroy, was admitted to
the St. Mary's Hospital in
Hunington, W. Va. early
~unday morning where the
diagnosis of cerebral
hemorrhage has been made.
· He is in Room 6Q(J3.

·Helen Help

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Schi!'tzinger of westervtlle blows in a wild 14-hit attack
West team iicored a 1-0 South tallied on a throwing that carried- his team to
shutout In the fin;d game of error by Canton Central victory. He went two for four
Lou and had two rbi's.
the 21st East-West All.Star Catholic catcher
The opening contest wu
baseball series Sunday to DiAntonio in the opening
avert an East sweep of the inning. Schirtzinger drew the decided when East got four
most valuable player honors runs in the third In~, to
weekend play.
on
the West team.
end a 1-1 first Inning tie.
Fairmont West's Tom
The
East squad had '!~ken Three more runs In the next
Hawk went six innings and
Delaware's Jay Coffman the opener IH and the prior frame assured the victory.
East had won Saturday's
pitched the final three frames day's game 4-3. DiAntonio got
of the game. The single run most valuable honors In East series opener on a seventh
play on his opening game inning rally that scored two
came
when
Ste~e
runs , the winner coming
when Ed Risdon singled
home Sandy VaUey's Emery
Hunt. The "nightcap was
rained out.
Recent guests of Mr . and grandchildren, and -great·
Mrs. Victor Young, Jr. of great·grandchildren with
Pomeroy 'liave been· her Mrs. Esenhuth who will be 90
grandmother; r.~rs·. Mary in Nove!llber. Mrs. Esenhuth
May Esenhuth, of East returned home Tuesday.
I..iverpool who came in May
especially for her great·
SEASON CAMPSITES '
granddaughter's graduation
from Meigs High School, and
AVAILABLE
their son, Victor Chuck
DAY-WEEKYoung .III, wife, Kathy and
The District II office of the
MONTHLY
their son, Victor IV of In· Watercraft Division of the
Under
New
dianapolls, Ind.
Ohio Department of Natural
Management
On Sunday a patio dinner Resources IS at . Governor 's
Rt . 144
·was served and' joining the Manor, T~rrace Level F!ve,
Hockingsport, Ohio.
group 1were the Young's son· • 1200 E. High St., Sprmgfield
in-law and daughter, Mr. and 45505.
Mrs. Bill Harris , and l ....l!!!lllli!I!!!'IIIIIJ!~fl!
children, Kim, Tim and
Mindy, Middleport; another
daughter, Diana Brewer and
•
son, Charlie, Jr., Chester;
OFFICE
RS: 9:30 to" ' ~ to 5 (CLOSE
Janice and Bradley Young,
AT
NOON
ON
THURS.l - EAST COl!.RT
both at home, and Mrs.
Audrey Young, Pomeroy.
Pictures were taken ·of the
grandchildren, p;reat·

., Us •••

PICNIC ENJOYED
Mr : and Mrs. Kenneth
Wyant, Ken and Tim, entertained recently with a
family picnic. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Lynch,
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood, Ronnie Wood, Mr.
and Mrs. Luther Gilliam,
John, Terri a~d Eddie, Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas DeBord,
Tammie · and
Vicky,
Pomeroy; Mrs. James
Haning, Jim, Jeff, Mike and
Chris, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gilliam and Terri,
Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Wood and Carrie,
Rlckenbacker Air Force
Base, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brlckles, Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Cadle, Jason and Stacey, Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Raster,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kaye and
Mickey, Springfield, and
Darlene Barrett, Rutland.

.Ybungs entertain guests

+++

RIVERS BEND
CAMPGROUND

Dear Helen:
I had been fond of this man for a long Ume, though I never
considered becoming his lover. Then It happened. I'd been
feeling depressed becauae of my husband's lack of sexual
interest, and we fotmd ouraelves ingether at the right (or
wrong) monient .
We know what we are doing is terribly wrong and
deceitful. Both of us love our spouses, but we can't break off;
our love Is too strong. (Yes, you CAN lovemorethanone.)
I'm In constant fear of being caught. I hate sneaking,
trying to avoid "him" in public because my eyes might give
me away, never being able .to respond to him unlCIIS we're
alone.
But we couldn't break up two marriages. Our mates and
children suspect nothing; In fact, everyone aees us as very
happUy marrted people.
.
I'm not asking advice: I know what! should do, and I know
what I'D probably conUnuedolng. Just a word to thoee who are
tempted: don't start! Unless you want divorce, take your
yearnings out in daydreams. They aren't nearly so painful! Regretful
•

N

'.

Over 150 girls
register for camp
Over 150 Meigs County girl
scouts have registered for the
Big Bend Day Camp to be
;1eld at Camp Kiashuta near
Chester, July 12-16.
Final plans for the camp
program were made at a
meeting of personnel Thursday night with Mrs. Judy
Werry, camp director, and
Mrs. Pat Thoma, · assistant
director and registrar.
II was noted that 18 troops
will be participating in the
camp program and that three
ovemlghta have been planned. .Juniors may stay all
three of the overnights, while
Brownies are limited to one.
The junior scouts will sleep In
tents·while the Brownies wiD
sleep inlllde the cabin.
While much of the time wiD
be spent on outdoor crafts
and hiking around Camp
Kiashuta, several special
acUvitil'!l.have been planned.
On Wednesday Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets will present a
program of folk music on her

..

,-COO( (61.,
252·3181

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

I

)'oo'IISIOiil• TowwrrmulfY·· T~. Cqr• (IJ

r ••, 1'r&lt;lh l'odov'

..

'

-

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'"

dulcimer and autobarp, Sandi
Rodman wiD work with the
scouts in natural clay, and
there wiD be a demonstration
on wood ecology- and woodworking.
Bicycling, IIC]uare dancing
and Philippine pole dancing
are also planned along with
baaketweavlng and tie dytng.
The final day of camp there
wiD be an award&amp; eeremony ·
and parents wiD be Invited to
attend.
Scouts are to take a nose
bag ltmch on the first and last
day of the camp. Mrs. Pat
Harmon, R.N. of Rt. I,
Rutland wiD be the camp
nurae and the emergency
contact person wiD be Mrs.
Margaret Parker.
Other personnel Include
Mrs.· Belly Lane, transportation coordinator; Mrs.
Carolyn Reeves, finance
director; Mrs. Vera Johnson,
program director; and Mrs.
Delores Gaus, equipment
cbalnnail.

'Tecumseh ' to open

MOIIDAY THROUGH FRIDo\Y

Or•n111 Township
Twp. Cltrk
Meig1 County
R. R. 2
_
Coolville. Ohio 4S723

+++

Dear M.A.:
Only If you are stranded alone on a desert Island!
!cotton to the man who.writes: "My wife and I are 100 per
cent faithful. But we trust each other enough to be "open" In
our associations with friends Of the opposite sex. If she were no
longer attractive to other men, I'd feel sad for her and myself,
and the same goes for me where she's concerned. Our
'harmless flirtatlons' make us much more desirable to each
other. They ·make us feel - CHALLENGED

01 . flll!AAN MAUl

AVE.

Keeping the electricity corning is a big job.
requires planning, new facilitie~, and unfor
Its more than JUSt taking care of the
tunately, a lot of money. · .
. day-to-day problems of supplying power. It's . · ·,. And frankly, we can't do 1t all by our~
also making sure we have enough fuel and · selves,
. . , '· · ·
.
facilities to keep up with the increasing needs
That's why we .need yoll!' ?Oop~ration.
of our area. ·
You can help by usmg electric1ty wtsely. And
And the needs are growing. For instance, by your understanding of the jomt responour electric requirements are almost double sibility for suppl~g our future electric
what they were ten short years ago. Simply neepg. It's a critical ingredient in our power
stated, electric power continues to be called partnership.
·
upon to do more and more things in our
We know that asking you to work
work and in our homes.
with us is asking a lot. But when you get
Keeping up with this increase 'is 'tough.
right down to it, working together is the only
It re~s the best of everyone. It ~so
way. ·

Ohio Power
Working,together is tne only way.
r

history . and culture of. Congressman Clarence E.
southeastern Ohio. The · Mlller and the National Park
program Is Intended to bring Service Invited the gruop to
entertainment and an un- perform In Washington, D.C.
derstandlng of native culture On that trip, Green Parks
to the people. The group performed for more than
travels throughout Ohio and 3,000 people In Lafayette
surrounding areas presenting Park and Dupont Circle. ·
a variety of concerts 1n order
During the swnmer of 1974,
to share with the audience the the Appalachian Green Parks. '
same spirit that the early Project was designated an
Ohio settlers shared with official performing .group of
each other.
the
Ohio · American
The Appalachian Green Revolution Bicentennial
Parks
Project
was Advisory Commission. It has
established in the summer of also received the Governor's
1973 as a joint venture of the Award·for Community Action
Ohio Valley Theater, Inc. and and was recognized and
the Ohio University School of ,honored by the Ohio Hou~ of
Theater with the support of ' Representatl~es.
·
A children s show wiD be
· the Ohio Department of
Na !ural Resources . Since performed at ·t ' 30 In the
then the group has expanded afternoon an!) the evenmg
Its
tour areas to Include the show w1ll begin at 8. I..ibby
MONDAY
schools
slate parks college Willis and Matthew Griffin,
VACATION BIBLE
camp~s
co~unltles. both of Gallipolis, are
SCHOOL
Portland-Racine In the and
fall
of 1973 , members of the Project.
Reorganized Latter Day
Saints Monday through June
18 from 7 to 9:15p.m. Theme
"God's Love is Jesus:•. Bus
se.rVice available. For additional information call 8432711.
.
MEIGS ATHLETIC
RACINE - A family Mrs. Sylvia M. Wolfe,
BooSters Monday, 7:30 p.m. reunion was held June 6 at the Racine; Bob and Kathy
at high school.
home of Mrs. Ethel Sarson. It Meredith and Jason, Belpre;
Mr. and Mrs . Tpm Klpps,
WINDING TRAIL Garden was the first time all her Terri and Amy, Porterfield;
Club, 6 p.m. Monday at the children were together since Mrs. Louise Meredith, Toni
home of Mrs. Dollie Hayes. August, 1958.
Preaent were Mr. and Mrs. and John, Belpre; Mrs.
Members are to take a
Brenda Pettit and Jamie, Mr.
·covered dish. ·Mrs. Wilma Paul Justis, Jr. and Kerry and Mrs. William Justis and
Ten'ell will give the program Lynn, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. David, Mrs. Juanita Justis,
on gardening without poisons Wheeler Sarson, Grandview, all of Middleport; Mr . and
and there will be a tour of the Mo.; Mrs. Ethel E. Adkins Mrs. Lewis Sarson, Letart
flower garden of Mrs. Dora and Wanda Lea, Racine; Falls; Barbara Sarson an!l
Heaton.
Tom Lane, Racine; Mrs.
TUESDAY '
Cheryl Milliron, Letart Falls;
GRouP
united
Mr. and Mrs. Rlcliard Ours,
Presbyterian Church,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolfe and
Middleport, 7:30 Tuesday at '
rt
children, Racine; Drusilla,
the home of Mrs. William
Tammy and I..inda Hart, New
Morris. Mrs. Robert WoodHaven, W. Va.; Connie.
ward will be Mrs. Morris' co. ·
6 •
Milliron and Sammy Sarson,
hoetess. Mrs. ·Myron Miller,
Rllclne; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
devotional leader. Members
"Bicentennial Babies" Sarson of Scottown.
to take their Bible study born at Holzer Medical
books.
Center during 1976 will be
MEIGS COUNTY Chapter, receiving Bicentennial Birth
American Cancer Society Notices to commemorate the
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday historic year In which they
at headquarters, S. tbtrd were born.
for
Ave;, Middleport. Regular
These.certlflcates prepared
·'
service station
and new members Invited. by the hospital are printed In
owners
RACINE MASONIC Lodge red, white and blue, and are
44!1 Tuesday 7 p.m. Work In signed by James A. Rhodes,
Nalloo.OIIo 11111 tolltf··
master mason degree. All Governor of Ohio, Hugh P.
master masons are Invited. Klrkel, Executive . Vice
";.President and the attendfng
WEDNESDAY
*'-0001--Mphysician for the baby's
ROSE GARDEN CLUB birth.
... Gllrtd bJ f' I"
annual picnic Wednesday at
Each child born at Holzer
....., ot•trlll ht ......
the home of Mrs. Floyd Stout, Medical Center during the
. . . wltlf CO'WIIf'. . . . . . . .
5 p.m. for members and their year will be receiving . the
Collo
rlr
.....
-lo.
famllles.
certificates In the mail as
PAST PRESIDENTS, they are prepared. From
American Legion Auxiliary, January through May nearly
IMW. MAIN
Drew Webster Post 39, 7:30 550 babies were born and thus
,.m.,.y,O.
Wednesday at the home o! eligible to receive the special
Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mld- birth notice. By december an
dl•nort.
estimated 1,000 certificates
BOSWORTH Council 48, will be Issued.
Royal and Select Masters will
In future years these
bave a apeclal meeting at 7 p. certificates wiD become a
. _ . . . . . 1_ _ _
m. Wednesday at the lreaJured memento of the
. _ . . : ........ Ollie
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. ]llrth of a baby during the
The royal and lielect master nation's 200th anniversary .
degree will be conferred.

••'
••

••

The '76 season of
"Tecumseh!," outdoor
drama, gets off with a
"bang" Monday, June 21 ...
And that's no joke. Five new
rifles are being added to the
drama's formidable arsenal
of 30 fllnUocke and three
cannons. New staging
techniques wtll surround the
Bicentennial audience with
the sights and sounds of the
Indian wars. In one batUe
~ene alone over 90 actors
aild a herd of horaes will
perform on the drama's 12
huge stages. But the new
"bang'' of "Tecumaeh!" goes
much . deeper than tbe
drama's combat scenes.
Headlining the drama's ,
company and crew .of 130 ·11 ·
Mel Cobb, the noted
televlslon and stage actor .
who created the role of .
TeCumseh In 187:1-74. Cobb II
supported by beaatlful
Engllah aclnlll, Jane Ridley
aa Rebecca Galloway. "Work
has been waderway for 10
montha on reblocking
characten In scenes and
tightening the script of tbe
drama," according to
producer-director "Rusty"
Mundell, "We have cut
hundreda of wordl from the
scriP! In ordlr lo live the flow

l

of action a faster pace. We
are looking forward to a more
engagingandgrlpplngdrama
than we have ever been able
to give OlD' audience."
Another new "bang" In
"Tecumaeh!" '76 Is vlalble
from the moment you enter
the amphitheatre. The
drama 'a huge arllflclal cUffs
and rock formations have ·
been enlarged by nearly 30
percent. OVer 740 board feet
of de1111e-core Polyurethane
foam have ,gone Into the
construe ton of the huge new
formations. This marks the .
first large acale uaea of this
dense-core foam In the
nation. Robert Ramsey,
Plastics and Set Dealgn
speclalllt from Montevallo,
Alabama, de•laned and
IUPfrVIIed conslrucUon of
the nwnmoth addlUona.
"Tecumaeh!" II the faatest
growing of America's 52
outdoor dramas, ahowlng
nearly 90 percent attendance
Increase between its '73 and
'75 seaaona. Eighty lliousand
persona are expected to at·
tend the drama this summer.
For Information call toll free:
800-282·2015 or write :
"Tecumaeh!," P. 0. 8ol 73,
ChUilcothe, Ohio 45801.
'

''

Social
Calendar

Give Father a
pair of boat
shoes
ltluroup 011)

Navy or whlfe

'6 •50

heritage house

ANOTHER GOOD BUY
FROM
BAKER'S BUDGET SHOP

·

SlJSPECl' ARRAJGNED
CL.EVELAND (UP!.)
Paul H. Hlxen, 38, Sheffield,
ohio, charged in the Jline 3
robbery of the ~range
branch of the -Elyria Savings
and Trust National Bank, was
arraigned today before a
federal magistrate.
Hlxen 's arrest
was
announced Saturday by the
FBI, which said some of the
money taken In the heist was
recovered.

Concert in the park planned .

. Dear Helen :
You said the married woman who Is tempted toward an
affair should "settle for a harmless fllrtatlon ."
Since when is flirtation "harmless'? Every time my wife
attracts other men with what she calls meaningless skirting
aroun~. I feel rejected. Awoman's interest should be directec:J
only toward her mate. - MINE AWNE

FOil PRICES CAU COWCT

COLlNEIUS, CJilO 43205

THREE MEMBERS of the Appalachian Green Parks Project company: John Koetz,
Ross Moore, Alex Lullnan.

'

Marie Walker a family In
Nevada, Mrs. Adams, one In
Haiti, and Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm, a family In India.
Mrs . Yost gave the
program on aervlce and Mn.
Barbara Gheen sang a verse
of "Make Me a Blessing."
Mrs. Adams assisted by Mrs.
Gheen and Mrs. Mary L.
Beegle aerved refreshmenta.

MEETING SET
A county-wide prayer
meeting has been aet for June
20at 2p. m. at White's Chapel
Church by the leader, Glen
Bissell.

The Appalachian Green
Parks Project will present a
concert In the Gallipolis City
Park at 1:30p.m. on June 21.
The Project Is composed of
musicians, singers and actors
who, with the use of
tradl tiona! Appalachian
lruttruments, help to preserve
the herl tage of Appalachian
music and folklore.
Dear Regretful:
The program preaented by
You didn't ask advice, so I'll simply ask a question&lt;Would the Appalachian Green Parks
you he as drawn.to this other man If your husband ~ere more. Pr~ject Is ]lased on the
attentive. I'd guess what you feel isn't so much "love" but the
need for love.-'andyou mightflnd It at home If you'd work oo
the problem together, perhaps with the help of a CQunaelor. -

and suffered the loss for the
Orioles - now in fifth place,
eight games out of first place.
The Cleveland Indians
swept the Chicago White Sox,
6-5 and 9-7; the california
Angels defeated the Detroit ·
Tigers, 10-7: the Texas
Rangers beat the New York
Yankees, 7-1 ; the Boston Red
Sox topped the Mimesota
Twins, 10-2, and the ~
Milwaukee Brewers shaded
the Oakland A's, &gt;4, in other

RIVIERE CENTER 949 t

By Helen Bottel

Dear Joe:
Maybe If you came halfway toward your wife's liberation,
you'd discover it Isn't so frightening after all - especlaUy If
she came halfway back toward being a BiKlaUed "&amp;eX object."
-H.

Indians win double bill
in two runs in the seventh
inning. Dave Roberts was the
loser.
Rangers 7, Yankees I
Mike Hargrove hit a threer.un .homer and Jim
Umbarger pitched a fivehitter for his seventh win for
the Rangers, who dealt the
Yankees' Jim Hunter his
sixth setback against seven
victories. Umbarger walked
three and struck out three
enroute to his sixth complete
AL ~ames .
game. Hunter gave up seven
Indians 8-9, White Sox 5-1
· earned runs in a game for
Homers by Rico Carty and only the third time in his
Frank Duffy paced an 11-hit career.
Red Sox 10, TwlDB 2
Cleveland attack which
enabled Pat Dobson to win his
Steve Dillard, Denny
seventh game in the opener at Doyle, Jim Rice and Carlton
Cleveland. Carty came back Fisk each singled home a run
in the second game to deliver in a sevenrun, third inning for
a pinch-hit, bases-loaded the Red Sox. Rick Jones,
double and Larvell Blanks hit inaking his first major league
a two-run triple in a six-run start, went the distance
eighth inning rally. Reliever although touched for nine
Jim Kern won hls .slxth game hits. Jim Hughes lost his
in the nightcap. Bart Johnson seventh game against two
and Clay Carroll were the ,. wins1or the Twins.
losers for the WhiteSox.
, :..:Ptewers 5, A's 4
Angels 10 Tigers 7
··~,;11m Slaton allowed five hits
Orlando 'Alvarez and Ron fn 8 1-3 innings and won his
Jackson each hit a homer and eighth game for the Brewers
a double to lead \he Angels' with the ninth-inning relief of
12-hit attack, which brought Bill Castro. Slaton, Luis Ti~nt
Don KirkWood his second and Frank Tanana are tied
victory. Four other Angels for the AL lead in victories.
also hit doubles, including Sixto Lezcano had three hits .
Tommy Davis who knocked for the Brewers.

RACINE- Mu. Mary Kay
Yoet reported on the recent
Ohio . Baptist Women's
Convention recently In
Columbus at the Thursday
ntcht meeUng of the Ruth
Mlaalonary Circle of the
Racine Firat Baptlst Church.
Mrs. Emma Adams hoeted
the meeting at her borne.
Included In her report on
the
conventlon
were
missionary activities of Ohio
Baptista. She had letters from
missionaries which were
read by members Including
Mrs. Nondus Hendricks,
from a family In Alaska, Mrs.

He'a Got lbe Uberated ·Blue. ...
Dear Helen:
For 30 years my wife and I had a beautiful marriage. We
raised four ldds who aU turned out weD, aU collet!e educated.
Six years ago my wife became "liberated." We bave both
been mllerable ever since. But she is happier being mllerable
and a "liberated person" than being a wife and "sex object."
Maybe I'm nuts. - JOE

H

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
George Brett, the Kansas
City Royals' star third baseman, has an easy explanation
for his impressive .351
batting
average
and
outstanding all-around
batting statistics.
••von must remember,''
Brett said Sunday ar.ter
leading Ute Royals to an 8-4
· victory that extended the
Baltimore Orioles ' los ing
streak to nine games, "that I
hit bet ween Amos Otis and
John Mayberry. The pitchers
can't afford to walk me. They
have to throw me str ikes."
Brett homered, triple and
doubled and drove in three
runs to lead Kansas City 's 11hit attack and Dennis
Leonard pitched a ninehitter, with nine strikeouts,
for his sixth win as the Royals
maintained their three-game
lead in the American
League's Western Division.
Brett hit a two-run triple in
the first inning, his third
homer of the season in the
third inning and doubled and
scored on a double by Jim
Wohlford in the fifth inning.
Mike Flanagan was ripped
for five runs in 2 1-3 innings

Convention report heard

SOFA
BEDS

·Whdll pay you .the

intetest

on your savings?

Family has reunion

n.

B'teente nnta. I
bi h. nottces
•
to be aiv.en

__
---....._....
......,_."'"...
.,.._.

'"''""""--

··'*·
No-...,.

P. J~ PAII!Y
P1L 912-2311

__ _

·~
Q .............
... -...·

no mattefwhat you~ looking
for in savings or investment
certificates...
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

5~. 5:J:~%

s~~.%

• Pa~t~l l

Ray E. Ad8Jils, t;'orest T.
Adam' .to Clyde A. Adams,
Ullle M. Adams, 2 acres,
OUve.
Uzzle McKnight, dec. to
Otho McKntcht, Cert. for
trans., Columbia.
UWe B. Ledlle to Larry B.
Haynes·, Paula J, Haynes,
Parcels, Rutland.
Amedee L. Lefebre,
Racheal L. Lefebre to Donna
Rae Spencer, Lot, PomerOy.
·William Qulvey to David
Howard BarnhOUJe, I acre, 5
acres, Bedford.
Rachel Simon to Andrea L.
Schmidt, Joaeph W. Mariano,
28'1. acres, Scipio.
,.

II
I

II

I

GARMENTS

••

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

All

G.::~,:~ts

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

II
~II

Durttrlr • M&lt;lljnum $) ,00000

3-VEAR CERTIFICATE

6~.

6~~.%

Rll(

onrU,rly • Minimum 11 .oouo

UIF

P1y1~ lt

1 Pl~lllt ~UiriiiiW 1 ll!lnlllliHII SI.OOQ DO

• Ptyl-11 Owt;rl, • Minhn111 I I .OGO 00

4·YEAR CERTIFICATE

6•YEAR CERTIFICATE

And In tddlll~n to all · t~l• ... monltltw or

7:~.%

7~~.%

lour, or al• 1..1 ctrtln"tn. l~ternt pty·
tbll monlllly 11 You llttlrt on ct111f1CI1tt
with lttt am~unt ul l$.1)00.00 01 mOlt,

• 'tytllll Qurtuly •

Jl l ~ lmwm

11 ,000.00

• hyt.re Ourtttly •

Jll~ll•umli . DOO.OO

~UIIIUIY

IMOJN .. , paid

Of\

0111, IWD, IIHM,

Ftdlftl 1\~V~JitliDrtl !~Iff I IUI!IItn11tl
,wrt-; for prfmlturt wlthdrtwtl ol cerllll·
c111 run~t .

you'll find it at

OhioValley Batll&lt;.

I

II ltll'•t•
,.,,.
I

I

•

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

?..

I

For Your Winter

s.'*. '

'.

UTE

.I ---------·· ----------..I

Meigs
Property I~
Transfers I

• Pay;'h Q~llierll 1 lll r ~ • mum $1 ,00D 00

Darl' !

1·YEAR CEATIF.ICATE

~

I

'

Cen~gew•~d

s~~.%

'

u,n

UTE

•

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

Why settle for less than the best? ·
When it comes to yu ur savings, you
want a fair return , the highest le·
ga ily possible, with a guaran tee of
safety for your funds, and access1bility to these funds

-

Qn reasonable notice of wfthdrawat .
This i! exactly what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their de·
positors. No wonder savings deposits ~ntin~e to be at an
all-t1me high.

'

~ OhioValley Bank
Ga tllpollll , Ohio

Member FDIC

at
I ROBINSON'S CLEANERS I
L:.~!~!S.. ,_____ .:_ __~~~ 0!_! L--""':'"----------,.---:------:;=-"-...;__-;-..J
.
:rhe leading savings plans are

the leading savings bank.

�~

6-:: '!'he Dally Sent me l, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 Monday,June 14, 1976
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not ce s hereby given that
seated btds will be recel\led at
t he office of the VIllage c erk
on Second Street VIllage of
Pomerov
01'1to
until 12
o clock. noon on the 19th of
July
tor
th e pur chase
of ,,_. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .__ , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
the 1976
f ollo
w tng
parcels

DEADLINES

S P M
Da y
Beior e
Publlcllllon
Mdndav Deadl tne 9

am

Cancellation

Corrections wtll be ac

cepted unt i l 9 a m
Dav of Publi c ation

for

descr•bed real estate
That the follow ing d escr~be d
rtal estate belongmg to thE
Village of Pomeroy 1s not
needed f or any muntc1pat
pu( pOse to wtt
Parcel I L ot 12 m v 6
Horton s Add tlon to Pomeroy
Lot 13 m v B Horton s A d
dillon to Pomer oy
Reference Deed
Volume
205 Pa ge 387 at the M e1gs
County Ohto Deed Records
Parcel 2 Begtnntng on Nye
Street at the Northeast cor ner
Of a lot her etof ore deeded by
Cur ti s D Reed and Laura
A lber t a R ee d to Joh n M
Roed el by deed dat ed April 24
1899 recorded tn Vo lume B4
Pag e 3B6 records of D eeds of
M elos County Oh1 0 Th ence
Sou th pa ral lel w1lh Ny e Str eet
e1g hteen C18 J feet
t hence
West twenty stx (26) feet
thence no rth e1ghteen (18)
t eet then ce East twenty s1x
f26l fe et to tne p lace of
b~gmntng
Savini} li nd ex
cepttng a l t coat and other
mtnerals u nderly t n g fh f
prem1ses he r eby g ranted
Together w1th lh e r ight to
mine ltl e same withou t any
unnecessa ry damage to th e
su rfa ce of the same
Deed Referenc;e Volu m e 94
Page 286 Me1gs Co unty Deed
Records
Parcel J
Sttuat ed In the
Townsh•P ot Sal •sbury County
of Meigs and Stat e of Ohio and
more parlt c ularty bound ed
and d e scr~bed ItS follow s
Sttuat ed m the V•llage of
Pomeroy belng Lot No 43
commen c mg on the Nor t h S1de
of Condor St re et m satd Ct ty at
a stone placed at a permanent
corner then ce runn ing at rtght
angles with said street 100
f ee t then ce runmng parallel
wtth the ttne f tr sl run 100 tee t
to th e street 1 r st named
th ence easterly along sa 1d
str ee t 38 teet to the p lace ot

REGULATIOI!S

The Publ isher renr ves
the rtght to edtt or reject
any ads deemed ob
ltcllonal . The publ ~ h e r
will no t be re!tponstbl e for
more than on e mcorrect

tnsert ton

RATES

For W•nt Ad Servtce
s cents per word on e
Insert ion
Mmlmum Ch arg eS\ 00
14 cen ts pe r word three

cortsecuttve

tnse rlton s

n ce nts per word so&lt;
consecuttve
tnsertions

25 Per Cent Otscount on
pa 1d ads and ads pa td
wtthm 10 dav s

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 00

for

mmtmum

50

wo r d

Ea c h i ddtt onal word J
cents

BLIND ADS

Addll onal He Ch a rg e
per Adver t tsemer'll
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p 1'11
Dally 8 30 ol m to 17 00
Noon Saturday
Phon e today 992 2156

NOTICES
ATTN II

ALLIIOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales Rummpg e
Porct1 and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales etc
must be pa id m advance
Get your l n m early by
stopping by our offt ce at
The Dally Se,nt tnel
111
Court St or wnt nQ B~x
729 Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Wtlh your rem 1ttance

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OH IO

begon nong

DEPARTMENT OF

TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s Ohto
June 4 1976
Contract Sales Legal Copy
No 76 520
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sea led propo sals wtl
be
recetved a t t he olf tce of th e
D re c tor o f the Oh o Depart
men!
of
Transportat ton
Columbu s Oh to unt1l 10 00
AM
Oh10 Standard T 1m e
Tu es day June 29 1976 tor
Improvement s tn
Part s I to 16 InClU SIVE' arc
off er ed as on e co ntra c t und
w II be co nstde r ed on th e basts
of th e total amount btd
Parts 1 to 16 mclu stv e
At hen s
G all a
M e tgs
Morgan Nob le Vmton an d
Wash n g ton Co un ltes Oh o on
st ru c tur es on \lar tous routes
and sectton s n the VI age of
by c l eant1 Q and
V nton
patn ttng
Ty pe o f Structur e
See
Plan
The date set for c omp te! on
of th1 s wo rk shall be as se t
forth n t/1e btddtng p roposal
Ea c h bidder shalt
be
r equ r ed to fi le wtth h s b d a
cerllt ed chec k or cashter s
c he c~ for an amount equal t o
ftv e per cent ot hts b1d b ut '"
no even t more than lttty
thous and dollar s or a bond for
ten per cent of hts bid payab l e
to the D irec tor
B dders m ust app y on th e
prop er forms for qualtfl calton
at leas t ten day s pr or to t h e
date set tor op en ng btds m
accor dan ce w th Chapter 5575
Oh1o Rev1 se d Code
Pan s and spe c tftcat on s ar e
on fil e 1n the D epartment of
Tran spo r tal on and th e offt ce
of
the
Dis riel
Dep ut y
D re c tor
The D tr ec tor r ese r ves Jh e
r~ght t o r e tect an y and all b1dS
RI CH A RD 0

JA~KS ON

DIRECTOR
Rev B 17 73
I6 J 1.4 21 2tc

AstraGraph
~Bermea

Bede Osol

For Tue1day June 15 1976

ARIES (March 21 April

19)
You It be ve ry successfu l today
n dea ltng w1th o th ers •I you re
no t too aggresstve People wtll
coo perate 11 you gutde Don t
push

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Your amb !t ons wt ll be m h1gh
gea r today You I be mott va ted
by somelhmq you strongly
de s1 re Keep yo ur 1easons to
you rse ll tor no w

GEMINI (May 21 June 20)
So ft sell

w II work wonde rs
tod ay Underst ate wh at you
have to oller Let th e per son
you re deatmg wtth ftll tn th e
bl ank s

..

CII.NCER (June 21 July 22)

"

rI :

-·

-~

Benet ts occ ur to day because
of you r smc er e dewe to se rve
someone wh o needs 1'1elp You
won t do 11 for prof t but you II
gatn anyway

LEO (July 23 -Aug

22)

Glamorous poop e and set
tmg s hold a spec1al ap p er~ l lor
you to day D•nner tn a posh
res tauran t wou ld match your
mood

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept 22) The
market value o f goods ser
v ces or talents th at you have to
pu rvey tod av 1S up Keep thts
foremost tn se tt tnq your pn ce

•• •

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•

LIBRA (Sept 23-Dct 23) You
mnkc a very favorab le tmpres
s1 on toda y all hough you wont
pom ted ly try to do so or even
be aware o f 1!

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

.
I

l

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••

I•

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SAGITTARIUS (NoV: -23 Doc

'

21) The example you set Will be
an excellent one today You are
co mpassiona te wlltJng to listen
and eager to help

beo ng Ihe same

p r em 1se s
co n veyed
to
Margaret Kautz by C Hamm
and Su san Ha mm h ts wife by
deed dated Aug 3rd 1841 and
r ecorded •n Vo l 9 page 449 of
the Re cords of Dee ds tn Me,gs
Co unty Ohm Said pr emts es
are kn own as No 207 Condor
Str ee t
Th e followmg real estate
stl uat ed m the V Illag e of
Town s h 1p
of
Po me r oy
Sa li sbu r y County ot Melgs
and State of OhiO and more
part c ular l y bound ed and
descr~bed as follows
Be ng Lo t No ~'l on Condor
St sa td lot be ng 36 teet fr ont
on Condor Str ee l n Second
Ward of sa1d v llage of
Pomeroy
Ot1to
b emg the
same prem ses so ld by Jos•ah
Ho ff and w1t e Sarah A Hoff
as are descr i bed tn Vol 108
page 25 6 Metgs County Deed
Records Sat d pr emtse s are
known as No 207 Condor
Stree t
Parcel 4
The folloWtng
descrtbed real es ta t e situated
n the V l lag e of Pom eroy
Coun ly of Mc• gs and State ot
Oh10 Begmntn y 60 feet and 7
nch es southwester ly from the
southeasterly corner of Lot 151
In sa td v lla ge on Sec ond
Str ee t at the sou!heasterly
corner Of the but dtng now or
form erly owned by satd City of
Pomeroy !known as t h e Ctty
Ha 1)
then ce nor tl'1w ester ty
para ll el wtth tl'1e westerly tine
ot Lo t 14 1 100 feet or to the
north ltne of an unnumbered
located between lots
tot
numbered 1.41 and 152 m sa1d
village thence southwester ly
lollowmg the northerly I me of
Lot 152 and the heretofore
m enfton ed unnumbered lot to
t he nor theaster y corner of th e
prem1ses now or formerly
own ed by theE berfetd Realty
Company (For reference deed
see Vo l 161 page 35 0) Thence
southeas terly parall el Wtlh the
westerly line L ot 152 of Secon d
Street thence northeasterly
following the southerly line of
Lot 151 and the unnumbered
Lo t located between Lots lSI
and 152 to 1M place of
begtnn •ng Thts lot to be so ld Is
known as tl'1 e C t ty Hall
Pomeroy Ohlo
Th ere s al so tnc lud ed a
strtp of land on the easterly
s de of lhe 1'1ere tn descnbed
prem 1ses extend1ng f r om
Second Stree t to the rear of
sa td Lot a stnp S t eet w 1de for
the purpose of an alley to be
used tn commo n by the
M ethodiSt Eptscopal Chur ch
of Pom eroy OhiO and the
here n named Vtllage of
Pomeroy thetr
suc cessors
and ass1gns
Ther e ts also tn c tud ed the
tQht to use an alley .4 feet and
10 mch es wtde on the west s1dc
of the heretn descr i bed r ea l
esta t e sa d alley to be used tn
common W1th the Elberfeld
Realty Company and the
Village of Pomeroy for the
purpose of mgress and egress
s~td alley 1s located tn Lotl52
Thet the sa•d Co uncil of the
Village of Pomeroy havmg
the
superviS IOn
or
management of the property
to be so ld be and 1'1ereby tS
author~zed to &amp;dverttse sa1d
real estate for sa e to the
highest b•dder ac cording to
taw upon the following terms
Cash 10 hand on the da y ot the
sa te
Ea ch b •d must conta1 n the
full name of every person or
co mpany tnterested in the
same and be accompanied by
11 bond or certlfted ct1eck ln the
sum
of
S10000
to t he
sat sfact on of V llag e Council
as a guaranty 11'1et tf the btds 1s
accepted contra c t w II be
entered mto and tis perform
ance properly secured
These c hec~s or bond s w 11
be returned at on ce to all
exc ept the successful bidder
H ts check or bond Will be held
unt t t he con tra ct or bid •s
properly executed by h im
SAtd council reserves th e
rtgh t to retect any and all btds
re ce1ved for the sale of any
parcel of real estate Th1s
Ordmance st1all go mto effect
fr om and af t er tl'1e earliest
per od allowed by low

Someone vou II be deahng w•th
tod ay does thmg s tn a cra lly
lash on He II be no ma tch for
you You can see through llts
venee r
~

ATTEST

R ~I ph Werry
President of
Vtllllge Council
V II age of Pomeroy

Jane Walton
Clerk of VIllage
o1 Pomeroy

161

14

21 28 171 s 12 lie

Pomeroy
Motor Co.
1974 FORD FlOO
5299S
8 Styleslde green finish good tires R oomper
chrome gr ills &amp;ftls bumper 6 cy l &amp;std trans
1973 CHEVROLET ClO

52895

8 F leetstde wh over red clean 1ntenor 350 V S
automatic power st eermg &amp; brakes good tires step
bumper radiO custom tnm &amp; mtrrors

1913INTERNATtONAlt600
102 C A V 8 5 speed 18 5001 speed R axle 900 tires
S&lt;llld cab color whtte

t

POM0~~?!vE~?!~~ CO. '(ji\

~~

POMEROY, OHI\)

~

.•

RACINE F1re Department w1lt
ho"e a gun shoot Saturday at
6 30 p m ot thelr new butldtng
off Bashan Rood

1956 Chevy Belo tr 53 00 o(tual
m1les Phone 992 6092

CHANGE OF HOURS - Begmntng
June 12 we w11l be closed Sotur
doys New hours wtll be Man
day through Fndoy 9 o m tdl
7 p m Carol no Fobr1 cs Route
7 one half m1le north of
Chesler Ohto Henry and Mary
Hunter o wn ers

1970 Bu1ck R vtero full power ex
cellent cond1t lon
$1200
Phone 747 2796

1971 VW

Beetle

$850 Phone

9913038

1964 Cu tlass converllble

$300

Phone 949 2480 o r 992 6092
1971 Ford LTD good condtllon
5-4 000 mtles $1600 Phone

992 2704

LJ..Jp w.ag"-.1
Jm "' KU
-

=

-~

_

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MENT NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CALL COlLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518 489 8395 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE
ALBANY N Y 12105
HOUSEWIVES open the door to
ex tra eornmgs Jam the sue
cesslul women who ore mok
tng good money m the r spore
I me
No
exper ence
necessa ry no del very no col
lechng n9 cosh mvestment
Call now and ge t extra early
beneftts Ph one 949 2003 or
949 2786 Al so book1ng par
ltes

1974 Olds Cutlass Supreme fully
carpeted p s p b tope ex
tros
Low m1leoge Ask ng

$3450 Call992 3032
1970 Pont oc H T Catalina o1r
cond ttonmg p s p b $500

Phone 949 2589

-

1974 Ford 4 door hardtop power
stecrmg power brakes atr
(Ond f1on ng rod ol I res m(e
cor $1995 Phone (6t.t ) 985

3554
1973 Goloxu:! 500 p s p b good
cond1fl0n $1600 Phone 992

2978

SiLa.M1a...:W.ala.il ==;;;:: -_-_;;__
JWGWJ»::Ucu• a
-~
=== ==-===WILL DO odd JObs roohng po n
ttng haul ng treework and
mowmg Ph one 9~2 74~
WILL core for elderly person 1n my

home Phone I (614) 985 3849
or992 3.4 10

992 2221

IF YOU have o ser v1ce to offer
wont to buy or sell someth ng
ore lookmg for work
or
whatever
you II get results
foster w1th o Senltnel Wont Ad

Coll992 2156
'YARD Sole Thursday thru June 30
across from Bradbury School
Shallow well pump
n ce
clothing
d1shes
f&amp;wel ry
reasonable

-

'

WILL bobys1t m Tuppers Plo•ns
and Ches ter area
hove
references Phone (614 ) 985

CASH pa d fo r all makes and
models of mobile t1omes
Phone a reo code 614 423 9531
,..

___ ...__ -- ---

$$Cosh$$$ for JUnked auto Frye s
Truck Auto Ports Rutland

--- -- -

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10 c m t1ll 7 p m Furmture
dtshes good drapes men and
women s dothmg blankets
lamps
ut1l1ty trol ler
Sole
located on old Rout-e 33 bet
ween County Roods 18 and 19
George Wh1te res dence
Phone ~92 _3~3~3 Fom tly Yard Sole by Salisbury
School Tues and Weds June
15 and 16 9 am 1111 6 p m
Wh1te untform and glassware

~~~~~~~~&lt;:_)'_! _a~~ ~~s_: - --YARD Sole lues ond Weds at
Donald Buchanon Reedsv lie
OhiO 8 30 1111 ?

USED Swmg Set or outdoor ploy

j

~y~- P~_'I~2_:J7~2_ _____

'

500 4 cyl

2331

BusinesS Franchise
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

Ch,ysle• molo' new l1ll l•ooler
lull conopy oil occesso,es
Phone i92 2280

1972 135 Ferguson tractor 300
hrs l1ke new $3500 Also 6ft
bush hog $350 Howard Sayre
Syracuse Ohto
e&gt;ecellent

lurmshed

opts

Phone 992

5434

--

FIRE lo-dder- b;ck~ho~;~ -r;h~sh­
ed and ca1ned Contact Lmcoln
Russell on Route 143
2 motchmg
handlebars
stupes ex
$.450 Phone

TAPPEN Gas r~n;e--s\o over
stuffed ct1o~r $5 00 Sunbeom
elec cu rler set $5 00 Phone

992 2S52
2 row corn cu lllvator to ht Mossey
Horr ss 44 tractor $50 Phone

(614) 985 3581
4x8 slate pool table w1th rock ond
cue5 $200 Phone 992 2413
STEREO w tth AM FM good condt

loon $7S 992 2087
REDUCE safe and fast wttl"i
Go8ese Tablets and E Vap
woi~_E~I; N!l!.~n_D!~9__ _

FREEZER SALE!
Save up to 5100 on 20
cu It Chest or 16 cu.
It Upnght.

Ch01ce

$26995

.POMEROY LANDMARK
4'--Jack W C.rsey,Mgr.
iliil Phone 992-2181

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS
Conven1enl to shopptng on
Th rd ond M II Streets tn M1d
d eport Brand new h1gh qua It
ty apartment s
See the
manager at R1ver:s1de Apart
ments or call 99:2 3273 Fur
ntshed • apartments
also
ov01loble
One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur
ntshed opartmenh
Phone
TRAILER space for ren t 1n M1d

~!~art ~~0~!!93_?434

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Wanted to own and operate
candy- &amp; contecflon vendmSt

route Me1gs Countv and
surrounding uu Pleu•nt
buslnen High profit Items
can start part time Age or
experience not Important
Requires car and S149.5 to
S4795 cuh Investment For
details wrltt and Include
your phone numbtr
Department IVV

3931 Meodowbrook Rd

Minneapolis, MN 55426

June 15 1976
The destre to qatn k 10wledge
throuqh study and ex per ence
wtH be stronq tn you thts com
nQ year Travel aqems wt lt hke
vm hflCRuse of you r urge to
see th e world

6-ro~;h~m;~_.M,ddi;p;,;t- ~~~

to school New shmgle roof
COUNTRY Mcbtle Home Pork Rt
SS500 Phone 992 7175
33 ten m1lel!l north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots wtth concret patios HOME- of lofe- Ei;a;d Hoefl1ch
314 Condor St Pomeroy Ktl
s1dewolks runners and off
chen
den laundry storage
~~~~~~~~~~~0~!~~!~~
f1rst floor two bedrooms ltvtng
ONE bedroom oportments ol
room bath second floor Full
VIlLAGE MANOR on Mlddleporo
ott1c three parcels Phone
for $104 monthly plus elec or
992 5374 after 5 p m
Sl30 mdudmg electnc LOWER

992 3129 0' 992 5434

FURNISHED 2 room apartment
126 Mulberry Ave adults and
references
Phone 992 2030
!.venlngs o~ 9~-2~~---2 Bedrm mob1le home Phone

992 2834
LARGE 3 rm furn1shed opt otr
cond1t1onmg 12 m1les from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Available

June IS Phone992 6161

2

bed~; o~dlb~rm ~~n~sh;d
apartment Phone 992 2288 or

992 2348
M081LE t1ome adults only Phone

992 SS3S

Moplewood take Phone 949
2709
4

rm
fur~tsh;d-- oo~;~~;nt..
everything pold upstairs apart
ment no pets or ch1ldren
Adults only Phone 992 5810 or
con be soan at 814 E Mom St
P.omeroy

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING IOFFITT
GUTTERS AWI!INGS

LOVELY OLD II KICK On 1 corner lots Beautiful
kitchen w range ref
disposal dishwasher other
extras 5 BR 2 baths N G
hot water heat Part
basement 120 000
RUTLAND - On Leading
Creek 1 72 acres mostly tn
lawn Excellent for home
or trailer This you must
see $3 300
HERE IS A BUY - 3 BR
bath dtn In kitchen w 17ft
cab dOuble bowl s S sink
Large Jiving R 2 porches,
N G heel, storage bldg
$7 900

FARMS &amp; ACREAGE 1-30 A , 1- 157 A 1-135
A
Please call
lor
particulars
POMEROY - Large brick
&amp; block building, 2 story,
lower has 3 rental rooms,
12 ere rented) S6 800 A
good Investment
DON'T LOSE MONEY LIST WITH US TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND,
BROKER
992 2259 or 992 2568

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse Oh io
Ph 992 3993

Ph 9!2 2114
P0111to11
'----------:..J

·-

•0
'--

•AK2
• Q9 4
•AQ86142

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CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RIDGE

4101rho

WEST

CBashan Arul

LONG BOTTOM

.J96
t76
.J 3

SALES &amp; RENTAL
Travel Trailers

• 109
Neather vulnerable

'

5 21 1 mo

I
0

'

,,..••

•

Tllltrs,

498 locust 51
Middleport, Oh10 912 3092
s 26 2 mo

house near
Phone 7.42

2796 •

HOUSE for sale m ChestMr area
Three year old four bedroom
brtck ranch on five acres of
land Has two baths Iorge
rooms flmshed basement w1th
fireplace m family room Phone
(6 1~) 985 3938 or contact Don
Roush

6uiell-;.;;,-;,;i.;i;.J -.~~- ;I;~ -3
bedrm

t1ome

$12 .500

Call

992 5011
lOT tn Spnng Htll Fla I For sole
or trade cor truck Oh10 land
onylhtng of value $2 500 or
mor~ ~alii~• ) 667 3074

TEAFORD
Vtrgtl B Sr , Realtor
110 Mechantc Pomeroy q
Phone 992 337~
MODERN - 3 brs, 2
baths nice kit , full
basement city water and
gas 1 4 acres $31 500
ONE FLOOR - Mod 3
brs bath kit has stove
refrlg and bar wllh dining
room Level lot $18 000
DEXTER Busl~ess
building 30 x 40 one floor
Asking only 55 500
COUNTRY SETTING -11
beautiful acres , lenced
blue &gt;grass garden, corn
patch 4 br residence
Spring water large yard
for the children NEW
LISTING at $29,000 be
tween coal mtnes

NEAT - 2 br bungalow
st

doors

cook

and

un its

furna ce

windows

nat

gas

basement

large

yard $13,500 Owner will
help finance

-

RIVER VIEW - Lovely
kit wllh cook units 3 brs
auto steam heel Porches,
garage and basement
S29 500
TUPPERS PLAINS- Nice
3 brs bath, gu F A
(urnace Lot 100 x 375 On &gt;;,
acre Only 519 500
NEW LISTING- 2 brs,
bath nat gas, F A
(urnece Full basement
Just $5,500
SOON THINGS WILL BE
BOOMING IF YOU WANT
TD
ENJOY
PROSPERITY, JOIN US,
llfi'I'U Vt'\111'!!1

nnt'\D~DTY

P01ss

Pass
It
2NT
Pass

1 ...

Openmg lead - 5 •

Southeastern Oh10

LJ'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIF

Truss Rafter Co.

LITTLE ORPHAN

Box28 A
Rutland, Ohto 4S775
Ph (61417422409
We Deliver
6 13 761 mo

WERE WAlKING
ALONG CARRYING
lOOtS THERE
WAS A BLINDIHG
FlASH AND A
CRASH·
11if'f

By Oswald &amp; Ja~t~es Jacoby
J1m
Rubber brtdge
players have lots of fun but

D A 11 y

lr.;~;!;{r';3;;~~:ll[v~ery
lew of them make any ef
r-::==::-:;:::::;=;:::::=;::;::=::.::;:;
YOU HADCHECt&lt;ED
WE ~HEW
rt to play r ea lly good
ClN WHAT

WPS

IN THE BUNDLES
AT THE GATEL
OF COURSE &lt;'

mFY we~e

I

DOitiG
SPECIAL
INOIIK
FOR YOU

'

I

I

H1gh prtces for scrap
autos. motors and
other meta Is. Phone
992-2228 Monday thru
Frtday 8 3, Saturday
8 12.
526-lmo

"'

''

•)

I

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brid1:e
Oswald Here IS a hand to
tllustrate lilts Playmg aL
three notrump South let East
hold the hrst track wtth the
of spades South put his
on East s ten and West
won wtlh hts ace West cashed
hts )ack or spades and cleared
the su1t but now South could
lose the club fmesse and st1ll
make hts contract
Jtm
l tmagme that East

INSURAIICE OPPORTUNITY 2 1n
d1v1duols who ne9d up to $700
to $900 per month dehvery
route or ms
eKpenence
helpful but not necessary
Please calf Mr Monroe at 453
0696 between 9 and S for ap
potnlment
An eqUal op

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ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters Irons all
small oppllon'ces lawn mower
next to State H1ghway Garage

on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
3825
REMODELING Plumb1ng healong
and all types of general repolr
Work guaranteed 20 y.ara ex

WHY UH A SPECIAL
NUT ~AT We USE1

I

IN OUR LAS WCRK

OH' WE~~. I

(2

""

- ~~!~~.!i~~z~~~--

REGISTERED Beagle pup 6 mon
lhs old Phono 949 2413
SIAMESE k11tens $10 Sealpolnt1
phone 992 3216

flcenstd Installer
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742 2«19

FCiR-th;t;;,t~n-;;;,-;;ildrill
lng Phone Lemley O•llltng
Company 7~~ 2003
FRE"e- t"o- ~ -~-c~~nf;;-ho-;,-;- HAliiiNG-- o~;.~-;y--;at;rk-1
and limestone or gro..,.l farm
femole dog pori Colle and
limo Ph Jr Dorst 742 2850
Corman Shophord Good with
children and good watch dog

Phone 992 2552

E

II

•••

••
•

•u

•

••

"'

If Tree
..I" U S vel-

We've

:
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city
Surrounding
Rock group's 8 KlpUng
Instrument
cia sale
(2 wda )
Nobleman

to

'

'

stop

h1m.
Sltrn!

:

At 5 p.m.

RUnAND PURNITU.

742·2211

.. ·~----

-- .. -........................
AllMOLd GRATJ

Slhlnl8y'1 A111wer
9 Picked up
%4 Say again

Cleaned

II Vlctuala
It Exceedingly
(2 wds )
%0 Give blrtb to
U Mw

reaort town

%5 French clty
%7 Right

SO Poet,

WH 21 Mellllldze
U Reverie
II Hlllh

forcibly
37 Telepathic
Initials

King and
Queen

pnr

\LWJJIIil llWlllJJII:%1 - aU..Ume

high
(2 wda)

Mauls
Beryl or
Wallsce
21 Landlord's

Income
32 Work unit

THERE60ESA
DE.A.D- 6Af'IIE
SPORTIN' KID'!

Semester 10

6 2t&gt;-Rev Cteophus Robinson 13
6 3t&gt;-Columbus Today 4 News 6, Summer Semester
8, Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 4S..Mornlng Report 3
6 st&gt;-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13
6 ss-Chuck White Reports 10, Good Morn ing, Trl
Slale 13
7 QO-Today 3,.,15, Good Morning America 613 CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 3t&gt;-Schooltes 10
8 DO-Lassie 6, Capt Kangaroo 8 10 SoSIIme St 33
8 3t&gt;-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 15, Lucy Show 8 Mike
Douglas 10 Morning wllh D J 13
9 lt&gt;-Cross Wlls 3 One Life lo Live 6, Tetlletelos 8
Mike Douglas 13
10 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3 • 15 Edge of Nlghl 6, Price Ia
Right 8,10, Bit with Knll 33
tO 3t&gt;-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,~ 15 Dinah 6 Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 ~Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Weekday •· Gambit
8, 10, Fermer's Daughter 13
11 31&gt;-Holtywood Squares 3.~. 15, Happy Days 13, Love
of Ltle 8,10
t1 ss-Take Kerr 8, Dan !mol's World 10
12 oo-Fun Factory 3, 15, Let s Make e Deal 13, Bob
Braun 4, News 6,8, 10. Seaame St 33
12 Jt&gt;-Gong Show 3 15 All My Children 6 13, Search
for Tomorrow 8,10
12 ss-NBC News 3 15
1 ~News 3. Ryan's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue B,
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Etec Cc 33
I 31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,.,15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13,
As The World Turns 8,10, Family Theatre 33
2 D0-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Bt Ways 33
2 3t&gt;-Doctors 3 ~.15, Break the Bank 6,13 Gutdtng
Light 8, 10, Unto the Hills 33
J ~Another World 3 4,15 General Hospltal6,13, All
In The Family 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 Catch 33
33
3 3D-One Life to Live 13 Mickey Mouse Club 6, Match
Game B, 10, Inner Tennis 20, Title X 33
4 ~Mister Cortoon 3 Merv Grttfln 4, Someraet 15,
BewttP,ed 6 Mickey Mouse Club 8, Mister Rogers
20,33 Movte "Tho Safecracker" 101 Dinah 13
4 3t&gt;-Bewltched 3, Mod Squad 6, Andy Grlllltn ~.
Sesame 51 20,33, Fltntstones 15
5 ~Bonanra 3, Partridge Family 8, Mission fm
possible 15
5 31&gt;-Adam 12 4, News 6, Family Affair 8, Elec Co
20,33 Adem 12 13
6 DO-News 3.~.8,10,13.15 ABC Newa 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3t&gt;-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News13, Andy Grllflth 6,
CBS News 8 101 Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Llllai Yoga
&amp; You 33
7 oo-Tr11th or Cons 3, To Tell tho Truth~. Bowling for
Dollars 6 Country Place 8, News 10, Name That
Tune 13, Family Affair IS, Romagoolla Table 20,
Wild Wild World of Animals 33
7 31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3, Movie ' Spertacus" 4,
Lets Dee! with It 6 Match Game PM 81 Evening
Edlllon with Marti~ Agronsky 20, Price Is R lght 10,
To Tell the Truth 13, Nashville on lhe Road 15,
Family Theatre 33
8 ~Movln' On 3, Happy Da~ 6 13 I've Got a Secret
8,10 To Be Announced 15, Burglar Proofing 20
8 3t&gt;-Laverne&amp; Shlrley6,13, Baaebalt 15, Good Tlmea
8 10 Consumer Survival 20,33
9 ~Pollee Women 3.~ 15 SWAT 13 Commanden 6,
Mash 8 10 Evening at Symphony 20 Mylhkln 33
9 3D-One Day at e Time 8,10
10 DO-City of Angels 3 • Rookies 6, 13, Bravo Julie 81
Dance lor Camera 33 Switch 10, News 20
10 3t&gt;-Biack Persptcllve on lhe News 20, Woman 33
11 ~News 3,46 8,10,13,15, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4 15, Mystery of the Week
6 13, Movie "The Fearless Vampire Killers" 8
Movie "Get Your10lf e College Girl" 10. Janek! 33
I oo-Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

33 Calendar
abbreviation

34 Coloration
3i Mental

block
(sl )
(2 wdlt

~~M@l!J:E;&amp;.J :::·'':-' ...J r::

goddes8

Unscramble thfle foorJumblto,
ont ltltor to tach oquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

)
37 Gennanlc

lo .. lllr&gt;.HI/\IHJ&lt;Ijlo

31 Relaxing
(2 wda )
31 Prophet

1•

,

NcMtOHO.V HIM HON
WRONG HE 1$ AND

HOW SWEET YOU
REALLY ARE I

Is

II

AXYDLBAAXK
I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter Simply st.mds for another In this sample A Ia
used for Lhe three I &lt; X for the two 0 s, etc Single letters.
apostrophes the length and formatoon of the 11ords arc all
hmts Each d oy the cnde letters arc dtfrerent

CRYPTOQUOTE
KYTS

SZGYH

TJGFEKB
YHM

NJTXYE

UKXHR

I () I I I

I (I)I I I I
P07TIE

XN

Y

NDLZTDZLK
NMNDKG

D. J

UKEJHRN

GJLK

...

A LAWVEI( W\-10'!&gt;

AF~AIP THE: CLIENT
MI6HT LOSE WE161·fT.

DSYH
ASXTS

Y E Q L K 0

'1'0\I'RE LEAVIN6 ~

.

WIMBLEDON N~?

("-wen ........,

S•lurd•y•

J•.,ble., POUND CANAL PAUOW TALICIR
An1wer1 W•llr'•••l tflltNn fldt
""culM-A FLOOD

I

8UT IT'S THE "'100\.f

OF THE

Nl6f.IT!!

1

•

~
,;----'~

I"

DAILY CRYPTO(jUOTE- Here's how to work It:

DERSTANDING, THE FURTHER DOES HE REMOVE
HIMSELF FROM QUARRElS - HASIDIC SA YJNG

•

•. FRIDAY TIL 8 :
Sat
•••••••••••••
Close

(Do you have a question
tor the e•perts? Wrtte 'Ask
the Jacobys care of lh1s
newspaper The Jacobys will
answer lnd1v1dual quesf1ons
11 stamped sell addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most mterestmg quesf/ons
w111 be used m thrs column
and w1ll race1va cop1as of
JACOBY MODERN I

Saturday'• Cryptoquole TilE GREATER A MAN'S UN-

eI 1

Thursday 8 t1112 noon

•1

shaded to 14 or even 13

aunt
the check
s 'I'm- My 10 Aahe and
Time''
Laver, at
S Whack
times
( sl )
7 Oklahoma

(2 wds)

qot

.

erans org
Intend

(2 wda )
1 Spanish

~Summer

ASXDKSKYO

8:00tll5:00

:

1

II

Mon., Tues., Wed

••

moder n teacher recommends
15 pomts but says 1t can be

1 Rascal
2 Erie or
alimentary
3 Veteran pol

wda )

S K

••
~

c"A"R"Pemell-!~;:;,;-9--~;iiln{,­
_!'.o~.!~"!!-~h!""---------992 2759

I\ reader wants to know how
many pomts are shown by the
btd of two notrump m the
partnership sequence I Spade
2 Clubs 2 Notrump
There was a day "hen 11
showed 16 or I7 htgh card
pmnts but m the last 15 years
tl has been reduced so that Lhe

Quaker
DOWN

If Distrlbutar
15 Scottiah
name prefix

------------- -- -- ExcAvATING-BAcKifoEs-ANo

AKC Mole boxer 11 w.aks old

~u~-.

transaction
U Famous

lZ Indian city
IS "A Bushel
-Peck"

"

(614) 667 6368

DOZER LARGE ANO SMAll
SEPTIC TANKS INSTIILLEO Silt
PUlliNS PHOI!E 992 2478 OilY
OR NIGHT
sePTic- sr;le;;,-; - -;;;-,,oll~- ~;;

6

6 1s-F arm Report 13

44l Buslnesa

ACROSS
1 Gael
11 Colombian
city

EXCAVATING

-------------------

TUESDAY, JUNE ll, 1976

by

CE!nAINt.'(
HOPE HE 1
FINDS IT

r

-~.!:!~~-~~~!_~~~~----

0&amp;0 TREE Trlmmlng 20 years ex
partence
Insured free
eshmotes Call 992 2384 or
1969 12x60 Schult Early Amencon
(614) 698 72!17 AI bony
model large kttchen and bath
2 bedrooms o1r condlluonlng SEWlNG- MACHiNE-~p;l;s-~;,
good cond1t1on Phone 7.42
vJCe all makes 992 22~ The
3018
Fabr~c
Shop
Pomeroy
1~4- H.!i~;st12;M -2-bed;~;Authortzed Smger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
lrant kitchen total elec fully
furniShed eye level oven and
do-;;- l.;;d.~-;,~d
surface
unit
corpMied
backhoe work dump trucks
throughout
boy wtndow
and lo boys for hire will haul
popu lar 3 door model Alto
fill dirt top sol i limestone and
1975 Skyline 12x52 2 bedroom
grovel Coli Bob or Roge1 Jel
front kllchen total elec total
fers
day phone 992 7089
wrapped Fom Cor new fur
n1gho phone 992 352S or 992
n1ture both umts like new
5232
pnced to sell Save a few hun
SEPTICTANKS~I;;;-n-;;
- Mode~n
dred on these trade ms at
Son 1taflon 992 3954 or 992
Kingsbury Home Sales ond Ser
2428
v1ces
1100 E Ma.n St
---- ---Pomeroy Phone 992 703-4
WILL do roofing, ;o~;t~u~tio-;.­
plumbmg and heating No job
12 mob1le homes for •o le B w1de
35 lo 50 lengths 1 and 2 too large or too small Phone
7~2 2348
bedrooms complete ly furn1!11h
ed cheap Coss•us Canoday ExC:AvATING --d-;;.~ --b;"k"h~.
1900 Central St
Galltpohs
and ditcher Charles R Hat
Ohta Phone (614) 406 I:I'll
field Bock Hoe Service
near Sm1th Butck
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2008
~ ------------------1972 12x60 Elcona washer and GREGs-ca-5AI:esla~;,~~~Erdryer shag carpet underplnn
wm 1 Gulf ServJCe
Mtd
109 olr condihonmg very
dleport Ohto
Phone 992
9ood condition $5500 Phone
2~38

told West If he had let South
hold that second tnck South
would not have made hts
game
Oswald Yes he dtd And
NorLh congratulated South on
lettmg the queen hold the first
spade
~1m
No conv ersatiOn
about the mtssed slam m
clubs'
Oswald Not a smtdg eon
No one pomted out that North
had underbtd ht s hand tremen
dously and no dtscusston o(
what sen es of btds would get
North and South to six clubs

~-~THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEY OOP
I

L

BRADFORD Aushoneer Com
plete ServiCe Phone 949 2.487
or 949 2000 Racme Ohio Crill
Bradford

Monday June14

~

5 Vaunts

_ $21 0&lt;J9 Phone (614) 667_3_5~9_

16 acres J bedrm
Rutlond1 $10 500

Sou ttl

Pass
Pass

P&lt;~ss

~~~~~!~~~~:

- ~~r~g~~~D!.!l62~~~9-~~~

Norah East

Pass

IIAI'r-M~OlSii==== -

MODERN rural elec home on 1
or 3 &amp; two th1rds acres 3
bedrooms l1vmg 1 both k1t
chen full ftmshed basement
Wl th
laundry
recreafton

\\eta

I. 32"'N T 2.
Pass

4•12 Pitch
24'- $17.28
26'- $18.72
28'- $20.16

SALVAGE

6 room house very well kept '3
bedrm:s modern kttchen wall
to wall carpet H W floors full
basement new gas furnace
small lot to mow •deal for
older couple or small fomt ly m
good
netghborhood
1n
Pomeroy Call for appomtment
Phone 992 3097

• K7
• 8 5J
• A K 12

owner

Above and below ground
pool ktts for the do ot
vourself man
All pool supplies avatlabte,
loo

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame
two bedrm
home
located between Coolvtlle and
Tuppers Plams One acre lot
two cor garage c1 ty water gas
heat
hardwood
floors
carpetd l1v1ng room n1ce v1ew

tiOH J
"'K986

Days and evenings except
Tues and Wtd or by
con1actlng R
Codner,

HALLS

Noble Summtl Rd
Middleport
PHONE992 5724
6 13 1 mo

.Q1074
SOU Til

-

saws.
Merry
Mowers

EAST IDI
•Q 103

•AJ754 2

SWIMMING
POOLS

D. BUMGARDNER

14

NOI\TH

~­

F ma ncmg A va1tabte

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC,

cond ition

1q75 C 6 750 Hond o $1500
Phone 992 7757 alter 6 p m

I

~Jigsaw

John 3.4,15 Medical Center 8 Bl Ways
33
10 3t&gt;-Woman 20 Catch 33 33
II ~News 3 ~ 6 8 101315 ABC News 33
I I 3t&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4 15 Getting Married 6 13
Movie ' Como Fly with Me" 8, Movie 'Brain
storm' 10 Janek! 33
I 00-Tomorrow 3,4, News ll

Complacent type of player

•'

Mtddloport, Oltlo
"2-' 1' 7
l ____...,:6:;,1.:;7.:,:6-:;.:.l~:.m:::on:!th::.:.J

Blown mtoWiills&amp; Att1cs

6ooo BTU W~~t~nQhouse mr cond1

cond1tlontng Call
G M
FreelarJd 992 2646 for appo1nt
m&amp;nt -

For aggresstve tndtvtdual
who IS wtlhng to work long

hours for good profits:
Small tnvestment required
- 11 000 For delaots and
mtervtew call Mr Adams
t 304 - 37S - ~89J eventngs.

Service

Press 20

••

FREE ESTIMATES

mtleo~! $~-~ho~!_~93!-l59
1976 16 ft T$1 Hull boo! 75 h p

DONEUJ'S PillA
_

Blown
lnsulatton Serv1ces

9 ~JQO Forrester 3 ~. 15 Ail In The Family 8,10

9 30-Maude B, Oral Roberts' We The PeoptelO World

10

WIN AT JIRIDGE

~~~~ ~
- :=:::::;;:=:=~

low

3- AN04-RMf~r~~h;d-;nd-u-;,

-

COINS tokens any form gold or
s lver 1ewelry spoons rmgs
dental W1ll !rode Coli Roger
Wamsley Rutland Ohto 742

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,.....-..,

David Parsons. Owner
949 2114
6 7 1 mo

1 30-Bobby Vinton~. Space 11199 6, Price Ia Right 8,
Evening Edition with Martin Agronaky 20, High
Road to Adventure10 , To Tell the Truth 13, Frltnell
ot Man IS, Tennis tor tveryone 33
8 ~VIva Voider 13 John Davidson •· 15, Gunamokt
a. U S A People &amp; Politics 20,33
8 3t&gt;-That Good Ole Nashville Muslt 3, Baseball 6,
Piccadilly Circus 33 Phyllis 10, WEIIaprlnga 20

WHIL!l IN WASHINc:iTON, DC

OPEN

Scjuare Yard lnstolled

992 3181 or 992 7639
197 1 Hondo

Tu
With any M 00 purdlost
and thla ad Good lllrougll
6-30-76
-

•6• 95

10 sp b cycle hke new Phone

3 bedroom houl!le both ond 01r

--

U1Birthday

MODERN stereo conso le 4 speed
changer om fm rod to Balance
SI06 _.Oar terms Coll992 3965

Middleport

3 Bedrm tro1ler 70KIA clean
mealy furnished located at

PISCES (Ftb 20-Marclf 20)

(614) 667 3333

-= =: ==-~-· ae~~;~~~~~~~~:
FURNISHED 2 btMtrm apartment ----::::====::::=--=====

dor Coli 992 2659
- - -

~Your

16 ft boo! 50 h-p- M;rc;y ;;.~;,r
wtth tro1ler Pme $350 Phone

o

•1.00+

BACK CARPETING

r

'
'I
I'

6 CANS OF RC

ASSORTED RUBBER

-;~,~rc;cle-~r~~er -(~II "::~~~~~~6~3~1~m~on~t~h~

992 1110

5 oo-.Bonaore 3 Partrtolge Family a Mtsston tm
possible 15
S 30-Adam 12 4,13 News 6 Family Allatr 8 Etec
Co 20,33
6 ~News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 30-NBC News 3,4 15 , ABC News q Andy Grllftth 6
CBS News a, 10
Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Carraacolen~as 33
7 DO-Oral Roberts' We The People 3 Probe 4
Bowling For Dollars 6 Buck Owens 8, News 10,
Candid Camera 13 Family Affair 15, Teach ina

I
'
I

Children to Read 20. Re1011rceful Weal VIrginia
33

MONDAY, JUNE 14, 1m

I

JUNE SPECIAL

Racine, Oil to

St Rt 124 Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone992 5468

runs

===--

11) You can count on favors to
day trorn persons you ve a1 d ed
m the pa st Tht s ts especia ll y
tru e n matters pe rtain ng to
yo ur fmances
Some news you ve been ani(
tously awat ttng cou ld arrtve
sho rtly lt w1U bn!=jhl en your
outlook considerably

cond1t1on

good 5500 Pol bel ly stove
$65 Phone 992 7805

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

adults only
In
Phone 992 3874

CARPET SHOP

RIDERS SALVAGE

1970 Doosun 510

Phone 742 20fll
DEALERS 1n 1unk cars scrap Iron
metals Phone 992 5.468

RACINE

1

cond11ton

auto 22 col forget p1stol new

3 b1ke

SeiiOu.h.ly 597 ,

Junk Batlertes $ 1 25

$650 Phone 992 3843
SMITH ond Wesoon Model 41
fo1r

Free Estimates

';:::;;:::;;;;;;;;:::;;:::;;::;:::;;;;;~
'-=========::·=~
I
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper 35c
Car Bodtes
scrap-Iron

Sedan

R 1
ep 1cement
WIRdows •nd Doors

We recommend and

loon Two end lobles mofchng
onl que bed and butteo d•esse'
Phone 992 6092
' Tl 45d- p,~,-;,y-p; t&lt;o-;.;;,~.;;.;

$180 l"m

Alumtnum V1nyl Steel
Continuous GuHer

3 281ma

Motor Cast Clean

good

304 415 0386
614 423~14

m:m

ONE dinette set ex"ellent cond,

YARD SALE June IS 16 17 18

4245

OLD lurn1ture Ice bo~~:es brass
beds old wall telephones and
ports or com plete households
Wnte M 0 M1ller Rt 2
Pomeroy Oh1o -~~ 9~_7!60_

cot~~~::

992 2272

WILL do bu1ldmg and remodelmg
roofmg
pllJmb ng
furnace YARD Sole June 10 thru 13
repoH gas or o1l or general
LeMaster residence near Oar
repo1r
Free esllmates and
wm Stereo TV console luds
reasonable rate s
Phone
clothes books new Queen
Ct1orles S nclo1r (614) 985 4121
sheets etc Phone 992 7119

----

~,:~• and lose weoghl Nelson

1970 Hondo CC 350
t1elmets hghnse
block w1th whtle
cellent cond1t1on

WANTED Bobysttter for 10 year
old boy Syracuse Oh10 Phone
997 7165ofter4 30p m

0'

convement than
Eat sot tsfy.ng

Soles &amp; Stnrfce
2013 loth Ave
Parkersburg, W Va

Racme Ohio

round or spltt

plan more
grapefruits

Siding Center

1

Nted new roof or old
replired? House, roof
barn, shingles build up
painting tlectrical work
gutters &amp; downspouts ,
furnaees. water tltaters
water softntrt. Instilled &amp;
rep a lrtd, Sewage

MAKE spnng cleonmg profi tab le
turn unwonted 1tems mto cosh
Adverttse in the Want Ads

-----------

992 5949 $1895

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

m

~~~!. 9~ _:m•
GRAPEFRUIT PILl w1lh Doodo•

r'
~-

COAL ltmestone and all types ol
solf and rock sal t for 1ce and
snow removal EKcels1or Salt
Work s East M01n St Pomeroy
OhiO Phone
3891

$50 Phone (614) 985 3926

5 ROOMS and bott1 on 212 Con

espoc)a!!y rc wardtnq days lor
you provtded you p u rsue
QO~ I s tn nccor dr1nce wtth your
I tq hr"&gt; l tdeT~Is

dtfferenl vanet1es of tomatoes
tncludtng non oCJd whate
tomato Very Iorge seleclton of
beddtng
plants
A lso
Geronlumt and other potted
plants
Hang1ng baskett
Cleland Forms and Green
haute
Geroldfne Cleland
Roc me

!loner

1971 Deluxe 5ho sto camper 21 h
self conta •ned a1 r cond111on
tng sleeps 4 ex tra Iorge
hold tng tonk Coli George Hall

Business Services

vEGETIIBLE plonh ol all kond1 10

motorcross

"otices

-,

Fof S'ile -~~,-

LOCUST posts

$3195

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Television log for easy viewing

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

mUNO

)

'

�~

6-:: '!'he Dally Sent me l, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 Monday,June 14, 1976
PUBLIC NOTICE
Not ce s hereby given that
seated btds will be recel\led at
t he office of the VIllage c erk
on Second Street VIllage of
Pomerov
01'1to
until 12
o clock. noon on the 19th of
July
tor
th e pur chase
of ,,_. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .__ , ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
the 1976
f ollo
w tng
parcels

DEADLINES

S P M
Da y
Beior e
Publlcllllon
Mdndav Deadl tne 9

am

Cancellation

Corrections wtll be ac

cepted unt i l 9 a m
Dav of Publi c ation

for

descr•bed real estate
That the follow ing d escr~be d
rtal estate belongmg to thE
Village of Pomeroy 1s not
needed f or any muntc1pat
pu( pOse to wtt
Parcel I L ot 12 m v 6
Horton s Add tlon to Pomeroy
Lot 13 m v B Horton s A d
dillon to Pomer oy
Reference Deed
Volume
205 Pa ge 387 at the M e1gs
County Ohto Deed Records
Parcel 2 Begtnntng on Nye
Street at the Northeast cor ner
Of a lot her etof ore deeded by
Cur ti s D Reed and Laura
A lber t a R ee d to Joh n M
Roed el by deed dat ed April 24
1899 recorded tn Vo lume B4
Pag e 3B6 records of D eeds of
M elos County Oh1 0 Th ence
Sou th pa ral lel w1lh Ny e Str eet
e1g hteen C18 J feet
t hence
West twenty stx (26) feet
thence no rth e1ghteen (18)
t eet then ce East twenty s1x
f26l fe et to tne p lace of
b~gmntng
Savini} li nd ex
cepttng a l t coat and other
mtnerals u nderly t n g fh f
prem1ses he r eby g ranted
Together w1th lh e r ight to
mine ltl e same withou t any
unnecessa ry damage to th e
su rfa ce of the same
Deed Referenc;e Volu m e 94
Page 286 Me1gs Co unty Deed
Records
Parcel J
Sttuat ed In the
Townsh•P ot Sal •sbury County
of Meigs and Stat e of Ohio and
more parlt c ularty bound ed
and d e scr~bed ItS follow s
Sttuat ed m the V•llage of
Pomeroy belng Lot No 43
commen c mg on the Nor t h S1de
of Condor St re et m satd Ct ty at
a stone placed at a permanent
corner then ce runn ing at rtght
angles with said street 100
f ee t then ce runmng parallel
wtth the ttne f tr sl run 100 tee t
to th e street 1 r st named
th ence easterly along sa 1d
str ee t 38 teet to the p lace ot

REGULATIOI!S

The Publ isher renr ves
the rtght to edtt or reject
any ads deemed ob
ltcllonal . The publ ~ h e r
will no t be re!tponstbl e for
more than on e mcorrect

tnsert ton

RATES

For W•nt Ad Servtce
s cents per word on e
Insert ion
Mmlmum Ch arg eS\ 00
14 cen ts pe r word three

cortsecuttve

tnse rlton s

n ce nts per word so&lt;
consecuttve
tnsertions

25 Per Cent Otscount on
pa 1d ads and ads pa td
wtthm 10 dav s

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

$2 00

for

mmtmum

50

wo r d

Ea c h i ddtt onal word J
cents

BLIND ADS

Addll onal He Ch a rg e
per Adver t tsemer'll
OFFICE HOURS
8 30 a m to 5 00 p 1'11
Dally 8 30 ol m to 17 00
Noon Saturday
Phon e today 992 2156

NOTICES
ATTN II

ALLIIOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales Rummpg e
Porct1 and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales etc
must be pa id m advance
Get your l n m early by
stopping by our offt ce at
The Dally Se,nt tnel
111
Court St or wnt nQ B~x
729 Pomeroy Ohio 45769
Wtlh your rem 1ttance

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OH IO

begon nong

DEPARTMENT OF

TRANSPORTATION
Columbu s Ohto
June 4 1976
Contract Sales Legal Copy
No 76 520
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sea led propo sals wtl
be
recetved a t t he olf tce of th e
D re c tor o f the Oh o Depart
men!
of
Transportat ton
Columbu s Oh to unt1l 10 00
AM
Oh10 Standard T 1m e
Tu es day June 29 1976 tor
Improvement s tn
Part s I to 16 InClU SIVE' arc
off er ed as on e co ntra c t und
w II be co nstde r ed on th e basts
of th e total amount btd
Parts 1 to 16 mclu stv e
At hen s
G all a
M e tgs
Morgan Nob le Vmton an d
Wash n g ton Co un ltes Oh o on
st ru c tur es on \lar tous routes
and sectton s n the VI age of
by c l eant1 Q and
V nton
patn ttng
Ty pe o f Structur e
See
Plan
The date set for c omp te! on
of th1 s wo rk shall be as se t
forth n t/1e btddtng p roposal
Ea c h bidder shalt
be
r equ r ed to fi le wtth h s b d a
cerllt ed chec k or cashter s
c he c~ for an amount equal t o
ftv e per cent ot hts b1d b ut '"
no even t more than lttty
thous and dollar s or a bond for
ten per cent of hts bid payab l e
to the D irec tor
B dders m ust app y on th e
prop er forms for qualtfl calton
at leas t ten day s pr or to t h e
date set tor op en ng btds m
accor dan ce w th Chapter 5575
Oh1o Rev1 se d Code
Pan s and spe c tftcat on s ar e
on fil e 1n the D epartment of
Tran spo r tal on and th e offt ce
of
the
Dis riel
Dep ut y
D re c tor
The D tr ec tor r ese r ves Jh e
r~ght t o r e tect an y and all b1dS
RI CH A RD 0

JA~KS ON

DIRECTOR
Rev B 17 73
I6 J 1.4 21 2tc

AstraGraph
~Bermea

Bede Osol

For Tue1day June 15 1976

ARIES (March 21 April

19)
You It be ve ry successfu l today
n dea ltng w1th o th ers •I you re
no t too aggresstve People wtll
coo perate 11 you gutde Don t
push

TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Your amb !t ons wt ll be m h1gh
gea r today You I be mott va ted
by somelhmq you strongly
de s1 re Keep yo ur 1easons to
you rse ll tor no w

GEMINI (May 21 June 20)
So ft sell

w II work wonde rs
tod ay Underst ate wh at you
have to oller Let th e per son
you re deatmg wtth ftll tn th e
bl ank s

..

CII.NCER (June 21 July 22)

"

rI :

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-~

Benet ts occ ur to day because
of you r smc er e dewe to se rve
someone wh o needs 1'1elp You
won t do 11 for prof t but you II
gatn anyway

LEO (July 23 -Aug

22)

Glamorous poop e and set
tmg s hold a spec1al ap p er~ l lor
you to day D•nner tn a posh
res tauran t wou ld match your
mood

VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept 22) The
market value o f goods ser
v ces or talents th at you have to
pu rvey tod av 1S up Keep thts
foremost tn se tt tnq your pn ce

•• •

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•

LIBRA (Sept 23-Dct 23) You
mnkc a very favorab le tmpres
s1 on toda y all hough you wont
pom ted ly try to do so or even
be aware o f 1!

SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22)

.
I

l

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SAGITTARIUS (NoV: -23 Doc

'

21) The example you set Will be
an excellent one today You are
co mpassiona te wlltJng to listen
and eager to help

beo ng Ihe same

p r em 1se s
co n veyed
to
Margaret Kautz by C Hamm
and Su san Ha mm h ts wife by
deed dated Aug 3rd 1841 and
r ecorded •n Vo l 9 page 449 of
the Re cords of Dee ds tn Me,gs
Co unty Ohm Said pr emts es
are kn own as No 207 Condor
Str ee t
Th e followmg real estate
stl uat ed m the V Illag e of
Town s h 1p
of
Po me r oy
Sa li sbu r y County ot Melgs
and State of OhiO and more
part c ular l y bound ed and
descr~bed as follows
Be ng Lo t No ~'l on Condor
St sa td lot be ng 36 teet fr ont
on Condor Str ee l n Second
Ward of sa1d v llage of
Pomeroy
Ot1to
b emg the
same prem ses so ld by Jos•ah
Ho ff and w1t e Sarah A Hoff
as are descr i bed tn Vol 108
page 25 6 Metgs County Deed
Records Sat d pr emtse s are
known as No 207 Condor
Stree t
Parcel 4
The folloWtng
descrtbed real es ta t e situated
n the V l lag e of Pom eroy
Coun ly of Mc• gs and State ot
Oh10 Begmntn y 60 feet and 7
nch es southwester ly from the
southeasterly corner of Lot 151
In sa td v lla ge on Sec ond
Str ee t at the sou!heasterly
corner Of the but dtng now or
form erly owned by satd City of
Pomeroy !known as t h e Ctty
Ha 1)
then ce nor tl'1w ester ty
para ll el wtth tl'1e westerly tine
ot Lo t 14 1 100 feet or to the
north ltne of an unnumbered
located between lots
tot
numbered 1.41 and 152 m sa1d
village thence southwester ly
lollowmg the northerly I me of
Lot 152 and the heretofore
m enfton ed unnumbered lot to
t he nor theaster y corner of th e
prem1ses now or formerly
own ed by theE berfetd Realty
Company (For reference deed
see Vo l 161 page 35 0) Thence
southeas terly parall el Wtlh the
westerly line L ot 152 of Secon d
Street thence northeasterly
following the southerly line of
Lot 151 and the unnumbered
Lo t located between Lots lSI
and 152 to 1M place of
begtnn •ng Thts lot to be so ld Is
known as tl'1 e C t ty Hall
Pomeroy Ohlo
Th ere s al so tnc lud ed a
strtp of land on the easterly
s de of lhe 1'1ere tn descnbed
prem 1ses extend1ng f r om
Second Stree t to the rear of
sa td Lot a stnp S t eet w 1de for
the purpose of an alley to be
used tn commo n by the
M ethodiSt Eptscopal Chur ch
of Pom eroy OhiO and the
here n named Vtllage of
Pomeroy thetr
suc cessors
and ass1gns
Ther e ts also tn c tud ed the
tQht to use an alley .4 feet and
10 mch es wtde on the west s1dc
of the heretn descr i bed r ea l
esta t e sa d alley to be used tn
common W1th the Elberfeld
Realty Company and the
Village of Pomeroy for the
purpose of mgress and egress
s~td alley 1s located tn Lotl52
Thet the sa•d Co uncil of the
Village of Pomeroy havmg
the
superviS IOn
or
management of the property
to be so ld be and 1'1ereby tS
author~zed to &amp;dverttse sa1d
real estate for sa e to the
highest b•dder ac cording to
taw upon the following terms
Cash 10 hand on the da y ot the
sa te
Ea ch b •d must conta1 n the
full name of every person or
co mpany tnterested in the
same and be accompanied by
11 bond or certlfted ct1eck ln the
sum
of
S10000
to t he
sat sfact on of V llag e Council
as a guaranty 11'1et tf the btds 1s
accepted contra c t w II be
entered mto and tis perform
ance properly secured
These c hec~s or bond s w 11
be returned at on ce to all
exc ept the successful bidder
H ts check or bond Will be held
unt t t he con tra ct or bid •s
properly executed by h im
SAtd council reserves th e
rtgh t to retect any and all btds
re ce1ved for the sale of any
parcel of real estate Th1s
Ordmance st1all go mto effect
fr om and af t er tl'1e earliest
per od allowed by low

Someone vou II be deahng w•th
tod ay does thmg s tn a cra lly
lash on He II be no ma tch for
you You can see through llts
venee r
~

ATTEST

R ~I ph Werry
President of
Vtllllge Council
V II age of Pomeroy

Jane Walton
Clerk of VIllage
o1 Pomeroy

161

14

21 28 171 s 12 lie

Pomeroy
Motor Co.
1974 FORD FlOO
5299S
8 Styleslde green finish good tires R oomper
chrome gr ills &amp;ftls bumper 6 cy l &amp;std trans
1973 CHEVROLET ClO

52895

8 F leetstde wh over red clean 1ntenor 350 V S
automatic power st eermg &amp; brakes good tires step
bumper radiO custom tnm &amp; mtrrors

1913INTERNATtONAlt600
102 C A V 8 5 speed 18 5001 speed R axle 900 tires
S&lt;llld cab color whtte

t

POM0~~?!vE~?!~~ CO. '(ji\

~~

POMEROY, OHI\)

~

.•

RACINE F1re Department w1lt
ho"e a gun shoot Saturday at
6 30 p m ot thelr new butldtng
off Bashan Rood

1956 Chevy Belo tr 53 00 o(tual
m1les Phone 992 6092

CHANGE OF HOURS - Begmntng
June 12 we w11l be closed Sotur
doys New hours wtll be Man
day through Fndoy 9 o m tdl
7 p m Carol no Fobr1 cs Route
7 one half m1le north of
Chesler Ohto Henry and Mary
Hunter o wn ers

1970 Bu1ck R vtero full power ex
cellent cond1t lon
$1200
Phone 747 2796

1971 VW

Beetle

$850 Phone

9913038

1964 Cu tlass converllble

$300

Phone 949 2480 o r 992 6092
1971 Ford LTD good condtllon
5-4 000 mtles $1600 Phone

992 2704

LJ..Jp w.ag"-.1
Jm "' KU
-

=

-~

_

DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST
MENT NO COLLECTING OR
DELIVERING CALL COlLECT TO
CAROL DAY 518 489 8395 OR
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR
TIES 20 RAILROAD AVE
ALBANY N Y 12105
HOUSEWIVES open the door to
ex tra eornmgs Jam the sue
cesslul women who ore mok
tng good money m the r spore
I me
No
exper ence
necessa ry no del very no col
lechng n9 cosh mvestment
Call now and ge t extra early
beneftts Ph one 949 2003 or
949 2786 Al so book1ng par
ltes

1974 Olds Cutlass Supreme fully
carpeted p s p b tope ex
tros
Low m1leoge Ask ng

$3450 Call992 3032
1970 Pont oc H T Catalina o1r
cond ttonmg p s p b $500

Phone 949 2589

-

1974 Ford 4 door hardtop power
stecrmg power brakes atr
(Ond f1on ng rod ol I res m(e
cor $1995 Phone (6t.t ) 985

3554
1973 Goloxu:! 500 p s p b good
cond1fl0n $1600 Phone 992

2978

SiLa.M1a...:W.ala.il ==;;;:: -_-_;;__
JWGWJ»::Ucu• a
-~
=== ==-===WILL DO odd JObs roohng po n
ttng haul ng treework and
mowmg Ph one 9~2 74~
WILL core for elderly person 1n my

home Phone I (614) 985 3849
or992 3.4 10

992 2221

IF YOU have o ser v1ce to offer
wont to buy or sell someth ng
ore lookmg for work
or
whatever
you II get results
foster w1th o Senltnel Wont Ad

Coll992 2156
'YARD Sole Thursday thru June 30
across from Bradbury School
Shallow well pump
n ce
clothing
d1shes
f&amp;wel ry
reasonable

-

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WILL bobys1t m Tuppers Plo•ns
and Ches ter area
hove
references Phone (614 ) 985

CASH pa d fo r all makes and
models of mobile t1omes
Phone a reo code 614 423 9531
,..

___ ...__ -- ---

$$Cosh$$$ for JUnked auto Frye s
Truck Auto Ports Rutland

--- -- -

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10 c m t1ll 7 p m Furmture
dtshes good drapes men and
women s dothmg blankets
lamps
ut1l1ty trol ler
Sole
located on old Rout-e 33 bet
ween County Roods 18 and 19
George Wh1te res dence
Phone ~92 _3~3~3 Fom tly Yard Sole by Salisbury
School Tues and Weds June
15 and 16 9 am 1111 6 p m
Wh1te untform and glassware

~~~~~~~~&lt;:_)'_! _a~~ ~~s_: - --YARD Sole lues ond Weds at
Donald Buchanon Reedsv lie
OhiO 8 30 1111 ?

USED Swmg Set or outdoor ploy

j

~y~- P~_'I~2_:J7~2_ _____

'

500 4 cyl

2331

BusinesS Franchise
AVAILABLE
IMMEDIATELY
IN POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
AREA

Ch,ysle• molo' new l1ll l•ooler
lull conopy oil occesso,es
Phone i92 2280

1972 135 Ferguson tractor 300
hrs l1ke new $3500 Also 6ft
bush hog $350 Howard Sayre
Syracuse Ohto
e&gt;ecellent

lurmshed

opts

Phone 992

5434

--

FIRE lo-dder- b;ck~ho~;~ -r;h~sh­
ed and ca1ned Contact Lmcoln
Russell on Route 143
2 motchmg
handlebars
stupes ex
$.450 Phone

TAPPEN Gas r~n;e--s\o over
stuffed ct1o~r $5 00 Sunbeom
elec cu rler set $5 00 Phone

992 2S52
2 row corn cu lllvator to ht Mossey
Horr ss 44 tractor $50 Phone

(614) 985 3581
4x8 slate pool table w1th rock ond
cue5 $200 Phone 992 2413
STEREO w tth AM FM good condt

loon $7S 992 2087
REDUCE safe and fast wttl"i
Go8ese Tablets and E Vap
woi~_E~I; N!l!.~n_D!~9__ _

FREEZER SALE!
Save up to 5100 on 20
cu It Chest or 16 cu.
It Upnght.

Ch01ce

$26995

.POMEROY LANDMARK
4'--Jack W C.rsey,Mgr.
iliil Phone 992-2181

RATES FOR SENOR CITIZENS
Conven1enl to shopptng on
Th rd ond M II Streets tn M1d
d eport Brand new h1gh qua It
ty apartment s
See the
manager at R1ver:s1de Apart
ments or call 99:2 3273 Fur
ntshed • apartments
also
ov01loble
One bedrm and 2 bedrm fur
ntshed opartmenh
Phone
TRAILER space for ren t 1n M1d

~!~art ~~0~!!93_?434

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON
Wanted to own and operate
candy- &amp; contecflon vendmSt

route Me1gs Countv and
surrounding uu Pleu•nt
buslnen High profit Items
can start part time Age or
experience not Important
Requires car and S149.5 to
S4795 cuh Investment For
details wrltt and Include
your phone numbtr
Department IVV

3931 Meodowbrook Rd

Minneapolis, MN 55426

June 15 1976
The destre to qatn k 10wledge
throuqh study and ex per ence
wtH be stronq tn you thts com
nQ year Travel aqems wt lt hke
vm hflCRuse of you r urge to
see th e world

6-ro~;h~m;~_.M,ddi;p;,;t- ~~~

to school New shmgle roof
COUNTRY Mcbtle Home Pork Rt
SS500 Phone 992 7175
33 ten m1lel!l north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots wtth concret patios HOME- of lofe- Ei;a;d Hoefl1ch
314 Condor St Pomeroy Ktl
s1dewolks runners and off
chen
den laundry storage
~~~~~~~~~~~0~!~~!~~
f1rst floor two bedrooms ltvtng
ONE bedroom oportments ol
room bath second floor Full
VIlLAGE MANOR on Mlddleporo
ott1c three parcels Phone
for $104 monthly plus elec or
992 5374 after 5 p m
Sl30 mdudmg electnc LOWER

992 3129 0' 992 5434

FURNISHED 2 room apartment
126 Mulberry Ave adults and
references
Phone 992 2030
!.venlngs o~ 9~-2~~---2 Bedrm mob1le home Phone

992 2834
LARGE 3 rm furn1shed opt otr
cond1t1onmg 12 m1les from
Pomeroy on Rt 33 Available

June IS Phone992 6161

2

bed~; o~dlb~rm ~~n~sh;d
apartment Phone 992 2288 or

992 2348
M081LE t1ome adults only Phone

992 SS3S

Moplewood take Phone 949
2709
4

rm
fur~tsh;d-- oo~;~~;nt..
everything pold upstairs apart
ment no pets or ch1ldren
Adults only Phone 992 5810 or
con be soan at 814 E Mom St
P.omeroy

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDING IOFFITT
GUTTERS AWI!INGS

LOVELY OLD II KICK On 1 corner lots Beautiful
kitchen w range ref
disposal dishwasher other
extras 5 BR 2 baths N G
hot water heat Part
basement 120 000
RUTLAND - On Leading
Creek 1 72 acres mostly tn
lawn Excellent for home
or trailer This you must
see $3 300
HERE IS A BUY - 3 BR
bath dtn In kitchen w 17ft
cab dOuble bowl s S sink
Large Jiving R 2 porches,
N G heel, storage bldg
$7 900

FARMS &amp; ACREAGE 1-30 A , 1- 157 A 1-135
A
Please call
lor
particulars
POMEROY - Large brick
&amp; block building, 2 story,
lower has 3 rental rooms,
12 ere rented) S6 800 A
good Investment
DON'T LOSE MONEY LIST WITH US TODAY
HENRY E CLELAND,
BROKER
992 2259 or 992 2568

LARRY
LAVENDER
Syracuse Oh io
Ph 992 3993

Ph 9!2 2114
P0111to11
'----------:..J

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'--

•AK2
• Q9 4
•AQ86142

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CODNER'S CAMPERS
RAINBOW RIDGE

4101rho

WEST

CBashan Arul

LONG BOTTOM

.J96
t76
.J 3

SALES &amp; RENTAL
Travel Trailers

• 109
Neather vulnerable

'

5 21 1 mo

I
0

'

,,..••

•

Tllltrs,

498 locust 51
Middleport, Oh10 912 3092
s 26 2 mo

house near
Phone 7.42

2796 •

HOUSE for sale m ChestMr area
Three year old four bedroom
brtck ranch on five acres of
land Has two baths Iorge
rooms flmshed basement w1th
fireplace m family room Phone
(6 1~) 985 3938 or contact Don
Roush

6uiell-;.;;,-;,;i.;i;.J -.~~- ;I;~ -3
bedrm

t1ome

$12 .500

Call

992 5011
lOT tn Spnng Htll Fla I For sole
or trade cor truck Oh10 land
onylhtng of value $2 500 or
mor~ ~alii~• ) 667 3074

TEAFORD
Vtrgtl B Sr , Realtor
110 Mechantc Pomeroy q
Phone 992 337~
MODERN - 3 brs, 2
baths nice kit , full
basement city water and
gas 1 4 acres $31 500
ONE FLOOR - Mod 3
brs bath kit has stove
refrlg and bar wllh dining
room Level lot $18 000
DEXTER Busl~ess
building 30 x 40 one floor
Asking only 55 500
COUNTRY SETTING -11
beautiful acres , lenced
blue &gt;grass garden, corn
patch 4 br residence
Spring water large yard
for the children NEW
LISTING at $29,000 be
tween coal mtnes

NEAT - 2 br bungalow
st

doors

cook

and

un its

furna ce

windows

nat

gas

basement

large

yard $13,500 Owner will
help finance

-

RIVER VIEW - Lovely
kit wllh cook units 3 brs
auto steam heel Porches,
garage and basement
S29 500
TUPPERS PLAINS- Nice
3 brs bath, gu F A
(urnace Lot 100 x 375 On &gt;;,
acre Only 519 500
NEW LISTING- 2 brs,
bath nat gas, F A
(urnece Full basement
Just $5,500
SOON THINGS WILL BE
BOOMING IF YOU WANT
TD
ENJOY
PROSPERITY, JOIN US,
llfi'I'U Vt'\111'!!1

nnt'\D~DTY

P01ss

Pass
It
2NT
Pass

1 ...

Openmg lead - 5 •

Southeastern Oh10

LJ'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIF

Truss Rafter Co.

LITTLE ORPHAN

Box28 A
Rutland, Ohto 4S775
Ph (61417422409
We Deliver
6 13 761 mo

WERE WAlKING
ALONG CARRYING
lOOtS THERE
WAS A BLINDIHG
FlASH AND A
CRASH·
11if'f

By Oswald &amp; Ja~t~es Jacoby
J1m
Rubber brtdge
players have lots of fun but

D A 11 y

lr.;~;!;{r';3;;~~:ll[v~ery
lew of them make any ef
r-::==::-:;:::::;=;:::::=;::;::=::.::;:;
YOU HADCHECt&lt;ED
WE ~HEW
rt to play r ea lly good
ClN WHAT

WPS

IN THE BUNDLES
AT THE GATEL
OF COURSE &lt;'

mFY we~e

I

DOitiG
SPECIAL
INOIIK
FOR YOU

'

I

I

H1gh prtces for scrap
autos. motors and
other meta Is. Phone
992-2228 Monday thru
Frtday 8 3, Saturday
8 12.
526-lmo

"'

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•)

I

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brid1:e
Oswald Here IS a hand to
tllustrate lilts Playmg aL
three notrump South let East
hold the hrst track wtth the
of spades South put his
on East s ten and West
won wtlh hts ace West cashed
hts )ack or spades and cleared
the su1t but now South could
lose the club fmesse and st1ll
make hts contract
Jtm
l tmagme that East

INSURAIICE OPPORTUNITY 2 1n
d1v1duols who ne9d up to $700
to $900 per month dehvery
route or ms
eKpenence
helpful but not necessary
Please calf Mr Monroe at 453
0696 between 9 and S for ap
potnlment
An eqUal op

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ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasters Irons all
small oppllon'ces lawn mower
next to State H1ghway Garage

on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
3825
REMODELING Plumb1ng healong
and all types of general repolr
Work guaranteed 20 y.ara ex

WHY UH A SPECIAL
NUT ~AT We USE1

I

IN OUR LAS WCRK

OH' WE~~. I

(2

""

- ~~!~~.!i~~z~~~--

REGISTERED Beagle pup 6 mon
lhs old Phono 949 2413
SIAMESE k11tens $10 Sealpolnt1
phone 992 3216

flcenstd Installer
Shepard
Contractors Phone 742 2«19

FCiR-th;t;;,t~n-;;;,-;;ildrill
lng Phone Lemley O•llltng
Company 7~~ 2003
FRE"e- t"o- ~ -~-c~~nf;;-ho-;,-;- HAliiiNG-- o~;.~-;y--;at;rk-1
and limestone or gro..,.l farm
femole dog pori Colle and
limo Ph Jr Dorst 742 2850
Corman Shophord Good with
children and good watch dog

Phone 992 2552

E

II

•••

••
•

•u

•

••

"'

If Tree
..I" U S vel-

We've

:
I

•

city
Surrounding
Rock group's 8 KlpUng
Instrument
cia sale
(2 wda )
Nobleman

to

'

'

stop

h1m.
Sltrn!

:

At 5 p.m.

RUnAND PURNITU.

742·2211

.. ·~----

-- .. -........................
AllMOLd GRATJ

Slhlnl8y'1 A111wer
9 Picked up
%4 Say again

Cleaned

II Vlctuala
It Exceedingly
(2 wds )
%0 Give blrtb to
U Mw

reaort town

%5 French clty
%7 Right

SO Poet,

WH 21 Mellllldze
U Reverie
II Hlllh

forcibly
37 Telepathic
Initials

King and
Queen

pnr

\LWJJIIil llWlllJJII:%1 - aU..Ume

high
(2 wda)

Mauls
Beryl or
Wallsce
21 Landlord's

Income
32 Work unit

THERE60ESA
DE.A.D- 6Af'IIE
SPORTIN' KID'!

Semester 10

6 2t&gt;-Rev Cteophus Robinson 13
6 3t&gt;-Columbus Today 4 News 6, Summer Semester
8, Concerns &amp; Comments 10
6 4S..Mornlng Report 3
6 st&gt;-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13
6 ss-Chuck White Reports 10, Good Morn ing, Trl
Slale 13
7 QO-Today 3,.,15, Good Morning America 613 CBS
News 8, Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
7 3t&gt;-Schooltes 10
8 DO-Lassie 6, Capt Kangaroo 8 10 SoSIIme St 33
8 3t&gt;-Big Valley 6
9 oo-A M 3, Phil Donahue 4, 15, Lucy Show 8 Mike
Douglas 10 Morning wllh D J 13
9 lt&gt;-Cross Wlls 3 One Life lo Live 6, Tetlletelos 8
Mike Douglas 13
10 DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3 • 15 Edge of Nlghl 6, Price Ia
Right 8,10, Bit with Knll 33
tO 3t&gt;-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,~ 15 Dinah 6 Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 ~Wheel of Fortune 3 15 Weekday •· Gambit
8, 10, Fermer's Daughter 13
11 31&gt;-Holtywood Squares 3.~. 15, Happy Days 13, Love
of Ltle 8,10
t1 ss-Take Kerr 8, Dan !mol's World 10
12 oo-Fun Factory 3, 15, Let s Make e Deal 13, Bob
Braun 4, News 6,8, 10. Seaame St 33
12 Jt&gt;-Gong Show 3 15 All My Children 6 13, Search
for Tomorrow 8,10
12 ss-NBC News 3 15
1 ~News 3. Ryan's Hope 6,13, Phil Donahue B,
Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women Only 15 ,
Etec Cc 33
I 31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,.,15, Rhyme &amp; Reason 6, 13,
As The World Turns 8,10, Family Theatre 33
2 D0-$20,000 Pyramid 6, 13, Bt Ways 33
2 3t&gt;-Doctors 3 ~.15, Break the Bank 6,13 Gutdtng
Light 8, 10, Unto the Hills 33
J ~Another World 3 4,15 General Hospltal6,13, All
In The Family 8, 10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 Catch 33
33
3 3D-One Life to Live 13 Mickey Mouse Club 6, Match
Game B, 10, Inner Tennis 20, Title X 33
4 ~Mister Cortoon 3 Merv Grttfln 4, Someraet 15,
BewttP,ed 6 Mickey Mouse Club 8, Mister Rogers
20,33 Movte "Tho Safecracker" 101 Dinah 13
4 3t&gt;-Bewltched 3, Mod Squad 6, Andy Grlllltn ~.
Sesame 51 20,33, Fltntstones 15
5 ~Bonanra 3, Partridge Family 8, Mission fm
possible 15
5 31&gt;-Adam 12 4, News 6, Family Affair 8, Elec Co
20,33 Adem 12 13
6 DO-News 3.~.8,10,13.15 ABC Newa 6, Zoom 20,33
6 3t&gt;-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC News13, Andy Grllflth 6,
CBS News 8 101 Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Llllai Yoga
&amp; You 33
7 oo-Tr11th or Cons 3, To Tell tho Truth~. Bowling for
Dollars 6 Country Place 8, News 10, Name That
Tune 13, Family Affair IS, Romagoolla Table 20,
Wild Wild World of Animals 33
7 31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3, Movie ' Spertacus" 4,
Lets Dee! with It 6 Match Game PM 81 Evening
Edlllon with Marti~ Agronsky 20, Price Is R lght 10,
To Tell the Truth 13, Nashville on lhe Road 15,
Family Theatre 33
8 ~Movln' On 3, Happy Da~ 6 13 I've Got a Secret
8,10 To Be Announced 15, Burglar Proofing 20
8 3t&gt;-Laverne&amp; Shlrley6,13, Baaebalt 15, Good Tlmea
8 10 Consumer Survival 20,33
9 ~Pollee Women 3.~ 15 SWAT 13 Commanden 6,
Mash 8 10 Evening at Symphony 20 Mylhkln 33
9 3D-One Day at e Time 8,10
10 DO-City of Angels 3 • Rookies 6, 13, Bravo Julie 81
Dance lor Camera 33 Switch 10, News 20
10 3t&gt;-Biack Persptcllve on lhe News 20, Woman 33
11 ~News 3,46 8,10,13,15, ABC News 33
11 3D-Johnny Carson 3,4 15, Mystery of the Week
6 13, Movie "The Fearless Vampire Killers" 8
Movie "Get Your10lf e College Girl" 10. Janek! 33
I oo-Tomorrow 3,4, News 13

33 Calendar
abbreviation

34 Coloration
3i Mental

block
(sl )
(2 wdlt

~~M@l!J:E;&amp;.J :::·'':-' ...J r::

goddes8

Unscramble thfle foorJumblto,
ont ltltor to tach oquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

)
37 Gennanlc

lo .. lllr&gt;.HI/\IHJ&lt;Ijlo

31 Relaxing
(2 wda )
31 Prophet

1•

,

NcMtOHO.V HIM HON
WRONG HE 1$ AND

HOW SWEET YOU
REALLY ARE I

Is

II

AXYDLBAAXK
I. 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One letter Simply st.mds for another In this sample A Ia
used for Lhe three I &lt; X for the two 0 s, etc Single letters.
apostrophes the length and formatoon of the 11ords arc all
hmts Each d oy the cnde letters arc dtfrerent

CRYPTOQUOTE
KYTS

SZGYH

TJGFEKB
YHM

NJTXYE

UKXHR

I () I I I

I (I)I I I I
P07TIE

XN

Y

NDLZTDZLK
NMNDKG

D. J

UKEJHRN

GJLK

...

A LAWVEI( W\-10'!&gt;

AF~AIP THE: CLIENT
MI6HT LOSE WE161·fT.

DSYH
ASXTS

Y E Q L K 0

'1'0\I'RE LEAVIN6 ~

.

WIMBLEDON N~?

("-wen ........,

S•lurd•y•

J•.,ble., POUND CANAL PAUOW TALICIR
An1wer1 W•llr'•••l tflltNn fldt
""culM-A FLOOD

I

8UT IT'S THE "'100\.f

OF THE

Nl6f.IT!!

1

•

~
,;----'~

I"

DAILY CRYPTO(jUOTE- Here's how to work It:

DERSTANDING, THE FURTHER DOES HE REMOVE
HIMSELF FROM QUARRElS - HASIDIC SA YJNG

•

•. FRIDAY TIL 8 :
Sat
•••••••••••••
Close

(Do you have a question
tor the e•perts? Wrtte 'Ask
the Jacobys care of lh1s
newspaper The Jacobys will
answer lnd1v1dual quesf1ons
11 stamped sell addressed
envelopes are enclosed The
most mterestmg quesf/ons
w111 be used m thrs column
and w1ll race1va cop1as of
JACOBY MODERN I

Saturday'• Cryptoquole TilE GREATER A MAN'S UN-

eI 1

Thursday 8 t1112 noon

•1

shaded to 14 or even 13

aunt
the check
s 'I'm- My 10 Aahe and
Time''
Laver, at
S Whack
times
( sl )
7 Oklahoma

(2 wds)

qot

.

erans org
Intend

(2 wda )
1 Spanish

~Summer

ASXDKSKYO

8:00tll5:00

:

1

II

Mon., Tues., Wed

••

moder n teacher recommends
15 pomts but says 1t can be

1 Rascal
2 Erie or
alimentary
3 Veteran pol

wda )

S K

••
~

c"A"R"Pemell-!~;:;,;-9--~;iiln{,­
_!'.o~.!~"!!-~h!""---------992 2759

I\ reader wants to know how
many pomts are shown by the
btd of two notrump m the
partnership sequence I Spade
2 Clubs 2 Notrump
There was a day "hen 11
showed 16 or I7 htgh card
pmnts but m the last 15 years
tl has been reduced so that Lhe

Quaker
DOWN

If Distrlbutar
15 Scottiah
name prefix

------------- -- -- ExcAvATING-BAcKifoEs-ANo

AKC Mole boxer 11 w.aks old

~u~-.

transaction
U Famous

lZ Indian city
IS "A Bushel
-Peck"

"

(614) 667 6368

DOZER LARGE ANO SMAll
SEPTIC TANKS INSTIILLEO Silt
PUlliNS PHOI!E 992 2478 OilY
OR NIGHT
sePTic- sr;le;;,-; - -;;;-,,oll~- ~;;

6

6 1s-F arm Report 13

44l Buslnesa

ACROSS
1 Gael
11 Colombian
city

EXCAVATING

-------------------

TUESDAY, JUNE ll, 1976

by

CE!nAINt.'(
HOPE HE 1
FINDS IT

r

-~.!:!~~-~~~!_~~~~----

0&amp;0 TREE Trlmmlng 20 years ex
partence
Insured free
eshmotes Call 992 2384 or
1969 12x60 Schult Early Amencon
(614) 698 72!17 AI bony
model large kttchen and bath
2 bedrooms o1r condlluonlng SEWlNG- MACHiNE-~p;l;s-~;,
good cond1t1on Phone 7.42
vJCe all makes 992 22~ The
3018
Fabr~c
Shop
Pomeroy
1~4- H.!i~;st12;M -2-bed;~;Authortzed Smger Sales and
Service We sharpen Scissors
lrant kitchen total elec fully
furniShed eye level oven and
do-;;- l.;;d.~-;,~d
surface
unit
corpMied
backhoe work dump trucks
throughout
boy wtndow
and lo boys for hire will haul
popu lar 3 door model Alto
fill dirt top sol i limestone and
1975 Skyline 12x52 2 bedroom
grovel Coli Bob or Roge1 Jel
front kllchen total elec total
fers
day phone 992 7089
wrapped Fom Cor new fur
n1gho phone 992 352S or 992
n1ture both umts like new
5232
pnced to sell Save a few hun
SEPTICTANKS~I;;;-n-;;
- Mode~n
dred on these trade ms at
Son 1taflon 992 3954 or 992
Kingsbury Home Sales ond Ser
2428
v1ces
1100 E Ma.n St
---- ---Pomeroy Phone 992 703-4
WILL do roofing, ;o~;t~u~tio-;.­
plumbmg and heating No job
12 mob1le homes for •o le B w1de
35 lo 50 lengths 1 and 2 too large or too small Phone
7~2 2348
bedrooms complete ly furn1!11h
ed cheap Coss•us Canoday ExC:AvATING --d-;;.~ --b;"k"h~.
1900 Central St
Galltpohs
and ditcher Charles R Hat
Ohta Phone (614) 406 I:I'll
field Bock Hoe Service
near Sm1th Butck
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2008
~ ------------------1972 12x60 Elcona washer and GREGs-ca-5AI:esla~;,~~~Erdryer shag carpet underplnn
wm 1 Gulf ServJCe
Mtd
109 olr condihonmg very
dleport Ohto
Phone 992
9ood condition $5500 Phone
2~38

told West If he had let South
hold that second tnck South
would not have made hts
game
Oswald Yes he dtd And
NorLh congratulated South on
lettmg the queen hold the first
spade
~1m
No conv ersatiOn
about the mtssed slam m
clubs'
Oswald Not a smtdg eon
No one pomted out that North
had underbtd ht s hand tremen
dously and no dtscusston o(
what sen es of btds would get
North and South to six clubs

~-~THOMAS JOSEPH

ALLEY OOP
I

L

BRADFORD Aushoneer Com
plete ServiCe Phone 949 2.487
or 949 2000 Racme Ohio Crill
Bradford

Monday June14

~

5 Vaunts

_ $21 0&lt;J9 Phone (614) 667_3_5~9_

16 acres J bedrm
Rutlond1 $10 500

Sou ttl

Pass
Pass

P&lt;~ss

~~~~~!~~~~:

- ~~r~g~~~D!.!l62~~~9-~~~

Norah East

Pass

IIAI'r-M~OlSii==== -

MODERN rural elec home on 1
or 3 &amp; two th1rds acres 3
bedrooms l1vmg 1 both k1t
chen full ftmshed basement
Wl th
laundry
recreafton

\\eta

I. 32"'N T 2.
Pass

4•12 Pitch
24'- $17.28
26'- $18.72
28'- $20.16

SALVAGE

6 room house very well kept '3
bedrm:s modern kttchen wall
to wall carpet H W floors full
basement new gas furnace
small lot to mow •deal for
older couple or small fomt ly m
good
netghborhood
1n
Pomeroy Call for appomtment
Phone 992 3097

• K7
• 8 5J
• A K 12

owner

Above and below ground
pool ktts for the do ot
vourself man
All pool supplies avatlabte,
loo

ROOMY 7 yr old one story wood
frame
two bedrm
home
located between Coolvtlle and
Tuppers Plams One acre lot
two cor garage c1 ty water gas
heat
hardwood
floors
carpetd l1v1ng room n1ce v1ew

tiOH J
"'K986

Days and evenings except
Tues and Wtd or by
con1actlng R
Codner,

HALLS

Noble Summtl Rd
Middleport
PHONE992 5724
6 13 1 mo

.Q1074
SOU Til

-

saws.
Merry
Mowers

EAST IDI
•Q 103

•AJ754 2

SWIMMING
POOLS

D. BUMGARDNER

14

NOI\TH

~­

F ma ncmg A va1tabte

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC,

cond ition

1q75 C 6 750 Hond o $1500
Phone 992 7757 alter 6 p m

I

~Jigsaw

John 3.4,15 Medical Center 8 Bl Ways
33
10 3t&gt;-Woman 20 Catch 33 33
II ~News 3 ~ 6 8 101315 ABC News 33
I I 3t&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4 15 Getting Married 6 13
Movie ' Como Fly with Me" 8, Movie 'Brain
storm' 10 Janek! 33
I 00-Tomorrow 3,4, News ll

Complacent type of player

•'

Mtddloport, Oltlo
"2-' 1' 7
l ____...,:6:;,1.:;7.:,:6-:;.:.l~:.m:::on:!th::.:.J

Blown mtoWiills&amp; Att1cs

6ooo BTU W~~t~nQhouse mr cond1

cond1tlontng Call
G M
FreelarJd 992 2646 for appo1nt
m&amp;nt -

For aggresstve tndtvtdual
who IS wtlhng to work long

hours for good profits:
Small tnvestment required
- 11 000 For delaots and
mtervtew call Mr Adams
t 304 - 37S - ~89J eventngs.

Service

Press 20

••

FREE ESTIMATES

mtleo~! $~-~ho~!_~93!-l59
1976 16 ft T$1 Hull boo! 75 h p

DONEUJ'S PillA
_

Blown
lnsulatton Serv1ces

9 ~JQO Forrester 3 ~. 15 Ail In The Family 8,10

9 30-Maude B, Oral Roberts' We The PeoptelO World

10

WIN AT JIRIDGE

~~~~ ~
- :=:::::;;:=:=~

low

3- AN04-RMf~r~~h;d-;nd-u-;,

-

COINS tokens any form gold or
s lver 1ewelry spoons rmgs
dental W1ll !rode Coli Roger
Wamsley Rutland Ohto 742

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,.....-..,

David Parsons. Owner
949 2114
6 7 1 mo

1 30-Bobby Vinton~. Space 11199 6, Price Ia Right 8,
Evening Edition with Martin Agronaky 20, High
Road to Adventure10 , To Tell the Truth 13, Frltnell
ot Man IS, Tennis tor tveryone 33
8 ~VIva Voider 13 John Davidson •· 15, Gunamokt
a. U S A People &amp; Politics 20,33
8 3t&gt;-That Good Ole Nashville Muslt 3, Baseball 6,
Piccadilly Circus 33 Phyllis 10, WEIIaprlnga 20

WHIL!l IN WASHINc:iTON, DC

OPEN

Scjuare Yard lnstolled

992 3181 or 992 7639
197 1 Hondo

Tu
With any M 00 purdlost
and thla ad Good lllrougll
6-30-76
-

•6• 95

10 sp b cycle hke new Phone

3 bedroom houl!le both ond 01r

--

U1Birthday

MODERN stereo conso le 4 speed
changer om fm rod to Balance
SI06 _.Oar terms Coll992 3965

Middleport

3 Bedrm tro1ler 70KIA clean
mealy furnished located at

PISCES (Ftb 20-Marclf 20)

(614) 667 3333

-= =: ==-~-· ae~~;~~~~~~~~:
FURNISHED 2 btMtrm apartment ----::::====::::=--=====

dor Coli 992 2659
- - -

~Your

16 ft boo! 50 h-p- M;rc;y ;;.~;,r
wtth tro1ler Pme $350 Phone

o

•1.00+

BACK CARPETING

r

'
'I
I'

6 CANS OF RC

ASSORTED RUBBER

-;~,~rc;cle-~r~~er -(~II "::~~~~~~6~3~1~m~on~t~h~

992 1110

5 oo-.Bonaore 3 Partrtolge Family a Mtsston tm
possible 15
S 30-Adam 12 4,13 News 6 Family Allatr 8 Etec
Co 20,33
6 ~News 3,4,8,10,13, 15, ABC News 6, Zoom 20,33
6 30-NBC News 3,4 15 , ABC News q Andy Grllftth 6
CBS News a, 10
Hodgepodge Lodge 20,
Carraacolen~as 33
7 DO-Oral Roberts' We The People 3 Probe 4
Bowling For Dollars 6 Buck Owens 8, News 10,
Candid Camera 13 Family Affair 15, Teach ina

I
'
I

Children to Read 20. Re1011rceful Weal VIrginia
33

MONDAY, JUNE 14, 1m

I

JUNE SPECIAL

Racine, Oil to

St Rt 124 Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone992 5468

runs

===--

11) You can count on favors to
day trorn persons you ve a1 d ed
m the pa st Tht s ts especia ll y
tru e n matters pe rtain ng to
yo ur fmances
Some news you ve been ani(
tously awat ttng cou ld arrtve
sho rtly lt w1U bn!=jhl en your
outlook considerably

cond1t1on

good 5500 Pol bel ly stove
$65 Phone 992 7805

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

adults only
In
Phone 992 3874

CARPET SHOP

RIDERS SALVAGE

1970 Doosun 510

Phone 742 20fll
DEALERS 1n 1unk cars scrap Iron
metals Phone 992 5.468

RACINE

1

cond11ton

auto 22 col forget p1stol new

3 b1ke

SeiiOu.h.ly 597 ,

Junk Batlertes $ 1 25

$650 Phone 992 3843
SMITH ond Wesoon Model 41
fo1r

Free Estimates

';:::;;:::;;;;;;;;:::;;:::;;::;:::;;;;;~
'-=========::·=~
I
$3.50 Per Hundred
Copper 35c
Car Bodtes
scrap-Iron

Sedan

R 1
ep 1cement
WIRdows •nd Doors

We recommend and

loon Two end lobles mofchng
onl que bed and butteo d•esse'
Phone 992 6092
' Tl 45d- p,~,-;,y-p; t&lt;o-;.;;,~.;;.;

$180 l"m

Alumtnum V1nyl Steel
Continuous GuHer

3 281ma

Motor Cast Clean

good

304 415 0386
614 423~14

m:m

ONE dinette set ex"ellent cond,

YARD SALE June IS 16 17 18

4245

OLD lurn1ture Ice bo~~:es brass
beds old wall telephones and
ports or com plete households
Wnte M 0 M1ller Rt 2
Pomeroy Oh1o -~~ 9~_7!60_

cot~~~::

992 2272

WILL do bu1ldmg and remodelmg
roofmg
pllJmb ng
furnace YARD Sole June 10 thru 13
repoH gas or o1l or general
LeMaster residence near Oar
repo1r
Free esllmates and
wm Stereo TV console luds
reasonable rate s
Phone
clothes books new Queen
Ct1orles S nclo1r (614) 985 4121
sheets etc Phone 992 7119

----

~,:~• and lose weoghl Nelson

1970 Hondo CC 350
t1elmets hghnse
block w1th whtle
cellent cond1t1on

WANTED Bobysttter for 10 year
old boy Syracuse Oh10 Phone
997 7165ofter4 30p m

0'

convement than
Eat sot tsfy.ng

Soles &amp; Stnrfce
2013 loth Ave
Parkersburg, W Va

Racme Ohio

round or spltt

plan more
grapefruits

Siding Center

1

Nted new roof or old
replired? House, roof
barn, shingles build up
painting tlectrical work
gutters &amp; downspouts ,
furnaees. water tltaters
water softntrt. Instilled &amp;
rep a lrtd, Sewage

MAKE spnng cleonmg profi tab le
turn unwonted 1tems mto cosh
Adverttse in the Want Ads

-----------

992 5949 $1895

Racine Plumbing
&amp;Heating

m

~~~!. 9~ _:m•
GRAPEFRUIT PILl w1lh Doodo•

r'
~-

COAL ltmestone and all types ol
solf and rock sal t for 1ce and
snow removal EKcels1or Salt
Work s East M01n St Pomeroy
OhiO Phone
3891

$50 Phone (614) 985 3926

5 ROOMS and bott1 on 212 Con

espoc)a!!y rc wardtnq days lor
you provtded you p u rsue
QO~ I s tn nccor dr1nce wtth your
I tq hr"&gt; l tdeT~Is

dtfferenl vanet1es of tomatoes
tncludtng non oCJd whate
tomato Very Iorge seleclton of
beddtng
plants
A lso
Geronlumt and other potted
plants
Hang1ng baskett
Cleland Forms and Green
haute
Geroldfne Cleland
Roc me

!loner

1971 Deluxe 5ho sto camper 21 h
self conta •ned a1 r cond111on
tng sleeps 4 ex tra Iorge
hold tng tonk Coli George Hall

Business Services

vEGETIIBLE plonh ol all kond1 10

motorcross

"otices

-,

Fof S'ile -~~,-

LOCUST posts

$3195

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan

AQUARIUS (Jan 20 Feb 19)

Television log for easy viewing

For Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

WANT ADS
INFORMATION

mUNO

)

'

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

News •. in Briefs
(·

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

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

•

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

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

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

Susanne

Pleshette, Elsa

Lanchester. Joby Baker.
Elliott Reid.
!GI

Show Starts 7 p.m.

Udall

Denials

(Continued !rem ..ae I)

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

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

Ohio
crops
need
•
ram

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

shorter in size," he said .

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

Wi11iam Jacobs died Saturday

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

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

,,.,,.,

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If yo u' re spendlng your
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?OMEROY CEMENl
BLOCK
The Department Store of
Builttin

Since 191S.

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

Beech Street , Middleport ,

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

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

o . Webster

!61 7.

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It ma ( be time to
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INGELS FURNITURE

DALE C. WMNER

MIDDLEPORT

992 -2143
102 W.

(

Drs.' Enjoy DOllars ran the

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

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

192-2635

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

J dg •

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

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

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

Vlnton ,

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

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

-

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

Jump into
Summer

Main

Pomeroy

$669,248. '

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

e
VOL XXVIII

" NO. {1

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

- TUESDAY, JUNE 1?. 1976

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

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

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

A piece of the energy puzzle.

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT

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

'

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

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

--Francia H. Andrews, Long

•

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

r

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

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

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

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

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

81.

I

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

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

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

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

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

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

Weather

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

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

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

Planners present review .

New architects offer bid on
new Gallia school buildings

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

Cove Point.

·PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Candidate has
no fears of office

all .

.TONI TODD

en tine

at y

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

0 .;

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

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

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

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

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

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

"

NOTICE OF
APPOINTM E N T

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

HOSPITAL NEWS

First funding

announced for
care center

'\

~

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