<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16303" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/16303?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T21:33:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49439">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/1d0fe54a0b83c3b559a0cfde13b4fba1.pdf</src>
      <authentication>c87a4ff3e5dd814260c87b33d90fce30</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52150">
                  <text>8Tt.e·Daily Sentinel, Middlrport-Polll crol . 11.. \1omil'Y .. June 21l, 197!i

Highway Departn1ent has cash pains
Due to an apparent &lt;:&lt;~sh
Row problem, the Gulli11
County Highway Department
Is In serious finanda l trouble.
Dlsspelling curre'nt rumors
tho! "the cow1ty" is broke,
Mrs . Do1·othy Conde~·. Gallia
Cow1ty Au&lt;litor, Sllid today it
is the highway dcpa rtm,nt,
which opera tes throuvh
Malntenanl'e and Hoad
t'uuds fu rnished by the stall'

MEIGS THEATRE
Munday t hru Thu rsdttV

June 28.Julv 1
NOT OP EN

. . . . .,

AlliE

ROOSTER COGBURN

(. . . AN D THE LAOYl
Jot1n W e~t n e , Ka th cH~n e
Hepbum. Jol1n Mclntl r l'.
St r o thP.r

,

Show Sta rt s 1 p. rn .

1976 bu(jget totaled $1 ,09'2,000.

gasoline . tux collections,

Earlier this month, the
Auditor's Office rcce&gt;vc'll a

which is broke.
Mrs. Condee said these
funds arc coming in v~ry
slowly since the Ohio
Highway Patrol Is conduclmg
an invt•stiga tion into the
(Continued from page 1)
MrJior Vehicle Dep.1rtment. part , Ford said, because
GI!IIW, HS all other COWJties "gover!Ullen\s overin Ohio is suffering finan· committed themselves to
ciuiJy fr om the investige~tiun . ;unelioriatc soda! inequities
(;aUia ('&lt;Jwliy's highw11y al home and abroad and to
dcpartlllcnt. rw1 by Cmully acllieve 1·ising standard of
Engineer Paul Stull, employs living," ' Gree nspan told
43 persons. The dep~rtment's reporters.
"These commi tment s
proved to be, in retrospect, in
eco nomic
terms,
\ oo
ambitious in wh at they
actually achieved as well as
( Continuc~t from page 11 in ~xpectations they raised,
Reagan by 2-1 margins in the and as a consequence, the
Sou th , where 13 slates maj or task of the next severoI
provide on.,-third of the years is both economic and
electoral votes needed to win politica l to restore the
tlH• pr~s idPn&lt;' y .
economy to a sustain ed
growth pattern but also to
accept realistic goals that are
accepted by the public as a
whole."
Greenspan said 1&lt;o1'd did
not specify ll lly country in
cr iti cizin g governm ent
spendi ng for social programs
but he has opposed U.S.

Goal high

Reagall

•

Fri.Sat.suo.
July 1·3-4

Tommy Lee,
M iJrt in. ·

from motor vehicle a11d

tPGl

----------·-·--·--

sensational Value!
23" console Special
...

,

' 1 Gr~t

Socie ty " programs in

the past because of the heavy
federal spendin~ involved.
l•'ord sa id "inflation by
itself crea tes recession and
unemployment ... and the
way to cope is to eliminate
inflati on, " acco rding to
Greenspan.
Prime ministers Aldo Moro

m woud

V C: I JC I~ f ";

(rn i Jp l 'rt) nt

r•ntl '; -t nd 1).1-;n o f
ll l·dr 1unv ~ unu t,ltc J
W&gt;!.XI 11l, l\ £l- ll &lt;tl

-·-·-·

·-·-

~--~· " .

Beautiful Mediterranean
styling

hom n or bust ut the

1

'?J'IN/!ft

~

I I IE QUALI TY GOES IN OEfl\flE

INGELS
fURNITURE
BANK RATE F INANC ING

'192-2635
---~·- -

.

111[ NAMF GOES

~nmc

time.
French President Valery
, Gis ca rd D'Esta in g said
France also ha s an

• ,..,,te nt ed PowCI 5cnt,y V(J!Ia(t~? Rngul.il, nq Sy'.!Pm

ON

the cow1ty highway depmtment would he f1nanted
through other cow1ty funds.
However, she said, the county eannot continue to float the
department much over a
month.
Hopo1·L&lt; tlmt cow1ty employL'CS will not be paid
Friday are also false. according to the cow1\y auditor.
·•we will meet the payroll
as usual," ~ he staled.

Another problem, apparently adding to the cowr
ty's ~·oes , is the slow tax
collection for the second half
ceal estate taxes.
County Treasurer Oty M.
Stewart reported today only
rme-fuulih of the amount due
from the second half collection has been paid thus far .
Two of the cow1ty'; biggest
taxpayers, Ohio Valley Electric (Kyger Creek Plant) and
Ohio Elcdric (James M.
Gavin Plant ) have not paid
their se cond half taxes.
Friday, .July 2 at 4 p.m. is
th~ deadline. Stewart said
any !Hxes received in the
mail postmarked befo1·e midnight Friday will be acct•pted. l'enalties will be added after t11e deadline.

Patrol reports
two aecidents

•~ r Hl ·L' It•;.. tlnrtJ ,-.•ot)d
"rtlr~h

U1e ' 'time being, at least,"

of Juliy and James Callaghan
of Great Brita in told the
summit their economies
needed more lime before
economic brakes are applic'!l
by the strange!' nations,
chiefly lhe United States,
West Germany and Japan .
Canadian Prime Minister
Two traffic accidents in·
Pierre Elliott Trudeau told volving Meigs area persons
the conference UJC differing were reported today by the
rates of recovery fi-mn the &lt;;ailia·Meigs Post, Stale
worldwide recession were R Highway Patrol.
blessing.
Saturdav· at 1:2() p.m. on
He said lhilt if nil the Sl! 7 three and one tenth
nations had synchrolli zed miles north of Crowr1 City"''
rates of growth all could go auto driven ~)' Hubern

f 'jl'~ h' J ~) ( i OIIlll f lr&gt;
Pr!~.

$30,000 'heck in returned
gasoline taxes, but has not
received a check from the
Department of Motor.
Vehicles since Atlril6.
At the end of May, the
Gallia Count y Highway
Department fund had $.13,000,
but since that time three
payrolls have been mel.
Mrs. Condee noted that for

unemployment p!'Oblem but

curbing irulation was a more
urgent pnonty .

c~~'.?elloratt~~:~tg sc1:1~i~~

of West Germany and Prime
MIDDLEPORT
Mini ster 'fak eo Miki of
______
_ _ _ _ Jaonn.

...~•••e••••••• •••••••••••• •• ••

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People

At Farmers Bank

Thompson, 51, Ro ute 1,

Morral Ohio struck the rear
of an a"uto dri~en by Phyllis
Rankin, 47, Route . 1,
Cheshire. There wao;; rmnor

damage. No charge was fil ed .
filed.
At 6 p.m. s~nda y on SH 124
in Meigs Cow1ty an auto
driven by ,Jotm Manley, 20,
Middleport , 11ttempted to
pass au unidentified vehicle

and his car struck the rear of
a Urinl vchicJe.driven by An·
· nabelle Thomas, 38, Mid. dleport. l'here was moderate
dam£tge.

Mrs. 'l11omas was removed
to Holzer Medical Center IJ)
the Pomeroy E-ft squad. The
accident is still under Ul·
vesligation. '!'he patrol investigated fiv e other ac·
cidents in the two cuunlles,
norte of a serious nature .

C eorl!e H. Ewing
dies in Akro n
George Henry Ewing, 79,
Akron, died Sunday evening
al a hospital in Akron.
The son of the late John T.
and Geneva Ewing, he spent
his early years in Pomeroy.
He was a graduate of Ohio
Umvers1ty.
Survivors include his wife,
Mari on ; a da ugh ter .
Marilyn, and a brother,
Charles of Akron, and a
sister, Mrs. Ethel William·
son, Pomeroy.

Free Checking Account For You
::,ef! u:; no w .

Surprise inside
detergent box

\

llv

Polly Cram&lt;r

Mr fr

"'The botlom rung of the
ladd er of success shou ld be

POME ROY, OHIO

suppo( ts the most pao ple".

People

li nd

thai

lh e
" FR I ENDLY ONES" '" e
dedicated lo finding the
materials you need, When
you need them , and gett ing

1hcm to you as soon as

possible.

POMEROY
$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each. Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

••••••

open

McARTHtJR-..-The Vlntoo stage starting at 9p.m.
Saturday's Big Event will
County Athletic Boosters
Assn, is sponsoring Its a!Ulual be entertainment by Mlaa
Fourth of July celebration at Susan Ray and the Flo;wen
the Marvin Koenecke Show at8 p.m. at the Football
Memorial Football field at field. This is the big money
VInton County High School making event lor the benefit
of Vinton County Athletes so
bere.
This year's Bicentennial why not support your yoq
celebration is a four-day JM!llllle by seeing and hearing
event July 1-4 which SUsan Ray, top-fllgbt country
promises to be bigger alid and western songstreaa and
better than ever according to the ever popular Flowers
Clarence "Beany'' Ward, Singing group? Admissloo is
$2 for adults and $1 for
chainnan.
The Bicentennial Pageant, children.
On Saturday at 10 a.m.
"The People of Vinton County" an original script by there will be a Junior OlymLoisene Hoy will be directed pics competition and at noon
by Gerry Frye. The pageant an antique Auto Show at the
will open the celebration football field. Also. reduced
ThUrsday at 7:30 p.m. with rides (prices reduced) from Z
to5p,m.
rides and games.
Sunday's festivities get unThe parade at 7 p.m.
der
way with a bicycle rodeo
Friday, JUly z ww reature
(Blacktop)
at 1:30 p.m. The
county and out of county
Talent
Show
Is scheduled for
floats, marching bands and a
5
p.m.
and
the
Miss Vintoo
variety of ot)ler units. This
County
Contest
is
at 8 p.m.
year, for the first time,
Following
the
crowning
of
trophies will be awarded winning floats. It is still not too Miss .Vinton CoUnty, 1111
late to enter a float. Cantact Bicentennial Queen, there
Gus Kaaz, Parade Chainnan will be the drawing for
at 617 Engle Drive, McArthur prizes. The grande finale, the
fireworks, will get under way
or call596-4409.
Inunediately following the by !0:30p.m.
Among the many side
parade the little Miss VInton
County will be selected and features is a display at the
crowned. "Wildfire" popular high school of Vinton County ·
rock group will perfonn on artifacts sponsored by the
Historical Society.

Oepartm elll Store

CLEARANCE
SALE
Ad In Wed.'s Paper

CEMENT BLOCK
The
Bui

SUMMER

of

heritage house
Middleport, 0 .

---'

underway Saturday with a 7~lus unit parad~ beginning a\
10:30 a.m.
Units of the parade will go to the Eli Denison American
Legion Post Home on Beech Grove Road where they will !,&gt;e put
into line of march:
Members of the lire department and the cvdununlty's
bicentennial committee have worked for months In preparing
for tbe J~ly 4th weekend celebration. They )1ave held moneyraising events and there have been a number of contributions
from churches, individuals and businesses to make the
weekend olJlervance possible,
A number of trophies have been purchased as awards for the
best parade entries. There are first, second and third place
trophies for the best CMunerclal and the best non .commercial
float type entries in the parade. The bicentennial theme Is of
course, being stressed.
,
1 There will be three trophies for tbe best horse and rider with
the costwning also to be judged and three trophies for the best
decorated bicycle and costwned rider. There is a large trophy
to be awarded to an entry which might not fall into regular
categories. This would be an unusual, unique or an outslanding
entry according to the judges' opinion.

clotting factors respond. You
can only tell this with blood
tests. I do not think anyone
should be taking Cownadin
unless they have fairly
regular tests done to be sure
the dose is properly'
regulated.
Individuals
taking
Coumadin and other
medicines to prevent clotting
of the blood should be aware
that some common·
medicines can increase their
tendency to bleeding. Aspirin
alone can increase the
bleeding tendency and has
been known to cause
hemorrhages in people
taking large amounts.
Tylenon will not cause
bleeding when taken alone,
but it will increase the action
of Cownadin and in this way
increase the tende!ICY to
hemorrhage. Since people
can get aspirin and Tylenol
without a prescription the
doctor may not know they are
taking these medicines and
that plays hob with trying to·
regulate the blood-clotting
mechanism.
MO~HERATOSU

COLUMBUS (UPI)- U. S.
Rep. Charles A. Mosher, !\.
Ohio, retiring from Congress
at the end of this tenn, will
deliver the main address at
Ohio State University's
summer commencement
exercises Aug. "J:/.

..

NOW YOU KNOW
The metal pen replaced the .
quill when Josiah Mason ,.
perfected the slip-in metal
nib In 1828 in Birmingham,
England.
TWO MEN DROWN
LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) - Two
Lancaster men drowned ,
Sunday during a canoe outing
on the Hocking River near
here, Dead are Douglas Hoy,
24, and Brent Garret, 23, botli
of Lancaster,

Save .during our sale of
furniture on the Third Floor
and Porch, Lawn and Patio
Furniture at the Mechanic
Street Warehouse.
MAIN STORE, ANNEX AND WAREHOUSE OPEN WEEKDAYS
AND SATURDAYf9:30 TO 5, OPEN FRIDAYS 9:30-TO 8 PM.

Elberfelds In Pomero

Trophies have abo been purchued for preientlltion to tile
three best dressed coupleurtendlnu square dance to be l)eld
In the RuUand gymnasium 9 p.m. Saturday. There will be a
mayor's trophy to be awarded to the "bestohhow" at a nower
show and a decorated cake lhow with both of th- events to be
held Satw-day In the gy~siwn.
f. tug of war wlll belield at ~ p.m. Sunday_ at the Rutland
lAlmmunlty Park which will be the scene of many othl!r
activities during the three days, There will be a large trophy
and an Individual trophy awllrded to each member of the
winning 12-man !tam.
·
Other Sunday features will include a. hymn sin&amp; at 2 p.m. in
the gytll!UiS!wn and just before that lime all of the bella in the
conunwnlty wiiJ be rung.·
On Monday there will be a tractor pulling contest at 1p.m.
In the park and there will be old.faahloned conu.ts for the
youngest set. The evening program -a talent show with $100 to
be awarcted to the top three adults, 18 and older, and c:hUdren's
acts,17 and under - will be followed by a firework&amp; dlaplay,
Mrs. Joan Stewart, head of the blcenteMial committee,
has llpe8rbeaded action In the community over the past few
months. There have been welcome signa and flower planters
placed at entrances of the town and bridges have been painted
I" red, white and blue.

Ford in

final
push
By ELIZABiml WHARTON

Ualtecl l'nll Iaterutblal
Prtlident Ford II home
from Puerto Rico and
planning stratesy to pick up
the remaining sa deJecatllll he
needs to l!'ln the GOP
nomiilatlon next month 1!1
Kanaas City,
Ford arrived back In Wash·
lngton late Mooday night,
enthllllastic over the resultl
of the economic conference of
the leaders of six Western
countries and Japan.
Alter briefing hll Catinet
today, he wualated to confer
with his carnp.lgn atrategllts
on wllit they acc:mnpllshed In
his abeence and on what
moves to make next in the
per1011-by-per100 fight for the
magic number of 1,130 GOP
convenU011 deleaates.
. Ria challenger, Ronllld
Reagan, entertained the
Meeting in regular session project would be difficult, It
trawllnl! preu corp~~ at his
Monday night, Middleport was agreed to advertise for and Park.
that needed to carry out the California randl, and the
Village Cauncll voted to ad- the materials and then fit the
Some 650 tons of materials resurfacing on the four apparent Democratic
vertise for bids on resur- project to • the finances will be needed to carry out streeta.
candidate, Jimmy Ca~~L ~
Gene o11 on inother lund-rllllllll
' facing up to four of its available. The four streets the resurfacing , The town · Clerk-treasurer
streets.
are BrowneD 11ve. , Chestnut · has ,$3,725in revenue sharinB Grate read a letter from tour with hllh hopes of
While it was the consensus St., Plwn St., and the part of funds eannarked for street Colwnbla Gas of Ohio in- helping to pay off the
of council tbat finan cing the Beech St. between Locust repairs but that amount dlcatlng that as of !he July 31 campaign debts of hla
would be onlv a fraction of biWng, gas costa to each primary oppone~~ta as wen as
cfllllomer, due to the coet ad- his own,
JIIBiment, wiU Increase .8.:18
Several dozen membere of
cents per 1,000 cubic feet.
· Reagan's traveling preu
A requeat was received · corpa were treated to a
from the Tew Co. asking barbecued beef lunch at the
permission to enclose a lot on former California governor's
Park St., which is leased at ~ere ranch north of Santa
$150 a year from the village Barbara Monday.
liY the company. Council took
Whe~ Reagan was ahout to
TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1976
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS no action until membere have demonstrate hla riding techan opportunity to study the niques for photocraphers, a
legal Implications of fencing reporter asked him to mount
the lot.
the horse from the rear with a
Cauncil also agreed to runnlnl! jUmp, as he had done
study further ali ordinance in Western movies yeara ago.
which would change the
"Are you kidding?" was
zoning on a piece of property the reply.
on Broadway St., 1Ollmed by
Democrat Carter left hill
John Kra..,.,...,.,,
A
first
ho'
•M· Ga,, at
··-···
me 1n PI au..,,
reading of the ordinance was midday for an eight-city fundapproved recently giving the ralalng tour, And his chief
property owner a non- fundo!'aiB- waa 10 confident
confonnlng pennlt ao that a he predicted Carter would not
repair garage could be built ooly pay off 1111 own debta,
on it. However, three but ret~uome mooey to the
readings will be required federal govenunent and even
~~. the pennlt can he help pay off the debt. ol10me
student - .teacher ratio ex- can still take part.
Motors ·for the swruner ........
j:Bndldat1111 he defeated in \Ill!
ceeds suggested state recomThe board employed Joe driver education prosram
Councd
received
a
comprtmarlei.
mendations.
Mitchem, junior high teacher and passed a resolution
Mortla Deea, In chuge of .
There wns no decision and IIBSistant football coach, authorlzlng Clerk-Treasurer plaint agalnat motorcycles
and
the
noise
they
make
in
Carter's
fund raillnf!, 11ld
reached last night. The board as head foottiall coach of the Eloise Boston to request, an
the
conununity.
It
wu
reporJ118!1Y
candldat1111
who hid
will discuss the matter again high school for next fall.
advance draw on school fun- ted that perhaps some of the dropped out of the race have
at the regular meeting in
There Is still a vacancy lor ds from the county auditor.
July. Mrs. Grace Weber, a history - health - phyilical · Attending the meeting vehicles have illegal muf- big campaign deflcltl,
principal of Riverview, and educati~n teacher at the high were Supt. . Riebel, Mrs. Hera. It was reported" that specifically mentioning
. three teachers there, led school. Those Interested Bol!ton, and board members, charges could be flied with Morrill Udall. The law forblda
parents on a tour of t!Je should contact Riebel at the Oris Smith, David Smith, the poUce In such Instances. Carter to give any candidate
However, It was agreed money outright, but he may,
school.
high school. The board leased Dorothy Calaway and Doug
Mayor Fred Hoffman would attend their fundralslng '
Alter the meeting, the a car from Smith-Nelson Bissell.
lnatead
have the poUce eventa and add 1111 prestige to
board met and accepted the
department
llaue some wal' their appeals.
resignation of Lewis (Spike)
nlngs
in
an
attempt to see
At the first atop In
Berkhimer, head football
that
the
lltuatiOilll
are
C&lt;II'J"eClAllheville,
N.C., Carter raised
coach, teacher and swruner
tedwlthoutcourtaction.
101ne
•100,000
at a fl,OOO..driver education instructor.
Attendln~
tbe
meeting
per1011
reception.
Sue Thompson was employed
were Mayor Hollman, ClerkRep. Albert P. Morano, ft.
as sununer driver education
Treasurer
Gnte,
Council
Conn.,
who Ia contelltlng the
instructor and the program
members,
Marvin
Kelly,
Senate
aeat
now held by Sen.
was organized this morning,
George Meinhart,- Carl Lowell P. Welcker Jr.,
Students wishing the course
Horky, Allen lee Kine, and invited Reagan to addrl!lll
James Brewer. Prayer that state's July ltl-17 Judge Paul E. Riley, set- Appeals In the case of Carter before the meeting was by convenUoo - tbe iqt of the
,:::,:,:::;:.:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: tlng by assignment in Gallia vs the Board Qf Education of the Rev. DwightZavitz.
year, but has not yet received
County Common Pleas Court, Southwestern Sc~ool
·a reply.
bas found in favor of the District.
Welcker supports Ford,'
defendant, the Galila County
who ls expected to win mOlt
"From the facts, lt would F~
Local Board of Education, In appear that plaintiff profited
WlLtlAMSBURG, Va.,
.u
of the state's 36 delegates.
a suit for back pay filed by in the amount of $2,254.87 lor
June 29 - The Vlrglaia
linda Rusk, a teacher in the the year by not having her
Convention adopted a coDschoolsystem.
stltution drafted by George
contract renewed. It is a funMrs. Rusk had been em- damental maxim of the law aU 0ffi0
Mason wblcb provided for
e
ployed by the fonner South- that if one C8IUIOt establlsh
tbe separation of !be
western Local School District damage, then one caJUJot
executive, legislative and
. RACINE - The Racine
for the year 1972-73. The
judicial branches of !be
recover. It would appear that Fire Deparbnent answered a
board on March · 20, 1973, plaintiff,
colonial govemmeat with a
under the facts call to the Pearl Deein
voted not to rehire Mrs. Rusk stipulated, suffered no actual , residence, Racine, at 11:30
bicameral legislature elecand 10 other teachers for the loss, monetary or otherwise. p.m. Saturday when an uninted. by popular vote, and a
197H4 school year.
governor with restricted
For the foregoing reasons, sured auto owned by WWlam
•
powers.
On June 7, 1974, the Fourth the court feels that the case J. Reibnlre, Pomeroy, was at SUJttffiit
District Court of Appeals
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:,:,:,:,:,::::::::::: reversed the action of the must be reaolved in favor of destroyed by fire. Wiring onthe defendant."
dar the dash was beUeved to
board because .the recomBy JIM ANDERSON
have been the cause of the
mendation of the county
OORADO,
Puerto Rico
fire. Lcea wu set at fl,200.
school superintendent was
(UP!)
The
West's aeven
Nine men and two trucks annot made to the board llefore
leading
Industrial
nations
Swered the caD.
its vote was taken. Under the
ended
a
Caribbean
lllnlnit
At a:tt p.m. Saturday the
I
1973-74 salary schedule of the
pledging
''better
department went to the Portdistrict, if plaintiff had been
land
area wbere an overiDad cooperation" to achieve
A Pomeroy man is in employed, her contract
. on an electric line callled a steady recovery from
would have been $6,922.30.
satisfa~tory condition at
r~on whUe avmdlng a
~~ in a home owned by
Veterans Memorial Hospital Plaintiff actually earned
new boom and buJi cycle of
CHARLESTON W. Va, JamesProffittandresldedln Inflation.
following a two car accident $4,233.42 during the school
by Raymond Ginther. Loe.s
at 11 :05 p.m. Monday in year and$9,176.97 overall.
(UP!) - Qlaker State on to the structure was p00 and . The leaders of the United
In his ruling, Judge Riley Refining
Chester Township on SR 7.
Corp.
has $800 to the contentl. Elcht States, Britain, Japan,
The Meigs County Sheriff's cited a similar case (Justus announced Valley Camp Coal men and two trucks an- France, Canada, West
Germany and Italy agreed
Department said Ronald L. vs Brown) in which the Corp. has become a swerect the call.
that IInce they met lut year
Carr, 38, Pomeroy, was Supreme Court ruled against subsidiary'
The merger follows
In Ramboaillet, France,
thrown from his car Into a , the plaintiff, but In favor of
approval last month by
"economic recovery Ia well
ditch and his car landed on the board of education.
Judge Riley stated, "All to stockholders of
both Dragging begun
under way."
.
top of him.
According to the report the issue, the court is of the cwnpanies,
But the cautious laniuage
Under terms of the merger,
Mikel P, Milhoan, 58, Rt. 1, opinion that the ruling in
of their cloalnc communique
Justus
vs
Brown
overrules
a
ma:dmum of 3.16 million lot missing boy
Long Bottom, traveling north
did not quite conceal the
on SR 7 was passed by Carr, the Fourth District Court o( shar• of Quaker State stock
es~entlal disagreement
POINT Pll:ASANT
is ileuable to shareholders of
who cut in too quickly and the
betw.n the blc three - the
Valley Camp, a Cleveland, John McDade, 15, ol 111 United States, West Germany
two collided. Carr's vehicle
Ohio-based company with Smith St., Point Pleuant was and J11pa11 - and the two
left the highway, going over
major coal production in reported mlBilnR Sunday at 9 Wilker economiel, Britain
an embankment; Carr was
Cloudy
tonlghl
ana
Wed·
West VIrginia,
p.m. He Ia the 1011 of Mr. and and Italy, where lnOaUon Ia
thrown from out into a ditch
Mn.
Roy McDade. McDI!de IIIII running above 15 per cent
nesday,
chance
of
showers
,\~though
Quaker
Stile's
and the vehicle landed on top
·
tonight
but
mcire
likely
Wed·
first
venture
into
the
coal
was lut near the river- and . 20
of him.
per
cent
bank.
Point
Pl..m
VoJbn. reepectlvely.
nesday.
Lows
tonight
in
buslneu,
the
merger
follows
Carr was taken to the
"Our objective now Ia to
hospital by the Pomeroy lower 60s; highs Wednesday a general trend in American leer Fire Department bepn
Emergency Squad. Carr was in the upper 70s, Probability · lndllltry where many large draggins operaUona In manage eHec:tlvely a
cited to court on charges of of rain 30 per cent today, 40 . coal companies s· '\llrUaUy Crooked Creek near the Point tramltloil, which will ~ce
per c-ent tonight, 60 per· t-ent or wholly oWile
.Jjor oil Pleasant boat launch this the
hi&amp;h
level
of
reckless operation.
Wednesday,~
companies.
morning.
' (Continued on,pace tl)

Bids wanted on street project

-

JACK WALKER AND JANET WILLIAMSON show the many trophies to be awarded.
over the three-day July 4th celebration in Rutland starting Saturday.

VOL. XXVIII

Vitamin need after surgery

Watch For Our

RUTLAND- This community will roll out its w~lcome mat

to a three-day holiday weekend celebration which gets

•

e

DR. LAMB

Hospital News ·

75-unit parade will launch
Rutland holiday celebration

Vinton 'Fourth'

money, prolong the use of
IN FLA'fiON FIGHTER
DEAR POLLY - When a your control-top pantyhose
powdered detergent box and be very cvmlorlable in
seems empty I always cut it hct weather. Take a pair with
open. It is surprising how runs and cut off the legs
much detergent is stuck to where they are joined to the
the bottom of the box and panty. The control top can
would be wasted otherwise. then be used as a light weight
This is very easily scraped off panty gird)e that is especially
good under slacks when you
into the washer. ~ ANNA .
go bare legged. It is cooter
DEAR POLLY - Instead and still your twnmy Is kept
of buying a commercial oven under control. These cut
clea ner , I find regular downs wash and dry quickly
household anunonia is better, and easily, too. - ·cARRIE
DEAR POLLY - To save
easier and ce rta inly less
on
the high cost of soap, make
expensive. I pour one-third to
one-half cup of the full a small sack out of nylon net
strength ammonia into a and put a drawstring in the
small glass, jar or bowl and top. Drop aU those little ends
set it on the oven rack of soap in llie bag, pull up tbe
. ov ernight. Next morning string and it is just as good or
even baked-&lt;&gt;n food lifts off better than a regular bar of
and away and there is no dull soap. This way every bit of
film or unpleasant odor. ~ every bar is used. - JOE ,
DEAR POLLY - Ifound I
TAN A.
was
using a roll of paper
DEAR POLLY - Kate
towels
every week just lor the
wrote a Pet Peeve conc-erning
kids
to
dry their hands in the
lhc odd shapes of some jam
kitchen.
I had an oldjars and how hard it is to get
that last bit out. My sons get fashioned wooden paper
every last bit of ia m or iellv towel holder so I bought two
by adding \'.! cup milk bright colored towels to
and then shaking the jar to match my kitchen and pinned
make a delicious flavored to the holder. This looks great
in my country kitchen and
milk shake. ~ D.A.L.
DEAR POLLY - When a surely saves money. There
tube of maseru:.• gets dry or are no more towels dropped
seems to be empty I place it, on the floor and when dirty
tightly closed, in a glass of the towel is thrown in the
hot wa ter while I apply other washer and a clean one
make-up. Soon it has warmed pinned on. ~ SHIRLEY.
so J am able to use it several
more times . - MRS. J . K.
DEAR POLLY ~ I have a
small famil y and have found
that I can save a considerably
amount of money by doing
grocery shopping only every
two weeks rather than every
week. I buy meal in larger
packages. TI1is is usually
cheaper and then I divide it
needs I'm sending you The
into smaller packages. I bake By Lawrence E. LaiQb, M.D .. Health Letter nwnber 4-6,
DEAR
DR.
LAMB
I
am
a
our own bread, cookies, etc,
vegetarian. I've read that Balanced Diet, RecomBy foll owing a complete
the best of vegetarian mended Daily Dietary
even
grocery list I usually only
diets
Jack vitamin B-12, but Allowances (RDA), Others
have to pick up milk in beother
books say that there is who want this information
tween my regular shopping
nothing
lacking. Would you can send 50 cents with a long,
days. ~ LiNDA M.
·
set
the
record
straight and let Btarnped self-addressed enDEAR POLLY ~ Save
us vegetarians know if we're velope for mailing. Address
getting all the vitamins and your letter to me in care of
this newspaper, P. 0. Box
•mtrients we need?
1551, Radio City Station, New
DEAR
READER
Veterans Memorial Hospital
York.
Vitamin
B-12
is
found
in
ADM ISSIONS - Melvin
DEAR DR. LAMB - Could
animal
products.
Strict
Foreste r, Racine; Gladys
there
be any danger of
vegetarians
who
use
no.
Barton, Coolville; Clara
hemorrhage
from taking 10
animal
protein
at
all
in
their
Honey, New Haven; Edna
milligrams
of
Cownadin as a
diet
are
conswning
a
vitamin
Swick, Rutland ; Wilbert
blood
thinner
over
a period of
B-12
deficient
diet.
MicroMcLain , RaCi ne; Arbella
time?
organisms
do
live
in
the
Donahue, Pomeroy; Linda
DEAR READER - II Is
Grimm , Racine; David nodules of Jegwnes that syncertainly
a warning that you
thesize
coenzyme
8-12
and
Carter, Pomeroy ; Mildred
should
see
a doctor at once
that
delays
the
Will, Pomeroy; Goldie
and
have
your
blood tested. A
of
B-21
manifestations
Ro berts, Racine; Elsie
dose
of
10
milligrams
a day is
deficiency.
The
strict
Spence, Pomeroy.
the
upper
range
that
is
vegetarians also get plenty of
DISCHARGES - Craig
usually
given
and
is
likely
to
Dorst, Burwell McKinney, folic acid from leafy
Martha Searls, Myrtle Durst, vegetables. The folic acid be too much over a period of
Bar ~ ara
Smith , Elson may help to prevent part of time.
The dose does have to be
the prob
of B-12 deficienSpencer.
cy but no• ne of the vital regulated for each patient according to how his bloodones.
Holzer Medical Center
Vegetarians
who
use
milk,
(Births, June 25)
Mr. and Mrs. Basil C. cottage cheese and dry milk
Shaffer, daughter, Point powder will get some B-12 EXTENDED OUIUlOK
from these products. Also,
Wednesday tbrougb
Pleasant, W.Va .
tlje1
·e
is
an
adequate
amount
mostly fair and
Friday,
(Births, June Z6)
of
B-12
in
egg
yolks.
But
if
cool
lbrough
!be period
Mr. and Mrs. Michael E.
these
items
are
not
in
the
diet
with
highs
in
!be
70s and
Stapleton, so n, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond P. then you should seriously lows In .tbe 50s.
consider adding some B-12 to
Denuit , son, Oak Hill.
your daily nutrient intake. I'd
1Births, June Z7)
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Kight, recommend that such individuals just take an orson, Jackson .
WINS CROWN
dinary daily all-purpose COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) vitamin pill and that will Jay Springsteen, Flint,
Tax distributed
meet
the daily needs for B-12. Mich., led almost the entire
COLUMBUS
Slate:
You can get sufficient way in capturing the
Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson's office distributed amounts of protein in a American
Motorcycle
$4,664,000 in gasoline taxes in vegetarian diet that includes Association Camel Pro Series ,
Jw1e to Ohio's counties and plenty of beans, particularly event at the Ohio State
townships. Each of 1,320 soybeans, plus some wheat in Fairgrounds Sunday,
townships received $1,200 for the diet. . However, for
Springsteen, a 19-year-old
a IOWllShip total of $1,584,000 growing children who need member of the Harleyand each of the 88. counties greater amounts of some of Davidson factory team,
received $35,000 for a county the amino acids I think it Is moved from a fourth place
total of $3,080,000. The state's wise to also include milk and start to seize the lead on the
967 cities and villages, which milk products in the diet.
first lap of the 20 lap national
To give you more in- event on the half mile dl!1
normally receive gasoline
taxes eight times a year, fonnation on daily dietary track.
were excluded from the June
distribution.
OHIOAN IS FIRSF
BECKLEY, W. Va. (UP! )
- Melvin D. Helmondollar,
211, of Columbus, Ohio, Friday
became the first victim to die
this year on the West Virginia
Turnpike. Police said he was
pronounced dead on arrival
at a Beckley hospital after his
car collided head-&lt;&gt;n wit11
another car in a three.Jane
portion of the toll road. It was
raining at the time.

th e strOnges t becn us.e it

Fanners.Bank

~o

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Because We Furnish A

We invite ynu to use th is preferred serv ice wi lh no
servi ce charge. All those 65 years and over are
we lcome lo open nn acco unt any l ime. Slo p in and

Polly's Pointers

Pageant

NO. 51

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

en tine

~~Busing for better
Classroom aired

By United PresslnteruaUonal
DAN DIEGO-S.SGT. HAROLD BRONSON, a Marine
drill instructor court-martialed lor the death of a recruit
fatally beaten in training, was found Innocent of all charges
Monday. His attorney called for dismissal of charges against
two other sergeants and a captain;
A panel of five officers and three enlisted men, including
two other drill sergeants, deliberated three hours and 15
miootes before brb)glm! in qte verdict, ending an 11-&amp;ly trial
at Marine Corps Ri.Tuit' Depot. They apparently accepted
Bronson's defense that he acted reasonably and was carrying
out orders.when Pvt. Lynn McClure was fatally beaten In a
bout with pugll sticks as he refused to fight back and screamed
for mercy.
LONDON - PRINCE STAN ISLAUS RADZIWILL, the
Polish-born fonner husband of Princess Lee Radzlwill, sister
of Mrs. Jacqueline driassis, died Sunday after a brief illness.
He was 61. Radzlwill, who has a home near Buckingham
Palace, died at the hlime of miiiJonaire racehorse owner lvor
1
Bruce in Essex, northeast of London.
The Radziwills married in 1959 but were divorced in 1915
after living apart for two years. Princess IAle, 44, flew to
London with her daughter when she heard the news and said
she wanted to be at Radziwill's funeral and to visit their son,
Antoine, at school in London.
"Despite our divorce, we were very close," she told the
Jaily Express. "I last saw him in New York about three weeks
1go. He had been In indifferent health for some time."
LONDON - A SALE OF 27 impressionist and modem
J)Bintlngs from mainly French and Swiss private art
collections totaled $2.8 million at Sotheby's Monday evening,
A painting by VIncent Van Gogh, "L'Heure de Midi ou
Jardin pres d'une Maison," was sold to an anonymous buyer
lor $8114,000. The record price for a Van Gogh is $974,880paid in
New York in 1970. A painting by Paul Gauguin entiUed "I.es
premieres Fleurs ·ou les BretoMes aux Avlns" brought
$396,000.
AKRON, OIDO - A STRIKE BY THE city's sanitation
department workers halted all garbsge collections Monday,
Local 1360 of the American Federation of State, County and
Municipal Employes, representing the 80 garbage men, said it
walked out over a »day suspenaion given to one of ill
members last week.
·
The union said tbe worker had an "altercation with a
cltl2en" on his route. City officials said no garbage pickups
would he made until the dispute was settled. They also Insisted
there would be no negotiations until the men returned to work.
SEA'ITLE - GA80IJNE STATION OWNER John E.
Banda did a brlak business Sunday, but tbe cash wasn't going
. into the till. It went into a bag held by a robber hidden inside
the office.
·
Banda told pollee a man In his early 20s came to the office
and asked for directions. "I have a gun," the intruder said and
then positlooed himself out of sight under a desk where he
stayed while business boomed. "Thanks, sucker," the robber
said before he left the statloo.
Pollee said that the bandit fled after he hauled In $500.
WASHINGTON- IN THE PAS!' MONTH, four tourists
were arrested for ca~ their guns with them as they went
through the White House tourist line. The U. S. attorney's
office said r.1Ionday the toiD'ists all brought their guns to
Washington for protection and were apparently unaware of the
city's gun cCIIIIrol laws.
.
The office said It fears many tourlsts may be arrested diD'ing
the July 4 w"kend for carrying unregistered guns. Assistant
U. S. Attorney Bette Uhrmacher said maily tourlats bringing
guns with them come from states with leas stringent gun
control laws than those in Washington. She said the guns were
discovered when the tourl8la were searched as they entered
the White House.

REEDsvilLE
Apptoximately 35 to 40 parents
expressed views on proposed
reassigrunent of pupils in order to achieve an improved
teacher-student ratio at a
public meeting conducted by
. the Eastern Local School
District Board of Education
Monday night at Riverview
School.
Pros and cons of the issues
were voiced by the parents;
several expressed ·strong
opinions against the change.
· Supt. John Riebel said the
. plan is being considered by
the board because oi the high
student- teacher ratio at the
Chester Elementary Scllool
and the low student-teacher
ratio at . the ltivervie"w
School. At Chester the

Cambridge

firm wins
bridge hid
A bid of $43,145 to replace a
bridge in Chester Township
on TR 112 submitted by the
Ohio Bridge Corp. of. Cambridge was accepted by the
Meigs County CommissionersMonday.
Meeting with the commission were members of the
Winding Trail Garden club
who asked for and got a
promise of help in replacing a
beautification project in front
of the Infirmary damaged
when new water lines were
laid recently. The prject consisted of a bird bath, benches,
flowers and trees,
The conunissionets approved an animal claim of
$50 for the Joas of a lamb submitted by George Roberts,
Long Bottom. Attending were
Henry Wella, Warden Ours,
and Bernard Gilkey commissioners, Wesley Buehl,
engineer and Martha Chambers, clerk.

ACfJONS FILED
Rita Hughes, Chester, has
filed suit for support in the
amownt of $700 against Herman Taylor and Vona Taylor,
Middleport, in Meigs County
Common
Pleas Court. Wanda
UNll'CALLED
UNrrCALLED
Gardner,
Rt. 1, Langsville,
The Pomeroy Emergency
The
Middleport
ER
Sqllld
filed
suit
lor
divorce against
Sqllld was called at5 :41 p.m. ,
was
caD~
Monday
at
11
:22
David
Gardner,
a&amp;nie adMooday' to ·the Hiland Road
a.m.
to
Syeamore
Street
for
dress,
and
Dottie
Capehart,
for Harry Eblin, Jr., who was
ill, He was ta11en to Holzer Woodrow Call, 12, medical, Rt. 4, PomerOy, was granted
who was taken to Holzer a divorce from Michael
Medical Center.
Medical
Center.
Capeha~Sprlng Lake, N.C.
~

•

Teacher loses
hack pay ·suit

Dateline 1776

...e guts
1

. j'ured
Carr m

Oil finn has

, ace ,d ent
m

swallowed up

Valley Camp

Weather

biJ · CoA · t'
upera IOn
pledged

�,

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 29,1976

Hikes excessive, unnecessary--Getgey ·
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The
president or . the Ohio

Academy or Trial Lawyers
says the increase in medical

TOM TIEDE

malpractice insurance rates not supported by the
in Ohio is unconscionable and evidence.
"Physicians and hospitals
in Ohio are being made to pay
for poor management by the
insurance companies and lor
high loss rates in other parts
of the country," John J.
Getgey Jr., of Cincinnati said
Monday.
Getgey called the •ate
hikes put into effect at the
beginning of June as .
excessive
and unnecessary.
holding his chin on a fist. He
He
also
called
on the Ohio
mentions Duval County to the
Department
of
Insurance
to
south, where a political boss
roll
rates
back
to
the
previOUB
named George Parr ("The
Duke of Duval" ) is still level after hearif!lls early
suspected of giving Lyndon next month.
The Joint Underwriting AuJohnson a still-questioned
thority,
a group created by
start in public life. Johnson
the
stat'e's
new medical
won his first seat in Congress
malpractice
law;
Insurance
by 87 votes, out of one million
Services
Organization,
a
cast, and when a recount was
national
group
;
and
Ohio
ordered the suspected records in Duval County Bureau of Casua lty Insurers,
a stale orga nization of
mysteriously disappeared.
private insurers, put into
It should be noted that the
effect
increases averaging
Duval votes did not include
145
per
cent for physicians
one by Tom East. Though
and
t60
per
cent for hospitals.
discouraged with the way the
·
Getgey
said · insurance
system is working, he says he
com
pa
nie
s s uff e red
has never voted in his life.
He's far too busy for such
things. East is not just a
hired hand, as he says, he's a
gradnson of Capt. King and
one of the wealthiest men in
Texas. He likes to spqof
vi sitors about his
ployment; helps lake his
mind off the hard times in
America.

Where discord is the
national anthem
By Tom Tiede
SARITA, Texa• + (NEAl
+ The man outside the
general store had the look of
Randolph Scott about him.
Levis, cotton sltirt with snaps
on the pockets, spurs spinning from the backs of his
boots, He was tall as a barn ,
lean as a prairie snake, and
bowed at the knees. '
''This your store"' I asked.
"·Nope, " he replied, "! just
w01'k a round here.''
His name was Tom East.
Man in his fifties. An old
cowboy smoking a self-rolled
cigarette. It was on toward
dusk in the middle of
nowhere, ' Ken edy County on
the Texas Gilf, and I had
stopped to look around, not
that there was anything to
see. There are 600 people in
1,400 square miles of Kenedy
County. The1·e is one town ,
one public road, one stop
light, a gas station and a
million mesquite trees.
"Not many towns around
here, ":!-observed.
"One's too many for me,"
the cow.boy said.
He scuffed the tltinl. Aman
of few words but many
opinions. And during two
hours of somewhat diffi cult
conversation, he drew a
decidedly bleak picture of not
only the population problem
but the general state of the
Union: gove rnment is not to
be trusted , weirarc is a rpioff,
politicians are shifty, people
have become soft. There was
no malice in his thoughts, but
there was more than a touch
of acrimony .
East's sentiment is, of
course, widely observed m
the nation today. The electorage is.in a foul mood . And
nowhere is the discontentment greater than here in the
Sun Belt , or southern rim of
the America. In recent years
the region has become
almost a sanctuary for
people fleeing the heavy
problem• of the urban East
and stagnating Midwest.
They come here for OI&gt;portunitity, primarily, but
also because tryey perceive

the soci al and political
philosophy to be rooted in
traditional values.
Interestingly, it seems that
the dissatisfaction is greatest
where the comforts and
benefits of the times are also
greatest. In Kenedy Couinty,
for instance, few citizens are
suffering from America's
ills. It is one of the few places
in the nation where all of the
land is owned by private enterprise, in this case, ranchers. Nelson Rockefeller
has a spread that cuts into
Kenedy . Another cliwJk of
rich property belongs, to the
husband of Anne Armstrong ,
U. S. ambassador to Great
Britain.
The Kenedy ranch here is
one of the largest in the country , perhaps 500,000 acres of
top grade cattle, oil, gas and
financial security.
The fabled King ranch is
also in Kenedy, as well as
many other counties. Foun·
ded by Capt. Richard King
after the Ci vii War - he had
been told by Robert E. Lee to
"buy land and never sell,'- it
is now the largest corp()ration ranch in the world ,
There are almost 900 000

tremendous losses in the
stock market in 1973 and 1974.
He said they panicked when
stocks went down, sold when
stock prices were low, and
are now buying as stock
prices increase.
"That is poor investment
policy and the medical
profession and the public are
suffering for it," he satd.
He also said the insurance
industry says the rate
structure for medical
malpractice insurance must
be based on nationwide
averages and experience.
"That is not fair to tbe
medica l profession and
t'Onsurners of this state," he

Editorial comment,

~

•

•

opznzon, features

Voters opt for slow nuclear haste

OPEN 9 TIL 4 JULY 4th

said:

"The Ohio Aca demy of
Trial Lawyers worked in
getting
a
medical
malpractice law in Ohio that
would be fair to all parties
concerned," he said. "We are
presenUy striving to make
that law work justly,
" We hope that one of the
byproducts nnight be a reduction in the skyrocketing cost
of medical and hospital care .
to the public."

-

·-·-....

be plugged

·~- -

.

"I STILL can't believe he's going to eat .the whole thing!"

law leaks
'

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - The national clean election law is not
being enforced.
With the publicity given its writing , the Supreme Court's
emasculation and the subsequent revision after long debate,
King acres in Texas ~ob­
The Dai~ Sentinel thereNotwasso hope we'd have a workable arrangement.
webbed by 2,000 miles of fenDEVOTED TO TH E
ces. As for the world-wide
The law's key feature is a provision calling for the name
INTEREST OF
holdings, they exceed in area
MEJGS· MASON A·REA
address, business and employment of each donor of $100 o;
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
the states of Maryland and
more. This to enable voters to know where a candidate's
Ex e'c. Ed.
•·
lttwaii.
money comes from and to whom he may be beholden .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
So it is ironic here amid the
Adetailed list of a presidential cdndidates donors can give
Publ i shed da ily excl.'pt
fortunes to hear the raps
Satu r day by The O h i o
clues as to what he is. As distinct from what he claims to be.
Va lley Publ is h i n g Com
against the times. In nearby
A careful run through of reports turned in by leading
Pany ,
111
Cou r t
S t ..
Houston the skyscrapers are
Pom ero y . O"' io
&lt;~ 576 9
presidential candidates, Democratic and Republican, reveals
Business Offi ce Ph on e 99 2.
growing so taU they will soon
that !ewe~ than half the major donors are identified by
2 156 Edito r ia l Phon e 992
2 157
have to show movies on the
occupation and 0r employment.
~ eco nd c lass postage
elevators. One of the local
Worse yet, even those identifying their occupation for the
pa1d ar Pomeroy . Oh io .
ranch homes is said to be so
N ntto nat
a dv e rti si ng
most
pard do so in the most general way - businessman or
r e f?r ~se n tative
Wn r delegant it has air con·
business
executive, attorney, self-employed , farmer,
Grdftlh ComRa ny In c
ditioning in the saw1a and
Bottinelli &amp; Ga lagh e r D iv · ·
consultant.
These terms tell us next to nothing,
757 Th ird Ave ., New Yo rk '
high and low tides in the
When several hundred management employes of a major
N Y . 10017
'
swinuning pool. Yet woe is
S ubsc r (p tion
ratCs :
company and their wives give $100 to $1,000 each, so that
D el1~e red by carr ie r wher e
everywhere. Tom East
donations from that company add up to $20,000 or $60,000 or
ava ilable 7S ce nt s pe.r
agrees with others in the
week , By MQ tor RO ute
more, we need to know which company that is and why there
whe~c .carrier se r vice no t
cow1ty who say they have not availa
shouid be this concentrated giving from one firm.
bl e, One month
in their lifetimes seen the SJ . 25 By ma il in Ohio and
The same applies to giving by union members. If several
W. Va ., Oll e Ye ar , sn.oo :
nation in such a period of Sn&lt;
mo n ths , Sll.S O; Tllree
thousand members of one WJion give money to the same
montll s. S7 .00. E l sew her e
disrepair.
candidate, and the total adds up to · tens or hundreds of
.00 year : Silc: months '
"We know plenty about $$26
thousands of dollars, we need to knowthisand why. ,
.1 3 . 50 : . th ~ ee m'o nths , S7. SO .
Subscrtp l ton price in c lu des
corrupt goverrunent around Sunaay
This. discussion does· not impiy that such giving is
Times Se n t ine l .
here,' ' East grumbles, now
necessarily wrong. But that information would certainly be a
leaning against a car and
clue as to who is backing the candidate in question. And a
careful search of the methods used to induce this concentrated
giving could uncover any improprieties.
. It should be pointed out that this irregularity ir!_reporting · ~ •• this ~bs~nce of vital information required by law -:- shows up
hea~1ly 1~ the reports turned in by all three of today 's leading
presidential candidates - Jimmy Carter, Ronald reagan and
Gerald Ford.
The Federal Election Corrunission, set up with such
fanfare to monitor campaign practices, reviews the reports,
perfunctortly sends what amount to innocuous form letters
I
asking for additional inforl!Uition.
That is, the follow-up is minimal and infective.
There is but one way to make the law work for presidential
candidates. No donation should county toward counterpart
. government funds Wiless the full name, address, occupation,
,.,&lt;:&gt;-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-.c&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:!'G&gt;o.c&gt;oe:N-."&lt;."&lt;.:&gt;&lt;:..o-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:.--.::.--&lt;::;.o-.c;..-..v-o&lt;...:;-' bustness address and company, partnership wtion or
association name is listed. It is as simple as that. '
·
To go back now and require this information for every
donation at the $100 level already reported would probably be
impossible this late in the game. But a follow-through would be
practical on each past donation of $400 or more by an
individual or combination of $400 or more by a husband wife
· The recent referendum in Califo~nia on
'
quoted the president of Exxon N~clear Co. and immediate family .
the future of nuclear energy in that slate
as warning.
The winning candidates could be warned that all donations
may turn out to be a contest in which everyIt would indeed be ironic if nuclear of $100 of more hereinafter reported would be ~ligible for
bodywon.
energy, shich is being counted on so heavily counterpart government funds only when the requisite
By a two-to-one margin, Californians
to help alleviate this country's dependence information was given.
decisively rejected Proposition 1~, which
In 1980, all candidates for the presidency should be warned
on foreign petroleum, were itself to bet'Ome
would have mandated impossible safety
at time of their announcements of the commission's intention
dependeng upon foreign supplies.
and perfonnance standards for nuclear
But this should not necessarily be cause to enforce this policy of no money without full informa lion.
power plants and, according to opponents of
for alarm, says another authority. After all,
the proposition, have stopped the developthere are very few natural resources in
ment of nuclear energy in its tracks. Both
which the United States is totally selfsides expended millions of dolla r/; in
sufficient, points out William Jackson, a
promoting their arguments.
vice president of Babcock x Wilcox Co.
Contri bu ting to the defeat of
· which builds power generating equipment
Proposition 15, however, was the action by
for both the nuclear and fossil-fuel inthe California legislature on the eve of the
dustries. Fortunately, some of the largest
balloting in passing three measures relating
known deposits of uranium in the world ar'\l
to nuclear plant safety, and signed by Gov.
not in the volatile Middle East but in
Edmund Brown, which greatly counAustralia and Canada.
teracted the scary vision of atoms gone wild
As for the cost of uranium, he believes
conjured up by the antinuclear forces.
the previous going market price was too low
Thus while Californians have signified
and is now about where it should be to
that they want nuclear energy , the industry
stimulate exploration for new deposits.
has been put on notice (if it were not already
Uranium, anyway, is a relatively minor
well aware) that the public is intensely copfactor in the ultimate cost to conswners of .
cerned about this issue and will del!Uind t~e
nuclear-generated electricity. The price of
closest monitoring of nuclear development
coal has also escalated in the past two
from here on out. The industry still faces
years, he notes, even though the United
similar referenda in other states.
States has abundant supplies of this fuel.
Actually, the questions of reactor
If Americans don 't suddenly begin
safety, the disposal of radioactive wastes
making inordinate energy demands but
and the possibility of sabotage or theft of
maintain an annual increase in energy con·
nuclear materials have been grossly distorsumption somewhere around the current
ted, not only in California but elsewhere 'in
five per cent, Jackson foresees an orderly,
the country where nuclear plants have been
crisis-free growth in the coming decades
built or are planned.
both in nuclear energy, as more efficient
The real problem facing the industry in
reactors are developed, and in alternate
the immediate future may be a shortage of
energy sources, such as the much-discussed
uranium and prohibitively high prices for
solar power,
the ore, which have already escalated from
The nation, in other words, should make
~a pound in January 1974 to around $35 or
haste slowly as we enter more deeply into
$.10 today,
the long-promised age of nuclear energy +
So much uranium will be ·needed soon
neither expecting it to be a cheap and easy
just for currently operating reactors that
panacea for all our energy needs nor straitsome industry executives are convinced the
jacketing its development with unrealistic
ID 1Y76by ~U. Inc ~
U~ 5. won 't get by without substantial imand unneceSsary restrictions.
ports, the Wall Street Journal recently
Making nucle~r haste slowly is, in ef"The campaign hasn 't been ·Iough enough _
reported. " It is probably too late to avoid an
fect, what t.M voters in California have
now THIS!" ~.
ilnportant ur~ !1ium export program,' '' it
. wisely opted for.
1

\\

RAY CROMLEY

em·

.l

DR. LAMB

. Stomach can't absorb B-12 By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB Because of an ulcer I had part
of my stomach removed 15
years ago at age 6{). I was told
years afterward that my
stomach eould not absorb
vitamin B-12and that I should
have an injection once a

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Howard E. Cecil to Robert
·G. Painter, part of lot 413,
Middleport.
Loris Ray Pullins, Susan
Jane Pullins to Riley B. King,
Birchie King, .29 acre,
Salisbury,
Martha E. Haggerty,
James K. Haggerty, Mary
Haggerty, Robert V. lttggerty, Lucille Y. lttggerty to
Robert V. Haggerty, Richard
L. Haggerty, lot 18, Middleport.
James K. Haggerty, Mary
Haggerty, Robert V. Haggerty, Lucille Y. Haggerty to
Martha E. Haggerty, lots,
Middleport.

TRAIN MISHAP
SHELBY, Ohio (UP!)
Gregory Perry, 18, of Shelby,
was kUled Monday when he
walked into the path of a
ConRail freight train just
south of here.
Richland County sheriff's
deputies
said
Perry
apparently walked from
behind some bushes and into
the path of the train. He was
pronounced dead at the
scene.

B
__e_r_r...::y:.._S_·_W~
._O_r_l_d______ . J~~e:~:::.~n:cinternattooat
Today is Tuesday, June 29,
the 181st day of 1976 with 185
to follow.
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
wtder the sign of Cancer,
William Mayo, founder of
the famed Rochester, Minn.,
Medical Center bearing his
name, was born June 29, 1661.
On this day in history:
In 1946, two years before
Israel became a nation, the
British arrested more than
2,700 Jews in an effort to put
down
terrorism
in
Palestine.
In 1972, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled that capital
punishment
as
then
administered was
unconstitutional. It also ruled
that sources of information
must be revealed to State
grand juries.
In 1974, President Nixon
and Soviet Communist leader
Leonid Brezhnev reached a
trade accord at their summit
meeting in Moscow and Oew
to Yalta for arms tails .

month which I have been
doing . At first they seemed to
make little difference. Is it
.possible that! am now able to
absorb B-12 from food and
. vitamins? Am I taking too
much or too little in your
opinion? I'm fairly active for
my age, do not smoke and
take alcoholic drinks rarely,
DEAR
READER
Inability io absorb vitamin B12 resulting in pernicious
anemia Is a common
cpmplication of removal of a
major protion of the stomach.
Why? Because the stomach
forms a substance called
intrinsic factor that combines
with the 8-12 to enable it to be
absorbed. One cause of
pernicious anemia is the loss
of the stomach's ability to
form intrinsic factor. This is
frequently accompanied with
· a decrease or absence of the
formation of normal stomach
acid.
After surgery the stomach
may gradually increase in
size again and there Is a
certain
amount
of
regeneration. What happens
depends a lot of how much of
the stomach was actually
removed, It i~ possible that
you no longer need to take
vitamin B-12 shots but the
only way to find out Is to let
your doctor test you.
I would not recommend
stopping taking B-12 unless
your dobtor tells you it would
be all right to do oo. Absence
of B-12 could lead to
permanent damage to nerve
tracts in your spinal cord and
other complications. These
changes could slip up on you
without you being aware of
any changes.
The reason . you need to
have the injections Is that
they get the B-12 directly into
your body. When the stomach
fails to produce intrinsic
factor and you can't absorb
the B-12 properly, swallowing

su~tR\OR

the B-12 will not get It into
your bloodstream and it Is
simply lost.
To gi,ve you more
information about 8-12 I am
sending you The Health
Letter number 4-5, Vitamin
B-12, Folic Acid, Pernicious
Anemia. Others who want
this information can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me in care of this newspaper, P. 0. 8ox1~1, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can
anything be dooe about a
person who snores? My
husband has, I believe, about
the loudest snore possible.
The only way I have fowtd to
stop It Is to have him lie on his
side and close his moulth, but
sometimes he starts snoring
again soon after I've stopped
him,
It is not wtusual to have this
happen triree or four urnes a
night, particularly if he is
very tired. I hate to keep
waking him up, but it Is the
only way I can get any sleep.
H there any other answer to
this problem?
DEAR READER
&amp;loring occurs with mouth
breathing and is m~st
common when the person Is
sleeping on his or back.
Sometimes mouth breathing
Is related to obstructions of
the nose and some of these
can be corrected.
More often it Is a habit. I
read a good suggestion
recently that you can try.
Strap a ·ping pong ball or '
other object to the small of
the back or tape it in place.
That will keep him off his
back arid give you ·some
sleep,
In some cases the couples
find it is just better to hilve
separate bedrooms so they
can both get some sleep.

fR~ft~\tS

·sET Of 4 WITH

$10.00 ORDER
OR MORE AND
COUPON IN THIS AD

64 oz.
No Return
SAVE
40~

•

.CHARALTON

We Hol~ These Truths ...

GREY

A Chronicle of America

WATERMELON

_,

Spring, 1776:
Follo~lng the examples of New Hampshire and South

Carolina, In January and March respectively , most of the
other colonies are taking various steps towards Independence. ln.Aprll, North Carolina Instructs its delegates to
the Contmental Congress to vote for independence·
VIrginia follows suit in May , Connecticut In June. Also!~
April, Georgia Instructs Its delegates to vote In whatever
manner they deem best for thecommongood. Rhode Island
declares its Independence on May4. During May and June
New Jersey and Virginia prepare state constitutions. 1~
New York , Delaware, Maryland, and - particularly Massachusetts, s~ntlment for Independence runs high.
These Independence moves culminate In Philadelphia on
Ju\y 2 and 4.

~' ~-·

U N IT E 0 R,.D I E

-By Ros!'l Markenzte • Jeff MacNe lly /ol976, Unlled FtWrure Syndic: ale.

'

'~

'·

20 ....lb. Avg.
ONLY

. I

I

'

SAVE

60~

EXTRA

TOP VAlUE STAMPS
WITH COUPONS
IN THIS AD AND
REQUIRED PURCH~SES

�,

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 29,1976

Hikes excessive, unnecessary--Getgey ·
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - The
president or . the Ohio

Academy or Trial Lawyers
says the increase in medical

TOM TIEDE

malpractice insurance rates not supported by the
in Ohio is unconscionable and evidence.
"Physicians and hospitals
in Ohio are being made to pay
for poor management by the
insurance companies and lor
high loss rates in other parts
of the country," John J.
Getgey Jr., of Cincinnati said
Monday.
Getgey called the •ate
hikes put into effect at the
beginning of June as .
excessive
and unnecessary.
holding his chin on a fist. He
He
also
called
on the Ohio
mentions Duval County to the
Department
of
Insurance
to
south, where a political boss
roll
rates
back
to
the
previOUB
named George Parr ("The
Duke of Duval" ) is still level after hearif!lls early
suspected of giving Lyndon next month.
The Joint Underwriting AuJohnson a still-questioned
thority,
a group created by
start in public life. Johnson
the
stat'e's
new medical
won his first seat in Congress
malpractice
law;
Insurance
by 87 votes, out of one million
Services
Organization,
a
cast, and when a recount was
national
group
;
and
Ohio
ordered the suspected records in Duval County Bureau of Casua lty Insurers,
a stale orga nization of
mysteriously disappeared.
private insurers, put into
It should be noted that the
effect
increases averaging
Duval votes did not include
145
per
cent for physicians
one by Tom East. Though
and
t60
per
cent for hospitals.
discouraged with the way the
·
Getgey
said · insurance
system is working, he says he
com
pa
nie
s s uff e red
has never voted in his life.
He's far too busy for such
things. East is not just a
hired hand, as he says, he's a
gradnson of Capt. King and
one of the wealthiest men in
Texas. He likes to spqof
vi sitors about his
ployment; helps lake his
mind off the hard times in
America.

Where discord is the
national anthem
By Tom Tiede
SARITA, Texa• + (NEAl
+ The man outside the
general store had the look of
Randolph Scott about him.
Levis, cotton sltirt with snaps
on the pockets, spurs spinning from the backs of his
boots, He was tall as a barn ,
lean as a prairie snake, and
bowed at the knees. '
''This your store"' I asked.
"·Nope, " he replied, "! just
w01'k a round here.''
His name was Tom East.
Man in his fifties. An old
cowboy smoking a self-rolled
cigarette. It was on toward
dusk in the middle of
nowhere, ' Ken edy County on
the Texas Gilf, and I had
stopped to look around, not
that there was anything to
see. There are 600 people in
1,400 square miles of Kenedy
County. The1·e is one town ,
one public road, one stop
light, a gas station and a
million mesquite trees.
"Not many towns around
here, ":!-observed.
"One's too many for me,"
the cow.boy said.
He scuffed the tltinl. Aman
of few words but many
opinions. And during two
hours of somewhat diffi cult
conversation, he drew a
decidedly bleak picture of not
only the population problem
but the general state of the
Union: gove rnment is not to
be trusted , weirarc is a rpioff,
politicians are shifty, people
have become soft. There was
no malice in his thoughts, but
there was more than a touch
of acrimony .
East's sentiment is, of
course, widely observed m
the nation today. The electorage is.in a foul mood . And
nowhere is the discontentment greater than here in the
Sun Belt , or southern rim of
the America. In recent years
the region has become
almost a sanctuary for
people fleeing the heavy
problem• of the urban East
and stagnating Midwest.
They come here for OI&gt;portunitity, primarily, but
also because tryey perceive

the soci al and political
philosophy to be rooted in
traditional values.
Interestingly, it seems that
the dissatisfaction is greatest
where the comforts and
benefits of the times are also
greatest. In Kenedy Couinty,
for instance, few citizens are
suffering from America's
ills. It is one of the few places
in the nation where all of the
land is owned by private enterprise, in this case, ranchers. Nelson Rockefeller
has a spread that cuts into
Kenedy . Another cliwJk of
rich property belongs, to the
husband of Anne Armstrong ,
U. S. ambassador to Great
Britain.
The Kenedy ranch here is
one of the largest in the country , perhaps 500,000 acres of
top grade cattle, oil, gas and
financial security.
The fabled King ranch is
also in Kenedy, as well as
many other counties. Foun·
ded by Capt. Richard King
after the Ci vii War - he had
been told by Robert E. Lee to
"buy land and never sell,'- it
is now the largest corp()ration ranch in the world ,
There are almost 900 000

tremendous losses in the
stock market in 1973 and 1974.
He said they panicked when
stocks went down, sold when
stock prices were low, and
are now buying as stock
prices increase.
"That is poor investment
policy and the medical
profession and the public are
suffering for it," he satd.
He also said the insurance
industry says the rate
structure for medical
malpractice insurance must
be based on nationwide
averages and experience.
"That is not fair to tbe
medica l profession and
t'Onsurners of this state," he

Editorial comment,

~

•

•

opznzon, features

Voters opt for slow nuclear haste

OPEN 9 TIL 4 JULY 4th

said:

"The Ohio Aca demy of
Trial Lawyers worked in
getting
a
medical
malpractice law in Ohio that
would be fair to all parties
concerned," he said. "We are
presenUy striving to make
that law work justly,
" We hope that one of the
byproducts nnight be a reduction in the skyrocketing cost
of medical and hospital care .
to the public."

-

·-·-....

be plugged

·~- -

.

"I STILL can't believe he's going to eat .the whole thing!"

law leaks
'

By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - The national clean election law is not
being enforced.
With the publicity given its writing , the Supreme Court's
emasculation and the subsequent revision after long debate,
King acres in Texas ~ob­
The Dai~ Sentinel thereNotwasso hope we'd have a workable arrangement.
webbed by 2,000 miles of fenDEVOTED TO TH E
ces. As for the world-wide
The law's key feature is a provision calling for the name
INTEREST OF
holdings, they exceed in area
MEJGS· MASON A·REA
address, business and employment of each donor of $100 o;
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL
the states of Maryland and
more. This to enable voters to know where a candidate's
Ex e'c. Ed.
•·
lttwaii.
money comes from and to whom he may be beholden .
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
So it is ironic here amid the
Adetailed list of a presidential cdndidates donors can give
Publ i shed da ily excl.'pt
fortunes to hear the raps
Satu r day by The O h i o
clues as to what he is. As distinct from what he claims to be.
Va lley Publ is h i n g Com
against the times. In nearby
A careful run through of reports turned in by leading
Pany ,
111
Cou r t
S t ..
Houston the skyscrapers are
Pom ero y . O"' io
&lt;~ 576 9
presidential candidates, Democratic and Republican, reveals
Business Offi ce Ph on e 99 2.
growing so taU they will soon
that !ewe~ than half the major donors are identified by
2 156 Edito r ia l Phon e 992
2 157
have to show movies on the
occupation and 0r employment.
~ eco nd c lass postage
elevators. One of the local
Worse yet, even those identifying their occupation for the
pa1d ar Pomeroy . Oh io .
ranch homes is said to be so
N ntto nat
a dv e rti si ng
most
pard do so in the most general way - businessman or
r e f?r ~se n tative
Wn r delegant it has air con·
business
executive, attorney, self-employed , farmer,
Grdftlh ComRa ny In c
ditioning in the saw1a and
Bottinelli &amp; Ga lagh e r D iv · ·
consultant.
These terms tell us next to nothing,
757 Th ird Ave ., New Yo rk '
high and low tides in the
When several hundred management employes of a major
N Y . 10017
'
swinuning pool. Yet woe is
S ubsc r (p tion
ratCs :
company and their wives give $100 to $1,000 each, so that
D el1~e red by carr ie r wher e
everywhere. Tom East
donations from that company add up to $20,000 or $60,000 or
ava ilable 7S ce nt s pe.r
agrees with others in the
week , By MQ tor RO ute
more, we need to know which company that is and why there
whe~c .carrier se r vice no t
cow1ty who say they have not availa
shouid be this concentrated giving from one firm.
bl e, One month
in their lifetimes seen the SJ . 25 By ma il in Ohio and
The same applies to giving by union members. If several
W. Va ., Oll e Ye ar , sn.oo :
nation in such a period of Sn&lt;
mo n ths , Sll.S O; Tllree
thousand members of one WJion give money to the same
montll s. S7 .00. E l sew her e
disrepair.
candidate, and the total adds up to · tens or hundreds of
.00 year : Silc: months '
"We know plenty about $$26
thousands of dollars, we need to knowthisand why. ,
.1 3 . 50 : . th ~ ee m'o nths , S7. SO .
Subscrtp l ton price in c lu des
corrupt goverrunent around Sunaay
This. discussion does· not impiy that such giving is
Times Se n t ine l .
here,' ' East grumbles, now
necessarily wrong. But that information would certainly be a
leaning against a car and
clue as to who is backing the candidate in question. And a
careful search of the methods used to induce this concentrated
giving could uncover any improprieties.
. It should be pointed out that this irregularity ir!_reporting · ~ •• this ~bs~nce of vital information required by law -:- shows up
hea~1ly 1~ the reports turned in by all three of today 's leading
presidential candidates - Jimmy Carter, Ronald reagan and
Gerald Ford.
The Federal Election Corrunission, set up with such
fanfare to monitor campaign practices, reviews the reports,
perfunctortly sends what amount to innocuous form letters
I
asking for additional inforl!Uition.
That is, the follow-up is minimal and infective.
There is but one way to make the law work for presidential
candidates. No donation should county toward counterpart
. government funds Wiless the full name, address, occupation,
,.,&lt;:&gt;-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-.c&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;:!'G&gt;o.c&gt;oe:N-."&lt;."&lt;.:&gt;&lt;:..o-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;::&gt;-&lt;:.--.::.--&lt;::;.o-.c;..-..v-o&lt;...:;-' bustness address and company, partnership wtion or
association name is listed. It is as simple as that. '
·
To go back now and require this information for every
donation at the $100 level already reported would probably be
impossible this late in the game. But a follow-through would be
practical on each past donation of $400 or more by an
individual or combination of $400 or more by a husband wife
· The recent referendum in Califo~nia on
'
quoted the president of Exxon N~clear Co. and immediate family .
the future of nuclear energy in that slate
as warning.
The winning candidates could be warned that all donations
may turn out to be a contest in which everyIt would indeed be ironic if nuclear of $100 of more hereinafter reported would be ~ligible for
bodywon.
energy, shich is being counted on so heavily counterpart government funds only when the requisite
By a two-to-one margin, Californians
to help alleviate this country's dependence information was given.
decisively rejected Proposition 1~, which
In 1980, all candidates for the presidency should be warned
on foreign petroleum, were itself to bet'Ome
would have mandated impossible safety
at time of their announcements of the commission's intention
dependeng upon foreign supplies.
and perfonnance standards for nuclear
But this should not necessarily be cause to enforce this policy of no money without full informa lion.
power plants and, according to opponents of
for alarm, says another authority. After all,
the proposition, have stopped the developthere are very few natural resources in
ment of nuclear energy in its tracks. Both
which the United States is totally selfsides expended millions of dolla r/; in
sufficient, points out William Jackson, a
promoting their arguments.
vice president of Babcock x Wilcox Co.
Contri bu ting to the defeat of
· which builds power generating equipment
Proposition 15, however, was the action by
for both the nuclear and fossil-fuel inthe California legislature on the eve of the
dustries. Fortunately, some of the largest
balloting in passing three measures relating
known deposits of uranium in the world ar'\l
to nuclear plant safety, and signed by Gov.
not in the volatile Middle East but in
Edmund Brown, which greatly counAustralia and Canada.
teracted the scary vision of atoms gone wild
As for the cost of uranium, he believes
conjured up by the antinuclear forces.
the previous going market price was too low
Thus while Californians have signified
and is now about where it should be to
that they want nuclear energy , the industry
stimulate exploration for new deposits.
has been put on notice (if it were not already
Uranium, anyway, is a relatively minor
well aware) that the public is intensely copfactor in the ultimate cost to conswners of .
cerned about this issue and will del!Uind t~e
nuclear-generated electricity. The price of
closest monitoring of nuclear development
coal has also escalated in the past two
from here on out. The industry still faces
years, he notes, even though the United
similar referenda in other states.
States has abundant supplies of this fuel.
Actually, the questions of reactor
If Americans don 't suddenly begin
safety, the disposal of radioactive wastes
making inordinate energy demands but
and the possibility of sabotage or theft of
maintain an annual increase in energy con·
nuclear materials have been grossly distorsumption somewhere around the current
ted, not only in California but elsewhere 'in
five per cent, Jackson foresees an orderly,
the country where nuclear plants have been
crisis-free growth in the coming decades
built or are planned.
both in nuclear energy, as more efficient
The real problem facing the industry in
reactors are developed, and in alternate
the immediate future may be a shortage of
energy sources, such as the much-discussed
uranium and prohibitively high prices for
solar power,
the ore, which have already escalated from
The nation, in other words, should make
~a pound in January 1974 to around $35 or
haste slowly as we enter more deeply into
$.10 today,
the long-promised age of nuclear energy +
So much uranium will be ·needed soon
neither expecting it to be a cheap and easy
just for currently operating reactors that
panacea for all our energy needs nor straitsome industry executives are convinced the
jacketing its development with unrealistic
ID 1Y76by ~U. Inc ~
U~ 5. won 't get by without substantial imand unneceSsary restrictions.
ports, the Wall Street Journal recently
Making nucle~r haste slowly is, in ef"The campaign hasn 't been ·Iough enough _
reported. " It is probably too late to avoid an
fect, what t.M voters in California have
now THIS!" ~.
ilnportant ur~ !1ium export program,' '' it
. wisely opted for.
1

\\

RAY CROMLEY

em·

.l

DR. LAMB

. Stomach can't absorb B-12 By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB Because of an ulcer I had part
of my stomach removed 15
years ago at age 6{). I was told
years afterward that my
stomach eould not absorb
vitamin B-12and that I should
have an injection once a

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Howard E. Cecil to Robert
·G. Painter, part of lot 413,
Middleport.
Loris Ray Pullins, Susan
Jane Pullins to Riley B. King,
Birchie King, .29 acre,
Salisbury,
Martha E. Haggerty,
James K. Haggerty, Mary
Haggerty, Robert V. lttggerty, Lucille Y. lttggerty to
Robert V. Haggerty, Richard
L. Haggerty, lot 18, Middleport.
James K. Haggerty, Mary
Haggerty, Robert V. Haggerty, Lucille Y. Haggerty to
Martha E. Haggerty, lots,
Middleport.

TRAIN MISHAP
SHELBY, Ohio (UP!)
Gregory Perry, 18, of Shelby,
was kUled Monday when he
walked into the path of a
ConRail freight train just
south of here.
Richland County sheriff's
deputies
said
Perry
apparently walked from
behind some bushes and into
the path of the train. He was
pronounced dead at the
scene.

B
__e_r_r...::y:.._S_·_W~
._O_r_l_d______ . J~~e:~:::.~n:cinternattooat
Today is Tuesday, June 29,
the 181st day of 1976 with 185
to follow.
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter.
The evening stars are
Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
wtder the sign of Cancer,
William Mayo, founder of
the famed Rochester, Minn.,
Medical Center bearing his
name, was born June 29, 1661.
On this day in history:
In 1946, two years before
Israel became a nation, the
British arrested more than
2,700 Jews in an effort to put
down
terrorism
in
Palestine.
In 1972, the U.S. Supreme
Court ruled that capital
punishment
as
then
administered was
unconstitutional. It also ruled
that sources of information
must be revealed to State
grand juries.
In 1974, President Nixon
and Soviet Communist leader
Leonid Brezhnev reached a
trade accord at their summit
meeting in Moscow and Oew
to Yalta for arms tails .

month which I have been
doing . At first they seemed to
make little difference. Is it
.possible that! am now able to
absorb B-12 from food and
. vitamins? Am I taking too
much or too little in your
opinion? I'm fairly active for
my age, do not smoke and
take alcoholic drinks rarely,
DEAR
READER
Inability io absorb vitamin B12 resulting in pernicious
anemia Is a common
cpmplication of removal of a
major protion of the stomach.
Why? Because the stomach
forms a substance called
intrinsic factor that combines
with the 8-12 to enable it to be
absorbed. One cause of
pernicious anemia is the loss
of the stomach's ability to
form intrinsic factor. This is
frequently accompanied with
· a decrease or absence of the
formation of normal stomach
acid.
After surgery the stomach
may gradually increase in
size again and there Is a
certain
amount
of
regeneration. What happens
depends a lot of how much of
the stomach was actually
removed, It i~ possible that
you no longer need to take
vitamin B-12 shots but the
only way to find out Is to let
your doctor test you.
I would not recommend
stopping taking B-12 unless
your dobtor tells you it would
be all right to do oo. Absence
of B-12 could lead to
permanent damage to nerve
tracts in your spinal cord and
other complications. These
changes could slip up on you
without you being aware of
any changes.
The reason . you need to
have the injections Is that
they get the B-12 directly into
your body. When the stomach
fails to produce intrinsic
factor and you can't absorb
the B-12 properly, swallowing

su~tR\OR

the B-12 will not get It into
your bloodstream and it Is
simply lost.
To gi,ve you more
information about 8-12 I am
sending you The Health
Letter number 4-5, Vitamin
B-12, Folic Acid, Pernicious
Anemia. Others who want
this information can send 50
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
mailing. Address your letter
to me in care of this newspaper, P. 0. 8ox1~1, Radio
City Station, New York, NY
10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can
anything be dooe about a
person who snores? My
husband has, I believe, about
the loudest snore possible.
The only way I have fowtd to
stop It Is to have him lie on his
side and close his moulth, but
sometimes he starts snoring
again soon after I've stopped
him,
It is not wtusual to have this
happen triree or four urnes a
night, particularly if he is
very tired. I hate to keep
waking him up, but it Is the
only way I can get any sleep.
H there any other answer to
this problem?
DEAR READER
&amp;loring occurs with mouth
breathing and is m~st
common when the person Is
sleeping on his or back.
Sometimes mouth breathing
Is related to obstructions of
the nose and some of these
can be corrected.
More often it Is a habit. I
read a good suggestion
recently that you can try.
Strap a ·ping pong ball or '
other object to the small of
the back or tape it in place.
That will keep him off his
back arid give you ·some
sleep,
In some cases the couples
find it is just better to hilve
separate bedrooms so they
can both get some sleep.

fR~ft~\tS

·sET Of 4 WITH

$10.00 ORDER
OR MORE AND
COUPON IN THIS AD

64 oz.
No Return
SAVE
40~

•

.CHARALTON

We Hol~ These Truths ...

GREY

A Chronicle of America

WATERMELON

_,

Spring, 1776:
Follo~lng the examples of New Hampshire and South

Carolina, In January and March respectively , most of the
other colonies are taking various steps towards Independence. ln.Aprll, North Carolina Instructs its delegates to
the Contmental Congress to vote for independence·
VIrginia follows suit in May , Connecticut In June. Also!~
April, Georgia Instructs Its delegates to vote In whatever
manner they deem best for thecommongood. Rhode Island
declares its Independence on May4. During May and June
New Jersey and Virginia prepare state constitutions. 1~
New York , Delaware, Maryland, and - particularly Massachusetts, s~ntlment for Independence runs high.
These Independence moves culminate In Philadelphia on
Ju\y 2 and 4.

~' ~-·

U N IT E 0 R,.D I E

-By Ros!'l Markenzte • Jeff MacNe lly /ol976, Unlled FtWrure Syndic: ale.

'

'~

'·

20 ....lb. Avg.
ONLY

. I

I

'

SAVE

60~

EXTRA

TOP VAlUE STAMPS
WITH COUPONS
IN THIS AD AND
REQUIRED PURCH~SES

�.

•

.
·-~Dill·-r~rty-·-~
:~:
----·
A '-' ~ 1 ..... I 4

...

.

(__,
I
A
1\J'
I'
4
t·
' YA.J. ~!., .1.
I
..

•

A,

STORE HOURS:

MONDAY _THRU FRIDAY, 9:00 10 8:00 •
_SATURDAY, 9:00 TO 6:00
CLOSED SUNDAYS SO EMPLO~EES CAN SPEND SUNDAY WITH FAMILY
&amp; CHURCH. WE WISH OTHER STORES WOULD DO THE SAME

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS FRANKIES

HAMS
TAVERN ·

.

BONELESS

EINE

•

..• .•
"'

'

.
.:. I
. ''

·• •

.

' .

12·oz. .
PKG.

.

. ; BONEt FSS HAM
.. BREAKFAST

SUPERIOR

•

••'.'

' , ,)

BONELESS \

"'

.

WHOli:
,,,

:I

..

'

SLICED

$159 . BONELESS
. $169
HAMS .••.••....•.••..... ~...
HAMS •• ~..... ~.~~.
HALVESLB.

TAVERN

POLISH SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••'!·. 89' ·; · SLICES••••••••• ~~~.!1"
FINE
BAR~~F LB.

LUNCH MEATS ... !.~~~!.~~·.~.

$119

FRESH

ROUND STEAK ..........~~·..
BONELESS

·.

·

·

SUPERIOR

.

1 09
·

·

$119

CHUCK ROAST. •••••••• ~~;..
GROUND CHUCK ••••••••L~;...
.
.' .RUMP
'159 . ARMOUR STAR
.~
ROAST•.•.•••.•.•.•••!!';...
TURKEYS •••••••••••••••••~. 69e

88
SLICED BACON•••••••~~.~~.~~~;.
.~
COLUMBIA

.

.

. KRAFT

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••• ~.~~~.99~

GOLDEN ISLE .

.

MACARONI · CHEESE

TEEN QUEEN

PEAS....

7 OZ.

4 BtiXEs '1

PLASTIC
--

•

·
BAG 39~

.

S~OONS &amp; FORKS...............
l' SLE.
GO DEN I

.

.

·

.

. ..... ~ •••••4CANs *1 PANCAKE MIX •••••••••••• ~.~~~~ 69~

BLACK

.

All
'VORS
n.n

n

1

'

-

•

... "
'

I

.,

LARGE PLASTIC

ARMOUR

COWBOY

POTTED MEAT

. &amp; .

s

50

cans

. ct.

cans

••

14 OZ.
CANS
I

.

POUND

29 oz.
CAN

YABBA DABBA DEW

POTATOES

ORAN-GE
. DRINk ·

RED RIPE ICE COLD

1h

-

MELONS

'

I:

4&amp;0t

.

.

WHOLE KERNEL
WHOLE

AY· FOR 5

-'•

I

.
.•.••..
'

•ONLY

-~

.

MUSHROOMS
WHOLE

21h oz.

.•

....
"

•

CAN
.

'

: F·AITHFUL '

SHEUIF

•

~·

8

"•.:.•i.-----·---~---·------.·-------------""~---"
TEEN QUEEN
GREEN GIANT · '.
GREEN
OR

-.·--.

OF

TOYS .

TEEN QUEEN

_,, ...

BAG

INDIANS.

100
ct.

BEA'N'S

BAG

--•
...;.

••

•

NEW WHITE

'

......:...~.~~. 99 ~

NEW WHITE

•

.

MAISON

MUSTARD ••••••••• }.~!l!;.~~!!~. 29~

TREET
can

'

1

PLOCMAN

ARMOUR'S

12 OL

'"

POP TARTS

•••••••••••••
$169

.

KELLOGG$

FOR
TENDER

Ii

14 OZ. CAN

'

I

�.

•

.
·-~Dill·-r~rty-·-~
:~:
----·
A '-' ~ 1 ..... I 4

...

.

(__,
I
A
1\J'
I'
4
t·
' YA.J. ~!., .1.
I
..

•

A,

STORE HOURS:

MONDAY _THRU FRIDAY, 9:00 10 8:00 •
_SATURDAY, 9:00 TO 6:00
CLOSED SUNDAYS SO EMPLO~EES CAN SPEND SUNDAY WITH FAMILY
&amp; CHURCH. WE WISH OTHER STORES WOULD DO THE SAME

SUPERIORS

SUPERIORS FRANKIES

HAMS
TAVERN ·

.

BONELESS

EINE

•

..• .•
"'

'

.
.:. I
. ''

·• •

.

' .

12·oz. .
PKG.

.

. ; BONEt FSS HAM
.. BREAKFAST

SUPERIOR

•

••'.'

' , ,)

BONELESS \

"'

.

WHOli:
,,,

:I

..

'

SLICED

$159 . BONELESS
. $169
HAMS .••.••....•.••..... ~...
HAMS •• ~..... ~.~~.
HALVESLB.

TAVERN

POLISH SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••'!·. 89' ·; · SLICES••••••••• ~~~.!1"
FINE
BAR~~F LB.

LUNCH MEATS ... !.~~~!.~~·.~.

$119

FRESH

ROUND STEAK ..........~~·..
BONELESS

·.

·

·

SUPERIOR

.

1 09
·

·

$119

CHUCK ROAST. •••••••• ~~;..
GROUND CHUCK ••••••••L~;...
.
.' .RUMP
'159 . ARMOUR STAR
.~
ROAST•.•.•••.•.•.•••!!';...
TURKEYS •••••••••••••••••~. 69e

88
SLICED BACON•••••••~~.~~.~~~;.
.~
COLUMBIA

.

.

. KRAFT

ORANGE JUICE ••••••••••• ~.~~~.99~

GOLDEN ISLE .

.

MACARONI · CHEESE

TEEN QUEEN

PEAS....

7 OZ.

4 BtiXEs '1

PLASTIC
--

•

·
BAG 39~

.

S~OONS &amp; FORKS...............
l' SLE.
GO DEN I

.

.

·

.

. ..... ~ •••••4CANs *1 PANCAKE MIX •••••••••••• ~.~~~~ 69~

BLACK

.

All
'VORS
n.n

n

1

'

-

•

... "
'

I

.,

LARGE PLASTIC

ARMOUR

COWBOY

POTTED MEAT

. &amp; .

s

50

cans

. ct.

cans

••

14 OZ.
CANS
I

.

POUND

29 oz.
CAN

YABBA DABBA DEW

POTATOES

ORAN-GE
. DRINk ·

RED RIPE ICE COLD

1h

-

MELONS

'

I:

4&amp;0t

.

.

WHOLE KERNEL
WHOLE

AY· FOR 5

-'•

I

.
.•.••..
'

•ONLY

-~

.

MUSHROOMS
WHOLE

21h oz.

.•

....
"

•

CAN
.

'

: F·AITHFUL '

SHEUIF

•

~·

8

"•.:.•i.-----·---~---·------.·-------------""~---"
TEEN QUEEN
GREEN GIANT · '.
GREEN
OR

-.·--.

OF

TOYS .

TEEN QUEEN

_,, ...

BAG

INDIANS.

100
ct.

BEA'N'S

BAG

--•
...;.

••

•

NEW WHITE

'

......:...~.~~. 99 ~

NEW WHITE

•

.

MAISON

MUSTARD ••••••••• }.~!l!;.~~!!~. 29~

TREET
can

'

1

PLOCMAN

ARMOUR'S

12 OL

'"

POP TARTS

•••••••••••••
$169

.

KELLOGG$

FOR
TENDER

Ii

14 OZ. CAN

'

I

�.....__

•
l~'nle:iii:~==~Mi
=ddl~e:po:rt~P:o~m~:r:oy~,~
o ., ·~ru:e:sda~~y,~J:une~2'J~,~~9~76~---------..--•IIlllll

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

Reds have

Super Market • .~ardware
Building Supplies

4 leading
on all star

Set of 4 - 11
Glasses

Pearl &amp; Locust
Middleport, Ohio
------ - --- ------ - ~-----

-----------------•
'

TOP VAL.UE STAMP~.
With •10· Order
00

or more
Coupon good thru

Ju~

5, 1976

Wrth '10 00 Order or more
and coupon
Good 6-29; - 7-5-76

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
, I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

VALUE
STAMPS

'I

I
I
I

"With DUrchase of
~-~~~~ Pienic Ham
tAJupii pel thru July 5. 1976

•

E STAMP$
W"lth purchase of '. ·
~ , each sheet of Paneling '
~ Coupon~ thru Ju~ 5,
~

all for 100-year old woman

TOP

TOP VALUE STAMPS
W"ltll purchase of
one.Armour Star Turkey
Caupill pd thru July 5, 1976

if

~

Viking decision pending

I

TOP ALUE STAMPS
With purchase of
1 gallon of Paint
Coupon good thru Ju~ 5, 1976

I

STAMP$ .
.:.· With purchase of

1

I
TOP VALUE STAMPS .
With purchase of
any Radio ($10.00 or more)
Coupon good thru Ju~ 5, 1976

*.':P. Barden's Ice' Cleam _.,

- 5, 1976

C'Aiu11011 pd thru July
"

VALUE STAMPS
:. With putthase of
41111..iiq. Chaimin Toilet TISUe
Qauaon aaad thru Ju1J ~ 1976

Ohio .ridet~• will help

•I
I
I

Am(wlcn "

rhtllt

~erorc

--

._...

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televlaioo Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - "The Avengers" may return to
televlsionsoon,withaonnethingold,somethlngnew,somethlng
borrowed and nothing blue.
The "New Avengers" series wtll star that veteran ave'!&amp;er,
Patrick MacNee, bowler-hatted and elegant as always, as
enterprising COI!"Ieragent John Steed. MacNee was 38 when be
first played Steed. Now he's 54, by the calender If not be the ·
mirror; wlaer,hehopea,thebettertoplayhlsrole:
.
His feminine fellow agent wtll be a beautifu~ blond former
mndel named Joanna Lumley, Impersonating a lady named
"Purdey," who was booted out ~ the Royal Ba~et and
pirOuettes Into some wild kicks straight to the villains chops.
Something brand new has been added In Gareth Hunt, who
wtll play Mike Gambit, a fellow-agent who came out of the
British army and sorriehow became associated with Steed and
company.
While the "New Avengers" will be less obviously violent and
wtll combine the new with the old, It wtll borrow hea~y from
the old series that in this country ran on ABC oppostle LsughIn" m NBC and "G111t81110ke" on CBS.
.
This was the series, incidentally, that Introduced Diana RJgg
to American audiences aa Emma Peel. The British first saw
Steed teamed up with a man and then with Honor_Blackman
("Pussy Galore" ln. "Goldfinger"), before Miss RJgg's
peculiar combination of warm beauty and cool karate ~&gt;ec,ame
a foil for MacNee's urbane Steed.
·
Right now the producers are hoping to tell the series to
American network television because that's where the profits
lle.
NBC appears the most likely bidder, with CBS and ABC
evincing interest in declining order, according to the show's
producers. The earliest lhst Americall8 could see "The New
Avengers" would be next winter. It might make a dandy
"second season" replacementfor a network nop, particularly
since it has the most devoted "cult" .audience this side of "Star
Trek."
Brian Clemens, co-producer of the show with Albert Fennel,
was insistent that It was the "New Avengers," with accent on
the word "New."
.
"What we are shooting now must be a series for the 1911&amp;,"
Clemends said. "We have to look to those lucrative reruns in
six-~~even years time."
• ·
·
Clemens Intends to produce a series that Is more sophisticated, less violeat, but with the aame highly stylized format
- MacNee calls It "comic strip," but with obvious affection.
Among other changes, Steed wtll hsve moved from his
fashionable London town house to Steed's Stud, outside
London. There will be more locatlcn shooting atound Britain,
including sites such as the Isle of Skye, and there also will be
guest stars.
.
"The vl)lains will be different," Clemens said. "Our vl)lains
used to be way out and strange. Now they wtll be more
ordinary -but still with very strange predlllctions. I think
'that's more how people are - with a strong drive to be
ordinary, to conform - but with ~ very strange predlllctl6ns hidden beneath the surface."
All this talk of changing "The Avengers" Into a "new" breed
might distress an old fait. Never fear - the first episode
involves a cadre of Hllterltes hidden aomewhere in deepest
Scotland, preserving their old attitudes, their old swaatlkabedecked unifonns, and turning a "Heil!" into an offensive

any C-B Radio .

~ Coupon rood thru July 5, 1976

TOP V
STAMPS
With purchase of
~
3 lb. can of C~
~ Coupon rood thru Ju~ 5, 1976

VALUE STAMPS

·::Wittt purchase_of

:-2 stalls of CelefJ
Caupon aaad thru Ju~ 5, 1976

.
, ••
••···
NEW YORK (UP! )- Karl suspected .nna
failure
Thomas today was dosing in and he has hlid tO resort to a
on the halfway point in his bid sextant and the stars to plot
to llecome the first to solo the
Atlantic Ocean in a balloon, his" Hcourse.
he Is where we belleve
his growd control base said. he Is, hP.'s in tllrbest'weather
With lyck, he could be in pattern possible, " said
Europe by Thursday.
Clayton. "There are no
"We 'guestimate be's about unfavorable weather systems
1,200 miles east of New·York lxilldlng 'al\elllT'IIthlm an&lt;i 'Iie
City and about 250 mUes has favorabl winds trailing
south of Nova Scotia," Walter.
•
Clayton, a spokesman for the him.
"But he d8e..have •cloud
flight, said Monday.
.cover whical Jlfllkes visual
"He's better than a third of slgllting f~ the air
the way there."
difficult.'; .. ...,.
Thomas had planned to
Clayton sata'!l' was obvious
land Thursday in Paris ..But a Thomas was still aloft
spokesman said he possibly "because 1&gt;f the radio
could;make It by Wednesday
night If he were where they
believed him to be.
Clayton said Thomas '
positiOII aboard the balloon he
dubbed the "Spirit of '76" was
sa~
based on his last radio
CLEVELAND (UP!) contact, with an Alltalia The ,United.ltllh,tler Workers
flight from New York to
Union and ~-tone were
Rome, at 10:43 p.m. EDT unc
0mmunft\ilve after
Sunday:
meeting
M~. with U.S.
But the flight, which began
Lsbor
Secre!ArY
J.
Friday at the Lakehurst, Usery, who seughtWilliam
to help end
N.J.,,,Naval Air Station, was the 100-day~ld nationwide
hav~ Its problems. TIJe 27- rubber strike.__ .
: .
year!-old German ;born
A union ' ""spokesman
ballo'onli t 's main radio acknowledged that Usery
tranamitier apparently had · met with negotiators but
bro~n down and he was would ·only · ~nt ' that
using 'abackup system.
URW Pre!llllent Peter
Clayton said th~e had been Bommarito said " nothing
no direct contact with happened.''
Thoma- since the Sunday . A spok881111111 fur Firestone
tr81111111laslon.
said he woul&lt;Qnl!t conunent
"From the transmission to on the talks f t request of
the airliner we know he is all the federal l!lflllators. The
right," said· Clayton. "He mediators could not be
didn 't ask for any help, If he reached for Comment.
were In trouble he would have
Besides Usery , whose
'Mayctayed.'"
personal · Tn't'e rventlon
He laid Thomas had a list brought abclutiieitlenient of·
of schecluled transatlantic. the nationwide trucking
flightll arid ''We're hoping be strike, the federal team
will aoon make more contacts 'included James F. Scearce;
for a better fix on biB head of the Mediation and
posiUon."
'
'Conciliation . . .ce. ''"
Thomas' electronic naviga- ·The union strick Firestone,
tional aids allo have been Goodyear, Goodrich and
useless because of a Uniroyal April 21 , demallllillg

frequency used and ,the fact
none of the automatic
beepers that are on both the
gondola and balloon have
gone off - and they are
designed to go off on
contact." .
"We know the balloon Is
perfect because of the tests
we've made," Clayton said.
He estimated Thomas' altitude as "around 5,000 feet,
give or take a few thousand
feet for various weather
conditions." He said Tb(lllas
was carrying oxygen and
could go as high as 20,000 feet
If necessary.

Adversaries in strike
are
nothing

VAL..UI:.

With purchase of
3-16 oz. loaves of Bread
c:.tll!lllld IIIIU Ju1J 5, 1976

'I

STAMPS

· 3~:~:..

C.pon;.pd lhru July 5, 1976

CLIP AND SAVEll

I

SAVEl I
'.,'

a "catch up" wage increase
and an open-ended cost of
Uving focmula. The strike,
idling 70,000 work~s. has
closed 47 plants.
The talks resumed Monday
.after a four-day recess. They
produced no progress toward
a settlement last week with
Scearce in attendsnce.
Meanwhile, the Mohawk
Tire &amp; Rubber plant in Akron
shut down Monday after
'ORW members 'there struck
despite
a
tentative
agreement on a new contract.
The company obtained a
court ocder against plckeUng,
making It possible foc office
workers to enter the . plant.

REAGAN UNSEATED
SANTA BARBARA, eallr,
(UPI) - The tlght-fittlllg
style in blue jeans today Is
unsuitable - or unseatable for movie-style cowboy
tricks,
according · to
Republican presidential
challenger and former
cinema wrangler Ronald weapon.
Reagan.
The moce 110me things change, the more they stay the same.

TreastJrcr

Ger trud ~

Donahey, remains u mystery,
since the rCC(lt'ds were lu!-!l,
sa id Mason.
''ll's wntppt.,lln puper and
is probnbly lin," 'he said. The
size or U1e capsule Is 0 lnd1es ·
by 14 Inches by lR Inches.
Items to be put into 11 20711
time cupsulc lhnl. night will
be stores in 11 box 24 Inches h)
12 inches by 10 Inches.
Elsewhere throughout t111·
state this weekend:
- "Pau l Revere" will ride
thr ough the dty
or
Willoughby to wurn or o mock
batt le in the City Hull
I'Mking Lot bctwc&lt;•n 10
" Hedconls" and Willoughby's &gt;~minutem en" ,
- fl time capsule will be
senil'&lt;i in Wellinglim in !..&lt;&gt;rain
County,
conta ining
1.1
llliniulu(e pn inting of the
''Sph•il or '76" un vei led 100
years ugo at lhc nation 's
CcntCimlalln Philudcphiu by
U1e m·llst Archilm ld Wi llm•ci,
" n utlv~&gt; of Wellington .

down

Ci~Loan.

When you need money for home impmvements, or a~y good .
reason, talk to us. We hand le HomeOwJ IPt' Loan~ rtt,llddy, f~asdy
and with consideration. Amounl'.'i up (u $1!&gt;,000 avmlable.

CITY LOAN
COMPANY

125 E. Main Slrcel 992-2171
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

tlw

rlnginn or the bell.
Contents of Uw 1876 Uu w
capsule, in Uw orricc vr Stu!&lt;•

- le Th ursday
Landf'-11
iU..l PO·Ss.ih

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purchase of

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purchase of
10 lbs. of Charcoal
Coupon goad thru Ju~ 5, 1975

Christmas decorations.
"Althoug h she watches the
news on TV und keeps up on
current events, the only thin g
she can't understand is the
high prices," said Mrs.
Coll ins.
"She
thinks
th is
Bicentennial is something,"
said Mrs. Coll ins, "bccat"e
it's going lluck to things she
can relate to,"
Mrs. Collins Is plunning
fo od for 200 pCI'SiliiS at
Sunday's
party
with
decorations In rc&lt;i , white 1111&lt;1
blue.
Another re&lt;l-whilNIIld-biuc
celebration this weekend will
be th e Ce ntral Ohio
Blcentenniu l Orgunizlltion 's
gigantic progrum at &amp;:ioto
Downs Friday nig ht.
Afl ve~wur cxtravngunw is
timed to end ut U1e stroke of
midnight wiU1the ringing or a
bell and a low-key aerial
fi reworks display.
"We can't go ror all the
boom-booms in flrewor~~S IJec.usc or the horses ut Scioto
Downs," said r&lt;:&lt;l Mason,
chainnan or Uw PI'Ogrum.
14
So we planned u big EWl'Jnl

dlstllay."
The p1·o~r11m will conslstur
chorulnnd clanco ~ro ups , till'
opcnmr, uf U1c 1876 Unll'
capsule, th&lt;: scaling of the
2076 lillie CII!XIIJlc und the
si nging of "God lJlcss

TV•••in Review

,.

~

VanMatre, llill Hcnslc1·, Steve Uunrcc, nnd Murk
Tannehill. Childs, ll eusl&lt;'l' and T&gt;tnnd ,ill plnyed togeUwr
on the same JJUic l.enKuC !(•tun, !IIIli Mull~n . l1oycl, flu it,
VunMutre unci Dunft'll un othc1· Middleport Little Lca~ue
teams nbuut tho !tune ymu·s in tht' tiQ:o , Picture by .Jim
Hamm.

·Biggest birthday party of

TOP VALUE STAMPS

I

NEW YORK (UPI) -Led
by second baseman J oe
Morgan, catcher Johnny
Bench and third baaeman
Pete Rose, the world
champion Cincinnati Reds
are leading at four positions
and rwming second In two
oth«s in the balloting to
determine the starting
National League team for the
All{!tar same.
Mocgan, the Most Valuable
Player In last year's Wocld
Serl1!8, Is the leading votegetter thus far with 1,620,538
vote!!, II was announced Monday . by the office of the
Baseball Commissioner .
" TALK ABOUT HEADS for businellll, ~ohwa Maxey of St. Louis demonstrates tha t
Bench was just behind with
where there'sa wt11 there's a way to martwliJler wigs even If It means literally taking to the
1,613,165 votes with Rll6e the
nljld. At least it cuts down on overhead. ·
·
thi!'d most . popular player
MIDDLEPORT FRIENDLY TAVERN
among the fans with 1,405,1MMJ
Campaigning in the. Summer Independent Base~ ll
votes.
league Is this team of former Middleport and Meigs H1gh
. Dave Concepcion of the
athletes spon110red by The Friendly Tavern. Front, 1..-,
Reds was leading at shortstop
Mike Taylor, Mlck Childs, Toot Mullen, Dave .Boyd, Perk
with 1,000,1138 voll!8 while
Ault, Jim Cundiff; standing, Steve Clonch, Rick
Tony Perez was second
•
behind Steve Garvey of the
WIL~HIRE. Ohio (UP! ) ride acrodhe state in about field and in Steubenville.
Loa
Angeles Dodgers In tbe
- Many Ohioans wt11 grab 24 hours; ~ering West
Law enforcement officers balloting for first baae and
reins and join in the Pony Virginia at 'Steubenville.
wtll ride ahead of the Pony George Foster trailed only
Express nonstop · cross
Local riders wtll ride five to Expr ess for safety and
CO)IIIIry trip ending in Valley l(knlle segments with the provide the much-needed Greg Luzinski of the
Philadelphia PI!UIIes In the
Forge, Pa ., July 4.
· five origirial riders . At each light during the night.
outfield.
voting.
·The trip began June 22 In len lillie illfl!tval, the pouch
The pouch contains letters
Garvey
hsd drawn 1,118,271
Mt. Vernon, Wash ., and wtll be transferred to another signed by President Ford,
votes,
Perez
825,837, Luzlnskl
riders are carrying a pouch of rider on Its nonstop trip.
governors of nearly a)! the 818,615 and Foster 735,156.
letter~ to be delivered at the.
Exchan~ wtll be made states , and some Indian
nation's Bicentennial near "~ Eigtn·: · 'C01rVefse, tribes throughout the The thi!'d outfield post, If the
ocder remains the same, By SANDRA L. LATIMER
celebration.
Kenton, Big Island, Marion, country.
survivors are a nephew and
Pony Express riders will iberia, Lexington, Belleville,
The cross-country trip will would go to Dave Kingman of UDited Press lnlensatloaal
several nieces who live out of
There will be many town.
~nter Ohio around 2:15 a .Ill. Butle r , ;,•.rr.j)udonvllle, cover 3,014 miles in 12 days. the New York Mets with
·birthday parties this wee~end
Friday at this Van Wert Nashville, :SilPr Creek, New Riders try to average about 691,269 votea.
"So she depends upon the
Bench, Rose, Morgan, Con- as Ohioans celebrate the neighbors
County community. They wW Phlladelpl!llf;" East Spring-_ 10 miles per hour.
to help her ," said
cepcio!l and Garvey all were nation's 200th birthday.
1"\1
Mrs.
Collins.
·
••
starters for the National
But hsrdly any wt11 be as
Daisy and her husband had
League last year. The colorful and big as one being operated a restaurant afler
balloting for this year's game planned in Canton for Dals.r they were married. Up until a
at . Philadelphia on July 13 Deville.
few years ago she still had
ends July 4.
Although Daisy will be 100 roomers in her seven..-oom
The tightest competition in years old July 3, a gigantic twostory house, cooking their
the
N.L. Is for the outfield redwhite-and-blue birthday meals and doing their
By JAMES J. DOYLE
a dispute at a meeting
Fl!\SADENA, Calif. (UP!) Saturday tlil!ht at the . Jet said, the landing could take berths with Lou Brock of the party 1s being planned in her laundry, said Mrs. Collins.
St. Louis Cardinals in fourth honor at her church - the
- Viking scientists say they Propulsion Laboratory that place July 22.
She has since given that up,
In pictures of the area place with 674,~ votes, fol- 1 Church of God.
will decide Thursday where operates U.S. space probes,
also
her garden ,
"Daisy Is all excited about
and when a life-seeking placed the .sa{fty of the Mars taken from an angle it lowed by teanunate Bake
Daisy
does her own
automated laboratory ' .lander abfo~ the schedule appears to ill! more like an McBride (636,224 ), Rick Mon- this," said her much,younger weeding of her flower beds.
orbiting Mars wtll make Its and the disiPabUity of the earth desert, covered by day of the Chicago CUbs friend Mrs. Helen Collins who Her neighbors mow her ya rd.
WindbloWn sand dunes.
(633,616), and Ken Griffey of Is planning the party.
delayed landing on the lnitiallan~sile .
She Is very active with
Choice
of
another
site,
A2
the
Reds (633,608).
"She's very capable of
planet.
The site; ~ Portion of the
older
ci tize n groups and
The American League doing everything," said Mrs.
A:J the hunt for a suitable plain of Chryse designated or Tritonus Lscus, would
church
groups.
lanlllng spot continued, AI , was a erq~.nising pl~ce to involve a five-day manuever leaders as of last week..were Collins. "She Is alert and
She climbs the sleps at
to
put Viking"in orbit ov~ the catcher Carlton Fisk of Uves alone.
~jrfcmanager Jim Martin search for-• evidence .of life
"Inlact, sheevenprepared· home, loves to travel and eat
Said
had ''no apologies" licailse it;;.ii . taCecl" )lith site, and a landing could be Boston, Rod Carew of
Minnesota at first base, and served refreshments for in restaurants. She keeps up
for
decision canceling the canyoos and the beds of what attempted July 21.
Scientists are trying to • Bobby Grieb of BalUmore at the committee as we planned with current events, and
July ' 4 descent , long sci~tlsts believe were once
spends many hours In front of
determine
whether there 'is second base, George Brett of this party," she said.
scheduled .as one of the mlgl)ty Jiw s, . which
anything to be gained by Kansas City at third baae,
Mrs: Deville, a woman of her television , with the
hlgh\ ights of Bicentennial vanished long ago. ·
volume turned up rather high
festivities.
But the rollgh features that selecting one of the.alternate Fred Patek of Kansas City at slight build, has been a widow because her hearin g is
·"This
m1ss1on
Is made it atq~Uve also in- _sites. H they decide that at all shortstop and outfielders since 1959 when her husband falling.
e:tploration," he said. ''No creased . tlip;r~Jreat to the of Mars is just as hazardous Fred LYnn of Boston, Roo Charles, whom she married
She,finds plenty of time to
one has ever landed oil Mars, lander, whi~~uld be ruined as the original site, the LeFlore of Detroit and Bobby in 1003, died, She never had do her own bakin g and
take place . Bonds of California,
any children and her only
"If one sets out as If ' it does ·'!lOt ~ttle on landing
there Julywould
9.
handcrafts , esp ecially
')))umbus did to fmd a new compatatlv~evel ground.
"!am still coofident we will
world, he didn't fl!8h into the
Three other sites are under make a safe landing," Martin
first beach he found. He consideratlql!., ,jr_lcludlng one said.
prollably looked around for a dubbed "theoNorthwest Ter"I'm just not quite sure
safeharbor."
ritory," • ' - the plain of when."
Martin's' decision, settling Chryse. If it iicnosen, Martin

�.....__

•
l~'nle:iii:~==~Mi
=ddl~e:po:rt~P:o~m~:r:oy~,~
o ., ·~ru:e:sda~~y,~J:une~2'J~,~~9~76~---------..--•IIlllll

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

Reds have

Super Market • .~ardware
Building Supplies

4 leading
on all star

Set of 4 - 11
Glasses

Pearl &amp; Locust
Middleport, Ohio
------ - --- ------ - ~-----

-----------------•
'

TOP VAL.UE STAMP~.
With •10· Order
00

or more
Coupon good thru

Ju~

5, 1976

Wrth '10 00 Order or more
and coupon
Good 6-29; - 7-5-76

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
,I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
, I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

VALUE
STAMPS

'I

I
I
I

"With DUrchase of
~-~~~~ Pienic Ham
tAJupii pel thru July 5. 1976

•

E STAMP$
W"lth purchase of '. ·
~ , each sheet of Paneling '
~ Coupon~ thru Ju~ 5,
~

all for 100-year old woman

TOP

TOP VALUE STAMPS
W"ltll purchase of
one.Armour Star Turkey
Caupill pd thru July 5, 1976

if

~

Viking decision pending

I

TOP ALUE STAMPS
With purchase of
1 gallon of Paint
Coupon good thru Ju~ 5, 1976

I

STAMP$ .
.:.· With purchase of

1

I
TOP VALUE STAMPS .
With purchase of
any Radio ($10.00 or more)
Coupon good thru Ju~ 5, 1976

*.':P. Barden's Ice' Cleam _.,

- 5, 1976

C'Aiu11011 pd thru July
"

VALUE STAMPS
:. With putthase of
41111..iiq. Chaimin Toilet TISUe
Qauaon aaad thru Ju1J ~ 1976

Ohio .ridet~• will help

•I
I
I

Am(wlcn "

rhtllt

~erorc

--

._...

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televlaioo Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - "The Avengers" may return to
televlsionsoon,withaonnethingold,somethlngnew,somethlng
borrowed and nothing blue.
The "New Avengers" series wtll star that veteran ave'!&amp;er,
Patrick MacNee, bowler-hatted and elegant as always, as
enterprising COI!"Ieragent John Steed. MacNee was 38 when be
first played Steed. Now he's 54, by the calender If not be the ·
mirror; wlaer,hehopea,thebettertoplayhlsrole:
.
His feminine fellow agent wtll be a beautifu~ blond former
mndel named Joanna Lumley, Impersonating a lady named
"Purdey," who was booted out ~ the Royal Ba~et and
pirOuettes Into some wild kicks straight to the villains chops.
Something brand new has been added In Gareth Hunt, who
wtll play Mike Gambit, a fellow-agent who came out of the
British army and sorriehow became associated with Steed and
company.
While the "New Avengers" will be less obviously violent and
wtll combine the new with the old, It wtll borrow hea~y from
the old series that in this country ran on ABC oppostle LsughIn" m NBC and "G111t81110ke" on CBS.
.
This was the series, incidentally, that Introduced Diana RJgg
to American audiences aa Emma Peel. The British first saw
Steed teamed up with a man and then with Honor_Blackman
("Pussy Galore" ln. "Goldfinger"), before Miss RJgg's
peculiar combination of warm beauty and cool karate ~&gt;ec,ame
a foil for MacNee's urbane Steed.
·
Right now the producers are hoping to tell the series to
American network television because that's where the profits
lle.
NBC appears the most likely bidder, with CBS and ABC
evincing interest in declining order, according to the show's
producers. The earliest lhst Americall8 could see "The New
Avengers" would be next winter. It might make a dandy
"second season" replacementfor a network nop, particularly
since it has the most devoted "cult" .audience this side of "Star
Trek."
Brian Clemens, co-producer of the show with Albert Fennel,
was insistent that It was the "New Avengers," with accent on
the word "New."
.
"What we are shooting now must be a series for the 1911&amp;,"
Clemends said. "We have to look to those lucrative reruns in
six-~~even years time."
• ·
·
Clemens Intends to produce a series that Is more sophisticated, less violeat, but with the aame highly stylized format
- MacNee calls It "comic strip," but with obvious affection.
Among other changes, Steed wtll hsve moved from his
fashionable London town house to Steed's Stud, outside
London. There will be more locatlcn shooting atound Britain,
including sites such as the Isle of Skye, and there also will be
guest stars.
.
"The vl)lains will be different," Clemens said. "Our vl)lains
used to be way out and strange. Now they wtll be more
ordinary -but still with very strange predlllctions. I think
'that's more how people are - with a strong drive to be
ordinary, to conform - but with ~ very strange predlllctl6ns hidden beneath the surface."
All this talk of changing "The Avengers" Into a "new" breed
might distress an old fait. Never fear - the first episode
involves a cadre of Hllterltes hidden aomewhere in deepest
Scotland, preserving their old attitudes, their old swaatlkabedecked unifonns, and turning a "Heil!" into an offensive

any C-B Radio .

~ Coupon rood thru July 5, 1976

TOP V
STAMPS
With purchase of
~
3 lb. can of C~
~ Coupon rood thru Ju~ 5, 1976

VALUE STAMPS

·::Wittt purchase_of

:-2 stalls of CelefJ
Caupon aaad thru Ju~ 5, 1976

.
, ••
••···
NEW YORK (UP! )- Karl suspected .nna
failure
Thomas today was dosing in and he has hlid tO resort to a
on the halfway point in his bid sextant and the stars to plot
to llecome the first to solo the
Atlantic Ocean in a balloon, his" Hcourse.
he Is where we belleve
his growd control base said. he Is, hP.'s in tllrbest'weather
With lyck, he could be in pattern possible, " said
Europe by Thursday.
Clayton. "There are no
"We 'guestimate be's about unfavorable weather systems
1,200 miles east of New·York lxilldlng 'al\elllT'IIthlm an&lt;i 'Iie
City and about 250 mUes has favorabl winds trailing
south of Nova Scotia," Walter.
•
Clayton, a spokesman for the him.
"But he d8e..have •cloud
flight, said Monday.
.cover whical Jlfllkes visual
"He's better than a third of slgllting f~ the air
the way there."
difficult.'; .. ...,.
Thomas had planned to
Clayton sata'!l' was obvious
land Thursday in Paris ..But a Thomas was still aloft
spokesman said he possibly "because 1&gt;f the radio
could;make It by Wednesday
night If he were where they
believed him to be.
Clayton said Thomas '
positiOII aboard the balloon he
dubbed the "Spirit of '76" was
sa~
based on his last radio
CLEVELAND (UP!) contact, with an Alltalia The ,United.ltllh,tler Workers
flight from New York to
Union and ~-tone were
Rome, at 10:43 p.m. EDT unc
0mmunft\ilve after
Sunday:
meeting
M~. with U.S.
But the flight, which began
Lsbor
Secre!ArY
J.
Friday at the Lakehurst, Usery, who seughtWilliam
to help end
N.J.,,,Naval Air Station, was the 100-day~ld nationwide
hav~ Its problems. TIJe 27- rubber strike.__ .
: .
year!-old German ;born
A union ' ""spokesman
ballo'onli t 's main radio acknowledged that Usery
tranamitier apparently had · met with negotiators but
bro~n down and he was would ·only · ~nt ' that
using 'abackup system.
URW Pre!llllent Peter
Clayton said th~e had been Bommarito said " nothing
no direct contact with happened.''
Thoma- since the Sunday . A spok881111111 fur Firestone
tr81111111laslon.
said he woul&lt;Qnl!t conunent
"From the transmission to on the talks f t request of
the airliner we know he is all the federal l!lflllators. The
right," said· Clayton. "He mediators could not be
didn 't ask for any help, If he reached for Comment.
were In trouble he would have
Besides Usery , whose
'Mayctayed.'"
personal · Tn't'e rventlon
He laid Thomas had a list brought abclutiieitlenient of·
of schecluled transatlantic. the nationwide trucking
flightll arid ''We're hoping be strike, the federal team
will aoon make more contacts 'included James F. Scearce;
for a better fix on biB head of the Mediation and
posiUon."
'
'Conciliation . . .ce. ''"
Thomas' electronic naviga- ·The union strick Firestone,
tional aids allo have been Goodyear, Goodrich and
useless because of a Uniroyal April 21 , demallllillg

frequency used and ,the fact
none of the automatic
beepers that are on both the
gondola and balloon have
gone off - and they are
designed to go off on
contact." .
"We know the balloon Is
perfect because of the tests
we've made," Clayton said.
He estimated Thomas' altitude as "around 5,000 feet,
give or take a few thousand
feet for various weather
conditions." He said Tb(lllas
was carrying oxygen and
could go as high as 20,000 feet
If necessary.

Adversaries in strike
are
nothing

VAL..UI:.

With purchase of
3-16 oz. loaves of Bread
c:.tll!lllld IIIIU Ju1J 5, 1976

'I

STAMPS

· 3~:~:..

C.pon;.pd lhru July 5, 1976

CLIP AND SAVEll

I

SAVEl I
'.,'

a "catch up" wage increase
and an open-ended cost of
Uving focmula. The strike,
idling 70,000 work~s. has
closed 47 plants.
The talks resumed Monday
.after a four-day recess. They
produced no progress toward
a settlement last week with
Scearce in attendsnce.
Meanwhile, the Mohawk
Tire &amp; Rubber plant in Akron
shut down Monday after
'ORW members 'there struck
despite
a
tentative
agreement on a new contract.
The company obtained a
court ocder against plckeUng,
making It possible foc office
workers to enter the . plant.

REAGAN UNSEATED
SANTA BARBARA, eallr,
(UPI) - The tlght-fittlllg
style in blue jeans today Is
unsuitable - or unseatable for movie-style cowboy
tricks,
according · to
Republican presidential
challenger and former
cinema wrangler Ronald weapon.
Reagan.
The moce 110me things change, the more they stay the same.

TreastJrcr

Ger trud ~

Donahey, remains u mystery,
since the rCC(lt'ds were lu!-!l,
sa id Mason.
''ll's wntppt.,lln puper and
is probnbly lin," 'he said. The
size or U1e capsule Is 0 lnd1es ·
by 14 Inches by lR Inches.
Items to be put into 11 20711
time cupsulc lhnl. night will
be stores in 11 box 24 Inches h)
12 inches by 10 Inches.
Elsewhere throughout t111·
state this weekend:
- "Pau l Revere" will ride
thr ough the dty
or
Willoughby to wurn or o mock
batt le in the City Hull
I'Mking Lot bctwc&lt;•n 10
" Hedconls" and Willoughby's &gt;~minutem en" ,
- fl time capsule will be
senil'&lt;i in Wellinglim in !..&lt;&gt;rain
County,
conta ining
1.1
llliniulu(e pn inting of the
''Sph•il or '76" un vei led 100
years ugo at lhc nation 's
CcntCimlalln Philudcphiu by
U1e m·llst Archilm ld Wi llm•ci,
" n utlv~&gt; of Wellington .

down

Ci~Loan.

When you need money for home impmvements, or a~y good .
reason, talk to us. We hand le HomeOwJ IPt' Loan~ rtt,llddy, f~asdy
and with consideration. Amounl'.'i up (u $1!&gt;,000 avmlable.

CITY LOAN
COMPANY

125 E. Main Slrcel 992-2171
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

tlw

rlnginn or the bell.
Contents of Uw 1876 Uu w
capsule, in Uw orricc vr Stu!&lt;•

- le Th ursday
Landf'-11
iU..l PO·Ss.ih

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purchase of

TOP VALUE STAMPS
With purchase of
10 lbs. of Charcoal
Coupon goad thru Ju~ 5, 1975

Christmas decorations.
"Althoug h she watches the
news on TV und keeps up on
current events, the only thin g
she can't understand is the
high prices," said Mrs.
Coll ins.
"She
thinks
th is
Bicentennial is something,"
said Mrs. Coll ins, "bccat"e
it's going lluck to things she
can relate to,"
Mrs. Collins Is plunning
fo od for 200 pCI'SiliiS at
Sunday's
party
with
decorations In rc&lt;i , white 1111&lt;1
blue.
Another re&lt;l-whilNIIld-biuc
celebration this weekend will
be th e Ce ntral Ohio
Blcentenniu l Orgunizlltion 's
gigantic progrum at &amp;:ioto
Downs Friday nig ht.
Afl ve~wur cxtravngunw is
timed to end ut U1e stroke of
midnight wiU1the ringing or a
bell and a low-key aerial
fi reworks display.
"We can't go ror all the
boom-booms in flrewor~~S IJec.usc or the horses ut Scioto
Downs," said r&lt;:&lt;l Mason,
chainnan or Uw PI'Ogrum.
14
So we planned u big EWl'Jnl

dlstllay."
The p1·o~r11m will conslstur
chorulnnd clanco ~ro ups , till'
opcnmr, uf U1c 1876 Unll'
capsule, th&lt;: scaling of the
2076 lillie CII!XIIJlc und the
si nging of "God lJlcss

TV•••in Review

,.

~

VanMatre, llill Hcnslc1·, Steve Uunrcc, nnd Murk
Tannehill. Childs, ll eusl&lt;'l' and T&gt;tnnd ,ill plnyed togeUwr
on the same JJUic l.enKuC !(•tun, !IIIli Mull~n . l1oycl, flu it,
VunMutre unci Dunft'll un othc1· Middleport Little Lca~ue
teams nbuut tho !tune ymu·s in tht' tiQ:o , Picture by .Jim
Hamm.

·Biggest birthday party of

TOP VALUE STAMPS

I

NEW YORK (UPI) -Led
by second baseman J oe
Morgan, catcher Johnny
Bench and third baaeman
Pete Rose, the world
champion Cincinnati Reds
are leading at four positions
and rwming second In two
oth«s in the balloting to
determine the starting
National League team for the
All{!tar same.
Mocgan, the Most Valuable
Player In last year's Wocld
Serl1!8, Is the leading votegetter thus far with 1,620,538
vote!!, II was announced Monday . by the office of the
Baseball Commissioner .
" TALK ABOUT HEADS for businellll, ~ohwa Maxey of St. Louis demonstrates tha t
Bench was just behind with
where there'sa wt11 there's a way to martwliJler wigs even If It means literally taking to the
1,613,165 votes with Rll6e the
nljld. At least it cuts down on overhead. ·
·
thi!'d most . popular player
MIDDLEPORT FRIENDLY TAVERN
among the fans with 1,405,1MMJ
Campaigning in the. Summer Independent Base~ ll
votes.
league Is this team of former Middleport and Meigs H1gh
. Dave Concepcion of the
athletes spon110red by The Friendly Tavern. Front, 1..-,
Reds was leading at shortstop
Mike Taylor, Mlck Childs, Toot Mullen, Dave .Boyd, Perk
with 1,000,1138 voll!8 while
Ault, Jim Cundiff; standing, Steve Clonch, Rick
Tony Perez was second
•
behind Steve Garvey of the
WIL~HIRE. Ohio (UP! ) ride acrodhe state in about field and in Steubenville.
Loa
Angeles Dodgers In tbe
- Many Ohioans wt11 grab 24 hours; ~ering West
Law enforcement officers balloting for first baae and
reins and join in the Pony Virginia at 'Steubenville.
wtll ride ahead of the Pony George Foster trailed only
Express nonstop · cross
Local riders wtll ride five to Expr ess for safety and
CO)IIIIry trip ending in Valley l(knlle segments with the provide the much-needed Greg Luzinski of the
Philadelphia PI!UIIes In the
Forge, Pa ., July 4.
· five origirial riders . At each light during the night.
outfield.
voting.
·The trip began June 22 In len lillie illfl!tval, the pouch
The pouch contains letters
Garvey
hsd drawn 1,118,271
Mt. Vernon, Wash ., and wtll be transferred to another signed by President Ford,
votes,
Perez
825,837, Luzlnskl
riders are carrying a pouch of rider on Its nonstop trip.
governors of nearly a)! the 818,615 and Foster 735,156.
letter~ to be delivered at the.
Exchan~ wtll be made states , and some Indian
nation's Bicentennial near "~ Eigtn·: · 'C01rVefse, tribes throughout the The thi!'d outfield post, If the
ocder remains the same, By SANDRA L. LATIMER
celebration.
Kenton, Big Island, Marion, country.
survivors are a nephew and
Pony Express riders will iberia, Lexington, Belleville,
The cross-country trip will would go to Dave Kingman of UDited Press lnlensatloaal
several nieces who live out of
There will be many town.
~nter Ohio around 2:15 a .Ill. Butle r , ;,•.rr.j)udonvllle, cover 3,014 miles in 12 days. the New York Mets with
·birthday parties this wee~end
Friday at this Van Wert Nashville, :SilPr Creek, New Riders try to average about 691,269 votea.
"So she depends upon the
Bench, Rose, Morgan, Con- as Ohioans celebrate the neighbors
County community. They wW Phlladelpl!llf;" East Spring-_ 10 miles per hour.
to help her ," said
cepcio!l and Garvey all were nation's 200th birthday.
1"\1
Mrs.
Collins.
·
••
starters for the National
But hsrdly any wt11 be as
Daisy and her husband had
League last year. The colorful and big as one being operated a restaurant afler
balloting for this year's game planned in Canton for Dals.r they were married. Up until a
at . Philadelphia on July 13 Deville.
few years ago she still had
ends July 4.
Although Daisy will be 100 roomers in her seven..-oom
The tightest competition in years old July 3, a gigantic twostory house, cooking their
the
N.L. Is for the outfield redwhite-and-blue birthday meals and doing their
By JAMES J. DOYLE
a dispute at a meeting
Fl!\SADENA, Calif. (UP!) Saturday tlil!ht at the . Jet said, the landing could take berths with Lou Brock of the party 1s being planned in her laundry, said Mrs. Collins.
St. Louis Cardinals in fourth honor at her church - the
- Viking scientists say they Propulsion Laboratory that place July 22.
She has since given that up,
In pictures of the area place with 674,~ votes, fol- 1 Church of God.
will decide Thursday where operates U.S. space probes,
also
her garden ,
"Daisy Is all excited about
and when a life-seeking placed the .sa{fty of the Mars taken from an angle it lowed by teanunate Bake
Daisy
does her own
automated laboratory ' .lander abfo~ the schedule appears to ill! more like an McBride (636,224 ), Rick Mon- this," said her much,younger weeding of her flower beds.
orbiting Mars wtll make Its and the disiPabUity of the earth desert, covered by day of the Chicago CUbs friend Mrs. Helen Collins who Her neighbors mow her ya rd.
WindbloWn sand dunes.
(633,616), and Ken Griffey of Is planning the party.
delayed landing on the lnitiallan~sile .
She Is very active with
Choice
of
another
site,
A2
the
Reds (633,608).
"She's very capable of
planet.
The site; ~ Portion of the
older
ci tize n groups and
The American League doing everything," said Mrs.
A:J the hunt for a suitable plain of Chryse designated or Tritonus Lscus, would
church
groups.
lanlllng spot continued, AI , was a erq~.nising pl~ce to involve a five-day manuever leaders as of last week..were Collins. "She Is alert and
She climbs the sleps at
to
put Viking"in orbit ov~ the catcher Carlton Fisk of Uves alone.
~jrfcmanager Jim Martin search for-• evidence .of life
"Inlact, sheevenprepared· home, loves to travel and eat
Said
had ''no apologies" licailse it;;.ii . taCecl" )lith site, and a landing could be Boston, Rod Carew of
Minnesota at first base, and served refreshments for in restaurants. She keeps up
for
decision canceling the canyoos and the beds of what attempted July 21.
Scientists are trying to • Bobby Grieb of BalUmore at the committee as we planned with current events, and
July ' 4 descent , long sci~tlsts believe were once
spends many hours In front of
determine
whether there 'is second base, George Brett of this party," she said.
scheduled .as one of the mlgl)ty Jiw s, . which
anything to be gained by Kansas City at third baae,
Mrs: Deville, a woman of her television , with the
hlgh\ ights of Bicentennial vanished long ago. ·
volume turned up rather high
festivities.
But the rollgh features that selecting one of the.alternate Fred Patek of Kansas City at slight build, has been a widow because her hearin g is
·"This
m1ss1on
Is made it atq~Uve also in- _sites. H they decide that at all shortstop and outfielders since 1959 when her husband falling.
e:tploration," he said. ''No creased . tlip;r~Jreat to the of Mars is just as hazardous Fred LYnn of Boston, Roo Charles, whom she married
She,finds plenty of time to
one has ever landed oil Mars, lander, whi~~uld be ruined as the original site, the LeFlore of Detroit and Bobby in 1003, died, She never had do her own bakin g and
take place . Bonds of California,
any children and her only
"If one sets out as If ' it does ·'!lOt ~ttle on landing
there Julywould
9.
handcrafts , esp ecially
')))umbus did to fmd a new compatatlv~evel ground.
"!am still coofident we will
world, he didn't fl!8h into the
Three other sites are under make a safe landing," Martin
first beach he found. He consideratlql!., ,jr_lcludlng one said.
prollably looked around for a dubbed "theoNorthwest Ter"I'm just not quite sure
safeharbor."
ritory," • ' - the plain of when."
Martin's' decision, settling Chryse. If it iicnosen, Martin

�'

8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. June :!9, 1976

9- The OaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport·PW!eroy, 0., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

link between him and the
CIA.
"Although he was only in
Angola for a short time, there
is no doubt that he is a highly
dangerous man," said Judge
Ernesto da SUva.
He called the men in the
dock and mercenaries in
general "dogs 61 war with
biOOd-stalned muzzles that
left a trail of rape, murder
and pillage across the face of
our nation." But, he said, he
recognized the varying
degree of guilt of the ·
. prisoners.

Appeals planned for 3 mercenaries
By NAT GIBSON
LUANDA, Angola (UP!) Defense attorneys began appeals today for 13 America.ns
and Britons sentenced to
death or long' imprisonment
for fighting as "mercenary
prostitutes" in Angola's civil
war.
!"our of the men, including
American Daniel Gearheart,
were condemned to death by
firing squad. The nine others

were given prison terms
ranging from 16 to 30 years
Monday.
The three British lawyers
in the case sent cables to
Queen Elizabeth and Prime
Minister James Callaghan
and drafted a personal appeal
to Angolan
President
Agostinhil Neto, who can
comm ute the sentences .
The American attorneys
planned a similar appea I to

Neto and one booked a flight
to WashingWn to seek aid
(rom tile U,S . government.
"1 am catching the first
flight out for Washington,"
said Bill Wilson of St. Louis.
"There is no other comment
to make about the trial. You
ca n make up your own mind
about the justice of It from
the inconsistencies of the
sentences.''
(In London, Callaghan

issued an appeal to Neto for
clemency for the three
Britons sentenced to death.)
(In Washington, a State
Department spokesman said
the
government
had
contacted the Red Cross. The
United States and Angola do
not
have
diplomatic
relations.)
Gearhart, a balding, 34yearold Vietnam veteran,
who left a wife and four

children in Kenslngton, Md.,
was singled out for the death
penalty because he allegedly
ran an adve,rtisement
offering himself as a
mercenary.
T he R e v o Iu t i o n a r y
Peoples' Tribunal also
accused him of writing a
letter to the "Wild Geese," a
group of former mercenaries
based in South Africa and
made allusions to a possible

.'

:.: }"::
.:

',:: .

'

'

,...

:

·'· . ...

•'

.

. :

-.- _·-i

..

'

:

.: .. . .

'·: '

'

'

.

'

.

-;;

Gary Acker, 21, of Costas Georgbl~, wu 114!11·
Sacramento, Calif., was tenced . to death aa a
senteneed to 16 yea,rs and "homicidal ·m aniac," who
Gustavo Grillo, a 27-year~ld ordered the execution ol 14
Argentine American frbm British mercenaries and ·
Jersey City, N.J., was given killed three Angolans ''for
the rriuimum 30 years.
' fun."
The judge said the United
States and Britain shared the
guilt of the 'convicted men,
adding, "The FBI had full HENRY INDEPENDENT
knowledge of this traffic ln
WASHINGTON (UPI) military prostitutes and did Secretary of St.a_te Henry
nothlng about it."
Kissinger was asked aboard
"Col. Tony Callan," a 25- Air Force One returning from
year~ld Greek Cypriot (rom
Puerto Rico if he Is a
London, whose real name is Republican.

'

OPEN
JULY 4
and 5
REGULAR

MINUTE STEAK

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10 .

~~~

We Accept Federal Food Stamps}$.

Garner Mill and Second Sts

lean, Pure
Beef

~~

PHONE 992 3480
We reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT,

0.

19

COOKOUT
SPECIAL

Delicious! !

lb.

Eckrich

BOLOGNA
Th'ick and

Regular Sliced

12 oz.

12

oz.89¢

pkg.

.

SMORGAS PAK
Better Luncheon lb.
Snacks

· NORTHERN

HI-DRI

TOILET TISSUE
4 Roll

FAVORITE

BREAD

99' Size Mr.

6~

POTATO

SCOT LAD

TRASH CAN
LINERS

ZESTA SALTINE

ICED TEA
3 Ol JAR

SUNSHINE

EGGS

DOG FOOD

"Old
·l-Ib.
CHIPS
Yeller"
box
10
ct.
3
LOAVES
25 lb. '
pkg.
·bag
----------------------~----~~---+--~--------

c

SJOO

THURSDAY ONL V

8 PAK

7-UP

8 PAK 99e

RC COLA
16 oz. bois.

DIET RITE

09

PAK

16 oz.

PAK

8 16 oz.

. Sprite

Reg.

Fresca

and

Tab

Sugar

8 PAK

Free

99'

, •...U
!1

•

I

1

~~~'!t~a:~:'!:0:

:I~~~-

AIOUver,whoforyearshBII distance, allowing nine bits,

bemoaned the fact that he Is to best Joe Coleman. Bill
unappreciated, may have Madlock homered for
toned down his personality Chicago.
some but his bat hasn't
1n ·other NL games, Los
mellowed a bit.
First he took over the
National League lead In
baiting during the recent
week, then on Monday night
he collected four hits,
lncluding his 12th home run,
anddrovelnfourrunstolead
the Pirates to a 9-2 victory
over the Chicago Cubs. He
has now had eight Jilts in his
last 11 at bats to raise his
average to .354.
"For.seven years I've evaluated myself 811 a ballplayer
and now it's time for someone
else to evaluate me," sal.d
Oliver. "If I continue to bit I
might get picked by the AllStar manager and that's
important to me," he said.
Oliver's bitting helped Jim

Angeles beat Atlanta, 1).2,
Cincinnati whipped San
Diego, 7-3, New York edged
St Louis 5-4 Philadelpbt
·
'
'
a
downed Montreal, 6-2, and
Houston defeated San
Francisco, 6-2.
Dodgers 5, Braves 2:
Lee Lacy's sacrifice fly in
the seventh innlng scored
Dave Lopes to break a 2-2
deadlock and Bill Bucloier
followedwithasolohomerto
give the Dodgers a victory
over the Braves and help
Rick Rhoden to his seventh
wininarow.BillRussellhad
a two-run slngle for Los
Angeles
while
Willie
Montanez hit a two-run
homer for Atlanta.
Mets 5, Reds 4:

~

~~\':b~:~~ia

Fidrych stops Yanks, 5-l

.·.:-

~~ :;:~

H;~~~~~~/ors~r~~ , 1 !~~

Houston at San Francisco

By J~ SAUNDERS
Red Sox 12, Orioleo 8:
Kuiper's sacrifice fly in the
UPI Sparta Writer
Third baseman Butch Hob- second and a pair of runs in
Mark Fidrych, who pitches son, reactivated less than 24 the fifth on an error and
for the Tigers and is known as hour~ earlier, smacked a Lowenstein 's run~sc oring
the " Bird," stalked the tivorun, inside-the-park single. Raagers 3, A's 2:
mound like a caged lion but homer to highlight a threeJeff Burroughs' one-out
pitched like li crafty fox.
run sixth Inning. With the single
ln the 11th Inning drove
He's now 8-1, earning his score tied U and Cecil In Lemy Randle from second
seventh straight victory in Cooper on first base, the 24- base and lead Texas over
hurling a seven-hitter ' year-Old rookie whacked a Oakland. Randle reached
Monday night agalnst the drive against the left-center iirst on a badhop single off
American League East- field fence just out of the the glove of A's shortstop
leading New York Yankees reach of a leaping Paul Blair. Bert Campaneris and moved
for a 1).1 triumph.
·
The ball rolled lnto right- to second 011 a sacrifice by
The . boyish~ooklng right- center field and Hobson made Ken Pape. Toby Harrah was
handar delighted the crowd, a belly slide to beat the relay intentionally walked by loser
talking to the baU between throw to the plate.
Jim Todd to brlng up Burpitches and stalking aroWJd Indians 5, Orioles 3:
roughs, who slapped a 1.Q
the mound. After the game,
John Lowenstein drove in pitch over Todd's head lnto
the 47,855 who assembled for two runs with a single and a center field.
the nationally televised homer and reliever Jim . Twin• 4, Royals 3:
contest on Famil~ Night, Bibby hurled a 2-;llnnlngs of
Tony Oliva doubled in the
responded to F1drych's two-bit relief raise his record tying run and Larry Hisle
performance by givlng him a to 4-2. After spotting lofted a sacrifice fly in the
standing ovation as he Baltimore a 2-0 lead in the eighth inning for the winning
walked off the mound.
first inning, Cleveland score in Mlnnesota's victory
Then, with cries of "We bounced
back
on over first-place Kansas City .
want Fidrych," the crowd Lowensteln's first homer of The Twins scored after a 61demanded a curtain call for the season In the first, Alan minute raln delay brought on
an encore of thunderous Ashby 's double and Duane fresh pitchers for both teams .
applause.
"I've never pitched before
this many people before;"
'•
·
said Fldrych, who struck out
two, didn't walk a batter and
yielded only Yankee catcher .
. .
.
Ellie Hendricks' second- By ROBERT MUSEL
Borg, brllhant on .grass thiS
lnning homer. " ... But 43,000-WIMBLEDON, England year for.a man who professes
wow!''
(UP!) .- Roscoe Tanner · to prefer clay, met sixthRusty Staub backed finally grew impatient with seeded Guillermo Vilas ln the
Fidrych by bitting his .fourth the barrage of questions fourth .
homer, with a man on ln the about his chances of beating
" I've come to win "
first inning, to give Detroit a favorite Jimmy Coonors ln Connors says. His incentiv~s
2-0 lead it never relinquished. the Wimbledon quarter.finals are to regain the title won ln
He also scored Ron LeFlore today .
1974 and the first prize of
from third base with the
"I've beaten him before, so $22,125.
infield hit in in the eighth why not again?" snapped
Chris E·1ert, the women's
lnnlng when he grounded out Tamer, generally acknowl- top seed, reached the
slowly to second base.
edged to have the fastest semifinals Monday with an
Aurelio Rodriguez ga:ve serve In tennis. He is not the impressive win over Russia's
Detroit a 3-1 lead in the least awed by Comors.
fifth-seeded Olga Morozova,
seventh lnnlng with his fifth
However, Connors has not S-3, ~.and will play Martina.
home run with one out and lost a set and has dropped Navratilova ln the semiimals
nobody on. Alex Johnson also only 29 games, the lowest by Wenesday.
doubled home a run for ·the any player left In the
"I am playing much more
Tigers in the eighth inning. wurnament, In winning four aggressively," Chris said. "I
Elsewhere In the AL, matches so far. Tanner has go to the net much more
Boston outlasted Baltimore, W.opped·one set and 62 games often. The others don 't seem
12-8,
Cleveland
beat .in the same number of to be playing well, but maybe
Baltimore. S-3, Texas edged matches.
I'm not giving myself enough
Oakland, 3-2, in 11 innings,
Unseeded Vitas Gerulaitls, credit for playing well."
and Minnesota nipped, who ousted the top-seeded
She does not expect many
Kansas City 4-3.
defending champion Arthur problems with Navratilova,
Ashe, met fiflh«eded Raul who beat Britain's Sue
Ranilrez of Mexico ln another Barker, 6-3, ~. Hi.
quarter-flnal match in the
"I don't thlnk Martlna is
.. \ $280,000 tournament. ·
playing so well this year. I
With Ashe gone, Tanner will be going into the match
\ r.l_RTC_..\-\. ~
1"71,."
_.. •
and thlrd-Beeded Die Nastase with great confidance."
~
aretheonlyplayersleftinlhe
Evonne Goolagong, tlje se"
tournament to have beaten cond seed, beat Rosie casals,
:
,., Connors this year.
7-5, 6-3. In the semifinals,
' m!~U~"''"'~IONALilUllff ...~~u..r l , ,u..
Nastase met unseeded Goolagong will play Britain's
.
Otarles Pasarell of Puerto Virglnia Wade, who defeated
Rico ln another quarter-final, Australia's Kerry Melville
·
.
with fourth-seeded Bjorn Reid, 6-4, 6-2.
llllflJ1'1UM rliLCQ
Ill
unlolflnl:n.
,

Philade lphi o at Montreal ,
night
St. Louis at New York , night
Chicago at Pittsburgh, nigh I
Atlanta at Los Angeles. night
Cincinnati at Sa n Diego, night
American L :eague

East

New York
Cleveland

Ba ltimore
Detroit

Boston
M ilwaukee

W. L. Pel. GB
43 25 .632

35 33 .5 1~ 8
34 35 .493 9V,
33 35 .485 10
32 35 .478 10'1'
25 40 .385 16'17

West

.Kans. City

W. L. Pet. GB
42 27 .609

Texas

39 29 .!74 21',

Minnesota
California

33 37 ..471 91/2
29 45 .392 15111

oakland

35 37 .&lt;as

a•r.

Monday's Results
Texas 3 Oakland 2, 11 Inns
Detroit 5 New York 1

Cleveland 5 Milwaukee 3
Boston 12 Ba ltimore 8
Minnesota 4 Kansas City J

(Only games scheduled)

Toda 'f's Probable Pitchers

!AIITimes ·EDTI
Qakland (Abbott 1·11 at
Texas !Barr 1-31, 9:05p.m.
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 8·

41 at Minn esota !Goltz 7-51. 9
p .m .

d..

.

a match ""'
A'""

for life.

'"'"'""·

State Farm Matchmaker
Service is

free.

And

In Melgs-1\.ason Pony
League action Saturday,
league- leading Mason whipped a stubborn visiting
Eastern team, 6-3. Winning
hurler Mark Johnson teamed

so

simple. You tell us a little
about yourself, your family,
yo.ur goals. We feed this in·

ANAHEIM, Call!. (UPI) Nolan
Ryan left the
formation to our computer
California
Angels w return
and In a matter of seconds
home
and
have his alllng
It prints out a State Farm
·
pltchlng
arm
checked out.
life Insurance program that
The
CalifOJ'I!Ia
Angels' ace
matches your needs. One
righthander
felt
a
"catch" in
you can live with ..
his right elbow while
See or cal/:
warmlng up for · the sixth
Inning at Kansas City
BILL FLETCHER
Saturday night, . returned
here Sunday and visited Dr.
12$8 POWell Sf
Jules
Raslnaki, the Angels'
Middleport, q.
team pbyalclan, Monday..
He 1B scheduled to see
PH. 992-7155 orthopedic
specialist Dr.
4TATE FARM LiP!
Frank Jobe today and hopes
NSUitANCE COMPANY
to rejoin the Angels, who are
Homooftieo: .....,.,..,,, 1111101o ·
ln Chicago, for a Wednesday·
--,~~;---;-...J:P:.J.Z22Qiliill! night pitching assignment.'

~

Mojor Leagut Leadtrs
United Pr~sttll~rnallonal
a. ...
tbaHdon 175atbats)
Nation11 Loalut
Oliver, Pit
«,
Foster, Cln 65 25&lt; ..o 8l .343
McBride , St. ~
51 198 29 6 1 .338
Crawfrd, St.L
59 197 26 66 .335
Morgan , Cln 59 t88 51 63 .335
Cay, LA
64 231 37 76 .329
Rose. Cln
73 2'14 62 96 .327
Andrews. Hou
&lt;2 176 2&lt; 57 .324
Montanez, Atl
76 2'17 31 96 .323
Grlltey, Cln 67 246 56 79 321
American League
G. AB R. H. Pel.
Brett, KC 69 283 43102 .360
LeFlore, Del 63 261 44 92 .352
McRae, KC 69 258 43 87 337
Rivers, NY 60 2it 47 88 .325
Carew. Min 69 273 43 as .322
Munson, NY 6&lt; 261 32 83 .318
Staub, Del 68 244 31 77 .316
Lynn,Bos 58 219 3069 .315
Bell, Cle ··• 68 258 41 81 . 31~
otis, KC
67 266 52 82 .308
Home Runs
National League: Kingman.
NY 26; Schmidt. Phil ~1 ;
Foster. Cln (161 ; Monday, Chi
and Morgan, Cln 13.
American League:. L May ,
Ball. Yastrzemskl. Bos and
Sando, Oak 13; Rice, Bas and
otis, KC 12.
Runs Balled tn
National League: Foster,
Cln 62 ; Kingman , NY 60 ;
Schmidt, Phil 57 ; Morgan and
Perez, Ctn 13.

G6oA~• '!;, ~~2

American Legue : L. May,

American League : Travers,

SAN DIEGO(UPI) - After Mtl'8111 came blck MCIIday
missing a dozen same• night and homered, doubled,
because of a pulled rib
muscle, Joe Morsan bas ilnocked In four runa and
relllrned to the !lncinnati made • big play with biB
Reds'
glove u the Redl belt the
regular lineup with a San Diego Padrea 7-2.
bafl8,
Morgan's fleldlna sem
Injured 1n an eahiblllm
helped
aecure rookie Stlntoe
~tame June17 at Indianapolis
• Al5ala 's seventh win In nine
declsl~. With balllll l011ded
in the ~venth Inning and San
US
· C
goe8 Diego trailing 8-3, Willi ~
McCovey sma.red a ~ pttch
fi ,
toward second bue. Morgan
"U W 0'8.1JleS
·
dived,
knocked the ball down
1't
and threw McCovey out.
W
"I'm lucky I'm a wteran,"
explained Mtl'glll, "With the
In Independent balleball basea loaded and the count ~
action over the weekend, 0, he's not suppoaed to awlnll.
SyraCU3e raised Its record to But I've been around long
7-1 by defeatlns halt Letart enough to n:pect anythins.
on $aturday 1&amp;-2 and whom- I'm lucky I wu ready.
"When the count goee to ~
ping vlsitlns Minersville on
0,
!be tendency Ia to relax.
Sunday, 18-7.
But
II I'm the manager I ask
Bahlnd a 211-1111 attack on
myself,
'Do I let this guy
Saturday, 1'inner Bob Cunhack?
'
and
I said to myself,
ningham won his fourth
'Maybe
I
do.'
So I play It like
straight game without a 101111
It'
a
a
1.Qcountand
I jual try to
and teamed with Hemsley
and Van Meter to fan 11 and knock II down. It was t'ellly
burned."
walk five.
Morgan said diving ftl'
Jeff Hubbard, Eddie Van
Maire, and Rudy Stewart McCovey'allner was the only
each had four hits, but team- time his Injury bothered
mate Jim Hemsley took top him.
"My side won't be 100 per
honors, getting five hits and
cent
for the rest of the
IICOI'in8 five runs.
season,"
said Morgan.
For Letart, Fred Miller
''There's
nothing
broken but
had two hits, and loaer Rusty
It
wW
be
sore
for
a
10118 time.
Tucker and Don Hupp comThe
only
time
It
hurt
tmight
bined to strike out four and
was
when
I
dove
for
walk eight.
s
510 015 232--19 26 0 McCovey's ~II. 1 felt it. To
L
000 010 001- 2 6 6 tell you the truth, I wanted w
lay there for a while.''
+++
Tralllns 7~ before they Sparky Anderaon feela hia
ever came to bat, Syracuse club, which leada the NL
rallied Sunday to take a West by 41!1 games, IB ready
seven-inning 11-7 win over to reach Ita peak.
"This was only the 21at
Minersville at Racine. Bob
time
we played our regulal'!l
Cunningham started m the
this
year,"
11111ld Anderaon.
mound and gave up six hits
"We're
I~
with them In
and seven runs before being
there.
Thai's
good
enough to
relieved by Jeff Hubbard
win
anyUW..
We've
played
with no outs In that first
Philadelphia six times. Joe
frame.
·
Hubbard went on to aUow Morgan baa only played in
.
Minenvllle no runs and only me ol thoae gallll!l.''
McCovey
got
the
Padree
an
three hits the rest ol the way.
Randy Clark had a triple and early lead with a threH-un
two sinslea while Hubbard homer In the first Inning, his
and Rudy Stewart had two fifth of the year and the 463rd
ol hla.career. Morgan's thlrcl
hitnplece.
.Ron Clonch, Jed Will, and lnnlns. three-run blut wu
Wyatt each bad two bue biB 13th and got the Reds
knocks for the 10111'11. Mlnel'!l- even.,
George FOII!er kept the
vllle pltcherll gave up nine
lnnlns
solng with a lingle and
walb and struck out nme.
Tony
Perez put anctnnatl
M·
, 700000~7 82
ahead
to
stay, doubling home
S
51!2 200 x-16 12 0
Foster.

Syra· e
3
OVer eekend

Mil 1.80; Garland, Ball 1.82;
Fldrych, Det2.06; Umbarger,
Tex 2.51; Gossage, Chi 2.76.
Strikeouts
National League: Seaver,
NY 111 ; Richard, Hou sa;
A thought for the day:
Messersmith, All 85 ; Nlekro,
British
poet Lord Byron said,
All 81 ; Montefusco, SF 80.
American League: Ryan, "Speak not of men's creeda.
Cat 135 ; Tanana, Cal 123; They rest between man and
Blyleven. Tex 107; Jenkins, his Maker.''
Bas 90 ; Hunler, NY 83.

Thia WtH's Spteo!'t

USED

Oliver prepared to watch
TV
.
when all star game is played.
.

PmSBURGH (UP!) Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder
AI Oliver might watch this
year's All-Star game on
television despite the fact he
is leading the National
League in batting and raced

Maloney
• •
smt IS
attacked

home with the winning run In
lastyear'srnidaeason classic.
"Over the years I've
become accustomed to not
getting the fanfare," salt!
Oliver after belting four .hits
to drive in four runs Mooday
and lead Pittsburgh to a ~2
rout of the Chlcogo Cubs.
Although he is batting .352,
Oliver was passed up this
year by the fans who vote for
the All.Star team. He was
12th In voting among ·
.outfielders.
Technically, he still could
be chosen by Cincinnati
Manager Sparky Andersonthis year's NL skipper-as he
was last year by Los Angeles'
Walter Alston. ·
"Five or six years ago I
would have been upset, hut
not now," said O~ver, who
added it would be "unportant
to me" to he selected. Last
summer, he slammed a ninth

causing bodily harm to
Glennie during a . game at
Maple Leaf Gardens last
Nov. 5.
·
After McGee read into the
.record Incidents of violence
that have blinded several
hockey players, lmlach testified:
"I've never seen anybody
lose (his) eye or get seriously
burt as a result of a fightand that's In 30 years.
"I think we have a good
game and I can only think
that you people are trying w
"ruin it."
,
In opening the defense,
attorney George Finlayson
said he would bese his case on
the "consent" nf all hockey
players to subject themselves
to possible assault and injury
whenever they step oil the
Ice.

Inning double and then acored
the winning run In the
National League's 6-3 victory
over the AL stars.
Oliver baa a steady .292'
lifetime mark, has never wm
a l!atting crown and says he
may need luck to do lt.
"I've proven that I can hit
as bard as anyme," he said.
"But 1 talked to guys who.
have won It Uke Bill Madlock
Pete Rose and Joe Torre and
they all say you have to have
some luck to do it.
"With luck, I could do it."
Oliver clearly had no
mercy for Cube' 111ar1er Joe
Coleman and rellefer Buddy
Schultz, rattllns them lor
four safeties, Including a twonm double In the aecmd and
a 4ro-foot aolo homer In the
seventh. Hla last RBI came
on a ground out In the eighth
Inning when the Pirates
added two more I'UI'8.
Jbn Rooker went the route
for Pittsburgh, allowing nine
hits In wtnnins hla seventh
game.
Coleman Isn't the only NL

~

hurler who Is hoping Oliver's
'1uck" wlllaoon end. In hla
last 18 games, he baa sone 36
for 74 -nearly a .500 clipwith six hWle runs and 23

RBIB.

"For seven years, I've
evaluated myself as a ball·
player," said Oliver aoberly,
as he sat back on biB locker
room stool. "Now Ita time ftl'
someone elae to evaluate

rue."

y·----

'1895

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Like Our Q\UIItly
Way of Doing Business.
GMAC FINANCING
992-53-12
Pomeroy
Open Evt .. ,ngs 'ti\6:00
Tit 5 ~.m. Sat.

":**************************
11:**..
DELICIOUS STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE_
* TWIST IC£ CREAM SUNDAES, SODAS. MALTS,
:

FLOATS, SOFT DRINK, SANIMICHES

~I;;~

·~~

i

i Adolph's Dairy Valley :*I
:

*
...

Hrs.: 10:00A.M._Til11:00 P.M. Sun.- Thurs.
lO:OOA.M. Tti12:00P.M. Fri.B,Sat.
992-2556

: W.MAIN

.

POMEROY,O. It

'*****************************..:

Cl'l GREAT ~ZARO, Kt-Ool·

5.COI&lt;::Hit-,G DE$ERT5 TO
_!?EEK &lt;01 1.~ COuNCoL.

Green-green cloth Interior.
green Y·roof. full power
and air.

.

.

00 OMNII&gt;JTEiJT-

-l

ONE, I CAN 'T UNilERSTAND THIS CON-

ER rF ALL lHII'Q;. W£'1/E

JUUR&gt;.~YEDTID..ISANDS Of
MilES OI£R R\XG:D 11l'-"1TAINS, STORMY SCA.C, AND

CARS\

'73 OlDS 88
4 DR. HT

.

TORONTO (UPI) - Punch
lmlach, one of hockey's most
colorful personalities,
Monday
charged
the
with Mrk Smith to give up prosecution In the Dan
only five bits whilefannlng 11 · Maloney assault trial with
and walklng seven.
"trying to ruin" the sport.
Kenny Hanklnson led the
!miach, general manager
bitting with a triple and of the Buffalo Sabres, was
double and David Camp had , one of six witnesses the
two triples. Greg Stodola had defense called In opening Its
a double while Smith and case after the prosecution
Chris Davis each had a rested at midday In Judge
single.
Patrick LeSage's courtroom.
Loser Donny Spencer
Asked about Maloney's atstruck out ten and walked leged assault on Toronto
eight while giving up seven Maple Leaf Brian Glennie,
bits. Steve Little had a double Imlach said he saw a
while single hitters were videotape of the incident and
Rusty Wigal, Spencer, Tim considered it "nothing. We've
Enevoldson, and Jeff Goble. seen a "lot worse."
Mason Is now 7-1 while · Did he condone such an
Eastern dropped tol)-2.
action, Prosecutor Robert
McGee asked 011 cross examl·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - AI naUon.
Geiberger's first-place finish
"Yes, I condone it," Imlach
in the Western Open Sunday shot back. "There's nothing
vaulted him four places, from to it. It 's all ln the game of
eighth to fourth, in the list of hockey."
money wtnners on the PGA
Maloney, a Detroit Red
Tour where Hubie Green, a Wing defenseman known for
three-time wlnner, still leads his fighting abilities, was
rwith $1~,427.
charged with assaul' for

Mason overcomes Eastem 6-3 '

i

Cin
004 200 001 - 1 11 1 Bait, Yastrzemskl, Bos and
SO
300 000 000- 3 10 1 Bando, Oak 13; Rice, Bas and
Alca la ,
Hinton
(7) , Oils, KC 12.
McEnaney (71 , Borbon (8)
Runs Batted tn
and Bench; A. Foster, - National League: Foster,
Reynolds, (4 ). Folkers (51. Cln 62 ; Kingman , NY 60 ;
Melzger (8) and Kendall , B. Schmidt, Phil 57 ; Morgan and
Davis (9) . WP - Alcala (7-21. Perez, Cln. 52 .
lp 8 a . foster !2·41. HRs American
League:
Cincinna ti , Morgan (131 ; San Burroughs, Te&lt;. 54; Mayberry,
Diego, McCovey 151.
KC 51 ; Otis, KC and
Chambliss, NY. 48; M0n"son,
American League
NY 46.
(11 innings)
Stolen Bases
Qak
000 000 002 Q0-2 7 0
National League: Cedeno,
000 00 020 01 - 3 7 0 Hou 27; Morgan, Cln and
Te&lt;
Norri s, Lindblad (91. Todd Brock, St. L 22; Griffey, Cln
(9) and Sundberg. WP - 19; Lopes, LA and Taveras,
Foucaull (7-4) . LP - Todd (6· Pill 18.
6) . HR s - Oakland, Bay lor
American League: Patek,
(10). Tenace (7 1.
KC 37; Carew, Mlnn and
Baylor, Oak 33; Norlh. Oak
NY
010 000 000- 1 7 I 32; LeFlore, Del and
Del
200 000 12x--5 6 0 Campanerls, Oak 25.
Holtzman !HI and Hend·
Pitch IIIli
ri cks: Fidrych (8 -11 and
Most Victories
Kimm . HRs - Detroit, Staub
National League: Jones, SD
(41. Rodriguez (51; New York . 13-3; Lon borg. Phil (10-4);
Hendricks (31
Matlack, NY 9-2; Ruthven, All
&lt;
'1-7 ;
Kaat, Phil
8-2;
Milw
210 000 000- 3 6 2 Christenson,
Phil
8-3;
Cleve
110 210 00&lt;- 5 11 3 Fryman, Mtl and Seaver, NY
Co lborn, . sadecki (7), 8-5.
Fri sell a (81 and Kusnt•er,
American
League:
Porter (71 ; Hood. Bibby (2 ), Figueroa , NY (9·41 ; Tlant,
l.a Roche (9) and Ashby . WP Bos and Dobson, Clev (9-5) ;
- Bibby (4·21. LP - Colborn Palmer. Ball and Hunter, NY
(4 -101 . HRs - Cleveland , 9·7.
Lowenstein 111. Hendrick
EarntdAunAverage
1111 .
- (based on u lnning•pllchtd)
Ball
020231000--8133
Na ,tlonal
League:
Bos . 004 213 11x- 12 16 1 Frelsleben,
SO
1.88;
Palmer. Flanagan 141 , R. Stonhouse, Mil 2.32; Foster,
May (61 , Pagan (71 and SD 2.35; Messersmith, All and
Duncan ; Jones, Cleveland (4). Zachry, Cln 2.54.

New York !Aie.ander 4-41
at Detroit (Crawford 0·3, 8
p.m.
Milwauk ee (Travers 8-5) at
Cleveland I Brown 6-21. 7:30
p.m.
Baltimore !Cuellar 4-71 at
Boston (Wise 5-4). 7:30 p.m.
California !Tanana 8·51 at Jenkins 16) and Fisk . WP Chicago (Gossage 5-5), 9 p.m. Jenkins (6-8) . LP - Flanagan
Wednesday's Games
(OcJI. HR s - Baltimore,
Baltimore at Boston
Duncan (2), ' Grich 17) ;
New York at Detroit. night
Boston, Hobson (11.
Ca li fornia at Chicago, nigh I
Oakland at Te&lt;as, night
KC
002 010 000-3 7 1
Kansas Coty at Minnesota, Minn
020 000 02&lt;- 4 6 0
noght
Leonard, lilt(ell (8). Halt
(On ly games sched uled!
(81 and Martinez; Singer,
Campbell !81 and Wynegar.
WP - Campbell !8·21. LP Littell !3-31 .

The State farm

Can fl'nd you

.79

~b

Major League Slandongs
Major League Results
United Press International
Uniled Press International
Nation• I League
National league
East
Hous
023 000 102- 8 16 1
Dave Kingman, wlio hit his W. L. Pel. GB SF
000 020 000- 2 5 0
1
26th homer ln the fourth
;:
·9' ,
lnning, scored the winning New York
38 37 .507 14
Heaverlo (31 . Will iams (61 ,
run in the eighth, on a wild 51. Louis
31 40 .437 19
Caldwell (81 and Hill. WP pitch . by reliever AI Chicago
30 41 .423 20
Cosgrove (3·41. LP - Dressier
Montreal
24 42 .164 23"' (1.6) .
Hrabosky, to give New York
West
a victory over St. Louis. John
W. L. Pet. GB Phlla
020 002 020-6 12 1
Milner hit a tworun single for Cin cinnati
45 28 .616
Mont
000 002 000- 2 1 t
the Mets while Skip Los Angeles 41 33 .554 7
Car lton
(1·31
and
3
8
3
5
5
2
1
7
Lockwood picked up the wm· lat lnanDtiaego
_
.
Me
c
C
a
r
v
e
r
;
R
o
g
e
rs,
33 40 452 12
arrlthers 111 , Dunn ing (8 )
ln relief of Tom Seaver.
Houston
33 40 .452 12
and Foote. tP - Rogers (2)5).
Phlllles 8, Expoo 2:
San Fran .
JO 46 .395 16'1, HR - Ph iladelphia, Schmidt
Garry Maddox drove home
Monday's Results
1211 .
Houston 8 San Francisco 2
three runs with a triple, PNhiladelpl1ia 6 Montreal 2
51. L
001 ooo 210- 4 7 o
single and sacrifice fly and
ew York 5 5I. Louis 4
NY
001 120 Ox.- 5 9 1
"Mike Schmidt hit his 21st Pittsburgh 9 Chicago 2
Denny , Wallace (6). Greif
ho
Los Angeles 5 Atlanta 2
(71, Hrabosky (81 and
mer to lead Philadelphia CincinMii 7 San Die~o 3
Simmons; Seaver, Lockwood
past Montreal. Steve Carl.ton
Today's Probable Potchers
I71 . Apodaca !9 ) and Grote.
went the distance for the
!All Times EDT)
WP -- Lockwood (4-21 . LP Phillies, striking out nine, to
Houston! Dlerker6.7) at San Grell ( 1-51 . HR ~ New York.
Francisco (Barr 6-5), 11 :05 Kingman (26).
gsln his seventh victory.
p.m.
Astros 8, GlaoiB 2:
Philadelphia ! Kaa t 8-21 at Chi
011 ooo ®-2 9 2
Cliff Johnson drove ln three Montreal !Stanhouse S-31. 8:05 Pitts
040 020 12&lt;- 9 12 o
runs with a pair of doubles to p.m.
Coleman, Schultz !61 and
k
·
St. Louis !Falcone HI at Swisher: · Rocker 11·31 and
spar Houston's victory over · New York llolich J.91. 8:05 ..Sa ngullten . LP - Coleman (O.
San Francisco. Bob Watson p.m..
Jl. HRs - Chicago, Madlock
chipped_ in with a two-run
Cho cago (Renko 2-31 at (81 ; Pittsburgh, Oliver (121 .
double for the Astros as Mike Pittsburgh I Ca ndelar ia 6·41.
Cosgrove and Bob Forsch 7:35 p.m.
All ' ·
ooo ooo 200- 2 ~ 1
Atlanta (Moret 3-21 at Los LA
000 002 21&lt;- 5 10 1
tamed the Giants on five hits. Angeles (Jolm 4-41. 10:30 p.m.
Ruthv en, Marshall. (8) and
Cinc innati I Nolan 7-41 at Williams; Rhoden, Hough (8)
S.n Diego !Freisleben 6-21, 10 and Yeager . WP - Rhoden (7.
p.m.
01. LP - Ruthven (9-71 . HR Games
Los Angeles, Buckner (~I.

· " 'Mf\ILC:.n
91!1~.~· oc'!_~,

Grade BLarge

CRACKERS

INSTANT TEA
FOR

Jumbo
Size
each

Pak

$}29

OUR SCOT LAD

PAPER TOWELS

. -

Tanner Unawe

.Eckrich

pkg.

r;~:~SCOREBOARD"'"
E
::l
Morgan
makes
..
hIg
• g Iove p·1ay

Oliver has 4 hits
•
zn 9 2 P • t e ...omp

~ _....,

----·J·. . -

FOUNDED 1:-ISURANCE
mLtL y

--.::::/
"""-.
~
~...........,

~~

~

:!J[_
a?
FEUJI WHAT- ~ ~
\_~;.;x
&gt;•)
WANNAkNOW. •

k_

l:'-\·1\

. --,. @f : ~jd

!~ ~"

.,
Set B·ILL CHILDs, et DOWNING-CHi Los: tie KNOW5iilst..Suranc1 :

IXMNINGOIILDS M1ENCY INC.

. Middleport, Ohio
992-2342

�'

8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. June :!9, 1976

9- The OaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport·PW!eroy, 0., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

link between him and the
CIA.
"Although he was only in
Angola for a short time, there
is no doubt that he is a highly
dangerous man," said Judge
Ernesto da SUva.
He called the men in the
dock and mercenaries in
general "dogs 61 war with
biOOd-stalned muzzles that
left a trail of rape, murder
and pillage across the face of
our nation." But, he said, he
recognized the varying
degree of guilt of the ·
. prisoners.

Appeals planned for 3 mercenaries
By NAT GIBSON
LUANDA, Angola (UP!) Defense attorneys began appeals today for 13 America.ns
and Britons sentenced to
death or long' imprisonment
for fighting as "mercenary
prostitutes" in Angola's civil
war.
!"our of the men, including
American Daniel Gearheart,
were condemned to death by
firing squad. The nine others

were given prison terms
ranging from 16 to 30 years
Monday.
The three British lawyers
in the case sent cables to
Queen Elizabeth and Prime
Minister James Callaghan
and drafted a personal appeal
to Angolan
President
Agostinhil Neto, who can
comm ute the sentences .
The American attorneys
planned a similar appea I to

Neto and one booked a flight
to WashingWn to seek aid
(rom tile U,S . government.
"1 am catching the first
flight out for Washington,"
said Bill Wilson of St. Louis.
"There is no other comment
to make about the trial. You
ca n make up your own mind
about the justice of It from
the inconsistencies of the
sentences.''
(In London, Callaghan

issued an appeal to Neto for
clemency for the three
Britons sentenced to death.)
(In Washington, a State
Department spokesman said
the
government
had
contacted the Red Cross. The
United States and Angola do
not
have
diplomatic
relations.)
Gearhart, a balding, 34yearold Vietnam veteran,
who left a wife and four

children in Kenslngton, Md.,
was singled out for the death
penalty because he allegedly
ran an adve,rtisement
offering himself as a
mercenary.
T he R e v o Iu t i o n a r y
Peoples' Tribunal also
accused him of writing a
letter to the "Wild Geese," a
group of former mercenaries
based in South Africa and
made allusions to a possible

.'

:.: }"::
.:

',:: .

'

'

,...

:

·'· . ...

•'

.

. :

-.- _·-i

..

'

:

.: .. . .

'·: '

'

'

.

'

.

-;;

Gary Acker, 21, of Costas Georgbl~, wu 114!11·
Sacramento, Calif., was tenced . to death aa a
senteneed to 16 yea,rs and "homicidal ·m aniac," who
Gustavo Grillo, a 27-year~ld ordered the execution ol 14
Argentine American frbm British mercenaries and ·
Jersey City, N.J., was given killed three Angolans ''for
the rriuimum 30 years.
' fun."
The judge said the United
States and Britain shared the
guilt of the 'convicted men,
adding, "The FBI had full HENRY INDEPENDENT
knowledge of this traffic ln
WASHINGTON (UPI) military prostitutes and did Secretary of St.a_te Henry
nothlng about it."
Kissinger was asked aboard
"Col. Tony Callan," a 25- Air Force One returning from
year~ld Greek Cypriot (rom
Puerto Rico if he Is a
London, whose real name is Republican.

'

OPEN
JULY 4
and 5
REGULAR

MINUTE STEAK

SUPER MARKET - Open Daily 9 to 10
Sun. 10 to 10 .

~~~

We Accept Federal Food Stamps}$.

Garner Mill and Second Sts

lean, Pure
Beef

~~

PHONE 992 3480
We reserve the right to limit quantities. MIDDLEPORT,

0.

19

COOKOUT
SPECIAL

Delicious! !

lb.

Eckrich

BOLOGNA
Th'ick and

Regular Sliced

12 oz.

12

oz.89¢

pkg.

.

SMORGAS PAK
Better Luncheon lb.
Snacks

· NORTHERN

HI-DRI

TOILET TISSUE
4 Roll

FAVORITE

BREAD

99' Size Mr.

6~

POTATO

SCOT LAD

TRASH CAN
LINERS

ZESTA SALTINE

ICED TEA
3 Ol JAR

SUNSHINE

EGGS

DOG FOOD

"Old
·l-Ib.
CHIPS
Yeller"
box
10
ct.
3
LOAVES
25 lb. '
pkg.
·bag
----------------------~----~~---+--~--------

c

SJOO

THURSDAY ONL V

8 PAK

7-UP

8 PAK 99e

RC COLA
16 oz. bois.

DIET RITE

09

PAK

16 oz.

PAK

8 16 oz.

. Sprite

Reg.

Fresca

and

Tab

Sugar

8 PAK

Free

99'

, •...U
!1

•

I

1

~~~'!t~a:~:'!:0:

:I~~~-

AIOUver,whoforyearshBII distance, allowing nine bits,

bemoaned the fact that he Is to best Joe Coleman. Bill
unappreciated, may have Madlock homered for
toned down his personality Chicago.
some but his bat hasn't
1n ·other NL games, Los
mellowed a bit.
First he took over the
National League lead In
baiting during the recent
week, then on Monday night
he collected four hits,
lncluding his 12th home run,
anddrovelnfourrunstolead
the Pirates to a 9-2 victory
over the Chicago Cubs. He
has now had eight Jilts in his
last 11 at bats to raise his
average to .354.
"For.seven years I've evaluated myself 811 a ballplayer
and now it's time for someone
else to evaluate me," sal.d
Oliver. "If I continue to bit I
might get picked by the AllStar manager and that's
important to me," he said.
Oliver's bitting helped Jim

Angeles beat Atlanta, 1).2,
Cincinnati whipped San
Diego, 7-3, New York edged
St Louis 5-4 Philadelpbt
·
'
'
a
downed Montreal, 6-2, and
Houston defeated San
Francisco, 6-2.
Dodgers 5, Braves 2:
Lee Lacy's sacrifice fly in
the seventh innlng scored
Dave Lopes to break a 2-2
deadlock and Bill Bucloier
followedwithasolohomerto
give the Dodgers a victory
over the Braves and help
Rick Rhoden to his seventh
wininarow.BillRussellhad
a two-run slngle for Los
Angeles
while
Willie
Montanez hit a two-run
homer for Atlanta.
Mets 5, Reds 4:

~

~~\':b~:~~ia

Fidrych stops Yanks, 5-l

.·.:-

~~ :;:~

H;~~~~~~/ors~r~~ , 1 !~~

Houston at San Francisco

By J~ SAUNDERS
Red Sox 12, Orioleo 8:
Kuiper's sacrifice fly in the
UPI Sparta Writer
Third baseman Butch Hob- second and a pair of runs in
Mark Fidrych, who pitches son, reactivated less than 24 the fifth on an error and
for the Tigers and is known as hour~ earlier, smacked a Lowenstein 's run~sc oring
the " Bird," stalked the tivorun, inside-the-park single. Raagers 3, A's 2:
mound like a caged lion but homer to highlight a threeJeff Burroughs' one-out
pitched like li crafty fox.
run sixth Inning. With the single
ln the 11th Inning drove
He's now 8-1, earning his score tied U and Cecil In Lemy Randle from second
seventh straight victory in Cooper on first base, the 24- base and lead Texas over
hurling a seven-hitter ' year-Old rookie whacked a Oakland. Randle reached
Monday night agalnst the drive against the left-center iirst on a badhop single off
American League East- field fence just out of the the glove of A's shortstop
leading New York Yankees reach of a leaping Paul Blair. Bert Campaneris and moved
for a 1).1 triumph.
·
The ball rolled lnto right- to second 011 a sacrifice by
The . boyish~ooklng right- center field and Hobson made Ken Pape. Toby Harrah was
handar delighted the crowd, a belly slide to beat the relay intentionally walked by loser
talking to the baU between throw to the plate.
Jim Todd to brlng up Burpitches and stalking aroWJd Indians 5, Orioles 3:
roughs, who slapped a 1.Q
the mound. After the game,
John Lowenstein drove in pitch over Todd's head lnto
the 47,855 who assembled for two runs with a single and a center field.
the nationally televised homer and reliever Jim . Twin• 4, Royals 3:
contest on Famil~ Night, Bibby hurled a 2-;llnnlngs of
Tony Oliva doubled in the
responded to F1drych's two-bit relief raise his record tying run and Larry Hisle
performance by givlng him a to 4-2. After spotting lofted a sacrifice fly in the
standing ovation as he Baltimore a 2-0 lead in the eighth inning for the winning
walked off the mound.
first inning, Cleveland score in Mlnnesota's victory
Then, with cries of "We bounced
back
on over first-place Kansas City .
want Fidrych," the crowd Lowensteln's first homer of The Twins scored after a 61demanded a curtain call for the season In the first, Alan minute raln delay brought on
an encore of thunderous Ashby 's double and Duane fresh pitchers for both teams .
applause.
"I've never pitched before
this many people before;"
'•
·
said Fldrych, who struck out
two, didn't walk a batter and
yielded only Yankee catcher .
. .
.
Ellie Hendricks' second- By ROBERT MUSEL
Borg, brllhant on .grass thiS
lnning homer. " ... But 43,000-WIMBLEDON, England year for.a man who professes
wow!''
(UP!) .- Roscoe Tanner · to prefer clay, met sixthRusty Staub backed finally grew impatient with seeded Guillermo Vilas ln the
Fidrych by bitting his .fourth the barrage of questions fourth .
homer, with a man on ln the about his chances of beating
" I've come to win "
first inning, to give Detroit a favorite Jimmy Coonors ln Connors says. His incentiv~s
2-0 lead it never relinquished. the Wimbledon quarter.finals are to regain the title won ln
He also scored Ron LeFlore today .
1974 and the first prize of
from third base with the
"I've beaten him before, so $22,125.
infield hit in in the eighth why not again?" snapped
Chris E·1ert, the women's
lnnlng when he grounded out Tamer, generally acknowl- top seed, reached the
slowly to second base.
edged to have the fastest semifinals Monday with an
Aurelio Rodriguez ga:ve serve In tennis. He is not the impressive win over Russia's
Detroit a 3-1 lead in the least awed by Comors.
fifth-seeded Olga Morozova,
seventh lnnlng with his fifth
However, Connors has not S-3, ~.and will play Martina.
home run with one out and lost a set and has dropped Navratilova ln the semiimals
nobody on. Alex Johnson also only 29 games, the lowest by Wenesday.
doubled home a run for ·the any player left In the
"I am playing much more
Tigers in the eighth inning. wurnament, In winning four aggressively," Chris said. "I
Elsewhere In the AL, matches so far. Tanner has go to the net much more
Boston outlasted Baltimore, W.opped·one set and 62 games often. The others don 't seem
12-8,
Cleveland
beat .in the same number of to be playing well, but maybe
Baltimore. S-3, Texas edged matches.
I'm not giving myself enough
Oakland, 3-2, in 11 innings,
Unseeded Vitas Gerulaitls, credit for playing well."
and Minnesota nipped, who ousted the top-seeded
She does not expect many
Kansas City 4-3.
defending champion Arthur problems with Navratilova,
Ashe, met fiflh«eded Raul who beat Britain's Sue
Ranilrez of Mexico ln another Barker, 6-3, ~. Hi.
quarter-flnal match in the
"I don't thlnk Martlna is
.. \ $280,000 tournament. ·
playing so well this year. I
With Ashe gone, Tanner will be going into the match
\ r.l_RTC_..\-\. ~
1"71,."
_.. •
and thlrd-Beeded Die Nastase with great confidance."
~
aretheonlyplayersleftinlhe
Evonne Goolagong, tlje se"
tournament to have beaten cond seed, beat Rosie casals,
:
,., Connors this year.
7-5, 6-3. In the semifinals,
' m!~U~"''"'~IONALilUllff ...~~u..r l , ,u..
Nastase met unseeded Goolagong will play Britain's
.
Otarles Pasarell of Puerto Virglnia Wade, who defeated
Rico ln another quarter-final, Australia's Kerry Melville
·
.
with fourth-seeded Bjorn Reid, 6-4, 6-2.
llllflJ1'1UM rliLCQ
Ill
unlolflnl:n.
,

Philade lphi o at Montreal ,
night
St. Louis at New York , night
Chicago at Pittsburgh, nigh I
Atlanta at Los Angeles. night
Cincinnati at Sa n Diego, night
American L :eague

East

New York
Cleveland

Ba ltimore
Detroit

Boston
M ilwaukee

W. L. Pel. GB
43 25 .632

35 33 .5 1~ 8
34 35 .493 9V,
33 35 .485 10
32 35 .478 10'1'
25 40 .385 16'17

West

.Kans. City

W. L. Pet. GB
42 27 .609

Texas

39 29 .!74 21',

Minnesota
California

33 37 ..471 91/2
29 45 .392 15111

oakland

35 37 .&lt;as

a•r.

Monday's Results
Texas 3 Oakland 2, 11 Inns
Detroit 5 New York 1

Cleveland 5 Milwaukee 3
Boston 12 Ba ltimore 8
Minnesota 4 Kansas City J

(Only games scheduled)

Toda 'f's Probable Pitchers

!AIITimes ·EDTI
Qakland (Abbott 1·11 at
Texas !Barr 1-31, 9:05p.m.
Kansas City (Fitzmorris 8·

41 at Minn esota !Goltz 7-51. 9
p .m .

d..

.

a match ""'
A'""

for life.

'"'"'""·

State Farm Matchmaker
Service is

free.

And

In Melgs-1\.ason Pony
League action Saturday,
league- leading Mason whipped a stubborn visiting
Eastern team, 6-3. Winning
hurler Mark Johnson teamed

so

simple. You tell us a little
about yourself, your family,
yo.ur goals. We feed this in·

ANAHEIM, Call!. (UPI) Nolan
Ryan left the
formation to our computer
California
Angels w return
and In a matter of seconds
home
and
have his alllng
It prints out a State Farm
·
pltchlng
arm
checked out.
life Insurance program that
The
CalifOJ'I!Ia
Angels' ace
matches your needs. One
righthander
felt
a
"catch" in
you can live with ..
his right elbow while
See or cal/:
warmlng up for · the sixth
Inning at Kansas City
BILL FLETCHER
Saturday night, . returned
here Sunday and visited Dr.
12$8 POWell Sf
Jules
Raslnaki, the Angels'
Middleport, q.
team pbyalclan, Monday..
He 1B scheduled to see
PH. 992-7155 orthopedic
specialist Dr.
4TATE FARM LiP!
Frank Jobe today and hopes
NSUitANCE COMPANY
to rejoin the Angels, who are
Homooftieo: .....,.,..,,, 1111101o ·
ln Chicago, for a Wednesday·
--,~~;---;-...J:P:.J.Z22Qiliill! night pitching assignment.'

~

Mojor Leagut Leadtrs
United Pr~sttll~rnallonal
a. ...
tbaHdon 175atbats)
Nation11 Loalut
Oliver, Pit
«,
Foster, Cln 65 25&lt; ..o 8l .343
McBride , St. ~
51 198 29 6 1 .338
Crawfrd, St.L
59 197 26 66 .335
Morgan , Cln 59 t88 51 63 .335
Cay, LA
64 231 37 76 .329
Rose. Cln
73 2'14 62 96 .327
Andrews. Hou
&lt;2 176 2&lt; 57 .324
Montanez, Atl
76 2'17 31 96 .323
Grlltey, Cln 67 246 56 79 321
American League
G. AB R. H. Pel.
Brett, KC 69 283 43102 .360
LeFlore, Del 63 261 44 92 .352
McRae, KC 69 258 43 87 337
Rivers, NY 60 2it 47 88 .325
Carew. Min 69 273 43 as .322
Munson, NY 6&lt; 261 32 83 .318
Staub, Del 68 244 31 77 .316
Lynn,Bos 58 219 3069 .315
Bell, Cle ··• 68 258 41 81 . 31~
otis, KC
67 266 52 82 .308
Home Runs
National League: Kingman.
NY 26; Schmidt. Phil ~1 ;
Foster. Cln (161 ; Monday, Chi
and Morgan, Cln 13.
American League:. L May ,
Ball. Yastrzemskl. Bos and
Sando, Oak 13; Rice, Bas and
otis, KC 12.
Runs Balled tn
National League: Foster,
Cln 62 ; Kingman , NY 60 ;
Schmidt, Phil 57 ; Morgan and
Perez, Ctn 13.

G6oA~• '!;, ~~2

American Legue : L. May,

American League : Travers,

SAN DIEGO(UPI) - After Mtl'8111 came blck MCIIday
missing a dozen same• night and homered, doubled,
because of a pulled rib
muscle, Joe Morsan bas ilnocked In four runa and
relllrned to the !lncinnati made • big play with biB
Reds'
glove u the Redl belt the
regular lineup with a San Diego Padrea 7-2.
bafl8,
Morgan's fleldlna sem
Injured 1n an eahiblllm
helped
aecure rookie Stlntoe
~tame June17 at Indianapolis
• Al5ala 's seventh win In nine
declsl~. With balllll l011ded
in the ~venth Inning and San
US
· C
goe8 Diego trailing 8-3, Willi ~
McCovey sma.red a ~ pttch
fi ,
toward second bue. Morgan
"U W 0'8.1JleS
·
dived,
knocked the ball down
1't
and threw McCovey out.
W
"I'm lucky I'm a wteran,"
explained Mtl'glll, "With the
In Independent balleball basea loaded and the count ~
action over the weekend, 0, he's not suppoaed to awlnll.
SyraCU3e raised Its record to But I've been around long
7-1 by defeatlns halt Letart enough to n:pect anythins.
on $aturday 1&amp;-2 and whom- I'm lucky I wu ready.
"When the count goee to ~
ping vlsitlns Minersville on
0,
!be tendency Ia to relax.
Sunday, 18-7.
But
II I'm the manager I ask
Bahlnd a 211-1111 attack on
myself,
'Do I let this guy
Saturday, 1'inner Bob Cunhack?
'
and
I said to myself,
ningham won his fourth
'Maybe
I
do.'
So I play It like
straight game without a 101111
It'
a
a
1.Qcountand
I jual try to
and teamed with Hemsley
and Van Meter to fan 11 and knock II down. It was t'ellly
burned."
walk five.
Morgan said diving ftl'
Jeff Hubbard, Eddie Van
Maire, and Rudy Stewart McCovey'allner was the only
each had four hits, but team- time his Injury bothered
mate Jim Hemsley took top him.
"My side won't be 100 per
honors, getting five hits and
cent
for the rest of the
IICOI'in8 five runs.
season,"
said Morgan.
For Letart, Fred Miller
''There's
nothing
broken but
had two hits, and loaer Rusty
It
wW
be
sore
for
a
10118 time.
Tucker and Don Hupp comThe
only
time
It
hurt
tmight
bined to strike out four and
was
when
I
dove
for
walk eight.
s
510 015 232--19 26 0 McCovey's ~II. 1 felt it. To
L
000 010 001- 2 6 6 tell you the truth, I wanted w
lay there for a while.''
+++
Tralllns 7~ before they Sparky Anderaon feela hia
ever came to bat, Syracuse club, which leada the NL
rallied Sunday to take a West by 41!1 games, IB ready
seven-inning 11-7 win over to reach Ita peak.
"This was only the 21at
Minersville at Racine. Bob
time
we played our regulal'!l
Cunningham started m the
this
year,"
11111ld Anderaon.
mound and gave up six hits
"We're
I~
with them In
and seven runs before being
there.
Thai's
good
enough to
relieved by Jeff Hubbard
win
anyUW..
We've
played
with no outs In that first
Philadelphia six times. Joe
frame.
·
Hubbard went on to aUow Morgan baa only played in
.
Minenvllle no runs and only me ol thoae gallll!l.''
McCovey
got
the
Padree
an
three hits the rest ol the way.
Randy Clark had a triple and early lead with a threH-un
two sinslea while Hubbard homer In the first Inning, his
and Rudy Stewart had two fifth of the year and the 463rd
ol hla.career. Morgan's thlrcl
hitnplece.
.Ron Clonch, Jed Will, and lnnlns. three-run blut wu
Wyatt each bad two bue biB 13th and got the Reds
knocks for the 10111'11. Mlnel'!l- even.,
George FOII!er kept the
vllle pltcherll gave up nine
lnnlns
solng with a lingle and
walb and struck out nme.
Tony
Perez put anctnnatl
M·
, 700000~7 82
ahead
to
stay, doubling home
S
51!2 200 x-16 12 0
Foster.

Syra· e
3
OVer eekend

Mil 1.80; Garland, Ball 1.82;
Fldrych, Det2.06; Umbarger,
Tex 2.51; Gossage, Chi 2.76.
Strikeouts
National League: Seaver,
NY 111 ; Richard, Hou sa;
A thought for the day:
Messersmith, All 85 ; Nlekro,
British
poet Lord Byron said,
All 81 ; Montefusco, SF 80.
American League: Ryan, "Speak not of men's creeda.
Cat 135 ; Tanana, Cal 123; They rest between man and
Blyleven. Tex 107; Jenkins, his Maker.''
Bas 90 ; Hunler, NY 83.

Thia WtH's Spteo!'t

USED

Oliver prepared to watch
TV
.
when all star game is played.
.

PmSBURGH (UP!) Pittsburgh Pirates outfielder
AI Oliver might watch this
year's All-Star game on
television despite the fact he
is leading the National
League in batting and raced

Maloney
• •
smt IS
attacked

home with the winning run In
lastyear'srnidaeason classic.
"Over the years I've
become accustomed to not
getting the fanfare," salt!
Oliver after belting four .hits
to drive in four runs Mooday
and lead Pittsburgh to a ~2
rout of the Chlcogo Cubs.
Although he is batting .352,
Oliver was passed up this
year by the fans who vote for
the All.Star team. He was
12th In voting among ·
.outfielders.
Technically, he still could
be chosen by Cincinnati
Manager Sparky Andersonthis year's NL skipper-as he
was last year by Los Angeles'
Walter Alston. ·
"Five or six years ago I
would have been upset, hut
not now," said O~ver, who
added it would be "unportant
to me" to he selected. Last
summer, he slammed a ninth

causing bodily harm to
Glennie during a . game at
Maple Leaf Gardens last
Nov. 5.
·
After McGee read into the
.record Incidents of violence
that have blinded several
hockey players, lmlach testified:
"I've never seen anybody
lose (his) eye or get seriously
burt as a result of a fightand that's In 30 years.
"I think we have a good
game and I can only think
that you people are trying w
"ruin it."
,
In opening the defense,
attorney George Finlayson
said he would bese his case on
the "consent" nf all hockey
players to subject themselves
to possible assault and injury
whenever they step oil the
Ice.

Inning double and then acored
the winning run In the
National League's 6-3 victory
over the AL stars.
Oliver baa a steady .292'
lifetime mark, has never wm
a l!atting crown and says he
may need luck to do lt.
"I've proven that I can hit
as bard as anyme," he said.
"But 1 talked to guys who.
have won It Uke Bill Madlock
Pete Rose and Joe Torre and
they all say you have to have
some luck to do it.
"With luck, I could do it."
Oliver clearly had no
mercy for Cube' 111ar1er Joe
Coleman and rellefer Buddy
Schultz, rattllns them lor
four safeties, Including a twonm double In the aecmd and
a 4ro-foot aolo homer In the
seventh. Hla last RBI came
on a ground out In the eighth
Inning when the Pirates
added two more I'UI'8.
Jbn Rooker went the route
for Pittsburgh, allowing nine
hits In wtnnins hla seventh
game.
Coleman Isn't the only NL

~

hurler who Is hoping Oliver's
'1uck" wlllaoon end. In hla
last 18 games, he baa sone 36
for 74 -nearly a .500 clipwith six hWle runs and 23

RBIB.

"For seven years, I've
evaluated myself as a ball·
player," said Oliver aoberly,
as he sat back on biB locker
room stool. "Now Ita time ftl'
someone elae to evaluate

rue."

y·----

'1895

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You'll Like Our Q\UIItly
Way of Doing Business.
GMAC FINANCING
992-53-12
Pomeroy
Open Evt .. ,ngs 'ti\6:00
Tit 5 ~.m. Sat.

":**************************
11:**..
DELICIOUS STRAWBERRY SHORT CAKE_
* TWIST IC£ CREAM SUNDAES, SODAS. MALTS,
:

FLOATS, SOFT DRINK, SANIMICHES

~I;;~

·~~

i

i Adolph's Dairy Valley :*I
:

*
...

Hrs.: 10:00A.M._Til11:00 P.M. Sun.- Thurs.
lO:OOA.M. Tti12:00P.M. Fri.B,Sat.
992-2556

: W.MAIN

.

POMEROY,O. It

'*****************************..:

Cl'l GREAT ~ZARO, Kt-Ool·

5.COI&lt;::Hit-,G DE$ERT5 TO
_!?EEK &lt;01 1.~ COuNCoL.

Green-green cloth Interior.
green Y·roof. full power
and air.

.

.

00 OMNII&gt;JTEiJT-

-l

ONE, I CAN 'T UNilERSTAND THIS CON-

ER rF ALL lHII'Q;. W£'1/E

JUUR&gt;.~YEDTID..ISANDS Of
MilES OI£R R\XG:D 11l'-"1TAINS, STORMY SCA.C, AND

CARS\

'73 OlDS 88
4 DR. HT

.

TORONTO (UPI) - Punch
lmlach, one of hockey's most
colorful personalities,
Monday
charged
the
with Mrk Smith to give up prosecution In the Dan
only five bits whilefannlng 11 · Maloney assault trial with
and walklng seven.
"trying to ruin" the sport.
Kenny Hanklnson led the
!miach, general manager
bitting with a triple and of the Buffalo Sabres, was
double and David Camp had , one of six witnesses the
two triples. Greg Stodola had defense called In opening Its
a double while Smith and case after the prosecution
Chris Davis each had a rested at midday In Judge
single.
Patrick LeSage's courtroom.
Loser Donny Spencer
Asked about Maloney's atstruck out ten and walked leged assault on Toronto
eight while giving up seven Maple Leaf Brian Glennie,
bits. Steve Little had a double Imlach said he saw a
while single hitters were videotape of the incident and
Rusty Wigal, Spencer, Tim considered it "nothing. We've
Enevoldson, and Jeff Goble. seen a "lot worse."
Mason Is now 7-1 while · Did he condone such an
Eastern dropped tol)-2.
action, Prosecutor Robert
McGee asked 011 cross examl·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - AI naUon.
Geiberger's first-place finish
"Yes, I condone it," Imlach
in the Western Open Sunday shot back. "There's nothing
vaulted him four places, from to it. It 's all ln the game of
eighth to fourth, in the list of hockey."
money wtnners on the PGA
Maloney, a Detroit Red
Tour where Hubie Green, a Wing defenseman known for
three-time wlnner, still leads his fighting abilities, was
rwith $1~,427.
charged with assaul' for

Mason overcomes Eastem 6-3 '

i

Cin
004 200 001 - 1 11 1 Bait, Yastrzemskl, Bos and
SO
300 000 000- 3 10 1 Bando, Oak 13; Rice, Bas and
Alca la ,
Hinton
(7) , Oils, KC 12.
McEnaney (71 , Borbon (8)
Runs Batted tn
and Bench; A. Foster, - National League: Foster,
Reynolds, (4 ). Folkers (51. Cln 62 ; Kingman , NY 60 ;
Melzger (8) and Kendall , B. Schmidt, Phil 57 ; Morgan and
Davis (9) . WP - Alcala (7-21. Perez, Cln. 52 .
lp 8 a . foster !2·41. HRs American
League:
Cincinna ti , Morgan (131 ; San Burroughs, Te&lt;. 54; Mayberry,
Diego, McCovey 151.
KC 51 ; Otis, KC and
Chambliss, NY. 48; M0n"son,
American League
NY 46.
(11 innings)
Stolen Bases
Qak
000 000 002 Q0-2 7 0
National League: Cedeno,
000 00 020 01 - 3 7 0 Hou 27; Morgan, Cln and
Te&lt;
Norri s, Lindblad (91. Todd Brock, St. L 22; Griffey, Cln
(9) and Sundberg. WP - 19; Lopes, LA and Taveras,
Foucaull (7-4) . LP - Todd (6· Pill 18.
6) . HR s - Oakland, Bay lor
American League: Patek,
(10). Tenace (7 1.
KC 37; Carew, Mlnn and
Baylor, Oak 33; Norlh. Oak
NY
010 000 000- 1 7 I 32; LeFlore, Del and
Del
200 000 12x--5 6 0 Campanerls, Oak 25.
Holtzman !HI and Hend·
Pitch IIIli
ri cks: Fidrych (8 -11 and
Most Victories
Kimm . HRs - Detroit, Staub
National League: Jones, SD
(41. Rodriguez (51; New York . 13-3; Lon borg. Phil (10-4);
Hendricks (31
Matlack, NY 9-2; Ruthven, All
&lt;
'1-7 ;
Kaat, Phil
8-2;
Milw
210 000 000- 3 6 2 Christenson,
Phil
8-3;
Cleve
110 210 00&lt;- 5 11 3 Fryman, Mtl and Seaver, NY
Co lborn, . sadecki (7), 8-5.
Fri sell a (81 and Kusnt•er,
American
League:
Porter (71 ; Hood. Bibby (2 ), Figueroa , NY (9·41 ; Tlant,
l.a Roche (9) and Ashby . WP Bos and Dobson, Clev (9-5) ;
- Bibby (4·21. LP - Colborn Palmer. Ball and Hunter, NY
(4 -101 . HRs - Cleveland , 9·7.
Lowenstein 111. Hendrick
EarntdAunAverage
1111 .
- (based on u lnning•pllchtd)
Ball
020231000--8133
Na ,tlonal
League:
Bos . 004 213 11x- 12 16 1 Frelsleben,
SO
1.88;
Palmer. Flanagan 141 , R. Stonhouse, Mil 2.32; Foster,
May (61 , Pagan (71 and SD 2.35; Messersmith, All and
Duncan ; Jones, Cleveland (4). Zachry, Cln 2.54.

New York !Aie.ander 4-41
at Detroit (Crawford 0·3, 8
p.m.
Milwauk ee (Travers 8-5) at
Cleveland I Brown 6-21. 7:30
p.m.
Baltimore !Cuellar 4-71 at
Boston (Wise 5-4). 7:30 p.m.
California !Tanana 8·51 at Jenkins 16) and Fisk . WP Chicago (Gossage 5-5), 9 p.m. Jenkins (6-8) . LP - Flanagan
Wednesday's Games
(OcJI. HR s - Baltimore,
Baltimore at Boston
Duncan (2), ' Grich 17) ;
New York at Detroit. night
Boston, Hobson (11.
Ca li fornia at Chicago, nigh I
Oakland at Te&lt;as, night
KC
002 010 000-3 7 1
Kansas Coty at Minnesota, Minn
020 000 02&lt;- 4 6 0
noght
Leonard, lilt(ell (8). Halt
(On ly games sched uled!
(81 and Martinez; Singer,
Campbell !81 and Wynegar.
WP - Campbell !8·21. LP Littell !3-31 .

The State farm

Can fl'nd you

.79

~b

Major League Slandongs
Major League Results
United Press International
Uniled Press International
Nation• I League
National league
East
Hous
023 000 102- 8 16 1
Dave Kingman, wlio hit his W. L. Pel. GB SF
000 020 000- 2 5 0
1
26th homer ln the fourth
;:
·9' ,
lnning, scored the winning New York
38 37 .507 14
Heaverlo (31 . Will iams (61 ,
run in the eighth, on a wild 51. Louis
31 40 .437 19
Caldwell (81 and Hill. WP pitch . by reliever AI Chicago
30 41 .423 20
Cosgrove (3·41. LP - Dressier
Montreal
24 42 .164 23"' (1.6) .
Hrabosky, to give New York
West
a victory over St. Louis. John
W. L. Pet. GB Phlla
020 002 020-6 12 1
Milner hit a tworun single for Cin cinnati
45 28 .616
Mont
000 002 000- 2 1 t
the Mets while Skip Los Angeles 41 33 .554 7
Car lton
(1·31
and
3
8
3
5
5
2
1
7
Lockwood picked up the wm· lat lnanDtiaego
_
.
Me
c
C
a
r
v
e
r
;
R
o
g
e
rs,
33 40 452 12
arrlthers 111 , Dunn ing (8 )
ln relief of Tom Seaver.
Houston
33 40 .452 12
and Foote. tP - Rogers (2)5).
Phlllles 8, Expoo 2:
San Fran .
JO 46 .395 16'1, HR - Ph iladelphia, Schmidt
Garry Maddox drove home
Monday's Results
1211 .
Houston 8 San Francisco 2
three runs with a triple, PNhiladelpl1ia 6 Montreal 2
51. L
001 ooo 210- 4 7 o
single and sacrifice fly and
ew York 5 5I. Louis 4
NY
001 120 Ox.- 5 9 1
"Mike Schmidt hit his 21st Pittsburgh 9 Chicago 2
Denny , Wallace (6). Greif
ho
Los Angeles 5 Atlanta 2
(71, Hrabosky (81 and
mer to lead Philadelphia CincinMii 7 San Die~o 3
Simmons; Seaver, Lockwood
past Montreal. Steve Carl.ton
Today's Probable Potchers
I71 . Apodaca !9 ) and Grote.
went the distance for the
!All Times EDT)
WP -- Lockwood (4-21 . LP Phillies, striking out nine, to
Houston! Dlerker6.7) at San Grell ( 1-51 . HR ~ New York.
Francisco (Barr 6-5), 11 :05 Kingman (26).
gsln his seventh victory.
p.m.
Astros 8, GlaoiB 2:
Philadelphia ! Kaa t 8-21 at Chi
011 ooo ®-2 9 2
Cliff Johnson drove ln three Montreal !Stanhouse S-31. 8:05 Pitts
040 020 12&lt;- 9 12 o
runs with a pair of doubles to p.m.
Coleman, Schultz !61 and
k
·
St. Louis !Falcone HI at Swisher: · Rocker 11·31 and
spar Houston's victory over · New York llolich J.91. 8:05 ..Sa ngullten . LP - Coleman (O.
San Francisco. Bob Watson p.m..
Jl. HRs - Chicago, Madlock
chipped_ in with a two-run
Cho cago (Renko 2-31 at (81 ; Pittsburgh, Oliver (121 .
double for the Astros as Mike Pittsburgh I Ca ndelar ia 6·41.
Cosgrove and Bob Forsch 7:35 p.m.
All ' ·
ooo ooo 200- 2 ~ 1
Atlanta (Moret 3-21 at Los LA
000 002 21&lt;- 5 10 1
tamed the Giants on five hits. Angeles (Jolm 4-41. 10:30 p.m.
Ruthv en, Marshall. (8) and
Cinc innati I Nolan 7-41 at Williams; Rhoden, Hough (8)
S.n Diego !Freisleben 6-21, 10 and Yeager . WP - Rhoden (7.
p.m.
01. LP - Ruthven (9-71 . HR Games
Los Angeles, Buckner (~I.

· " 'Mf\ILC:.n
91!1~.~· oc'!_~,

Grade BLarge

CRACKERS

INSTANT TEA
FOR

Jumbo
Size
each

Pak

$}29

OUR SCOT LAD

PAPER TOWELS

. -

Tanner Unawe

.Eckrich

pkg.

r;~:~SCOREBOARD"'"
E
::l
Morgan
makes
..
hIg
• g Iove p·1ay

Oliver has 4 hits
•
zn 9 2 P • t e ...omp

~ _....,

----·J·. . -

FOUNDED 1:-ISURANCE
mLtL y

--.::::/
"""-.
~
~...........,

~~

~

:!J[_
a?
FEUJI WHAT- ~ ~
\_~;.;x
&gt;•)
WANNAkNOW. •

k_

l:'-\·1\

. --,. @f : ~jd

!~ ~"

.,
Set B·ILL CHILDs, et DOWNING-CHi Los: tie KNOW5iilst..Suranc1 :

IXMNINGOIILDS M1ENCY INC.

. Middleport, Ohio
992-2342

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

Safe Boating Week to be observed
next week; skiing tips are given
'

~

Ellltor 's note - Safe
Boating Week will be
observed next week durin~
the 12th annual Gallipolis
River Recreation Festival.

Tbe Ohio Department of
Natural Resources today
has some Ups on water
skiing salety.

Guiding Hand School
does well in Olympics
The Guiding Hand School
Special Olympi cs Team
returned to Gallipolis Sunday
night after a successful trip
to the 1976" Ohio Special
Olympics. The nine athletes
who attended have won
honors in their various even·
Is, and are now proudly
wearing their medals. Win·
ners from the Guiding Hand
School Special Olympics
Team include:
Don Saxon, standing lon~
jump, first place (Gold
medal ); soft ball throw, first
place (Gold medal), (1 2-)'.l
age Division).
Gene Shaver , soft ba ll
throw, first place (Gold
medal J; 220 yat·d run, first
place (Gold medal). (20-29
age Division).
Ken Shaver, softball throw
(Participant medal); 50 yard
dash, fi rst place (Gold
medal). (20-29 age Division) .
Richa rd Hood, softball
throw (Participant medal) ;
220 yard das h (Participant
meda1J . 120-2n age Division).
Paul Winston , standing
long jump, first place (Gold
medal) ; 220 yard run, first
place (Gold meda l), (2().29
age Division ).
Oale Tucker, 50 yard dash,
first place (Gold medal ); softball Uu·ow, 2nd place (Silver
medal ). (16-17agcgroup /.
Joe Dunn, 50 yard dash.
Participant Medal ; softball
throw, Participant medal,
( 111-19 age group).
Ben Skinner, sta nditt g
jwnp (Long Jump ), first

place (Gold medllJ); softba ll
throw, participant medal. ( 30
and over division ).
Ma urice Smith, 220 yard
da sh, fi rst plare (Gold
medal) ; standing long jump,
ftrst place (Gold medal ).
440 Relay Team, second
pl ace (Silver medal) , ·
Mauric-e Smith, Gene Shaver,
Ken Shaver and Paul Winston.
.
Opening ceremoni es star·
ted off the weekend event on
Friday evening, June 25, as
the "Parade of Athletes"
marched on to the Stadium
fi eld. The traditional lighting
of the torch officially opened
the games, and was followed
by a carnival provided by
thcUS&lt;l nds of volunteers.
The Ohio Special Olympics
Program is now reaching
thousa nds of mentally rctar·
ded youngsters and adults
with major emphasis on the
improved self-innage of all
parti cipating . Presently
there are oW Special Olym·
pians from Guiding Hand
School, and pains call for expanded involvement in the
future. Strong volunteers are
continuing to strengthen the
program , and it is hoped that
in 1977, the Guiding Hand
School Special Olympies
Program will be better than
ever before.
If any individual, business,
or organization is interested
in sponsoring one or more
athletes forthe SpecialOlympirs Program, please contract the school.

Water skiing is a lot of fun
but it can also he hazardous if
not practiced safely. Water
skiing is just as much fun as it
looks. lt is also just as easy. 1f
you want to water ski, you
can. Tbe desire to learn is
the
only
actu ally
pr ereq ui site . Serio usly
crippled children and adults ,
includin g amputees, a re
among the tho1,1Sands who are
learning to water ski each
year - and ski well.
AI; in the case of riding a
bicycle, getting started is the
most difficult step. The
beginner
is naturall y
nervous, but once he is up on
skis, his nervousness gives
way to elation. The ~eg inner
soon realizes just how easy
skiing Is, and in almost no
lime atall,heis crjsscrossing
the wake and looking for new,
more advanced maneuvers to
try .
M o s I in s tru ct or s ,
professional or otherwise;
will limit first~ime skiers to
four or fiv e minut es on the
water , frequently less. After
about an hour of water skiing,
the average learner will have
mastered the fundamentals
of the sport, including deepwater take-offs, landings, and
crossing and , jumping the
wake. Then the single-ski and
basic bricks , even judging ,
are not too far away.
Water skiing is safety . This
simple statement of truth is
probably the best direct
approach to safety In water
skiing. Of course, it must be
qualified by saying that, like
any sport or activity in our
modern . life; the ilegree of
safety is relative io the
precautions and care that are
taken by its participants.
Safe boat driving for water
skiing hegins long before you
get in the boat to take your
first skier for a ride. No
matter how much a person
has driven a boat, no matter
how familiar he is with good

boat handling, the first time
he tows a skier he has some
surprises. Tbe good boat
driver is thoroughly familiar
with the problems of the skier
and preferably is a skier
himself. Before you attempt
the job of driving for skiing,
go along in the tow boat and
observe a good driver and the
way he thinks ahead for the
Observe
th e
skier .
coordination of driver and
skier from shore also, to
more fully realize how they
operate as a team. This
should be done several times
before you attempt to drive
for skiing.
The boat driver is not only
driving the boat, he is also
performing a very important
part of the skiing itself. The
skier is intent on skiing, and
in his position behind the boat
he depends entirely upon you,
as a part of his team, to do a
good, safe and dependable
job of boat driving for hinn .
In Ohio, at least three
persons are required in order
to go water skiing. Besides
the skier and .the boat ~river,
there must he an observer at
least 12 years old in the boat
who watches the skier and
transmits signals between
the skier and driver. The
principal responsibility of the
driver is to operate the boat,
not to watch the skier. Ohio
law states that no more than
two skiers may he towed
simultan eously and each
must wear an adequate life
saving device at all times . Ski
belts are not recommended
for this purpose since they
procide no protection in the
event of a hard fall and will
riot keep an unconscious
skier 's head out of the water .
EKcept for Lake Erie, the
Ohio River, and adjacent
harbors, skiing is confined to
designed ski wnes on most
inland lakes in Ohio. In
addition, wa ter skiing is
prohibited between the hours

Ken t Wolfe Saturday
picked up his sixth win "Of the
y~r as the host Racine A's
shut out the Pomeroy
Yankees on two hils, S.O:
Wolfe fanned six and walked
only three as Zane Beegle
stroked a home nm and two
singles. Tom Roseberry h;td
a double and single and
scored two runs while Wolfe
and Bostick had a triple each.
Loser R. Kovalchik struck
out seven and walked four .
Mike Whitlatch had an outstanding game at shortstop
[or tt)e Yankees and got one
of the two hits.
p
00 00--a 2 0
R
015 2x-3 10 0

The Middleport Blg Jim's
Junior Girls' team heat the
Salisbury Liberty Bells in
league action last night at the
Minersville Field by the score
or 20 to 2.
Middleport pounded out 18
hits, two of those home runs,
to 9 of Salisbury's.
Bangie Hart pitched
Middleport to its victory
while Pam Crooks led the
team in hits with a double and
a home run.
Other players getting hits
for
Middleport were M.
fifth plac-e with 293, earning week for the players.
Spencer,
and M. Miller, each
But Rankin whistled a four$4,600, while Susie McAllister
a
single
and double; C.
and Chako Higuchi were next wood to the left side of the · Crooks and P. Horton, each 3
at 294 and youitg Ai Yu Tu green and calmly two-putted
singles ; T. Ferguson, single
from about 30 feet w nail
came in at 295.
and homer; K. Glass, 2
Rankin, who took the lead .down the win .
and B. Hart and E.
singles
Sunday with he r second She started on 17 three
Smith
each
a single.
straight 69, held a. three stoke shots up, but double bogeyed
Players
getting
hits for
margin over Carner and when she hooked her drive
Salisbury
were
N.
Lambert,
2
Blalock going into her final into the water. Blalock was
L.
Cole,
J.
GilliSpie
singles
;
,. round, but had to par the last already in at even par and
and K. .Sisson each ·I single;
hole, a tough dogleg left Carner also was even as she
S.
Hudson and S. Marshall
which proved difficult all teed off on 18.
with two singles.
each
Carner , gambling for a
Junior League
birdie, tried to cut the corner,
WL
hit a tree and took a .double
Forest Run
5
0
bogey six, which finished her
New Haven
5
0
chances.
Racine
3 2
"I knew I had to birdie the
Big
Jim's
3 3
hole to put pressure on
Syracuse
2 4
Judy /' Carner sa id in
Salisbury
Lib.
Bells
0
4
explaining the gamble. "I hit
Letart
0
5
the drive just super, if I
Senior !.£ague
hadn't hit the tree . But the
WL
•
~
gamble didn 't work ."
Forest Run
5 I
"All I can say is I don't play
5 t
for money, " said Ca rner, who Hit 'n Misses
M&amp;R(Meigs)
4 I
lost an additional $1,700 in
Syra cuse
3
3
Jeff Wayland went th e priz~ money when she didn't
New
Haven
I
3
distance for the Br~ ve s par the final hole. " I play to
Pomeroy
I 5
defeatmg the Raccoon Valley win."
Rutland
0
6
Ca rner , who was paired
Pirates 6-2 Monday evening
at Mtddleport, picking up his with Rankin , never got closer
4th victory aga inst no than the one shot going to the
defeats . With the win the final hole alter she took a
SUMMER
Braves move on to the bogey on the first bole and
Rutland Dodgers Thursday then double bogeyed the
evening with an unblemished second . At that point she was
record of 10-0.
six shots back.
One Dozen
The Braves stand 12-U on
Blalock crept to within one
the season in all games. shot when she birdied the
Wayland had 8 strokeouts and sixth but bogeyed Ute eighth
gave up 4walks and scattered and didn 't really get back into
4htts. Wayland also aided his the fight until a birdie on 17.
cause with a second inning
" I honestly think I won the
ONLY
triple with two bboard.
tournament the first three
Getting hits for the Braves days," said Rankin . "I hit a
were Terry Wayland with lot olbadshotstoday. I had to
Qouble and 2 singles, three plily the game for score. I just
Cash 'n Carry
for three on the night ; Jim know my own game well
Boyer, a double and single, enough wmanage it.
Jell Wayland, double and
"I'm pleased with myself
triple, Dave Demosky and that I did the bad thing on 17
Dan Hysell each singles.
(double bogey), then when I
59 N. Second, Middleport
For the Pirates Sam had to on 18, I did it, " she
Manard started and pitched said .
four innings but gave way to
Jeffers in the last inning
because of arm trouble .
Manard had 8 strikeouts
issoed but two walks, and
"The Insurance Store"
gave up eight hits. Jeffers
Complete
pitched an effective fifth
Insurance
Service
inning. Allowing but one base
runner, had one strike out
' and walked one batter.
Getting hits for the Pirates
were Kevin Gobel with a
single . Walter Garnes
continued his hit rampage
against the Braves going
Utree for three Utus far this
l~a~~~ee
season , :'Big Walt" is hitting
a hot .1000 against Braves ·
214 E. Main
POMEROY
pitching. Garnes had a triple
and two singles on the
evening.
"QUALITY and
Thursday games : Braves
SERVICE"
at Dodgers;. Pirates at
Indians, and Reds at Bobcats.
Raccoon
011 000--2 4 0
Braves
r.J.tO 20x-il 8 1

Texan, who captured here
fourth victory on the LPGA
tour this year. "But, this
time , I'm go ing. to giv e
myself the benefit of the
doubt and say th.at 1 was
swinging a little bit tired.
"Usually, I blame myself,
but the lastfew days !felt like
I couldn 't get out of bed. J'm
just overgolfed."
.
Jane Blalock earned $11,000
for her second place finish ,
one stroke back, and JoAnne
Carner, last week 's winner of
the Hoosier Classic, picked
up $7 ,600 for third . She
finished at 290.
Sandra Palmer finished in

Braves'

record
Cincinnati picked for
IS perI·ect
colleges hall of fame
NEW YORK 1UP!) - The
National Football Foundation
selected a 1,60\Htcr e amusement park complex near
Cincinna ti Mond ay for the
site of the Collegiate Football
Hall of Fame.
Vincent dePaul Oraddy an
ex~cutive of the foundation,
satd the board fell a c-entrally
located site would be
appropriate for the Hall ·of
Fame.
The foundstlon accepted an
offer from the Taft
Broadcasting Co. to build the
shrine a t the company 's
King's Island amusement
complex, 25 miles north of
Cincinnati.
·
The foundation, which has
180 member colleges, honors
high school scholar-athletes
and distinguished citizens. It
also sponsors a graduate
fell owship progr am for
college football players.
In Cincinnati Monday, Jack

Farcison, president of the
found ation ' s Cincinnati
chapter, said he was
eKtremely pleased the shrine
wo~ld be built at the Kings
Island site .
"Now we are going to have
the center of college football
in America in the Cincinna ti
area )" Farcison said.
" It will not be dead hall of
fame ,~~ he said. There will
he a projection room where
you can see great games
from over the years and stars
in action.''
The Taft Broadcsting Co.
made their offer to construct
the hall in early March. That
offer was chosen over others
made by groups from Columbus, Ohio, and Knoxville,
Tenn.
The hall is expected to be
completed by the spring of
1978and will cost from $2.5 to
$3 million.
11

MASON f.tj.IRNITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon ., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat.-ll:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va.

ROSE SPECIAL
RED ROS.ES
ARRANGED
S9.95

sa.95

•

Reuter-Biopn

• •

Cook-Out
Specials

icentennial
~ Bargai
QUANTITIES LtMlTEO

I!ItliJ:lt]~l

I

3.5 oz.
PALMOLIVE SOAP

BAN BASIC
:
ANTI·PERSPIRANT
:
or natural Non-aerosol spray ; 1

~egular

$119

Re.g• ..
••· 19

I

With Coupon
Limit 2

6/$100

REG 28c

1
I

·

I

'

I

FOR 'THE
th

Prlceo V•lid June 30 · Juty 4, 1111

-----------------r---------------COUPON

. 3 oz.

Open Eves. Tii9:00.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps_

With Coupon
llm•l 12

Pojces Valid June 30-July 4

------------------~----------------llitiiJ:ol•NI
l lf• oz. llilt11J:ol•NI

I

FOLDING CHARCOAL GRILL : PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE
I
I
I
I

Full 160 sq . in. of space ser ves 6·8
adults.

$'M9

REG . $4.98

L

With Coupon
L•m•l 2

____P_rices Valid June 30-July 4

Personal Size

,

.·R
. e

a,

"

15'

f&amp;c

Vlasic Re

With Coupon
Limit 2

3

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

:

.65

CLEARASIL CREAM

I
I
I

Regular or clea r van ishing formula

79'

REG. $1.29

With Coupon
Limit 2

f -·- -P~c!.'.:'.!!~ !_u.!!.e2~J!,'!,.!,.--

WliitiiJ:oltJ~I

:

-+-

.

$2495

With Coupon
Ltm1t 1

.

t--- __Pr!~.!:~'~:!.:'~ _!Oj~':_4___

COUPON

COUPON

:

"CARRY ABOUT"

Set ol si x

S es~me

1 6

I
I
I

I

AI;sorted Sizes

1

49'

REG. 11.18

L

29'

REG $J 25
· ·

FRESH CRISP

HEAD LffiUCE

GOLDEN ISLE

___ _

LIBBY'S

SUNSHINE HARVEST
SHAMPOO

1

All.scents

U. S. NO. 1

.
9'
9

L1m1t 2

.

2" &amp; UP

2

REG.

FauHiess GOLF BALLS

I
I

59'

su 2

$333

Reg' $10·80

------------------r-----------------COUPON
oz. IB•XII:Il•UI
:

Prices Valid June JQ.July 4

PARTY PAK OR BREAST
BOX

1 4

5 Gillette
TRAC II BLADES
REG .

85'

$1. 49 .

: SEA &amp; SKI SUNTAN LOTION
1

REG .. $1 . 1o

II

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

I

LOVE'S LEMON WEDGE

lI

$}09

With Coupon
Limit 2

Prices vatid June JQ.Juty 4

----------------~---------------IB•111 :ll•W
I 10 oz. COUPON
2.5 oz . lemon soothing lotion
2.5

REG. S6.00

SIMONIZ SUPER BLUE

I
I

oz. lemon shamjXIo

2 oz. lemon skin freshener
2 oz . le mon fri ction cologne

1
I
I

$229 ~:::1t'2oupon

L

J

REG 11 ,
· ·•9 ·

79e

ALL GRINDS

$429

140 CT. PKG.

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

NO. 605
With Coupon
L•m•l 1

Reg.

I

Johnson &amp; Joltusoo

:

p~~!! 9~~~-

!1 STEEL WOOL SOAP PADS

, 118

·

.

69'

j9'

I

REG Sl 02
Wtth Coupon
· · ·~
Ltmrt2
Prices Valid. June 30-Juty 4

·
.

.

I

-----------------L-------------....;·-----14 oz. IB•lii _Q•J~I
: oz.
.
1

Johnson &amp; JoltDSOo

1

BABY POWDER

:

Purest protection

I
I
I
I

REG . St .87

85

~ With Coupon

Limit 2

_!:~~~~i!!,~~.!o.::'!!!':..'_ ___ :
lfltl1Jilteh11

10 oz. PACQUIN LOTION
For e xtra dry hand s. 10c OFF .

REG. S1 .98

e With
Coupon
Ltmtl 2

59

WISHBONE

COUPON

16 OZ. BTL

l

FURNITURE POLISH

49*

With Coupo"n
Limit 2

Prices Valid June

4

T----------~!;"!!!!.!.. ___ _

COUPON

Yardstick LAWN TORCH BUG
Pleasant herba I scenl drives mosquito:;
owoy
3 feet high
Lasts len hours
REG. $!.99
.

8'"

LARGE ROLL
W/C

3g~

COUPO N

COUPON

DREAM WHIP

BARBECUE SAUCE

59t

28 OZ. JAR
NO. 105

W/C

TOPPING

89~

6 OZ. BOX
NO. 105

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway
COUPON

W/C

COUPON

PRINGLES

69~

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

j

1_

j

LIPTON

POTATO CHIPS
lWIN .PACK

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway
.

I

INSTANT TEA

$}19

3 OZ. JAR

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

CUUPO N

I

WHEATIES CEREAL

OXYDOL

MAYONNAISE

89~

OPEN PIT

LOUPON

1

'

. HELLMAN'S

QT. JAR.
NO. 125

W/C

3g~

IOldl(N

I

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

Woodcrafter
REG. 79&lt;

6gt .

;

SCOIT TOWELS

ITALIAN DRESSING

tB pads

1

With Coupon
Limit 2

.Prices Valid June 30-Juty 4

Supreme

CATSUP
314 oz. ~mEs •1oo ,

COUPON

CUUPON

----------COUPON

Isle

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

~i~~~~..:'!!!'~~-~~~----~--!~~'_~~ June 30-Juty 4·
IB•IIJ:lt1•11

3 10 OZ. PKG. '1 00

VIVA NAPKINS

FOLGER'S COFFEE
3LB. CAN

MARSHMALLOWS

FROZEN
LEMONAD
60~·a9~
6 CANS

Bottle

I

With
Limit Coupon
2

~U_UP~N-

i

CAMPFIRE

GOLDEN ISLE

· 52 · 10

1

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

WEAVER

FROZEN CHICKEN

WIRE MIRROR
No. 937
SJ19 With
Coupon
REG
Limit 1

I

With Coupon
Ltmtl 2

3 OZ. PKG. 1 00

With Coupon
Limit 2

COUPON
Viscount

I
I
I

B-Pack

ALL FLAVORS

6

1----Pr~~~~~~~.!.o.::'~~'-.~--L_-~i~!.~!d..!!n'!e.~-;!.".!!~~4! ___,_,

I

JELLO GELATINS

lB.

Extra pain relief ... contains' no aspirin

500 mQ . each

IB•liJ:l•hll

.Deep Brown Beans
4 14 OZ. CAN'1 00

PEACHES

W1th Coupon
Limit 2

.P..:.ri~~~~j~!,~-~~~---j_ _ _P!2~':_V_!I~.:.~':_3~:!.:'~~--fieiiJ :ll•1~1
:
111•11J:Il•hll
40 EFFERDENT TABLETS 1
24 TYLENOL
Extra strength denture cleanser
EXTRA STRENGTH CAPSULES
REG. $1 .49 89~ With Coupon

7% OZ. BOX '1 00

8 oz. Clairol

REG. $1,85

I
I
I

4

HEADS

____

Stronger against sta ins.

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNERS

With Coupon
.L1m11 1

lll•liJii:n~•

1

lI

SHASTA

Canned Beverages
All FlAVORS
712 OZ. CANS t 100

COUPON

oz.

1

With
Limit Coupon
2

69¢
2
8CT.
PKS.

'1i~!, ~!_dJ!!!'!,~·.:!.."!!~-

1
1

PLASTIC BANDAGES

63e

PRODUCE

With_Coupon
-. Ltmtt 2

-~~~~~~~~!~~~----L-~~~~~~~~~~~~!
80 Curad

8 oz.

Street records and

$1)49

I

l!i•J••:z•u•

AMERICAN CHEESE SLICES

3 ~A~z. 4-9~

GATEWAY BUNS

MEADOW BATH CRYSTALS

1
1

Limit1

GOLDEN ISLE

BAKED BY BETSY ROSS
SANDWICH OR WIENERS

SHULTON WILD

1

39e

LB.

TEEN QUEEN

RECORD ASSORTMENT

+__

$199 With Coupon

89e

t!~z-

MUSTARD

MARGARINE

SWEET

-~~e.!,~•.!!'!.:!!!'!!!':.!~~ - - -

1 books .
l
I!EG . 54 _98
1

Gillette
CRICKET "KEEPER"
REG. $4 .49

59

1

I1

CORNING WARE SET

e With
Coupon
Ltmtl2

,Reg. $1.29

I
I

13-Piece
REG. $69 .95

Safety cushioned ends

PARKAY

HAMBURGER - HOTDOG

- -------------~---------------oz. II:ItiiJ:l•NI
I
COUPON
I
I
170 Q-TIP SWABS

Big Jim's

bombs Bells
by 20-2 score

9 AM TO 6 PM

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 29 THRU JULY 3

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

of sunset and sunrise. Besides
knowing the laws r•~arding
water skiing there are some
common sense rules that you
should follow in order to keep
your skiing safe, sensible ,
and enjoyable.
Here are a few tips :
- !.£am to use the various
hand signals for skiers.
- On take-offs , wait for a
delinite-signal from the skier
before accerlating.
- stay away from shallow
water, other boats, the shore,
and any objects in the water .
- Return to fallen skiers
irrunediately .
- Turn off your motor
whenever a skier is clirttbing
in or out of the boat.

Rankin picks up $15,000 after Zaharias victory
By GENE CWm·~ '
UPI Sports \hit&lt; r
CHAGRJ:N Fii U..S, Ohio
(UP!) - Judy R ~ nl :in isn't
going to apologiz" for her
closing round of 7 ~ in winning
the $100,000 Babe Za harias
Invitational Golf Classic.
Rankin picked up $15,000
for the win, boosting her
year 's winnings to a·record
$96,830, but she was visibly
disappointed about a double
bogey six on the 17th hole
which nearly wiped out a
three-shot lead .
" I'd feel pretty good a bout
the day if it hadn 't been for
17," said the 31-yea r-old

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS -

WoHe twirls
his sixth win

POTATO BUDS

DETERGENT
W/C

GIANT BOX

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

$}19

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

NO. 705
W/C

.12 OZ. BOX

49~

Expires 7-3-76
Twin _Cities Gateway

BETIY CROCKER

W/C

NO. 1-75
16 OZ. BOX

59~

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway ·

With Coupon
;, Limit 2·

Prices Volld June JO.July 4

•

'

I

!, • •

• ...

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

Safe Boating Week to be observed
next week; skiing tips are given
'

~

Ellltor 's note - Safe
Boating Week will be
observed next week durin~
the 12th annual Gallipolis
River Recreation Festival.

Tbe Ohio Department of
Natural Resources today
has some Ups on water
skiing salety.

Guiding Hand School
does well in Olympics
The Guiding Hand School
Special Olympi cs Team
returned to Gallipolis Sunday
night after a successful trip
to the 1976" Ohio Special
Olympics. The nine athletes
who attended have won
honors in their various even·
Is, and are now proudly
wearing their medals. Win·
ners from the Guiding Hand
School Special Olympics
Team include:
Don Saxon, standing lon~
jump, first place (Gold
medal ); soft ball throw, first
place (Gold medal), (1 2-)'.l
age Division).
Gene Shaver , soft ba ll
throw, first place (Gold
medal J; 220 yat·d run, first
place (Gold medal). (20-29
age Division).
Ken Shaver, softball throw
(Participant medal); 50 yard
dash, fi rst place (Gold
medal). (20-29 age Division) .
Richa rd Hood, softball
throw (Participant medal) ;
220 yard das h (Participant
meda1J . 120-2n age Division).
Paul Winston , standing
long jump, first place (Gold
medal) ; 220 yard run, first
place (Gold meda l), (2().29
age Division ).
Oale Tucker, 50 yard dash,
first place (Gold medal ); softball Uu·ow, 2nd place (Silver
medal ). (16-17agcgroup /.
Joe Dunn, 50 yard dash.
Participant Medal ; softball
throw, Participant medal,
( 111-19 age group).
Ben Skinner, sta nditt g
jwnp (Long Jump ), first

place (Gold medllJ); softba ll
throw, participant medal. ( 30
and over division ).
Ma urice Smith, 220 yard
da sh, fi rst plare (Gold
medal) ; standing long jump,
ftrst place (Gold medal ).
440 Relay Team, second
pl ace (Silver medal) , ·
Mauric-e Smith, Gene Shaver,
Ken Shaver and Paul Winston.
.
Opening ceremoni es star·
ted off the weekend event on
Friday evening, June 25, as
the "Parade of Athletes"
marched on to the Stadium
fi eld. The traditional lighting
of the torch officially opened
the games, and was followed
by a carnival provided by
thcUS&lt;l nds of volunteers.
The Ohio Special Olympics
Program is now reaching
thousa nds of mentally rctar·
ded youngsters and adults
with major emphasis on the
improved self-innage of all
parti cipating . Presently
there are oW Special Olym·
pians from Guiding Hand
School, and pains call for expanded involvement in the
future. Strong volunteers are
continuing to strengthen the
program , and it is hoped that
in 1977, the Guiding Hand
School Special Olympies
Program will be better than
ever before.
If any individual, business,
or organization is interested
in sponsoring one or more
athletes forthe SpecialOlympirs Program, please contract the school.

Water skiing is a lot of fun
but it can also he hazardous if
not practiced safely. Water
skiing is just as much fun as it
looks. lt is also just as easy. 1f
you want to water ski, you
can. Tbe desire to learn is
the
only
actu ally
pr ereq ui site . Serio usly
crippled children and adults ,
includin g amputees, a re
among the tho1,1Sands who are
learning to water ski each
year - and ski well.
AI; in the case of riding a
bicycle, getting started is the
most difficult step. The
beginner
is naturall y
nervous, but once he is up on
skis, his nervousness gives
way to elation. The ~eg inner
soon realizes just how easy
skiing Is, and in almost no
lime atall,heis crjsscrossing
the wake and looking for new,
more advanced maneuvers to
try .
M o s I in s tru ct or s ,
professional or otherwise;
will limit first~ime skiers to
four or fiv e minut es on the
water , frequently less. After
about an hour of water skiing,
the average learner will have
mastered the fundamentals
of the sport, including deepwater take-offs, landings, and
crossing and , jumping the
wake. Then the single-ski and
basic bricks , even judging ,
are not too far away.
Water skiing is safety . This
simple statement of truth is
probably the best direct
approach to safety In water
skiing. Of course, it must be
qualified by saying that, like
any sport or activity in our
modern . life; the ilegree of
safety is relative io the
precautions and care that are
taken by its participants.
Safe boat driving for water
skiing hegins long before you
get in the boat to take your
first skier for a ride. No
matter how much a person
has driven a boat, no matter
how familiar he is with good

boat handling, the first time
he tows a skier he has some
surprises. Tbe good boat
driver is thoroughly familiar
with the problems of the skier
and preferably is a skier
himself. Before you attempt
the job of driving for skiing,
go along in the tow boat and
observe a good driver and the
way he thinks ahead for the
Observe
th e
skier .
coordination of driver and
skier from shore also, to
more fully realize how they
operate as a team. This
should be done several times
before you attempt to drive
for skiing.
The boat driver is not only
driving the boat, he is also
performing a very important
part of the skiing itself. The
skier is intent on skiing, and
in his position behind the boat
he depends entirely upon you,
as a part of his team, to do a
good, safe and dependable
job of boat driving for hinn .
In Ohio, at least three
persons are required in order
to go water skiing. Besides
the skier and .the boat ~river,
there must he an observer at
least 12 years old in the boat
who watches the skier and
transmits signals between
the skier and driver. The
principal responsibility of the
driver is to operate the boat,
not to watch the skier. Ohio
law states that no more than
two skiers may he towed
simultan eously and each
must wear an adequate life
saving device at all times . Ski
belts are not recommended
for this purpose since they
procide no protection in the
event of a hard fall and will
riot keep an unconscious
skier 's head out of the water .
EKcept for Lake Erie, the
Ohio River, and adjacent
harbors, skiing is confined to
designed ski wnes on most
inland lakes in Ohio. In
addition, wa ter skiing is
prohibited between the hours

Ken t Wolfe Saturday
picked up his sixth win "Of the
y~r as the host Racine A's
shut out the Pomeroy
Yankees on two hils, S.O:
Wolfe fanned six and walked
only three as Zane Beegle
stroked a home nm and two
singles. Tom Roseberry h;td
a double and single and
scored two runs while Wolfe
and Bostick had a triple each.
Loser R. Kovalchik struck
out seven and walked four .
Mike Whitlatch had an outstanding game at shortstop
[or tt)e Yankees and got one
of the two hits.
p
00 00--a 2 0
R
015 2x-3 10 0

The Middleport Blg Jim's
Junior Girls' team heat the
Salisbury Liberty Bells in
league action last night at the
Minersville Field by the score
or 20 to 2.
Middleport pounded out 18
hits, two of those home runs,
to 9 of Salisbury's.
Bangie Hart pitched
Middleport to its victory
while Pam Crooks led the
team in hits with a double and
a home run.
Other players getting hits
for
Middleport were M.
fifth plac-e with 293, earning week for the players.
Spencer,
and M. Miller, each
But Rankin whistled a four$4,600, while Susie McAllister
a
single
and double; C.
and Chako Higuchi were next wood to the left side of the · Crooks and P. Horton, each 3
at 294 and youitg Ai Yu Tu green and calmly two-putted
singles ; T. Ferguson, single
from about 30 feet w nail
came in at 295.
and homer; K. Glass, 2
Rankin, who took the lead .down the win .
and B. Hart and E.
singles
Sunday with he r second She started on 17 three
Smith
each
a single.
straight 69, held a. three stoke shots up, but double bogeyed
Players
getting
hits for
margin over Carner and when she hooked her drive
Salisbury
were
N.
Lambert,
2
Blalock going into her final into the water. Blalock was
L.
Cole,
J.
GilliSpie
singles
;
,. round, but had to par the last already in at even par and
and K. .Sisson each ·I single;
hole, a tough dogleg left Carner also was even as she
S.
Hudson and S. Marshall
which proved difficult all teed off on 18.
with two singles.
each
Carner , gambling for a
Junior League
birdie, tried to cut the corner,
WL
hit a tree and took a .double
Forest Run
5
0
bogey six, which finished her
New Haven
5
0
chances.
Racine
3 2
"I knew I had to birdie the
Big
Jim's
3 3
hole to put pressure on
Syracuse
2 4
Judy /' Carner sa id in
Salisbury
Lib.
Bells
0
4
explaining the gamble. "I hit
Letart
0
5
the drive just super, if I
Senior !.£ague
hadn't hit the tree . But the
WL
•
~
gamble didn 't work ."
Forest Run
5 I
"All I can say is I don't play
5 t
for money, " said Ca rner, who Hit 'n Misses
M&amp;R(Meigs)
4 I
lost an additional $1,700 in
Syra cuse
3
3
Jeff Wayland went th e priz~ money when she didn't
New
Haven
I
3
distance for the Br~ ve s par the final hole. " I play to
Pomeroy
I 5
defeatmg the Raccoon Valley win."
Rutland
0
6
Ca rner , who was paired
Pirates 6-2 Monday evening
at Mtddleport, picking up his with Rankin , never got closer
4th victory aga inst no than the one shot going to the
defeats . With the win the final hole alter she took a
SUMMER
Braves move on to the bogey on the first bole and
Rutland Dodgers Thursday then double bogeyed the
evening with an unblemished second . At that point she was
record of 10-0.
six shots back.
One Dozen
The Braves stand 12-U on
Blalock crept to within one
the season in all games. shot when she birdied the
Wayland had 8 strokeouts and sixth but bogeyed Ute eighth
gave up 4walks and scattered and didn 't really get back into
4htts. Wayland also aided his the fight until a birdie on 17.
cause with a second inning
" I honestly think I won the
ONLY
triple with two bboard.
tournament the first three
Getting hits for the Braves days," said Rankin . "I hit a
were Terry Wayland with lot olbadshotstoday. I had to
Qouble and 2 singles, three plily the game for score. I just
Cash 'n Carry
for three on the night ; Jim know my own game well
Boyer, a double and single, enough wmanage it.
Jell Wayland, double and
"I'm pleased with myself
triple, Dave Demosky and that I did the bad thing on 17
Dan Hysell each singles.
(double bogey), then when I
59 N. Second, Middleport
For the Pirates Sam had to on 18, I did it, " she
Manard started and pitched said .
four innings but gave way to
Jeffers in the last inning
because of arm trouble .
Manard had 8 strikeouts
issoed but two walks, and
"The Insurance Store"
gave up eight hits. Jeffers
Complete
pitched an effective fifth
Insurance
Service
inning. Allowing but one base
runner, had one strike out
' and walked one batter.
Getting hits for the Pirates
were Kevin Gobel with a
single . Walter Garnes
continued his hit rampage
against the Braves going
Utree for three Utus far this
l~a~~~ee
season , :'Big Walt" is hitting
a hot .1000 against Braves ·
214 E. Main
POMEROY
pitching. Garnes had a triple
and two singles on the
evening.
"QUALITY and
Thursday games : Braves
SERVICE"
at Dodgers;. Pirates at
Indians, and Reds at Bobcats.
Raccoon
011 000--2 4 0
Braves
r.J.tO 20x-il 8 1

Texan, who captured here
fourth victory on the LPGA
tour this year. "But, this
time , I'm go ing. to giv e
myself the benefit of the
doubt and say th.at 1 was
swinging a little bit tired.
"Usually, I blame myself,
but the lastfew days !felt like
I couldn 't get out of bed. J'm
just overgolfed."
.
Jane Blalock earned $11,000
for her second place finish ,
one stroke back, and JoAnne
Carner, last week 's winner of
the Hoosier Classic, picked
up $7 ,600 for third . She
finished at 290.
Sandra Palmer finished in

Braves'

record
Cincinnati picked for
IS perI·ect
colleges hall of fame
NEW YORK 1UP!) - The
National Football Foundation
selected a 1,60\Htcr e amusement park complex near
Cincinna ti Mond ay for the
site of the Collegiate Football
Hall of Fame.
Vincent dePaul Oraddy an
ex~cutive of the foundation,
satd the board fell a c-entrally
located site would be
appropriate for the Hall ·of
Fame.
The foundstlon accepted an
offer from the Taft
Broadcasting Co. to build the
shrine a t the company 's
King's Island amusement
complex, 25 miles north of
Cincinnati.
·
The foundation, which has
180 member colleges, honors
high school scholar-athletes
and distinguished citizens. It
also sponsors a graduate
fell owship progr am for
college football players.
In Cincinnati Monday, Jack

Farcison, president of the
found ation ' s Cincinnati
chapter, said he was
eKtremely pleased the shrine
wo~ld be built at the Kings
Island site .
"Now we are going to have
the center of college football
in America in the Cincinna ti
area )" Farcison said.
" It will not be dead hall of
fame ,~~ he said. There will
he a projection room where
you can see great games
from over the years and stars
in action.''
The Taft Broadcsting Co.
made their offer to construct
the hall in early March. That
offer was chosen over others
made by groups from Columbus, Ohio, and Knoxville,
Tenn.
The hall is expected to be
completed by the spring of
1978and will cost from $2.5 to
$3 million.
11

MASON f.tj.IRNITURE

STORE HOURS
Mon ., Tues., Wed . &amp; Sat.-ll:30til5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 NOON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

MASON FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va.

ROSE SPECIAL
RED ROS.ES
ARRANGED
S9.95

sa.95

•

Reuter-Biopn

• •

Cook-Out
Specials

icentennial
~ Bargai
QUANTITIES LtMlTEO

I!ItliJ:lt]~l

I

3.5 oz.
PALMOLIVE SOAP

BAN BASIC
:
ANTI·PERSPIRANT
:
or natural Non-aerosol spray ; 1

~egular

$119

Re.g• ..
••· 19

I

With Coupon
Limit 2

6/$100

REG 28c

1
I

·

I

'

I

FOR 'THE
th

Prlceo V•lid June 30 · Juty 4, 1111

-----------------r---------------COUPON

. 3 oz.

Open Eves. Tii9:00.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps_

With Coupon
llm•l 12

Pojces Valid June 30-July 4

------------------~----------------llitiiJ:ol•NI
l lf• oz. llilt11J:ol•NI

I

FOLDING CHARCOAL GRILL : PEPSODENT TOOTHPASTE
I
I
I
I

Full 160 sq . in. of space ser ves 6·8
adults.

$'M9

REG . $4.98

L

With Coupon
L•m•l 2

____P_rices Valid June 30-July 4

Personal Size

,

.·R
. e

a,

"

15'

f&amp;c

Vlasic Re

With Coupon
Limit 2

3

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

:

.65

CLEARASIL CREAM

I
I
I

Regular or clea r van ishing formula

79'

REG. $1.29

With Coupon
Limit 2

f -·- -P~c!.'.:'.!!~ !_u.!!.e2~J!,'!,.!,.--

WliitiiJ:oltJ~I

:

-+-

.

$2495

With Coupon
Ltm1t 1

.

t--- __Pr!~.!:~'~:!.:'~ _!Oj~':_4___

COUPON

COUPON

:

"CARRY ABOUT"

Set ol si x

S es~me

1 6

I
I
I

I

AI;sorted Sizes

1

49'

REG. 11.18

L

29'

REG $J 25
· ·

FRESH CRISP

HEAD LffiUCE

GOLDEN ISLE

___ _

LIBBY'S

SUNSHINE HARVEST
SHAMPOO

1

All.scents

U. S. NO. 1

.
9'
9

L1m1t 2

.

2" &amp; UP

2

REG.

FauHiess GOLF BALLS

I
I

59'

su 2

$333

Reg' $10·80

------------------r-----------------COUPON
oz. IB•XII:Il•UI
:

Prices Valid June JQ.July 4

PARTY PAK OR BREAST
BOX

1 4

5 Gillette
TRAC II BLADES
REG .

85'

$1. 49 .

: SEA &amp; SKI SUNTAN LOTION
1

REG .. $1 . 1o

II

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

I

LOVE'S LEMON WEDGE

lI

$}09

With Coupon
Limit 2

Prices vatid June JQ.Juty 4

----------------~---------------IB•111 :ll•W
I 10 oz. COUPON
2.5 oz . lemon soothing lotion
2.5

REG. S6.00

SIMONIZ SUPER BLUE

I
I

oz. lemon shamjXIo

2 oz. lemon skin freshener
2 oz . le mon fri ction cologne

1
I
I

$229 ~:::1t'2oupon

L

J

REG 11 ,
· ·•9 ·

79e

ALL GRINDS

$429

140 CT. PKG.

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

NO. 605
With Coupon
L•m•l 1

Reg.

I

Johnson &amp; Joltusoo

:

p~~!! 9~~~-

!1 STEEL WOOL SOAP PADS

, 118

·

.

69'

j9'

I

REG Sl 02
Wtth Coupon
· · ·~
Ltmrt2
Prices Valid. June 30-Juty 4

·
.

.

I

-----------------L-------------....;·-----14 oz. IB•lii _Q•J~I
: oz.
.
1

Johnson &amp; JoltDSOo

1

BABY POWDER

:

Purest protection

I
I
I
I

REG . St .87

85

~ With Coupon

Limit 2

_!:~~~~i!!,~~.!o.::'!!!':..'_ ___ :
lfltl1Jilteh11

10 oz. PACQUIN LOTION
For e xtra dry hand s. 10c OFF .

REG. S1 .98

e With
Coupon
Ltmtl 2

59

WISHBONE

COUPON

16 OZ. BTL

l

FURNITURE POLISH

49*

With Coupo"n
Limit 2

Prices Valid June

4

T----------~!;"!!!!.!.. ___ _

COUPON

Yardstick LAWN TORCH BUG
Pleasant herba I scenl drives mosquito:;
owoy
3 feet high
Lasts len hours
REG. $!.99
.

8'"

LARGE ROLL
W/C

3g~

COUPO N

COUPON

DREAM WHIP

BARBECUE SAUCE

59t

28 OZ. JAR
NO. 105

W/C

TOPPING

89~

6 OZ. BOX
NO. 105

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway
COUPON

W/C

COUPON

PRINGLES

69~

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

j

1_

j

LIPTON

POTATO CHIPS
lWIN .PACK

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway
.

I

INSTANT TEA

$}19

3 OZ. JAR

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

CUUPO N

I

WHEATIES CEREAL

OXYDOL

MAYONNAISE

89~

OPEN PIT

LOUPON

1

'

. HELLMAN'S

QT. JAR.
NO. 125

W/C

3g~

IOldl(N

I

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

Woodcrafter
REG. 79&lt;

6gt .

;

SCOIT TOWELS

ITALIAN DRESSING

tB pads

1

With Coupon
Limit 2

.Prices Valid June 30-Juty 4

Supreme

CATSUP
314 oz. ~mEs •1oo ,

COUPON

CUUPON

----------COUPON

Isle

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

~i~~~~..:'!!!'~~-~~~----~--!~~'_~~ June 30-Juty 4·
IB•IIJ:lt1•11

3 10 OZ. PKG. '1 00

VIVA NAPKINS

FOLGER'S COFFEE
3LB. CAN

MARSHMALLOWS

FROZEN
LEMONAD
60~·a9~
6 CANS

Bottle

I

With
Limit Coupon
2

~U_UP~N-

i

CAMPFIRE

GOLDEN ISLE

· 52 · 10

1

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

WEAVER

FROZEN CHICKEN

WIRE MIRROR
No. 937
SJ19 With
Coupon
REG
Limit 1

I

With Coupon
Ltmtl 2

3 OZ. PKG. 1 00

With Coupon
Limit 2

COUPON
Viscount

I
I
I

B-Pack

ALL FLAVORS

6

1----Pr~~~~~~~.!.o.::'~~'-.~--L_-~i~!.~!d..!!n'!e.~-;!.".!!~~4! ___,_,

I

JELLO GELATINS

lB.

Extra pain relief ... contains' no aspirin

500 mQ . each

IB•liJ:l•hll

.Deep Brown Beans
4 14 OZ. CAN'1 00

PEACHES

W1th Coupon
Limit 2

.P..:.ri~~~~j~!,~-~~~---j_ _ _P!2~':_V_!I~.:.~':_3~:!.:'~~--fieiiJ :ll•1~1
:
111•11J:Il•hll
40 EFFERDENT TABLETS 1
24 TYLENOL
Extra strength denture cleanser
EXTRA STRENGTH CAPSULES
REG. $1 .49 89~ With Coupon

7% OZ. BOX '1 00

8 oz. Clairol

REG. $1,85

I
I
I

4

HEADS

____

Stronger against sta ins.

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNERS

With Coupon
.L1m11 1

lll•liJii:n~•

1

lI

SHASTA

Canned Beverages
All FlAVORS
712 OZ. CANS t 100

COUPON

oz.

1

With
Limit Coupon
2

69¢
2
8CT.
PKS.

'1i~!, ~!_dJ!!!'!,~·.:!.."!!~-

1
1

PLASTIC BANDAGES

63e

PRODUCE

With_Coupon
-. Ltmtt 2

-~~~~~~~~!~~~----L-~~~~~~~~~~~~!
80 Curad

8 oz.

Street records and

$1)49

I

l!i•J••:z•u•

AMERICAN CHEESE SLICES

3 ~A~z. 4-9~

GATEWAY BUNS

MEADOW BATH CRYSTALS

1
1

Limit1

GOLDEN ISLE

BAKED BY BETSY ROSS
SANDWICH OR WIENERS

SHULTON WILD

1

39e

LB.

TEEN QUEEN

RECORD ASSORTMENT

+__

$199 With Coupon

89e

t!~z-

MUSTARD

MARGARINE

SWEET

-~~e.!,~•.!!'!.:!!!'!!!':.!~~ - - -

1 books .
l
I!EG . 54 _98
1

Gillette
CRICKET "KEEPER"
REG. $4 .49

59

1

I1

CORNING WARE SET

e With
Coupon
Ltmtl2

,Reg. $1.29

I
I

13-Piece
REG. $69 .95

Safety cushioned ends

PARKAY

HAMBURGER - HOTDOG

- -------------~---------------oz. II:ItiiJ:l•NI
I
COUPON
I
I
170 Q-TIP SWABS

Big Jim's

bombs Bells
by 20-2 score

9 AM TO 6 PM

PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 29 THRU JULY 3

Prices Valid June 30-July 4

of sunset and sunrise. Besides
knowing the laws r•~arding
water skiing there are some
common sense rules that you
should follow in order to keep
your skiing safe, sensible ,
and enjoyable.
Here are a few tips :
- !.£am to use the various
hand signals for skiers.
- On take-offs , wait for a
delinite-signal from the skier
before accerlating.
- stay away from shallow
water, other boats, the shore,
and any objects in the water .
- Return to fallen skiers
irrunediately .
- Turn off your motor
whenever a skier is clirttbing
in or out of the boat.

Rankin picks up $15,000 after Zaharias victory
By GENE CWm·~ '
UPI Sports \hit&lt; r
CHAGRJ:N Fii U..S, Ohio
(UP!) - Judy R ~ nl :in isn't
going to apologiz" for her
closing round of 7 ~ in winning
the $100,000 Babe Za harias
Invitational Golf Classic.
Rankin picked up $15,000
for the win, boosting her
year 's winnings to a·record
$96,830, but she was visibly
disappointed about a double
bogey six on the 17th hole
which nearly wiped out a
three-shot lead .
" I'd feel pretty good a bout
the day if it hadn 't been for
17," said the 31-yea r-old

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS -

WoHe twirls
his sixth win

POTATO BUDS

DETERGENT
W/C

GIANT BOX

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

$}19

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway

NO. 705
W/C

.12 OZ. BOX

49~

Expires 7-3-76
Twin _Cities Gateway

BETIY CROCKER

W/C

NO. 1-75
16 OZ. BOX

59~

W/C

Expires 7-3-76
Twin Cities Gateway ·

With Coupon
;, Limit 2·

Prices Volld June JO.July 4

•

'

I

!, • •

• ...

�12-TheDAilySentinel,Mlddleport·POJllerOy,O., Tuesday,Juile29, 1976

,

' ! "" '

' '•

MASON - The Mason John Lewis, William Barton,
United Methodist ChW'Ch Charles Kitchen and Todd,
held liB first father and son Gene
Thomas
and
banquet recently in the chur· Christopher, Bob and lluck
ch social rooms with the 011 ver, Rev. w. F'be
1 r,
United Methodist Women George VanMeter, Ed Perry,
serving as hostesses. Tables Randy RU&amp;!ell and Todd
were decorated in red, white Russell .
and blue in keeping with a
David Smith, Dennis
Bicentennial theme.
Harris, Cecil Smith, Gary
The Rev. Robert Maring, Gregory and John, Alan R.
pastor, was~ charge of the Peaslee, and Roy Harless.
program which consisted of
Ladies helping to serve inshort stories and a medley of • eluded Maxine Arnold .FranSODgll. James Proffitt recited ces Stewart, Vlviar{ Fry,
a poem and closed the . Hazel Smith, Joyce Carson,
program with prayer.
June VanMatre, Murl Megee,
Attending were Landon Lorraine Harless Lilah
Smith, Charles Yeager, Mar· Zerkle
Helen 'sarton
ty Yeager, William (P~k) LaVer~ Yeager, Evely~
Zerkle, Rev. Robert Manng, Maring, Evelyn Proffitt and
Ray and James Proffitt, Catherine Smith.
William Fry, Ru.ssellllarton,

1 ' : •

..

., '
•'I I

-

"

.'

'

Historical society makes
bicentennial parade plans

..

..,

.. .

with the sketch of the Virgil
A. Lewis home had been sold
by her and numerous other
packages have been sold for
$1.25 each by others.
Mrs. Ray Proffitt gave the
society $2 which waa left af·
ter purchasing flowers.
The president reported that
·glaBS had been placed in a
show case and glass was pur·
chased lor several boat pictures.
A
commencement
program dated May 23, 1897
was given by Frances Dyer
to the society. :rhe
graduation waa held at
Waahington Hall in Mason,
and the graduates are Hallnab Ada YoWlg, Elizabeth
Ryan, Grace Paine Tunler,
Elizabeth Kautz, Eliza'beth
Cooper,
Ida
E.
Voegelgesang, Georgia Martine, Cora White, John F.
Dyke.
Participants so far named
for the parade in Mason illelude Mason City Historical
Society,
Mason
Homemakers, Helping Hand,
United Methodist MYF,
Eastern Star, Jo Ann
Taylor's 4-H Club, Mason
VolWlteer Fire Department,
Bob Roush, Business Men's
Association, Baptist Church,
Assembly of God Church,
Earl Lewis horses and
others, Old Car of Raymond
Lieving's, Bliss Wilson,
Darrell Jenks, Mason
deceaaed.
The president reported Ubrary, VFW of Mason.
seven packages of note paper

MASON, W. Va. - The
Mason · City Historical
Society met on Monday, June
28, and discUBSed further
their participation in the
bicentennial
parade .
scheduled for July 3 in
Mason.
A new redwood sign was
displayed which will be osed
on the Historical Society float
and later at the Virgil A.
Lewis home and reads as
follows, Mason City
Historical Society fonned in
1974, donated by Harry
CampbelL
A history and govenunent
of West Virginia by Virgil A.
Lewis was donated to the
society by Millard Gress of
Bellaire, Ohio, fonrierly of
Mason. other items accepted
by the society included a set
of doll dishes belonging to the
late Hattie Reed, and her
daughter, Mrs. Maurice
Lambert of Columbus, 0.
Mrs. Addie Brown gave a
replica of an antique shoe
which served as a flower
planter.
Mrs. Catherine Smith,
· preside~ of the society,
presided at the meeting and
Mrs. Bessie lngeiB presented
the devotionalB.
The president appointed
Mrs. Fred Taylor to be in
charge of the Memorial Book
with names, date of births,
and the dates the persons

...

..'
.'
:

,...,..,

Carter asks mayors t~ reduce wa~te

.
0

Pirst father- son r~_. . ,.,~;;;;;;:,Ra;======: ,:,., ,~~~ .1. elevtston. vtewers to enjoy balle
hela at Church .
·~

~

_

·.\

.

'

.

Polly's Pointers

....
.
'

\
•''

.; !ly Polly Cramer

'·
••

Old brass bed
gets new look

POll.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - It.ave an
old lrass bed that has been
enamelled and I would Uke to
know the best way to remove
this paint and restore the
brass finish . Will paint
remover harm the brass? -

I •

.·•

~ET .

.•
'•
'
..' .'
,•.
••
.•..
..•

..
'

•

DEAR HARRIET - A
bran refiDIJhlDI compuy
told me that any 1ood
commercial paint remover
can be:liaed oa your bed wllh
no Ill. effecta. Follow
dtreclleu carefully. Wheo
it's removed, pollcb wllh a
1ood' bra11 polllb. The ideal
ftdm b to uve tbe bed
pollilled and lacquered
Jll"'lfillooally 10 no further
pollJidag b necessary. POLLY.
DEARconcerns
POLLY those
- My who
Pet
Peeve
"heat and serve"
foods. I do not see why they
do. not Include directions. for
101cro-wave cooking on such
pack&amp;ges. I never know how
long to heat French fries and
they get hard II left in too
long. - VIRGINIA.
DEAR POLLY - I save
toilet soap and at the same
time haVI! an aleays ready
nail lrush by turning thts
brush upelde down on the sink
dish and then placing the
soap bar on the bristles
rather than right In the dish.
No more soapy dishes .to
clean alid a nail brush always
ready to use. - A. D.
DEAR POLLY
and
Beverly- I have been.
making my own diet
margarine for many. a year.
· Buy a soli spread, let It come
to room temperature In your
smallest, deepest mlxlng
bowl. Gradually add me and
a ball to two cups of tepid

pro~

.

..

water as It beats on low·
medium. Experiment a bit. If
bought in a tub, as I buy it,
ere should be two tubs full
hen you flnlsh and, of
course, hal as many calories
in ~ach serving. I lind the
firmer spread does not mix so
well with the water so always
use the soft. II well mixed the
water wlll rarely ever
"wefp" and you have a light,
tasty and always spreadable
mixture that is great for
weight watchers and those
allergic to fats. It was quite
natural that the margarine
company did not want to tell
you of the addition of water,
since one only has to buy half
as much margarine. - MRS.
O.V.D.
Thanks to many many ·

t

M Z'll'Zr01~tS
vz'sz't hel¥o
·

f c;..

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Mill·
iroo of Dayton have spent

several days with their
families, Mrs. Marie Mill·
Iron, Middleport, and
llrownie Vujahllja, Athens
Road.
On Swlday a picnic dinner
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Milliron on
Leading Creek Road. At·
tending were the Marvin
Millirons and 'daughters,
Diane and Tanuny; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Jacobs, Crystal
and Jean, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Milliron,
Dayton; Mrs. Berth!! Rife,
Mrs. Marie Mllllron, Mrs.
Belva Mohler and son, Tony,
Middleport, alld Norman
MIUiron and brother, Melvin
MUIJ;,oo• lor a visit.
,

By Helen and Sue Hottel

0

0

~~:

By GLENNE CURRIE
;~;
;~ UP! Uvely Arta Editor
)IIEW YORK (UP!)
"ILoveaDrunk"
Televls'lon viewers should
n.•ar Helen •nd Sue :
give a lrlel thought to the
My boyfriend is only 17 but he gets drunk every day. He woman behind the legend
had a coke bottle in his locker at school, but il was filled with when they see Rtlllsian-bom
vodk• and coke. He can have all the beer he wants at home, ballerina Natalia Makaroya
"nd he gets booze from his folk's liquor cabinet. They seem Wednesday night (June 30) In
blind to what's happening but my friends and 1 kilow he's darn the Public Broadcasting
near an alcoholic.
System's threehour live
Hesayshecanquitanytimehewants;ldon'lthinkso.
broadcast of "Swan Lake."
I've told him I'll break up with him if he doesn 't stop. He
"SwanLake" is the third in
thinksl'mkidding.Heknowshowmuch!lovehim.
the "Live from Lincoln
What can 1 do ?_ CAN'T STAND IT
Center" series inaugurated in
January .by New York's
WNET. The broadcast of the
De•r CSI :
Give this fellow a chance to prove he can quit any time he
wants to : tell him - and mean it - that y,ou won't date a lush.
If losing you isn't a strong enoUgh incentive, he may be
candidate for Alcoholics Anonymous, but h!&lt;'ll have to find that
out fm· himself. No ooe can make him stop drinking against his
will. - SUE
FUNNY BUSINESS

American Ballet Tbeatre
production of the ballet, from
the New York State Tbeater
at LinColn Center, will be
seen on PBS stations acrou
the country (8-11 p.m.
Eastern time). At least 44
.stations wtll provide lllereo
110~ In cooperation with
local ~adlo stations.
What viewers wtll see II a
slim girl with a big smile,
dancing first the Swan Queen,
Odette, and then the evU
Odlle, daughter of · the
magician who bewitched
Odette. They will see the

++ +

OOt StR ... 'I. H.~UE. IJOTH 111.10
A0AJ~ST 8EIN~ TRANSFeRf&lt;ED
TO A~TtiER OFFICE . . .
·

Dear CSI:
But his parents could at least make a strong case for
sobriety, ilthey knew what was happening.
Surely they aren',t so blind that they wouldn't recognize the
syri!ptoms 1and COWlt the empty bottles and cans) if someone
alerted them to their son's problems. Why not ask an adult
'friend to help? - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm an 18-year-old with two wonderful parents, two
Wlderstanding brothers, great friends, a fantastic job, and I
know what to expect in thefuture. l'm npt at all confused.
Problem ? I don't have one. I'm writing to explain why I'm
so sure of myself, even though I was born Into a so~alled
confused world.
I had the right people to see me !hrough! My family and
friends were there during the rough times. They listened and
sawmy needs.! was loved and wanted. My parents ut\derstood
the little quirks in my actions, the silent monenls as well •s the
limes I'm super talkative.
I'm writing to tell parents new and old that all it takes is
love, understanding, guidance and ,good examples. Please sign
my nickname so the important people will recognize - "THE
DOCKTER"
JJ

JLJUJJJbd.®dd.&amp;J ::.~

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday nig~t at the
hall. Practice lot inspection
to be held.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Kelly
Grueser with Mrs. Stacey
Arnold as the assisting
hosteBS.
PAST COMMANDERS and
Trustees of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
hall for a dlnner meeting.
WE;UEND Meeting at
Ash St. Free Will Baptist
Church, Middleport, begins
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. with
Paul Taylor from Utah as
evangelist. Public Invited.

a
;
""
~

"
•
;;

Church women
hold meeting
MASON, W. Va. - The
monthly meeting of the
Mason United Methodist
Women waa held recently at
the church. Mrs. Catherine
Smith O~Jened the meeting
with prayer.
Mrs. June VanMatre was
in charge of the program,
"The World We Uve In."
Using scripture from Mat·
thew she emphasized the
place of the church in the
world today. The group
discussed serving the lather
and son banquet, the wedding
reception of SUBan Leper,
and a Fourth of July church
program.
Refreslunents were served
to Joyce Earsoo, Mildred
Riley, Helen Barton, Lois
Test, LaVera Yeager, Fran·
ces Stewart, Maxine Arnold,
Lilah Zerkle, Catherine
Smith, JWle VanMatre and
Stella Chattin.

Racine Social Events

·By Mrs. Fraocb MorriB
Nine members of the
Booster Claas of First Baptist
ChW'Ch enjoyed a .picnic dinner at~:30p. m. Friday, June
18, at the home of Mrs. Mar·
jorie Grimm. A program by
Mrs. Dorothy Badgley
followed Qpening with group
singing "Make Me a
Blessing". Scripture waa
Proverbs 27:17-28 and
prayer. "Question Scroll for
King Solomon". Questions by
members and answered by
Mrs. Grimm after which a
dialog, "Tis More Blessed to
Give Than to Receive" by
Helen Simpson and Vera
THURSDAY
Beegle. Song, "America". In
the business session a
EVANGELINE CHAP·
DINNER ATIENiJED
donation was made to the
TER, O.E.S. 7:30 Thursday,
RACINE - Attending building flliU\ and alBo to the
Middleport Masonic Temple. . dinner at the home of Frank Walter Cleland Memorial
hi'JVJVAL at the Highland and Cora Wallace, Rt. 2, fund. Prayer by Mrs. Grimm
Chapel Church, Route . 7 by- Racine, Sunday were Mrs. closed the meeting. A silent
pass, 8 nightly beginning · Joyce Birch, and Randy auction followed.
·
Thursday . Evangelist Birch, both of Waterford;
Mr. James Autherson was
Lawrence Manley with George and Paula Roe, Joy taken to Veterans Memorial
special singing. Pastor is the and Diana, Beverly; Walker Hospital by the emergency
Rev. Gellrge Casto.
and Carla Edmlnston, and squad.
Dawn, Akron; Gladys and
Mrs. George Taylor enHlirlow Swink; Brady Lake; tered Vete'rans Memorial
Bill and Edith Hoppess, and Hospital Sunday. Her son,
readen 'IIIIo sent Ia this same granddaughters, Linda and Mr. Lewis Talbott of Danmethod tbt they all seemed Terry, Plloenill, Ariz.; 000 ville,I1l.cameonSaturdayto
to like.- POLLY.
and Llnds VanLangen, Rick beat her bedside.
DEAR POLLY- To keep and Donnie, Columbus;
Bill Lake of Columbus
cookies from burning on the Clifford and Clara Hill, came after biB grandmother,
tottom, I turn my cookie D11rien, Coon.; • Todd . Mrs. Francis Morris, to take
sheet upside down and bake . Hubbard, Columbyus, Oris her to Columbus to enter
the cookies on the back. '!bey and Mae Hubbard, Syracu8e, MoWll Cannel Eaat H011pill11
are a nice golden brown.
AaronandShlrleySayre, and June21,1976.
.
I would like to paBS on a Slapheilie, Syracuse.
Rev. 'rimothy J. Smith of
beauty tip I have osed for
Columbus was named aa a
years and it works. Fill a
replacement for Howard
kettle three-fourths full of
Shively who has been
water and heat until
REUNION PLANNED
transferred to McArthur,
steaming. Put cleansing
GRAHAM STATION -The Ohio.
cream .on your face and a annual reunion of the late
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker
shower cap over your hair so Leonard and Susan - Jane and family went to Swnas not to loose your set. With Roush family will be held mersvllle, W. Va. June 18 for
a towel make a kind of tent Sunday, July 4 at the Vernon the. wedding of hla son,
around the kettle, lean over Club House located back of Delbert and Norma Woods on
and steam your face for four · Philip Sporn Power Plant. June i9. He returned June 19
or
Thissoft
leaves
Signs will tobetheposled
giving
thefive
skinminutes.
rose petal
and directions
area. Dinner
the pores thoroughly will be served at 12:30 p.m.
cleansed. - ANOTHER
POLLY .

·

after the wedding. '!'heir
daughter and son-in-law from
Alabama returned home with
themtospenda week.
Rev, Don Walker has been
conducting a revival service
at Southern Local football
lieldJWle 21 throughJWle28.
Racine Fi1'st Baptist Church had its Bible School JWle 7
through ~une !8 with its
closing program on JWle 20.
There was an average of 83
students for the two weeks.
Money collected during Bible
School was donated to the
building fWld.

"Swan Lake."
Natalia Matlarova
born In
danced with
Kirov Ballet in
1959 until she defeiCted
Imdm in 1970. Sbe
married to a film director\
but divorced him belare
defection. Sbe has been
ABT since 1t70,
appearing u guest art1at
other companies, notabl~f
Britain's Royal Ballet.
She has )leen BIIIICial:eil
,,
with "Swan Lake" me
another ever since joining
Kirov school.
1
"For gracluation I dancec!
Odette," she IBid. ''Then 111 ·
my first year In theater afteq
school I was in ccrpe for
'Swan Lake,' then [ waa one
of four swans, then the pas de·· •
trois. My first Odette waa ln. · ··"
1964. l danced mly Odette
and other girl danced Odlle. !· ·" •
was Vl!ry young and · lesa. ' ··•
confident and I wu
concentrating on lyric
dancing, not so much thej ·
vlrtuoeo. Now I do boj

rr~·"'·.

~

--~*

t f&lt;i!• '

-~·... ·

:

-~·

..

'\&gt;.&lt;

-·-l" ,,.,.-·'f"' 'i'~ ..;'-~~·:":.-,; • ·

~

In an urban policy
statement to the U.S.
Conference of Mayors, the
Democratic presidential
hopeful said cities were
"America's No. 1 ecootmlc
problem" and pledged to
work wilh mayors "just as
Franklin Roo11evelt worked to
meet the problema of the
rural South in the 19308."
"The first thing we need is
jobs, a job for every
American who wants one,"
Carter said, citing statistics
indicating an average
unemployment rate of 9.6 per
cent in the Inner cities, and 40
per cent among black teenagers.
"Like some of you, I
remember the Impact of the

and the services to the pe(lple
who need them and not Just to
the communltes that happen
to be most tlkilled In the art of
Initiatives are called for grantsmanship," he said.
today -but with stress on "Public emplQyment muat be
urban, rather than rural, meaningful and productive ln
work projects, and with meeting the most urgent
maximum possible local needs of the community."
He called lor • program o!
control over those projects,"
"counter-cytUcal" federal
Carter said.
l;lut the lonner Georgia assistance to break 1
governor warned "federal "vicious cycle'' of heavy
taJ: funds should not fund
property taxes in the areas
local waste."
"We must get the mooey w~{~ ::ub~lcg!~la~~

CCC (Civilian Conservation

Corps) and WPA (Work Projects Administration) in the
193CIB and I think slmllar

does not yet realize that what
we confront Ia not jua New
York City's fiscal crilla but a
national Jll"'blem," he A.ld.
carter on a week-long,
eight-citY lunaralslng sweep,
hopes to ralae well over
$500,000 to wipe out campaign
debts and build all apense
fund for nell month's
Der.1ocratlc National

't

-i

..

. NAIROBI, Kennya (UP!)'
- Palestinian guerrillas
today demanded !he release
of 53 prlaoners held in a
number of countries In
exchange lor a hijacked
French alrllrier and 257
hostages they hold at
gunpoint at Uganda's
International Entebbe
airport.

Radio Uganda broadcast
the demands and said the
guerrillas set a deadline of 8
a.m. EDT Thursday lor tbe

achange.
The radio said President
ldi Amin personally handed
th~ demands to French
Foreign Mlnstry officiaiB 111
hj8 ccmmand post residence.
The demand listed 40
names of pro-Palestinian
prisoners held ln Israel, silt in
West · Germany, five In
Kenya, me in Switzerland
_and one in France.

MorF than 80 of the
hostages held at Entebbe
airport are reported to be
Israeli. , ·
Most of the names were
Arabic, though some of those
detained In Germany
sounded 'Gennan.
The ddeurnent handed over
by Amln ln Kampala also
listed
several
other
.demands:
-All tile prisoners must be
brought ,!&lt;! Entebbe .lor the
a change.
-Air - France . must
trans)iQrt:those held in Israel
on all' aircraft carrying only
the priBoners and the crew.
-Other countries must
transport:' their prisoners to
Entebl)e by their own means.
-Hash! Abdullah, the Somalia ·ambassador in
Kampala; will represent the
Popular Front for the
Uberatiiln of Palestine In

negotiations with the French
government. The hijackers
say they are members of the
PFLP.
-France must name a
re()resentative to the negotla·
lions and. the name of this
person should be telegraphed
immediately to the Uganda
government.
The hijackers did not say
what they would do II their
demands or deadline were
not met.
'
They threatened Monday to
blow up the aircraft with
everyone on board if
Ugandan security troops
approached it. But later they
allowed all aboard the
aircraft - a Europeanmade jet airbus
to leave the stifling
hot plane and enter .the
airport terminal building
where they fed and remained
Wlder close guard.

·Broadcasting firm to spend $1 million
· CLEVELA:ND ( UPl) Malrlte Broadcasting Co. will
Invest about $1 million in ·new
studios and a corporate head·
quarters· in the ~ty's Plaza
Hotel-Plaza Office Tower
comPia, Maltrlte President
Milton Maltz announced
Monday.
· Malrlte operates ten radio
stations, lnclijdlng WHK·AM
and WMMS-FM In Cleveland.

.

,,
..
The company's president
facilities are located about
four miles east of the
· downtown area.
·
Plans call for a new
"concert" studio, an
advanced inter n a I
communlcatiQns system and
a computerized operations
center for research, traffic,
bookkeeping, payroll and
engineering.
~

Other Malrlte stations are
· located
in
Detroit,
Milwaukee, Minneapolis-st.
Paul, and Rochester, N.Y.
The firm is currently
negotiating to purchaae its
first television stations, Maltz
added.
WHK, the flagship station,
began operations July 26,
1921, as the first station in the
state of Ohio and filth in the
nation.

New debate on
busing begins ·

By' mERYL ARVIDSON ' occupied Seqate debate lor
WASIUNGTON (UPI) - seven days.
'!be Senate faces another·
tntimately, the chamber
potential fight over school agreed to an amendment by
busing for desegregation as it assistant Democratic leader
considers legislation funding Robert Byrd forbidding HEW
two big government agepcles to order schools to bus
for the coming fiscal year. stuqents beyond their
The busing debate set to neighborhoods for racial
start today when the Senate purposes.
resumed consideration of a
'!be Byrd amendment did
Radio Uganda broadcast blll providing $57.1 billion to not affect courto()rdered
the demands followed runthedepartmentso!Labor '·busing, which constitutes
protracted negotiations and Health, Education and · moat busing c~es.
conducted by President Welfare . An antibusing
On Monday, the Senate
Amin, French AmbaBSador amendment by Sen. Jesse refused to go along with a
R-N.C .,
was House -passed provision
Pierre Renard and other. Helms,
officials.
established as the first order prohibiting use of federal
Air France officials in of business.
funds to finance abortions for
Paris said they understood
Helms' amendment would Indigent women.
the guerrillas, believed to prohibit HEW from'uslng any . '!be Senate approVI!d, 57'to
number four or five, were money in the bill to require 28, an amendment by Sen.
armed with hand grenades school districts as a Robert Packwood, R.Qre.,
and submachine guns.
condition of recelvb,g federal striking .the House-passed
They said. the hostages aid to classify students or antiabortion language from
Included nine Americans, teaclters by ·race.
the legislation. Last wee~. the
three Canadians, five new
It aiBo would block HEW House voted 'JJYI to 167 to
Zealanders, one Argentinian, attempts to assign teachers lorblduseofanymoneyinthe
15 French, several Britons, · or students to schools claBSes bill to finance abortions, even
Greeks, Cypriots, one or courses for reaso~ of race to save the mother's life.
Japanese and more than 80 · or national origin or Ioree
"It doesn't prohibit
Israelis.
school districts to prepare or abortions, It prohibits
maintain any records files aborti&lt;*IB for poor people.
WALTNER RETIRES
reports , or
statl:stic~ The ~.lch will still have
COLUMBUS (UP!) - After pertaining to the race or them, Packwood said.
28 years on the staff, Dr. national origin of teachers or
"We're not going to stop
Ch a r I e s
Wa I t n e r , students.
abortions by paBSing thlB
sUperintendent of the
Helms offered a . similar (House amendment), we're
Woodside Receiving Hospital amendment to last year's going to put them back into
at Youngstown, will retire appropriation bills but the the butcher shope, the back
Thursday, it was annoWlced Senate rejected It as too room and the coat hanger
here.
· broad. However,
the abortionists."
Wa I t n e r
w a s antibusing arguments· 'lboae favoring the House
superintendent the past 18 generated by . various language said taxpayers'
years.
alternative ·' proposals money should not be~ to
He joined the staff of
·
finance abortions since many
Woodside Receiving
find
them
morally
Hospital, then Youngstown
objectionable.
Receiving Hospital, in 1941 liS
"You're subsidizing with
a staff physician.
pubUc money something that
In 1951 he became clinical
other people morally object
director and assistant
OURS IN HOSPITAL
to," said Sen. Jolln Pastore,
superintendent at Oeveland
Warden Ours, Meigs Coun· D-R.I. "The American public
State Hospital, and returned ty commissioner, waa ad· is split down the middle on
to Woodside in 1958 as . mitted to Veterans Memorial thiB.
superintendent and medical Hospital Monday where he · "Don't split them more and
director.
will undergo surgery.
keep public fWlds out of it,"

Pregnant Washoe the chimp may surprise ·lots
"

•

. '

baby. ~
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI) Researchers at the
Washoe Is the first University of Oklahoma's
cblmpanzee to use American Institute of Primate Studies
sign
language
to , wtll be watching to see II she
communicate with human . teaches the sign language to
beings. Now researchers her offspring.
liope s1u1 wt11 dit!pel a. widely
Dr. Roger Fouts, associate
held IIeBei tbllt mly humans • professor))! (lsychology at the
cin tramirili language skills university, has spent
from
generation
to considerable time teaching
generatim.
sign language to the
At the age of ll, Washoe is expectant chimp and other
about to have her first . primates.,~

By JOHN D. THOMPSON

Although more' than a
dozen chimpe haVI! had some
sign language training in
recent years, Washoe
probably has the largest
vocabulary, Fouts said . some 200 .,.ords, from which
she can string together
phrases to express emotions,
·thoughts and wants.
She also has created noVI!l
terms for items for which she
has no sign, such as a Brazil
nut, which she calls a "rock

berry," or a swan, which she
refers to as a ''water bird."
Fouts said baby chlmpe
raised by humana have been
known to use sign language
by their third or fourth
month, just as deaf human
babies may make signs by
their fifth month of life.
Washoe's · baby probably
will take longer to make signs
- if, ind~, it learns the
language - because it will be
raised by Its natural mother

and signing is a Second
language to chimpa, Fouts
said.
"They don't use It nearly as
often as their natural form of
communication," be said.
But the professor is
coofldent Washoe will teach
her baby the sign language
and give it the. ability to
communicate with humans.
"I think lhat the b!Jby will
learn it because chlmpe learn
tool making and tool uae from

0 -peop l e

f

'

their mothers," he said.
Washoe has been acting
"VI!ry typically pregnant,'' ;
Fouts said. She has had
morning sickness and some
'daysshemoVI!s a Utile slower
than uaual.
• Washoe apparently koows
she ill pregnant. She often
points to her stomach and
gives the sign for uby- that
Is, she cradles her arms and
rocks them gently.

Cmvention in New Yon.
Morris o-, Carter's chla
fundrailer, told ft901"1el'l in
Atlanta Carter II wl11q to
apeak at fllldralaln&amp; eVI!nta
. for former compelltori,
particularly Rep. Morrie
Udall, l).Af4.. whun Dees.
aaya haa the laraut
campelp debt.

r-------------------,I

Guenillas demand prisoners let go

Makarova was married
again
Feb.
22,
to
businessman Edward
Karkar, and they haVI! hlllles. · . ' ln San Franclaco and London .
- though she hasn't been
back to San FranciSco since
the wedding.
"I don't know when l wtll go
back," she ~d. "Flnt there
Is the season at the New York
State '!beater. I finish 21St of
July. Mter that a lot of wori.
Maybe I could manage a
vacation second half of
. September, 'but I'm not sure .... ,
about that."
What does she do in what·
little spare time she hal?.
"I read a lot. Unfortunately
I pnly read Russian. I don't
read Englilh wt1l and It's so
difficult using dictionary all
,,
the time. But I should try. I'
lllte the movies very much.
And I just put tape recorder, I
and listen to music." .

....

t

BURRO RACING THE HARD WAY 11 more of a workout for Joe Glavinick of Leadville,
Colo., tba11 lor bls trusty sleed, Ringo. Already five-time winners, they're in lralning for
tbe Z8th aanual running of lbe World's Championship Pack Burro Race in which par·
·licipants may walk, run or carry·burros bul not ride. Glavinick pushed Ringo across the
finlob line lor.lait year's victory. The July 25 race in Fairplay, Colo., is a fealured event of
Colorado's·Suntennlal Summer.

roles."

'

.

,~...,.

~F&amp;~it:&gt;" .
~!_/'': ..... ~

CENTER TO Q.OSE ·
The Meigs Community
Mental Health Center will be
closed Monday, July 5.

Couple charged in slaying .

of 8-year old Karen Kollar
'
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Dallas Stuckey, 19, IJ\d Guy
Freluneyer, 18, have been charged with aggravated mlll'der in the torture slaying of eight-year-old Karen Kollar at
an abandoned llrewery during the weekend.
David Zytowieckl, 21, was charged with obatructlng ju1o
lice and his wife Susan, 16, allo waa held in the call.
'!be girl was tied up in the brewery, throiin from Ill '
third floor onto a cimopy oVI!r nearby railroad tracka and
then dumped to the tracks, where she was uttered, police
said, Wltll she died.
The charges were !Ued Monday by Pollee Prosecutor
Almeta Jollnaon but Allllatant CU)'Jiboga County
Proaecutor Mlcuel Caine .wu apected to lieek grand
jury indictments in the c- as well.
The three men were Scheduled for a preliminary
hearing today before Municipal Judge Theodore
Williams.
Funeral services lor Karen wlU be at 1 p.in. 'Wtdnellday
at the Schoff Funeral Home In Madera, Pa;, from where ·
her family moved to Oeveland seven years ago. '
Neighborhood residents over the weeki!nd collected
more than $700 to help the Kollara pay for the ~ral.

Withholding rate
same on Thursday
WASIUNGTON (UPI) The Senate hail taken the first
step to ensure that no OJie's
lncome tax withholding rates
rlae Thur~y .
If the House .aclil quickly
as expected, the curren!
lower rates wlU remain ln
effect at least through Sept. I
while the Senate continues to
struggle with a maaslve tax
revision blll.
The Senate took tlie action
almost nonchalantly by voice
vote Monday evening, shortly
after a group of tax "relor·
mers" won one of their rare
victories by convincing the
Senate to leave intact a
provision lowering the max·
lmum tax rate on unearned
income such as dividendi
from 70 per cent ttl 50 per
cent.
•
IIY voting to extend

wlihholdlng rates, the Senate
formally lldmowledged whit
had' become obvl0111 1110t1
than a week ago: the l,u&amp;.
·pege tu revision bW cannot
poaaibly ba Cllllpleted before
Cmgresilleavee thb weekend
lor Ita two-week holiday
covering the July 4 weekend
and the Democratic national
convenUon July 12-ID.
The withholding e:llllllion
wu atlarJ!ed to a minor
HoUBejlaaled bW.
Finance Committee
chairman RUIIIell Img, 1).
La., suggested the ratee be
extended to Aug. 18. But
Rep11bllcana noted that was
the date the Republican
political convention start•
and inslJted on Sept. I.
The "temporary"
receaalein.ftghtfna tu ct1t1
Congress approved last year
nplre Thursday. It Ia
assumed the eventual tax
CHARGES Fn.ED
revillon bill wt11 make
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
tax cuts perm8nent.
Charges of manufacturing
'!be Senate action on tax
and selllng destructive cuts over1hadowed the
devices were to be filed today atru(lllle o\'el' the muimum
ln federal court against Steve tax, willch took up most of the
Rupert, 22, Luna' Pier, Mich., Sellfte's time Monday.
according to Ohio Attmtey · Tfle victory for the
General Wllllam J. llrown. "reform" group melna aEach charge carries a with large amounts of
maximum penalty of a interest, dividends, renta and
'10,000 fine and 10 years in other "unearned" Income
prison. Brown said the arreat wtll have til continue paying a
here last Tuesday follows mu:Imum tu rate of 70 per
several
weeks
of cent.
•
Investigation and involves
The victory for the
sales to an Wldercover agent "reform" group li1MIIIIhOM
from the Bureau of Criminal with large amounts of
Identification.
Interest, dividends, renll and
Brown said Rupert would other "unearned" Income
be arralgntid In federal court wtll have til continue paying a
and evidence would allo he mu:lmum taJ: rate of 70 per
presented..to a Lucas County cent.
.grand jury.

u-

Watch For Our

SUMMER

CLOSED JULY 5TH

1776-1976

•

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

a.EARANCE

SALE
'

Celebrate With Your
Family- Plan A Picnic! I

.-...

,i .. ••

heritage house

i

~

;

'

JELL0.............................5

pkg . .

A. Stllnleu ltHI, Blltk
Cllf S1rip. ' " ·

PHEBE'S STORE

I.Goldtonlifiniih-.Rolilif Urlk

June 29.Juty 3
Rlght Reserved to Ll mit Quantities'
Wo Glodly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
, 9:00to7:00
Soto.rd1oy 9 to''9

band. $110. ·

C. Trapezoid d"l111 .

HOOVER CLEANERS

$ssoo·

We have them. The exciting, new quartz digilats from
Butova. Advanced technology watches that tell the hour
minute, second, month and date. Self-sot lor months of '
28, 30 and 31 days.
With automatic sensors that adjust numeral brightness
lor easy reading, day or night , .. simplified one-button

ORANGE DRINK .....~~~:... 79e

ANY AMOUNT
"

&amp;ge
FROSTING ..................~~.~...
BETTY CROCKER ALL 'FLAVORS

COKE-16 oz.

ARMOUR'S

PRODU CE BUYS

LARGE. SIZE

oz. 79~

.BEEF STEW.............. ~:~.·~....
-

keep readouts sharp and clear:
We havelhem In .all the dynamic, new styles. Fine jewelry
fashions, capable of accuracy to within a mlnule a year.
From $99 to $180.
Try one on today.

'24

BES·PAK

TRASH BAGS...........~~- ...
pkg.

CELERY ,
OR

OUARTZ WATCHES

LETTUCE

GOESSLER'S
· JEWELRY STORE .

. POMEROY

GROUND BEEF

BROUGHTON'S

lb.79~

14o•.

setting controls ... scratch resistant mineral crystals that

COURT ST.

Our Good USDA Choice Beef

301.$1

St1lnteu steer. J175.

BUDGErSHOP

FOR YOUR JULY OUTING

ASSORTED FLAVORS

-

Middleport, 0.

GOOD BUY
FROM .BAKER'S

ONLY

"Were many problems,
,plus nerves
and
responsibilities. I much
preferred second performance. I could be myself."
·ABT's new production of
the classic full-evening
"Sleeping Beauty," at a cost
of nearly S500,000, was one of
the big eVI!nts of the ballet
season, !llld Makarova was
chosen as the June 15 opening
night Princess Aurora. The
critics loved her. But the
schedule of morning practice,
afternoon rehearsals and
evening P.erlormances combined with the inevitable
mishaps, delays and nervous·
ness accompanying a new
production - took their tOll.
Her schedule for that week
was horrifying: Sunday morning practice, rehearsing
"Sleeping Beauty" 1 p.m. to
midnight; Monday
morning practice, rehearsing
1-lip.m.; Tuesday-morning
practice, evening opening·
performance 8:30 p.m. to
midnight; Wednesday morning practice, rebearsals
In afternoon; Thursday morning practice, evening
another performance of
"Sleeping Beauty;" Friday
morning practice,
afternoon rehearsal of
Jerome Robbins' "Other
Dances" with Mikhail

waste.''

HOSPITA!JZED
Penny Sue Landers Is a
paUent at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Her room number Is
132 lor those who wish to send
cards.

ANOTHER

Potluck enjoyed

MILWAUKEE (UPI) Jimmy Carter told the
nation's mayors today.
American cities need New
Deal type programs but
warned federal money
"should not fund local

=....

BAND MEETING
Southern
Local
Elementary School Band will
meet this evening from 6 to 7
p.m. at the high school.

llfll••••••••••••••••..

ANNIVERSARY NEAR
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy
Ralrden of Long Bottom will
be observing their 62nd
Members of the Middleport wedding anniversary '!bursFirst Baptist Church Busy day. Friends are encouraged
Bee Class met on the patio of tO send them carda.
the home.of Mrs. Rosemary
Lyons for a potluck supper
RECUPERATING ·
Thursday night.
Robert
Lewis,
Sr.,
Attending Wl!re Mrs. Pearl Middleport, 1B recuperating
Hoffman·, Mrs. · Gwinnle !tom a heart attack at hla
White, Mrs. Leora Sigman, home folloWing a stay ·at the
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Lettie Roush, Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs. Julia
Grimm, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, Mrs. Louise
GUTHRIE ILL
Thompson, Mrs. FreQ&amp; Ed·
POINT
· PLEASANT +
wards, Mrs. Lillian
Demoakey1 Mrs. Betty Denny Robert Guthrie entered the
and son, Bonnie, Mrs. Nora Pleasant Valley lbpifal prj
Jordan, John Lyons, Eddie Sunday and remains a
patient there.
Miller,an~Bllly Weaver.

By WILLIAM COTI'ERELL

BaryJlmlkov, folJond by

Interview. On S&amp;turday,
· she and J!lryllbnlkov,
had a IIOI'e ale, bad
cancel ·achedul
performances,
they rarely do.
No wonder ll!le bid
th:(l~ June

right.

++ +

:::::.W.~S'JJ

greatest dancer ol the day
outalde the Soviet Unlm In
one of the moat famous
ballets ol all time: young,
lithe, vibrant.dazzllng.
-They might not recognize
the tiny ahausted W0018D
drenched in sweat, her uir
bedraggled, smoking a ciga·
rette as she laboriously
untied her blocked shoes
afterarehearsal,anoldrobe
covering her faded pink
practice tights.
Makarova looked her 35
years In the unflattering light
of her cluttered dreaalng
room. She ud begged off
posing
for
offstage
photographs but shook her
head when asked II she'd like
to postpone the lntervl&lt;!W.
"I'm just really exhausted
now ... mostly reacUoli," she
said. "Two 'Sleeping
Beautys' in tln"ee days, and
much preparatim. Tuesday
lor the first 'Sleepng Beauty'
I had swollen cheek (from an
Infected tooth) but today all

3 1.00•
FOR

~

. \,

89~

69e
JOY................................. ~.t: .. ..

Buy hak at
: Regular Price...~ Get
1 Coke Glass FREE

---------BROUGHTON'S

DISHWASHING LIQUID
.

•

•-

ICE MILK

2.2 •· ·

HAMBURGER
I Ol~ ,
Size
HELPER................ .- ............... .

:
:

:

gal. '1.19
VALLEY BELL

BUnERMILK

: · % aal. 69•
.......................

FRENCH CITY

DA CHOICE BEEF

RIB STEAK ..:................... ~.~JJ9
HAM DELICACY. .............. ~.'~:.l.59 .
BOLOGNA ............... ~ .....~~ 1.49
CHOPPED HAM ..............~b:.1.59
BOI~ED HAM ..................:·..1..99
FRENCH CITY

TASTEE

·

-

.•

.

FRENCH CITY

FRENCH CITY

·

-

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS
20 ct.

Plcg.

129

�12-TheDAilySentinel,Mlddleport·POJllerOy,O., Tuesday,Juile29, 1976

,

' ! "" '

' '•

MASON - The Mason John Lewis, William Barton,
United Methodist ChW'Ch Charles Kitchen and Todd,
held liB first father and son Gene
Thomas
and
banquet recently in the chur· Christopher, Bob and lluck
ch social rooms with the 011 ver, Rev. w. F'be
1 r,
United Methodist Women George VanMeter, Ed Perry,
serving as hostesses. Tables Randy RU&amp;!ell and Todd
were decorated in red, white Russell .
and blue in keeping with a
David Smith, Dennis
Bicentennial theme.
Harris, Cecil Smith, Gary
The Rev. Robert Maring, Gregory and John, Alan R.
pastor, was~ charge of the Peaslee, and Roy Harless.
program which consisted of
Ladies helping to serve inshort stories and a medley of • eluded Maxine Arnold .FranSODgll. James Proffitt recited ces Stewart, Vlviar{ Fry,
a poem and closed the . Hazel Smith, Joyce Carson,
program with prayer.
June VanMatre, Murl Megee,
Attending were Landon Lorraine Harless Lilah
Smith, Charles Yeager, Mar· Zerkle
Helen 'sarton
ty Yeager, William (P~k) LaVer~ Yeager, Evely~
Zerkle, Rev. Robert Manng, Maring, Evelyn Proffitt and
Ray and James Proffitt, Catherine Smith.
William Fry, Ru.ssellllarton,

1 ' : •

..

., '
•'I I

-

"

.'

'

Historical society makes
bicentennial parade plans

..

..,

.. .

with the sketch of the Virgil
A. Lewis home had been sold
by her and numerous other
packages have been sold for
$1.25 each by others.
Mrs. Ray Proffitt gave the
society $2 which waa left af·
ter purchasing flowers.
The president reported that
·glaBS had been placed in a
show case and glass was pur·
chased lor several boat pictures.
A
commencement
program dated May 23, 1897
was given by Frances Dyer
to the society. :rhe
graduation waa held at
Waahington Hall in Mason,
and the graduates are Hallnab Ada YoWlg, Elizabeth
Ryan, Grace Paine Tunler,
Elizabeth Kautz, Eliza'beth
Cooper,
Ida
E.
Voegelgesang, Georgia Martine, Cora White, John F.
Dyke.
Participants so far named
for the parade in Mason illelude Mason City Historical
Society,
Mason
Homemakers, Helping Hand,
United Methodist MYF,
Eastern Star, Jo Ann
Taylor's 4-H Club, Mason
VolWlteer Fire Department,
Bob Roush, Business Men's
Association, Baptist Church,
Assembly of God Church,
Earl Lewis horses and
others, Old Car of Raymond
Lieving's, Bliss Wilson,
Darrell Jenks, Mason
deceaaed.
The president reported Ubrary, VFW of Mason.
seven packages of note paper

MASON, W. Va. - The
Mason · City Historical
Society met on Monday, June
28, and discUBSed further
their participation in the
bicentennial
parade .
scheduled for July 3 in
Mason.
A new redwood sign was
displayed which will be osed
on the Historical Society float
and later at the Virgil A.
Lewis home and reads as
follows, Mason City
Historical Society fonned in
1974, donated by Harry
CampbelL
A history and govenunent
of West Virginia by Virgil A.
Lewis was donated to the
society by Millard Gress of
Bellaire, Ohio, fonrierly of
Mason. other items accepted
by the society included a set
of doll dishes belonging to the
late Hattie Reed, and her
daughter, Mrs. Maurice
Lambert of Columbus, 0.
Mrs. Addie Brown gave a
replica of an antique shoe
which served as a flower
planter.
Mrs. Catherine Smith,
· preside~ of the society,
presided at the meeting and
Mrs. Bessie lngeiB presented
the devotionalB.
The president appointed
Mrs. Fred Taylor to be in
charge of the Memorial Book
with names, date of births,
and the dates the persons

...

..'
.'
:

,...,..,

Carter asks mayors t~ reduce wa~te

.
0

Pirst father- son r~_. . ,.,~;;;;;;:,Ra;======: ,:,., ,~~~ .1. elevtston. vtewers to enjoy balle
hela at Church .
·~

~

_

·.\

.

'

.

Polly's Pointers

....
.
'

\
•''

.; !ly Polly Cramer

'·
••

Old brass bed
gets new look

POll.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - It.ave an
old lrass bed that has been
enamelled and I would Uke to
know the best way to remove
this paint and restore the
brass finish . Will paint
remover harm the brass? -

I •

.·•

~ET .

.•
'•
'
..' .'
,•.
••
.•..
..•

..
'

•

DEAR HARRIET - A
bran refiDIJhlDI compuy
told me that any 1ood
commercial paint remover
can be:liaed oa your bed wllh
no Ill. effecta. Follow
dtreclleu carefully. Wheo
it's removed, pollcb wllh a
1ood' bra11 polllb. The ideal
ftdm b to uve tbe bed
pollilled and lacquered
Jll"'lfillooally 10 no further
pollJidag b necessary. POLLY.
DEARconcerns
POLLY those
- My who
Pet
Peeve
"heat and serve"
foods. I do not see why they
do. not Include directions. for
101cro-wave cooking on such
pack&amp;ges. I never know how
long to heat French fries and
they get hard II left in too
long. - VIRGINIA.
DEAR POLLY - I save
toilet soap and at the same
time haVI! an aleays ready
nail lrush by turning thts
brush upelde down on the sink
dish and then placing the
soap bar on the bristles
rather than right In the dish.
No more soapy dishes .to
clean alid a nail brush always
ready to use. - A. D.
DEAR POLLY
and
Beverly- I have been.
making my own diet
margarine for many. a year.
· Buy a soli spread, let It come
to room temperature In your
smallest, deepest mlxlng
bowl. Gradually add me and
a ball to two cups of tepid

pro~

.

..

water as It beats on low·
medium. Experiment a bit. If
bought in a tub, as I buy it,
ere should be two tubs full
hen you flnlsh and, of
course, hal as many calories
in ~ach serving. I lind the
firmer spread does not mix so
well with the water so always
use the soft. II well mixed the
water wlll rarely ever
"wefp" and you have a light,
tasty and always spreadable
mixture that is great for
weight watchers and those
allergic to fats. It was quite
natural that the margarine
company did not want to tell
you of the addition of water,
since one only has to buy half
as much margarine. - MRS.
O.V.D.
Thanks to many many ·

t

M Z'll'Zr01~tS
vz'sz't hel¥o
·

f c;..

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Mill·
iroo of Dayton have spent

several days with their
families, Mrs. Marie Mill·
Iron, Middleport, and
llrownie Vujahllja, Athens
Road.
On Swlday a picnic dinner
was held at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Milliron on
Leading Creek Road. At·
tending were the Marvin
Millirons and 'daughters,
Diane and Tanuny; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Jacobs, Crystal
and Jean, Rutland; Mr. and
Mrs. Melvin Milliron,
Dayton; Mrs. Berth!! Rife,
Mrs. Marie Mllllron, Mrs.
Belva Mohler and son, Tony,
Middleport, alld Norman
MIUiron and brother, Melvin
MUIJ;,oo• lor a visit.
,

By Helen and Sue Hottel

0

0

~~:

By GLENNE CURRIE
;~;
;~ UP! Uvely Arta Editor
)IIEW YORK (UP!)
"ILoveaDrunk"
Televls'lon viewers should
n.•ar Helen •nd Sue :
give a lrlel thought to the
My boyfriend is only 17 but he gets drunk every day. He woman behind the legend
had a coke bottle in his locker at school, but il was filled with when they see Rtlllsian-bom
vodk• and coke. He can have all the beer he wants at home, ballerina Natalia Makaroya
"nd he gets booze from his folk's liquor cabinet. They seem Wednesday night (June 30) In
blind to what's happening but my friends and 1 kilow he's darn the Public Broadcasting
near an alcoholic.
System's threehour live
Hesayshecanquitanytimehewants;ldon'lthinkso.
broadcast of "Swan Lake."
I've told him I'll break up with him if he doesn 't stop. He
"SwanLake" is the third in
thinksl'mkidding.Heknowshowmuch!lovehim.
the "Live from Lincoln
What can 1 do ?_ CAN'T STAND IT
Center" series inaugurated in
January .by New York's
WNET. The broadcast of the
De•r CSI :
Give this fellow a chance to prove he can quit any time he
wants to : tell him - and mean it - that y,ou won't date a lush.
If losing you isn't a strong enoUgh incentive, he may be
candidate for Alcoholics Anonymous, but h!&lt;'ll have to find that
out fm· himself. No ooe can make him stop drinking against his
will. - SUE
FUNNY BUSINESS

American Ballet Tbeatre
production of the ballet, from
the New York State Tbeater
at LinColn Center, will be
seen on PBS stations acrou
the country (8-11 p.m.
Eastern time). At least 44
.stations wtll provide lllereo
110~ In cooperation with
local ~adlo stations.
What viewers wtll see II a
slim girl with a big smile,
dancing first the Swan Queen,
Odette, and then the evU
Odlle, daughter of · the
magician who bewitched
Odette. They will see the

++ +

OOt StR ... 'I. H.~UE. IJOTH 111.10
A0AJ~ST 8EIN~ TRANSFeRf&lt;ED
TO A~TtiER OFFICE . . .
·

Dear CSI:
But his parents could at least make a strong case for
sobriety, ilthey knew what was happening.
Surely they aren',t so blind that they wouldn't recognize the
syri!ptoms 1and COWlt the empty bottles and cans) if someone
alerted them to their son's problems. Why not ask an adult
'friend to help? - HELEN
Dear Helen and Sue :
I'm an 18-year-old with two wonderful parents, two
Wlderstanding brothers, great friends, a fantastic job, and I
know what to expect in thefuture. l'm npt at all confused.
Problem ? I don't have one. I'm writing to explain why I'm
so sure of myself, even though I was born Into a so~alled
confused world.
I had the right people to see me !hrough! My family and
friends were there during the rough times. They listened and
sawmy needs.! was loved and wanted. My parents ut\derstood
the little quirks in my actions, the silent monenls as well •s the
limes I'm super talkative.
I'm writing to tell parents new and old that all it takes is
love, understanding, guidance and ,good examples. Please sign
my nickname so the important people will recognize - "THE
DOCKTER"
JJ

JLJUJJJbd.®dd.&amp;J ::.~

Social
Calendar
TUESDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday nig~t at the
hall. Practice lot inspection
to be held.
WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Kelly
Grueser with Mrs. Stacey
Arnold as the assisting
hosteBS.
PAST COMMANDERS and
Trustees of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
hall for a dlnner meeting.
WE;UEND Meeting at
Ash St. Free Will Baptist
Church, Middleport, begins
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. with
Paul Taylor from Utah as
evangelist. Public Invited.

a
;
""
~

"
•
;;

Church women
hold meeting
MASON, W. Va. - The
monthly meeting of the
Mason United Methodist
Women waa held recently at
the church. Mrs. Catherine
Smith O~Jened the meeting
with prayer.
Mrs. June VanMatre was
in charge of the program,
"The World We Uve In."
Using scripture from Mat·
thew she emphasized the
place of the church in the
world today. The group
discussed serving the lather
and son banquet, the wedding
reception of SUBan Leper,
and a Fourth of July church
program.
Refreslunents were served
to Joyce Earsoo, Mildred
Riley, Helen Barton, Lois
Test, LaVera Yeager, Fran·
ces Stewart, Maxine Arnold,
Lilah Zerkle, Catherine
Smith, JWle VanMatre and
Stella Chattin.

Racine Social Events

·By Mrs. Fraocb MorriB
Nine members of the
Booster Claas of First Baptist
ChW'Ch enjoyed a .picnic dinner at~:30p. m. Friday, June
18, at the home of Mrs. Mar·
jorie Grimm. A program by
Mrs. Dorothy Badgley
followed Qpening with group
singing "Make Me a
Blessing". Scripture waa
Proverbs 27:17-28 and
prayer. "Question Scroll for
King Solomon". Questions by
members and answered by
Mrs. Grimm after which a
dialog, "Tis More Blessed to
Give Than to Receive" by
Helen Simpson and Vera
THURSDAY
Beegle. Song, "America". In
the business session a
EVANGELINE CHAP·
DINNER ATIENiJED
donation was made to the
TER, O.E.S. 7:30 Thursday,
RACINE - Attending building flliU\ and alBo to the
Middleport Masonic Temple. . dinner at the home of Frank Walter Cleland Memorial
hi'JVJVAL at the Highland and Cora Wallace, Rt. 2, fund. Prayer by Mrs. Grimm
Chapel Church, Route . 7 by- Racine, Sunday were Mrs. closed the meeting. A silent
pass, 8 nightly beginning · Joyce Birch, and Randy auction followed.
·
Thursday . Evangelist Birch, both of Waterford;
Mr. James Autherson was
Lawrence Manley with George and Paula Roe, Joy taken to Veterans Memorial
special singing. Pastor is the and Diana, Beverly; Walker Hospital by the emergency
Rev. Gellrge Casto.
and Carla Edmlnston, and squad.
Dawn, Akron; Gladys and
Mrs. George Taylor enHlirlow Swink; Brady Lake; tered Vete'rans Memorial
Bill and Edith Hoppess, and Hospital Sunday. Her son,
readen 'IIIIo sent Ia this same granddaughters, Linda and Mr. Lewis Talbott of Danmethod tbt they all seemed Terry, Plloenill, Ariz.; 000 ville,I1l.cameonSaturdayto
to like.- POLLY.
and Llnds VanLangen, Rick beat her bedside.
DEAR POLLY- To keep and Donnie, Columbus;
Bill Lake of Columbus
cookies from burning on the Clifford and Clara Hill, came after biB grandmother,
tottom, I turn my cookie D11rien, Coon.; • Todd . Mrs. Francis Morris, to take
sheet upside down and bake . Hubbard, Columbyus, Oris her to Columbus to enter
the cookies on the back. '!bey and Mae Hubbard, Syracu8e, MoWll Cannel Eaat H011pill11
are a nice golden brown.
AaronandShlrleySayre, and June21,1976.
.
I would like to paBS on a Slapheilie, Syracuse.
Rev. 'rimothy J. Smith of
beauty tip I have osed for
Columbus was named aa a
years and it works. Fill a
replacement for Howard
kettle three-fourths full of
Shively who has been
water and heat until
REUNION PLANNED
transferred to McArthur,
steaming. Put cleansing
GRAHAM STATION -The Ohio.
cream .on your face and a annual reunion of the late
Rev. and Mrs. Don Walker
shower cap over your hair so Leonard and Susan - Jane and family went to Swnas not to loose your set. With Roush family will be held mersvllle, W. Va. June 18 for
a towel make a kind of tent Sunday, July 4 at the Vernon the. wedding of hla son,
around the kettle, lean over Club House located back of Delbert and Norma Woods on
and steam your face for four · Philip Sporn Power Plant. June i9. He returned June 19
or
Thissoft
leaves
Signs will tobetheposled
giving
thefive
skinminutes.
rose petal
and directions
area. Dinner
the pores thoroughly will be served at 12:30 p.m.
cleansed. - ANOTHER
POLLY .

·

after the wedding. '!'heir
daughter and son-in-law from
Alabama returned home with
themtospenda week.
Rev, Don Walker has been
conducting a revival service
at Southern Local football
lieldJWle 21 throughJWle28.
Racine Fi1'st Baptist Church had its Bible School JWle 7
through ~une !8 with its
closing program on JWle 20.
There was an average of 83
students for the two weeks.
Money collected during Bible
School was donated to the
building fWld.

"Swan Lake."
Natalia Matlarova
born In
danced with
Kirov Ballet in
1959 until she defeiCted
Imdm in 1970. Sbe
married to a film director\
but divorced him belare
defection. Sbe has been
ABT since 1t70,
appearing u guest art1at
other companies, notabl~f
Britain's Royal Ballet.
She has )leen BIIIICial:eil
,,
with "Swan Lake" me
another ever since joining
Kirov school.
1
"For gracluation I dancec!
Odette," she IBid. ''Then 111 ·
my first year In theater afteq
school I was in ccrpe for
'Swan Lake,' then [ waa one
of four swans, then the pas de·· •
trois. My first Odette waa ln. · ··"
1964. l danced mly Odette
and other girl danced Odlle. !· ·" •
was Vl!ry young and · lesa. ' ··•
confident and I wu
concentrating on lyric
dancing, not so much thej ·
vlrtuoeo. Now I do boj

rr~·"'·.

~

--~*

t f&lt;i!• '

-~·... ·

:

-~·

..

'\&gt;.&lt;

-·-l" ,,.,.-·'f"' 'i'~ ..;'-~~·:":.-,; • ·

~

In an urban policy
statement to the U.S.
Conference of Mayors, the
Democratic presidential
hopeful said cities were
"America's No. 1 ecootmlc
problem" and pledged to
work wilh mayors "just as
Franklin Roo11evelt worked to
meet the problema of the
rural South in the 19308."
"The first thing we need is
jobs, a job for every
American who wants one,"
Carter said, citing statistics
indicating an average
unemployment rate of 9.6 per
cent in the Inner cities, and 40
per cent among black teenagers.
"Like some of you, I
remember the Impact of the

and the services to the pe(lple
who need them and not Just to
the communltes that happen
to be most tlkilled In the art of
Initiatives are called for grantsmanship," he said.
today -but with stress on "Public emplQyment muat be
urban, rather than rural, meaningful and productive ln
work projects, and with meeting the most urgent
maximum possible local needs of the community."
He called lor • program o!
control over those projects,"
"counter-cytUcal" federal
Carter said.
l;lut the lonner Georgia assistance to break 1
governor warned "federal "vicious cycle'' of heavy
taJ: funds should not fund
property taxes in the areas
local waste."
"We must get the mooey w~{~ ::ub~lcg!~la~~

CCC (Civilian Conservation

Corps) and WPA (Work Projects Administration) in the
193CIB and I think slmllar

does not yet realize that what
we confront Ia not jua New
York City's fiscal crilla but a
national Jll"'blem," he A.ld.
carter on a week-long,
eight-citY lunaralslng sweep,
hopes to ralae well over
$500,000 to wipe out campaign
debts and build all apense
fund for nell month's
Der.1ocratlc National

't

-i

..

. NAIROBI, Kennya (UP!)'
- Palestinian guerrillas
today demanded !he release
of 53 prlaoners held in a
number of countries In
exchange lor a hijacked
French alrllrier and 257
hostages they hold at
gunpoint at Uganda's
International Entebbe
airport.

Radio Uganda broadcast
the demands and said the
guerrillas set a deadline of 8
a.m. EDT Thursday lor tbe

achange.
The radio said President
ldi Amin personally handed
th~ demands to French
Foreign Mlnstry officiaiB 111
hj8 ccmmand post residence.
The demand listed 40
names of pro-Palestinian
prisoners held ln Israel, silt in
West · Germany, five In
Kenya, me in Switzerland
_and one in France.

MorF than 80 of the
hostages held at Entebbe
airport are reported to be
Israeli. , ·
Most of the names were
Arabic, though some of those
detained In Germany
sounded 'Gennan.
The ddeurnent handed over
by Amln ln Kampala also
listed
several
other
.demands:
-All tile prisoners must be
brought ,!&lt;! Entebbe .lor the
a change.
-Air - France . must
trans)iQrt:those held in Israel
on all' aircraft carrying only
the priBoners and the crew.
-Other countries must
transport:' their prisoners to
Entebl)e by their own means.
-Hash! Abdullah, the Somalia ·ambassador in
Kampala; will represent the
Popular Front for the
Uberatiiln of Palestine In

negotiations with the French
government. The hijackers
say they are members of the
PFLP.
-France must name a
re()resentative to the negotla·
lions and. the name of this
person should be telegraphed
immediately to the Uganda
government.
The hijackers did not say
what they would do II their
demands or deadline were
not met.
'
They threatened Monday to
blow up the aircraft with
everyone on board if
Ugandan security troops
approached it. But later they
allowed all aboard the
aircraft - a Europeanmade jet airbus
to leave the stifling
hot plane and enter .the
airport terminal building
where they fed and remained
Wlder close guard.

·Broadcasting firm to spend $1 million
· CLEVELA:ND ( UPl) Malrlte Broadcasting Co. will
Invest about $1 million in ·new
studios and a corporate head·
quarters· in the ~ty's Plaza
Hotel-Plaza Office Tower
comPia, Maltrlte President
Milton Maltz announced
Monday.
· Malrlte operates ten radio
stations, lnclijdlng WHK·AM
and WMMS-FM In Cleveland.

.

,,
..
The company's president
facilities are located about
four miles east of the
· downtown area.
·
Plans call for a new
"concert" studio, an
advanced inter n a I
communlcatiQns system and
a computerized operations
center for research, traffic,
bookkeeping, payroll and
engineering.
~

Other Malrlte stations are
· located
in
Detroit,
Milwaukee, Minneapolis-st.
Paul, and Rochester, N.Y.
The firm is currently
negotiating to purchaae its
first television stations, Maltz
added.
WHK, the flagship station,
began operations July 26,
1921, as the first station in the
state of Ohio and filth in the
nation.

New debate on
busing begins ·

By' mERYL ARVIDSON ' occupied Seqate debate lor
WASIUNGTON (UPI) - seven days.
'!be Senate faces another·
tntimately, the chamber
potential fight over school agreed to an amendment by
busing for desegregation as it assistant Democratic leader
considers legislation funding Robert Byrd forbidding HEW
two big government agepcles to order schools to bus
for the coming fiscal year. stuqents beyond their
The busing debate set to neighborhoods for racial
start today when the Senate purposes.
resumed consideration of a
'!be Byrd amendment did
Radio Uganda broadcast blll providing $57.1 billion to not affect courto()rdered
the demands followed runthedepartmentso!Labor '·busing, which constitutes
protracted negotiations and Health, Education and · moat busing c~es.
conducted by President Welfare . An antibusing
On Monday, the Senate
Amin, French AmbaBSador amendment by Sen. Jesse refused to go along with a
R-N.C .,
was House -passed provision
Pierre Renard and other. Helms,
officials.
established as the first order prohibiting use of federal
Air France officials in of business.
funds to finance abortions for
Paris said they understood
Helms' amendment would Indigent women.
the guerrillas, believed to prohibit HEW from'uslng any . '!be Senate approVI!d, 57'to
number four or five, were money in the bill to require 28, an amendment by Sen.
armed with hand grenades school districts as a Robert Packwood, R.Qre.,
and submachine guns.
condition of recelvb,g federal striking .the House-passed
They said. the hostages aid to classify students or antiabortion language from
Included nine Americans, teaclters by ·race.
the legislation. Last wee~. the
three Canadians, five new
It aiBo would block HEW House voted 'JJYI to 167 to
Zealanders, one Argentinian, attempts to assign teachers lorblduseofanymoneyinthe
15 French, several Britons, · or students to schools claBSes bill to finance abortions, even
Greeks, Cypriots, one or courses for reaso~ of race to save the mother's life.
Japanese and more than 80 · or national origin or Ioree
"It doesn't prohibit
Israelis.
school districts to prepare or abortions, It prohibits
maintain any records files aborti&lt;*IB for poor people.
WALTNER RETIRES
reports , or
statl:stic~ The ~.lch will still have
COLUMBUS (UP!) - After pertaining to the race or them, Packwood said.
28 years on the staff, Dr. national origin of teachers or
"We're not going to stop
Ch a r I e s
Wa I t n e r , students.
abortions by paBSing thlB
sUperintendent of the
Helms offered a . similar (House amendment), we're
Woodside Receiving Hospital amendment to last year's going to put them back into
at Youngstown, will retire appropriation bills but the the butcher shope, the back
Thursday, it was annoWlced Senate rejected It as too room and the coat hanger
here.
· broad. However,
the abortionists."
Wa I t n e r
w a s antibusing arguments· 'lboae favoring the House
superintendent the past 18 generated by . various language said taxpayers'
years.
alternative ·' proposals money should not be~ to
He joined the staff of
·
finance abortions since many
Woodside Receiving
find
them
morally
Hospital, then Youngstown
objectionable.
Receiving Hospital, in 1941 liS
"You're subsidizing with
a staff physician.
pubUc money something that
In 1951 he became clinical
other people morally object
director and assistant
OURS IN HOSPITAL
to," said Sen. Jolln Pastore,
superintendent at Oeveland
Warden Ours, Meigs Coun· D-R.I. "The American public
State Hospital, and returned ty commissioner, waa ad· is split down the middle on
to Woodside in 1958 as . mitted to Veterans Memorial thiB.
superintendent and medical Hospital Monday where he · "Don't split them more and
director.
will undergo surgery.
keep public fWlds out of it,"

Pregnant Washoe the chimp may surprise ·lots
"

•

. '

baby. ~
NORMAN, Okla. (UPI) Researchers at the
Washoe Is the first University of Oklahoma's
cblmpanzee to use American Institute of Primate Studies
sign
language
to , wtll be watching to see II she
communicate with human . teaches the sign language to
beings. Now researchers her offspring.
liope s1u1 wt11 dit!pel a. widely
Dr. Roger Fouts, associate
held IIeBei tbllt mly humans • professor))! (lsychology at the
cin tramirili language skills university, has spent
from
generation
to considerable time teaching
generatim.
sign language to the
At the age of ll, Washoe is expectant chimp and other
about to have her first . primates.,~

By JOHN D. THOMPSON

Although more' than a
dozen chimpe haVI! had some
sign language training in
recent years, Washoe
probably has the largest
vocabulary, Fouts said . some 200 .,.ords, from which
she can string together
phrases to express emotions,
·thoughts and wants.
She also has created noVI!l
terms for items for which she
has no sign, such as a Brazil
nut, which she calls a "rock

berry," or a swan, which she
refers to as a ''water bird."
Fouts said baby chlmpe
raised by humana have been
known to use sign language
by their third or fourth
month, just as deaf human
babies may make signs by
their fifth month of life.
Washoe's · baby probably
will take longer to make signs
- if, ind~, it learns the
language - because it will be
raised by Its natural mother

and signing is a Second
language to chimpa, Fouts
said.
"They don't use It nearly as
often as their natural form of
communication," be said.
But the professor is
coofldent Washoe will teach
her baby the sign language
and give it the. ability to
communicate with humans.
"I think lhat the b!Jby will
learn it because chlmpe learn
tool making and tool uae from

0 -peop l e

f

'

their mothers," he said.
Washoe has been acting
"VI!ry typically pregnant,'' ;
Fouts said. She has had
morning sickness and some
'daysshemoVI!s a Utile slower
than uaual.
• Washoe apparently koows
she ill pregnant. She often
points to her stomach and
gives the sign for uby- that
Is, she cradles her arms and
rocks them gently.

Cmvention in New Yon.
Morris o-, Carter's chla
fundrailer, told ft901"1el'l in
Atlanta Carter II wl11q to
apeak at fllldralaln&amp; eVI!nta
. for former compelltori,
particularly Rep. Morrie
Udall, l).Af4.. whun Dees.
aaya haa the laraut
campelp debt.

r-------------------,I

Guenillas demand prisoners let go

Makarova was married
again
Feb.
22,
to
businessman Edward
Karkar, and they haVI! hlllles. · . ' ln San Franclaco and London .
- though she hasn't been
back to San FranciSco since
the wedding.
"I don't know when l wtll go
back," she ~d. "Flnt there
Is the season at the New York
State '!beater. I finish 21St of
July. Mter that a lot of wori.
Maybe I could manage a
vacation second half of
. September, 'but I'm not sure .... ,
about that."
What does she do in what·
little spare time she hal?.
"I read a lot. Unfortunately
I pnly read Russian. I don't
read Englilh wt1l and It's so
difficult using dictionary all
,,
the time. But I should try. I'
lllte the movies very much.
And I just put tape recorder, I
and listen to music." .

....

t

BURRO RACING THE HARD WAY 11 more of a workout for Joe Glavinick of Leadville,
Colo., tba11 lor bls trusty sleed, Ringo. Already five-time winners, they're in lralning for
tbe Z8th aanual running of lbe World's Championship Pack Burro Race in which par·
·licipants may walk, run or carry·burros bul not ride. Glavinick pushed Ringo across the
finlob line lor.lait year's victory. The July 25 race in Fairplay, Colo., is a fealured event of
Colorado's·Suntennlal Summer.

roles."

'

.

,~...,.

~F&amp;~it:&gt;" .
~!_/'': ..... ~

CENTER TO Q.OSE ·
The Meigs Community
Mental Health Center will be
closed Monday, July 5.

Couple charged in slaying .

of 8-year old Karen Kollar
'
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Dallas Stuckey, 19, IJ\d Guy
Freluneyer, 18, have been charged with aggravated mlll'der in the torture slaying of eight-year-old Karen Kollar at
an abandoned llrewery during the weekend.
David Zytowieckl, 21, was charged with obatructlng ju1o
lice and his wife Susan, 16, allo waa held in the call.
'!be girl was tied up in the brewery, throiin from Ill '
third floor onto a cimopy oVI!r nearby railroad tracka and
then dumped to the tracks, where she was uttered, police
said, Wltll she died.
The charges were !Ued Monday by Pollee Prosecutor
Almeta Jollnaon but Allllatant CU)'Jiboga County
Proaecutor Mlcuel Caine .wu apected to lieek grand
jury indictments in the c- as well.
The three men were Scheduled for a preliminary
hearing today before Municipal Judge Theodore
Williams.
Funeral services lor Karen wlU be at 1 p.in. 'Wtdnellday
at the Schoff Funeral Home In Madera, Pa;, from where ·
her family moved to Oeveland seven years ago. '
Neighborhood residents over the weeki!nd collected
more than $700 to help the Kollara pay for the ~ral.

Withholding rate
same on Thursday
WASIUNGTON (UPI) The Senate hail taken the first
step to ensure that no OJie's
lncome tax withholding rates
rlae Thur~y .
If the House .aclil quickly
as expected, the curren!
lower rates wlU remain ln
effect at least through Sept. I
while the Senate continues to
struggle with a maaslve tax
revision blll.
The Senate took tlie action
almost nonchalantly by voice
vote Monday evening, shortly
after a group of tax "relor·
mers" won one of their rare
victories by convincing the
Senate to leave intact a
provision lowering the max·
lmum tax rate on unearned
income such as dividendi
from 70 per cent ttl 50 per
cent.
•
IIY voting to extend

wlihholdlng rates, the Senate
formally lldmowledged whit
had' become obvl0111 1110t1
than a week ago: the l,u&amp;.
·pege tu revision bW cannot
poaaibly ba Cllllpleted before
Cmgresilleavee thb weekend
lor Ita two-week holiday
covering the July 4 weekend
and the Democratic national
convenUon July 12-ID.
The withholding e:llllllion
wu atlarJ!ed to a minor
HoUBejlaaled bW.
Finance Committee
chairman RUIIIell Img, 1).
La., suggested the ratee be
extended to Aug. 18. But
Rep11bllcana noted that was
the date the Republican
political convention start•
and inslJted on Sept. I.
The "temporary"
receaalein.ftghtfna tu ct1t1
Congress approved last year
nplre Thursday. It Ia
assumed the eventual tax
CHARGES Fn.ED
revillon bill wt11 make
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
tax cuts perm8nent.
Charges of manufacturing
'!be Senate action on tax
and selllng destructive cuts over1hadowed the
devices were to be filed today atru(lllle o\'el' the muimum
ln federal court against Steve tax, willch took up most of the
Rupert, 22, Luna' Pier, Mich., Sellfte's time Monday.
according to Ohio Attmtey · Tfle victory for the
General Wllllam J. llrown. "reform" group melna aEach charge carries a with large amounts of
maximum penalty of a interest, dividends, renta and
'10,000 fine and 10 years in other "unearned" Income
prison. Brown said the arreat wtll have til continue paying a
here last Tuesday follows mu:Imum tu rate of 70 per
several
weeks
of cent.
•
Investigation and involves
The victory for the
sales to an Wldercover agent "reform" group li1MIIIIhOM
from the Bureau of Criminal with large amounts of
Identification.
Interest, dividends, renll and
Brown said Rupert would other "unearned" Income
be arralgntid In federal court wtll have til continue paying a
and evidence would allo he mu:lmum taJ: rate of 70 per
presented..to a Lucas County cent.
.grand jury.

u-

Watch For Our

SUMMER

CLOSED JULY 5TH

1776-1976

•

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

a.EARANCE

SALE
'

Celebrate With Your
Family- Plan A Picnic! I

.-...

,i .. ••

heritage house

i

~

;

'

JELL0.............................5

pkg . .

A. Stllnleu ltHI, Blltk
Cllf S1rip. ' " ·

PHEBE'S STORE

I.Goldtonlifiniih-.Rolilif Urlk

June 29.Juty 3
Rlght Reserved to Ll mit Quantities'
Wo Glodly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday
, 9:00to7:00
Soto.rd1oy 9 to''9

band. $110. ·

C. Trapezoid d"l111 .

HOOVER CLEANERS

$ssoo·

We have them. The exciting, new quartz digilats from
Butova. Advanced technology watches that tell the hour
minute, second, month and date. Self-sot lor months of '
28, 30 and 31 days.
With automatic sensors that adjust numeral brightness
lor easy reading, day or night , .. simplified one-button

ORANGE DRINK .....~~~:... 79e

ANY AMOUNT
"

&amp;ge
FROSTING ..................~~.~...
BETTY CROCKER ALL 'FLAVORS

COKE-16 oz.

ARMOUR'S

PRODU CE BUYS

LARGE. SIZE

oz. 79~

.BEEF STEW.............. ~:~.·~....
-

keep readouts sharp and clear:
We havelhem In .all the dynamic, new styles. Fine jewelry
fashions, capable of accuracy to within a mlnule a year.
From $99 to $180.
Try one on today.

'24

BES·PAK

TRASH BAGS...........~~- ...
pkg.

CELERY ,
OR

OUARTZ WATCHES

LETTUCE

GOESSLER'S
· JEWELRY STORE .

. POMEROY

GROUND BEEF

BROUGHTON'S

lb.79~

14o•.

setting controls ... scratch resistant mineral crystals that

COURT ST.

Our Good USDA Choice Beef

301.$1

St1lnteu steer. J175.

BUDGErSHOP

FOR YOUR JULY OUTING

ASSORTED FLAVORS

-

Middleport, 0.

GOOD BUY
FROM .BAKER'S

ONLY

"Were many problems,
,plus nerves
and
responsibilities. I much
preferred second performance. I could be myself."
·ABT's new production of
the classic full-evening
"Sleeping Beauty," at a cost
of nearly S500,000, was one of
the big eVI!nts of the ballet
season, !llld Makarova was
chosen as the June 15 opening
night Princess Aurora. The
critics loved her. But the
schedule of morning practice,
afternoon rehearsals and
evening P.erlormances combined with the inevitable
mishaps, delays and nervous·
ness accompanying a new
production - took their tOll.
Her schedule for that week
was horrifying: Sunday morning practice, rehearsing
"Sleeping Beauty" 1 p.m. to
midnight; Monday
morning practice, rehearsing
1-lip.m.; Tuesday-morning
practice, evening opening·
performance 8:30 p.m. to
midnight; Wednesday morning practice, rebearsals
In afternoon; Thursday morning practice, evening
another performance of
"Sleeping Beauty;" Friday
morning practice,
afternoon rehearsal of
Jerome Robbins' "Other
Dances" with Mikhail

waste.''

HOSPITA!JZED
Penny Sue Landers Is a
paUent at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. Her room number Is
132 lor those who wish to send
cards.

ANOTHER

Potluck enjoyed

MILWAUKEE (UPI) Jimmy Carter told the
nation's mayors today.
American cities need New
Deal type programs but
warned federal money
"should not fund local

=....

BAND MEETING
Southern
Local
Elementary School Band will
meet this evening from 6 to 7
p.m. at the high school.

llfll••••••••••••••••..

ANNIVERSARY NEAR
Mr. and Mrs. Sammy
Ralrden of Long Bottom will
be observing their 62nd
Members of the Middleport wedding anniversary '!bursFirst Baptist Church Busy day. Friends are encouraged
Bee Class met on the patio of tO send them carda.
the home.of Mrs. Rosemary
Lyons for a potluck supper
RECUPERATING ·
Thursday night.
Robert
Lewis,
Sr.,
Attending Wl!re Mrs. Pearl Middleport, 1B recuperating
Hoffman·, Mrs. · Gwinnle !tom a heart attack at hla
White, Mrs. Leora Sigman, home folloWing a stay ·at the
Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner, Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Lettie Roush, Mrs.
Beulah White, Mrs. Julia
Grimm, Mrs. Isabelle
Winebrenner, Mrs. Louise
GUTHRIE ILL
Thompson, Mrs. FreQ&amp; Ed·
POINT
· PLEASANT +
wards, Mrs. Lillian
Demoakey1 Mrs. Betty Denny Robert Guthrie entered the
and son, Bonnie, Mrs. Nora Pleasant Valley lbpifal prj
Jordan, John Lyons, Eddie Sunday and remains a
patient there.
Miller,an~Bllly Weaver.

By WILLIAM COTI'ERELL

BaryJlmlkov, folJond by

Interview. On S&amp;turday,
· she and J!lryllbnlkov,
had a IIOI'e ale, bad
cancel ·achedul
performances,
they rarely do.
No wonder ll!le bid
th:(l~ June

right.

++ +

:::::.W.~S'JJ

greatest dancer ol the day
outalde the Soviet Unlm In
one of the moat famous
ballets ol all time: young,
lithe, vibrant.dazzllng.
-They might not recognize
the tiny ahausted W0018D
drenched in sweat, her uir
bedraggled, smoking a ciga·
rette as she laboriously
untied her blocked shoes
afterarehearsal,anoldrobe
covering her faded pink
practice tights.
Makarova looked her 35
years In the unflattering light
of her cluttered dreaalng
room. She ud begged off
posing
for
offstage
photographs but shook her
head when asked II she'd like
to postpone the lntervl&lt;!W.
"I'm just really exhausted
now ... mostly reacUoli," she
said. "Two 'Sleeping
Beautys' in tln"ee days, and
much preparatim. Tuesday
lor the first 'Sleepng Beauty'
I had swollen cheek (from an
Infected tooth) but today all

3 1.00•
FOR

~

. \,

89~

69e
JOY................................. ~.t: .. ..

Buy hak at
: Regular Price...~ Get
1 Coke Glass FREE

---------BROUGHTON'S

DISHWASHING LIQUID
.

•

•-

ICE MILK

2.2 •· ·

HAMBURGER
I Ol~ ,
Size
HELPER................ .- ............... .

:
:

:

gal. '1.19
VALLEY BELL

BUnERMILK

: · % aal. 69•
.......................

FRENCH CITY

DA CHOICE BEEF

RIB STEAK ..:................... ~.~JJ9
HAM DELICACY. .............. ~.'~:.l.59 .
BOLOGNA ............... ~ .....~~ 1.49
CHOPPED HAM ..............~b:.1.59
BOI~ED HAM ..................:·..1..99
FRENCH CITY

TASTEE

·

-

.•

.

FRENCH CITY

FRENCH CITY

·

-

FRENCH CITY

WIENERS
20 ct.

Plcg.

129

�•

•1• .-:- The O.Uy _Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

I

-

!'or Fast Results Use· The Classifieds
WANT ADS
lli,OIIMATION
DIADLINES
S P .M . Dav
Before
l'ubiiCIIIon .
Clnctllatlons,
corn!!c.
tlons ecctpted fJrst dar of
PUbllcollon .
II EGULATIONS
The Publisher renrves
tht rloht to ed i t or reject
lny ads · deemed ob lectlonel The publisher
will not be respons ible for

more than one incorrect

Insertion .

RATES
'or Went Ad Strvlct
5 cents per word one

Insertion .
Minimum Charge Sl 00

lA cents per word three

consecutive Insertions
26

cents r,er

word si x

conucutlve nsertlons

25 Per Ctnt Discount on
Plld IdS lnd Ids paid
within 10 d1y1 .

CARD DF THANKS
&amp; OIITUARY
$2 .00 for
minimum

80

word

Eech additional word J

cents .

ILIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge
ptr Advertisement

OFFICE HOURS

I 30 1 .m to 5 . 00 pm
Dally, 1 ' 30 l .m to 12 ·0()
Noon Saturct•y .
Phone toa•y 1192 -21S6

NOTICES
ATTN , II

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

OF

Motor
QUALITY

1973 CHEVROLET CIO
S289S
8' Fleets ide, wh over red, c:lean Interior, 350 V-8,
automatte, power stee r in g &amp; brakes , good tires step
bumper, radio, custom t ri m 8- mirrors .
'

LOST Tuesdoy r11ght , pan a f light
blue prescrtpt•on glosses ,
possibly los t on Pomeroy porkmg lot Rewmd tf found Coli
9&lt;9-23 1&lt;
LOsT Motorcycle lrcense No 9C
M Please phone Kenneth
Mofery 992,3286 •f found

197J INTERNATIONAL 1600
•
S389S
102" C E . V-B, Sspeed , 18,500 2 speed R. axle, 900 fires,
solid cab, colo r wh1te .

~

'

FREE E_$TIMATE$

,..........
. STOIIII

IARWfER
4-10-1

frtar

CODNER'S CAMPERS

home wtth pre -school
chtldren . Hove ex perience and
references Phone 992 .bQ J2

OPEN

I

lll1l: .... . . , - ""-· •

'*"" ... - ...........

..., Tllen, 11111 .....
. . Uati!St .
I~ Olllo HZ-,11112

CAPTAIN EASY
..

'ftlltld

wantttto:'Buy.=,

WH¥1 .. 50 •He
ENEMY A'f&gt;f;NT$
WATCHtNe HER
PLACE WILL GET
INTERESTED
IN ME:~

rtof

lltw

or oil,-

pllntlnl, tlectrlnl

'l
ue,
wor •i

Colluo ol t4f-2112
or t4t-2213
3:28-1 m_!:.J

W.Dih

1969 Plymouth Sa!elhte, $1 200
P~one 992 6131

RKINE

6 CANS OF RC .

CMPET Sfl)p

•1.00+

PI CTURE !

"utters &amp; downspouts,
urn1ces, Wlttr htlttrs,
Wlttr softnen, illltllltd &amp; 1
rtpelred, St••••·

,._ 1114174Z·24ot

JUNE SPECIAL

NOW HOlD O&gt;J! '\"l;NEAK"' I ~ A HOK RIC
AilE YOU PROPOSING 1'/0R'D, 5PORT· BUT ,
I SNEAK IN HER.
E55E&gt;JTIALlY
MCK WINDOW~
YOU'VE GOT THE-

ltlrn, 11\lntlfl, IJYIIcl

llltiiM,Illllo8771

5-21-llllt.

TO 60 6E'T
R051E'5 REPORT!

rtp•lred? Houu, roo

6-13-7! I mo.
MAK E sprrng cleaning prof ttoble ,
All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
'"
turn unwonted items mto cash
Porctland Basement Porch
Adverttse 1n the Want Ads
and Basement Sales, etc .
19741-ord Courte·; 4 speed, 11~(XX)
.must be p11d In edvence .
miles , $200 ond assume lOCUST posts, round or spl1t .
OLD fur ni tur e, tce bJx~s · brass
Julllllotttrles $1.25
Get yours In early by
payments, 1974 Kowasok t 250,
Phone 9&lt;9·277•
beds
wal l telep!)pnes end
stopp ing by our office et
lltllor Cist Clllll
1966 Ntmrod comp1ng traile r
ports or complete tjSuseholds
The Dilly Sentinel, 111
1973 450 Prototype Kawasaki
lor
lost
sale
Phone
992-7066.
Court St or writing Box
$3.50
Per Hundltd
Wn te M D MiiiRt 4,
mo to r c ro s~.
good condttion.
- -Granado 301~-8 . p --s , $650
Racine, Ohio
72,, Pomeroy , Ohio 45169
-7760
_ Pomeroy ._Oht ~~a~l
1975
Ford
Phone
992-3843.
with your remlftance .
1 ••
p b . 0 c $3895 p• • 992CASH po1d for all
s and
LA
TEN
paper,
roller,
2
truck!l,
C. ladies
3&lt;51
With any ~.00 purchuo ·
mode ls of mob•
ames
reasonable Phone992-7481.
and
this
ad.
Good
throygh
Phone area code 614-423-9S31
. Scrlp.l1'1111
1972 Ford % lon prckup truck,
PUCO Cast No. 76-454-WS-COI
1975 Bullc ... o 360 Frontier motor- 6-30-76.
I 1350 00 Colli 378 63&lt;9
Public Notice
S$Coshs$$for
junked
a~
Frye
s
cycle Enduro model , many exNotice Is hereby given lhal IN memory of Rolph E lee, wno
Truck Auto Parts . ullond. )97-4 Ford van , E300 senes, 1 ,tros , reasonably pnced . Pl'lone
passed
away
on
June
28,
1975
the
Public
Utilities
Phone 742-2001
Squore ·v.rd Instolled
Phone 992 7320
992-7291 after 8 p.m.
,..., Ollio
Slltlrt
Commission of Ohio seeks to God sow you gett1ng weary
He
did
what
He
thought
best
CoiNS
tokens
any
form
gold
or
David Parions, Owner
Chevrolet truck $85 See Of 74 Kowo sakl $475 00. Phone 742Middleport, Ohio
'
amend Chapter XX IX ol Its
Pllooo HZ.54a
He put H1s arms around you ,
stlver 1cwelry , spoons rings
,.,::it14.
570 Peor l .~tddleport
2980
992-6167
Code
of
Rules
and Then
took yau home to rest
dental Wtll trade Cell Roger
Regulations, pertaining Ia the
6-1-76-1 month
• -7-1 mo.
1974 Monte Carlo 28 000 rnrl es, CoAL , limestone , ond calc1um
Wamsley , Rutl dnd, Oh to, 742
operations of water -works Sadly m1ued by the fomt ly, 2331
burgundy
wtth
dark
burgundy
chlonde
and
colc1um
brtne
lor
children
,
grandchildren
and
companies and
sewage
-'
top, bucket swtvel sea ls, $3700
dust co ntrol and spectal m1xing
disposal system com panies - ~ot ·g':_ondch~dren .
TIMBER PomerO)I/.~Fores t Pro
Coll992 5053
salt for fo rmers Main Street,
sub/'ed to the Commission 's
duels. Top pnce for standmg
Pomeroy, Ohto or phone 992jur sdlctlon .
A
public
-sawttmber Call M;flnt Hanby 1975 Cu tlass Solon AM tape Olf
custom tntertor, cru tse co ntro l
389 1~--~----comment per iod for written
l·-446-B570 ~ __
cos t over S6 000 new Phone 1973 25 it . Yukon Delta
comments on
proposed
992-9_981 morn~~o~ ly ,
houseboa t, oil se lf·contoined,
Amended Chapter XXIX will
••lend until July 19, 1976
wtlh 1976 Chrysler 105 h p.
The Complete
1967 Cornaro 327. 4 speed , ex
engine Phone992-5532.
Persons who Intend to tesl1fy RACINE Ftre Deportment
celle nt condttt on, $q50 Phone
Remodeling
Service
IF
YOU
hove
a
have
o
gun
shoot
Soturdo,
should prepare their remarks
offer
{61&lt; ) 985 3806.
II 11011 ............... lot.
MEN'S used work un1forms , pants
6.30 p.m. at their new
want to bu y or
In writing and submit them on
For
Your
Home
-28 inch - 36 mch waist , shrrts
off Bashon Road.
or before lhe date of hea rt ng
ore lookmg for work . or
-----S-M·L, short and long sieve,
All written comments and
whatever
you'll ge l resulls cam_pJJ!I~
_-·.
i
$1.98
set Boilvy's Store, MidI
foster w.th o Sentmel Wont Ad
testimony should be II led with
dleport
'
Rutland
742-2:121
lhe
Public
Utilitie s lrrming -up before testrng
Coil 992·2156
lAST week of mce Anntve rsory
••• 5 I
All Work Guaranteed
Commission of Ohio on or PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Y ARD-sa le M(lnd oy, Tuesday
Sole on Storeraft mtnl motors, Three-yttar-old reg1stered black
PIIOllf
112-5724
Free Estimates
before the deadlines A.Public Be very sensi ble abou t healt h
Angus bull for sale. Phon&amp; {61.4)
Wednesday Mt•~:~nne Mtcho'tl.
$12 300 or $10 ,500 20 It 7mch
985
-3555
hearing
will
be W held matters t oQ~w . II yo u kno w th e
6-IH mo
laurel Cliff D~r es~ lon g loss,
self.contatned trotler, $-4299
,._ 112·2174 ;::'.
,...,
commencing on July 26. 1976. mustard ar1W'bn1on s always uplold ·downs $1900 We servtce 23 channel CB ftts tn • dash,
some furn•t.ure ol'ld mtsC
al9 30 A.M. atlhe ofllce of the
o --- ~
1
who! we sell Camp Conley
o m - fm-m p~e rad1o, 8 track
Public Ulllllles Commission ot set you . eal yo ur hot dog pfa1n
YARD Sole , July I 2, 3 Bott om ot
Stcrcraft Soles Route62 N , PI
stereo Call 992·3965.
Ohio, II I North High Street,
Mos.sar Htl l. starts at 9 a m
Pleasan t
Columbus. Ohio 43215 Copies
Dtshes . po ts ftOn s some ontt
f---~~ d
d MAYTAG wrrnger washer and
I.
ques Clothtng , tee cream 16 I comptng trot er goo con •or this Entry and propcsed
dryer . Phone {614) 985-3554. ROOMY 7 yr. old one story wood .
home.
two
bedrm.
home
sPRAY
PAINTING,
Al
TIIOMM
freezer
m1s
c
\IO
riety
of
thi
ngs
.
liOn
_P
hone
84~}5~2
__
__
Amended Cl&gt;apler XXIX may
Harold Brewer , long Bottom,
locorod botwoen Coolville ond
CONSTRUCTION. PHON£ 742be obtained lrom the olflces of
EN ORMOU So~ Fomtly Ya rd Sole 197'1 Trove! lro tler, 18 ft sel f- Ohio
Continuous one place
ruppers Plains. One acre lot.
:2321.
'
lhe
Public
Utilitie s
Juna 30, 1976
Jul y lsi, 2nd. 3rd . Fronk Hud
~~nlomed
good co ndth on TULSA truck win ch. 12,00J lbs
guttors. We hang it, or do it
two
cor
garage,
clly
wot..-,
goo
VERMRR
BALER
~LES
AND
SER·
Commission.
Dockeling
son reSidence. co rn er Flhh _ • ~;BS 4~S __ _
vourself. Speclol prices to
capacity Also, two overhead
You will have more than your
Division
heot ,
h~rdwood . flo~rs,
VICE. Melg.·Athens County.
and Peart Streets , Ro ct ne
bullcltrs.
10~e 1 0 garage doors. Phone
fai r share of opportuntt•es thts
carpetd, l1vmgroom . ntctvlew,
Bal..., from p99s up Merrill
Oh1o Antrque trunk; key-wtnd wa~,--=::=
-~{614
)
985
-355-4
,
Harold
Brewer.
year
howeve
r
1
1
you
don
I
act
$21
.000
Phono(61•)667-3514.
ChaH,
(614)698-3021.
'
THE PUBLIC
clock collector's items. Gtbson
llll __ -=;. J
~---=--l ong Bottom , Ohto .
UT ILITIES on them wt sely th ey 'll dtssolve
Phone 949-2814
6 room house, very well kept, 3
gut tor , ampltfler , law n mower,
-COMMISSION mto pleasan t memones
Ne
w 16 ft flatbed tandem tro tler.
WANTED to rent 3 bedroom home
bedrms., modern kitchen, well EXPERIENCED • houte palnl....
9
A.M. to 5 P.M.
5 ptece dmett e , tools m•sc
locally or would ltke to bu y
Phone Arlltu/ MusMr, 742OF OHIO
Phone (614) 985-3554 Harold
to wall cQrpet, H.W. floors, full
2180.
from A lo.Z
home on land contract Phone
Brewer, Long Bottom , Ohio
basement, new gas furnoce.
992-7320 evenings
By : Randall G. App legate,
PORCH Sole , Corner of Vme and
2-47 -2167 .
small
lot
to
mow
,
Ideal
for
gUILDING
and remodeling, exSMITH and Wesson , Model 41
Broadwa y , Weds1
an d
Secretary DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX,
older
couple
or
small
family
in
cavation, conc~•t• work, el.c:·
outomot•c ~2 cal, target pistol,
Thu rsday , June30and3 1, 10 00
good neighborhoa.d In
.
6-27 -76
trlcal -rk, plumbing, rough
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
new
$180
f1
rm
,
1970
Datsun
510
16) 29, ltc
hiI 4 00 M• sc some lurn•lure
·or;;~~ent~~~:·' ::-"==':.;_
Pomeroy.
Coli
for
appointment
and
llnlllhecl,
:carpon!ry
ond
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
Sedan , fair co ndit ton. runs
etc
Phone 992-3097.
roofing. Phone 9'12-7481.
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
good , $500 Pot belly stove,
FURNISHED
,
2
bedrm
apartment
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE YARD Sole, Thur sd ay and Frid ay ,
$65
Phone992-7805.
42 one-fourth acres of real estate, RICHAI:D'a Malnfwlonce, e:dtror
adu lts on ly tn Mtddleport
Ju ly 1 and 2nd 10 00 till 2 00
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST more or leu, sltualtd in Sec·
painting, dry woll. roofing, otc.
Phone
992
3874
NEW
delu
)(e
Tappan
elednc
MENT , NO COLLECTING OR
Drapenes, cloTh e$, reco rds ,
!ton 26, Fraction 31. in Rutland
lowut rotea , around. Phone IRADFORD, Auollonoor. Comrange,
lull
warranty
,
Has
dHp
DELIVERING: CALL COLLECT Tb
wts kttchen stool and cart and 3 AND 4 RM . furn"hed and un·
Township, Metga County, Ohio
7d-2126. '
v
on door w1ll sacrifice , $235 00
ploto Sorvlce. Phone 9•9-2&gt;187
CAROL DAY 51B·&lt;B9-B395 OR
many hosuehold tlems All
fu rnts hed a(l iS Phone 992
For further mfarmotlon , contact
Krngsbury
Home
Sales
,
call
or 949-2000. Roclne, Ohio, Critt
WILL
do
hovso
c~nln~.
Call
belWR ITE FRIENOL Y HOME PAll dean Upper Syracuse next to
543&lt;
Bernard V. Fultz, Pomerod Na·
992 7034 .
Bradford.
Ruth s Market
ween 9 a .m. OAd 12 p.m. or •n
TIES, 20 RAILROAD
ttonol
Bonk
Burl lng,
·coU-NTRY M~b~e H~m;-Po rk , Rt
evening
after
6
a
.m.
or
before
9
Pomeroy, Oh10. Telephone:
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR cSA~LiB~A~N~Y.iNf;Y~I2~2~05~do~~~ YARD Sole , Anttque te e bo x m•lk
33, ten m•l• nori h of Pom eroy
p.m. 92·337~ . •,.
992-2 186.
Sweepera, toasters, Irani , all
H
, open the
can treadle sewmg mochm e,
Lorge lots \Y1th concret paftos ,
YOUR HOTPOINT
small applloncM . lawn mower,
extra earn1ngs Jotn
solo
cho tr, mrsc It ems
stdewolk s. runners and off
AP PLIAN CE STO RE
HOMESITES for sale. 1 acre and EXCAVATING, li.IICKH0£5 AND
next to State Highway Goroge
DOZER - LARG£ AND SMAll,
cessful women who ore
Richard Spencer on Rt 7, Tup
st ree1 pork mg. Phone 992 7479.
• Bemtce Bede Osol
up, Middleport near Rutland.
on
R011te 7. Phon• {61•1 985.
SEPTICTANKS)~STALLED,
LOW
mg good money rn their
pers Plo tns. July 2 and 3 star FREEZER
SALE!
Caii992·7•Bt
ONE -bedr~ o;;;tme~
382S
For WedMidoy, Juno 30, 1g75
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. l lll
ttme
No expertence
tmg9a .m
Save
up
to
$100
on
20
VILLAG E MANOR m Mtddleport
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 batha,
PULLINS, f'HOI'If 992-:U78 DAY REMODELING. Plumbing hooting
necessary , no delivery, no col·
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19)
for $104 mon thly plus elec . or
oil elec. I aero, Mlddlopcrt ,
cu.
ft . Chest or 16 cu.
OR NIGHT.
feeling, no cash mvestment
and all types of g.nerol repair.
SpectJialtve situattons are not
$130 mcludmg electrtc LOWER
clo5e to Rutland. Phone 992·
Call now and get extra early
ft. Upright.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
your long suit today Even 11
RATES
FOR
SENOR
CITIZENS
.
7&lt;81.
.
benefits Phone 949· 2803 or
perlonco. Phono 992-2•09.
Conven1ent to shopping on
you get a tempting ms1de ttp,
·. -- ·- :. =._ :_.
:
949-2786 . Also, booktng par· POODLES, 6 we~ s old, $35 Phone
SMALL farm for sole . 10% down,
Third and Mtll Streets rn Mid
avoid II If It carries any type of
9902 7671
o&amp;o
TREE Trimming, 20 years u tieS
Choice
owner ftnanced. Monro. Coun· FAIRIC SHOP. l)lh party plan
risk
dleport Brand new high quai l·
perlence. Insured free
ty:
W.
Vo,
Phone
(304)
n2FABRIC SHOP- EARN EXTRA $$$ PuPS to ~•ve away Port Spr~n er
Appl ran ce Department
ty op,jrfm ents . See the
Mf '!! and rady lo
..timates . Call 992·238.4 or
3102 or (304).772-3227.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) If
Sponte , port Beagle. Cal l
-f
Part-time or ful l-time. Fabric ,
mono. at Rtverside Apartmako morroy.,gn be oplnllod
(61•)698-7257 Albany.
POME(lOY
LANDMARK
5170
or
992-2669
·
you're buying a hlgh-pnced
craft and notton5 party plan
ments or call 992·3273 Fur from your liOme wllh low
HOUSE for sale in Racine, Ohio.
home Item, take lime to get explus sample shop. No Invest- SIAMESE kittens , $10. Seolpoints ,
ntshed
apartments als o
-9. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
ovetltood and high proflls. ln- SEWING MACHINE R..,airo, oerSt Rt. 338, just outside town. 8
vlco, all makft, 992-2284. Tho
ment. For 1nfo. write or ca ll
actly what you want or you may
avadable
v. . tminl ol S2.4oo .10 S3,900
rooms, both, porch , patio, city
All . Phone 992-2111
phone 992-3216.
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Stmphcty Fabrics, 249 W .
have to hve with a costl y miSdollaro
will
put
you
In
a
one
of
a
water,
gaa
forced
air
furnace,
TRAILER space lor ren t 1n MtdAuthorlzod Slngor SoiM ond
take
Center St , Morto n Ohto
kind bualneu ln your county.
good lot . Coli owner anytime,
dleporl . Phone 992-5434
Ser-vice. We sharpen Sciasors .
•3302- Phone {61• ) 382-3066
tnlo,
write:
Stmpllclly
W•ll1om
Maynard,
9·9-2613.
GEMINI (May - 21 -Juno 20)
Also , I (one) distributor needUNFURNISHED Opt . lor rent. 4
fobrtcs, 249 ~- Conlor 51 .. EXCAVATING, dozer, looder ond
Don't flaunt your knowledge tn
OLDER, remodeled, 3 bedroom
ed for your county - Very
rooms and both Phone 992Olrio---&gt;13302 . .Phono
bockha. work; dump trucks
conversatron with one who may
home, a ll electric, on corner lot
high income For 1nlo, see ad
5908.
and lo-boyo for hire, will houl
t49a
cre
fo
rm,
t~o
houses,
barns,
tn
Pomeroy,
$12,500.
Phone
not be as bnght as you Others
under Businass Opportunttres
fill dirt. tap oall, limestone and
'
hed
,
several
bu1ld•ngs,
city
TRAILER
lot
rn
Chester
,
electmrty
9'12-5011.
will be sympathetiC to your
{Fabric Shop) .
avol. Call lob or Roger Jefwater , m1nerol rights. timber,
o~ city water Phone 992·6072,
target
ero, day phone 992-70119,
$25.00 per Hundred stufhng
I 00 acres ttllable, good pasture cOUNTRY lormlond with aocluded woods , water ond good ac· 1'169 12x60 khuf(z, 2 bedroom•.
2 bedroom mobtle home Brown 's
land 8 m1les north of Pomeroy
nlghl phone 992-3525 or 992Envelopes . Send se lf
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Full
or
cess in Monroe County, W, Va.
Troller
Por.t
.
992-332-4
off
Route
33
Hemlock
Gro\le,
addressed
,
stamped
olrcondlllonor. ~ candtrlon .
5232.
You're sllll not the maste r or
$1,000 down, call {304) 772·
envelope· Edroy Metis , Box
NEW 3 bedroom hom ; ;Rutland
Ohla . Phone 992-501-4 eventngs
your budget today Before you
Parttime
Phonee....,lnll'7•2-3018.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
188, YW, Albany , Mo. 6&lt;•02_
write a check, make sure
"'-:--:----...,-­
for rent . Furn1shed mcl udlng _ a,h~e'::r,-:5:-'p"'.m
IO'x55'
mobile,
homo,
3
Sanitation. 992-3954 or 9'12MANUFACTURING
you're not rotlb lng Peter to pay HELP WANTED · $2 00 hour . begin co lored TV , near mtnes . Con· HOUSE for sole by owner, large WHY RENT? Buy o now home wllh
bed,._,a,
with
fuel
oil
hoot,
;:-::2:.,
4:.:2:::8·:--..,-- -- - Paul.
payments same or lower than
toc1(614)9B5-3574after6p .m
ltvtng room , large krtch413n with
PIECE WORK
ntng today, workers needed to
bolli•d
gil!,
range.
WILl
do roofing, construcllon.
rent. 3 bedrooms, den, 2 baths ,
ptck IJP pqtatoes . Contact
bu•lt-tn birch cabinets . ~
LARGE 3 room furnished apartrelrljJoralor, diiiiiito HI, bUnk
Columbus •company will
plumbing and hoatlnu. No job
LEO (July 23-AUG. 22) Today
carpet, r,lua all the extras a
Delbert lawson at David Yost
bedrooms, lltoth , hardwood
ment Phane992 6161.
bods. S200o. P'r 992-5786,
too largo or loa amall. Phone
fully tra1n a few r eliable
you could eastly be taken tn by
housewi e would want. Shown
form
,
Great
Bend
,
Ohio,
Rt,
floors,
wall
fl'woll
carpet
in
all
people to a ssist in out of
someone with great form but
•lodrm.
c!OIIblo
iftle
h...,.,
60tc7•2-23-18.
FURNISHED
3
roo
m
apartment
fjyoppointment, 742-2328
338.
rooms . Carport, utlltty room,
plant production to make
little substance Approach new - - ' - ' - ' - - - - - - - · ond both with yard. Uh lttles
24. on lol In • ..,., , W. Va. ExCAVATING, dam, backhoe
house
fuHy
insulated
,
storm
small uret han e parts on
acquaintances wtth an open
potd Coli from 4·6 p.m 992·
Coli 992-703o4.
and' dllthor. Chorleo R. Hoi·
doors,
w1ndows
,
extra
Iorge
lot
contract, small garage size
m1
mrnd and a cntrcal eye
field, Back Hoe Service,
located
outStde
Pomeroy
Corp
-----shop area a nd a means to
Rullond. Ohio. Phone 7•2-:lQle,
on Union A\lenue. Phone 992VIAQO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22)
del1 ver product to our loca l
7874
foroppotnlment.
Utilize your common sense tn
GlliG'S Cl SALES, localod al Erwarehouse required. No
bustness dealings today Don t
win'• Gulf Servlc:e, Mid·
2 story frame house, 2 bedrooms ,
expenence hecessary, if
trust the analysis or others who
1/irgll
B.
Sr.,
Rultor
·.!
dloport,
Ohio. Phone 9'12·
1974
24ft
motor.home,
excelle
nt
poss
tbly
3,
livmg
room
,
both
,
you ca n prove you a re
2.al.
may have less knowledge
110 Mechanic Pomoroy, Q.
cond tl lon wrth abso lute ly
kitchen and utility room , newly
"
dependabl e and willing to
carpeted , partial basement and
~every thmg Phone 949 - 277~ .
Phone P92-l37~
·
APPROXIMATtl Y 10 acrft - SI:PTIC Syslemo inalallod by
work A min im um cas h
LIIIIA (8opl. 23-0cl. 23) You
carport, 2 stories , out building.
boaullful bulldlnQ aile, an good
TUPPERS PLAINS - 4
llcenood lnolallor. Shepord
requtrem e nt of $5950
INTERNATIONAL Model 6&lt; commay act haslily to accompli sh
forced
oir,
natural
gas
heat,
road.
O...tw wdtor, wil l lako , Contractors. Phone 742·2409.
bedrooms,
.p;,
ceramic
tile
bi
f1
e,
excellent
co
nd1t
ton,
lots
necessary 6 month refund
something, without makmg
lots of storage space, $17,500.
lrodot ond hM&gt; fll1anco If
baths, nice frullwood
of extra parts . Lorge tondem
program . lntervtews can
sure the time Is ripe You could
CARPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
Phone 992-7360 after 5 p.m .
ntcollary, ~honlf949·:1770.
kllchen.
oil
F
.A.
furnace,
2
fert
lizer
spreader
good
condi·
be a'rranged fOr those W1 th
mess up your chances
ponollng. Phono992-2759.
car
garage.
All
on
1
acre.
han Tractor bolt dr1ven wood 3 bedroom house , we ll to wall
RUTH'S Marl&lt;el, S!uocus•, Ohio.
Approx . 38 customers .
avatlable space
and
$22.500
.
•
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
carpet, aluminum sldtng, l'ijtw
Phone 992-39116. or alter 7 Will trim or cut tr... and shrub·
sow 1959 Chevrolet 1 ton wtth
Earn extra spending
finances who are ready to
2 YRS . OLD - Modern 3
Pnorltles are most Important to
p.m.. 949-:1738.
cabinets some furniture, new
borv, phone 949-lS.S or 7•2alum. von body ond power
start immed ia tel y by
money and win valuable
3167.
~ou today If your aims overlap,
tot lgaJe, good condrtton . Phone
bathroom, 1ust bui lt, patio and bedroom home with nice
prtzes. Call The Datly
ca ll 1ng · Coli eel
kitchen which Includes
9&lt;9 2770 .
the possibilities or success
walk . One-half acre lot. 650
Sentinel al 992-2156 today.
614-252-4967
range . glass oven over.
• diminish conslder8bly
Os borne St , Pomeroy Phone
Ask For Mr. Green
Dining, centra1 air-heat,
992-5688
IAGITTAAIUS (Nov. 23· Doc:.
family room with fireplace,
• 21) Those you're likely to l1sten
and 2 car garage In dry
lo today are the ones with all
basement. S38,500.
the wrong answers Truth and
.,
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
frame house, bath, nat. gas
convincing ~hrases are not
'
synonymous
4,000 BTU G.E Corry-Cool Oir con·
F.A. furnace, basement, st.
ditioner. May be seen at 1047
drs. &amp; windows. Only 18500.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
PORTLAND P roor]1
South Second Ave., Middleport ,
1t) Don't larm out wor&lt; or
house, modern kitchen,
bet~een 4 ond 6 p.m Make ofhave services done toda y
fer .
new 2 car garage and le-&lt;el
'
' - .
I
.
wlfhoul checking out people
lot, 90&gt;90 .
.
LoCST'P;sts
fo
r
sal;--;:;
;;;;
~ and prices A wrong oho1ce
NEW LISTING - Large 2
698
_ o-~~eap , Phone 992-2647
could prove expensive
4amlly home, 12 rms,, 5 up
"
with bath. 7 down with
EVERYTHING IN
1976 750 Hondo 700 miles, l1ke
AOUAIIIUI (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
bath. Nat gas heat, city
REAL ESTATE
new, $1700, Phone {614) 985It would be • mistake today to
3806.
water, and nice Jot. Only
CALL l'OOAY
.,
rely 100 heavily on recently
519,000 .
FOR YOUR NEED.
197&lt;T--5-. S-u-z-,
uk_i_I-BS- .-2-.300
- --;,ct;;;;i
acquired allies . These
WE HAVE A HOME FOR
Henry E. Cleland, Broker
miles , 2 helmets, like new.. ex:
reJeuonal')ips need more
EVERYONE. COME IN
992-2259 or 992-2548
tros $625 Phone 992 76as•
AND HAVE A LOOK.
"
'
A~L HOUSEWI~ES

THE OSVIOU5

$0L UTION 15 FOR

R•clne, Otuo

. '"

~.

BORN lAJ'"""
A~ 1(1Jp.W&lt;;

'6.t5

DONElli'S PJZ2A

8 0()., ~ L asslr 6, Co1p l Kt.H1 Q.t l 1)0 t!, 10, ~n!Hnne S l

TOO ~Cl'lES' RI:TIRE~f.IT
PARTLI OtJ THe 2?'.!' ,
THORNAPP\..~ ~

JIWJMill~®tJ.J ..,,_,u -1 9"loy Ill Nfliiii!N0ll1 oond HOB l(f'

Yogil &amp; You

Unacramblethe•e rour Jumbles.

RIDERS SALVAGE

one letler to each square, to
form four ordinary word!l.

FI\IE MINUTES TALK
WITH HER ALOHE-

...................
.....,.... .
POOLS

ll&lt;AT'S ALL I'll
NEED· -

WARBUC&lt;S IS WORTH

BILLIONS · · MV f)(- WIFE IS
Ho SAP--SHE'LL NOT TAKE
AHV CHANCE OF LETTIN(i
ME. TALK TO HIM··
THIS G&gt;OT HIN\
WEAVINo.

D. Bumprdner

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

AL TROMM OONST

SMIIH 'J!ILSON
MOTOIIS, INC.

s-mtno.

o~~

(Aa1wen lomorrowt

GUlTER SERVICE

Ye•lerd•r'•

Jomb!.o. BRASS JOINT FER~OR PIGEON

I

,\n,wf'r:

•• }'ou 'rt the- III!Cflnd G'tHI I! to Hfhp
lhini/"-"PERSON"

---/fint

f-

. . . . -. . ,- -- - _.:;_

AstraGraph

~-sil~_&amp;-~

----

AltEY CLOSES
~ANCE SE1WEEN HI MSELI=
AND~E 'TH IEF...

GASOLIN"E ALLEY

.. . OUR .-RIENDS SACK IN THE TIME MAcHINE LABORATORY ARE HARD
AT WORK 11&lt;:'V ING 10 DETERMINE
HIS WHEREABOUTS .1

I WIII IIJ

·-.

Who
shall
call

on

ZZ Dlacovery
Z1 Brook

on
fo!J..\s

U Spring
25 Zero or
witching
Z8 Metric

~....,~
J:t!~-

now,
Rufus?

31 ExpWJge

35 Quiet
one

measure

""' '
-time

(colloq.)
3'1 Stannwn

Z9 Metric

38 Cape-

measure

pr-

START EARNING
TOMORROW

for
baseball's
Goslin

n Wine

- - ----.

$26995

Aaswer
30 Nickname

Ye~terday's

2DO ~ear aqo when
nation wels founded
c~ J.

we

WIN AT BRIDG E

- - -- --------- --:-::-+-1---H-+-fHal could break his own rule
r-------------lutt r of duiJs Fnurth bes( of n
Nitt\'111
----~

.

ON

WMPO·AM·FM

Country Cousins Cookshoppe wi II be
accepting applications June 28-29-30
at their new location at
W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio from 9:00 to
s: 00.

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

_.-. A~ T~ Noon Report,

..

:: and 5 P.M.

~ ·

..

. -II

• (JI !1 7 ~1

no ttm r tfJ
South ptillli "i .tr t• or d uhs Oft
l•:us r ' Ill ;nul led lh,• Ill uf
11iunu,nrls ll :d li u c k~d IJnt lwtl
tn WI!! lin• 11c x t t.hr.tlllQIHJ :
T!t('ll he tliouglit fo r It !IIOrnrtt t :md piHIIkt'd down •hltl
;l('t' {•f spt.td es. l ~ ast stgtt:J IIf' li
w1lh lht• nin&lt;' lla l led his lns l
sp.tdt• :tlllf (k c: l;u er was dt!W lt
t wo
1\ H llal pol tt ll'll ou ll (tlcr ,ltts
spatll' I Pad mtg ht ll :.~vc t· o~L ~~
Iri ck, hut thl' onl y dwm·!l tu
(id ea l th e con t ra&lt; t wuultl, he
lo lincl l·~ a st wt llt th ose ~vull

• IUt•l
t A ll
U 41
,4 ,1!} 7 1.1
· ,. 10 !1
Slll "''ll 1111
.!J iJ2

• .1 n2
¥ A Q 111
+K 111'1

.f, AQ r,
Hoth uult wraiJI I'
W~s t

North 1•.wa

So uth

t NT

Pass :1 N 'I' Pus:-;

r~,l"'i

Pnss

Openm g lf'ad

4"

L---- --- - fl y Oswnltl &amp; J nn11•s .Ja cohy
One pttnctpl c o l d ~ l c n stvP
One Jetter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia play th a i ll al S1111S s l ~t•sscd
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. &lt;lc. Single letters. was that yo u sllon ld .~ void
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all s&lt;·aLlN gun pl ays In olher
hints. Each day I he code letters arc different.
word s. if you ~~ ~~~ tNI nnu Slllt

FTOOFL
YL

CRYPTOQUOTES
y

NRTFVZLS

DLZLSL

IS V

suo

you should lcud to kl'ep on
with II
D R U H F V
fi e fel l !ha l any l tt nt' yuu
' brok e a new sni t you were
D N I Z L V , like ly l&lt;1 bt• g1v t1tg a tr 1rk

away

HEAR NEWS FIRST

HELP WANTED

hm ~ SlJI! W:IS ;111!1 ~tl ways Will
IJI' :1 s t:Ht!l:n d l&lt;!:u.l ag ains l

1-:AS'I'
A I( t) ~14 'l

TEAFORD

--- - -

&lt;11 111 '/ij
¥ I( .1

.. 1&lt;11 2

r.

CARRIER WANTED
FOR GOOD
SYRACUSE
ROUTE

:n

I I 00- Wt•cei of ~ ., lunc 3, 15; Wrekd ay •1. G,.,.,;,ll
8, 10; f armor's Duughler 1.1
11 30 - llo llywood Squ.Jrps 3,4.d 15, II,J p py
1~ .
Love ol Llle 8, 10
11 55-- Tet ke Kerr 8, Dan l111c l's Worl d 10
12· 01}- Fun Fectory J,IS1 Le i's Mnke" Dl'o l IJ; t; ob
Braun 4 Ncw5 616, 10; Scs11me St. 3J
11 30--Go ng Show 3, 15, /I ll My Cl•llurutl 6, t:t; S"11rr ll
for tomorrow 8.10
12 55-NBC News 3, 15 .
1 OG-Ncw' 3; Ryan 's Hopu 6, I]; f'&gt; hll ll onu~uc 8,
Young &amp; lhe Res !less 10, N() l Fur Wo ~ n c n Onl y 15,
E le e. Co. 33.
30- Days ul Our Ll vt!s 3,4, 15; l~ hylflf\ &amp; I~ cason 6, 1.1;
/Is Tile Wor ld Turns A, 10. Nov,, 13
2:00- $20,000 Pyr a mi d 6, 13.
2 . ~o-.Oocl ur s .1,11,15; BreAk the Bank 6,13, Gu1tJing
Llghl B, 10, EvenlnQ a l Pop s 33
3 00 --AilOIII er Wor ld 3,4, 15; Gcn ero l llo·;pllnl o.IJ , All
In The FMnily 6, 10; K.up 's Show 20,
3:3()-() ne Life lc Live 13. Mic ke y Mo use Club 6. Mn tch
Game a, 10; o u,·story 33
ji.Oo--Mis ler Car loon 3, Merv Grllf in 4; S om ers~ I 15,
Bcwll cllcd 6; Mic key Mo use Club a. Mlslc r ll og&lt;'"
10.33 ; Movie " lhc Neked Spul"' 10; Dlnnh 13. '
4.3o-Bew llchod I, Mod Squad 6; Andy Grl ffllh 0;
Sesam e Sl 70,JJ. Flln ls lo11es IS
S·OO- Bonama 3: P nl" l r ldgf\ Filtnlly 0; Ml s~ IOII' !111
'- possible 15
5:3G-Adam -12 4, News 6. Fn1111 ly Altair A. E le c . Co
20.33 : Ada m -12 13
6.00- Nevv. 3,4,8, 10 , 13, 15 , ABC News 6. Zoorn 20.3:1.
6. 3tJ---NBC News 3, 4, 15,. AB CNcws 13; A11d)IGrlff ll h 6,
CBS News 8, 10, llndg epodgt! Lodge 70, VII In 1\legrc
33 .
7.0o-Truth 01 Consl J; Vaude vil le ·1: ~uwllng lor
Dollars 6, Pop Goe s th o Country o; News 10: Wild
Kingdom 13: FRmlly Ali al r 11 . Book ll ca t ~0 ;
Tou r ists are Com111g 33.
. 7· 30- Lnst oflh e Wll rl 3; Ma lch Ga tn e PM 6; $25,000
Pyramid 8. Even ing Ed ition wll h Ma rlin Agronsk y
10; The Ju dge 10 ; To Tull lh e l'ru th 13. Wild
Kingdom 15; Ono~ Boe l 33
B· DO-Li lli e House on Ihe PrRI r lo '1. ~ . 15, Bioni c Worn an
6, 13; Jack sons 6, 10; Ll&lt;ve Irom Llnr ol n Center 70,:tl
a 30- Kell y Mon te ith a.10
9·00- Siar s &amp; Stripes Sho w 3.4, 15, Bm ello 6, 13;
Cann on H, IO.
10 · 00- Star..ky &amp; Hulcl&gt; 6, 13, Bl l•e Knig ht 6, 10
II :OG-News 3.4.6.8. 10, 13,15 , fi Rl Ne ws 31
11:3o-J ohnny Car son 3,4, 15. Mov ie " Qull lcr P r ice of
Violence" 6, 13; Movl(! ' 'How the Wes t Wrts Won'' !J ;
M ovie " Wher e I he Spies A1r·" 10 J, mnit!JJ
30- Tomorrow 3,&lt;t ; News 13

P"Y'

UPIRIINCID

SWIMMING

n

8 . 30- Big V,lll cy 6
9:00- AM. 3; Phi l Qon ahuc 4, 15; Lucy % ow 0; Mi ke
Dougl as lQ, Morntng with 0 J 1J
9: 3o-Cross Wll s 3; One Life lo ll vt' 6. l e ll le lnles a,
Ml ~e Do ug le&lt; 13.
IO .Oo-Sanforrl /1. Son 3,•1, 15; E dqt' ot Nlql1l 6; Pr ice 1·
Righ i a. 10. IJ •t wll h Knl l 33
l O·)O- Cc lebri ly Swuopsl,, kes 3, 4, 15, IJ\n t:th 6 , Li li as,

'

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and .Repair

!_»J!!llilt",:c __··

6: 15- Farm Repo rt II
6· 2()-. The Story 13
6 30 Colum b u!&gt; foctrJ y 11, News 6, Sv rnnH·r St• lnec; lt·r
8, Farmllme 10
6:45 Mornin g I~Cpcl l 3
6 .so- Good Morn lnq , W~ s t Vlrqln !A p
6 55 Chuc k While Ht•p&lt;tt Is 10. GO(lCI Mur 11 lng , 11 1
Slate 13
7 00-..-Tod.ly ~ ,•1 , 1 5 ; Good Mornl nQ, /\ n,N ICil 6, 13; (. 1\ S
News B,· 13ugs Bunny &amp; r r l!•nds 10
7 30- SdlOOIIi•s 10.

Ai.tm~D AA IIOVITA1101l10

eo,;., ax

AssORTED RUBBER

WEDNESDA Y, JUN E 30, 1976

6:0o-- Summer S(lmcsft'l r 10

1\\A\ '10U

BACLf.AiPETING

~~~-

5:00-Bonanza 3. 1-'artndge ~amlly B; Mission lm
pcsslble lS.
5:3G-Adam-12 4, IJ; News 6; Family Alta ir B: Elec
trlc Company 20.33 .
6:00-News 3. ~.8. 10, 13. 15; ABC New&gt; 6. Zoom 20,33.
6 30....NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News IJ ; Andy Grlltlth 6;
CBS News8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences J; To Tell the Trut h ' ·
Bowling for Dollars 6, Lei' s Go lo the Ra ces B•
News 10; Name That Tune 13, Fam ily Affair IS;
Romagnolls' Table 2C ; Wild, Wild Wo rl d of
Animals 33.
7·3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let' s Deal W1th II 6;
Match Game 8; Evening Edlllon Wllh Martin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13; Nashville on the Road 15; Family Theatre 33
8:00-Movle "1776" 3.4 , IS; Happy Days 6, 13 ; I've Gol a
Secret 8, 10; Burglar-Proofing 20,33
8:3o-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Good Times B, IO ,
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
9:00-S W.A. T. 13; World at Wa r 6 , M-A S-H a. IO, More
Musi c From Aspen 33; Evening al Symphon y 20
9:3()-()ne Day at A Time 8.10
10:00-Rookles 13; Great American Musi c Celebration

T. . .

&amp; Heating

TlliSI biter Co.

lbrs ond .... inp • ..,. T... ""'

-.

'

6; Ve ud~vl!lc B; Df'nU! t cr C:uncr ll JJ . Switch !0
News 70
10 30- Bl ack PC'r"S pecl•vi-• on tl tt• tJ tl\\&lt;S JO: Wom cm J.1
10 ·4S- To Be Announc..:d 3,4, 15
11 ·00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, I; II OC Nl'l" J.l
11 30 -Johnny Car s011 3. 4. 15 My1-0tc• y of l! n:! Wc•uk
" The Murdere rs" 6, 13; Mu v ~t~ '' Show l:lotl1 " 0,
Mov ie " lip rr o111 Th e BP~ c h " 10. Jrmak l JJ ,
00 Tom on ow 3. 4. Nt•w &lt;; 13

TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1976

........

5-Zi-1 mo.

SoutheMfem Ohio

:

Wed ,.. bJ con11&lt;Un1 I.
owner.

Auto Sales

1-.

a.12.

4-1Z Pltdt
M'-$.1111
21'-$ll72
Zl'-$111.11

--- ~

my

Cllolo

~
· RaciM Plumbing ·
•

IWIIOW IIOCE
(lllhal Altli

I WOULD lrke to do bobys• tt•ng rn

........
.......
.. ...
'-ltlllls.l~

'IOU

LOIIG 1lOITOII

Will DO odd )obs roofmg, po•n·
ling houltn g, tr eework , and
m~wmg Phone 992 -74:09

--

Television log for easy viewing

WIUUISOI'S

_, ....

a.J,·.:.s...,

-·

'

-

-.

mo.

SittratiolltWanted ·
~

-·

'·

.................
"'-m.zm. ...., ...
-~,_ _

WINIIIIIS I DOOIS
IENIUEIIT
WIIIIIIIS
AWMIIIIIII
SIOIIIG-IIImT

Ph. H2·Jtl3

.

H~LLS
SAlvAGE ·

-

llowollllw• 1 Altlcs

.

.

"

llltwn ·
lnsulltion snc.

Co~

1974 FORD FIOO
1299S
8' Sty les1 de. green fini sh, good tires, R. bumper,
chrome grr ll s &amp; fit s bumper , 6 cy I. &amp; std. trans

Lost and fllllnd

We know that we cou ld neer
fmd ,
A deorer, loving Dod
Dod r~ such a s pee~ol word ,
Because 1t s!onds for you
So sad ly m1ssed by daughter
_ Mrs. Helen Jelfer~ond Forr11l y
IN memo ry of our be loved
Mother, Add le l Hawk who
passed away June 2'Uh , 196-4
It s the ann tversary of o loved one
lost,,
Her smilmg way and pleasant
face ore o pleos ~Jre to retail
She enJoyed life to the fullest,
And d1ed beloved by all
Thts rrchly shored love we'll never
forget
And hold m our heart s, till ogam
We ~'lave met.
Mtssed by children and grand
child ren

:

.

IN LOVING memory of our dear NOTICE As of June '13 1976 the
fathe r. Homer Icenhower who
Chester Volunteer Ftre Dept,
poned away three years ago
Will no longer hau l water ,
June 29th 1973.
It's lonesome l'lere wtthout you WOULD the lady who recet\led o
wl-ute long hat red kitt en ot the
Dod,
home of Freddie Houdasheh
We miss you more each day
Fnday afternoon, please conSome ho~ ltfe doesn t seem the
tact M1s s Houdeshell at 992some,
2520 or 992 33-4 5
Since you were called owoy
THERE w1ll be a shoo tmg match
God took you home to be his
Sunday. July 4, starting at noon
guest ,
ot tl'le Forked Run Sportsman
But stll the empty cho tr
Club .
Remmds us of the foce, the smiiB
01 one who once sot there

Ule muST go on wtthoiJt you
But the memor1 es we share
Gives us comoloflon, because
We hod yoiJ here

-

Business
- Services

Notices

A space is vacant in our home
Whtck never co n be filled ,
So often ou r thoughs wonder
To a grove no I far ~way .

... -

SNUFFVH
DURN 'lORE HIDE!!
WHV DON'T lfE

ANSWER

ME? ·

SHHH-·
TH' LINE'S
BUSY

IHORUZ
HSWSUBS
Not litill ll al wa s l u u
Yet!lerday's Cryploquote: THE TROUBLE WITII TODAY'S stubborn to vto ltiLe Iu s ow n
ECONOMY IS THAT WHEN A MAN IS RICH, IT'S ALL ON rul ~s
PAPER. WHEN HE'S BROKE IT'S CASH. -SAM MARCONI li e Hat Wl•st and rn:ttli• hi s
&lt;C 1916 Klnl f'"htra Syndh:at•. Inc,)

'' I FOOND MI.{ 515TEI1.
SELLE ... AND WHAT A

ltEONION WE'RE HAVING !
IJELLE IS JUST A.5
BEAUTIFUL AS EVER ''

normal opening lead of the

'I"""~'

~~ ~u-~~~
An Ont;u lo rea der wan ls' to
know wl1&lt;1l Wl' think 111' lite
ldl'a ul op~:nl11g lh1rd r.tt hl'f
tl "t" lou rt h best ftnm " l~ n ~
SUll
J
Tit~ rl.l ed h &lt;.~ s son1e mori t,
but Ulll' ~rPrt t WCH ktl t'S."i . 'J'Iwr r.
ure too 111 a nv ()('ttsion s suclr us
" ho lding ur'Q 10 II 4 wl1eo you
ncctl to h&lt;~ vc llwt e ight sp&lt;IO in

your hand la t{'r

,

(l-or a cop y of JA C~BY
M ODERN, sen d $ 1 to " Wm

tJndgu . " .! o f ~ JS
newspaper. P 0 . Box 4Q9.
tl a d1o Crty Sfa ftO!l, / lew Y(l(k,
NY 1001 91
.,

af

,,

..,,,,
)

'' UNFOfi'TVNATEL'f, T
CAN'T SA'f MUCH F'OR
HER TEEN-A6E SON "

�•

•1• .-:- The O.Uy _Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

I

-

!'or Fast Results Use· The Classifieds
WANT ADS
lli,OIIMATION
DIADLINES
S P .M . Dav
Before
l'ubiiCIIIon .
Clnctllatlons,
corn!!c.
tlons ecctpted fJrst dar of
PUbllcollon .
II EGULATIONS
The Publisher renrves
tht rloht to ed i t or reject
lny ads · deemed ob lectlonel The publisher
will not be respons ible for

more than one incorrect

Insertion .

RATES
'or Went Ad Strvlct
5 cents per word one

Insertion .
Minimum Charge Sl 00

lA cents per word three

consecutive Insertions
26

cents r,er

word si x

conucutlve nsertlons

25 Per Ctnt Discount on
Plld IdS lnd Ids paid
within 10 d1y1 .

CARD DF THANKS
&amp; OIITUARY
$2 .00 for
minimum

80

word

Eech additional word J

cents .

ILIND ADS
Additional 2Sc Charge
ptr Advertisement

OFFICE HOURS

I 30 1 .m to 5 . 00 pm
Dally, 1 ' 30 l .m to 12 ·0()
Noon Saturct•y .
Phone toa•y 1192 -21S6

NOTICES
ATTN , II

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

OF

Motor
QUALITY

1973 CHEVROLET CIO
S289S
8' Fleets ide, wh over red, c:lean Interior, 350 V-8,
automatte, power stee r in g &amp; brakes , good tires step
bumper, radio, custom t ri m 8- mirrors .
'

LOST Tuesdoy r11ght , pan a f light
blue prescrtpt•on glosses ,
possibly los t on Pomeroy porkmg lot Rewmd tf found Coli
9&lt;9-23 1&lt;
LOsT Motorcycle lrcense No 9C
M Please phone Kenneth
Mofery 992,3286 •f found

197J INTERNATIONAL 1600
•
S389S
102" C E . V-B, Sspeed , 18,500 2 speed R. axle, 900 fires,
solid cab, colo r wh1te .

~

'

FREE E_$TIMATE$

,..........
. STOIIII

IARWfER
4-10-1

frtar

CODNER'S CAMPERS

home wtth pre -school
chtldren . Hove ex perience and
references Phone 992 .bQ J2

OPEN

I

lll1l: .... . . , - ""-· •

'*"" ... - ...........

..., Tllen, 11111 .....
. . Uati!St .
I~ Olllo HZ-,11112

CAPTAIN EASY
..

'ftlltld

wantttto:'Buy.=,

WH¥1 .. 50 •He
ENEMY A'f&gt;f;NT$
WATCHtNe HER
PLACE WILL GET
INTERESTED
IN ME:~

rtof

lltw

or oil,-

pllntlnl, tlectrlnl

'l
ue,
wor •i

Colluo ol t4f-2112
or t4t-2213
3:28-1 m_!:.J

W.Dih

1969 Plymouth Sa!elhte, $1 200
P~one 992 6131

RKINE

6 CANS OF RC .

CMPET Sfl)p

•1.00+

PI CTURE !

"utters &amp; downspouts,
urn1ces, Wlttr htlttrs,
Wlttr softnen, illltllltd &amp; 1
rtpelred, St••••·

,._ 1114174Z·24ot

JUNE SPECIAL

NOW HOlD O&gt;J! '\"l;NEAK"' I ~ A HOK RIC
AilE YOU PROPOSING 1'/0R'D, 5PORT· BUT ,
I SNEAK IN HER.
E55E&gt;JTIALlY
MCK WINDOW~
YOU'VE GOT THE-

ltlrn, 11\lntlfl, IJYIIcl

llltiiM,Illllo8771

5-21-llllt.

TO 60 6E'T
R051E'5 REPORT!

rtp•lred? Houu, roo

6-13-7! I mo.
MAK E sprrng cleaning prof ttoble ,
All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
'"
turn unwonted items mto cash
Porctland Basement Porch
Adverttse 1n the Want Ads
and Basement Sales, etc .
19741-ord Courte·; 4 speed, 11~(XX)
.must be p11d In edvence .
miles , $200 ond assume lOCUST posts, round or spl1t .
OLD fur ni tur e, tce bJx~s · brass
Julllllotttrles $1.25
Get yours In early by
payments, 1974 Kowasok t 250,
Phone 9&lt;9·277•
beds
wal l telep!)pnes end
stopp ing by our office et
lltllor Cist Clllll
1966 Ntmrod comp1ng traile r
ports or complete tjSuseholds
The Dilly Sentinel, 111
1973 450 Prototype Kawasaki
lor
lost
sale
Phone
992-7066.
Court St or writing Box
$3.50
Per Hundltd
Wn te M D MiiiRt 4,
mo to r c ro s~.
good condttion.
- -Granado 301~-8 . p --s , $650
Racine, Ohio
72,, Pomeroy , Ohio 45169
-7760
_ Pomeroy ._Oht ~~a~l
1975
Ford
Phone
992-3843.
with your remlftance .
1 ••
p b . 0 c $3895 p• • 992CASH po1d for all
s and
LA
TEN
paper,
roller,
2
truck!l,
C. ladies
3&lt;51
With any ~.00 purchuo ·
mode ls of mob•
ames
reasonable Phone992-7481.
and
this
ad.
Good
throygh
Phone area code 614-423-9S31
. Scrlp.l1'1111
1972 Ford % lon prckup truck,
PUCO Cast No. 76-454-WS-COI
1975 Bullc ... o 360 Frontier motor- 6-30-76.
I 1350 00 Colli 378 63&lt;9
Public Notice
S$Coshs$$for
junked
a~
Frye
s
cycle Enduro model , many exNotice Is hereby given lhal IN memory of Rolph E lee, wno
Truck Auto Parts . ullond. )97-4 Ford van , E300 senes, 1 ,tros , reasonably pnced . Pl'lone
passed
away
on
June
28,
1975
the
Public
Utilities
Phone 742-2001
Squore ·v.rd Instolled
Phone 992 7320
992-7291 after 8 p.m.
,..., Ollio
Slltlrt
Commission of Ohio seeks to God sow you gett1ng weary
He
did
what
He
thought
best
CoiNS
tokens
any
form
gold
or
David Parions, Owner
Chevrolet truck $85 See Of 74 Kowo sakl $475 00. Phone 742Middleport, Ohio
'
amend Chapter XX IX ol Its
Pllooo HZ.54a
He put H1s arms around you ,
stlver 1cwelry , spoons rings
,.,::it14.
570 Peor l .~tddleport
2980
992-6167
Code
of
Rules
and Then
took yau home to rest
dental Wtll trade Cell Roger
Regulations, pertaining Ia the
6-1-76-1 month
• -7-1 mo.
1974 Monte Carlo 28 000 rnrl es, CoAL , limestone , ond calc1um
Wamsley , Rutl dnd, Oh to, 742
operations of water -works Sadly m1ued by the fomt ly, 2331
burgundy
wtth
dark
burgundy
chlonde
and
colc1um
brtne
lor
children
,
grandchildren
and
companies and
sewage
-'
top, bucket swtvel sea ls, $3700
dust co ntrol and spectal m1xing
disposal system com panies - ~ot ·g':_ondch~dren .
TIMBER PomerO)I/.~Fores t Pro
Coll992 5053
salt for fo rmers Main Street,
sub/'ed to the Commission 's
duels. Top pnce for standmg
Pomeroy, Ohto or phone 992jur sdlctlon .
A
public
-sawttmber Call M;flnt Hanby 1975 Cu tlass Solon AM tape Olf
custom tntertor, cru tse co ntro l
389 1~--~----comment per iod for written
l·-446-B570 ~ __
cos t over S6 000 new Phone 1973 25 it . Yukon Delta
comments on
proposed
992-9_981 morn~~o~ ly ,
houseboa t, oil se lf·contoined,
Amended Chapter XXIX will
••lend until July 19, 1976
wtlh 1976 Chrysler 105 h p.
The Complete
1967 Cornaro 327. 4 speed , ex
engine Phone992-5532.
Persons who Intend to tesl1fy RACINE Ftre Deportment
celle nt condttt on, $q50 Phone
Remodeling
Service
IF
YOU
hove
a
have
o
gun
shoot
Soturdo,
should prepare their remarks
offer
{61&lt; ) 985 3806.
II 11011 ............... lot.
MEN'S used work un1forms , pants
6.30 p.m. at their new
want to bu y or
In writing and submit them on
For
Your
Home
-28 inch - 36 mch waist , shrrts
off Bashon Road.
or before lhe date of hea rt ng
ore lookmg for work . or
-----S-M·L, short and long sieve,
All written comments and
whatever
you'll ge l resulls cam_pJJ!I~
_-·.
i
$1.98
set Boilvy's Store, MidI
foster w.th o Sentmel Wont Ad
testimony should be II led with
dleport
'
Rutland
742-2:121
lhe
Public
Utilitie s lrrming -up before testrng
Coil 992·2156
lAST week of mce Anntve rsory
••• 5 I
All Work Guaranteed
Commission of Ohio on or PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
Y ARD-sa le M(lnd oy, Tuesday
Sole on Storeraft mtnl motors, Three-yttar-old reg1stered black
PIIOllf
112-5724
Free Estimates
before the deadlines A.Public Be very sensi ble abou t healt h
Angus bull for sale. Phon&amp; {61.4)
Wednesday Mt•~:~nne Mtcho'tl.
$12 300 or $10 ,500 20 It 7mch
985
-3555
hearing
will
be W held matters t oQ~w . II yo u kno w th e
6-IH mo
laurel Cliff D~r es~ lon g loss,
self.contatned trotler, $-4299
,._ 112·2174 ;::'.
,...,
commencing on July 26. 1976. mustard ar1W'bn1on s always uplold ·downs $1900 We servtce 23 channel CB ftts tn • dash,
some furn•t.ure ol'ld mtsC
al9 30 A.M. atlhe ofllce of the
o --- ~
1
who! we sell Camp Conley
o m - fm-m p~e rad1o, 8 track
Public Ulllllles Commission ot set you . eal yo ur hot dog pfa1n
YARD Sole , July I 2, 3 Bott om ot
Stcrcraft Soles Route62 N , PI
stereo Call 992·3965.
Ohio, II I North High Street,
Mos.sar Htl l. starts at 9 a m
Pleasan t
Columbus. Ohio 43215 Copies
Dtshes . po ts ftOn s some ontt
f---~~ d
d MAYTAG wrrnger washer and
I.
ques Clothtng , tee cream 16 I comptng trot er goo con •or this Entry and propcsed
dryer . Phone {614) 985-3554. ROOMY 7 yr. old one story wood .
home.
two
bedrm.
home
sPRAY
PAINTING,
Al
TIIOMM
freezer
m1s
c
\IO
riety
of
thi
ngs
.
liOn
_P
hone
84~}5~2
__
__
Amended Cl&gt;apler XXIX may
Harold Brewer , long Bottom,
locorod botwoen Coolville ond
CONSTRUCTION. PHON£ 742be obtained lrom the olflces of
EN ORMOU So~ Fomtly Ya rd Sole 197'1 Trove! lro tler, 18 ft sel f- Ohio
Continuous one place
ruppers Plains. One acre lot.
:2321.
'
lhe
Public
Utilitie s
Juna 30, 1976
Jul y lsi, 2nd. 3rd . Fronk Hud
~~nlomed
good co ndth on TULSA truck win ch. 12,00J lbs
guttors. We hang it, or do it
two
cor
garage,
clly
wot..-,
goo
VERMRR
BALER
~LES
AND
SER·
Commission.
Dockeling
son reSidence. co rn er Flhh _ • ~;BS 4~S __ _
vourself. Speclol prices to
capacity Also, two overhead
You will have more than your
Division
heot ,
h~rdwood . flo~rs,
VICE. Melg.·Athens County.
and Peart Streets , Ro ct ne
bullcltrs.
10~e 1 0 garage doors. Phone
fai r share of opportuntt•es thts
carpetd, l1vmgroom . ntctvlew,
Bal..., from p99s up Merrill
Oh1o Antrque trunk; key-wtnd wa~,--=::=
-~{614
)
985
-355-4
,
Harold
Brewer.
year
howeve
r
1
1
you
don
I
act
$21
.000
Phono(61•)667-3514.
ChaH,
(614)698-3021.
'
THE PUBLIC
clock collector's items. Gtbson
llll __ -=;. J
~---=--l ong Bottom , Ohto .
UT ILITIES on them wt sely th ey 'll dtssolve
Phone 949-2814
6 room house, very well kept, 3
gut tor , ampltfler , law n mower,
-COMMISSION mto pleasan t memones
Ne
w 16 ft flatbed tandem tro tler.
WANTED to rent 3 bedroom home
bedrms., modern kitchen, well EXPERIENCED • houte palnl....
9
A.M. to 5 P.M.
5 ptece dmett e , tools m•sc
locally or would ltke to bu y
Phone Arlltu/ MusMr, 742OF OHIO
Phone (614) 985-3554 Harold
to wall cQrpet, H.W. floors, full
2180.
from A lo.Z
home on land contract Phone
Brewer, Long Bottom , Ohio
basement, new gas furnoce.
992-7320 evenings
By : Randall G. App legate,
PORCH Sole , Corner of Vme and
2-47 -2167 .
small
lot
to
mow
,
Ideal
for
gUILDING
and remodeling, exSMITH and Wesson , Model 41
Broadwa y , Weds1
an d
Secretary DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX,
older
couple
or
small
family
in
cavation, conc~•t• work, el.c:·
outomot•c ~2 cal, target pistol,
Thu rsday , June30and3 1, 10 00
good neighborhoa.d In
.
6-27 -76
trlcal -rk, plumbing, rough
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
new
$180
f1
rm
,
1970
Datsun
510
16) 29, ltc
hiI 4 00 M• sc some lurn•lure
·or;;~~ent~~~:·' ::-"==':.;_
Pomeroy.
Coli
for
appointment
and
llnlllhecl,
:carpon!ry
ond
PARTIES HAS OENINGS FOR
Sedan , fair co ndit ton. runs
etc
Phone 992-3097.
roofing. Phone 9'12-7481.
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA
good , $500 Pot belly stove,
FURNISHED
,
2
bedrm
apartment
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE YARD Sole, Thur sd ay and Frid ay ,
$65
Phone992-7805.
42 one-fourth acres of real estate, RICHAI:D'a Malnfwlonce, e:dtror
adu lts on ly tn Mtddleport
Ju ly 1 and 2nd 10 00 till 2 00
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INVEST more or leu, sltualtd in Sec·
painting, dry woll. roofing, otc.
Phone
992
3874
NEW
delu
)(e
Tappan
elednc
MENT , NO COLLECTING OR
Drapenes, cloTh e$, reco rds ,
!ton 26, Fraction 31. in Rutland
lowut rotea , around. Phone IRADFORD, Auollonoor. Comrange,
lull
warranty
,
Has
dHp
DELIVERING: CALL COLLECT Tb
wts kttchen stool and cart and 3 AND 4 RM . furn"hed and un·
Township, Metga County, Ohio
7d-2126. '
v
on door w1ll sacrifice , $235 00
ploto Sorvlce. Phone 9•9-2&gt;187
CAROL DAY 51B·&lt;B9-B395 OR
many hosuehold tlems All
fu rnts hed a(l iS Phone 992
For further mfarmotlon , contact
Krngsbury
Home
Sales
,
call
or 949-2000. Roclne, Ohio, Critt
WILL
do
hovso
c~nln~.
Call
belWR ITE FRIENOL Y HOME PAll dean Upper Syracuse next to
543&lt;
Bernard V. Fultz, Pomerod Na·
992 7034 .
Bradford.
Ruth s Market
ween 9 a .m. OAd 12 p.m. or •n
TIES, 20 RAILROAD
ttonol
Bonk
Burl lng,
·coU-NTRY M~b~e H~m;-Po rk , Rt
evening
after
6
a
.m.
or
before
9
Pomeroy, Oh10. Telephone:
ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR cSA~LiB~A~N~Y.iNf;Y~I2~2~05~do~~~ YARD Sole , Anttque te e bo x m•lk
33, ten m•l• nori h of Pom eroy
p.m. 92·337~ . •,.
992-2 186.
Sweepera, toasters, Irani , all
H
, open the
can treadle sewmg mochm e,
Lorge lots \Y1th concret paftos ,
YOUR HOTPOINT
small applloncM . lawn mower,
extra earn1ngs Jotn
solo
cho tr, mrsc It ems
stdewolk s. runners and off
AP PLIAN CE STO RE
HOMESITES for sale. 1 acre and EXCAVATING, li.IICKH0£5 AND
next to State Highway Goroge
DOZER - LARG£ AND SMAll,
cessful women who ore
Richard Spencer on Rt 7, Tup
st ree1 pork mg. Phone 992 7479.
• Bemtce Bede Osol
up, Middleport near Rutland.
on
R011te 7. Phon• {61•1 985.
SEPTICTANKS)~STALLED,
LOW
mg good money rn their
pers Plo tns. July 2 and 3 star FREEZER
SALE!
Caii992·7•Bt
ONE -bedr~ o;;;tme~
382S
For WedMidoy, Juno 30, 1g75
BOY AND DUMP TRUCKS. l lll
ttme
No expertence
tmg9a .m
Save
up
to
$100
on
20
VILLAG E MANOR m Mtddleport
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 batha,
PULLINS, f'HOI'If 992-:U78 DAY REMODELING. Plumbing hooting
necessary , no delivery, no col·
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll 19)
for $104 mon thly plus elec . or
oil elec. I aero, Mlddlopcrt ,
cu.
ft . Chest or 16 cu.
OR NIGHT.
feeling, no cash mvestment
and all types of g.nerol repair.
SpectJialtve situattons are not
$130 mcludmg electrtc LOWER
clo5e to Rutland. Phone 992·
Call now and get extra early
ft. Upright.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
your long suit today Even 11
RATES
FOR
SENOR
CITIZENS
.
7&lt;81.
.
benefits Phone 949· 2803 or
perlonco. Phono 992-2•09.
Conven1ent to shopping on
you get a tempting ms1de ttp,
·. -- ·- :. =._ :_.
:
949-2786 . Also, booktng par· POODLES, 6 we~ s old, $35 Phone
SMALL farm for sole . 10% down,
Third and Mtll Streets rn Mid
avoid II If It carries any type of
9902 7671
o&amp;o
TREE Trimming, 20 years u tieS
Choice
owner ftnanced. Monro. Coun· FAIRIC SHOP. l)lh party plan
risk
dleport Brand new high quai l·
perlence. Insured free
ty:
W.
Vo,
Phone
(304)
n2FABRIC SHOP- EARN EXTRA $$$ PuPS to ~•ve away Port Spr~n er
Appl ran ce Department
ty op,jrfm ents . See the
Mf '!! and rady lo
..timates . Call 992·238.4 or
3102 or (304).772-3227.
TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) If
Sponte , port Beagle. Cal l
-f
Part-time or ful l-time. Fabric ,
mono. at Rtverside Apartmako morroy.,gn be oplnllod
(61•)698-7257 Albany.
POME(lOY
LANDMARK
5170
or
992-2669
·
you're buying a hlgh-pnced
craft and notton5 party plan
ments or call 992·3273 Fur from your liOme wllh low
HOUSE for sale in Racine, Ohio.
home Item, take lime to get explus sample shop. No Invest- SIAMESE kittens , $10. Seolpoints ,
ntshed
apartments als o
-9. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
ovetltood and high proflls. ln- SEWING MACHINE R..,airo, oerSt Rt. 338, just outside town. 8
vlco, all makft, 992-2284. Tho
ment. For 1nfo. write or ca ll
actly what you want or you may
avadable
v. . tminl ol S2.4oo .10 S3,900
rooms, both, porch , patio, city
All . Phone 992-2111
phone 992-3216.
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy .
Stmphcty Fabrics, 249 W .
have to hve with a costl y miSdollaro
will
put
you
In
a
one
of
a
water,
gaa
forced
air
furnace,
TRAILER space lor ren t 1n MtdAuthorlzod Slngor SoiM ond
take
Center St , Morto n Ohto
kind bualneu ln your county.
good lot . Coli owner anytime,
dleporl . Phone 992-5434
Ser-vice. We sharpen Sciasors .
•3302- Phone {61• ) 382-3066
tnlo,
write:
Stmpllclly
W•ll1om
Maynard,
9·9-2613.
GEMINI (May - 21 -Juno 20)
Also , I (one) distributor needUNFURNISHED Opt . lor rent. 4
fobrtcs, 249 ~- Conlor 51 .. EXCAVATING, dozer, looder ond
Don't flaunt your knowledge tn
OLDER, remodeled, 3 bedroom
ed for your county - Very
rooms and both Phone 992Olrio---&gt;13302 . .Phono
bockha. work; dump trucks
conversatron with one who may
home, a ll electric, on corner lot
high income For 1nlo, see ad
5908.
and lo-boyo for hire, will houl
t49a
cre
fo
rm,
t~o
houses,
barns,
tn
Pomeroy,
$12,500.
Phone
not be as bnght as you Others
under Businass Opportunttres
fill dirt. tap oall, limestone and
'
hed
,
several
bu1ld•ngs,
city
TRAILER
lot
rn
Chester
,
electmrty
9'12-5011.
will be sympathetiC to your
{Fabric Shop) .
avol. Call lob or Roger Jefwater , m1nerol rights. timber,
o~ city water Phone 992·6072,
target
ero, day phone 992-70119,
$25.00 per Hundred stufhng
I 00 acres ttllable, good pasture cOUNTRY lormlond with aocluded woods , water ond good ac· 1'169 12x60 khuf(z, 2 bedroom•.
2 bedroom mobtle home Brown 's
land 8 m1les north of Pomeroy
nlghl phone 992-3525 or 992Envelopes . Send se lf
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Full
or
cess in Monroe County, W, Va.
Troller
Por.t
.
992-332-4
off
Route
33
Hemlock
Gro\le,
addressed
,
stamped
olrcondlllonor. ~ candtrlon .
5232.
You're sllll not the maste r or
$1,000 down, call {304) 772·
envelope· Edroy Metis , Box
NEW 3 bedroom hom ; ;Rutland
Ohla . Phone 992-501-4 eventngs
your budget today Before you
Parttime
Phonee....,lnll'7•2-3018.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
3102 or (304) 772-3227 .
188, YW, Albany , Mo. 6&lt;•02_
write a check, make sure
"'-:--:----...,-­
for rent . Furn1shed mcl udlng _ a,h~e'::r,-:5:-'p"'.m
IO'x55'
mobile,
homo,
3
Sanitation. 992-3954 or 9'12MANUFACTURING
you're not rotlb lng Peter to pay HELP WANTED · $2 00 hour . begin co lored TV , near mtnes . Con· HOUSE for sole by owner, large WHY RENT? Buy o now home wllh
bed,._,a,
with
fuel
oil
hoot,
;:-::2:.,
4:.:2:::8·:--..,-- -- - Paul.
payments same or lower than
toc1(614)9B5-3574after6p .m
ltvtng room , large krtch413n with
PIECE WORK
ntng today, workers needed to
bolli•d
gil!,
range.
WILl
do roofing, construcllon.
rent. 3 bedrooms, den, 2 baths ,
ptck IJP pqtatoes . Contact
bu•lt-tn birch cabinets . ~
LARGE 3 room furnished apartrelrljJoralor, diiiiiito HI, bUnk
Columbus •company will
plumbing and hoatlnu. No job
LEO (July 23-AUG. 22) Today
carpet, r,lua all the extras a
Delbert lawson at David Yost
bedrooms, lltoth , hardwood
ment Phane992 6161.
bods. S200o. P'r 992-5786,
too largo or loa amall. Phone
fully tra1n a few r eliable
you could eastly be taken tn by
housewi e would want. Shown
form
,
Great
Bend
,
Ohio,
Rt,
floors,
wall
fl'woll
carpet
in
all
people to a ssist in out of
someone with great form but
•lodrm.
c!OIIblo
iftle
h...,.,
60tc7•2-23-18.
FURNISHED
3
roo
m
apartment
fjyoppointment, 742-2328
338.
rooms . Carport, utlltty room,
plant production to make
little substance Approach new - - ' - ' - ' - - - - - - - · ond both with yard. Uh lttles
24. on lol In • ..,., , W. Va. ExCAVATING, dam, backhoe
house
fuHy
insulated
,
storm
small uret han e parts on
acquaintances wtth an open
potd Coli from 4·6 p.m 992·
Coli 992-703o4.
and' dllthor. Chorleo R. Hoi·
doors,
w1ndows
,
extra
Iorge
lot
contract, small garage size
m1
mrnd and a cntrcal eye
field, Back Hoe Service,
located
outStde
Pomeroy
Corp
-----shop area a nd a means to
Rullond. Ohio. Phone 7•2-:lQle,
on Union A\lenue. Phone 992VIAQO (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22)
del1 ver product to our loca l
7874
foroppotnlment.
Utilize your common sense tn
GlliG'S Cl SALES, localod al Erwarehouse required. No
bustness dealings today Don t
win'• Gulf Servlc:e, Mid·
2 story frame house, 2 bedrooms ,
expenence hecessary, if
trust the analysis or others who
1/irgll
B.
Sr.,
Rultor
·.!
dloport,
Ohio. Phone 9'12·
1974
24ft
motor.home,
excelle
nt
poss
tbly
3,
livmg
room
,
both
,
you ca n prove you a re
2.al.
may have less knowledge
110 Mechanic Pomoroy, Q.
cond tl lon wrth abso lute ly
kitchen and utility room , newly
"
dependabl e and willing to
carpeted , partial basement and
~every thmg Phone 949 - 277~ .
Phone P92-l37~
·
APPROXIMATtl Y 10 acrft - SI:PTIC Syslemo inalallod by
work A min im um cas h
LIIIIA (8opl. 23-0cl. 23) You
carport, 2 stories , out building.
boaullful bulldlnQ aile, an good
TUPPERS PLAINS - 4
llcenood lnolallor. Shepord
requtrem e nt of $5950
INTERNATIONAL Model 6&lt; commay act haslily to accompli sh
forced
oir,
natural
gas
heat,
road.
O...tw wdtor, wil l lako , Contractors. Phone 742·2409.
bedrooms,
.p;,
ceramic
tile
bi
f1
e,
excellent
co
nd1t
ton,
lots
necessary 6 month refund
something, without makmg
lots of storage space, $17,500.
lrodot ond hM&gt; fll1anco If
baths, nice frullwood
of extra parts . Lorge tondem
program . lntervtews can
sure the time Is ripe You could
CARPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
Phone 992-7360 after 5 p.m .
ntcollary, ~honlf949·:1770.
kllchen.
oil
F
.A.
furnace,
2
fert
lizer
spreader
good
condi·
be a'rranged fOr those W1 th
mess up your chances
ponollng. Phono992-2759.
car
garage.
All
on
1
acre.
han Tractor bolt dr1ven wood 3 bedroom house , we ll to wall
RUTH'S Marl&lt;el, S!uocus•, Ohio.
Approx . 38 customers .
avatlable space
and
$22.500
.
•
ICOIIPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
carpet, aluminum sldtng, l'ijtw
Phone 992-39116. or alter 7 Will trim or cut tr... and shrub·
sow 1959 Chevrolet 1 ton wtth
Earn extra spending
finances who are ready to
2 YRS . OLD - Modern 3
Pnorltles are most Important to
p.m.. 949-:1738.
cabinets some furniture, new
borv, phone 949-lS.S or 7•2alum. von body ond power
start immed ia tel y by
money and win valuable
3167.
~ou today If your aims overlap,
tot lgaJe, good condrtton . Phone
bathroom, 1ust bui lt, patio and bedroom home with nice
prtzes. Call The Datly
ca ll 1ng · Coli eel
kitchen which Includes
9&lt;9 2770 .
the possibilities or success
walk . One-half acre lot. 650
Sentinel al 992-2156 today.
614-252-4967
range . glass oven over.
• diminish conslder8bly
Os borne St , Pomeroy Phone
Ask For Mr. Green
Dining, centra1 air-heat,
992-5688
IAGITTAAIUS (Nov. 23· Doc:.
family room with fireplace,
• 21) Those you're likely to l1sten
and 2 car garage In dry
lo today are the ones with all
basement. S38,500.
the wrong answers Truth and
.,
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
frame house, bath, nat. gas
convincing ~hrases are not
'
synonymous
4,000 BTU G.E Corry-Cool Oir con·
F.A. furnace, basement, st.
ditioner. May be seen at 1047
drs. &amp; windows. Only 18500.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jon.
PORTLAND P roor]1
South Second Ave., Middleport ,
1t) Don't larm out wor&lt; or
house, modern kitchen,
bet~een 4 ond 6 p.m Make ofhave services done toda y
fer .
new 2 car garage and le-&lt;el
'
' - .
I
.
wlfhoul checking out people
lot, 90&gt;90 .
.
LoCST'P;sts
fo
r
sal;--;:;
;;;;
~ and prices A wrong oho1ce
NEW LISTING - Large 2
698
_ o-~~eap , Phone 992-2647
could prove expensive
4amlly home, 12 rms,, 5 up
"
with bath. 7 down with
EVERYTHING IN
1976 750 Hondo 700 miles, l1ke
AOUAIIIUI (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
bath. Nat gas heat, city
REAL ESTATE
new, $1700, Phone {614) 985It would be • mistake today to
3806.
water, and nice Jot. Only
CALL l'OOAY
.,
rely 100 heavily on recently
519,000 .
FOR YOUR NEED.
197&lt;T--5-. S-u-z-,
uk_i_I-BS- .-2-.300
- --;,ct;;;;i
acquired allies . These
WE HAVE A HOME FOR
Henry E. Cleland, Broker
miles , 2 helmets, like new.. ex:
reJeuonal')ips need more
EVERYONE. COME IN
992-2259 or 992-2548
tros $625 Phone 992 76as•
AND HAVE A LOOK.
"
'
A~L HOUSEWI~ES

THE OSVIOU5

$0L UTION 15 FOR

R•clne, Otuo

. '"

~.

BORN lAJ'"""
A~ 1(1Jp.W&lt;;

'6.t5

DONElli'S PJZ2A

8 0()., ~ L asslr 6, Co1p l Kt.H1 Q.t l 1)0 t!, 10, ~n!Hnne S l

TOO ~Cl'lES' RI:TIRE~f.IT
PARTLI OtJ THe 2?'.!' ,
THORNAPP\..~ ~

JIWJMill~®tJ.J ..,,_,u -1 9"loy Ill Nfliiii!N0ll1 oond HOB l(f'

Yogil &amp; You

Unacramblethe•e rour Jumbles.

RIDERS SALVAGE

one letler to each square, to
form four ordinary word!l.

FI\IE MINUTES TALK
WITH HER ALOHE-

...................
.....,.... .
POOLS

ll&lt;AT'S ALL I'll
NEED· -

WARBUC&lt;S IS WORTH

BILLIONS · · MV f)(- WIFE IS
Ho SAP--SHE'LL NOT TAKE
AHV CHANCE OF LETTIN(i
ME. TALK TO HIM··
THIS G&gt;OT HIN\
WEAVINo.

D. Bumprdner

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

AL TROMM OONST

SMIIH 'J!ILSON
MOTOIIS, INC.

s-mtno.

o~~

(Aa1wen lomorrowt

GUlTER SERVICE

Ye•lerd•r'•

Jomb!.o. BRASS JOINT FER~OR PIGEON

I

,\n,wf'r:

•• }'ou 'rt the- III!Cflnd G'tHI I! to Hfhp
lhini/"-"PERSON"

---/fint

f-

. . . . -. . ,- -- - _.:;_

AstraGraph

~-sil~_&amp;-~

----

AltEY CLOSES
~ANCE SE1WEEN HI MSELI=
AND~E 'TH IEF...

GASOLIN"E ALLEY

.. . OUR .-RIENDS SACK IN THE TIME MAcHINE LABORATORY ARE HARD
AT WORK 11&lt;:'V ING 10 DETERMINE
HIS WHEREABOUTS .1

I WIII IIJ

·-.

Who
shall
call

on

ZZ Dlacovery
Z1 Brook

on
fo!J..\s

U Spring
25 Zero or
witching
Z8 Metric

~....,~
J:t!~-

now,
Rufus?

31 ExpWJge

35 Quiet
one

measure

""' '
-time

(colloq.)
3'1 Stannwn

Z9 Metric

38 Cape-

measure

pr-

START EARNING
TOMORROW

for
baseball's
Goslin

n Wine

- - ----.

$26995

Aaswer
30 Nickname

Ye~terday's

2DO ~ear aqo when
nation wels founded
c~ J.

we

WIN AT BRIDG E

- - -- --------- --:-::-+-1---H-+-fHal could break his own rule
r-------------lutt r of duiJs Fnurth bes( of n
Nitt\'111
----~

.

ON

WMPO·AM·FM

Country Cousins Cookshoppe wi II be
accepting applications June 28-29-30
at their new location at
W. Main
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio from 9:00 to
s: 00.

EXPANDED WEEKDAY NEWSCASTS AT

_.-. A~ T~ Noon Report,

..

:: and 5 P.M.

~ ·

..

. -II

• (JI !1 7 ~1

no ttm r tfJ
South ptillli "i .tr t• or d uhs Oft
l•:us r ' Ill ;nul led lh,• Ill uf
11iunu,nrls ll :d li u c k~d IJnt lwtl
tn WI!! lin• 11c x t t.hr.tlllQIHJ :
T!t('ll he tliouglit fo r It !IIOrnrtt t :md piHIIkt'd down •hltl
;l('t' {•f spt.td es. l ~ ast stgtt:J IIf' li
w1lh lht• nin&lt;' lla l led his lns l
sp.tdt• :tlllf (k c: l;u er was dt!W lt
t wo
1\ H llal pol tt ll'll ou ll (tlcr ,ltts
spatll' I Pad mtg ht ll :.~vc t· o~L ~~
Iri ck, hut thl' onl y dwm·!l tu
(id ea l th e con t ra&lt; t wuultl, he
lo lincl l·~ a st wt llt th ose ~vull

• IUt•l
t A ll
U 41
,4 ,1!} 7 1.1
· ,. 10 !1
Slll "''ll 1111
.!J iJ2

• .1 n2
¥ A Q 111
+K 111'1

.f, AQ r,
Hoth uult wraiJI I'
W~s t

North 1•.wa

So uth

t NT

Pass :1 N 'I' Pus:-;

r~,l"'i

Pnss

Openm g lf'ad

4"

L---- --- - fl y Oswnltl &amp; J nn11•s .Ja cohy
One pttnctpl c o l d ~ l c n stvP
One Jetter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia play th a i ll al S1111S s l ~t•sscd
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. &lt;lc. Single letters. was that yo u sllon ld .~ void
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all s&lt;·aLlN gun pl ays In olher
hints. Each day I he code letters arc different.
word s. if you ~~ ~~~ tNI nnu Slllt

FTOOFL
YL

CRYPTOQUOTES
y

NRTFVZLS

DLZLSL

IS V

suo

you should lcud to kl'ep on
with II
D R U H F V
fi e fel l !ha l any l tt nt' yuu
' brok e a new sni t you were
D N I Z L V , like ly l&lt;1 bt• g1v t1tg a tr 1rk

away

HEAR NEWS FIRST

HELP WANTED

hm ~ SlJI! W:IS ;111!1 ~tl ways Will
IJI' :1 s t:Ht!l:n d l&lt;!:u.l ag ains l

1-:AS'I'
A I( t) ~14 'l

TEAFORD

--- - -

&lt;11 111 '/ij
¥ I( .1

.. 1&lt;11 2

r.

CARRIER WANTED
FOR GOOD
SYRACUSE
ROUTE

:n

I I 00- Wt•cei of ~ ., lunc 3, 15; Wrekd ay •1. G,.,.,;,ll
8, 10; f armor's Duughler 1.1
11 30 - llo llywood Squ.Jrps 3,4.d 15, II,J p py
1~ .
Love ol Llle 8, 10
11 55-- Tet ke Kerr 8, Dan l111c l's Worl d 10
12· 01}- Fun Fectory J,IS1 Le i's Mnke" Dl'o l IJ; t; ob
Braun 4 Ncw5 616, 10; Scs11me St. 3J
11 30--Go ng Show 3, 15, /I ll My Cl•llurutl 6, t:t; S"11rr ll
for tomorrow 8.10
12 55-NBC News 3, 15 .
1 OG-Ncw' 3; Ryan 's Hopu 6, I]; f'&gt; hll ll onu~uc 8,
Young &amp; lhe Res !less 10, N() l Fur Wo ~ n c n Onl y 15,
E le e. Co. 33.
30- Days ul Our Ll vt!s 3,4, 15; l~ hylflf\ &amp; I~ cason 6, 1.1;
/Is Tile Wor ld Turns A, 10. Nov,, 13
2:00- $20,000 Pyr a mi d 6, 13.
2 . ~o-.Oocl ur s .1,11,15; BreAk the Bank 6,13, Gu1tJing
Llghl B, 10, EvenlnQ a l Pop s 33
3 00 --AilOIII er Wor ld 3,4, 15; Gcn ero l llo·;pllnl o.IJ , All
In The FMnily 6, 10; K.up 's Show 20,
3:3()-() ne Life lc Live 13. Mic ke y Mo use Club 6. Mn tch
Game a, 10; o u,·story 33
ji.Oo--Mis ler Car loon 3, Merv Grllf in 4; S om ers~ I 15,
Bcwll cllcd 6; Mic key Mo use Club a. Mlslc r ll og&lt;'"
10.33 ; Movie " lhc Neked Spul"' 10; Dlnnh 13. '
4.3o-Bew llchod I, Mod Squad 6; Andy Grl ffllh 0;
Sesam e Sl 70,JJ. Flln ls lo11es IS
S·OO- Bonama 3: P nl" l r ldgf\ Filtnlly 0; Ml s~ IOII' !111
'- possible 15
5:3G-Adam -12 4, News 6. Fn1111 ly Altair A. E le c . Co
20.33 : Ada m -12 13
6.00- Nevv. 3,4,8, 10 , 13, 15 , ABC News 6. Zoorn 20.3:1.
6. 3tJ---NBC News 3, 4, 15,. AB CNcws 13; A11d)IGrlff ll h 6,
CBS News 8, 10, llndg epodgt! Lodge 70, VII In 1\legrc
33 .
7.0o-Truth 01 Consl J; Vaude vil le ·1: ~uwllng lor
Dollars 6, Pop Goe s th o Country o; News 10: Wild
Kingdom 13: FRmlly Ali al r 11 . Book ll ca t ~0 ;
Tou r ists are Com111g 33.
. 7· 30- Lnst oflh e Wll rl 3; Ma lch Ga tn e PM 6; $25,000
Pyramid 8. Even ing Ed ition wll h Ma rlin Agronsk y
10; The Ju dge 10 ; To Tull lh e l'ru th 13. Wild
Kingdom 15; Ono~ Boe l 33
B· DO-Li lli e House on Ihe PrRI r lo '1. ~ . 15, Bioni c Worn an
6, 13; Jack sons 6, 10; Ll&lt;ve Irom Llnr ol n Center 70,:tl
a 30- Kell y Mon te ith a.10
9·00- Siar s &amp; Stripes Sho w 3.4, 15, Bm ello 6, 13;
Cann on H, IO.
10 · 00- Star..ky &amp; Hulcl&gt; 6, 13, Bl l•e Knig ht 6, 10
II :OG-News 3.4.6.8. 10, 13,15 , fi Rl Ne ws 31
11:3o-J ohnny Car son 3,4, 15. Mov ie " Qull lcr P r ice of
Violence" 6, 13; Movl(! ' 'How the Wes t Wrts Won'' !J ;
M ovie " Wher e I he Spies A1r·" 10 J, mnit!JJ
30- Tomorrow 3,&lt;t ; News 13

P"Y'

UPIRIINCID

SWIMMING

n

8 . 30- Big V,lll cy 6
9:00- AM. 3; Phi l Qon ahuc 4, 15; Lucy % ow 0; Mi ke
Dougl as lQ, Morntng with 0 J 1J
9: 3o-Cross Wll s 3; One Life lo ll vt' 6. l e ll le lnles a,
Ml ~e Do ug le&lt; 13.
IO .Oo-Sanforrl /1. Son 3,•1, 15; E dqt' ot Nlql1l 6; Pr ice 1·
Righ i a. 10. IJ •t wll h Knl l 33
l O·)O- Cc lebri ly Swuopsl,, kes 3, 4, 15, IJ\n t:th 6 , Li li as,

'

Aluminum Siding,
Roofing, Gutters,
Painting and .Repair

!_»J!!llilt",:c __··

6: 15- Farm Repo rt II
6· 2()-. The Story 13
6 30 Colum b u!&gt; foctrJ y 11, News 6, Sv rnnH·r St• lnec; lt·r
8, Farmllme 10
6:45 Mornin g I~Cpcl l 3
6 .so- Good Morn lnq , W~ s t Vlrqln !A p
6 55 Chuc k While Ht•p&lt;tt Is 10. GO(lCI Mur 11 lng , 11 1
Slate 13
7 00-..-Tod.ly ~ ,•1 , 1 5 ; Good Mornl nQ, /\ n,N ICil 6, 13; (. 1\ S
News B,· 13ugs Bunny &amp; r r l!•nds 10
7 30- SdlOOIIi•s 10.

Ai.tm~D AA IIOVITA1101l10

eo,;., ax

AssORTED RUBBER

WEDNESDA Y, JUN E 30, 1976

6:0o-- Summer S(lmcsft'l r 10

1\\A\ '10U

BACLf.AiPETING

~~~-

5:00-Bonanza 3. 1-'artndge ~amlly B; Mission lm
pcsslble lS.
5:3G-Adam-12 4, IJ; News 6; Family Alta ir B: Elec
trlc Company 20.33 .
6:00-News 3. ~.8. 10, 13. 15; ABC New&gt; 6. Zoom 20,33.
6 30....NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News IJ ; Andy Grlltlth 6;
CBS News8,10; Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences J; To Tell the Trut h ' ·
Bowling for Dollars 6, Lei' s Go lo the Ra ces B•
News 10; Name That Tune 13, Fam ily Affair IS;
Romagnolls' Table 2C ; Wild, Wild Wo rl d of
Animals 33.
7·3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Let' s Deal W1th II 6;
Match Game 8; Evening Edlllon Wllh Martin
Agronsky 20; Price Is Right 10; To Tell The Truth
13; Nashville on the Road 15; Family Theatre 33
8:00-Movle "1776" 3.4 , IS; Happy Days 6, 13 ; I've Gol a
Secret 8, 10; Burglar-Proofing 20,33
8:3o-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; Good Times B, IO ,
Consumer Survival Kit 20,33
9:00-S W.A. T. 13; World at Wa r 6 , M-A S-H a. IO, More
Musi c From Aspen 33; Evening al Symphon y 20
9:3()-()ne Day at A Time 8.10
10:00-Rookles 13; Great American Musi c Celebration

T. . .

&amp; Heating

TlliSI biter Co.

lbrs ond .... inp • ..,. T... ""'

-.

'

6; Ve ud~vl!lc B; Df'nU! t cr C:uncr ll JJ . Switch !0
News 70
10 30- Bl ack PC'r"S pecl•vi-• on tl tt• tJ tl\\&lt;S JO: Wom cm J.1
10 ·4S- To Be Announc..:d 3,4, 15
11 ·00-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, I; II OC Nl'l" J.l
11 30 -Johnny Car s011 3. 4. 15 My1-0tc• y of l! n:! Wc•uk
" The Murdere rs" 6, 13; Mu v ~t~ '' Show l:lotl1 " 0,
Mov ie " lip rr o111 Th e BP~ c h " 10. Jrmak l JJ ,
00 Tom on ow 3. 4. Nt•w &lt;; 13

TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1976

........

5-Zi-1 mo.

SoutheMfem Ohio

:

Wed ,.. bJ con11&lt;Un1 I.
owner.

Auto Sales

1-.

a.12.

4-1Z Pltdt
M'-$.1111
21'-$ll72
Zl'-$111.11

--- ~

my

Cllolo

~
· RaciM Plumbing ·
•

IWIIOW IIOCE
(lllhal Altli

I WOULD lrke to do bobys• tt•ng rn

........
.......
.. ...
'-ltlllls.l~

'IOU

LOIIG 1lOITOII

Will DO odd )obs roofmg, po•n·
ling houltn g, tr eework , and
m~wmg Phone 992 -74:09

--

Television log for easy viewing

WIUUISOI'S

_, ....

a.J,·.:.s...,

-·

'

-

-.

mo.

SittratiolltWanted ·
~

-·

'·

.................
"'-m.zm. ...., ...
-~,_ _

WINIIIIIS I DOOIS
IENIUEIIT
WIIIIIIIS
AWMIIIIIII
SIOIIIG-IIImT

Ph. H2·Jtl3

.

H~LLS
SAlvAGE ·

-

llowollllw• 1 Altlcs

.

.

"

llltwn ·
lnsulltion snc.

Co~

1974 FORD FIOO
1299S
8' Sty les1 de. green fini sh, good tires, R. bumper,
chrome grr ll s &amp; fit s bumper , 6 cy I. &amp; std. trans

Lost and fllllnd

We know that we cou ld neer
fmd ,
A deorer, loving Dod
Dod r~ such a s pee~ol word ,
Because 1t s!onds for you
So sad ly m1ssed by daughter
_ Mrs. Helen Jelfer~ond Forr11l y
IN memo ry of our be loved
Mother, Add le l Hawk who
passed away June 2'Uh , 196-4
It s the ann tversary of o loved one
lost,,
Her smilmg way and pleasant
face ore o pleos ~Jre to retail
She enJoyed life to the fullest,
And d1ed beloved by all
Thts rrchly shored love we'll never
forget
And hold m our heart s, till ogam
We ~'lave met.
Mtssed by children and grand
child ren

:

.

IN LOVING memory of our dear NOTICE As of June '13 1976 the
fathe r. Homer Icenhower who
Chester Volunteer Ftre Dept,
poned away three years ago
Will no longer hau l water ,
June 29th 1973.
It's lonesome l'lere wtthout you WOULD the lady who recet\led o
wl-ute long hat red kitt en ot the
Dod,
home of Freddie Houdasheh
We miss you more each day
Fnday afternoon, please conSome ho~ ltfe doesn t seem the
tact M1s s Houdeshell at 992some,
2520 or 992 33-4 5
Since you were called owoy
THERE w1ll be a shoo tmg match
God took you home to be his
Sunday. July 4, starting at noon
guest ,
ot tl'le Forked Run Sportsman
But stll the empty cho tr
Club .
Remmds us of the foce, the smiiB
01 one who once sot there

Ule muST go on wtthoiJt you
But the memor1 es we share
Gives us comoloflon, because
We hod yoiJ here

-

Business
- Services

Notices

A space is vacant in our home
Whtck never co n be filled ,
So often ou r thoughs wonder
To a grove no I far ~way .

... -

SNUFFVH
DURN 'lORE HIDE!!
WHV DON'T lfE

ANSWER

ME? ·

SHHH-·
TH' LINE'S
BUSY

IHORUZ
HSWSUBS
Not litill ll al wa s l u u
Yet!lerday's Cryploquote: THE TROUBLE WITII TODAY'S stubborn to vto ltiLe Iu s ow n
ECONOMY IS THAT WHEN A MAN IS RICH, IT'S ALL ON rul ~s
PAPER. WHEN HE'S BROKE IT'S CASH. -SAM MARCONI li e Hat Wl•st and rn:ttli• hi s
&lt;C 1916 Klnl f'"htra Syndh:at•. Inc,)

'' I FOOND MI.{ 515TEI1.
SELLE ... AND WHAT A

ltEONION WE'RE HAVING !
IJELLE IS JUST A.5
BEAUTIFUL AS EVER ''

normal opening lead of the

'I"""~'

~~ ~u-~~~
An Ont;u lo rea der wan ls' to
know wl1&lt;1l Wl' think 111' lite
ldl'a ul op~:nl11g lh1rd r.tt hl'f
tl "t" lou rt h best ftnm " l~ n ~
SUll
J
Tit~ rl.l ed h &lt;.~ s son1e mori t,
but Ulll' ~rPrt t WCH ktl t'S."i . 'J'Iwr r.
ure too 111 a nv ()('ttsion s suclr us
" ho lding ur'Q 10 II 4 wl1eo you
ncctl to h&lt;~ vc llwt e ight sp&lt;IO in

your hand la t{'r

,

(l-or a cop y of JA C~BY
M ODERN, sen d $ 1 to " Wm

tJndgu . " .! o f ~ JS
newspaper. P 0 . Box 4Q9.
tl a d1o Crty Sfa ftO!l, / lew Y(l(k,
NY 1001 91
.,

af

,,

..,,,,
)

'' UNFOfi'TVNATEL'f, T
CAN'T SA'f MUCH F'OR
HER TEEN-A6E SON "

�16 - The Daily Sentinel,j11lddJeport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 29, 1976

School board Sued for
$200,000 by ex-teacher
Additional particulars mainly a demand for $200,000
- of a suit filed last week in
Columbus in the U. S.
· District's Court Southern
District of the Eastern
Division by William Bahr,
fonner teacher in the Ga llia
County Local SChool District,
were made public today.
Informat io n
made
available earlier to local

media by Mr. Bahr did not
include the fact that he sued
the board for $200,000.
Copies of the petition
mailed by the court to the
defendants show that Bahr,
with ba&lt;·k pay and a new oneyear contract, asked for
$100,000 in compensatory
danlllges plus $100,000 in
punitive damages from all
defendants in the action ex-

Unions invited to talce part
in solving !ill/ety problems
PITISBURGH (UP!) I.W. Abel, president of the
United Steel Workers of
America , ha s called on
metalworkers' unions around
the world to work together to
solve such problems as sa fety
hazards in mills and neg·alive
effects on workers employed
by multination al cor·porations.
Abel spoke Monday before
the convening session of the
International Metalworkers
Federation, attended by delegates from 30 nations.
"Only a united front of
workers in all countries of the
free world is capable of
coping with the immense
power and . wealth of lhe
multinationals," Abel said.
"We can stop exploitation
of workers by multinalionals
and uplift the liv ing
standards of all if we

strengthen our ties through
the labor movements of our
respective countries, and
through the Il\IF in such
mcelings as this one."
The USWA is host for the
conference.
- IMF delega les are to
decide
poli cy
on
coniJ'oversial ·issues of world
trade, questions of health ,
safety and humanization of
work, and mullin ationa l
corpora lions .

LAFF- A - DAY

I

f.l' ~ \
'·

' , ·~ ffl'l '
~ "--· -'/ ' ~

....

I

&lt; ' ...

Rev. Taylor to
conduct two
revival series
The Rev. Paul Taylor,
visiting relatives in Meigs
County, will hold revival services at the Ash St. F'ree Will
Baptist Church in Middleport
beginning Wednesday, Jw~e
30at 7:30p.m. throughJuly4 .
Rev. Taylor, following the
services in Middleport, will
hold services ~t the Rutland
Free Will Baptist Church
from July&gt; through July 9.
Rev. Taylor will be returning home in Helper, Utah in
two weeks.
He is associated with Ura
Swisher there in Swisher's
coal mining operation.

l l!illlk tht· i.'o!llpllli.' l' gui! lt•d
my l'.'\ -11\otlwr 111·1:1\\

1111 ~ 1:-

Fonner teacher

Rhodes cuts up bill

in Mason dies

By J.K. KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes today anMASON, W. Va .
nounced he had vetoed eight
Elizabeth Anne Ryan , 97, portions or a . $152 mUilon
Mason , died Tuesday supplemental appropriations
Veterans bills pushed through the Ohio
morning a t
General Assembly by
Memo~ial Hospital.
She was born June 9, 1879 in majority Democrats earlier
Named as defendants in Coleburg, W. Va. to the )ate this month.
ccpt Kyger Creek Pl'incipal
The vetoes were expected
Robert L. Lanning because the sult were J. E. Cremeens, Thomas and Mary McCory
and
were cut out of the bill
Ryan
.
She
was
a
former
the board. not Lanning, J. c. Mitchell, Bruce S. Stout,
before
Rhodes signed it
Mason
County
school
teacher
deterntined not to rehire James V. Blevins, and
Monday.
The vetoes included
and
clerk
at
the
Hessler
William E. Carter, each one
Bahr.
removal
of:
Dress
Shop
in
Charleston,
W.
His suit also asked that the individually and as members
- An aUowance for
defendants be required to of the Gallia County Local Va . She was a member of St.
advanced
payments of the
Joseph's
Catholic
ChW'ch
in
pay reasonable attorney fees Board of Education; C.
Mason.
corporate
franchise tax to
and court costs and that the Comer Brad bur y, in ease
the
state's
periodic cash
She
is
survived
by
four
board be enjoined from divi&lt;lually and as superin·
flow
problems.
nephews
and
four
•lieces.
tendent
of
schools;
Robert
1..
luring a teacher to replace
Funeral services wlll be
- Restoration of the 2 per
Lanning as principal at
him.
Kyger Creek and Mrs. Naomi held at St. Joseph 's Catholic cent budget cut in the
Beman, as clerk of the board. Church Thursday at 10 a.m. Department of Welfare
The suit resulted from the with Fr. Raymond Jablinski executive budget which
board not renewing Bahr's officiating. Burial will follow would have added some $10
LODGE TO MEET
in St. Joseph's Cemetery . miiJioh to the department's
CHESTER - A special teaching contract for the Friends may call at the funding.
meeting of Shade River 197&amp;:77 teaching year. Bahr Foglesong Funeral Home in
~ Half the S4 million
Lodge 4&gt;3, F&amp;AM, Chester, charges his contract was not Mason from 7-9 p.m . appropriated
for the Ohio
will be held at 7:30 p.m. renewed because of his ac- Wednesday. A rosary service Instructional Grant program
Thursday with work in the tivities in the local teachers' will be held at 7:30 p.m. through the state Controlling
master ma son degree . All association.
Board.
Six docwnented reasons Wednesday.
master masons are invited.
- $1&gt;0,000 for a Legislative
were given by the board for
Budget Commission study of
the non-renewal on April 23,
sta te 's
Medicaid
and six more were given Veterans Memorial Hospital the
Admitted
Horner program.
following Bahr's due process
Moodispaugh, Middleport;
Rhodes also removed from
hearing in May.
OHIOAN KILLED
Ruth Duerr, Pomeroy; Ralph the bill a section specifiying
The
vote
to
not
renew
his
ORLANDO, l'la. I UP I) Ours, Long Bottom; Carroll
Anude stabbing victim found contract was 3-2 with Blevins Dodderer, Coolville; Inez that if any of the extra
in a wooded area Sunday has and Mitchell favoring Bahr. Pooler, Reedsville; Juanita funding allocated to the
been identified as 11\-year-old Bahr is a fonner instructor in Abshire, Gallipolis; Inez Departmen t of Public
Micl1ele Tanasy of Toledo, the Gallia Academy and is a Windland, Guysville; Curtis Welfare is not used in fiscal
graduate of Rio Grande
Ohio, police say.
Powell, Racine; Earl Ingels,
Mi ss Tanasy had been College.
CONNORS UPSET
Jr., Middleport; Richard
li vin g with relali ves at
WIMBLEDON
(UP! ) Fick, Cheshire; Veleeta
Sa nford for the past thr"" .
Roscoe
Tanner
upset
favored
NOW YOU KNOW
Rowe, Racine ; Orl ene
weeks while job hunting ,
Jinuny
Connors
6-4,
6-2, ~.
Aday on Mars, called a sol, Saylor, Guysville; Paul
Orange County police said is 24 hours, 37 minutes and 23 Baer, Minersville; Lois today to. reach the men's
Monday .
singles · semifinals at the
seconds long - 41 minutes Hawley, Pomeroy.
An autopsy showed the and 29 seconds longer than an
Discharged - ·Martin Cun- Wimbledon tennis chamyoung woman died of Earth day.
pionships.
ningham.
extensive hemmoraging due
to multiple sla b wounds .
The body was found in a
remote corner of Kelly Park
in the northwest part of the
COUlity by teen-agers who
were hunting for snakes.

year 1977, it would be used to
boost the Aid for Dependent
Children program.
Rhodes said this "serves
one purpose : the railllng of
false hopes 'by the ADC
recipients of Ohio who have
no real hope of receiving such
a4ditional benefi\S.'.'
Rbodes' vetoes were anno\Uiced in a fivf1&gt;age message. Republicans in' the
legislature have urged
Rhodes to veto parts of tbe
bill, saying its enactment
would "spend the state into
insolvency."
Concerning the advance
payment schedule for the
corporate franchise tax - a
fiscal
technique . first
suggested by former Rhodes'
Administration Budget
Director Howard Collier Rhodes noted that he had
vetoed this authOrization
once before in the original
bieMial budget passed last
year.
"Ohio's employer's should
not be required to advance
their capital to finance the
of
state
operation
government," said Rhodes.
"Such an attempt could force
a further loss of jobs Ohio can
iU afford."
The proposed $150,000 study
of Medicaid study, said
Rhodes, would be a needless
dupliciltion of previous
management efficiency
studies by the state.
"The Medicaid program
suffers
from
severe
underfunding, and this
appropriation for another
'study' wiU further deplete.
funds needed for the care of
the sick," he said.
Rhodes only briefly

touched on the - legislature
attempt at restoring the 2 per
cent Welfare Department
budget cut ordered through
an executive order la8t year
when Rhodes implemented
the original budget biU.
-Rbodes said tbe restoration
was "yet another. blatant
example of the policy of fL!cal ·
irresponslblllty of the
nnajorlty of the Ohio General
AsSembly" and was "the first
attempt in memory by the
General Assembly
to
appropriate a deficit."
•"l'wo per cent of nothing Is
nothing," said Rhodes ,
repeating
a
phase
Republicans used on the
House and Senate floor
during debate on tbe supplemental spending meas\U'e.
Two other parts of the orli .
were removed· by Rhodes :
~ Reappropriation of
money allocated last year to
the Ohio Rail TransportatiOn
Authority. ·
- A budgetary cbange
which would have stopped
extra funding for universities
if their enrolhnents exceed
104 per cent of their estimate.
The eighth and final section
of Rhodes' veto message was
a
technical
change
confonning the final version
of the bill · to legislative
standards.
Democrats are expected to
try and override some of
Rhodes' line4tem vetoes, but
the General Assembly is not
expected to return to
Columbus until September. A
. skeleton session is set for .
mid.J uly, but no votes will be
taken and only a handful of
the legislators wiJJ be
present.

ElBERFELDS IN .· POMEROY

They'll Do It Every Time
( .t-JOW ~~;RYBOOY IS StJPFO•SW

10 Y/ONDEOR Wt10 HER ""''m~'""
15 H£ MLJ 5'[ flf 1\ GO~F "u• ";' 1

DOC fOR

TAKE NEW
PAfl£!115. Ho ON"Y
1001( US AS A
FAVOR fO 11\'/
8ROTI1£R ...

I W/1" '7

~A.V{

•!

Railroad Days'
-notes updated
There \viii not be any fireworks diSplay in Middleport as
part of the Railroad Days-Fourth of July weekend.
It was felt that it would be a foolish expenditure in light of
th~ fact that several other local conununilies are planning
lir.eworks for Sunday night.
_· · "I could not see several huodred dollars going up in smoke
and fire that could be used for something else," said. Paul
Gerard, Railroad Days co-ordinator.
·
He added: "We are not criticizing any town that does opt
for fireworks because there is something very moving about a
spectacular sky show. We think that our program, I Hear
America Singing, will have the same effect on people. I can
guarantee that no one will be able to leave the show without a
sense of rekindled national pride."
. The show is to be presented by the Pt. Pleasant band and
traces the history of the United States from colonial times to
the present day.
Tbe show will begin at 9 p.m. Friday at the Middleport Park.
In the event of rain, the show will be moved to the elementary
school. Everyooe should bring chairs.

FREE SWIMMING AT TilE MIDDLEPORT POOL
There wlll be fr"" swinuning at the Middleport Pool
ThW'sday night from 7 to 9 p.m. as a part of the Railroad Days
Weekend In Middleport. Everyone Is welcome.

:0

FRA•K DERRIG.
l3ob E 155 ''' ST,

Reg . $735.00

C"oV&amp;I-A&gt;H&gt;,

OH IO

Sporting notes

respect."

WIRING INSTALLED - Rutland fire department members are already working at the
CQmmunlty park putting in wiring and preparing booths for the three day Rutland July 4th
celebration which begins with a parade at 10:30 a.m. Saturday. Skill game stands,
refreslunent booths, an ox roast and a softball tournament will be featured at the
community park aU three days of the celebration. The park will be the scene of a talent show
at 8 p.m. Monday, the final feature of the celebration, which wiJI be followed by fireworks .

ITEMS NEEDED FOR DISPLAY
ITEMS ARE STILL BEING collected for the railroad
exhibltiori and' model triiiii'sliow to be held Thursday through
&amp;mday, July 1 through 4, as part of the Railroad Days
weekend In Middleport.
The show will be held at the elementary school on Pearl St.
Items oo display wiU include many of those originally seen
earlier this year at the Meigs Museum. Among Items needed
are model trains -working and non-working displays - as well
as Items associated with railroads,- that is, maps, photos,
tlmetables,lanlerns, oil cans, tools and the like. All the articles
will be returned to their owners Sunday afternoon when the
show concludes. Anyone who has anything to donate is asked to
call 992-3189 as soon as possible.

Cooperation
(Continued from page I)
unemployment thaf persists
in many countries and will
not · jeopardize our common
aim of avoiding a new wave
of inflation," the statement
said.
It committed the seven,
representing 60 per cent of
the world 's production, to
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! I . "deliberate, orderly and sus- The National l£ague offi ce
tained expansion, and to the announced Monda y Mike
indispensable companion Phillips, an infielder for the
goal of defeating inflation." New York Mcts, was selected
Noting
" the Player of the Week.
Phillips, fillin g in fo r
interdependence of our
destinies ," the lea ders injured Bud Harrelson at
pledged "to work toward shortstop, slapped a single,
mutually co nsi ste nt double, triple and homer
economic strategies through against the Cubs Friday . He
better cooperation. "
was only the 72nd player in
The
communique NL history to hit for the cycle
recognized, however, t he in a game.
"importance of each nation
managing its economy and
NEW YORK . ( UPI I intern ational monetary Righthander Bert Blyleven,
affairs."
who fashioned back-to-ba ck.
It
also
approved 10-innin g shutouts, was
"transitory financing" for named the American L£ague
industrial nations suffering Player of the Week it was
balance
of
payment announced Monday.
difficulties. It did not spe ll out
Blyleven blank ed th e
the mechanics of the Oakland A's on only one hit on
financing or the recipients, Monday and in his next
but they were expected to be appea rance shut out the
Britaln and Italy.
Chicago
White
Sox .
President Ford, host of the Blyleven's victory over lhe
two-day meeti ng at the A's wa the lOOIJ1 of his ca r..,r.
tightly guarded Dorado
Beach resort near San Juan,
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) pronounced thr swnmit a The Philadelphia 76ers ansuccess and said the nounced the signing of Nate
participants had taken a Barnett , a 6-3 gua rd , who
"major step forwa rd in played for the Indiana Pacers
cooperation."
of the American Basketball
Attending were Prime Association last season. .
Ministers James Callaghan · Barnett, a seventh-row1d
of Britain, Takeo Miki of dra ft choice of the Houston
Japan, AldoMoro of Italy and Rockets in 197&gt;, wa s signed
Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Monday as a free agenl.
Canada, French President
Valery Giscard d 'Estaing -BOSTON (UPI J - The
and West Gennan Cha ncellor Boston Red Sox recalled third
Hehnut Schmidt.
baseman Butch Hobson from
Tbe seven called for tpeir Rhode Island club in the
expanded investment lnternalionul Leag ue
opportunities, reduction in ~onday and sen t catcher
tariffs and other trade ll!ldy Merchant to the same
barriers, increased trade club ...
with Communist nations and
Merchant, in his second
cl06er ties with developing stint with Boston this season,
nations based on "mutual never came lo bat.

Lebanon
•
VIctory
claimed

MONTREAL I UPIJ - The
Montreal Expos ass igned
vete ran reliever Wayne
Granger to' the Denver Bears
of the American Associatior
Monday to create a spot for
the return of Steve Rogers
from the disabled list.
Rogers was placed nn the
disabled list May 26 ·;·:th a
fracture in tlle lillie fin ger of
his pitching hand.
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Don
King Produ cti ons fil ed a
complaint in the sta te
Supreme Cour t Monday
asking that a permanent
injunction ~e grant.ed against
the scheduled heavyweight
championship fighl between
Muhanunad Ali and Ken
Norton at Yankee Stadium ,
Sept. 28.
The com plaint contends
that King 's company entered
into an agreement last
August with Norton and
Hobert H. Biron, the
challen ger 's ma na ger,
granting
Don
King
Productions the excl usiv.e
right fo r two years to
promote all bouts involving
Norton.
A hearing on King's motion
for a prelim\nary injunction
is scheduled for July 13.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tue sday thru Thursday
June 29 -Ju ly t
NOT OPEN

Ren

Xl-100

FIDDLERS CONTEST CANCELLED
The oldtlme fiddlers contest scheduled for 6 p.m.
llaturday, July 3, in Middleport has been cancelled due to lack
of lnierest.
Co-ordinator Paul Gerard said not a single entry has been
received.
"It may be that we fell vlcthn to the very strong
· competition from the Del Reeves Show which will be in Racine
Saturday night at Southern High School," he said, ;,but for
whatever reason, it just didn't come off."

- All-wood
wal nut
cabinet
- Automat i c
fin e
tun ing
~ A cc u to l o r
picture
tube 15" diag.

Sale
Reg. $925.00
- Advanced color track system
- Accufi lter 25" diag . picture tube
- Countr y American pine finish

Sale

'825

BABY CON'l'F3T ENTRIES POURING IN
Entries for the Pretty Baby contest have been coming in
steadily. Entries will be accepted until 9:30a.m. Saturday at
the park. The contest will begin promptly at 10 a.m. In the
event of raln, the contest will move to the elementary school.

•

Brre
•t
ews.
.
•
.ln
IN

···-»··x-w·""""""&lt;··&lt;···:···········:·:·..,,.,.,.,..·.·...,.,...,.,•,•,·,·,·,·.-.-.-.·.························:·:·:·:·:·:'

·~

i

ROll

ROll
XL-100

- Ea rly

Ame r .

Maple finish
- Acc u col or
diag. picture

- Acc umati c

XL-100

19"

IV

color control
- Automatic
tuning

.
XL-100 color track system

Reg . $539.00

- RCA
--Acc ufiller 19" d lag. picture tube
- Walnut fini sh

fine

Sale

$529

Sale
,

·We have many other models of RCA XL-100 and ColorTrak Color Televisions
in stock at Sale Prices.
Save now on these 1976 RCA Televisions At Elberfelds Warehou~ on 'Mechanic St.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Weather
Cloudy and cooler, chance
of showers tonight. L&lt;lws to
the low 60s. Cloudy and cooler
Thw·sday, highs in the mid
70s. Probability of rain 60 per
cent today, 30 per cent
tonight, 20per cent Thursday.

~:l

.' .

,\I ~

I
•

.~~~ ' •• t

..' .

•

'
MARIJUANA TAKEN - A big raid was made by
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbauch, deputies and members of
the Middleport ·Police Department Tuesday afternoon.
The Sheriff and other officers confiscated 300 plants of
marijuana being grown by Paul Strauss, 26, Rl. I,
Rutland. The location was on county road 14, The sheriff
said Strauss is lodged in jail and wiU be charged wlth
cultivation of marijuana. The sheriff also reported that
the marijuana \viii be kept in his office where all evidence
is kept and anyone wanting to·see it can do so when the

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO. 52

\

case ls over, they can also view the destruction of the
plants which will be destroyed by fire. Struuss will go
before County Court Judge Robert E. Buck this morning
for a preliminary hearing. Shown with the plants, some 7
feet in height are, '"', Sid Little, Middleport Pollee
Department, John King, sheriff's deputy; Dan Knotts,
and Gene McDaniel, both with the Middleport Pollee
Department, and Randall Carpenter, sheriff deputy, Also
assisting in the action was Middleport Chief of Pollee J. J.
Cremeans.

•

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY. JUNE 30, 1976

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

ers release .40
NAIROBI, Kenya (UPI) Diplomatic sources in
Uganda said today proPalestinian guerrillas have
yielded to President ldi Ami's
request to release sorne 40
women , children, aged and
sick among the ~7 airline
hostages they have held since
Sunday.
The hijackers
have
demanded the release of 53
political prisonets in five
contries- most of them held
in Israel- in exchange for
their captives they seized. in
an Air France Airbus
hijacked from Athens
Sunday.
French government
officials in Paris said the
guerrillas have promised to
release 40 of the hostages this
afternoon- chiefly women,

:;:::;:;:;:::;:::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::

children, the elder Iy and the heavy penalties" if the of Kampala told UP! the
ailing . -But the Foreign prisoners were not flown to captives were " relatively
State employes win pay increase
Ministry denied reports they . Entebbe, Uganda, by 3 p.m: ·comfortable"
in
the
had already been released. (B a .m. EDT) Thursday . cramped, mosquitoinfested
BOSTON (UPi)~egotlators agreed early loday 011 1
A relief Air France jet was They did not spell out the old airport buildings at
multlmUJionodollar
wage Increase for slate employes, ending
standing by in Nairobi with penalties.
·
Entebbe International
a
dlspule
which
had
resulled In a three-Uy strike.
.
two crews and medical
Early indications reaching Airport after a second night
The
three-year
pact
anoounced
by
mediator
Eric
supplies aboard ready to fly diplomatic sources in Paris in the sweltering heat.
Schmertz
at
%:30
a.m.
(EDT)
provides
for
salary
and
boaua
to Entebbe to pickup any froin Entebbe .were that no
The guerrillas earlier had
benefits ~allog $2,4SG per employe. The avel'l.le employe
released hostages. But an Israeli passangers would be threatened to blow up the
would gel a ral1e of aboul 9 per cent.
airline official said there among the group to be set plane with all aboard If
W~ges would Jump $810 In the first year of the conll'l.ct,
were no immediate plans for free . There are about 100 Ugandan security troops
with
the lint $300 Increment beglnolng Thund1y.
a takeoff.
lsra~lis among the captives. came too close. A pregnant
The
Alliance, which represented 50,000 slate employes In
Amin resumed negotiations
In .Uganda, President Idl passenger allnwed
to
with the guerillas early Amin returned to the Entebbe disembark during a refueling the negotiation• with the state which began March 22, woo 1
. Wednesday after making his airport today and began stop in Libya said they were slgulllcant victory by retaining cumol provlllons for all;
plea for mercy for the infirm another round of bargaining armed with a variety of salary lllep locremeota baaed oo the years of service.
The pruposalstUI faces a crucial raUflcalloo vote by the
Tuesday.
with the guerrillas. ·
weapons , including
members of the seveo bargaining uolla represeoted by the
The hijackers, who
AFrench Embassy spokes- grenades.
Alliance.
identified themselves as man in the Ugandan capital
(Continued on page 12)
members of the Popular
;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::·:::::::
Front for the Liberation of
Palestine , Tuesday
threatened " severe. and

Local news, in briefs

RACINE - Racine American Legion Post 602 will install
its officers Thursday, July 1, at 8 p.m. They are Ebner
Pickens, commander; Roger Hill, first vice commander; Paul
S::~l Lawrence, second vice com~ander; Eugene Holter, adjutant
~~ and Roger Brauer, finance officer ..Kevin Willford and Dave
· Roush who attended Boys State wtll g1ve a report of their
attendance. Barbecue chicken will be served. James Ray HiU
By Uolted Pressloternadooal
WASHINGTON - TilE 1976 CORN CROP, which is will be installing c;f!icer.
expected to set another record, remained in "good condition"
TilE MEIGS H!Gij SCHOOL marching band will hold a
through last week but needs more moisture soon, the
practice
session at 7p.m. Thursday althe high school.
Acriculture Department says.
That swmnary was released in a weekly crop weather
TilE JULY 2 FREE CANCER clinic for Meigs County
repoct as department officials prepared to Issue at 3 p.m. EDT
women
has been cancelled. Women registered for July 2are to
today a forecast of the number of acres of corn and other
phone
the
Meigs cancer office, 992-7531, from 1 to 4 p.m. on
major crops which will be harvested
. . this .year.
Tuesday or ThW'sday or 992-5832 in the evenings to change the
WASIDNGTON- EFFECTIVE NEXT TUESDAY, postal appointments. The next clinic wlll be held on July 9.
rates are going up by 5 to 20 per cent for certain types of
TilE 1\!EIGS FUTURE ·FARMERS of America will meet
secpnd, third and fourth class mall, The Increases announced
at
7
p.m.
Tuesday, July 6, at the Vo-Ag room of the high school.
b)' the Postal Service Tuesday wlll bring in an estimated $1.5 ·
Members
are asked to take ball gloves since the recreation
mllllorl in additional revenue each week, a spokesman said.
period
will
be playing soft .ball.
The new rale schedule for second and third class mainly
coilcems conunerclal mailers. Second class mail rates depend
FOURTEEN OHIO 1JNIVERSITY students from Meigs
oo weight, distance, whether it contains advertising, whether
County
were named to the dean's list for the spring quarter
mailed for p-ofit or non-profit, and whether it is classroom or
making
a grade average of at least 3.3.
agrlcultiU'al science matter.
They are Dewey M. Horton, Middleport; Melinda Jean
The changes for third class nnail concern circulars,
Amsbary,
Route 3, Pomeroy; Irene. Lois Barnes, Elizabeth
ca~logues and books rnalled by non-profit organizations.
Blaettnar, Rebecca Sue Card, all of Pomeroy; Rebecca Ann
NEW YORK - KARL THOMAS' GROUND ·crew is Cotterill, Route 3, Pomeroy; Lucy Jean Holter, Route 3,
expressing increasing concern over his fate, but feels the . Pomeroy; Connie Lu Radford, Route 3, Pomeroy; Linda
adventurer Is stlll aloft in his bid to become the first man to Rebecca Rupe, Pomeroy; Steven Stanley, Route 4, Pomeroy;
pilot a balloon across the Atlantic Ocean. The German-born Dorotha Petrel, Paul Glenn Simpson and Vicki Kara Wolfe, all
Th(lll8a, 27, who departed from the Lakehurst, N. J ., Naval of Racine, and Stephanie Lynn Ord, Syracuse.
Air Station last Friday, bas not been heard from since Sunday
night, wben he contacted an Alltalla Airlines flight by radio .
TiiE MIDDLEPORT Chamber of Conunerce wlll not meet
·"We are coocemed because there has not been a visual during the month of July. The next meellng will be the first
lllgliUng. We're reaDy quite anxious to get a sighting,'' spokes- ThW'sday in August.
man Wallace Claytoo said Tuesday evening. Asked whether he
thought 'lb(lll8s' balloon was down in the water, Clayton
ROCK SPRINGS - THE MEIGS JUNIOR High Band
replied, "In the absence of any distress signal whatsoever , we practic~ session scheduled for ThiU'sday has been cancelled
(Continued on page 12)
due to the high school band practice session.

f'·A··"·""·""·"""'·''..'&lt;···············...·.······"'···············"··································..... :,~

Reg. $579.00

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
fair and mild with highs in
the 70s Friday and
Saturday and in the 80s
Sunday. L&lt;lws will be in the
50s.

By DOYLE McMANUS
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP! )
- Right-wing Chri stian
· forces captured a Palestipi~n
refugee camp they had
besieged for eight days and
threatened to overwhelm
another today. Arab l£ague
envoy negotiated another
cease-fire but it failed to take
hold.
Fierce fighting with
rockets and mortars raged
across Beirut. Palestinians
charged that Syrian troops
shelled their positions in
southern and northeastern
l£banon during .the night.
The Voice of Palestine
radio charged tha l Syrian
troops also heavily shelled
the leftist held port of Sidon,
south of Beirut.
Dr. Hassan Sabry al Kholy,
the Egyptian liaison officer .
·for the Arab l£ague 's stillstalled peacekeeping force ,
negotiated another truce that
was to have begun ·Tuesday
night. It was the 40th ceasefire in 14\', montlis of Civil
war . .
It held up barely four hours
before. both rightists and
leftists began violating it with
fierce offensives and counterattacks that claimed at least
237 dead and 444 wounded on
all fronts over the past 24
hours .
Christian forces announced
they captured the Jisr a!
Pasha Palestinian refugee
camp in southeastern Beirut
at 6 p.m. Tuesday in an
attack by an estimated 6,000
men and 100 tanks. The leftist
·(Continued on page 12)

Carter expects strong fight

'
The probable Democratic
be mounting a major
presidential nominee told campaign, either with a very
about
450
Pittsburgh attractive, very charismatic
supporters at a fiUid ... aislng movie star or the incumbent ,
breakfast the April 27 President."
Pennsylvania primary, In
"Each one of those opwhich he overwhelmed Sen. ponents, which we might face
Henry Jackson despite strong in November, wlll be very
backing from state labor, was strong and a very great
the turning point in his.bid for challenge to us ."
the nomination.
On a flight to Pltl.olburgh
Carter, repeating a theme Tuesday night, Carter said
he has so\Uided at each point that as president-elect he
during an elghk:ity fund· might ask Congress for
raising s\vlng this week, em- authorization to reorganize
phasized he Is not taking the federal. goverrunent so
victory In November for that, ooce inaugurated, he
) WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Ford is
for H granted.
will be ready for the ta.sk.
"The Republicans w!U un:~ ~ two minuteso(,sustalned beilringlng across the nation at 2 (
Earlier, In a speech to tbe
;::: p.m. EDT &amp;llllay on the nation's Bicentennial Fourth of :::: doubtedly heal their wounds U. S. Conference of Mayors in
:::: July
· 4.
;:: rapidly after their own
Milwaukee, Carter said he
the bep; ring in our third century, as millions of \ convention in August,'' said hopes to do for cities what
:::: free men and women pray, let every American resolve ;:;: Carter. "As you know the Franklin D. Roosevelt did for
~:~: that this nation, under God, wlll meet the future with the { Republlcan party ls a rural America four decades
;::; same COW'age ·and dedication Americans showed the } monolithic structure that's
(Continue«! on 11111• 12)
( world two centuries ago," Ford said in a proclamation :;:: tightly organized, and they'll
;::: Tuesday.
:;:;
( Ford also W'ged all Americans to mark the country's ~:~:
';;: 200th birthday by joining•July 2 to July 5 in "an extended ::::
;:;: period of celebration, thanksgiving and prayer ... for the :;::
;:;: future safety and happiness of our nation.'~
:;:;
POINT PLEASANT - The foul play. No autopay will be
( "In this year of our nation's Bicentennial, we enter our } body of a 15-year-old performed.
:;:; third century with the knowledge that we have achieved :':: Klngtown youth was pulled
Units of the Point Pleasant
:::: greatness as a nation and have contributed to the good of { from the Kanawha River Volunteer Fire Department
:;:; all nnankind," he said.
~;:
Tuesday evening at ap- which removed the body ap::: "We face the future with renewed dedication to the :~ : proximately 5:50 p.m., ac- proximately eight feet from
( principles embodied in OW' Declar~tion of Independence, :::: cording to a spokeaman of the the mouth of Crooked Creek,
::: and with renewed gratitude for those who pledged their :;: Point Pleasant Pollee Dept.
began dragging operatluns at
;:;: lives, t~eir fortunes and their sacred honor to preserve }
8
a.m. Tuesday. The youth
Dead
Is
John
Henry
Mc:::: individual liberty for us."
;:;:
Dade,
111 Main St., lhe son of had been last seen Sunday1
:::: Ford asked ' civic, religious and other community :::
Mr. and Mrs. Roy McDade. night. Tbe body was removed
} leaders "to encourage public participation in this historic ;:;: The police spokesman said to Uie Crow-Hussel Funeral
~::: observance " ·
:::
Home were arrangements
~ ~ : : ::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:::::::::;: ;:;:;: : : : ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;: ::; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::: :::: ::::::~~ there was no indication of are
pending.
By WIJ.UAM COTTERELL
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Jimmy Carter said today tbe
Republicans
will
"undoubtedly heal their
wounds" after Ule August
GOP
convention
and
President Ford or challenger
Ronald Reagan will run a

strong campaigu against him
in the fall.
Carter also said he would
meet in Washington later in
the day with AFL-CIO
President George Meany
following a $1,000-a-plate
noon fund-raising luncheon In
Philadelphia.

r!~:~~a~y_:;:: : : : : : : : : : : :.l.l

&lt;

~alllng

( "As

Youth's body recovered

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="778">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11235">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52152">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52151">
              <text>June 29, 1976</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
