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.·
•
.. You ju81 have to find the good people
\

Jl -Tbt &amp;~~ay,...._·Sta''nt! ~.AU«.15.197&amp;

Tawney:
.,.... ,....., How to travel and love it
.

Your Wayne National Forest
B~~i~:~·~~:~:r

:"Z -"

:tc St•••
I

.

~

Wha~;r.~ ~~~i'~

a lawsuit, tbere
llrvleeprovldedbftbu........
IRONTON _ "Good morning,
isn't much to be done. I've seen
. checllllat of pro~ "-e lbe
u. s. Forest Service."
limber harvest o9eraUoris In this
landowner lbould put bite lllmple
"Yes. hello, I'd like to speak to
part of Ohio that makes me cringe.
contract.
the Ranger."
Rip ~nd roar - get the Umber out
Contracta need not bi • eiiiJ.
"Certainly, may 1 ask who's
the fastest aitd easiest way with
plica ted thai only an attorn., eGQid
caUing and the nature of your
nary a thought for the luture forest,
understand them. ObvtOWI u.., 1o
business?"
erosion or wlldll[e. The sad part Is
consldfl! are, of ~. dollara,
"My name is John Doe and I
that with just a smidgen of tender
when pay menta are lo be madt
have · some limber I'm thinking
loving care, a minimum of effort at
where wiU the main h!lul be located
about cutUng. "
litUe or no cost, the job can be done
and perhaps the periOd of lbe aale
"One moment, sir, while 1 ring
properly.
,
· Otivlously tbe iandowner donn•i
hi ..
·
There are many 'reasons why the
want tbe ·sale to drag on for JUrt.
m;'AI Wolter speaking , may I help : landowner docsn'ttake the Ume to
Nol so obvious are whers will
· M Doe
find out what his timber Is really
tbe skid trails be located, (a very
you ... , ~~ve a~~ acre tract of limber
worth, to find a reliable, ex·
crltlal part of any limber aale) will
th~t looks like it's readY. to cut but 1 perienced Jogger and to demand lhllt
tbere be a penalty for e•ceaslw
don 't wantto leljust anyone do II. r
the job is done right. .
damage to the ref!lalnlng trees,
want a good job and 1 want it done
A good stand of timber is like
what kind of equlpme.ntls to be USfd,
right! "
money in the bank. Landowners hold
operations during fire season, .wiU
1 get many calls just like that
this in reserve and .just like a
wildlife den trees be lefflstandlng,
and most of them have 8 happy
savings account, it accumulates
and of great economic Importance oo ·
ending. 1 refer such calls to the
Interest with each year 's growth.
the seller, who wiU do the timber
Service Forester in the county In
But a sickness occurs In tbe family
stand Improvement work after the
which . they reside. We don't gel
and there are large doctor bills or a
sale is complete. Often this can be
direclly involved In managng · series of srnaU debts mushroom Into
dOne as the sale progresses at UIUe
private lands, that's the service
a pressing need for hard cash.
cost to the Jsndowner .
forester's job.
Perhaps the landowner has been
Apoor logging job v;tll result In
dori't
mind
the
calls
a
bit
thinking
of
selling
tbe
timber
for
a
poor,
low quality stand In the
1
·though and ·here's why . 1 get other
some Lime but Just nevrr got around
future. With nearly 60 percent .of the .
calls too, and they go like this :
to do it. One evening n operator ' u. s. commercial forest land In
"Good morning. u. s. Forest
stops in, offers what ap; ~rs to be a
prlvale ownership, the management
Se ·
'" tc ..
fair price and the next day, the hills
or
these land.! Is Important to the
rvlc€:, e~ .• e ·
·
"Mr. Wolter, what can 1 do• !let
rallle
with the sound of trucks and
nations wood supply.
·
my third cousi n's nephew's uncle's
chainsaws. Then my phone starts to
So if you're thinking of selling
friend cut the back forty and you
ring - too lale !
some Umber, contact your service
should just see what's been done to ' Service Fores~rs provide a
forester or a consulting forester . For
my property! He took only the best
wide range of advisory assistance . If
Scioto and Lawrence Counties,
trees, damaged a lot of the sta nding
you don •t like his looks, consulting
contact Clyde Heazilt, 353-7939 in
trees, ran down my fencing. my
foresters are avllable also.
Portsmouth. Residents of Jackson
catUe are out and there 's terrible
For the pros pective limber
and GaUia Counties should call
ruts where he hauled the timber out.
seller, I thinil the most valuable
Frank Toih, 286-0029 in Jackson .
.L_,..;.._ _ _

reservation. and go. I never spoke Chinese but I sure got
.-r. LIS J lfirll to
had any problem whal1oever. through . to ~im with sign
U~U&lt;UI'O • ;..ptt who always playeif It by ear. One · But, in Taiwan it was a language that I had . 28
/ : : lilt
nice spould never worry or get differen t story. They do not minules to gel to the airport.
~ 011 my recent excited; bi calm at aU limes. have a large airport tike He came right bark to me In
lriieltP and I would like to I have seen people miss their Hong ~ong or Tokyo where his sign language that it
pu awrt of lhe numerthaoust plane, loae their I)&amp;Qage, you can go and leave any couldn't be done.
_ . Jrilillg from 11
think they had a hotel hour w'ilhout any problems. I
Then I reached in my
hue beef! uked .
reeervallon and found out hailed a cab and told him to pocket, pulled out anotber
. 110.1 - lferen't you afraid differently .
They get take me to the Northwest silver dollar centennial and
Ill lriVti by yourself In so hysterical and a person would Orient head office, which he gave him to understand It
i*'1 djelant lands 1 SUppoae lhlnk they were going to have did. I walked in and there was his if he got me there in
~ had gotten sick, lost, a heart attack alld !Imagine were three beauUful girls time .
I wa tched
the
fobbed, (t killed?
aome do.
silting at their individual speedometer jump from 50 to
; No. 2 - l}'hat country did
flu I the way I feel l~ that if desks. I picked the cenler one · 70 mUes per hour and he
JW like !Jeil? ·
you ml11 your plane there is because I just had a leeling passed everything in front ,
· )(q. 3 - If you 11ad your always
another
one she was a·lucky one.
ran two red lights and almost
cholh lD live in a foreign tomorrow.! have seen people
I just sat down and started hit a man pushing a cart of
•try, which would you .gel so msd at a ticket agent talking to her about straw across the road.
cboole?
thalllhlnk If they had a gun everything except a ticket to
He threw on his brakes, the
: fn.!lnswer to QUeations No. they would shoot him, but it is Tokyo. I asked her il she had car spun around, I shut my
dot hla fault.
seen our Centennial Silver eyes and scooled down in the
.. I never w111 forget when I Dollar. I knew she hadn 't. So, seat because I just knew he
.CARROL K. SfiOWDEN wanted to leave Taiwan for I look one I had around my was goi ng to hit the man and
'
Tokyo. They told me it·would neck mounted on a chain and kill him. When I opened my
St.
o.mM!ta,o.
bi nine days before I could handed II to her and ex· eyes, the car had skidded
. ,·
Ph.446.420f
get a ticket out because there plained II to her. She took It to around complelely and the
~11 '.
was a world trade show going · tbe other girls and showed it old man and his cart were on
on and if I did not have a . to them. I heard them ooh and the other side, We got back on
, ticket reservation, it was ah over it for some time. the track and took orr again.
impossible.
_ Then she brought it back to
l kept looking at my watch
I never had a reservation at me.
and it was two minules till
'I d
·
d takeo(f whe n we pu lied up a1
I '--k
any lime oil this trip.
wo 1 an put tt aroun
Whenever I got tired and her neck and told her she · the airport and I knew I could
thought 1 had seen enough ol could keep il a~ a gill from ·not possibly make il as they
a country, 1 would call the the USA. She said she had to check me through
airport and ask whal time the couldn 't take my only good customs. My cabbie look me
· next plane left, mske
luck charm from me just like to tbe right place and I paid
that because il meant too him and lipped him with
much tome. But after not too another silver dollar. He
•
much persuasion. she ac- hugged me and kept jab·
The.-e must be a reason
. cepl'&lt;!d it.
bering in Chinese to the
Then, I said to her I would customs agent. !I worked
just like her to do me one because lnever went through Taiwa n was in a restaurant
why Kingsbury Home Sales
lillie favor and that was get · customs ataU but they had to where I went to eat my
me a ticket to Tokyo. She then check out my passport which evening meal. Everything
told ·me the same story I took another 10 minu~s . I was written in Chinese on the
is selling so many
heard before lhal the World was now 15 to 20 minutes past menu. I asked if anyone
Trade Fair had everything takeoff. They whisked me out spoke English. In ab&lt;&gt;ut 10
booked solid . But she said, to the wailing plane. There minutes a young boy of about
modular homes in this area.
"let me see what I can do." was a Japanese man really 17 came up and said that he
· She got on the phone and I mad ab&lt;&gt;ut something and spoke English. He took my
know
she was on it for 15 was making quite a scene. I order. While I was eating, he
We think 141 because,of the quality of our
!.
minutes
and at times she ran up the steps and got in- and four others came over to
products, our attitude in dealing with our
talked very excited in side , the plane. The copilot mY table and sa t down..
CUJtomers and tilt service we pro vir' ·· at the
·Chinese. She hung up and said to me as I entered the Through this boy. who acted
sare.
then·said to me tha t I had 45 plane, "You sure must have a as my interpreter, they asked
.Stop In and see our display homes "••d give
.minutes to get to the airport. good frienq s9meplace me hundreds of questions
us an opportunity to fill your housing needs.
· Slle said grab a cab quick because you see that · about the USA. They were so
because it is 30 miles to llle Japanese man down lllere ? eager to talk to me. They
airport from Taipei.. I took He was bumped so you could would not let me leave until
IM!r hand and kissed it, ran go to Tokyo."
~!ley closed atil p.m. 1 gave
out the door, grabbed a cab to
I did not tell him, but in my each Of them a 1976 fifty cent
my hole! to pick up my mind I though! to myself that piece and they were. overluggage. told the cabbie to liUie girl at Northwest Orient joyed. ll made me feel good
wait right there, threw my Airline Office was a dear to see how happy l.had made
luggage in and took off for the friend.
these young people of Taipei.
airport. (I found that I left
So, you see how a little They walked me to my hotel
"QUALITY ALWAYS'
one suit and a pair of shoes in psychology works, if you use and insisted that I come back.
..
!flY closet at the holel).1 hope it right. If I had gone in there but I had to go to another city
liMn: Man .. Tu..,, ;-t.un.,s.t.,t.7:JO
.
somec&gt;ne In Talpel enjoys and lold them I had to have a the next day . .
Wtclntldly-Prlclly 9:otl-9:00, Sunclly Closed .
them ).
ticket or else, acted mad,
No, I am not afraid to .take
l'llmtnly ·
·
992-7034
Ohio
The traffic was very heavy ek., I would have spent a trip and travelalone .. Jf you
l'llarl Alh m.uu. Roger O.vls, m.r.n
that morning and m~ny , anotber 9 days in Taipei.
treat people with klndness
traffiC lights. My cabbie "!'IY
Another e1perience I had in and do not take advantage of
.lllem, kindness will be
returned , in most cases. After
all, I was once a poor farm
boy raised in Green Township
and worked hard .all my life.
Many a pay I had hoed corn,
set and suckered tobacco for
fft a day and when we used to
thresh wheal, (me a.nd my
brother Bill) we always had
to stack the straw and the
chaff would always get aU
over me. When I got through,
I would head for the old
swimming hole to gel rid of
the chaff that went down my
back.
·
Just remember, these
foreign neighbors want to
talk to you just as bad as you
want to talk to tbem and I try
my best to talk to them on
tbeir own level.
AS to all.!wering question
No. Z (What country I liked
best) :
All I can say Ia that I like
every country I have ever
NOTI(EI
visited . It Is a thrill to see and
1. .
I was never afraid. I

,

SALE

•

N.L BIMD flEW MODB.S ·
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the new models • • .

THE SALE OF SALES

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~

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CY4:111

I

·store at Rotorua and in- there are only three months
troduced myself. The owner !bey can'. gel out · over · the
just couldn 't belleve a mountains . December,
jeweler from the USA was January and February. The
stOpping In to see ·him. He rest of ·the year they are
closed shop and took me out snowed in . The mountains
to lunch. A photographer around the estate range up oo
from Auckland took off two 4,1100 fl. , so the only otber
hours to drive me around and outiet is by boat over the lake.
show me the city of Auckland.
I took some beautiful
Now if these kind people don 't sunset photos that evening
turn you on about a country, I thatlook like paintings. They
don't know what would.
have 30,1100 sheep and around
When I landed in Queens. 800 cattle. Mark told me they
town, New Zealand, I met a were -lucky If they made 40c
travel agent by the name of per'head on the sheep. He had
Don Kennett. I talked to him 8 sheep dogs so well trained
about 20 minutes and he that you would th)nk they
handed me two com· were human. He can talk to
plimentary tour tickets. One them and the)&gt; will drive the
was on the ski lift. and the sheep like a person. He has
other was to Walter Peak six whistle signals which all
Esta le of H~gh MacKenzie, mean different direction. He
which consisted ol 160,1100 never pels them or allows
acres. There were IS of us on anyone else oo touch them.
the tour. The cou 1le that lived
Aller a good nights' rest In
there·and mana~- the estate . this lovely home filled with
are Mark and Mary McLean, antiques worth ll fortune, we
real B&lt;itiSh speakin~ people. got up at f.he break of ,
By the way. Mr. MacKenzie · to a breakfast fit for a
is from England. He dl&lt;\d in They thought it was Odd that
1970 at the age of 92. His two qe~et .drink coffee or lea, but
sons and a daughler now own I sure got rid of a pitcher of
it.
,,. rich cold milk.
I had quile a conversation
We went Bulside and there
with Mark and I told him I was a heavy frost on the
sure would like to spend the ground, almost like snow. II
night in this lovely old home. was just like a crisp October
He said why not, so he told me morning here. I helped him
to tell the guide to take all the with some of the chores until
others back. They were all 8:30. He wanted me to go
Australians. i was the only hunting up in the mountains
American in the group. You but I told him I must g.
see, the Australians always because I wanted to be 01
come here for ·thei1· Sydney by tomorrow oo be
vacations. What a pleasure it with my 1tlaughter, Nancy, as
was that night. ·
I was already two days late.
· Mary fixed one of the most
So we got in his mooorboal
delicious meals I ever sat and took off for Queenstown
down to. I ate leg of lamb, 'h hopr away. I promised
which must have been 3lbs., these lovely people I would
and topped It off with two return some day; I am sure
pieces of some kind of berry going to live up to that
pie and two glasses of rich promill!!,JVhich wiU hopefully
meal.
be ne•t year.
Aflersupperwesatdown in
So, you see, there are a ·lol
front of a six ft. fireplace Of nice, decent people leflln
burning with three or four this old world, AU you have to
large logs. You see they have do is go find them. Next, I wiU
their winler' when we are write about another beautiful
having summer. In fact, .country, probably Ball.

LIMITED QUANTITIES
I

lASHERS

talk to foreign people and see
how they live. I lake .a tape
recorder and. try to reeord
their methods and history of
Uteir country.! have so many
tapes, I could wrile a book. In
fact, when I retire.. that is
what I am going to do. I will
atlempt to take one country
at a time and tell why I admire it. I wlll start with New
Zealand. I was on a 4\', hour
flight from Fiji to New
Zealand and it was my fortune to get a seat next to a
travel agent by ·the name of
Graham Stafford. He asked
me where I was going. I
showed him iny ticket and
told him lha t my main purpose was to "'•it my daughler
Nancy in Australia. He
looked at my ticket and told
me I could go almost around
the world with this ticket. Il
just wasn't made out right by
the ticket agent.
I told him I used to work for
AAA bUt I didn't know much
about making out tickets. He
said· AAA did not make llle
ticket out because he worked
with them on touts and they
are the best in tbe business.
So. when we landed in New
Zealand, he insisted I stay all
night with him as it was 1:30
a.m. I did stay lhe night with
him ·•nd he said he would take
me '" his office the loU owing
morning and change my
ijcket. When he got up at 7
a.m. we had breakfast where
I mel his lovely wife and two
sons. He had even inade one
of the boys sleep on the floor
so that I could have his bed.
We went to his office and he
told me he could send me to
Thailand, Taiwan, Tokyo and
Alaska , or go through Guam
and Manila. I told him to book
me by 41aska as I had always
wanted oo go there.
So, if it hadn't been for him
I would never have seen these
.countries.
I make it a point when I '
travel to meet men of my
trade of phol~grapbers and
jewelers. I went in a jewelry

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of. llt·nntl nu
AWARDS DISPLAYED - These Meig,. County
prden club members took lime out Sunday evening from
their work In painting the display area for the lwo Meigs
County Fair flower shows on Wednesday and Friday, to
dlsplaysonle Of the engraved i!llver trays that will be
awarded d\lring the shows. The trays will go to the best of

llliow and reserve best of show In the artistic division and
to the horticulturist sweepltakes winner on both days.
From the left are Janet Bolin, Suzie Carpenter and Alice
ThompiOtl. Both shows will he In a rennovated building on
~ grounds known as "F1oral Hall".

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.

NO. 84

..

at y

e
VOL XXVIII

•

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~:.:.:..::__~---.:..:.:.:.:.::.:.:..===-.::.:.:.:....:::.::___----'-_
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vow court fight
CHARLESTON, W.Va . "ignited in. southern West .
(UPI)- Leaders of a month- Virginia by a heevy fine on a
long coal strike withdrew Uirlted Mine Workers local
picket lines today In for engaging in an illegal
bituminous pits, but .renewed strike.
their VUWI lo end federal
Dissidents clainjed the
Court Intervention In mining strike solidified tbe nmk.and.dlspuleil.
file in: its opposition to courl
A~ many a~ 120,1100 miners Injunctions, frequently used
were Idled at the belght of the by coal operators to end mine
Industry-wide wlldca t, strikes.
:::::::::::::::::::~:::::~~=::::~:;:;:;:;:;::~:::;:;:::~::~:~:::f::::::::~:::::::::!:!:!:±:::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::c:.::::::;

:•::

{
Leaders said the mines ::::
would insist that United Mine ·:·:

A sult asking damages for
alienation of affection was
one ol four filed Friday and
saturday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Mr · and Mrs. Thomas E.
Buckley, Chesl'&lt;!r, filed for
judgment in the smount of
UOO.OOO for alienalion of
affection of their daughter ,
Lorie Ann, 7·
The suit claims alienation
:-:· has been caused by Mr · and

PARKERSBURG, W. Va. (UPI)- When Mrs. R. J. Niery Is ;heeled Into an
operating rooin, tbe only linesthellc she wantala her husband's voice. .
"Everybody thought.I wss crazy," the Cleveland, Ohio, resident 11ld of her
fu:sl use of hypnosis in ari operation.
That came in childbirth. In labor Z3 boilrll wltb her first child, Mrs. Nlery
Insists she felt no pain, even though she politely declined an offer for anestbesla.
Ustenlng to the tape-recorded voice of her husband, a hypnosis eiPef(, Mrs.
Niery underwent an opera tim that involved the probing of her t!plne.
Using her lwsband's voice 00 relax her, Mrs. Niery aays tbere was no attending
pain during or after the operation.
"There were no pt'Hhots," she added.
lm!ce she was successful in her first attempt to lace an operation without an
•

•

~~==r;~~:= ::.;~::~:~ii:~=-~:.:::;:C~it~ '. \·;:~['· .D...an
U · ... ·g· of
:tl\

to-strike clause when he · :'::
negotiates a new coal ::::
contract next year.
•:::

applied. Later, she refused to pay the bW and was suc~ulln her objectloll.!. "I
didn't ask for' him;'' she explained: ·
·
.
. · ·
Mrs. Nlery's husband is a lecturer and has been a profession~ hypnotlat f.X: 24

:)

::::

youths
~:::~~~:r~~EdE , ., ::,~~=,:,;,::,:.,.:::.:::.,::::::,.,:., ::i,:.:.: ,:.:,~':.,:::.:,.:::,.':::.,. .
Just
fiNews. • . in Briefsi
Pike County mines at work go·wild
obligation not to strike.
"We're not going back and .
fall over and play dead,"
said one strike activist from
District 29, at nearby
Beckley. "We're going to
organize ourselves and stand
By United Press International
LONG BEACH, CALIF. --' FBI AGENTS .TODAY up the nell\ time."
The miner said strikers
searched "aU over Southern California" for two women wbo
learned
from.reliable sources
escaped a D!deral prison Saturday - Susan K. Murphy and ·
that
coal
operators were
Diane Ellls. Miss Murphy was con\1cted with Manson ~Ills!
almost
provoked
into taking
sandra Goode of conspiring to semi death threat letters to
drastic
action
as
the
wildcat
business executives. MIS. Ellis was convicted of bank robbery.
wore
on,
.
because
coal
The women overpowered a lemale guard al .the federal
prllon on Termlnsl Island saturday and escaped in the stockpiles were dwindling.
"Operators were shalring
guard's car, which was found about four hours later
at
the end," he said. "They
abandoned In nearby Long Beach. An FBI spokesman said
were
just about to do
Sunday they had no clues as to the whereabouts of the women
something
big. It was lust
an4 were concentrating their search throughout the Southern
around
the
corner. Their
California area.
stockpiles
weren't
what they
KANSAS CITY, MO. - SEN. HOWARD BAKER of
Tennessee IIYS he wants to be president some day and !hal's thought they were." ·
The strike flared July 19
why he'll accept the vice presidential nomination this year If
after
local 1759 was ordered
It's offered. "If anybody asked me, llhlnk I probably would do
oo
pay
$50,1100 for defying a
II," Baker said Sunday In response lA! a question from a
back-towork
order. Pickets
Mississippi delegate.
spread
throughout
seven
Baker aald "It's fiatterlng" to be mentioned as one of the
other
states,
Idling
workers
in
lop names on President Ford'sllst of potential running mates,
Penns
y
Ivan
I
a
,
0
hi
o,
rut after being on slml1ar lists In 1968 and 1972, "We don't gel
very excited about lt." Asked If he really wanted to be a Kentucky, VIrginia,
presidential nominee, Baker replleq : "WeD, yeah, to be frank Alabama, Indiana . and
with you, I would. But !bat Is not in •: .~ cards in 1976. Maybe II illinois.
Mlller made four trlpa 1!.
will be someday. I hope that doesn't sound vain."
West VIrginia before a backPOIN'fE..A·PITRE, GUADELOUPE - A RUMBLING, t~ork trend began to
SMOKING La Soufrlere volcano spewed ashes and choking surface.
1umes over deserted mountain villages today, signaling an
Imminent erupUon that experts said could equal several
atomic bombs.
·
Offlclala reported aU residents bad been evacuated from
the threatened area 'and a (ew stray cats and ·dogs were the
only living u-eatures seen In a tour of almost a dozen towns
'nesUed on the slopes of the cloud-enshrouded volcano. An
estimated 130,000 persons SWiday fled their homes on the
10uthern baU of Basse·Terre, !be westernmoat ptrllon of this
ootterfly.ahaped F-rench Carlbeean Island.

·.!!.,,.,..

,.,,,,):i.

.

The last few hundred of
Kentucky's coal miners who
remaiJI!!d off the job Ia~ last
week returned to work today
In Pike County.
At one time · 13,000
Kentucky miners-7 ,000 ln
western Kentucky and some
6,000 In- eastern Kentuckyhad walked out in sympathy
to United Mine Workers in

Weath.er

West VIrginia who left tbe
pits In protest to contempt
fines levied In connectim
with a federal court judge's
decision .
"Everybody Ia back today
and work is back to normal,"
Mart Bailey, Pikeville, pres!-

Pomeroy twit

called Sunday

The Pomeroy ER Squad
was called Saturday at 7:14 .
p.m. for Margaret Sinclair
who was taken to Vel'&lt;!rans
Memorial Hospital and again
at 9:16 p.m. lo transfer her
to Holzer Medical Center.
Sunday at 11 :47 a.m. the
:.:::,::::::::::::::::::::::•:•:•:•:•:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
unit transported Less Price,
EXTEND EO
Pomeroy, to Veterans
Wednesday through Memorial Hospital, and at 9
Friday, lair with highs In a.m. today went to Brown's
70s and low 80s, and lows in Tractor sales for Charles
50s and low 60s.
Eskew who was taken to the
Medical Plaz~ in Gallipolis.
Sunny and cool today and
Tuesday. Highs Tuesday in
upper 70s and low 80s. Clear
and cool tonight. Lows. 50 lo
55. Chance of rain near zero
through Tuesday.

dent of the Pike County Coal
Operators Association, Inc.,
said today. The Ollsolrn Mine
and the Kentland-Elkhorn
Mine crews were the last oo
return oo work in the eastern
Kentucky coal field.
Most western Kentucky
miners went back oo lhi! job
Aug. 9 after a brief walkout.
Bltlley said It was difficult
to detennine the tonnage Of
coal lost in Pike County over
the two-week long walkout.
"It

was so spotty," he said,

"Some mines would work one
day and be off the next and
then others would go out-It
was pretty hard oo keep any

·record."
TRUSTEES TO MEET
· The Rio Grande Community College board of
trustees will meet Thursday,
Aug. 19, 7 p.m. at Allen Hall
on the Rio Grande College
campus.

•

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Ohio's 97-member
delegalloo to the Republican National Convention plans a
caucus today, but no Important policy matters are on tap.
Repitbllcap state chairman Kent B. McGoucb, chairman of the
delegallm, said the major problem to be Ironed out was the
procedure for suliltltutlng alternateS when the voting
delegatee leave the noor. ·
MCGough, whp said President Ford's strength In !be Ohio
delegatlm was siiU unwavering, announced that the
. President's son, Jaclt, would attena the Ohl.o caucua meallng
wedneadlly morning. Ford has 90 of Ohio's 97 delegates. Six
others are pledged to Rmald Reagan, while one Is listed u
uncomml~·

TOKYO- FORMER PREMIER KAKUEI TANAKA, the
rags-to-riches politician who beaded Japan's govl!rlllllenl from
1972 to 1974, wulndlcled today m a
of accepting a •1.67
tnDIIOO bribe from tha Lockheed Aircraft Corp. He Is the first
premier Ill Japmt's history to be Indicted for corrupUon while
1te Wllln office.
.
'Jbellldletmenl by the Tokyo District Prosecutor's office
accusell Tanaka, 58, of accepting the bribe in return for(ConUnued on page 8)

m.rge

TirE SHOW WILL GO

-:

TONIGHT'S SCHEDULE
8 p.m. - Coavelllloa
called
to
order.
8:25 p.m. - Welcome by
MJJsourl Gov. Cllrillopber
S. Boad ; speeches by Gov.
James B. Edwards of South
ClroUu; VIce President
Nelaoa Rockefeller; Sea.
Bltrry M. Goldwaler of
Arlzoaa, GOP caadldale Ia
l984; Mn. Smith; Hoa. AU
Laadon of Kansas, GOP
candldale In lf36; lemporary chairman Sen•.
Robert Dole of KaDHs;
Ka11.1as Gov. Robert F.
Bellllf!tt; Keynote speaker
Sen. Howard F. Baker of
Teonessee.
10:2t p.m. - Benedlctl011
ud adjournment anlll 8
p.m. EDT Tuesday.

If II did, the delegation
vole according .to
(cOnllnued.m ~e &amp;)

woul~

CENT~ $ '0 as
_.:__---"-'------'----~----- for alienation .
&lt;

.

delegates.
'"Ibis Is the ldnd of en·
thUlium that will give us a
vlcttryon Wednelltlay night,"
Ford told his boosters,
sweltering In the muggy
Allguat heat.
'!be 30.vote MIPiulppl
delegation, the largest lllngle
uncommitted bloc at the
convention, was crucial oo
Ford's bopes. He sent Sen.
Howard H. Balr:er, R-Tetm.,
who keynotes the cmventlm
tonight and Ia me ii Ftrd's
leading prospects for a
runnl!tg mate, to urge the
Milslaslpplans to ''vote your
conscience."
But they also wanted oo
hear frmn Reagan, wbom
they favored unlll he tapped
liberal
Sen.
Richard
Sehwelcker Ol Pennsylvania.
So they postponed until
Tuesday - and poulbly unlll
a few hours before the
presidential balloting begins
Wednesday night - any
declslm on abandoning their
1 self-Imposed unit rule.

r.J.l .

PRICE FIFTEEN

Husband's voice perfect anesthetic

~

delegates

&lt;.

MONDAY, AUGUST 16, 1976

Strl.ke..lea de·. •"-'
&lt;

d wInd II n g · AmerIcan Ford faDing a tantalizing flw
cmitltuency, open their 31st votes lhort of the 1,130-vote
national cmventlon atill torn majt.-lty he n~ to win on
between two warring !be llrat ballot.
conservatives, President
Reagan, tanned, relaxed
Ford and Rmald Reagan.
and seemingly confident he
Even as the convention Is woul". ultimately prevail,
pveled Into lellllon today at probed for wealmeos In the
futuristic Kemper Arena, . Pr:esldenl's ranks to bolster
Ford linda himself IICfapplnB bis 1,038-vole total.
witb the flrmer CalHornia . "Can we win It?" Reapn
governor over the few~ than asked on arrival by chartered
100 ~~~~~;oounltted delegatell. jet Sunday afternoon. "Yes, II
who bold the elusive key to a would be easier on the second
flrstballol presidential liallol but, yes, we can win m
pomlnallon Wednesday night. the first ballot."
· AlthOugh he and his • So seriously did Ford
political advisers lns.lsted regard &amp;lagan's challenge
victory was thelri, Ford was that he broke tradltloo and
fighting the llloll serious flew In from WaahlngtOO
challenge for nominatim that before the convention began.
any
Incumbent
GOP He greeted a cheering,
· president has laced In this chanting throng awaiting him
century, and IIill Btruggllng at !be ~own Center Hotel
oo gain rontrol of hla own and went Immediately to his
party.
~Y rooftcp suite to
. Hours before !be showdown start telephoning stray

ON - Despite heavy rains
which hit Meigs County early Sunday morning, workers of
Gambill and Bates Brothers Amusement Co., Route 2;

Wintersville, were buSy aasembllng rides for the midway
attractions of !be Melp County Fair. The fair will open
for Its first full,day of activity Tuesday and run through
Saturday night.

NEW YORK (UPI) Youths barred from a "disco
party" went on a spree of
robberies and vandalism In
midtown Manhattan Sunday,
assaulting pedestrians and
smashing windows. Ten
persons were arrested.
Pollee said more than 20
robberies were reported and
several windows were
smashed by band.! of youths
roaming the area from
Manhattan Center, two
blocks from the site of the
recent Democratic National
Convention, to Times Square.
The youths had been denie&lt;\
admittance to the center,
pollee aald.
Four teen-agers were
arrested by city police and
charged with robbery,
assault and disorderly
conduct. Transit Authority
offlciala arrested another six
on ·charges of looting
concessions In the subways.
The Manhattan Center bad
been rented for the night by a
group sponsoring a "disco
party " a spokesman for the
bulltfu.g said. He said the
suspecta refused to pay tbe $6
entrance charge and began
"making trouble" outside the
building.
Pollee said the youths
began roaming the streets in
small · groups, robbing
passersby of wallets, watches.
and other valuables.
"They also knocked down
anyooe who got In their way,"
said one officer at the
statlonhou.se.
'!be officer said the
windows of a delicatessen
were smashed "and they
rifled the cash register."

Mrs. James w. Suttle, Rt. 1,
Long Bottom. The suit alleges
the
defendants
were
strangers to the · Buckleys'
daughter, Lorle Ann, and
visited her at the Buckley ·
home at the expressed
prohibition .of her parents.
According to the suit, such
visits disrupted and invaded
the privacy and harmony of
the plaintiffs' home, and Mrs.
Suttle improperly visited
Lorie Ann at school.
The plaintiffs attempt8'!, ·AQ p)ltaln. lll!hool l;l!laJ;d .
assistance . In ._!l.cllping
the visits. AS a result of this
action privale and personal
details of the plaintiffs' lives
and that or Lori Ann allegedly
surfaced ca using embarrassment and damage to
their reputation and standing
in the community.
The suit seeks $511,000 lor
injuries sustained to family
prtvacy diid reputation in
addition to $50,000 sought to
compensate for the alienation
of Lorie Ann 's affections.
In other court action,
Martha Anderson, Rutland,
liled fo r divorce from
Thomas Anderson, RuUand.
The Motorists Insurance'
Companies, Columbus, filed
for judgment in the amount of
$625 ·- and costs against
William Edward Eakins, Rt.
2, Racine .

Leila "'velyn Clark,
Pomeroy, and Carmin E.
Clark filed for dissolution ol
marriage.

Coon hunt,
bench show
planned
'

RACINE
A U.K.C.
licensed Wild Coon Hunt and
Bench Show will be held
Saturday at the American
Legloo Hall in Racine under
the sponsorship of the Shade
River CoonhiUllers Assn.
The bench show will be at 4
p.m. with an entry fee of f4
competing for a full set for
trophies. Immediately
following tbe bench show will
be a treeing contest with an
entry fee of f,! and a re-entry
fee of''· The night hunt entry
fee Is $6 for grade and ~ for
registered with 10 trophies to
be awarded for registered
and five for grade. Trophies
will be ~warded for plus
points only and there will .be
hunting and non·huntlng

DAMAGE MINOR
judg
The Middleport Police
A ~OpJJy for grand night
Department investigated a · champion was dooated by the
minor accident Saturday at Farmers Bank and Savings
11 a.m. Trudy A. Casto, Rl. 4, Co., and special trophies for
Pomeroy, making a left turn tbe high point female and
from Walnut St. onto North hlghpolntmaleofthehuntby
Second Ave., scraped her Richarda and Son Sand and
right fron t bumper into t~• Gravel.
left rear fender of an auto · Anyme Wishing any mort
driven by Harvey L. lnfonnaUm on the event may
Erlewine. There were no contact Carl Hall 992-7222·
injuries, no citations·, and Bill Smith 992·5206 o~
orily minor damage.
Kenneth ruriey, 9&lt;19-2657.

II

'&amp;.

�'

2- 'l1le Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mondly, Aug. 16, 1976

...

A Chronicle of America
'

A ugusf, 1776:
Early th1s month, American General Philip Schuyler, ina
treaty session a!German Flats, NewYork,prevailaon the
Indians to remam neutral But almost Immediately, the
Brlllsh begi n to undo Schuyler's diplomacy. In eat1y Sep.
tember , Henry Hamilton, the lieutenant·governor of
Detroit, urges -In hls words
- "chiefs and warriors from
the Ouawas, OJIbwas, Wyandots, and Pottawatomies ,"
with the Senecas, to "fall on
the scattered settlers on the
Ohio " And In early October,
Joseph Brant-apro-Brltlsh
Mohawk chief - returns
from England to the upstate
New York Iroquois village
of Onoquaga. Brant rages
against the German Flats
treaty, and immediately
begins mobilizing the In·
dians to do battle with the
Joseph Brant
Americans
- By Rosa Mackenzie &amp; Jeff Ma~: Nelly/CJIJ76 United Feature Syndlcale

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

BY LEE LEONARD
UPI Slaleb- Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Tbere are llllllpiclons, and in
80IIIe cues evidence, that
big-time bingo operat&lt;rs are
circumventing Ohio's threemontl! old )aw designed to
protect charitable bingo and
church-eponsored games of
chance while curbing gaming
lor profit.
But
few ,
if
any ,
prosecutions have rerolted,
apparently because
everybody is waiting for
somebOOy else to make the
Drat move.
"It's a real chicken-and~
egg situation, " confirmed
Summit County Sheriff
IWnald H. Weyandt, a former
state representative who
auth&lt;red another Ohio law
banning casino-type
gambling. "Only somebOOy's
going to end up with some
scrambled eggs."
Under the charitable bingo
law enacted last May, the

I

olltce ol state Attorney
General WUI!am J . Brown
has licensed legitimate
organtutions to conduct
bingo games.
Some bingo profiteers
apparently are contlhuing
tl!eir games under the guise
ol charity, but big~lty
prolleCUtors far the mo!l part
have received no hard
inlonnatim from pollee, who
in turn have received no
formal complaints.
Richard
C.
Farrtn,
asaistant chief of the attorney
general's
charitable
foundations sect!Qn, reported
last week that 572 llcenses
had been granted, 344
applications sent back lor
re!Uing and 69 rejected outrtsht, mainly becauae they
did not quaUfy as charitable
&lt;rganlzatlons.
"We have su.splcions that
some of the big-time
operators may be renting
halls to charities which get
tlte licenses, or conducting

the 1ame.s for them and
maybe wldmming profits olf
the IDp but we have no ny ol
llnowlnt," Farrln said. "U
they'rellllll't, they wat't put
their names on the
application."
Farrln's suspicions are
shared by Sen. C!aar!M L.
Butts, I).Qeveland, autl!&lt;r ol
the charitable bqo law.
"We've seen a recurrence
ol aome of the same people
that were operating before,"
aatd Butts, referring to bingo

rearrangmg the deck chairs
on the Titan! c."
Sears, on the other hand,
kept the Reagan campaign
allve, engineering tl!e North
Carolina primary victory in
March, and then the stUnning
shutout in the May 1 Texas
primary that launched the
Californian into meaningful
contention
He Is credited with the
decision to alUIOunce Richard
Schwelker as Reagan's
potential running mate - a
bold move that may be.ckflre,
but which slowed Ford 'a
steady climb in delegate
atrength.
Then Sears followed up by
pushing a convention rules
change that would force Ford
to name his running mate

·Meigs

early today when a woman
lJSBON, OhlD (UP!) Three escapees fnm the Ohio who gave them a ride at a
Reformatory at Mansfield nearby truck stop was
were captured near here stopped lor a traffic violaticn
by Columbiana County
llllerlffl),l deputies.
Depli!res said the woman
was unaware that the men
and I fourth Inmate had
escaped
from
the
re!onnatory Sunday.
Tboee arrested were Identified as Robert Copley, 18,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) YOIII!IIIIown, serving hro-to- New Jersey alternate 10 years 111 two convictlODB ol
deletlate John W. Markert assault with a deadly
dldn, think much of the weapon, Paw Cole, 23,
preparations
for
his Washingtonville, CoJwnb1ana
hone)'IDOOII.
County, who was aervlng 9-toHe 101 married juJt before 40 years on three counts of
the Republican National Ccn- burglary and one of
ventlon and his state's lglll'avated arson and Robert
delegatlcrl wanted to sUI]l'iae Sparks, 20, YoungatQwn, who
him with a special suite in was serving a two-to-10 year
Kinas City.
term for two counts of
Tbe Breckenridge Inn assatilt.
readied 118 111011 luxurious
The fourth escapee,
quarters. The I'UIKlf-tbeoflllll Thomas Workman, 21,
furnlablngs 'll'tre replaced Uabon, was stiU at large.
with the ezqulllte, and plush
rup covesed the Boot.
Mftert waltzed b1a bride
STRlKE PUT OFF
Into the honeymom rolte,
AKRON
(UPI) A
looked around and quickly
threatened
str1ke
by
some
900
1'111 down the eight flight of
maintenance, clerical and
stain to the main lobby.
"Wbere's Kean• Where 's techmcal workers at the
Kean," be screamed, Akron General Medical
referring to delegation leader Center was postponed Sunday
Tbamu Kean. ''They moved for ten days pending outcome
further
contract
all that llluff in and f011otlhe of
negot1aUons.
bed."

One smalf item
omitted for

his honeymoon

•

DR. LAMB

There was one problem
when the huge granite
sundial was put in place
outside Kemper Arena at the
GOP convention so that
delegates could teD the lime
- as long as the sun was
shining.
The sundial was five
minute slow.
So a big truck with a hoist
and a lnll'k crew returned,
ripped It out, and set it rigbt
to the J)redse minute.
But then there was another
problem. 1''-e sundial Is set to
Cen1!'al ' -~ ndard Time while
Kansas 1.-1ty is on Central
Dayli h Time.

what be S'ftal'S is genuine
Washington "hot alr coverup ."
The red, white and blue can
bears the label directing the
uaer to hold the hot air six
inches from scandal and
spray for two seccnds. Tbe
label says the hot air is useful
for covering up cost
overruns, congressional
junkets, illegal campaign
contributions and padded
expense accounts.
Near the Municipal
Auditorium in Kansas Oty 1a
one of those modem
billboard&amp; whole m .,..,
are painted on slats that
swivel every few aeconda to
show two or three dllferenoe
ads in the same space.
First It promotes a lnnd ol
whisky. Then It shows an ad
for a soft drink with a picture
of a thirsty dog and the slogan
" Dog's Best Friend."
Finally, complete with a
IO!emn portrait, Is the slogan
•'President Ford in 7K ''

A reporter's 9011, f, Dew
be.ck fnm Plains, Ga., on
There may be a message .TIIIIIDY Carter's chartered jet
here somewhere. Oil the side last week after he and his
of the Art Deco IIUIIclpa1 father had spent a week ol
auditorium in Kania City working and ~ in
where 111011 ol the preconven- the Democratic presidential
ticn Ford-Reagan wrestling candidate's hometown.
has taken place Is the legend:
Carter came be.ci to the
"Comedy.
Drama. rear of the plane and !pen!
TragedY."
abQut 20 nunutes chatting
with the boy.
Ole T-eblrt aeen oo the
~ a scoop, the father
streets of Kansas Clty has asked b1a son what Carter
two huge green peanuts with had said.
the inscription "Nuts to
But like Ill good pollticlana
Carter." Also in the bar in the guarding a confidential
headquarters Mueblebach conversallon, the boy
Hotel,
the
bartender replied: "You'll have to ask
carefully explains to palrons Govern&lt;r Carter."
that the shelled peanuts he
serves cune fnm VIrginia.
Robert
S.
Carter,
"We aren't allowed to serve cochairman
of
the
Georgia peanuts,.. he said. Republican
National
Cllltunlttee, got b1a authors a
Representatives of bit confuaed. In the advance
Americao Ind1an tribes plan text of hll speech todly at the
a three-day "POIIWOW" opening session of the
beginning Monday next to oonvenlim, Carter said the
Kemper Arena. 'l1le ses5ons Democratic ptmlnee wboae
includes dances, drums and name be shares "puts 111 in
~es on Indian iasues.
mind of the headless
There will be competltloo horseman of Sleepy Hollow
among the tribes attending, letlend. who according to
liCCOI'ding to John Two Birda James Fenimore Cooper,
ArbUCkle, coordinator of the jumped onto b1a h&lt;rse and
event.
rode off in all directiw."
Nice description.
Jon Rintela of Arllngtcn,
But it waa Washington
Va., has c&lt;rne to Kansas Clty lrvlng who created "'11le
aelling Hel'OIIO! spray cans of Legend of Sleepy Hollow."

Property
Transfers
Marvm Yeauger , Delma
Halley , Alfred Yeauger,
Pearl Yeauger, Norman
Yeauger , Allen Yeauger,
11.110 A., Salisbury.
Kenneth B. Lawson,
Dorothy L. Lawson to VtrgH
B. Teaford Sr , Htlen L.
Teaford, Lot, Syracuse.
Margaret Lynch, dec , to
Arthur Lynch, W1lliam
Lynch, Joyce Wooten, Betty
Stewart, Helen Lemley, Aff.
for Trans., SaUs~ .
James E. SimJIII&lt;&gt;n, Adm.,
Arthur Lynch, dec., to Silvie
Roger Snyder, Nancy Sayder,
.53 A., Salisbury.
leWIS D. Telle, Nancy C.
Tell~ to Henry E. Cleland,
Jr , Kathleen M. Cleland, .275
A., Pomeroy.
James E Simpson, Adm ,
Arthur Lynch, dec., to Melvin
UtUe, Catherme Uttle I 33 'A.
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Elo1se Puckett, dec., to
Frank Puckett, Larry Dennis
Puckett , S1dney Darrell
Puckett, Bonme Scott, 124.65
A., Salem
James E. Simpson, Adm.,
Arthur Lynch, dec., to
Ri chard Stewart, Betty
Stewart, 'I• A., Salisbury.
Delma Halley to Jaymar
Coal Co., Int. in .311 acre,
Salisbury.
Pearl Yeauger, Lena
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co.,
.30 acre, Salisbury.
Marvin Yeauger, Lucille
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co.,
.30 acre, Salisbury.
Ullie B. Ledlle to Dorothy
Barnes Woodard, Albert
Woodard,
1.06 acres,
RutJand ,
Ellsworth J . Holden Jr.,
Ann F. Holden to George c.
McCleary, Sherry S. Mea eary, 20 acres, Scip1o.
Bernard V. Fultz, Betty J .
Fultz to James F. Arnold,
parcels, P.omeroy.
·
Edda J. lbllmpson to Elvm
Eugene 1bompson, Mary E.
Th ompson, parceI, Salem.
Margaret Ella Lewis, af.
fidavit, Rutland, Middleport,
Salisbury.
Guy Edison Gumther,
Unda L. Guinther to IUchard
w· vaughan, RubY va"6'-••
.......
lots, Pomeroy.
Anne Jenkins Van Atta,
dec to Dante! c. Jenkins,
cert. for trans. Pomeroy.
Ethel Grueser, Roy
Grueser, Opal Grueser,

Robert E. Grueser, Frieda
Grueser' Paul E. Grueser'
Audrey Grueser to Clarence
A Lambert, Sally J. Lambert, 1.16 acres, Sallsliury.
Dorsel Smith, dec. to
Mildred F Betztn
·
g, Evelyn S.
Folk, Robert Ralph Smith,
Sharon K Johnson Ronald B
'
·
·
Smith, cerl. of trans., Bedford.
Thomas Cross , Phyllis
causes for faUgue. When a Cross to Atha Olan Knapp,
fatrly complete examination Celia Pearl Knapp, lol,
fails to reveal any evtdence of Syracuse.
J bn J Ft k M J · F
disease of any organ system
o
. c , . ane ick,
it must be mcluded as one of aka Jane J. Fick to John J .
the possibilities. Often 1t is Fick, M. Jane flck, 3.2 acres,
the real cause. My point Chester.
Robert C. Harten bach,
remains that unexplained
fatigue
Is
often
a Sheriff Edna Shr ds
'
oa ' et al,
manifestation of depression
to Mildred Fitch, 74 acres,
and a complete evaluaUon of Lebanon.
Mildred Fitch, Larry Fitch
the symptom of fatigue
requires consideration of to Larry Fitch, Mildred
depression as a possible Filch , 74 aa"es, Lebanon.
cauae. Psych1a trials do not
John T. Holliday to Robert
make such a diagnosis just Dale Holliday Avanel
becauae tl!e other physlciana Hollida
Is' Col llmbla, "
found no .disease but rather Salem y, parce '
Gratia c. Oiler, Madge
on the 6aSts of a competent
review of the patient's Oiler to John Jacb Doris
symptarns and life sltualicn. Jacks, parcels,
For mformaUon on Iron
ROy Frecter to Jerry L
deficiency anemia send for Brogan, Judith A. Brogan;
The Health Letter numbered 1.091 acre, Cheater.
4-f, Iron and Anemia. Send a
David L Wanzo Mary K
long,
stamped,
self- Wanzo, Muriel 'Jackson:
addreSSied envelope and 50 JeromeP.Jacksonto&lt;llarles
cents for U. Address your
letter to Dr. Lamb in care of :~=· Jo Ann Eada,lot 34,
N-n J. Baxter, GUda
this DeW11J8per, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Statton, New Baxter to Norm J Baxte
Gllda Baxter : ~ r,
York, NY 10019.

Depression is oniy a symptom
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Your
column on depression
reminded me of my late
mother who died in 1950. She
had been to many doctors.
My father, at a calculated
risk, undermined her confidence in the diagnostic
ability of her own doctor. Her
doctors all ·prescribed "rest
and relaxation." Many
montba pasaed while she
experienced symptoms of
fall«ue Ute the lady you
wrote about. In about two
weeks Dad's doctor made his
dlagnoils and a biopsy
confirmed Hodgkin's dlaeaae.
Based on this I would take
issue With your s~ent
that if the lady had already
hid !leveral examinations, it
wu unlikely she had a
dlseue but rather a
depreuion. Mom's doctors
did Dol plc:k up her disealle,
DEAR READEit - Most
peGple think their doctor Is
ll'ftlt but an not "' Slife
1baul thole other doctors.

DIIIJno••• are .ru.ed. Even

with all the best tools of
model n medicme at hand the
diagnosis is not always easy.
Your mother's case of
Hodgkin's disease may have
. finally progressed to the point
that swollen glands were
large enough to be felt or seen
on an X ray, thereby making
11 easier to make a diagnosis
Time permits a disease to
become more evident. A
fever of unknown origm may
be easily nplained after a
typical rash develops. Quite
frankly, medicine Is not as
easy in some cases as TV
shows might lead one to
believe.
You may be Interested 1n
how many letters I received
sunllar to yours Each letter
&gt;mter was sure I was wrong
·about the lady having a
depression and each mads his
or her own diagnosis. These
included Hodgkin's dlaease,
myasthenia gravis, tuberculosis, kidney disease,
duemlnated lupus
erylhematosts (a rare

d1sea8e), ltver disease ,
emphysema and several
others. Now aU of these can't
be rtght. What does this
mean• It means that chronic
fabgue is a symptom, not a
diagnosis
You can have faijgue from
emphysema. I was particularly struck with an Ail'
Force off1cer who had
decreased exercise capactty
and had a long htstory of
trouble In physical performance but was not
diagnosed He actually had
emphysema and becauae of
his inability to mcrease
oxygen to his body was
limited as to how much work
he would do.
You can have faUgue from
diabetes, particularly II It Is
advanced and untreated.
Heat exha111tlon will cause
fatigue: so wUl cancer,
tuberculosis and anemia. 1be
adverbsera knew what they
were doing When lhey coined
the term, "tired blond."
Depression Is one of many

'

•I

got to be tough with thele
guys. They have to
underllland II won't be wortl!
u and that they're sllinc to
jaU."
"We said we weren't lolnc
to go out ~ tJ1Y raids,"
responded as1latant

s.ren:.

0
..

(Jwrlla

..........

~

· - -.... ,, - · •···-·-Jt"•-e••'"t ..... ..

alllw&amp;ant Cl.,.tland ~lly

bad lnqulrleubout !be ._,
mainly frcm d.twcDI, ~
requeD fnlll pollee ollcg.
lil)l

UltD1

...

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka
(UPI) - To a tnanpetlng ol
oonch shells, leaders of 811

ttlng mare
than half the world's
populatim opened I summit
meeting with an attack 111
Wlllllem llnancial instltutlonJ
and the govemmentl of the
United States, llrlel, South
Africa and Rhodesia.
Keynoting the Fifth
Summit Confertnce of
Nonalllned NatiQns, Sri
Lanka Prime Minister
Sl,rlmazvo Bandaranalke
urged the leaders to create a
"comtnerclll bank f&lt;r the
Third World" so "the
financial oenten of the warld
will no IQPger be llmlted to
New Yark, London, Zurich
and Paris."
1be prime mlnlaler said the
bank would allow developing
nat10111, many of which are
deeply in debt to Western
banks,
to
undertake
International economic
actlvil;y "which bas ao far
remained a mcnopoly of a
few multinational private
banks In the developed

Bnen•'"'*·

calltd "Zingo" - which ...

nations."
Alia's flr!l summit confer-

ence of nllllllgned nations
opened wltb pomp and
pageantry. Conch shells were
blown as the tradltlcrlll oil
lamp wasllgbted. &amp;me of the
Arab delegates to the fourday session were drealed in
flowing
robes
and
headdre!lles.
Mrs . Bandaranalke, in
clear, Brllish·accented
English, criticized the United
States for It role In the
~tname11e War and Issued a

bean played In Dlyton,
New.n and Reynoldlburg
under the aUiplcel of the
"~ (llarltlel Qlurch"
~~·:::..: the Ui!J11 .Jllnio cmdl 1l'llb 78
~1belr struggle 1~ thi
lnltead ol 78 to iet
d around the lepl deflnltkll.
mllltary
might
an · Nlcholu Gemn, alllllant

.ctl

=ca:::. ~neui~U:

and final victory, Ia a shining
Inspiration to all nations
fighting
for
national
Uberatlon aaalnat fore!Rn
Intervention, domlnatim and
q~pressloo " she said
She c~lled for the
dlsnwl"'RO t th American
"""6
e
mllltary bale on the Indian
Ocean la1and ol Diego Garcia
and the withdrawal of the
"great powers"_ the United
States and the Soviet Unloo from
their
mUitary
installations In
those
waters
The
minister who
usumed power six 'yean
ago, denounced lhe ''racist
resimllll" of South Africa and
Rhodesia
for
tllelr
domination
of
black
majoriUes
!lie
the only hope for
Middle East peace was
Israeli wlthdra'l!'al from
occupied
lands
and
recognition of the rights of
Palestinlans to their own
nation
The · heads of state and
government have before
them proposals that would
,...,. the • ..,ulslcn of flrsel

°

prime

sali

-D

-r

from the United Nations,
demand the removll of the
u.s. mllltary presence from
South Korea and demand that
the United states give up the
Panama Canal and ttl naval
baae·-at Guantanamo Bay,
which adjoins Cuba.

Bumps,
bruises
'
fu 12 accidents
oiily minor injuries were
reported in 12 traffic
accidents lnvestipted over
the weekend by the GaUlaMeigs POll State Rigbway
Patrol. These were:
Robert E. Manley, 26,
Bidwell, charged with DWI
and hllotklp fdlowillg an
accident at 11 p.m. Saturday
en Rt. 35. Manley ir!lvellng
west, loll control of hll car
whicb sideawiped an Ohio
Rigbway Patrol cruiser
drivenofby Dennis M. Hunter,
30,
Rodney, Manley
the scene.
Mh. Voa, 18, Pomeroy,
was c arged with DWI
followq an early morning
accident Saturday on Rt. 7 in
wb1cb she lost cmtrol of her
in
car a curve. 'l1le vehicle
ran off the left side ol the
highway and flipped mto Ill
IDp. There was moderate
damage.

lea,:&lt;

in~==~:~~

Saturday Ill Rt. 7 at the
)lnctlon to Georgea Creek
Rd. Apick-up truck driven by
Afbe
N
rl apney, Jr., 39,
Galllpolil, went to pasa a
farm tractor driven by Hollls
R. Mayo, 84, Bidwell,
traveling north with one
wheel on the berm and the
other on the hlglnray, when
Mayo lwei'Ved the tractar to
avoid striking a mallboK.
Injured were
three
passen1ers in the truck,
Jerry Lee Nonnov, 21 months
....--,
old; El1an Napney, age 17,
and. Tim Hurlow, 20,
GaDipolls, There wu heavy
damage to the pick-up truck.
No charle wu IUed.
A single car mishap
d t 2
occurre
a
:U p.m.
Saturday on Ri. 7 near the
Kyger Creek
Power Plant
where
Ev
a I. Diehl, 32,
Raclne,lollcontrolofbercar

1
while
·~
encl
colllalon
lrlth rear
another

vehicle. Her car slid off the
lqbway Into •

dltd!.

No tile wu cited in a two
V8blcle mllbap II 2:80 p.m.

its.~~t!:.~':

__. ol Rt. 7 where
,_
autos
operated by Leiria W.

w:·

~.:.:;r

3l, ~llpolla, ~~~ 11 ~
hUlcrest.
There
'II'IS
madlrate damage.
A tingle car accident
acctiTed liS: 12 p.m. 411 Rt.

553, one and two tentha miles
north ol Rt. 7 where Joseph
N. Bozzary, 17, Huntington,
lOOng control of b1a car (II
wet pavement, Wl!llt off the
highway Into a guardrail.
A three-vehicle ae~:ident
OCCln'ed at 3:45p.m. on Rt. 7
at the Silver Bridge Sbopplng
Plaza where cars driven by
William E. Carr, 64,
Galllpolls, and Doria Ann
Clark, 38, Galllpolla, collided
headon. JuHan Clark, 13, a
passenger, bad minor
injuries. The collllion was
blamed Ill an unidentified
vehicle which pulled from the
plaza and went en.
Michael L. Coleman, 19,
Vinton, was cited for
Improper paaslng following
an accident at II p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 180, three
tenths of a,mile north of Rl.
35. Coleman attempted to
pass a veblcle driven by
Debra A. Copper, 18, New
Carllsle, then cut back too
soon,llrlldng the Cooper car.
There · was
moderate
damage.
FOUR ON SUNDAY
The fir!l of lour &amp;mday
accidents OCCW'I'ed at 3:IXI
a.m. on Rt. 7 at t))e Kyger
Creek Plant where Douglas
M. Maaon, 31, Gallipolis,
backed b1a car into a prlv~te
driveway and over a concrete
culvert.
At 11:30 a.m. Sunday an
accident occurred on Salem
St. in Rutland where can
driven by Olarles R. F.lldl,
41, Rutland, and Joyce
Bartrum, t7, Middleport,
col1ided.
-.
A alngle vehicle ae~:ldent
occlfted all: 20 p.m. &amp;mday
on Georges Creek Rd., liz
le)ltba of a mile 1l't!lll on Rt.
7•. C!aarlotte A. Thwnu, 28,
Gallipolis, reaching for
objects which fell ol! the front
seat, 1011 ~ of b"' car
which mowed down three
mallbozes.
Delores HUI, 47' Jacbon,
wu charged wilb failure to
stop witbln the aured clear
dllllance following a~ .
mishap on Rt. 31, one 1811b of l
• mlle eut ol Rio Grande.
Her car llnlck the rear end
of an MilO operated by lllvld
Nolan, Jr., fll, &lt;Wilpolil
forcq Nolan'a Yeblde intci
the r- ol a tblrd car
operated by Billy R. Blmett,
17' Ge1llpolls,
0

proaecutor for Montaomeeyol
County, belleveaiiiOII f!.!e
IJI«-dme 8~ In DI)'IGD,
including • COli~!' .,llf

:~~~~ud~W:~· "¥.~
"Moat of them ire
legitimate chlrllles ••
opposed to the pre·l•:w
sham," said Gerren, add~
that hts office has warned 11a
.,.
couple of organizations W•uCh
have attempted to clrcumvent the splrtt.~f thte law
if not the letter • bu !1-s
made no prosecutions.
~Weyandlaaid~has
questions
about
Ill•
legitimacy of some of '\!.le
operatiOillin suburban~
but is awaiting dei«minattons by Brown's
office and the U.S. In~
Revenue Service, 'll'hloh
detennlnes their tu-ewiiPt
~.1111 •
,"
1blngs are about on An
even keel here," said
Weyandt of the Atroo ~·
which was me of the priJiie
locations of blg-dme bllr&amp;o
betare the law. "There ve
not a great nwnber of ~
places which hive openec!,
but it hasn't diminished,
either U
" I
Se · Butts noted that ...;;,
n.
-,..,.e
new and wortbwblle charities
have obtained bingo llL'enses
under the law, but he .is
concerned that ''if the law
continues to be lroken, the
Illegitimate mes will ~e;to
creep back in." He
es
lack of enf&lt;rcement.
"R's not the fault of the
law;" said Butts. "We never
thought that all our problems
would be aolved with the
signing of a blll."

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Estatt of John

case No. 7J870

w

Deceased.

Hoffman.

Notice 11 hertby given that
Marlorle A Goett , of 830 '~lest
Main Street, Pomeroy, 6Ji;Jo,
Mas

been

duly

appolf)J.ed

Administratrix of the E~t te
of
John
W
Hoff
n,

Deceased, late of Ct1es er ,

Melos county, Ohio

Creditors are required to

file their claims with 'kild

fidUciary within three morilns
Dated this 29th day of July
1976
°
'J
1

Manning 0 Web !ler
Ju~ge

..

"'

(81 2, 9, 16, ltc

NOTICE OF SALE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT
OF
MElliS
COUNTY, OHIO
•
loin

'"
•
County Savings ;~&amp;
Co .• an Ohio corp . ••

Fred

a

Athen&amp;

•••

Goegleln, ttll

....

Case No. 16:d~2

Pursuant to an ORDER OF
SALE Issued by the common
Plel!IS Court of Meigs County,
Ohio, I will offer for nltt,..at
public: auction on the Jrd day

Of September 1 1976, at 10 :00

A .M on the courthouse st~bs
at the COURTHOUSE ln
Pomeroy, Ohio, tht following
described real estate :
Situated In the Townshlp vor
Rutlond, Meigs County, Oti\O.
and In Fraction 2, Town . 6,
Range u of the Ohio com pany's Purchase, and beOOa
Lot No 20 of the Hutchln.On
Subdivision as Is recorded In
Plat Book .t, Page 57 of the
Records ot Plats of Meigs
County, Ohio
,,..
TERMS OF SALE . Cash,
for not less than two thirds of
the appra ised value
Propertv appraised at
$13,000.00

Robert C Hertenbecn
~riH
Meigs county,Ohlo
!81 l ,

16, 23. 30, 5tc

9,

..
,

...... IIMMl

,_,.,

DIVOtn ro ,,.

-....,_,.._
-·...
.
.
......, ................
......... ...............
----MlfOI:UIONAIIffA

........
v..., r

CHnllltL.rA...,.,

a.,. ......

,_.,
.mer .._.

0

;.IM..W:l

41 ..... ,.,

......... , .......Y. , . .,.

11tlril

._

I

...,

M'l,o.. .......

.................... w... o..
,..,....._.,......._n.,..~

"

,........ DA sO

' ,__._.IML

I

aual 'Ia rJ .... , .

.........

I

.,....

e IIUI ,-s

swept
a
IICI'IIIce and a Bingle to right his best hitters against Pittsburgh
by Bruce Boladair.
Koosman, •Insisting he was doublelteader from Houston,
"Everything wu WOfklng resting them. But he U and 3-j),
today," said K001111an after conceded, ''The last time, he
In the American League,
hll second lbutout of the beat 111 with them In the Minnesota edged New York,
season. "! waa in total lineup.''
9-8 ; Baltimore shut out
"IOUiilp.W Jarry ·x -wn.
e&lt;mmand all the WI)'. II WU
II'OOS!U!n dowiled the ~ Chjcago, ~ : Kansss City
"""RI&amp;ht
now,"
nld
fumy, warming lip in the 2-1 in Cincinnati in b1a mo!l defeated Detroit, 7·3:
.:;ecen!!J
rthlred Met
bullpen I didn't know the recent start against the front- Oakland edged Boaton, 8-7:
~M.n~Pt Joe Fr1iiler aftir
Cincinnati batting order. running Reds. 'l1le Reds are Milwaukee beat California, 5•«oo~man blu*ed Clnl:iDnill
When I got into the dugout stiU 30-11 since July I.
3, and Cleveland swept a
1-G llullday. "ba'l tba best
and saw no Rote, no Bench
In ciilier'Nattooal League doubleh!'Bder from Texas, 6-4
~ Wt.Undtr Jn tbl National
and no Griffey I waan't 1111re games, Lofl Angeles defeated and 3-j),
: IAtlpe. He'l ~ 111."
how to pitch to thoee other Chicago, 7-2: AUanta edged
Dodgen 1, Cubo %
· -· How . far Kooaman can
guys."
Don Sutton won his all!
St. Louis, 3-2; San Francisco
•tarTy the Meta II an open
Red manager Sparky IDpped Philadelphia, ~: San game as the Dodgers scored
•QIIestlon, but he'l doing b1a
Anderaon benched tlfree of Diego beat Montreal, &amp;-!, and all their runs tn the fifth
inning. Ron Cey drove in the
ftrst run, the second scored
on a balk by Chicago pitcher
Bill Bonham and Bill RusseU
singled home what proved to
,,:.: By JOE CARNICELLI
during the winter acqlllring Steelers, the two-time touchdowns, built a 27~ lead be the winning run. Rick
!"'
UPI Sports Writer
tl!e services of aome of the top .defending NFL cltlunPJcna, and then cruised in with a 27-7 Monday hit hts 21st home run
over
Allen's of the season for Ute Cubs.
~''l'he Pittsburgh Steelera free agent talent avallable in whoae rOller II composed victory
Braves 3, Cardlllals z
''llllowed Washington Coach the National Football almost exclllflvely of draft puncbless Redsklns. It was
Phil Niekro pitched a SIX·
P)tlaburgh's
fourth
straight
plckll,
;~ge ADen that you jlllt Leap. He unveiled twQ of
hitter
to raise his record to 1:1pr:e«ason
victory
without
a
·don't buy your way Into the tl!oee acqulalllons qether
Pittsburgh turned lntercep8
for
the
Braves. Niekro also
loss
while
the
Redskins
"!iiper Bowl.
for the ~ time Saturday Uw by Jack Ham and Mike
drove
in
a
run with a sscrlflce
dropped
to
1-2.
,.Allen spent a fortune night bulfalled to Impress the Wagner into early Rocky Bleier plunged two fly in the second and Darren
yards for Pittsburgh's first Chaney followed wtth a
score and Terry Bradshaw squeeze bunt single for
threw touchdown paues of 10 another Atlanta run in the
yarda to Lynn Swann and four UUting. The Braves scored
to Randy Grossman for a 21~ thetr third run in the eighth
lead.
Rookie Mike Kruczek on Rod Gilbreath's triple and
,,.,
made
it 27~ wtth a sevenMator u•oue Le1ders
I"'- \I. NltiOnll L JUUt Stlndlngt
San Diego
000 005 001- 6 10 0
yard
TD
pass to Theo Bell.
BY Unittd Press I nternallonal Monfreal
DY United P ess 1ntern1tlon•l
000 lOOOOD--1 61
81tllng
'Cast
Griffin (7 .tl and Kendall.
(based an 300 11 bats)
•
W L. Pel. GB
Carrithers, Taylor {6), Murray
National Le1eue
: l!"t&gt;llodelphla 15 AO 652 (BJ and carter LP.carrlthers
64 52 552 11 lf2
G AB
R H Pet 16 B)
•Pittsburgh
big atory. Allen paraded out
6 1"11ew York
Madlck. Ch 112 MW 56 138 337
61 5&amp; m - 16
his
multi-million dollar
1
54 66 450 23 h Gnffey, Cln 107 A08 95 136 333
.ost G•me)
..c~lcago
Foster, Cln 108 429 70 IA2 331 Plttsfiolrvn 100 020 104- 8 13 2 llacklleldofJohnR!ggins811d
49 64 434 25
~1 1 LOUIS
41 71 366 32 111 Oliver, Pitt 105 A13 58 135 .327 Houston
· Montreal
001 100 004-6 13 2
Crwfrd, St L 91 301 •2 98 326 Medfch, Tekulve (9) and Calvin Hill but they had little
West
"··•
w. l Pd. GB Morgan, Cln 99 333 92 108 324 Oyer. Larson, McLaughlin (9) success against Pittsburgh's
1
BETHESDA, Md. (UPI)MIKidK, Phi 108 384 57 123 320 and Jutze WP Med•ch (6 11 J remarkable defense.
~nclnnetl
76 42 644
n ~os Angeles
63 54 538 12 1h Rose.Cin
118478 99 152 318 LP Larson (2,-i l
Riggms, signed' to a $1.5 The name Charles Coody
San Diego
59 62 488 l8 1h Roblnsn , Ptt 92 319 A7 101 317
Geronm,
en
106
349
44
108
309
"''Mtklston
58 63 479 1911&gt;~
(2nd Game)
rn!Won coo tract after playing doesn't automatically come
Amer•c•n Leegue
Atlanta
5-t 64 458 22
Pittsburgh )00 000 OD0-3 12 3 out hll option with the New to mind when PGA tour stars
G AB
R H Pet. Houston
- 5an Francisco 51
69 425 26
000 000 ooo-o 6 I
McRae, KC 104 360 59 127 353
-~
Satui"dii( 1S Results
Reuss (11 11 and SaligJ.ullen . York Jets, gained 34 yards on are mentioned, but the 39Brett, KC 115 A69 74 161 3A3 Samb1f0. McL.aughlm (S J, Pentz e1ght carries and Hill tbe year-&lt;&gt;ld journeyman likes hts
" Ct'llc:ago 2 Los Angeles 0
LeFlore, Dt 109 439 74 143 326 (BJ and Johnson LP Samb1t0 former Dallas lllar wh~ was chances of adding a second
1New York 2 Cincinnati 1
Carew, Mnn 112 428 69 139 325 11 1)
Pittsburgh 5 Houston 4
Bostck, Mnn 89 318 47 103 324
;:,1St Louis .t Atlanta 0
m the World FoothaU League ' major championship to hts
99 -iOO 48 127 318 Los Angeles
..,;P.tliladelphla 13 san Francisco 2 Garr, Chi
000 300 OQ0---.3 9 o last season could manage portfolio, the now soggy 5Btl!
Munson, NY 110 442 62 137 310 ChiCago
..:S..n Diego 7 Montreal
2
100 010 OQ0-2 6 0
Carty, Clev 109 393 52 122 310 Sutton f14.9) and Yeager only 26 yar~ on 11 attempts PGA Championship.
sundiY 1S Results
'"'51!1n Francisco 9 Philadelphia S Staub, Oet 115 420 52 129 307 Bonham, Sutter (8l and Sw1
Pittsburgh's defense held
"I think I'm okay from the
Lynn, Bos 98 381 54 116 30A sher LP Bonham (7 1o r HR
~~ York 1 Cincinnati 0
1
the
Redskins
scoreless
until
standpoint
of havmg been
HOME RUNS
,AIIante 3 St Louis 2
ChiCIQO, Monday (21) ,
Nattonal League Kingman,
•...san Diego 6 Montreal 1
tl!e
final
&amp;7
seconds
of
the
under
that
kind
of pressure
Amer.c1n League
NY 32, S&lt;hmldt, Phil 31,
Los Angeles 3 Ch1caoo 2
(1st
Game)
game when second-string before ~. winning the 1971
Foster , Cln 27 , Monday, Chi Texas
P.lttsburgh 8 Houston 6, 1st
000 010 012- 4 11 1 quarterback Joe Tbetsmann Masters, sa1d Coody, who
and Morgan, Cln 21
:-:pTtsburgh 3 Houston o, 2nd
Cleveland
300
000 21X- 6 11 0
American League· Bando, Blyleven, Terpko (8) and scored on a five-yard run. held a tw~oke lead gomg
Q IOI • ,
Mandlly's Games
(All Times EDT)
Oak 23 : Jackson and L. May. Sundberg.
LaRoche
~'""''Atlanta
{Morton 2 9) at Bait 21. Henctri(:k, Clev 19 , (6 J. Kern (BlThomas,
and Fosse WP UntU that final drtve againSt mto today s final round of the
~;~; : lnclnnatl (Norman 11 2), 8.05 Nettles. NY 18
Thomas (3 1) LP Slyleven (9 Pittsburgh reserves, the PGA.
RUI'II 811ted In
- J.om.
13 ) HRS Texas, Harrah (10) , Redskin passing attack had
" But whoever 's behmd
Nahonal
League
Foster,
Cln
·· -·san D1ego (Sawyer 3 0) at Sf
- .buls (McGlothen 10 11), 8 30 106, Morgan, C1n 83, Schmid t, Burroughs (13)
netted only nine yards.
me- Jack Nlckla.us, ~
Phil 80, Lozinski, Phil 74 ;
I " ,,rn
(2nd Gamel
Allen however didn •t January, whoever-It doesn t
Chicago (R Reuschel 10·8l at Watson, Hou 73
Texas
000 000 ooo--o -4 l
r..:;riouston (Dierker 12 10), 8 35 American League Cham Cleveland
seemed
dismayed by hts mean anything to them."
000 000 21x-3 4 l
bliss, NV 79, Mayberry. KC 78 , Hargan. Hoerner
•m
(8)
and
club's
poor
performance
Coody charged into the lead
Munson, NY 75, Burroughs, Sundberg. Bibby· (9 4) and
~~ · (only games scheduled)
"That
was
a
patched
up
durmg
. Sunday morning's
Tuesday's Gimes
Tex 73, Rutli , Oak 72
Cerone LP Hargan {54),
Stolen B1ses
'"""'Montreal at Philadelph ia,
offensive line in front of concluston of the thtrd round,
National League Taveras,
li:H~ht
100 101101- 5 10 1 tl!em," he satd. "l wasn't pllrring four holes. and
. San 01eg0 at St Louis, n1ght P1tl 40, Morgan, Cln 38 . Milwaukee
California
000 000 3. . .3 8 2
Cedeno,
Hou
37,
Lopes,
LA
36
with
their sinkmg a four-foot btrdie putt
:n. .... Atl.!inta at Clnc1nnatl, night
Travers. Castro (7) and displeased
Brock, St L 35
Chicago at Houston, night
Porter
,
Ross,
Verhoeven
(7J.
perf&lt;rmance
considering
it's on tl!e ~8th for a 67 and total of
American League North,
New York at Los Angeles,
{8), Overy (9} and tl!e first time they worked 'lJfl. W1th the bulk of the fteld
Oak 56, LeFlore, Det and Scott
lght
Humphrey WP Travers (14 9)
Pittsburgh at san Francisco, Baylor, Oak 44, Patek, KC and LP Ross (7 14) HR Milwaukee together. When you give up still on the course, lightning
Campanerls,
Oak
43
night
Hegan (41
ooly 120 yards in the first half and heavy showers forced
Pitching
T ..' : .Amir-le_o_n-L,-a-gu~e-::5:-la-ndings
Most Vic,torles
and
they get 14 potnts, that's postpone~ent of Sunday
101 000 1~3 6 0
National League Jones, so Detroit
~ ~ ay United Press International
Kansas
Clly
310
003
OOx7
12
1
like
a baseball team getting afternoons scheduled fmal
,.....
E1st
19 7, Koosman, NY 15 7, Roberts, H11!er (7) and
Carlton,
Ph
d
1-i
4
,
Sutton
,
LA,
« o,•
w. L Pet. GB 14 9, Nlekro. Atl 13 a Mon K1mm , Hassler, Littell {8) and seven runs on four hits. 1 round .
. .New York
69 45 605
Martinez WP Hassler £271
Sunday's rain , which
- Baltimore
59 54 522 91h tefusco, SF 13-9; R:uthven, At! LPRoberts (11121 HR Kansas thought our defense played
10, Richard, Hou 13·12
pretty well and we could have stopped play at 2:33p.m and
'~~veland
57 58 496 121J~ 13 American
League Palmer, C1ty, OtiS (151
!.
tro1t
ss 60 478 14'1~
been ahead if we had taken completely washed out aU
. oston
53 60 469 151h BaH 16 10 , Leonard, KC 15 4, New York
OJO 050 ooo-a 14 1
advantage
of the breaks."
scores, cost Coody three pars.
'Milwaukee
SO 61 A50 17'h Figueroa, NY 15 6, Garland. Mtnnesota
220 000 23x- 9 10 2
' 1..,. 1
.~West
Bait
14 3. Tanana, Cal and
121
L
1 (81
In
other
games
Saturday
Nicklaus, tied for second
Fitzmorris, KC 14 a. Travers, Ell I~, Jackson
• Ye
.r • ,
w. l Pet. GB Mil
and
Munson
.
Stnger,
Burgrne•
Tampa
Bay
stunned
AUan~
place with a one-underiJar
14 9
. Kanses City 70 45 609
Earned Run Aver•~e
er (5). Hughes (5) , Campbell 17-3 to earn its first victory 209, !oat two pars and a
4 'Oaklend
64 53 547 7
(9) and Wvnegar WF' Hughes
...~ ~Melxnansesota
57 59 491 13 1h (based on 111 Innings p tehed) (6 IOl LP Lyle (6 71 HR New ever, Los Angeles shaded birdie, while Dr. Gil Morgan,
'l'o
56 60 483 W h
National League Richerd , York Chambliss (15 J
Seattle 1&amp;-13 Miami beat also at 209, lost two pars and a
Hou 2 51 , Zachry, Cln 2 66 ,
•
Chicago
49 66 426 21
--ooQ 000 ooo--o 6 o PhUadelplua '26-14 the New bogey.
CaiUorma
50 68 424 211h Montefusco, SF 2 68, Seaver,, Ch.cago
•::o
111urd1y's Results
NY 2 70, Jones, SO 2 72
Baltimore
102 000 oox-3 7 1
Coody sa1d that, as. usu~l,
~ nffncii c Cleveland 3, 10 Innings
Amencan League. Fldrych , Barrios. Ham 11fon {7) and York Glailts dum~ Houston
New York 5 Minnesota 4
Oet 197, Travers. Mil 2.35, Downlng 1 Garland (14 3) and 30-lt, Chicago downed nerves and concen~ation will
Garland, Salt 2.56, Blue ~ Oak Duncan LP Barr 1os (3 61 HRS Baltimore 25-14 Denver dec1de the champion.
Oakland 7 Boston 3
-ailtlrnore 8 Chicago 6, 1st
267, Palmer, Bait 276
Ball•more Gnch (11) L Mav
Strikeouts
•
'
edged Dallas 13-9 ~d CincinBesides Nicklaus and .MorBaltimore 6 Chicago S, 2nd
Nattonalleague Seaver, NY ('2 1)
• ~ansas City 15 oetrolt 3
natl
mopped
Detroit
26-14
gan,
a non-practicing
174 ; Richard, Hou 151, Nlekro, Boston
- Milwaukee 4 California J
033
000
lQ0-7
90
All 132 , Messersmlth 1 All 131. Oakland
"' ""
Sunday'' Gimes
000 022 022- 8 11 2 ' San Francisco defeated Oklahoma optometrist w~
KoosmBn , NY 130
Cleveland 6 Texas 4, 1st
Wise,
Murphy
(61. Wi lloughby Kansas Clty 21-13 and Green lfi:l the tournament at 1ts
Amerlclln League. Ryan. Cal (9) and F1sk. Torrez.
..Cleveland 3 Texas 0, 2nd
Lindblad Bay edged New England 1 ~;-i4. rrudw~y poillt but faltered m
216
,
Tanana,
Call77,
Blyleven
,
- aattlmore 3 Chicago o
(3). Bahnsen (7) and Tenace
Tex
162,
Hunter,
NY
129,
.Minnesota 9 New York 8
WP Bahnsen (6 3) LP Wll in Sunday games. Tonight, the third round, Coody must
Jenkins, Bos 126.
rtcansas City 7 Detroit 3
loughby 12-81 HRS Boston, Minnesota is at Cleveland
~ Milwaukee 5 C~tllfornla 3
Evans (11), Lynn (9) , Oakland ,
Sunday's Baseball Results
~ 'Oakland 8 Boston 1
and St. LoutS takes on San
(231
1 •.,.
By United Press lnternat1on11 Bando
Monday's Garrtes
,
lnternal1on11
Diego in Tokyo.
National
Lugue
';' ~:
(All Times EDT)
Lea~gue Standings
000 000 ooo-o s o
• Texas (Perry J1 .9) at New Cincinnati
Rookie Paul Hofer's 47Ul'liled
Press
lnternatlan1l
New York
000 010 OOx- 19 0
OWOANS MATCHED
~vork (Alexander 7 8), 7 40 1::1 m
W. L. Pet. GB yard TD run lifted San
Nolan, eastw1ck (8) and Rochester 71 43 642
""'-cleveland (Brown 7.7) at
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Francisco past Kansas City
'~' k~nsas City (Pattin 4 10 )~ 8 30 Bench . Koosroan (15,7) and Syracuse
69 51 575 8
Hodges
LP
Nolan
(10
81
Cincinnati
Midland Warriors
p.m
Rhode Island 62 59 512 15 1!~ and
Chester
Marco!,
· Oakland (Mitchell a 5) al
MemJ:~hls
59
62
488
19 '1~
and
Toledo
Trilby
Merchants,
~'Milwaukee
(Rodriguez 4 81, San Franclsc 030 001 005- 9 14 2 RIChmond 57 64 471 20'1~ rebounding from a leg injury each with one tournament
Philadelphia 021 000 020-5 9 0 Charleston 54 63 462 2111:1 which kept h1s out all last
••8.30 p m
Cressler, Mofllrt (61. Lavelle Tidewater 53 65 449 23
Boston fTiant 12 10) at
season, kicked three field loss, vied for the National
'"Chicago &lt;Johnson 9 10) , 9 00 C9 J and Rader ; Christenson. Toledo
49 73 402 29
Baseball
Reed
(3)
,
McGr~w 181, Garber
goals and an extra pomt m Amateur
Saturday's Results
':Ji: m
Federation'
"s
outhern 1 '
Baltimore «Grlmtley 5 51 at (91, Twitchell (9) and McCar Tidewater 8 Memphis 7
Green Bay's wm over New
:·1.\lnnesote (Redtern J.7), 9 00 ver WP Moffitt (5 A) LP Richmond 5 Charleston .t
senior
reg1onal
Garber (73) . HRS San Francis svracuse .t Toledo 3
England.
1' ""p.m.
co,
Evans
2
01)
,
Philadelphia
,
championships
title today.
Conly games scheduled)
Rochtster 7 Rhode ISland 4,
Luzlnskl (17)
.,,. ,
Tundly 11 Games
1st, 1 Innings
In the tourney semifinals
.:: Cleveland at Kansas City,
Rhode Island 7 Rochester 2,
Sunday, Toledo Trilby
St, Louis
000 100 001 - 2 6 2 2nQ , 7 Innings
night
~
1"' Baltimore at Minnesota , nloht
Atlanta
020 000 Olx- 3 9 1
defeated
Cincinnati Midland
Sunday•s Results
Forsch, Curtis (7), Hrabosky M~mphls
•~"~ Boston at Chlcaoo, night
6 Tidewater 5
4-3 in 10 1nnmgs. Earher in
Oakland at Milwaukee, night (8 ) and Ferguson , Nlekro (13 8) Charleston 13 Richmond 3
ond Corr•ll LP Forsch 15 8) Syracuse 2 Toledo 1
the
day ,
Cincinnati
'"' Callfomleat Detroit, night
HR -St LOUIS, Fer~uson (9)
TeXIs at New York, night
A DC.hes.ter ,. A hade Island 2
eliminated
Youngstown
SCIOTO ADVANCES
Buckeye Elks 9-2 and Toledo
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
ACTUAl. USE REPORT
'Il"l ,'
scored
a 2-1 victory over
Scioto, with Its ll-0
Youngstown.
whitewash of Maynard in the
State American Legion
Baseball Tournament
championship safely tucked TWO DIVISIONS
I
If
away,
today
began
making
CINCINNATI
(UPI)
Ro·
I
t
ready for ita next stop on the sette won the first division
••
tourney trail, a regional and B.J . King the second in
•
affair in Lafayette, Ind., Sunday's $7 ,500,added
opening Aug. 25.
VIvacious Handicap at River
•I
Scioto knocked out 17 hits, Downs.
~
Including four by Jim
Frank Brandt guided
Andrioff
in
five
times
at
bat,
'Rosette
over the mile and 70
; vn.'
and rapped eight extra-base yards m 1-46 2-5 for a $6 80,
l .... ,
blows to shut out Maynard for $3.60, $2.80 payoff. Double
''OM
tl!e Ohio Utle Saturday.
Dinky was second and Julie's
The
winners,
5-l
in
the
third.
Image
I' ·"
..,,
tourney and 41-7 overall,
B J King, ridden iill :44 1-:i
' ....
added to a iMJ lead with six by Gary Columbia, returned
' ""'"
runs in the etghtl! inning. $3.80, $2.80 and $2.60. Twenty
Tom
McFerin went the Pay placed, and Film
-,
,.
'
pitching
distance for Scioto, Festival showed.
j .....
giving up five safeties,
The 5-l daily double
•••
•
llrl1dng out 10 and walking combination of Boyle's Law
I
tl!ree. Jack Cole took the and Shamrock Tim ,was
I ., '
I ·-•
mound loss for Maynard, 5-2 worth $104.40.
in the tournament and 28-9 for
Attendance was 7,776 and
'
the hltndle $707,428
all games this season.

....

best In inflicting ooly the
fourth shutout loel on the
heavy-hitting Reda this
season, Kooaman fanned
eleYen men, walllad none and
allowed but five blta. 1be Met
defenle produced two aouble
plays to ball K001111111 out of
the lilly thrtala Qnclnnatl
could muster.
_
New Yark hu now wen
nine of Ill last 12 in the
belated drive to catch
Pltl.lbUrgh. 1be lone run in
&amp;mdly'1 win was produced
by a Roy Staiger lingle, a
force out, a Koosman

~:~teelers

..
" )

cruise past Redskins

Tom Pa~iorek's Aacrifice fly .
Joe Ferguson had a solo
home run f&lt;r the Cardinals.
GlaDIS 9, Pblllles 5
Ken Reitz' sacrifice fly
drove in the g(hllhead run and
Darrell Evans' secood homer
of the game, a thre&amp;-run shot,
capp,ed a five-run, ninthinning rally to give the Giants
tl!e victory over the PlliU!es.
Greg Lozinski homered for
the PhiWes.
Padres 6, Expos 1
Willie Dims drove in three
runs and Ted Kubiak two in
leading the Padri!s paat the
Expos Tom Griffin gained
credit for his seventh victory
in 11 decisions. Dave Winfield
drove in the other San Diego
run and Earl Williams'
singled home the Expos' only

nm.

Pirates 8-3, Astroa 11-0
Doc Medich won his first
game smce June 16 in the
opener will! relief help from
Kent Tekulve as Ed Kirkpatrick drove in two runs wilh a
ninth-inning double that
enabled the Pirates to
wtthstand a lour-run, mothinning rally by '!he Astros
Jerry Reuss won hts 11th
game of the season in the
mghtcap by shutting out
Houston on six hits.

St=~~tl!eu~=~wi!s :~ Final round rescheduled

• tounuunent
today m

G

..

also contend with Don
January, at !lVen par. Ray
F1oyd, David Graham, Tom
Kite, Gary Player and Dave
Stockton were at 211, one over
par on the 7,054-yard
Coogressional Country Club
layout.
Tom WeiSkopf, whose 65led
the Drat round, was at 212
starting tl!e final 18, five
atrokes back. Ben Crenshaw,
the tour's leading money
winner, was in a group at 214
that alsO included Jerry Pate,
who woo both the U.S. and
Canadian opens
The rainout caused some
grumbling among players
anxio111, for one reason or
another, to leave the
Washington area.
"Why don 't they just pick
up where they left off and
eliminatepolltu:iting'" asked
Ed Sneed, who bad finished 72
holes at 17 over par with a 74
Sunday. "Every shot should
count. The thought of looking
at those 18 holes again 1sn't

exciting."

Sport Parade
NEW YORK (UPI) - AD the olben were out on the field
taking batting practice. Pllte Rose was the only one left In the
Cincinnati Redl' clubiloule.
He hadn't put on b1a unlform yet all(\ wu in no greatlntrr)' to
do ao. He wu still in hla underwear, lilting at a woodsa table
used by the players for autographing baseballs and playing
cards sometlmee, and he was so high strwJ&amp;, so on edge, be
couldn't even sit still.
"When I don't play I go crazy," he said.
Pete Rose had gotten only ooe bit bt b1a last 27 times up and
with lhe Reds running away in their division, leading by 13~
games, Manager Sparky Anderaon bad decided to rest Role,
Joe Morgan and Ken Gp!fey for Sunday's g~e against the
New Yark Mets.
·
The last time Role had sat out an entire game was back in
1973. Since then be had appeared In 445 consecutive contests,
but in this one, Bob BaUey was goq to be at third be.11e for the
Reds, not him.
'
"When's the last time you didn't start a game?" a newsman
asked Rose.
"Last Saturday," replied the Reds' 36-year-&lt;&gt;ld pepperpot.
"Huh?"
"! didn 't start against the Dodgers last Saturday," aald
Rose. "Sparky said he wanted to rest me against Tommy John.
But I got into the game later (11, Next day I was oh.for.four
againat (Burt) Hoo19D; then I went ob-lor-15 in three games
with the Cubs and I'm one-far-eight in the two games we
played here so far. That's ooe-for-27."
Pete Rose didn't sound at aU worried.
He wasn't.
"I'm still leading the league in runs and hits," be said.
"Do you think you'D get 200 hits again?" aomeone asked

him,

"I hope so," be said. "I need 48 m&lt;re and we've got 15 more
games. F&lt;rty.four after today."
How dtd he feel about not playing in 11\la game?
"Sparky came to me 1aat night and talked about II,"
revealed Rose. "He said he wanted to give a few of 111 a rest
and he asked me if I wanted to play. I always wanna play but I
understood what be was trying to do. I told him I'd watch lt. I
dunno,l may go out on the bench or maybe I'll watch It on tv.
I'D be in tl!ere before the game Is over anyway."
"You mean you'll play?"
"Sure," said Rose, like someone who knew how the movie
was goingtoendbefore he even saw it.
"EverybOOy keeps telling me I should be tired, f&lt;r my age,"
said Rose, laughing. "I'm not tired. I mean 11. I'm not tired at
aU. When I was a kid I always ran around, on and off tl!e field .
Now I'm still enthustastic. I run flnnly to my position, but I
don 't waste nervous energy. I cooserve myself."
Pete Rose was doing the best he could to convey the Idea not
starting the game again!l the Meta didn't bother him, yet It
was obvious he was so conditioned to playing every day, be
didn't know what to do with himself.
He certainly didn't have to worry about bil .319 batting
average, which was seventh best in the league, although it
wasn't that long ago he led everyone else with .337.
"I'D be in there belore the game is over," he kept saying.
Pete Rose was rtsht.
In the etghth inning, with the Reds traiUng by one run, a man
111 first and two out, Rose was sent up to pinch hit against left:
bander Jerry Koosman. He waited for b1a pitch and hit the baD
sharply on a line to right field. It looked as if it would drop in
for a base hit but Mike Vail, tlte Mets' right-fielder, atayed with
it all the way and picked it off the grass for a fine
VaU
turned nearly completely around making the ~er and
had to hold the baD aloft in his glove to show he actually bad
caught it. And, as it turned out later, saved a 1-0 vtctory for the
Mets.
That made it 446 atraight games for Pete Rose.
When he doesn 't play, he Isn't himself.

catch.

Reds begin hom.e stand
CINCINNATI
The here this season. Game tune season, losing six of eight
longest homestand of the each night w1ll be 8 05 wtlh a games.
season, capped by a four- golf exhib1hon by Mtller
Tickets are avatlable for aU
game showdown
w1 th Barber precedmg
the games of the homestand, as
Eastern D1vis1on leader Monday game.
well as all remammg games
Phlladelphta, IS m store for
Then come the Phtls, who on the Reds' home schedule.
the Cincmnalt Reds hegm- are runmng away wtth the
mng tomght when Atlanta Eastern Div1s1on m much the
CHICAGO
(UPI)
checks m.
same way the Reds are Chicago White Sox catcher
Riverfron t Stad1um will he dommatmg the West. Game Bnan · Downing,
who
a welcome stght lor the Reds, · ltmes are 8:05 on Thursday fractured a finger on Jtily 25,
who wtll be coming off the1r and Frtday and 2 15 on has been reinstated to the
longest tnp of the season and sa turday and Sunday.
active roater.,
a h1ghly successful one at 9-4
The schedule says this IS
Dowmng injured the
In between four-game senes the Ph1ls' last v1s1t of 1976 middle linger en hts right
wi ll\ the Braves and Phlls, also, but they are expected to hand and was placed on the
the I Reds will also play return in October for the Is-day disabled !1st on July
Chicago and St L&lt;lws and Champtonslup Senes. 'lb1s 30, a club spokesman satd
enjoy some pre.game fun
Will be an important series_ Sunday.
There w1ll be one lor the Reds, who have fared
To make room for
" doubleheader" on the poorly m prev1ous meetmgs Downing, the Sox asked
schedule Saturday, w1ves of · w1th Ph1ladelph1a th1s waivers on catcher Phil Roof.
Reds players wtll be 1n acti on
m the1r annual game That
w1U begin at 6·20 p m. , pnor
to the 7 p m meetmg w1th the
Chicago Cubs, who also play
the Reds at 8·05 p.m Frtday
1251
and 2 15 next Sunday.
PawetlSt.
The lour games w1th
Mlddltport
Atlanta, runnmg Monday
PH.m·1155
through Thursday, wtll aU
begm at 8 05 Thursday w1ll
be Dayton N1ght w1th pregame acltv1ty from WHIO,
the Dayton aff1hate on the
Reds ' rad1o
network,
begmmng at 7 30
5U.JI , ....
A two-game series with St.
!.ike a good neighbor,
SIMI flfm l ilt lftlll'nt Q:lftpltir
L&lt;lws Monday (Aug. 23 ) and
Hom~ Otrlce ~ 11111011
Stall! Farm is there.
Tuesday w11l mark the last
~
appearance of the Cardinals

BILL R.£lCHER

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
too! Call me for details~

A

THURSDAY- AUGUST 19TH

CAMDEN PARK
UNTIL 5 PM ONLY

' ...

......................
,.
...........................
0

':"NEWYOIUt(UPI) -If the·
•New York MIU can OM'balll
. 4111 Plltlltlqh Pirate• for
ilhM¥1 placa In the National
.:rAque Eut, a JINit dell ol
•'lilt! c;redlt will belonc to

' "' ~

..lltM4 . ..., . . . ,.... . , . ...,.

Yfte Ollie
tl I h; c..,.ny,
111 Cewt •••• ......,.,, ow. 411M,
llnltt... Office ...._ Mt-ttM.

............
....1..... p •

0

- ·-l\.oosman shuts out Cincinnati, 1-0

...-at«,IUIIIII olllm bu
Hf A

'

••lei,

operallona are Dol o4n
Cuyahi!S• County Prolecutar edstence at tbt pr-1
Jan. O'Mean. "We 111n Ume," ukt
only going to prol8llllte If the "I be.veno kDowlldlt olti!Y
pollee broueltt 111 any Cllll, IJiapl tqo opentlonlln 11!1
but
ao far till!)' hlven'~ If IIIII few 111111tba."
Its entOIUIIlent," said Butts.
they
brlna Iii any, we'll • Bnnm's olllle bu obtiiMd
"What we need Is for the
prolleCUtor to go in. You've proeecute them."
a CIM&amp;'I order ac-lnll..;.
mutatlan ol bbWo - a pre

operators are exceedlllc the
$3,500 prize llmlt and paying
their help, which Ia lllcal, by
''tipping.''
"No law Ia any better than

natlona repr

Mae E. McPeek to James

before the presidential balloting. And the Reagan camp
has effectively trickled out
nunors Ford either would
chose a conservative and
alienate the Northea!l or a
liberal who would be
unacceptable to tlte South.
Sears is the kind of
Republican campaign
manager who would keep
Jimmy Carter hopping this
faD.

games conducted under
notlc church DllJlel and
gro.alng mare than mlllloo
a year.
"I hive to 8llllllle they are
doq It Illegally now," said
the 1e111tor, claiming aome

Other half hits West

John Sears igood man .J-lor
• Ford~~:r::~~:1··Jl::y~

~scapees recaptured

--., - - - - - · • · -... - ·r •••

Big-time bingo operators hardly slowed at alf

We Hold These Truths ...

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
- If President Ford beats
Ronald Reagan for the
Republican presidential
nomination, the first thing he
should do 1a go out and hire
Reagan campaign manager
John Sears f&lt;r the November
campaign.
Sears has brought what
seemed Uke a h~ess cause
after the first few primaries
to wilbin 100 delegates of
denying nominatim to an
incumbent.
Ford's own campaign
managers - Howard "Bo"
Callaway and Rogers C.B.
Morton - stiDilbled through
the prenomlnation period
with a series of gaffes
incllllllng M&lt;rton 's lllatement
that wblle tblngs weren't
going too weD: "We aren't

• .!:!""'

I

j'

EVENING RESERVED
FOR

S~COND

0

ASHLAND

"ANNUAL PICNIC"

·-

.~~ ~

'

CLOSED EVE

0

~

NATIONAL BANK

MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

,•

'•

l

�'

2- 'l1le Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Mondly, Aug. 16, 1976

...

A Chronicle of America
'

A ugusf, 1776:
Early th1s month, American General Philip Schuyler, ina
treaty session a!German Flats, NewYork,prevailaon the
Indians to remam neutral But almost Immediately, the
Brlllsh begi n to undo Schuyler's diplomacy. In eat1y Sep.
tember , Henry Hamilton, the lieutenant·governor of
Detroit, urges -In hls words
- "chiefs and warriors from
the Ouawas, OJIbwas, Wyandots, and Pottawatomies ,"
with the Senecas, to "fall on
the scattered settlers on the
Ohio " And In early October,
Joseph Brant-apro-Brltlsh
Mohawk chief - returns
from England to the upstate
New York Iroquois village
of Onoquaga. Brant rages
against the German Flats
treaty, and immediately
begins mobilizing the In·
dians to do battle with the
Joseph Brant
Americans
- By Rosa Mackenzie &amp; Jeff Ma~: Nelly/CJIJ76 United Feature Syndlcale

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

BY LEE LEONARD
UPI Slaleb- Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Tbere are llllllpiclons, and in
80IIIe cues evidence, that
big-time bingo operat&lt;rs are
circumventing Ohio's threemontl! old )aw designed to
protect charitable bingo and
church-eponsored games of
chance while curbing gaming
lor profit.
But
few ,
if
any ,
prosecutions have rerolted,
apparently because
everybody is waiting for
somebOOy else to make the
Drat move.
"It's a real chicken-and~
egg situation, " confirmed
Summit County Sheriff
IWnald H. Weyandt, a former
state representative who
auth&lt;red another Ohio law
banning casino-type
gambling. "Only somebOOy's
going to end up with some
scrambled eggs."
Under the charitable bingo
law enacted last May, the

I

olltce ol state Attorney
General WUI!am J . Brown
has licensed legitimate
organtutions to conduct
bingo games.
Some bingo profiteers
apparently are contlhuing
tl!eir games under the guise
ol charity, but big~lty
prolleCUtors far the mo!l part
have received no hard
inlonnatim from pollee, who
in turn have received no
formal complaints.
Richard
C.
Farrtn,
asaistant chief of the attorney
general's
charitable
foundations sect!Qn, reported
last week that 572 llcenses
had been granted, 344
applications sent back lor
re!Uing and 69 rejected outrtsht, mainly becauae they
did not quaUfy as charitable
&lt;rganlzatlons.
"We have su.splcions that
some of the big-time
operators may be renting
halls to charities which get
tlte licenses, or conducting

the 1ame.s for them and
maybe wldmming profits olf
the IDp but we have no ny ol
llnowlnt," Farrln said. "U
they'rellllll't, they wat't put
their names on the
application."
Farrln's suspicions are
shared by Sen. C!aar!M L.
Butts, I).Qeveland, autl!&lt;r ol
the charitable bqo law.
"We've seen a recurrence
ol aome of the same people
that were operating before,"
aatd Butts, referring to bingo

rearrangmg the deck chairs
on the Titan! c."
Sears, on the other hand,
kept the Reagan campaign
allve, engineering tl!e North
Carolina primary victory in
March, and then the stUnning
shutout in the May 1 Texas
primary that launched the
Californian into meaningful
contention
He Is credited with the
decision to alUIOunce Richard
Schwelker as Reagan's
potential running mate - a
bold move that may be.ckflre,
but which slowed Ford 'a
steady climb in delegate
atrength.
Then Sears followed up by
pushing a convention rules
change that would force Ford
to name his running mate

·Meigs

early today when a woman
lJSBON, OhlD (UP!) Three escapees fnm the Ohio who gave them a ride at a
Reformatory at Mansfield nearby truck stop was
were captured near here stopped lor a traffic violaticn
by Columbiana County
llllerlffl),l deputies.
Depli!res said the woman
was unaware that the men
and I fourth Inmate had
escaped
from
the
re!onnatory Sunday.
Tboee arrested were Identified as Robert Copley, 18,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) YOIII!IIIIown, serving hro-to- New Jersey alternate 10 years 111 two convictlODB ol
deletlate John W. Markert assault with a deadly
dldn, think much of the weapon, Paw Cole, 23,
preparations
for
his Washingtonville, CoJwnb1ana
hone)'IDOOII.
County, who was aervlng 9-toHe 101 married juJt before 40 years on three counts of
the Republican National Ccn- burglary and one of
ventlon and his state's lglll'avated arson and Robert
delegatlcrl wanted to sUI]l'iae Sparks, 20, YoungatQwn, who
him with a special suite in was serving a two-to-10 year
Kinas City.
term for two counts of
Tbe Breckenridge Inn assatilt.
readied 118 111011 luxurious
The fourth escapee,
quarters. The I'UIKlf-tbeoflllll Thomas Workman, 21,
furnlablngs 'll'tre replaced Uabon, was stiU at large.
with the ezqulllte, and plush
rup covesed the Boot.
Mftert waltzed b1a bride
STRlKE PUT OFF
Into the honeymom rolte,
AKRON
(UPI) A
looked around and quickly
threatened
str1ke
by
some
900
1'111 down the eight flight of
maintenance, clerical and
stain to the main lobby.
"Wbere's Kean• Where 's techmcal workers at the
Kean," be screamed, Akron General Medical
referring to delegation leader Center was postponed Sunday
Tbamu Kean. ''They moved for ten days pending outcome
further
contract
all that llluff in and f011otlhe of
negot1aUons.
bed."

One smalf item
omitted for

his honeymoon

•

DR. LAMB

There was one problem
when the huge granite
sundial was put in place
outside Kemper Arena at the
GOP convention so that
delegates could teD the lime
- as long as the sun was
shining.
The sundial was five
minute slow.
So a big truck with a hoist
and a lnll'k crew returned,
ripped It out, and set it rigbt
to the J)redse minute.
But then there was another
problem. 1''-e sundial Is set to
Cen1!'al ' -~ ndard Time while
Kansas 1.-1ty is on Central
Dayli h Time.

what be S'ftal'S is genuine
Washington "hot alr coverup ."
The red, white and blue can
bears the label directing the
uaer to hold the hot air six
inches from scandal and
spray for two seccnds. Tbe
label says the hot air is useful
for covering up cost
overruns, congressional
junkets, illegal campaign
contributions and padded
expense accounts.
Near the Municipal
Auditorium in Kansas Oty 1a
one of those modem
billboard&amp; whole m .,..,
are painted on slats that
swivel every few aeconda to
show two or three dllferenoe
ads in the same space.
First It promotes a lnnd ol
whisky. Then It shows an ad
for a soft drink with a picture
of a thirsty dog and the slogan
" Dog's Best Friend."
Finally, complete with a
IO!emn portrait, Is the slogan
•'President Ford in 7K ''

A reporter's 9011, f, Dew
be.ck fnm Plains, Ga., on
There may be a message .TIIIIIDY Carter's chartered jet
here somewhere. Oil the side last week after he and his
of the Art Deco IIUIIclpa1 father had spent a week ol
auditorium in Kania City working and ~ in
where 111011 ol the preconven- the Democratic presidential
ticn Ford-Reagan wrestling candidate's hometown.
has taken place Is the legend:
Carter came be.ci to the
"Comedy.
Drama. rear of the plane and !pen!
TragedY."
abQut 20 nunutes chatting
with the boy.
Ole T-eblrt aeen oo the
~ a scoop, the father
streets of Kansas Clty has asked b1a son what Carter
two huge green peanuts with had said.
the inscription "Nuts to
But like Ill good pollticlana
Carter." Also in the bar in the guarding a confidential
headquarters Mueblebach conversallon, the boy
Hotel,
the
bartender replied: "You'll have to ask
carefully explains to palrons Govern&lt;r Carter."
that the shelled peanuts he
serves cune fnm VIrginia.
Robert
S.
Carter,
"We aren't allowed to serve cochairman
of
the
Georgia peanuts,.. he said. Republican
National
Cllltunlttee, got b1a authors a
Representatives of bit confuaed. In the advance
Americao Ind1an tribes plan text of hll speech todly at the
a three-day "POIIWOW" opening session of the
beginning Monday next to oonvenlim, Carter said the
Kemper Arena. 'l1le ses5ons Democratic ptmlnee wboae
includes dances, drums and name be shares "puts 111 in
~es on Indian iasues.
mind of the headless
There will be competltloo horseman of Sleepy Hollow
among the tribes attending, letlend. who according to
liCCOI'ding to John Two Birda James Fenimore Cooper,
ArbUCkle, coordinator of the jumped onto b1a h&lt;rse and
event.
rode off in all directiw."
Nice description.
Jon Rintela of Arllngtcn,
But it waa Washington
Va., has c&lt;rne to Kansas Clty lrvlng who created "'11le
aelling Hel'OIIO! spray cans of Legend of Sleepy Hollow."

Property
Transfers
Marvm Yeauger , Delma
Halley , Alfred Yeauger,
Pearl Yeauger, Norman
Yeauger , Allen Yeauger,
11.110 A., Salisbury.
Kenneth B. Lawson,
Dorothy L. Lawson to VtrgH
B. Teaford Sr , Htlen L.
Teaford, Lot, Syracuse.
Margaret Lynch, dec , to
Arthur Lynch, W1lliam
Lynch, Joyce Wooten, Betty
Stewart, Helen Lemley, Aff.
for Trans., SaUs~ .
James E. SimJIII&lt;&gt;n, Adm.,
Arthur Lynch, dec., to Silvie
Roger Snyder, Nancy Sayder,
.53 A., Salisbury.
leWIS D. Telle, Nancy C.
Tell~ to Henry E. Cleland,
Jr , Kathleen M. Cleland, .275
A., Pomeroy.
James E Simpson, Adm ,
Arthur Lynch, dec., to Melvin
UtUe, Catherme Uttle I 33 'A.
Sybil Ebersbach, Comm.,
Elo1se Puckett, dec., to
Frank Puckett, Larry Dennis
Puckett , S1dney Darrell
Puckett, Bonme Scott, 124.65
A., Salem
James E. Simpson, Adm.,
Arthur Lynch, dec., to
Ri chard Stewart, Betty
Stewart, 'I• A., Salisbury.
Delma Halley to Jaymar
Coal Co., Int. in .311 acre,
Salisbury.
Pearl Yeauger, Lena
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co.,
.30 acre, Salisbury.
Marvin Yeauger, Lucille
Yeauger to Jaymar Coal Co.,
.30 acre, Salisbury.
Ullie B. Ledlle to Dorothy
Barnes Woodard, Albert
Woodard,
1.06 acres,
RutJand ,
Ellsworth J . Holden Jr.,
Ann F. Holden to George c.
McCleary, Sherry S. Mea eary, 20 acres, Scip1o.
Bernard V. Fultz, Betty J .
Fultz to James F. Arnold,
parcels, P.omeroy.
·
Edda J. lbllmpson to Elvm
Eugene 1bompson, Mary E.
Th ompson, parceI, Salem.
Margaret Ella Lewis, af.
fidavit, Rutland, Middleport,
Salisbury.
Guy Edison Gumther,
Unda L. Guinther to IUchard
w· vaughan, RubY va"6'-••
.......
lots, Pomeroy.
Anne Jenkins Van Atta,
dec to Dante! c. Jenkins,
cert. for trans. Pomeroy.
Ethel Grueser, Roy
Grueser, Opal Grueser,

Robert E. Grueser, Frieda
Grueser' Paul E. Grueser'
Audrey Grueser to Clarence
A Lambert, Sally J. Lambert, 1.16 acres, Sallsliury.
Dorsel Smith, dec. to
Mildred F Betztn
·
g, Evelyn S.
Folk, Robert Ralph Smith,
Sharon K Johnson Ronald B
'
·
·
Smith, cerl. of trans., Bedford.
Thomas Cross , Phyllis
causes for faUgue. When a Cross to Atha Olan Knapp,
fatrly complete examination Celia Pearl Knapp, lol,
fails to reveal any evtdence of Syracuse.
J bn J Ft k M J · F
disease of any organ system
o
. c , . ane ick,
it must be mcluded as one of aka Jane J. Fick to John J .
the possibilities. Often 1t is Fick, M. Jane flck, 3.2 acres,
the real cause. My point Chester.
Robert C. Harten bach,
remains that unexplained
fatigue
Is
often
a Sheriff Edna Shr ds
'
oa ' et al,
manifestation of depression
to Mildred Fitch, 74 acres,
and a complete evaluaUon of Lebanon.
Mildred Fitch, Larry Fitch
the symptom of fatigue
requires consideration of to Larry Fitch, Mildred
depression as a possible Filch , 74 aa"es, Lebanon.
cauae. Psych1a trials do not
John T. Holliday to Robert
make such a diagnosis just Dale Holliday Avanel
becauae tl!e other physlciana Hollida
Is' Col llmbla, "
found no .disease but rather Salem y, parce '
Gratia c. Oiler, Madge
on the 6aSts of a competent
review of the patient's Oiler to John Jacb Doris
symptarns and life sltualicn. Jacks, parcels,
For mformaUon on Iron
ROy Frecter to Jerry L
deficiency anemia send for Brogan, Judith A. Brogan;
The Health Letter numbered 1.091 acre, Cheater.
4-f, Iron and Anemia. Send a
David L Wanzo Mary K
long,
stamped,
self- Wanzo, Muriel 'Jackson:
addreSSied envelope and 50 JeromeP.Jacksonto&lt;llarles
cents for U. Address your
letter to Dr. Lamb in care of :~=· Jo Ann Eada,lot 34,
N-n J. Baxter, GUda
this DeW11J8per, P.O. Box
1551, Radio City Statton, New Baxter to Norm J Baxte
Gllda Baxter : ~ r,
York, NY 10019.

Depression is oniy a symptom
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Your
column on depression
reminded me of my late
mother who died in 1950. She
had been to many doctors.
My father, at a calculated
risk, undermined her confidence in the diagnostic
ability of her own doctor. Her
doctors all ·prescribed "rest
and relaxation." Many
montba pasaed while she
experienced symptoms of
fall«ue Ute the lady you
wrote about. In about two
weeks Dad's doctor made his
dlagnoils and a biopsy
confirmed Hodgkin's dlaeaae.
Based on this I would take
issue With your s~ent
that if the lady had already
hid !leveral examinations, it
wu unlikely she had a
dlseue but rather a
depreuion. Mom's doctors
did Dol plc:k up her disealle,
DEAR READEit - Most
peGple think their doctor Is
ll'ftlt but an not "' Slife
1baul thole other doctors.

DIIIJno••• are .ru.ed. Even

with all the best tools of
model n medicme at hand the
diagnosis is not always easy.
Your mother's case of
Hodgkin's disease may have
. finally progressed to the point
that swollen glands were
large enough to be felt or seen
on an X ray, thereby making
11 easier to make a diagnosis
Time permits a disease to
become more evident. A
fever of unknown origm may
be easily nplained after a
typical rash develops. Quite
frankly, medicine Is not as
easy in some cases as TV
shows might lead one to
believe.
You may be Interested 1n
how many letters I received
sunllar to yours Each letter
&gt;mter was sure I was wrong
·about the lady having a
depression and each mads his
or her own diagnosis. These
included Hodgkin's dlaease,
myasthenia gravis, tuberculosis, kidney disease,
duemlnated lupus
erylhematosts (a rare

d1sea8e), ltver disease ,
emphysema and several
others. Now aU of these can't
be rtght. What does this
mean• It means that chronic
fabgue is a symptom, not a
diagnosis
You can have faijgue from
emphysema. I was particularly struck with an Ail'
Force off1cer who had
decreased exercise capactty
and had a long htstory of
trouble In physical performance but was not
diagnosed He actually had
emphysema and becauae of
his inability to mcrease
oxygen to his body was
limited as to how much work
he would do.
You can have faUgue from
diabetes, particularly II It Is
advanced and untreated.
Heat exha111tlon will cause
fatigue: so wUl cancer,
tuberculosis and anemia. 1be
adverbsera knew what they
were doing When lhey coined
the term, "tired blond."
Depression Is one of many

'

•I

got to be tough with thele
guys. They have to
underllland II won't be wortl!
u and that they're sllinc to
jaU."
"We said we weren't lolnc
to go out ~ tJ1Y raids,"
responded as1latant

s.ren:.

0
..

(Jwrlla

..........

~

· - -.... ,, - · •···-·-Jt"•-e••'"t ..... ..

alllw&amp;ant Cl.,.tland ~lly

bad lnqulrleubout !be ._,
mainly frcm d.twcDI, ~
requeD fnlll pollee ollcg.
lil)l

UltD1

...

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka
(UPI) - To a tnanpetlng ol
oonch shells, leaders of 811

ttlng mare
than half the world's
populatim opened I summit
meeting with an attack 111
Wlllllem llnancial instltutlonJ
and the govemmentl of the
United States, llrlel, South
Africa and Rhodesia.
Keynoting the Fifth
Summit Confertnce of
Nonalllned NatiQns, Sri
Lanka Prime Minister
Sl,rlmazvo Bandaranalke
urged the leaders to create a
"comtnerclll bank f&lt;r the
Third World" so "the
financial oenten of the warld
will no IQPger be llmlted to
New Yark, London, Zurich
and Paris."
1be prime mlnlaler said the
bank would allow developing
nat10111, many of which are
deeply in debt to Western
banks,
to
undertake
International economic
actlvil;y "which bas ao far
remained a mcnopoly of a
few multinational private
banks In the developed

Bnen•'"'*·

calltd "Zingo" - which ...

nations."
Alia's flr!l summit confer-

ence of nllllllgned nations
opened wltb pomp and
pageantry. Conch shells were
blown as the tradltlcrlll oil
lamp wasllgbted. &amp;me of the
Arab delegates to the fourday session were drealed in
flowing
robes
and
headdre!lles.
Mrs . Bandaranalke, in
clear, Brllish·accented
English, criticized the United
States for It role In the
~tname11e War and Issued a

bean played In Dlyton,
New.n and Reynoldlburg
under the aUiplcel of the
"~ (llarltlel Qlurch"
~~·:::..: the Ui!J11 .Jllnio cmdl 1l'llb 78
~1belr struggle 1~ thi
lnltead ol 78 to iet
d around the lepl deflnltkll.
mllltary
might
an · Nlcholu Gemn, alllllant

.ctl

=ca:::. ~neui~U:

and final victory, Ia a shining
Inspiration to all nations
fighting
for
national
Uberatlon aaalnat fore!Rn
Intervention, domlnatim and
q~pressloo " she said
She c~lled for the
dlsnwl"'RO t th American
"""6
e
mllltary bale on the Indian
Ocean la1and ol Diego Garcia
and the withdrawal of the
"great powers"_ the United
States and the Soviet Unloo from
their
mUitary
installations In
those
waters
The
minister who
usumed power six 'yean
ago, denounced lhe ''racist
resimllll" of South Africa and
Rhodesia
for
tllelr
domination
of
black
majoriUes
!lie
the only hope for
Middle East peace was
Israeli wlthdra'l!'al from
occupied
lands
and
recognition of the rights of
Palestinlans to their own
nation
The · heads of state and
government have before
them proposals that would
,...,. the • ..,ulslcn of flrsel

°

prime

sali

-D

-r

from the United Nations,
demand the removll of the
u.s. mllltary presence from
South Korea and demand that
the United states give up the
Panama Canal and ttl naval
baae·-at Guantanamo Bay,
which adjoins Cuba.

Bumps,
bruises
'
fu 12 accidents
oiily minor injuries were
reported in 12 traffic
accidents lnvestipted over
the weekend by the GaUlaMeigs POll State Rigbway
Patrol. These were:
Robert E. Manley, 26,
Bidwell, charged with DWI
and hllotklp fdlowillg an
accident at 11 p.m. Saturday
en Rt. 35. Manley ir!lvellng
west, loll control of hll car
whicb sideawiped an Ohio
Rigbway Patrol cruiser
drivenofby Dennis M. Hunter,
30,
Rodney, Manley
the scene.
Mh. Voa, 18, Pomeroy,
was c arged with DWI
followq an early morning
accident Saturday on Rt. 7 in
wb1cb she lost cmtrol of her
in
car a curve. 'l1le vehicle
ran off the left side ol the
highway and flipped mto Ill
IDp. There was moderate
damage.

lea,:&lt;

in~==~:~~

Saturday Ill Rt. 7 at the
)lnctlon to Georgea Creek
Rd. Apick-up truck driven by
Afbe
N
rl apney, Jr., 39,
Galllpolil, went to pasa a
farm tractor driven by Hollls
R. Mayo, 84, Bidwell,
traveling north with one
wheel on the berm and the
other on the hlglnray, when
Mayo lwei'Ved the tractar to
avoid striking a mallboK.
Injured were
three
passen1ers in the truck,
Jerry Lee Nonnov, 21 months
....--,
old; El1an Napney, age 17,
and. Tim Hurlow, 20,
GaDipolls, There wu heavy
damage to the pick-up truck.
No charle wu IUed.
A single car mishap
d t 2
occurre
a
:U p.m.
Saturday on Ri. 7 near the
Kyger Creek
Power Plant
where
Ev
a I. Diehl, 32,
Raclne,lollcontrolofbercar

1
while
·~
encl
colllalon
lrlth rear
another

vehicle. Her car slid off the
lqbway Into •

dltd!.

No tile wu cited in a two
V8blcle mllbap II 2:80 p.m.

its.~~t!:.~':

__. ol Rt. 7 where
,_
autos
operated by Leiria W.

w:·

~.:.:;r

3l, ~llpolla, ~~~ 11 ~
hUlcrest.
There
'II'IS
madlrate damage.
A tingle car accident
acctiTed liS: 12 p.m. 411 Rt.

553, one and two tentha miles
north ol Rt. 7 where Joseph
N. Bozzary, 17, Huntington,
lOOng control of b1a car (II
wet pavement, Wl!llt off the
highway Into a guardrail.
A three-vehicle ae~:ident
OCCln'ed at 3:45p.m. on Rt. 7
at the Silver Bridge Sbopplng
Plaza where cars driven by
William E. Carr, 64,
Galllpolls, and Doria Ann
Clark, 38, Galllpolla, collided
headon. JuHan Clark, 13, a
passenger, bad minor
injuries. The collllion was
blamed Ill an unidentified
vehicle which pulled from the
plaza and went en.
Michael L. Coleman, 19,
Vinton, was cited for
Improper paaslng following
an accident at II p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 180, three
tenths of a,mile north of Rl.
35. Coleman attempted to
pass a veblcle driven by
Debra A. Copper, 18, New
Carllsle, then cut back too
soon,llrlldng the Cooper car.
There · was
moderate
damage.
FOUR ON SUNDAY
The fir!l of lour &amp;mday
accidents OCCW'I'ed at 3:IXI
a.m. on Rt. 7 at t))e Kyger
Creek Plant where Douglas
M. Maaon, 31, Gallipolis,
backed b1a car into a prlv~te
driveway and over a concrete
culvert.
At 11:30 a.m. Sunday an
accident occurred on Salem
St. in Rutland where can
driven by Olarles R. F.lldl,
41, Rutland, and Joyce
Bartrum, t7, Middleport,
col1ided.
-.
A alngle vehicle ae~:ldent
occlfted all: 20 p.m. &amp;mday
on Georges Creek Rd., liz
le)ltba of a mile 1l't!lll on Rt.
7•. C!aarlotte A. Thwnu, 28,
Gallipolis, reaching for
objects which fell ol! the front
seat, 1011 ~ of b"' car
which mowed down three
mallbozes.
Delores HUI, 47' Jacbon,
wu charged wilb failure to
stop witbln the aured clear
dllllance following a~ .
mishap on Rt. 31, one 1811b of l
• mlle eut ol Rio Grande.
Her car llnlck the rear end
of an MilO operated by lllvld
Nolan, Jr., fll, &lt;Wilpolil
forcq Nolan'a Yeblde intci
the r- ol a tblrd car
operated by Billy R. Blmett,
17' Ge1llpolls,
0

proaecutor for Montaomeeyol
County, belleveaiiiOII f!.!e
IJI«-dme 8~ In DI)'IGD,
including • COli~!' .,llf

:~~~~ud~W:~· "¥.~
"Moat of them ire
legitimate chlrllles ••
opposed to the pre·l•:w
sham," said Gerren, add~
that hts office has warned 11a
.,.
couple of organizations W•uCh
have attempted to clrcumvent the splrtt.~f thte law
if not the letter • bu !1-s
made no prosecutions.
~Weyandlaaid~has
questions
about
Ill•
legitimacy of some of '\!.le
operatiOillin suburban~
but is awaiting dei«minattons by Brown's
office and the U.S. In~
Revenue Service, 'll'hloh
detennlnes their tu-ewiiPt
~.1111 •
,"
1blngs are about on An
even keel here," said
Weyandt of the Atroo ~·
which was me of the priJiie
locations of blg-dme bllr&amp;o
betare the law. "There ve
not a great nwnber of ~
places which hive openec!,
but it hasn't diminished,
either U
" I
Se · Butts noted that ...;;,
n.
-,..,.e
new and wortbwblle charities
have obtained bingo llL'enses
under the law, but he .is
concerned that ''if the law
continues to be lroken, the
Illegitimate mes will ~e;to
creep back in." He
es
lack of enf&lt;rcement.
"R's not the fault of the
law;" said Butts. "We never
thought that all our problems
would be aolved with the
signing of a blll."

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Estatt of John

case No. 7J870

w

Deceased.

Hoffman.

Notice 11 hertby given that
Marlorle A Goett , of 830 '~lest
Main Street, Pomeroy, 6Ji;Jo,
Mas

been

duly

appolf)J.ed

Administratrix of the E~t te
of
John
W
Hoff
n,

Deceased, late of Ct1es er ,

Melos county, Ohio

Creditors are required to

file their claims with 'kild

fidUciary within three morilns
Dated this 29th day of July
1976
°
'J
1

Manning 0 Web !ler
Ju~ge

..

"'

(81 2, 9, 16, ltc

NOTICE OF SALE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT
OF
MElliS
COUNTY, OHIO
•
loin

'"
•
County Savings ;~&amp;
Co .• an Ohio corp . ••

Fred

a

Athen&amp;

•••

Goegleln, ttll

....

Case No. 16:d~2

Pursuant to an ORDER OF
SALE Issued by the common
Plel!IS Court of Meigs County,
Ohio, I will offer for nltt,..at
public: auction on the Jrd day

Of September 1 1976, at 10 :00

A .M on the courthouse st~bs
at the COURTHOUSE ln
Pomeroy, Ohio, tht following
described real estate :
Situated In the Townshlp vor
Rutlond, Meigs County, Oti\O.
and In Fraction 2, Town . 6,
Range u of the Ohio com pany's Purchase, and beOOa
Lot No 20 of the Hutchln.On
Subdivision as Is recorded In
Plat Book .t, Page 57 of the
Records ot Plats of Meigs
County, Ohio
,,..
TERMS OF SALE . Cash,
for not less than two thirds of
the appra ised value
Propertv appraised at
$13,000.00

Robert C Hertenbecn
~riH
Meigs county,Ohlo
!81 l ,

16, 23. 30, 5tc

9,

..
,

...... IIMMl

,_,.,

DIVOtn ro ,,.

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.mer .._.

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;.IM..W:l

41 ..... ,.,

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11tlril

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aual 'Ia rJ .... , .

.........

I

.,....

e IIUI ,-s

swept
a
IICI'IIIce and a Bingle to right his best hitters against Pittsburgh
by Bruce Boladair.
Koosman, •Insisting he was doublelteader from Houston,
"Everything wu WOfklng resting them. But he U and 3-j),
today," said K001111an after conceded, ''The last time, he
In the American League,
hll second lbutout of the beat 111 with them In the Minnesota edged New York,
season. "! waa in total lineup.''
9-8 ; Baltimore shut out
"IOUiilp.W Jarry ·x -wn.
e&lt;mmand all the WI)'. II WU
II'OOS!U!n dowiled the ~ Chjcago, ~ : Kansss City
"""RI&amp;ht
now,"
nld
fumy, warming lip in the 2-1 in Cincinnati in b1a mo!l defeated Detroit, 7·3:
.:;ecen!!J
rthlred Met
bullpen I didn't know the recent start against the front- Oakland edged Boaton, 8-7:
~M.n~Pt Joe Fr1iiler aftir
Cincinnati batting order. running Reds. 'l1le Reds are Milwaukee beat California, 5•«oo~man blu*ed Clnl:iDnill
When I got into the dugout stiU 30-11 since July I.
3, and Cleveland swept a
1-G llullday. "ba'l tba best
and saw no Rote, no Bench
In ciilier'Nattooal League doubleh!'Bder from Texas, 6-4
~ Wt.Undtr Jn tbl National
and no Griffey I waan't 1111re games, Lofl Angeles defeated and 3-j),
: IAtlpe. He'l ~ 111."
how to pitch to thoee other Chicago, 7-2: AUanta edged
Dodgen 1, Cubo %
· -· How . far Kooaman can
guys."
Don Sutton won his all!
St. Louis, 3-2; San Francisco
•tarTy the Meta II an open
Red manager Sparky IDpped Philadelphia, ~: San game as the Dodgers scored
•QIIestlon, but he'l doing b1a
Anderaon benched tlfree of Diego beat Montreal, &amp;-!, and all their runs tn the fifth
inning. Ron Cey drove in the
ftrst run, the second scored
on a balk by Chicago pitcher
Bill Bonham and Bill RusseU
singled home what proved to
,,:.: By JOE CARNICELLI
during the winter acqlllring Steelers, the two-time touchdowns, built a 27~ lead be the winning run. Rick
!"'
UPI Sports Writer
tl!e services of aome of the top .defending NFL cltlunPJcna, and then cruised in with a 27-7 Monday hit hts 21st home run
over
Allen's of the season for Ute Cubs.
~''l'he Pittsburgh Steelera free agent talent avallable in whoae rOller II composed victory
Braves 3, Cardlllals z
''llllowed Washington Coach the National Football almost exclllflvely of draft puncbless Redsklns. It was
Phil Niekro pitched a SIX·
P)tlaburgh's
fourth
straight
plckll,
;~ge ADen that you jlllt Leap. He unveiled twQ of
hitter
to raise his record to 1:1pr:e«ason
victory
without
a
·don't buy your way Into the tl!oee acqulalllons qether
Pittsburgh turned lntercep8
for
the
Braves. Niekro also
loss
while
the
Redskins
"!iiper Bowl.
for the ~ time Saturday Uw by Jack Ham and Mike
drove
in
a
run with a sscrlflce
dropped
to
1-2.
,.Allen spent a fortune night bulfalled to Impress the Wagner into early Rocky Bleier plunged two fly in the second and Darren
yards for Pittsburgh's first Chaney followed wtth a
score and Terry Bradshaw squeeze bunt single for
threw touchdown paues of 10 another Atlanta run in the
yarda to Lynn Swann and four UUting. The Braves scored
to Randy Grossman for a 21~ thetr third run in the eighth
lead.
Rookie Mike Kruczek on Rod Gilbreath's triple and
,,.,
made
it 27~ wtth a sevenMator u•oue Le1ders
I"'- \I. NltiOnll L JUUt Stlndlngt
San Diego
000 005 001- 6 10 0
yard
TD
pass to Theo Bell.
BY Unittd Press I nternallonal Monfreal
DY United P ess 1ntern1tlon•l
000 lOOOOD--1 61
81tllng
'Cast
Griffin (7 .tl and Kendall.
(based an 300 11 bats)
•
W L. Pel. GB
Carrithers, Taylor {6), Murray
National Le1eue
: l!"t&gt;llodelphla 15 AO 652 (BJ and carter LP.carrlthers
64 52 552 11 lf2
G AB
R H Pet 16 B)
•Pittsburgh
big atory. Allen paraded out
6 1"11ew York
Madlck. Ch 112 MW 56 138 337
61 5&amp; m - 16
his
multi-million dollar
1
54 66 450 23 h Gnffey, Cln 107 A08 95 136 333
.ost G•me)
..c~lcago
Foster, Cln 108 429 70 IA2 331 Plttsfiolrvn 100 020 104- 8 13 2 llacklleldofJohnR!ggins811d
49 64 434 25
~1 1 LOUIS
41 71 366 32 111 Oliver, Pitt 105 A13 58 135 .327 Houston
· Montreal
001 100 004-6 13 2
Crwfrd, St L 91 301 •2 98 326 Medfch, Tekulve (9) and Calvin Hill but they had little
West
"··•
w. l Pd. GB Morgan, Cln 99 333 92 108 324 Oyer. Larson, McLaughlin (9) success against Pittsburgh's
1
BETHESDA, Md. (UPI)MIKidK, Phi 108 384 57 123 320 and Jutze WP Med•ch (6 11 J remarkable defense.
~nclnnetl
76 42 644
n ~os Angeles
63 54 538 12 1h Rose.Cin
118478 99 152 318 LP Larson (2,-i l
Riggms, signed' to a $1.5 The name Charles Coody
San Diego
59 62 488 l8 1h Roblnsn , Ptt 92 319 A7 101 317
Geronm,
en
106
349
44
108
309
"''Mtklston
58 63 479 1911&gt;~
(2nd Game)
rn!Won coo tract after playing doesn't automatically come
Amer•c•n Leegue
Atlanta
5-t 64 458 22
Pittsburgh )00 000 OD0-3 12 3 out hll option with the New to mind when PGA tour stars
G AB
R H Pet. Houston
- 5an Francisco 51
69 425 26
000 000 ooo-o 6 I
McRae, KC 104 360 59 127 353
-~
Satui"dii( 1S Results
Reuss (11 11 and SaligJ.ullen . York Jets, gained 34 yards on are mentioned, but the 39Brett, KC 115 A69 74 161 3A3 Samb1f0. McL.aughlm (S J, Pentz e1ght carries and Hill tbe year-&lt;&gt;ld journeyman likes hts
" Ct'llc:ago 2 Los Angeles 0
LeFlore, Dt 109 439 74 143 326 (BJ and Johnson LP Samb1t0 former Dallas lllar wh~ was chances of adding a second
1New York 2 Cincinnati 1
Carew, Mnn 112 428 69 139 325 11 1)
Pittsburgh 5 Houston 4
Bostck, Mnn 89 318 47 103 324
;:,1St Louis .t Atlanta 0
m the World FoothaU League ' major championship to hts
99 -iOO 48 127 318 Los Angeles
..,;P.tliladelphla 13 san Francisco 2 Garr, Chi
000 300 OQ0---.3 9 o last season could manage portfolio, the now soggy 5Btl!
Munson, NY 110 442 62 137 310 ChiCago
..:S..n Diego 7 Montreal
2
100 010 OQ0-2 6 0
Carty, Clev 109 393 52 122 310 Sutton f14.9) and Yeager only 26 yar~ on 11 attempts PGA Championship.
sundiY 1S Results
'"'51!1n Francisco 9 Philadelphia S Staub, Oet 115 420 52 129 307 Bonham, Sutter (8l and Sw1
Pittsburgh's defense held
"I think I'm okay from the
Lynn, Bos 98 381 54 116 30A sher LP Bonham (7 1o r HR
~~ York 1 Cincinnati 0
1
the
Redskins
scoreless
until
standpoint
of havmg been
HOME RUNS
,AIIante 3 St Louis 2
ChiCIQO, Monday (21) ,
Nattonal League Kingman,
•...san Diego 6 Montreal 1
tl!e
final
&amp;7
seconds
of
the
under
that
kind
of pressure
Amer.c1n League
NY 32, S&lt;hmldt, Phil 31,
Los Angeles 3 Ch1caoo 2
(1st
Game)
game when second-string before ~. winning the 1971
Foster , Cln 27 , Monday, Chi Texas
P.lttsburgh 8 Houston 6, 1st
000 010 012- 4 11 1 quarterback Joe Tbetsmann Masters, sa1d Coody, who
and Morgan, Cln 21
:-:pTtsburgh 3 Houston o, 2nd
Cleveland
300
000 21X- 6 11 0
American League· Bando, Blyleven, Terpko (8) and scored on a five-yard run. held a tw~oke lead gomg
Q IOI • ,
Mandlly's Games
(All Times EDT)
Oak 23 : Jackson and L. May. Sundberg.
LaRoche
~'""''Atlanta
{Morton 2 9) at Bait 21. Henctri(:k, Clev 19 , (6 J. Kern (BlThomas,
and Fosse WP UntU that final drtve againSt mto today s final round of the
~;~; : lnclnnatl (Norman 11 2), 8.05 Nettles. NY 18
Thomas (3 1) LP Slyleven (9 Pittsburgh reserves, the PGA.
RUI'II 811ted In
- J.om.
13 ) HRS Texas, Harrah (10) , Redskin passing attack had
" But whoever 's behmd
Nahonal
League
Foster,
Cln
·· -·san D1ego (Sawyer 3 0) at Sf
- .buls (McGlothen 10 11), 8 30 106, Morgan, C1n 83, Schmid t, Burroughs (13)
netted only nine yards.
me- Jack Nlckla.us, ~
Phil 80, Lozinski, Phil 74 ;
I " ,,rn
(2nd Gamel
Allen however didn •t January, whoever-It doesn t
Chicago (R Reuschel 10·8l at Watson, Hou 73
Texas
000 000 ooo--o -4 l
r..:;riouston (Dierker 12 10), 8 35 American League Cham Cleveland
seemed
dismayed by hts mean anything to them."
000 000 21x-3 4 l
bliss, NV 79, Mayberry. KC 78 , Hargan. Hoerner
•m
(8)
and
club's
poor
performance
Coody charged into the lead
Munson, NY 75, Burroughs, Sundberg. Bibby· (9 4) and
~~ · (only games scheduled)
"That
was
a
patched
up
durmg
. Sunday morning's
Tuesday's Gimes
Tex 73, Rutli , Oak 72
Cerone LP Hargan {54),
Stolen B1ses
'"""'Montreal at Philadelph ia,
offensive line in front of concluston of the thtrd round,
National League Taveras,
li:H~ht
100 101101- 5 10 1 tl!em," he satd. "l wasn't pllrring four holes. and
. San 01eg0 at St Louis, n1ght P1tl 40, Morgan, Cln 38 . Milwaukee
California
000 000 3. . .3 8 2
Cedeno,
Hou
37,
Lopes,
LA
36
with
their sinkmg a four-foot btrdie putt
:n. .... Atl.!inta at Clnc1nnatl, night
Travers. Castro (7) and displeased
Brock, St L 35
Chicago at Houston, night
Porter
,
Ross,
Verhoeven
(7J.
perf&lt;rmance
considering
it's on tl!e ~8th for a 67 and total of
American League North,
New York at Los Angeles,
{8), Overy (9} and tl!e first time they worked 'lJfl. W1th the bulk of the fteld
Oak 56, LeFlore, Det and Scott
lght
Humphrey WP Travers (14 9)
Pittsburgh at san Francisco, Baylor, Oak 44, Patek, KC and LP Ross (7 14) HR Milwaukee together. When you give up still on the course, lightning
Campanerls,
Oak
43
night
Hegan (41
ooly 120 yards in the first half and heavy showers forced
Pitching
T ..' : .Amir-le_o_n-L,-a-gu~e-::5:-la-ndings
Most Vic,torles
and
they get 14 potnts, that's postpone~ent of Sunday
101 000 1~3 6 0
National League Jones, so Detroit
~ ~ ay United Press International
Kansas
Clly
310
003
OOx7
12
1
like
a baseball team getting afternoons scheduled fmal
,.....
E1st
19 7, Koosman, NY 15 7, Roberts, H11!er (7) and
Carlton,
Ph
d
1-i
4
,
Sutton
,
LA,
« o,•
w. L Pet. GB 14 9, Nlekro. Atl 13 a Mon K1mm , Hassler, Littell {8) and seven runs on four hits. 1 round .
. .New York
69 45 605
Martinez WP Hassler £271
Sunday's rain , which
- Baltimore
59 54 522 91h tefusco, SF 13-9; R:uthven, At! LPRoberts (11121 HR Kansas thought our defense played
10, Richard, Hou 13·12
pretty well and we could have stopped play at 2:33p.m and
'~~veland
57 58 496 121J~ 13 American
League Palmer, C1ty, OtiS (151
!.
tro1t
ss 60 478 14'1~
been ahead if we had taken completely washed out aU
. oston
53 60 469 151h BaH 16 10 , Leonard, KC 15 4, New York
OJO 050 ooo-a 14 1
advantage
of the breaks."
scores, cost Coody three pars.
'Milwaukee
SO 61 A50 17'h Figueroa, NY 15 6, Garland. Mtnnesota
220 000 23x- 9 10 2
' 1..,. 1
.~West
Bait
14 3. Tanana, Cal and
121
L
1 (81
In
other
games
Saturday
Nicklaus, tied for second
Fitzmorris, KC 14 a. Travers, Ell I~, Jackson
• Ye
.r • ,
w. l Pet. GB Mil
and
Munson
.
Stnger,
Burgrne•
Tampa
Bay
stunned
AUan~
place with a one-underiJar
14 9
. Kanses City 70 45 609
Earned Run Aver•~e
er (5). Hughes (5) , Campbell 17-3 to earn its first victory 209, !oat two pars and a
4 'Oaklend
64 53 547 7
(9) and Wvnegar WF' Hughes
...~ ~Melxnansesota
57 59 491 13 1h (based on 111 Innings p tehed) (6 IOl LP Lyle (6 71 HR New ever, Los Angeles shaded birdie, while Dr. Gil Morgan,
'l'o
56 60 483 W h
National League Richerd , York Chambliss (15 J
Seattle 1&amp;-13 Miami beat also at 209, lost two pars and a
Hou 2 51 , Zachry, Cln 2 66 ,
•
Chicago
49 66 426 21
--ooQ 000 ooo--o 6 o PhUadelplua '26-14 the New bogey.
CaiUorma
50 68 424 211h Montefusco, SF 2 68, Seaver,, Ch.cago
•::o
111urd1y's Results
NY 2 70, Jones, SO 2 72
Baltimore
102 000 oox-3 7 1
Coody sa1d that, as. usu~l,
~ nffncii c Cleveland 3, 10 Innings
Amencan League. Fldrych , Barrios. Ham 11fon {7) and York Glailts dum~ Houston
New York 5 Minnesota 4
Oet 197, Travers. Mil 2.35, Downlng 1 Garland (14 3) and 30-lt, Chicago downed nerves and concen~ation will
Garland, Salt 2.56, Blue ~ Oak Duncan LP Barr 1os (3 61 HRS Baltimore 25-14 Denver dec1de the champion.
Oakland 7 Boston 3
-ailtlrnore 8 Chicago 6, 1st
267, Palmer, Bait 276
Ball•more Gnch (11) L Mav
Strikeouts
•
'
edged Dallas 13-9 ~d CincinBesides Nicklaus and .MorBaltimore 6 Chicago S, 2nd
Nattonalleague Seaver, NY ('2 1)
• ~ansas City 15 oetrolt 3
natl
mopped
Detroit
26-14
gan,
a non-practicing
174 ; Richard, Hou 151, Nlekro, Boston
- Milwaukee 4 California J
033
000
lQ0-7
90
All 132 , Messersmlth 1 All 131. Oakland
"' ""
Sunday'' Gimes
000 022 022- 8 11 2 ' San Francisco defeated Oklahoma optometrist w~
KoosmBn , NY 130
Cleveland 6 Texas 4, 1st
Wise,
Murphy
(61. Wi lloughby Kansas Clty 21-13 and Green lfi:l the tournament at 1ts
Amerlclln League. Ryan. Cal (9) and F1sk. Torrez.
..Cleveland 3 Texas 0, 2nd
Lindblad Bay edged New England 1 ~;-i4. rrudw~y poillt but faltered m
216
,
Tanana,
Call77,
Blyleven
,
- aattlmore 3 Chicago o
(3). Bahnsen (7) and Tenace
Tex
162,
Hunter,
NY
129,
.Minnesota 9 New York 8
WP Bahnsen (6 3) LP Wll in Sunday games. Tonight, the third round, Coody must
Jenkins, Bos 126.
rtcansas City 7 Detroit 3
loughby 12-81 HRS Boston, Minnesota is at Cleveland
~ Milwaukee 5 C~tllfornla 3
Evans (11), Lynn (9) , Oakland ,
Sunday's Baseball Results
~ 'Oakland 8 Boston 1
and St. LoutS takes on San
(231
1 •.,.
By United Press lnternat1on11 Bando
Monday's Garrtes
,
lnternal1on11
Diego in Tokyo.
National
Lugue
';' ~:
(All Times EDT)
Lea~gue Standings
000 000 ooo-o s o
• Texas (Perry J1 .9) at New Cincinnati
Rookie Paul Hofer's 47Ul'liled
Press
lnternatlan1l
New York
000 010 OOx- 19 0
OWOANS MATCHED
~vork (Alexander 7 8), 7 40 1::1 m
W. L. Pet. GB yard TD run lifted San
Nolan, eastw1ck (8) and Rochester 71 43 642
""'-cleveland (Brown 7.7) at
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Francisco past Kansas City
'~' k~nsas City (Pattin 4 10 )~ 8 30 Bench . Koosroan (15,7) and Syracuse
69 51 575 8
Hodges
LP
Nolan
(10
81
Cincinnati
Midland Warriors
p.m
Rhode Island 62 59 512 15 1!~ and
Chester
Marco!,
· Oakland (Mitchell a 5) al
MemJ:~hls
59
62
488
19 '1~
and
Toledo
Trilby
Merchants,
~'Milwaukee
(Rodriguez 4 81, San Franclsc 030 001 005- 9 14 2 RIChmond 57 64 471 20'1~ rebounding from a leg injury each with one tournament
Philadelphia 021 000 020-5 9 0 Charleston 54 63 462 2111:1 which kept h1s out all last
••8.30 p m
Cressler, Mofllrt (61. Lavelle Tidewater 53 65 449 23
Boston fTiant 12 10) at
season, kicked three field loss, vied for the National
'"Chicago &lt;Johnson 9 10) , 9 00 C9 J and Rader ; Christenson. Toledo
49 73 402 29
Baseball
Reed
(3)
,
McGr~w 181, Garber
goals and an extra pomt m Amateur
Saturday's Results
':Ji: m
Federation'
"s
outhern 1 '
Baltimore «Grlmtley 5 51 at (91, Twitchell (9) and McCar Tidewater 8 Memphis 7
Green Bay's wm over New
:·1.\lnnesote (Redtern J.7), 9 00 ver WP Moffitt (5 A) LP Richmond 5 Charleston .t
senior
reg1onal
Garber (73) . HRS San Francis svracuse .t Toledo 3
England.
1' ""p.m.
co,
Evans
2
01)
,
Philadelphia
,
championships
title today.
Conly games scheduled)
Rochtster 7 Rhode ISland 4,
Luzlnskl (17)
.,,. ,
Tundly 11 Games
1st, 1 Innings
In the tourney semifinals
.:: Cleveland at Kansas City,
Rhode Island 7 Rochester 2,
Sunday, Toledo Trilby
St, Louis
000 100 001 - 2 6 2 2nQ , 7 Innings
night
~
1"' Baltimore at Minnesota , nloht
Atlanta
020 000 Olx- 3 9 1
defeated
Cincinnati Midland
Sunday•s Results
Forsch, Curtis (7), Hrabosky M~mphls
•~"~ Boston at Chlcaoo, night
6 Tidewater 5
4-3 in 10 1nnmgs. Earher in
Oakland at Milwaukee, night (8 ) and Ferguson , Nlekro (13 8) Charleston 13 Richmond 3
ond Corr•ll LP Forsch 15 8) Syracuse 2 Toledo 1
the
day ,
Cincinnati
'"' Callfomleat Detroit, night
HR -St LOUIS, Fer~uson (9)
TeXIs at New York, night
A DC.hes.ter ,. A hade Island 2
eliminated
Youngstown
SCIOTO ADVANCES
Buckeye Elks 9-2 and Toledo
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
ACTUAl. USE REPORT
'Il"l ,'
scored
a 2-1 victory over
Scioto, with Its ll-0
Youngstown.
whitewash of Maynard in the
State American Legion
Baseball Tournament
championship safely tucked TWO DIVISIONS
I
If
away,
today
began
making
CINCINNATI
(UPI)
Ro·
I
t
ready for ita next stop on the sette won the first division
••
tourney trail, a regional and B.J . King the second in
•
affair in Lafayette, Ind., Sunday's $7 ,500,added
opening Aug. 25.
VIvacious Handicap at River
•I
Scioto knocked out 17 hits, Downs.
~
Including four by Jim
Frank Brandt guided
Andrioff
in
five
times
at
bat,
'Rosette
over the mile and 70
; vn.'
and rapped eight extra-base yards m 1-46 2-5 for a $6 80,
l .... ,
blows to shut out Maynard for $3.60, $2.80 payoff. Double
''OM
tl!e Ohio Utle Saturday.
Dinky was second and Julie's
The
winners,
5-l
in
the
third.
Image
I' ·"
..,,
tourney and 41-7 overall,
B J King, ridden iill :44 1-:i
' ....
added to a iMJ lead with six by Gary Columbia, returned
' ""'"
runs in the etghtl! inning. $3.80, $2.80 and $2.60. Twenty
Tom
McFerin went the Pay placed, and Film
-,
,.
'
pitching
distance for Scioto, Festival showed.
j .....
giving up five safeties,
The 5-l daily double
•••
•
llrl1dng out 10 and walking combination of Boyle's Law
I
tl!ree. Jack Cole took the and Shamrock Tim ,was
I ., '
I ·-•
mound loss for Maynard, 5-2 worth $104.40.
in the tournament and 28-9 for
Attendance was 7,776 and
'
the hltndle $707,428
all games this season.

....

best In inflicting ooly the
fourth shutout loel on the
heavy-hitting Reda this
season, Kooaman fanned
eleYen men, walllad none and
allowed but five blta. 1be Met
defenle produced two aouble
plays to ball K001111111 out of
the lilly thrtala Qnclnnatl
could muster.
_
New Yark hu now wen
nine of Ill last 12 in the
belated drive to catch
Pltl.lbUrgh. 1be lone run in
&amp;mdly'1 win was produced
by a Roy Staiger lingle, a
force out, a Koosman

~:~teelers

..
" )

cruise past Redskins

Tom Pa~iorek's Aacrifice fly .
Joe Ferguson had a solo
home run f&lt;r the Cardinals.
GlaDIS 9, Pblllles 5
Ken Reitz' sacrifice fly
drove in the g(hllhead run and
Darrell Evans' secood homer
of the game, a thre&amp;-run shot,
capp,ed a five-run, ninthinning rally to give the Giants
tl!e victory over the PlliU!es.
Greg Lozinski homered for
the PhiWes.
Padres 6, Expos 1
Willie Dims drove in three
runs and Ted Kubiak two in
leading the Padri!s paat the
Expos Tom Griffin gained
credit for his seventh victory
in 11 decisions. Dave Winfield
drove in the other San Diego
run and Earl Williams'
singled home the Expos' only

nm.

Pirates 8-3, Astroa 11-0
Doc Medich won his first
game smce June 16 in the
opener will! relief help from
Kent Tekulve as Ed Kirkpatrick drove in two runs wilh a
ninth-inning double that
enabled the Pirates to
wtthstand a lour-run, mothinning rally by '!he Astros
Jerry Reuss won hts 11th
game of the season in the
mghtcap by shutting out
Houston on six hits.

St=~~tl!eu~=~wi!s :~ Final round rescheduled

• tounuunent
today m

G

..

also contend with Don
January, at !lVen par. Ray
F1oyd, David Graham, Tom
Kite, Gary Player and Dave
Stockton were at 211, one over
par on the 7,054-yard
Coogressional Country Club
layout.
Tom WeiSkopf, whose 65led
the Drat round, was at 212
starting tl!e final 18, five
atrokes back. Ben Crenshaw,
the tour's leading money
winner, was in a group at 214
that alsO included Jerry Pate,
who woo both the U.S. and
Canadian opens
The rainout caused some
grumbling among players
anxio111, for one reason or
another, to leave the
Washington area.
"Why don 't they just pick
up where they left off and
eliminatepolltu:iting'" asked
Ed Sneed, who bad finished 72
holes at 17 over par with a 74
Sunday. "Every shot should
count. The thought of looking
at those 18 holes again 1sn't

exciting."

Sport Parade
NEW YORK (UPI) - AD the olben were out on the field
taking batting practice. Pllte Rose was the only one left In the
Cincinnati Redl' clubiloule.
He hadn't put on b1a unlform yet all(\ wu in no greatlntrr)' to
do ao. He wu still in hla underwear, lilting at a woodsa table
used by the players for autographing baseballs and playing
cards sometlmee, and he was so high strwJ&amp;, so on edge, be
couldn't even sit still.
"When I don't play I go crazy," he said.
Pete Rose had gotten only ooe bit bt b1a last 27 times up and
with lhe Reds running away in their division, leading by 13~
games, Manager Sparky Anderaon bad decided to rest Role,
Joe Morgan and Ken Gp!fey for Sunday's g~e against the
New Yark Mets.
·
The last time Role had sat out an entire game was back in
1973. Since then be had appeared In 445 consecutive contests,
but in this one, Bob BaUey was goq to be at third be.11e for the
Reds, not him.
'
"When's the last time you didn't start a game?" a newsman
asked Rose.
"Last Saturday," replied the Reds' 36-year-&lt;&gt;ld pepperpot.
"Huh?"
"! didn 't start against the Dodgers last Saturday," aald
Rose. "Sparky said he wanted to rest me against Tommy John.
But I got into the game later (11, Next day I was oh.for.four
againat (Burt) Hoo19D; then I went ob-lor-15 in three games
with the Cubs and I'm one-far-eight in the two games we
played here so far. That's ooe-for-27."
Pete Rose didn't sound at aU worried.
He wasn't.
"I'm still leading the league in runs and hits," be said.
"Do you think you'D get 200 hits again?" aomeone asked

him,

"I hope so," be said. "I need 48 m&lt;re and we've got 15 more
games. F&lt;rty.four after today."
How dtd he feel about not playing in 11\la game?
"Sparky came to me 1aat night and talked about II,"
revealed Rose. "He said he wanted to give a few of 111 a rest
and he asked me if I wanted to play. I always wanna play but I
understood what be was trying to do. I told him I'd watch lt. I
dunno,l may go out on the bench or maybe I'll watch It on tv.
I'D be in tl!ere before the game Is over anyway."
"You mean you'll play?"
"Sure," said Rose, like someone who knew how the movie
was goingtoendbefore he even saw it.
"EverybOOy keeps telling me I should be tired, f&lt;r my age,"
said Rose, laughing. "I'm not tired. I mean 11. I'm not tired at
aU. When I was a kid I always ran around, on and off tl!e field .
Now I'm still enthustastic. I run flnnly to my position, but I
don 't waste nervous energy. I cooserve myself."
Pete Rose was doing the best he could to convey the Idea not
starting the game again!l the Meta didn't bother him, yet It
was obvious he was so conditioned to playing every day, be
didn't know what to do with himself.
He certainly didn't have to worry about bil .319 batting
average, which was seventh best in the league, although it
wasn't that long ago he led everyone else with .337.
"I'D be in there belore the game is over," he kept saying.
Pete Rose was rtsht.
In the etghth inning, with the Reds traiUng by one run, a man
111 first and two out, Rose was sent up to pinch hit against left:
bander Jerry Koosman. He waited for b1a pitch and hit the baD
sharply on a line to right field. It looked as if it would drop in
for a base hit but Mike Vail, tlte Mets' right-fielder, atayed with
it all the way and picked it off the grass for a fine
VaU
turned nearly completely around making the ~er and
had to hold the baD aloft in his glove to show he actually bad
caught it. And, as it turned out later, saved a 1-0 vtctory for the
Mets.
That made it 446 atraight games for Pete Rose.
When he doesn 't play, he Isn't himself.

catch.

Reds begin hom.e stand
CINCINNATI
The here this season. Game tune season, losing six of eight
longest homestand of the each night w1ll be 8 05 wtlh a games.
season, capped by a four- golf exhib1hon by Mtller
Tickets are avatlable for aU
game showdown
w1 th Barber precedmg
the games of the homestand, as
Eastern D1vis1on leader Monday game.
well as all remammg games
Phlladelphta, IS m store for
Then come the Phtls, who on the Reds' home schedule.
the Cincmnalt Reds hegm- are runmng away wtth the
mng tomght when Atlanta Eastern Div1s1on m much the
CHICAGO
(UPI)
checks m.
same way the Reds are Chicago White Sox catcher
Riverfron t Stad1um will he dommatmg the West. Game Bnan · Downing,
who
a welcome stght lor the Reds, · ltmes are 8:05 on Thursday fractured a finger on Jtily 25,
who wtll be coming off the1r and Frtday and 2 15 on has been reinstated to the
longest tnp of the season and sa turday and Sunday.
active roater.,
a h1ghly successful one at 9-4
The schedule says this IS
Dowmng injured the
In between four-game senes the Ph1ls' last v1s1t of 1976 middle linger en hts right
wi ll\ the Braves and Phlls, also, but they are expected to hand and was placed on the
the I Reds will also play return in October for the Is-day disabled !1st on July
Chicago and St L&lt;lws and Champtonslup Senes. 'lb1s 30, a club spokesman satd
enjoy some pre.game fun
Will be an important series_ Sunday.
There w1ll be one lor the Reds, who have fared
To make room for
" doubleheader" on the poorly m prev1ous meetmgs Downing, the Sox asked
schedule Saturday, w1ves of · w1th Ph1ladelph1a th1s waivers on catcher Phil Roof.
Reds players wtll be 1n acti on
m the1r annual game That
w1U begin at 6·20 p m. , pnor
to the 7 p m meetmg w1th the
Chicago Cubs, who also play
the Reds at 8·05 p.m Frtday
1251
and 2 15 next Sunday.
PawetlSt.
The lour games w1th
Mlddltport
Atlanta, runnmg Monday
PH.m·1155
through Thursday, wtll aU
begm at 8 05 Thursday w1ll
be Dayton N1ght w1th pregame acltv1ty from WHIO,
the Dayton aff1hate on the
Reds ' rad1o
network,
begmmng at 7 30
5U.JI , ....
A two-game series with St.
!.ike a good neighbor,
SIMI flfm l ilt lftlll'nt Q:lftpltir
L&lt;lws Monday (Aug. 23 ) and
Hom~ Otrlce ~ 11111011
Stall! Farm is there.
Tuesday w11l mark the last
~
appearance of the Cardinals

BILL R.£lCHER

"State Farm has LIFE insurance,
too! Call me for details~

A

THURSDAY- AUGUST 19TH

CAMDEN PARK
UNTIL 5 PM ONLY

' ...

......................
,.
...........................
0

':"NEWYOIUt(UPI) -If the·
•New York MIU can OM'balll
. 4111 Plltlltlqh Pirate• for
ilhM¥1 placa In the National
.:rAque Eut, a JINit dell ol
•'lilt! c;redlt will belonc to

' "' ~

..lltM4 . ..., . . . ,.... . , . ...,.

Yfte Ollie
tl I h; c..,.ny,
111 Cewt •••• ......,.,, ow. 411M,
llnltt... Office ...._ Mt-ttM.

............
....1..... p •

0

- ·-l\.oosman shuts out Cincinnati, 1-0

...-at«,IUIIIII olllm bu
Hf A

'

••lei,

operallona are Dol o4n
Cuyahi!S• County Prolecutar edstence at tbt pr-1
Jan. O'Mean. "We 111n Ume," ukt
only going to prol8llllte If the "I be.veno kDowlldlt olti!Y
pollee broueltt 111 any Cllll, IJiapl tqo opentlonlln 11!1
but
ao far till!)' hlven'~ If IIIII few 111111tba."
Its entOIUIIlent," said Butts.
they
brlna Iii any, we'll • Bnnm's olllle bu obtiiMd
"What we need Is for the
prolleCUtor to go in. You've proeecute them."
a CIM&amp;'I order ac-lnll..;.
mutatlan ol bbWo - a pre

operators are exceedlllc the
$3,500 prize llmlt and paying
their help, which Ia lllcal, by
''tipping.''
"No law Ia any better than

natlona repr

Mae E. McPeek to James

before the presidential balloting. And the Reagan camp
has effectively trickled out
nunors Ford either would
chose a conservative and
alienate the Northea!l or a
liberal who would be
unacceptable to tlte South.
Sears is the kind of
Republican campaign
manager who would keep
Jimmy Carter hopping this
faD.

games conducted under
notlc church DllJlel and
gro.alng mare than mlllloo
a year.
"I hive to 8llllllle they are
doq It Illegally now," said
the 1e111tor, claiming aome

Other half hits West

John Sears igood man .J-lor
• Ford~~:r::~~:1··Jl::y~

~scapees recaptured

--., - - - - - · • · -... - ·r •••

Big-time bingo operators hardly slowed at alf

We Hold These Truths ...

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)
- If President Ford beats
Ronald Reagan for the
Republican presidential
nomination, the first thing he
should do 1a go out and hire
Reagan campaign manager
John Sears f&lt;r the November
campaign.
Sears has brought what
seemed Uke a h~ess cause
after the first few primaries
to wilbin 100 delegates of
denying nominatim to an
incumbent.
Ford's own campaign
managers - Howard "Bo"
Callaway and Rogers C.B.
Morton - stiDilbled through
the prenomlnation period
with a series of gaffes
incllllllng M&lt;rton 's lllatement
that wblle tblngs weren't
going too weD: "We aren't

• .!:!""'

I

j'

EVENING RESERVED
FOR

S~COND

0

ASHLAND

"ANNUAL PICNIC"

·-

.~~ ~

'

CLOSED EVE

0

~

NATIONAL BANK

MONDAY EXCEPT LABOR DAY

,•

'•

l

�'

4-The Dally Sentfnel, Middle .ort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mooday, Aug. 16, 1976

Hassler snaps long losing streak
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
There was no c~ampagne
1alting for Andy Hassler in
i.hc Kansas City Royals '
clutmouse Sunday after he
scored his second victory for
the American League's
Western Diviston leaders.
Hassler's new teammates
are accepting one of
baseball's aUtime losers as a
winner. .
Hassler found a bottle of
champagne - compliments
of his teammates-waiting
for him at his dressing
cubicle Aug. 6 after snapping
an Ill-game losing streak
spread over two years. There
wasn't even a glass of water
SUnday but it dJdn't matter tD

Hassler.

defeated the Detroit Tigers 7·
3 and maintained th~lr seven·
game lesd over tl)e Oakland
A'' , who stretched their
!'(inning streak to nine
games. Amos OUs hit a tworun first-iMing homer and
Frank White had a pair of
RBI to lead Kansas City's 1~
hit attack.
The A's beat the Bostoo
Red Sox 1!-7, the Baltimore
Orioles ' topped the Chicago
White Sox ~. the Minnesota
Twins shaded the New York .
Yankees 9-8, the Mllwalikee
Brewers
downed · the
California Angels ~. and the
Cleveland Indians scored 6-4
and :i-o victories over tbe
Texas Rangers in other AL
games.
A's 8, Red Sox 7
The A's stretched their
!~~inning streak to nine games
. when they scored two runs In
the eighth and ninth inning~.
overcoming a 7-4 Boston lead.
Don Baylor's double scored
Bert Campaneris with two

"That champagne wll.'l a
on~e thing," said Hassler,
who has a 2.i 1 earned run
average in 46 innings since
going from the california
Angela to the Royals and is
assured of being a starter for
them the rest of the season.
"The big thing here IB that
people have confidence in
me. You know you're not just
a mop-up man."
:·we always had coofidence
. in Andy despite an those
losses," says' Manager,
Whitey Herzog. "He has a
splendid arm and we felt that
aU he needed was a change of
scenery."
Hassler allowed six hils
and all three runs in 8everi
innings as the Royals

Browns host
Minnesota
CLEVELAND (UP!) Coach Forrest Gregg of the
Cleveland Browns says you
never look past victory.
"Any time you win it's an
opportune time," he adds.
That's especially true if it's
against the Minnesota
VIkings, who face the Browns
tonight
at
Municipal
Stadium. •
Mike Phipps will start at
quarterback for the Browns,
looking for their second win
against one loss in pre-6ellson
competition - having bornbarded the Atlanta Falcons
· 31·7 Aug. 7.
.
Gregg also will use back-up
signal-caller Brian Slpe, in
his third NFL season, and
Dave Mays, who's fighting
lor a spot as the No. 3 field
general. Veteran Bob Berry
will direct Minnesota 'S
offense since Coach Bud
Grant has relegated Fran
Tarkenton to the second
string, at least temporarily,
though Tarkentoo is etpected
to perform.
"We're going ID start with
Mike and !lee what liappens,"
Gregg said " All three wiU
get a chance, though.
. "Mlnnelota is tough. It's a
·team that's been in the
playof!J seven of the past ·•
eight years. They l\1!11 have a
super football team. We
played them last year in
league play and know how
IDugh )bey are. They're sound
in all departments."
Gregg also lauded Grant,
whose club also will be
looting lor ita second
.exhibitiOn victory.
·''They have a good coach In
Bud Grant," added Gregg,
whose rugged coaching
philo10phy
has
been
pallerned-for the most
part.-..rter lhe late Vmce
l.anbardi, for wh~m Gregg
played at Green Bay. "It
sbowll by how many times
they've been in the playoffs.
''It's a very esperieneed
foothall team. Nearly aU

departments. They'll play
some young people, 'too, just
like us because they've to see
them. But just Uke us, they'll
be out to win!'
In an attempt to do.that, the
Vikings will start Willie
Spencer at running back and
rookies Sammie · White of
Grambling and Len Willis of
Ohio State at wide receivers.
Chuck Foreinan also will see
action, although he won't .
start because he reported to
camp late because of a
contract squabble.
Spencer, who played for
Toronto and Memphis in the
defunct World Football
League, carried the baU 10
times lor an average of .
slightly more than two vards
in the Vikings-Kansas City
game. He has bad knees.
"Willie has had a ·good
week of practice and he looks
more confident out there,"
Grant said. "It has not been
his injuries themselves that
are hurting him.
"It's the practice that he
has had to miss because of
them. Up unW now be just
ha.sn.'t been liP to the same
level of the rest of the team in
terms of conditioning," Grant
said of Spencer, who plafed
high school football in nearby
Masaillon.

out in the ninth Inning after
the A's tied the score on a
double by Bill North and
Campaneria' single. Dwight
Evans and Fred Lynn
homered for the Red Sox.
Orioles 3, White Sox 0
Wayne Garland oltched a
six-hitter, raising his record
w 14-3, and Lee May hit his
-21st homer lor iJie~iole~.
who deal~ Francisco Barrios
his sixth loss. It was ll'arked
the ninth straight season in
which May has hit 20 or more
homers. Bob Grich also
homered for the Orioles.
TWlDI '' Yukees 8
Rod Carew's single drove
in the winning run in the

eighth inning for the Twins as
Jim Hughes woo .his sixth
game and New York reliever
Sparky Lyle was nailed with
his seventh setback. Olrla
ChambUss hit a three-run
hoiner for the Yankees.
Brewen 5, Angdl 3
Bill Travers scored hiS 14th
victory with the relief aid of

Bill Cutro and Mike Hegan
homered for the Brewers.
CastrO came oo lifter the
Angels scored a~ their runs In
the seventh lnnins and lhut
out the Angela the rest of the
way. Gary RoiB was charged
with hiB 14th defeat.
lo•ltan• U, Rucen W
Larvell Blanks singled ID

trigger a three-run first
inning and singled ln two runs
ln the lleVetlth leading the
Indians to their triumph In
the first game. Buddy Bell's
two-run single and Jim
Bibby's lour-hit pitching
enabled the Indians to
complete the doubleheader
sweep in the nightcap.

bill reoffered
,.

!

Bengals topple
Lions, 26-14

(Md.), Rep. John Duncan
(Tem.), Rep. Albert Johnsoo
(Pa.), Rep. Stan Lundine
(NY), Rep. John Murtha
(Pa.), Rep. Carl Perkins
(Ky. ),
Rep. . Herman
Schneebeli (Pa.), and Rep.
Bud Shuster (Pa .).
Under the provistons of the
blll, ARC funds can be
combined with a state's
aUocatioo of Highway Trust
funds and State dollars in
several ways to bring. the
formula lor ARC highway
construction up to 90 percent
federal !bare and 10 percent
State share.

O'NEIU. ELECI'ED

.
PHILADELPIUA (UP!)Ohio Supreme Court Chief
Justice C. William O'Neill
was elected vice chairman of
the Conference of Chief
Justices or' the United States
Saturday,
O'Neill, who headed the
National AsSociation of
AttOCneys General and was a
member of the executive
committee of the Governor's
Conlere11ce before asslll1lin!!
his state court positioo, now
is in line wbe chairman next
year. ·.

Connors gains OCC finals

The Bengals got a slighl
scare when regular quarterback Keri Anderson got
kicked in the seat of the pant&amp;
after a Ill-yard fUll In the
second quarter, Immediately
left the game and didn't
return.
"A muacle lljjbtened up 111
him, but he's OK though,"
reported Jotm..m. ''Niillllnl
serioaa, we jlllt dlcln 'I want to
take a chance with him in 1
prHeaiOil

game.

Reserve quarterback John
Reaves replaced Anderaoa
and came tbroqb with llnl
TD pasaea a 1Siyarder IG
rookie BD!y Broob and a 1&amp;yarder to rookie Archie
Griffin.
Griffin
made
an
emhlrrasllng luln1ii8-and.
.with hll fCII'IIIII' Oblo Stata
coach Wood.J Hayea In !be .
atand1 to boot- whlcb
Detroit J'!llllde " - Hantar
picked up and r111 ::: ;'lll'dl
I

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPl Farm Editor
WASIUNGTON (UP!) Republicall and Democratic
farm campalgnen already
are making unflattering
remarks about each other'•
agricultural policies, but
their party platforms
indicate there still are 11010e
issues on "hich the warring
farm factions cloee ranks
agalnat "outside" critics.
Some farm cooperatives,
for example, have come
under !Ire ln recent )'ears
because of an alleged trend
toward mooopolistlc control
in marketing of milk and
· some fruits and vegetables.
But the draft of the
Republican platform
scheduled lor adoption this
week in Kansas City pledges
the GOP· to "reaffirm our
support of the CapperVolstead Act," the ·half.
century old law which allows
cooperatives to do business
w!thoutanti-tt'Ust prosecution
as long as they do not create
mooopolies and artiflcally
inflate prices.
The Democratic platform
went even further, although
the difference may be only
semantic. It promised flatly
to "support the Capper·
Volstead Act in its present

fonn."

Tbe
two
parties,
predictably, took sharply
different stands on issues like
farm price supports, with.the
GOP advocating Continued
use of the current system of
relatively low supports. The
Democratic platform did not
.nention specific · support
levels, bllt it talked in general
terms of asaartng fanners .a
chance to c:Over ttieir costs
plus a reasonable profit, and
party farm advisers said this
would include more increases
in supports than the GOP
favors.
In other areas, the farm
platforms differ where one
party has mentioned an issue

- ~ .LARGE

Both parties pledge to
support rural electrlflcatioo
and telephone services and ID
take steps to curb "tu loss"
farming by Investors who
seek to reduce tans on bljj.
non.farm incomes by using
special tax provisions ·
designed for farmers.

16 oz.

4 oz.

bltflcbt. I01m1lot of valuable lind. C'&amp;lllhe claim
ol it 11 a ''wife"? - MNCIIER
Dar Rancher:

lh

oz.

.

+++

Dar Helen:

It -na that 10 many famous people - financial giants,
perlorme11, ~clana. Wlulual, near.geniua types - have
retarded children. Haa anyooe ever dooe a survey · to
delermine whether or not especially talented persons are more
apt to produce mentally defective otbpring? l realize there's a
fine line between genlua and Idiocy. Maybe these people •s
genelleiiiCI'IIIIbledinreproductlon. - WONDERING (I.Q. 170)
.

Dear Won:
Ihuch a survey has been made,l'm not aware oflt.
Perhaps you IIIIIUIIIe famous near-genius types have a
blgher percentage of retarded offspring because the families
of these people are newaworthy. We bear about their children,
often because the parents are deeply Involved in mental health
work. Ordinary folk doo 't make headlines.
. WbynotdiacusathiBatyournextMENSA' meeling, Won ? I
think you'll be reafllllr'ed. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:

They say if you want to know what a woman wiU ~like 20
yelll'l hence, study her mother now. Does the same hold true of
8ona and lathers? - D. H.
·
·

Dear D.:
. Don't count on - or fear - either of these generalities.
Some people become the .direct opposites of their parents,
OChers drift back Into the same molds (even though they swear
!bey wm't!). But most take on a few family traits while
developing personalities of their own. - H.
(P.S. An encouraging note : studies say that sons of
working mothers seldom become bossy husbands, and hardly
ever Insist the wife's place Ia in the home.}

·I

Picnic honors Beat
William G. Beat of
Pomeroy was honored
•recently on his 84th birthday
with a picnic at Lake Hope.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Noel Young, Mr. and
Mrs. John Wesley Young, Mr,
and Mrs. Bruce Young,
Douglas and Kelley, Dayton;
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley YQung

.n,y

~'Y pay lor hitt 1 nouee.

II•

lodly't ..............
vatun Attl 1 Nationwide
16r dtt1ll1.

P. J. PAULEY
804 W. Mlln, Pomeroy
.·. PH: m.Ull

of the

.

I)~·
I

99

:' .

. :.,, ..

208 E. Main
l'h. H2-2586
Pomeroy, Ohio

any part

A lilreeo~~~onlhs live-In doean't conatltute a common-law
lllll'liaae. But, I suggellt you collllllt a lawyer to be absolutely
sure the Wllllln has no Ilea on you. - H.

HouM 'IIIIUH hiYe doW ltd
in the tast20 y.ara. Unliu ·
your e~raot htl dOubltd.

~

.

I

Two groups
Brad·
bQry Church of Christ par·
ticlpated in the Sunday af·
ternoon singspiration at the
Bradford Church.
They were "The New
~Creations" composed of
Chriati Stanley, Desi Jeffers,
Kevin King, Rodney Bailey,
Greg Browning, Beverly
Wilcox, Randy Haynes ,
Tanuny Stanley, Rita Bailey,
)!ryan Wilcox, accompanied
by MarUyn Wilcox; and "The
Propheta" made up of Kevin
King, Desi Jeffers, Greg
Browning, Randy Hayes and
Rocjney Bailey, accompanied
at the plano by Kevin,

...

'

Polly's Point-ers
How to recycle
I

. •t&gt;- Polly Cromer
DEAlt t'OLL't - When you
have a nylon or tricot
nightgown that is worn.out at
the top bui the bottom Is stiU
in good shape, c111 off the lllp.
Ma~e a half sUp out of the
bottom . Measure for the
desired length; attach elastic
at the top and no further
sewing is necessary . MABEL.

leftnver coke in a botUe as an
emergency cleaner to
remove the film from the car
windshield. Recently, I even
used coffee from my thermos
and it worked like a charm·..
too.
Peri dically I run aU my
soap scraps through my food
chopper. Mixed with a little
water the soap molds
together into nice bars. When
wrapPed in plastic wrap, one
would hardly guess they were
recycled. Mter such a job my
35 year old chopper is put in
to soak and with the aid of a.
kitchen brush gets a·
renovation , too. After a good
rinsing and drying it is stored
in a plastic bag . - FRIEDA.
DEAR POLLY ...,. To make
the hose on my canister type
vacuum cleaner last longer, I
have braided a yarn rope that
is just a' tilt shorter than the
hose. Tbis is attached to the
handle ·and to the end of the
hose so that I pull on the rope
rather than the hose and
when the vacuum is put awav
the rope just coils with the
hose.
Clothes that I no longer
wear are recycled into pants ,
skirts and dresses for my
daughter and patchwork
blankets can also be made
with little fuss and much
money saved. Also, in~tead of
buying individual receiving
blankets lor a new baby, one
!win size sheet blanket can be
cut to make four such
blankets . The edges have
binding sewed around or can
just be zigzag stitched on the
sewing
machine.
PATRI CIA.
Polly will send ·you one of
her " peachy" thank·you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in yo ur family
scrapbook, U she use; your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column. Write
Polly's Pointers In care of
this newspaper.

Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star were honored at
Thursday's meeting at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Honored were Grace
French, Naomi King,
Euvetta Bechtle, Genevee
DEARPOLLY - Recently,
Chesher, Farle Kennedy,
Kathy Miller, Evelyn Lewis, t used that popular ha~d soap
Marie Hawkins and MaryIn with pumice in it to clean my
Wilcox, past matrons, and stove and appliances when I
Harry Chesher and Bill King, was out of my regular
past matrons.
. cleanser . It did a wonderful
A thank-you note was read ·job that was ·better than any
fr om James Euler . Sue cleaner I have used for this. ll
.Floyd , worthy matron, and is a lot cheaper too.- VI.
DEAR POLLY - After
Harry Chesher, worthy
patron pro tern ~ . presid~ . making bread or pastry I
~a om I Klng was sunshme save aU that excess flour that
·page . Refreshments were is on the board and slllre it in
served by the Rev . and Mrs. a clean empty canister and
Robert Kuhn . Following the when I need wflour meat or
meeting a "do your own chicken before cooking I use
lhing " auction was held with this flour !hat would other·
proceeds gqing to the district wise be wasted. - JOLEEN.
association.
DEARPOLLY - Ikeeomv
?.&gt;WW ... 'WWI\\0 JJJIU ' iP: plastic wrap in
the
refrigerator . Doing this helps
il unroll more easily and cu Is
down on waste, thus sa.ving
pennies. - MRS. T.S.
DEAR POLLY - My brood
likes hoi cereals. I have found
it is a sugar saver to sweeten
· the water before I put the
MONDAY
cereal in to cook, and !here is
ME!Gs.GALLIA Chapter a uniform · sweetness
Ohio Civil Service Employes throughout.
Assn. Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
1 save all plastic produce
the Guiding Hand School in hags and always keep a
Cheshire.
folded one in rnY purse . I
·REVIVAL at the New cannotbegintoenumerateall
Haven First Church of God · the emergency uses I have
beginning Monday through found lor them.
Aug. 22, 7:30 nightly. The" When on a trip, use that
Rev. Joe Griffith of Ri timan
· will be the guest speaker.
HERE FOR VISIT
Special singing each evening.
Mrs.
Nina Bland and Mrs.
Public invited.
Bruce Ward, th~ former Neva
MIDDLEPORT Business Parsons, .of Akron, are the
and Professional Women's guests of Mrs . Pearl
Club, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Reynolds. Mrs. Ward will be
picnic at the Route 33 returning to Akron with her
Roaaside Park. Hamburger son this week.
fry and wiener roast will be
held with members to take
WEDNE'.SDA y
food enough for themselves
OLD fashioned revival ·
and their ~ families . Th~ camp meeting. Aug. 11!-29,
dessert and drinks will be ·-M:aplewood .Lake, Rt. 124,
furm shed by the hostess above Syracuse. Bible study,
In Style With
comm1ttee , In the event of 10:30 a.m .; special singing,
~From
ram, Ill&lt;\. meellng WI!) be at 6:30 p.m., with Bissell
the home o f Mrs. Alwilda Brothers , Gospel Tones,
The •
Werner, Middleport.
· Choralaires, Haven Family
ALL MEIGS High School singing; evening services,
students interested in trying 7:30 . p.m. Spe~ker . 0. G..
out for the Meigs High golf McKlnne~ Publlc lDVIted and
Middleport, o.
team meet at · 10 a. m. Mon. free parking lor campers.
day at Pomeroy Golf Course.
Take clubs and be prepared
to begin practicing that day.
POMEROY WOMEN 'S
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
Bowling Assn . meeting, •
01. " · J. ST.\fHII Dl; FWMAN MAl11
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
01 .. «. H.i CHUNG
Pomeroy Bo.wling Lanes.

Social
Calendar

and Jennifer, Xenia; Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Swart and Roma
Sue, Colu!'nbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Kirk Chevalier. and Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well, Chester,
and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Young, Wesley · and Yvette
and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beai
of Pomeroy.
:;:;:;:; ;::::::::::::::::: ::::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :; :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:~

I Family visits :·:
·:=:

::::

~·
heritage house

COU!CTJ
a: -'- 252·3181 w

TUEsDAY
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the church. Mrs. Elizabeth
Fick to have the program.
SOUTHERN Local band
~10ste rs Tuesday, 8 p.m.
following practice. Everyone .
urged to a!tend.
CHESTER Coun cil 323,
Daughters of .America, .
Tuesday night, 8 p.m .
Practice to be held lor in·
spection on. Sept. 7. All
members and officers urged
to attend the meeting.

:l
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Wvlce, Par!ials, Extractions •.

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American naturilllt John , Min.-Set., Z-4 p.m. Min.·
Burroucba llld, '"11me doea ' Fri., 7-1 p.m. Mon., Wed ..
aot beccme IICI'ed Jdll we rrt.
· PHONE 992-3331.
bave 1lwd it."
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Assorted colors
Reg . lfC

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sturdy steel kit - New snap latch
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,..----•~----·--··-· -..-·--·-·--·-·-·--·-·~·-·--·-4••.,

J

SALE STARTS MONDAY, AUGUST 1.

•

P\U! . .~

Cmdr. Gene Crooks of the
U. S. Navy, his wife Nancy,
and sons, John and Mark of
Charleston, S. C., have been
here visiting his pare11ts, ·Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Crooks,
Middleport. In the Navy for
the past 10 years, Cmdr.
Crooks is a dentist serving
aboard the U. S. Canopus . He
recently received
the
promotion to commander.
Mrs . Crooks and the
children are now visiting in
ColUmbus with her parents.
Cmdr. Crooks has returned to
South Carolina where he will
be stationed until the middle
of November when he will
sail on the Can opus for Spain .
·
.---"l,_AFF • A • DAY His family will join him there ·
in early December for his 18
~ ~-- month tour of duty.
I ·- .. . · ~btU'iJOO&amp;J~n~
.
~tPITION. 2•2• 4
I
·r"~"
"""''•• ,.,,,
BACK FROM FWRIDA
: 1 ~~~, ~L1:=~~~,,'~;·:~~~
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
l. .
" ):! ~·
Reynolds, Middleport and
n
r,
--~-.. - .. - their son and daughter-in·
}.!
fi,
law, Mr . and Mrs. Val
1 ( :~
I ,,.r-, .,
Reynolds, and children,
! "\]1 •
Gwynn , Lynn and Val,
returned Saturday night from
·--· ..- · " .... _,_.. ..
· • ··:~~- two week vacation at Pine
"Okay now, class, let's go over Island and around Fort
once more what we should do in Myers, Fla . They abo visited
the event our computer breaks. Disney World. Visiting here
down."
with the Reynolds family in
July were Mrs. Reynolds '
sister
and brother·in-law, Mr.
ATTEND MEET
and
Mrs.
0. H. O'Halloren
Mrs. Alwilda Werner,
and
son,
Mike,
of Rosemead,
ptelddent of the · Middleport
Calif.
It
was
their
first visit
Buliness and , Profe881onal
here
in
35
years.
They
abo
Women's Club, Mrs. EloiBe
Wilaon, vice president, and visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Dortha
Sals~r, Elroy Conroy of Chester, and
lleCI'etary, were in Well4tim in Lookout, W. Va. with
recently to attend the district relatives.
.,
prelddenta' meeting held at • ..,..._~~~--the Coach Houae, 1&gt;frs. Joan
·RIVERSIDE-·.MEDICAL
.. -· ~!.
Wood conducted the mee~
during which time plans were
GROUP
·~
made for the !aU meeting, the
Adl.a~t_!o
',!
y~ careerist contest, and
Vet..-ams
the 11Pf1n11 conference.
.
Mlmwlal Hospital

I

oz.

.

rve heard tblt conunon.Jaw marriages are conaidered
real mmla!l" "ln my ltate, and you have to aet legally
"untied" or you rnlghtrun Into troUble about property, etc.
11111 WUIIIIIJived ~th me for lilree montbe. She left after

'I

10~

FAN CLUB

+++

'

Jll today's prices? .

10 cr.

a

••. Andbesuretolncludeaflve-yeardiaryl -H.

reldld
··~

Prescription Drug Store

'

Chapter
meets
Thursday

How abouta combined 81ft: a weekend cruise perhaps or
a ..aon pau ID tlle bcnrllng alley?
'
'

COUftl~ ·.

of...

.n""

v..rr... ,

businesses."

~tnt

t

Dar Helen:
We have an ~·Yound friend "ho bo'lrlll twice a week
llld doll TOP eardiM.
We piiD to lh'e her a bill bub lor . her birthday ln
Past patrons and past
8lopttmber. BUt n 'rt lltampecl lbout glfti. She bu ewryth!ng
matrons
of Evangeline
1111 n.dl or Wlll!l,lllcluclq many lrlenda. Any suggestlon&amp;?

hand, leaDed for "long
overdue" pt:\ltiJ'11111 of aid ID
farm wor1i•rl In flelda
ranging, from. . ~oualn&amp; to
education, 8J!d the GOP made
no mention ol that lllue.
On subjecta Uke eatate •
taxes, however, . farm belt :
voters may qeed a party :
button to tell the Democrat&amp; •
from the Republicans. ·
•
The Democratic platform :
calls lor overhauling the :
inheritance and lift tax
structure "to alleviate 11010e
of the legal problems faced
by farm lamilles who would
otherwise be forced .to
liquidate their assets to pay
the tax.'' · ·
Tbe GOP platform got. •
more specific. It urged
passage this year of '
"Republican • 8p0naored
legislation now pending in
Coogress which will·increase '
the $60,000 estate tax .
examptioo to $200,000, aUow
valuation of filrm property oo •
a current use basis, and ·
provide lor extensloo of the ,
time of payment of estate tax
. in the case of farms and small •

fiomeount•'l fttwrance
!ron\ Nllllanwldt ll dtllC
10 prottcl1yowr home 11

.l.fl~l ....l

·By Helen Bottel

Perfect Glt for &amp;pry

Democrat&amp;, oo the other

3days only- Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday

8 oz.

Us • • •

while the other hu - !Gr Cllle
reuon or anolher - I'IGl
mentlootd ll dlnctly Ill tbe
formal platfonn.,
The GOP, lc. . eumple,
endorlld prupouli lor labor
le&amp;illaUon 4e~laned to
prevent alrlkea ln food
pr. .cuon industrlel durin&amp;
critical barvtlt perlodl. The
Democratic platform waa
silent m that subJe:ct·

youf tire inaurlhct

wllJMIMIIW&amp;, IRM.I'LU.... 11 ..CUlUQU1 , V. 1

Helen Help

farm policy plank

nighl but Was just putting the played Connors this year,
finishingtouchesoo ber finals said he wiU mix up his shots
win at that ~.
against the former Clay
"They give wimers the Courts champ bill the Pole's
next day oft," pointed out exact strategy "Ia a secret, of RADIO VET DIF.'!
U.S. Tennis Association course."
NEW YORK (UP!) -Fred
President Stan Malless.
After a tough match with Smith, who wrote the "March
~ the women's doubles Solomon , Connors didn't of Time" radio program and
finals, South Africans Linky "even want to think about it was a former dean of the
Boshoff and Ilana Kloss (the finals) until game time ." Cincinnati College
turned away American Laura
Fibak and VUas locked in a Cooservatory of Music and an
DuPont and Australian ferocious two-set match official of radio station WLW
Wendy Turnbull, 6-Z, S-3, to S.unday lor nearly three in Cincinnati, died here
hours. In the first set, Fibak Sillurday. He was 88.
take the title.
Coonors, a familiar face in -...s bebirMI four games ID one
Smith was studio director
tennis tourney finals, and but broke Vilas' serve three and announcer , for WL W
Fibak, a not'IIO.familiar face straight times while holding when it ~ in 1923. He
in that position, stwed their hill own all but ooce ID win 7.:i. traveled to'EUrope and Wrote
views on the grueling match Each player held service a syndicated column called
through regulation play in the "Broadcasting Abroad" 1111d
ahead.
"Every match is 110 tough,'' second set and Fibak won the returned to the U.S. to write
said Poland's No. I player, tiebreaker, ~ to move Into for Time magazine. He
"thai by the time you get to the finals.
originated and authored the
the finals, you're really tired.
Connors, Belleville, Ill., "March of Time" progrllm.
But I'll play my best, of jroke Solomon's serve thr~
Smith was named head of
course."
limes In the first set and held the Cincinnati College of
This II Fibak's - first his own all but once to fashioo Music in 1941 and was name4
appearance in the finals of a a &amp;-2 victory. He started out director when it merged with
major tDumament.
the second set winning the the conservatory in 1956.
"Getting to the finals is •first two games but Solomoo
what I play aU week for," lroke serve twice ·and held
said Connors. "You may beat three tlmea to take a 5-2 lead.
. llli! in the ffrllt or second Coonors turned the match
round but YOu'll have a back around by winning the
belluva time beating me in nell five games to win the set
the finals."
and the match and the right
Flbak, who hasn't yet to play Fibak in the linala.

· Special.value

not."

Warring parties do
close ranks on one

Highway funding

WASHINGTON - Rep.
Clarence
Miller
has
reintroduced his bill to alter
the funding fOMI)ula for the
Appalachian Highway
system with the supporl .of
eight co-aponsors in the
House of Representatives.
Miller's bill, whiCh would
switch the ARC highway
fcrmula from its present 71).31)
percent federal-elite level to
90-10 participation, ~ first
introduced In May. Since
then,
Miller
has
communicated with State
officials oo the impact of the
bill in Ohio and sister ARC
states, He has also Chaired a
lor a touchdown.
meeting ol House and Senate
representatives
fl'OOI the IllDetroit's ooly OCher TD
state
Appalachian
reglonl!ld
came too !ate to matter-« 4an
upcoming
ARC
yard paas from Bill M1111$01l
Governor's
meeting
whiCh
Ill rookie Lawrence Gaines
with just 11 seconds left in the. will concentrate on the new
90-10 funding proposal
game.
''The completioo of the
The Bengals got a 2'1-yard Appalachian Highway
field goal from rookie OlrlB network .is important to the
Bahr and the gift of a safety . continued growth of the
when Detroit center Ed entire region,'' Miller IOI.d his
O'Neil heaved a snap above-~ House colleagues in seeking
the head of pmter Herman support for the bill.
.
Weaver and out of the Lions
Joining in reintroducing the
end zone.
bill were Rep. Goodloe Byroo

CINCINNATI (UP!) - It
had been a dull first half of an
ezhibition football game.
Ten punts, lour fi~ld goal
attempts and a 10.0 halftime
score. Ho-lnun.
But Cincinnati rookie
Danny Reece knew how tD
liven up a dull affair.
He grabbed the second bell
kickoff away froin a
teammate and dashed 86
yards for a touchdown that
sparked the Bengals to a 26-14
win over the Detroit Lions.
And just to cap off the play
that woke up 47,289 fans
Saturday night, Reece held
the baU in an extended hand
and tantaliJingly waVed it at
the hapless Detroit defenders
as be galloped the !ina! 1o
yards.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) But Bengals head coach Pre-tourney favorite Jimmy
Bill Johnson figured that . Connors wiU trY to hold off
move was a little too exciting. the upset tid of Poland's
And dangerous.
Wojlek Fibak in the finals of
"I was enjoying !baking• the ns7,000 •U.S. Open Cay
the baU at Detroit, but I Courts tennis championship
immediately got told about oil !might.
by Johnson," chuckled Reece . Connors, the 1975 Clay
after the game. "The coach Court chimp and this year's
told me never to bold tlle baU No. 1 seed, topped No. 6 seed
out until I got Into the end Harold Sol(llloo, &amp;-2, 7-9, in
:wne."
the .aemifmal round SUnday.
Gregg · says his players'
The
rookie
from
Southern
No.
11 seed Fiball advanced
attitude in camp at Kent
Cal
alSo
was
told
a
story
to
to
the
finals by beating
State University has been
bring home the point-{! second-seeded Guillermo
good.
'
a-n•l Ken Viilas ol ArgentliiB,
·
,.,. .,.....,...
7-S, 7-'.
" Tbe guys have been · recoIIect ton ·~-t
In the w(lllen's finals, No.
working bard," relates Riley was ooce ao exci\!!d
returning
an 11 seed Kathy May became
Gregg. "I can't complain after
interception !Gr an apparent queen ol the Clay Courts by
about that.
touchdown !bat be spiked the defeating No. 10 Brigitte
"! feet like progress has baU-oo the five-yard line. CUypers 6-4, "'· G-2. May
been made. But there's The other team recovered. qualified for the finals by
always something better you , "Oh well," 'shrugged ousting top-~eeded Lesley
can do. There's always room Reece, "it was a greatleeling Hunt in the quarierfinals and
to improve. We think we'ft and l was enjoying it."
eliminating unaeeded
improved some (from last
~really shouldn't haw Fiorella Bonicelli in the
season). You bave to be fielded the kickoff because it semis.
inspired to play against Min· "!IS headed stralgh~ toward
The win, which earned the
neaota and we are."
co-;eturn man Willie Shelby ... 20-year-i!ld from Beverly
Besides scatback Greg
"II was W'dlie's baU but HUla $6,000, was the first of
Pru!U
and
Cleo
Miller,
the
from
the side I could 1ee it ber y~ pro tenn1a career.
•
&amp;owns plan tO· use rookie was dropping quickly and
May didn't em~ 11ee111 to
Mike Pruitt, their No. 1 draft figured Willie couldn't tell. So mind !bat lhe had nn-(1 her
Galia Christian School choice,inthebackfieldaloog Iranover,saidlwastaklngit lliglt to T&lt;ronto, !be next
with Larry Poole, sidelined and look oft.''
stop on the tour. She was to
•null claaes
with injuries most of last
The win was Cincinnati's have left at 6 p.m. &amp;wday
·quality educaUoa
season. (
. third straigbl pre-season
•-deiiiOIIIIIUIUaaal
victory without a lou, while
·
"~ also want to 1ee Dave Detroit suffered ita third
EdaeUlag lbe •whole cbOd Logan,"Greggsaldolh!JNo. exhibition defeat in four
to live ....ad• ally loday. 3 draft choice, a wide outings.
(Jolm 11:11)
receiver, who's expected ID
"We can't play any worse
be paired with Reggie Rucker offensively," grimaced Liona
Appllealioas aow beiag since Paul Warfield didn't head coach Rick Fonano,
accepted.
practice last week due to the noting his club made ooly one
Phoae: 441-3e41
death of his mother, who had 1st and 10 in 16 key third·
cancer.
down plays and netted only 56
offensive yards the first hall.
"Receivers dropped balls,
pass protection lroke down,
guy• ran the wrong routes
and caused the qUarterback
. to be sacked," Forzano
enumerated.
"But we're not that bad
oll-alleast, I certainly hope

-·

t-,.....

"

with Coupon
Lim II 2

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Reg. S1 .49

$
99

Wilh Coupon

Llmll2

�'

4-The Dally Sentfnel, Middle .ort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mooday, Aug. 16, 1976

Hassler snaps long losing streak
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
There was no c~ampagne
1alting for Andy Hassler in
i.hc Kansas City Royals '
clutmouse Sunday after he
scored his second victory for
the American League's
Western Diviston leaders.
Hassler's new teammates
are accepting one of
baseball's aUtime losers as a
winner. .
Hassler found a bottle of
champagne - compliments
of his teammates-waiting
for him at his dressing
cubicle Aug. 6 after snapping
an Ill-game losing streak
spread over two years. There
wasn't even a glass of water
SUnday but it dJdn't matter tD

Hassler.

defeated the Detroit Tigers 7·
3 and maintained th~lr seven·
game lesd over tl)e Oakland
A'' , who stretched their
!'(inning streak to nine
games. Amos OUs hit a tworun first-iMing homer and
Frank White had a pair of
RBI to lead Kansas City's 1~
hit attack.
The A's beat the Bostoo
Red Sox 1!-7, the Baltimore
Orioles ' topped the Chicago
White Sox ~. the Minnesota
Twins shaded the New York .
Yankees 9-8, the Mllwalikee
Brewers
downed · the
California Angels ~. and the
Cleveland Indians scored 6-4
and :i-o victories over tbe
Texas Rangers in other AL
games.
A's 8, Red Sox 7
The A's stretched their
!~~inning streak to nine games
. when they scored two runs In
the eighth and ninth inning~.
overcoming a 7-4 Boston lead.
Don Baylor's double scored
Bert Campaneris with two

"That champagne wll.'l a
on~e thing," said Hassler,
who has a 2.i 1 earned run
average in 46 innings since
going from the california
Angela to the Royals and is
assured of being a starter for
them the rest of the season.
"The big thing here IB that
people have confidence in
me. You know you're not just
a mop-up man."
:·we always had coofidence
. in Andy despite an those
losses," says' Manager,
Whitey Herzog. "He has a
splendid arm and we felt that
aU he needed was a change of
scenery."
Hassler allowed six hils
and all three runs in 8everi
innings as the Royals

Browns host
Minnesota
CLEVELAND (UP!) Coach Forrest Gregg of the
Cleveland Browns says you
never look past victory.
"Any time you win it's an
opportune time," he adds.
That's especially true if it's
against the Minnesota
VIkings, who face the Browns
tonight
at
Municipal
Stadium. •
Mike Phipps will start at
quarterback for the Browns,
looking for their second win
against one loss in pre-6ellson
competition - having bornbarded the Atlanta Falcons
· 31·7 Aug. 7.
.
Gregg also will use back-up
signal-caller Brian Slpe, in
his third NFL season, and
Dave Mays, who's fighting
lor a spot as the No. 3 field
general. Veteran Bob Berry
will direct Minnesota 'S
offense since Coach Bud
Grant has relegated Fran
Tarkenton to the second
string, at least temporarily,
though Tarkentoo is etpected
to perform.
"We're going ID start with
Mike and !lee what liappens,"
Gregg said " All three wiU
get a chance, though.
. "Mlnnelota is tough. It's a
·team that's been in the
playof!J seven of the past ·•
eight years. They l\1!11 have a
super football team. We
played them last year in
league play and know how
IDugh )bey are. They're sound
in all departments."
Gregg also lauded Grant,
whose club also will be
looting lor ita second
.exhibitiOn victory.
·''They have a good coach In
Bud Grant," added Gregg,
whose rugged coaching
philo10phy
has
been
pallerned-for the most
part.-..rter lhe late Vmce
l.anbardi, for wh~m Gregg
played at Green Bay. "It
sbowll by how many times
they've been in the playoffs.
''It's a very esperieneed
foothall team. Nearly aU

departments. They'll play
some young people, 'too, just
like us because they've to see
them. But just Uke us, they'll
be out to win!'
In an attempt to do.that, the
Vikings will start Willie
Spencer at running back and
rookies Sammie · White of
Grambling and Len Willis of
Ohio State at wide receivers.
Chuck Foreinan also will see
action, although he won't .
start because he reported to
camp late because of a
contract squabble.
Spencer, who played for
Toronto and Memphis in the
defunct World Football
League, carried the baU 10
times lor an average of .
slightly more than two vards
in the Vikings-Kansas City
game. He has bad knees.
"Willie has had a ·good
week of practice and he looks
more confident out there,"
Grant said. "It has not been
his injuries themselves that
are hurting him.
"It's the practice that he
has had to miss because of
them. Up unW now be just
ha.sn.'t been liP to the same
level of the rest of the team in
terms of conditioning," Grant
said of Spencer, who plafed
high school football in nearby
Masaillon.

out in the ninth Inning after
the A's tied the score on a
double by Bill North and
Campaneria' single. Dwight
Evans and Fred Lynn
homered for the Red Sox.
Orioles 3, White Sox 0
Wayne Garland oltched a
six-hitter, raising his record
w 14-3, and Lee May hit his
-21st homer lor iJie~iole~.
who deal~ Francisco Barrios
his sixth loss. It was ll'arked
the ninth straight season in
which May has hit 20 or more
homers. Bob Grich also
homered for the Orioles.
TWlDI '' Yukees 8
Rod Carew's single drove
in the winning run in the

eighth inning for the Twins as
Jim Hughes woo .his sixth
game and New York reliever
Sparky Lyle was nailed with
his seventh setback. Olrla
ChambUss hit a three-run
hoiner for the Yankees.
Brewen 5, Angdl 3
Bill Travers scored hiS 14th
victory with the relief aid of

Bill Cutro and Mike Hegan
homered for the Brewers.
CastrO came oo lifter the
Angels scored a~ their runs In
the seventh lnnins and lhut
out the Angela the rest of the
way. Gary RoiB was charged
with hiB 14th defeat.
lo•ltan• U, Rucen W
Larvell Blanks singled ID

trigger a three-run first
inning and singled ln two runs
ln the lleVetlth leading the
Indians to their triumph In
the first game. Buddy Bell's
two-run single and Jim
Bibby's lour-hit pitching
enabled the Indians to
complete the doubleheader
sweep in the nightcap.

bill reoffered
,.

!

Bengals topple
Lions, 26-14

(Md.), Rep. John Duncan
(Tem.), Rep. Albert Johnsoo
(Pa.), Rep. Stan Lundine
(NY), Rep. John Murtha
(Pa.), Rep. Carl Perkins
(Ky. ),
Rep. . Herman
Schneebeli (Pa.), and Rep.
Bud Shuster (Pa .).
Under the provistons of the
blll, ARC funds can be
combined with a state's
aUocatioo of Highway Trust
funds and State dollars in
several ways to bring. the
formula lor ARC highway
construction up to 90 percent
federal !bare and 10 percent
State share.

O'NEIU. ELECI'ED

.
PHILADELPIUA (UP!)Ohio Supreme Court Chief
Justice C. William O'Neill
was elected vice chairman of
the Conference of Chief
Justices or' the United States
Saturday,
O'Neill, who headed the
National AsSociation of
AttOCneys General and was a
member of the executive
committee of the Governor's
Conlere11ce before asslll1lin!!
his state court positioo, now
is in line wbe chairman next
year. ·.

Connors gains OCC finals

The Bengals got a slighl
scare when regular quarterback Keri Anderson got
kicked in the seat of the pant&amp;
after a Ill-yard fUll In the
second quarter, Immediately
left the game and didn't
return.
"A muacle lljjbtened up 111
him, but he's OK though,"
reported Jotm..m. ''Niillllnl
serioaa, we jlllt dlcln 'I want to
take a chance with him in 1
prHeaiOil

game.

Reserve quarterback John
Reaves replaced Anderaoa
and came tbroqb with llnl
TD pasaea a 1Siyarder IG
rookie BD!y Broob and a 1&amp;yarder to rookie Archie
Griffin.
Griffin
made
an
emhlrrasllng luln1ii8-and.
.with hll fCII'IIIII' Oblo Stata
coach Wood.J Hayea In !be .
atand1 to boot- whlcb
Detroit J'!llllde " - Hantar
picked up and r111 ::: ;'lll'dl
I

By BERNARD BRENNER
UPl Farm Editor
WASIUNGTON (UP!) Republicall and Democratic
farm campalgnen already
are making unflattering
remarks about each other'•
agricultural policies, but
their party platforms
indicate there still are 11010e
issues on "hich the warring
farm factions cloee ranks
agalnat "outside" critics.
Some farm cooperatives,
for example, have come
under !Ire ln recent )'ears
because of an alleged trend
toward mooopolistlc control
in marketing of milk and
· some fruits and vegetables.
But the draft of the
Republican platform
scheduled lor adoption this
week in Kansas City pledges
the GOP· to "reaffirm our
support of the CapperVolstead Act," the ·half.
century old law which allows
cooperatives to do business
w!thoutanti-tt'Ust prosecution
as long as they do not create
mooopolies and artiflcally
inflate prices.
The Democratic platform
went even further, although
the difference may be only
semantic. It promised flatly
to "support the Capper·
Volstead Act in its present

fonn."

Tbe
two
parties,
predictably, took sharply
different stands on issues like
farm price supports, with.the
GOP advocating Continued
use of the current system of
relatively low supports. The
Democratic platform did not
.nention specific · support
levels, bllt it talked in general
terms of asaartng fanners .a
chance to c:Over ttieir costs
plus a reasonable profit, and
party farm advisers said this
would include more increases
in supports than the GOP
favors.
In other areas, the farm
platforms differ where one
party has mentioned an issue

- ~ .LARGE

Both parties pledge to
support rural electrlflcatioo
and telephone services and ID
take steps to curb "tu loss"
farming by Investors who
seek to reduce tans on bljj.
non.farm incomes by using
special tax provisions ·
designed for farmers.

16 oz.

4 oz.

bltflcbt. I01m1lot of valuable lind. C'&amp;lllhe claim
ol it 11 a ''wife"? - MNCIIER
Dar Rancher:

lh

oz.

.

+++

Dar Helen:

It -na that 10 many famous people - financial giants,
perlorme11, ~clana. Wlulual, near.geniua types - have
retarded children. Haa anyooe ever dooe a survey · to
delermine whether or not especially talented persons are more
apt to produce mentally defective otbpring? l realize there's a
fine line between genlua and Idiocy. Maybe these people •s
genelleiiiCI'IIIIbledinreproductlon. - WONDERING (I.Q. 170)
.

Dear Won:
Ihuch a survey has been made,l'm not aware oflt.
Perhaps you IIIIIUIIIe famous near-genius types have a
blgher percentage of retarded offspring because the families
of these people are newaworthy. We bear about their children,
often because the parents are deeply Involved in mental health
work. Ordinary folk doo 't make headlines.
. WbynotdiacusathiBatyournextMENSA' meeling, Won ? I
think you'll be reafllllr'ed. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:

They say if you want to know what a woman wiU ~like 20
yelll'l hence, study her mother now. Does the same hold true of
8ona and lathers? - D. H.
·
·

Dear D.:
. Don't count on - or fear - either of these generalities.
Some people become the .direct opposites of their parents,
OChers drift back Into the same molds (even though they swear
!bey wm't!). But most take on a few family traits while
developing personalities of their own. - H.
(P.S. An encouraging note : studies say that sons of
working mothers seldom become bossy husbands, and hardly
ever Insist the wife's place Ia in the home.}

·I

Picnic honors Beat
William G. Beat of
Pomeroy was honored
•recently on his 84th birthday
with a picnic at Lake Hope.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Noel Young, Mr. and
Mrs. John Wesley Young, Mr,
and Mrs. Bruce Young,
Douglas and Kelley, Dayton;
Mr. and Mrs. Bradley YQung

.n,y

~'Y pay lor hitt 1 nouee.

II•

lodly't ..............
vatun Attl 1 Nationwide
16r dtt1ll1.

P. J. PAULEY
804 W. Mlln, Pomeroy
.·. PH: m.Ull

of the

.

I)~·
I

99

:' .

. :.,, ..

208 E. Main
l'h. H2-2586
Pomeroy, Ohio

any part

A lilreeo~~~onlhs live-In doean't conatltute a common-law
lllll'liaae. But, I suggellt you collllllt a lawyer to be absolutely
sure the Wllllln has no Ilea on you. - H.

HouM 'IIIIUH hiYe doW ltd
in the tast20 y.ara. Unliu ·
your e~raot htl dOubltd.

~

.

I

Two groups
Brad·
bQry Church of Christ par·
ticlpated in the Sunday af·
ternoon singspiration at the
Bradford Church.
They were "The New
~Creations" composed of
Chriati Stanley, Desi Jeffers,
Kevin King, Rodney Bailey,
Greg Browning, Beverly
Wilcox, Randy Haynes ,
Tanuny Stanley, Rita Bailey,
)!ryan Wilcox, accompanied
by MarUyn Wilcox; and "The
Propheta" made up of Kevin
King, Desi Jeffers, Greg
Browning, Randy Hayes and
Rocjney Bailey, accompanied
at the plano by Kevin,

...

'

Polly's Point-ers
How to recycle
I

. •t&gt;- Polly Cromer
DEAlt t'OLL't - When you
have a nylon or tricot
nightgown that is worn.out at
the top bui the bottom Is stiU
in good shape, c111 off the lllp.
Ma~e a half sUp out of the
bottom . Measure for the
desired length; attach elastic
at the top and no further
sewing is necessary . MABEL.

leftnver coke in a botUe as an
emergency cleaner to
remove the film from the car
windshield. Recently, I even
used coffee from my thermos
and it worked like a charm·..
too.
Peri dically I run aU my
soap scraps through my food
chopper. Mixed with a little
water the soap molds
together into nice bars. When
wrapPed in plastic wrap, one
would hardly guess they were
recycled. Mter such a job my
35 year old chopper is put in
to soak and with the aid of a.
kitchen brush gets a·
renovation , too. After a good
rinsing and drying it is stored
in a plastic bag . - FRIEDA.
DEAR POLLY ...,. To make
the hose on my canister type
vacuum cleaner last longer, I
have braided a yarn rope that
is just a' tilt shorter than the
hose. Tbis is attached to the
handle ·and to the end of the
hose so that I pull on the rope
rather than the hose and
when the vacuum is put awav
the rope just coils with the
hose.
Clothes that I no longer
wear are recycled into pants ,
skirts and dresses for my
daughter and patchwork
blankets can also be made
with little fuss and much
money saved. Also, in~tead of
buying individual receiving
blankets lor a new baby, one
!win size sheet blanket can be
cut to make four such
blankets . The edges have
binding sewed around or can
just be zigzag stitched on the
sewing
machine.
PATRI CIA.
Polly will send ·you one of
her " peachy" thank·you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in yo ur family
scrapbook, U she use; your
favorite Pointer, Peeve or
Problem in her column. Write
Polly's Pointers In care of
this newspaper.

Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star were honored at
Thursday's meeting at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Honored were Grace
French, Naomi King,
Euvetta Bechtle, Genevee
DEARPOLLY - Recently,
Chesher, Farle Kennedy,
Kathy Miller, Evelyn Lewis, t used that popular ha~d soap
Marie Hawkins and MaryIn with pumice in it to clean my
Wilcox, past matrons, and stove and appliances when I
Harry Chesher and Bill King, was out of my regular
past matrons.
. cleanser . It did a wonderful
A thank-you note was read ·job that was ·better than any
fr om James Euler . Sue cleaner I have used for this. ll
.Floyd , worthy matron, and is a lot cheaper too.- VI.
DEAR POLLY - After
Harry Chesher, worthy
patron pro tern ~ . presid~ . making bread or pastry I
~a om I Klng was sunshme save aU that excess flour that
·page . Refreshments were is on the board and slllre it in
served by the Rev . and Mrs. a clean empty canister and
Robert Kuhn . Following the when I need wflour meat or
meeting a "do your own chicken before cooking I use
lhing " auction was held with this flour !hat would other·
proceeds gqing to the district wise be wasted. - JOLEEN.
association.
DEARPOLLY - Ikeeomv
?.&gt;WW ... 'WWI\\0 JJJIU ' iP: plastic wrap in
the
refrigerator . Doing this helps
il unroll more easily and cu Is
down on waste, thus sa.ving
pennies. - MRS. T.S.
DEAR POLLY - My brood
likes hoi cereals. I have found
it is a sugar saver to sweeten
· the water before I put the
MONDAY
cereal in to cook, and !here is
ME!Gs.GALLIA Chapter a uniform · sweetness
Ohio Civil Service Employes throughout.
Assn. Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
1 save all plastic produce
the Guiding Hand School in hags and always keep a
Cheshire.
folded one in rnY purse . I
·REVIVAL at the New cannotbegintoenumerateall
Haven First Church of God · the emergency uses I have
beginning Monday through found lor them.
Aug. 22, 7:30 nightly. The" When on a trip, use that
Rev. Joe Griffith of Ri timan
· will be the guest speaker.
HERE FOR VISIT
Special singing each evening.
Mrs.
Nina Bland and Mrs.
Public invited.
Bruce Ward, th~ former Neva
MIDDLEPORT Business Parsons, .of Akron, are the
and Professional Women's guests of Mrs . Pearl
Club, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Reynolds. Mrs. Ward will be
picnic at the Route 33 returning to Akron with her
Roaaside Park. Hamburger son this week.
fry and wiener roast will be
held with members to take
WEDNE'.SDA y
food enough for themselves
OLD fashioned revival ·
and their ~ families . Th~ camp meeting. Aug. 11!-29,
dessert and drinks will be ·-M:aplewood .Lake, Rt. 124,
furm shed by the hostess above Syracuse. Bible study,
In Style With
comm1ttee , In the event of 10:30 a.m .; special singing,
~From
ram, Ill&lt;\. meellng WI!) be at 6:30 p.m., with Bissell
the home o f Mrs. Alwilda Brothers , Gospel Tones,
The •
Werner, Middleport.
· Choralaires, Haven Family
ALL MEIGS High School singing; evening services,
students interested in trying 7:30 . p.m. Spe~ker . 0. G..
out for the Meigs High golf McKlnne~ Publlc lDVIted and
Middleport, o.
team meet at · 10 a. m. Mon. free parking lor campers.
day at Pomeroy Golf Course.
Take clubs and be prepared
to begin practicing that day.
POMEROY WOMEN 'S
DR. RONALD F. RIVIERE
Bowling Assn . meeting, •
01. " · J. ST.\fHII Dl; FWMAN MAl11
Monday, 7:30 p.m. at
01 .. «. H.i CHUNG
Pomeroy Bo.wling Lanes.

Social
Calendar

and Jennifer, Xenia; Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Swart and Roma
Sue, Colu!'nbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Kirk Chevalier. and Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Well, Chester,
and Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Young, Wesley · and Yvette
and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beai
of Pomeroy.
:;:;:;:; ;::::::::::::::::: ::::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :; :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::;:~

I Family visits :·:
·:=:

::::

~·
heritage house

COU!CTJ
a: -'- 252·3181 w

TUEsDAY
FRIENDLY Circle, Trinity
Church, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at the church. Mrs. Elizabeth
Fick to have the program.
SOUTHERN Local band
~10ste rs Tuesday, 8 p.m.
following practice. Everyone .
urged to a!tend.
CHESTER Coun cil 323,
Daughters of .America, .
Tuesday night, 8 p.m .
Practice to be held lor in·
spection on. Sept. 7. All
members and officers urged
to attend the meeting.

:l
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American naturilllt John , Min.-Set., Z-4 p.m. Min.·
Burroucba llld, '"11me doea ' Fri., 7-1 p.m. Mon., Wed ..
aot beccme IICI'ed Jdll we rrt.
· PHONE 992-3331.
bave 1lwd it."
I,

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79$ With Coupon
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Reg. $14.99

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KNEE HI HOSE

Top Scholar THEME BOOK

For wear with pants. pantsuits,
spgrtswear and midi and maxi.
Reg. 69c

so sheets

4/$100 With Coupon
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Shetland .1000 WATT

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STYLING DRYER

. 60-pack
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- 4 temperature settings

-Concentrator for spot drying

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89$

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3 or. Shari

COMB/BRUSH/MIRROR SET

CANDY tiGARETIES

· 6ge ·

- Assorted sizes and colors
- In plastic travel bag

Reg. 11 •49

$199 With ·coupon
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Kleenex

THERMOS

LllTLE TRAVELER TISSUES

4
Compact and convenient fo r us'e
anywhe r e

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17~

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J.l

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oz.

Boullque

25$

PLASTIC HANGERS
As5o,ted colors

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Limit2

·

Reg . 19C

10/$100Wil~
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CRYSTAL PEN

VENUS PENCILS

- Instant drying, -smoother writing
- Pre.tested stainless steel bal l
.- IO·pack
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$

Reg . S2.50

12·paCk

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Black

&amp;

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8 01 .

Fantastik SPRAY CLEANER
Cleans most washable surfilces

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99

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Top Scholar

TUCK CELLOPHANE TAPE

MEMO BOOK

1f2 " x soo inches

- 100 S ht!eTS

19

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~

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STENO BOOK
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19

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79

e With Coupon
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.

~1!!1· .79C

SOFA,

GYM BAG
~turdy

59

$

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· ,

$

19

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POCKET FOLIO
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and waterprool

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Middleport, 0.

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Batteries not includeQ

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4tell FlASHLIGHT

GARY'S PEANUTS

INGELS FUR'NITURE .

- 3" )( 5"

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AND CHAIR
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sturdy steel kit - New snap latch
--~
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R. A. AVERION, M.D.
A. G. SOLA, M.D.
JOHN RIDGWAY, D.O.
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FOR PIIJCU. CW.

[

,..----•~----·--··-· -..-·--·-·--·-·-·--·-·~·-·--·-4••.,

J

SALE STARTS MONDAY, AUGUST 1.

•

P\U! . .~

Cmdr. Gene Crooks of the
U. S. Navy, his wife Nancy,
and sons, John and Mark of
Charleston, S. C., have been
here visiting his pare11ts, ·Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Crooks,
Middleport. In the Navy for
the past 10 years, Cmdr.
Crooks is a dentist serving
aboard the U. S. Canopus . He
recently received
the
promotion to commander.
Mrs . Crooks and the
children are now visiting in
ColUmbus with her parents.
Cmdr. Crooks has returned to
South Carolina where he will
be stationed until the middle
of November when he will
sail on the Can opus for Spain .
·
.---"l,_AFF • A • DAY His family will join him there ·
in early December for his 18
~ ~-- month tour of duty.
I ·- .. . · ~btU'iJOO&amp;J~n~
.
~tPITION. 2•2• 4
I
·r"~"
"""''•• ,.,,,
BACK FROM FWRIDA
: 1 ~~~, ~L1:=~~~,,'~;·:~~~
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
l. .
" ):! ~·
Reynolds, Middleport and
n
r,
--~-.. - .. - their son and daughter-in·
}.!
fi,
law, Mr . and Mrs. Val
1 ( :~
I ,,.r-, .,
Reynolds, and children,
! "\]1 •
Gwynn , Lynn and Val,
returned Saturday night from
·--· ..- · " .... _,_.. ..
· • ··:~~- two week vacation at Pine
"Okay now, class, let's go over Island and around Fort
once more what we should do in Myers, Fla . They abo visited
the event our computer breaks. Disney World. Visiting here
down."
with the Reynolds family in
July were Mrs. Reynolds '
sister
and brother·in-law, Mr.
ATTEND MEET
and
Mrs.
0. H. O'Halloren
Mrs. Alwilda Werner,
and
son,
Mike,
of Rosemead,
ptelddent of the · Middleport
Calif.
It
was
their
first visit
Buliness and , Profe881onal
here
in
35
years.
They
abo
Women's Club, Mrs. EloiBe
Wilaon, vice president, and visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.
Dortha
Sals~r, Elroy Conroy of Chester, and
lleCI'etary, were in Well4tim in Lookout, W. Va. with
recently to attend the district relatives.
.,
prelddenta' meeting held at • ..,..._~~~--the Coach Houae, 1&gt;frs. Joan
·RIVERSIDE-·.MEDICAL
.. -· ~!.
Wood conducted the mee~
during which time plans were
GROUP
·~
made for the !aU meeting, the
Adl.a~t_!o
',!
y~ careerist contest, and
Vet..-ams
the 11Pf1n11 conference.
.
Mlmwlal Hospital

I

oz.

.

rve heard tblt conunon.Jaw marriages are conaidered
real mmla!l" "ln my ltate, and you have to aet legally
"untied" or you rnlghtrun Into troUble about property, etc.
11111 WUIIIIIJived ~th me for lilree montbe. She left after

'I

10~

FAN CLUB

+++

'

Jll today's prices? .

10 cr.

a

••. Andbesuretolncludeaflve-yeardiaryl -H.

reldld
··~

Prescription Drug Store

'

Chapter
meets
Thursday

How abouta combined 81ft: a weekend cruise perhaps or
a ..aon pau ID tlle bcnrllng alley?
'
'

COUftl~ ·.

of...

.n""

v..rr... ,

businesses."

~tnt

t

Dar Helen:
We have an ~·Yound friend "ho bo'lrlll twice a week
llld doll TOP eardiM.
We piiD to lh'e her a bill bub lor . her birthday ln
Past patrons and past
8lopttmber. BUt n 'rt lltampecl lbout glfti. She bu ewryth!ng
matrons
of Evangeline
1111 n.dl or Wlll!l,lllcluclq many lrlenda. Any suggestlon&amp;?

hand, leaDed for "long
overdue" pt:\ltiJ'11111 of aid ID
farm wor1i•rl In flelda
ranging, from. . ~oualn&amp; to
education, 8J!d the GOP made
no mention ol that lllue.
On subjecta Uke eatate •
taxes, however, . farm belt :
voters may qeed a party :
button to tell the Democrat&amp; •
from the Republicans. ·
•
The Democratic platform :
calls lor overhauling the :
inheritance and lift tax
structure "to alleviate 11010e
of the legal problems faced
by farm lamilles who would
otherwise be forced .to
liquidate their assets to pay
the tax.'' · ·
Tbe GOP platform got. •
more specific. It urged
passage this year of '
"Republican • 8p0naored
legislation now pending in
Coogress which will·increase '
the $60,000 estate tax .
examptioo to $200,000, aUow
valuation of filrm property oo •
a current use basis, and ·
provide lor extensloo of the ,
time of payment of estate tax
. in the case of farms and small •

fiomeount•'l fttwrance
!ron\ Nllllanwldt ll dtllC
10 prottcl1yowr home 11

.l.fl~l ....l

·By Helen Bottel

Perfect Glt for &amp;pry

Democrat&amp;, oo the other

3days only- Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday

8 oz.

Us • • •

while the other hu - !Gr Cllle
reuon or anolher - I'IGl
mentlootd ll dlnctly Ill tbe
formal platfonn.,
The GOP, lc. . eumple,
endorlld prupouli lor labor
le&amp;illaUon 4e~laned to
prevent alrlkea ln food
pr. .cuon industrlel durin&amp;
critical barvtlt perlodl. The
Democratic platform waa
silent m that subJe:ct·

youf tire inaurlhct

wllJMIMIIW&amp;, IRM.I'LU.... 11 ..CUlUQU1 , V. 1

Helen Help

farm policy plank

nighl but Was just putting the played Connors this year,
finishingtouchesoo ber finals said he wiU mix up his shots
win at that ~.
against the former Clay
"They give wimers the Courts champ bill the Pole's
next day oft," pointed out exact strategy "Ia a secret, of RADIO VET DIF.'!
U.S. Tennis Association course."
NEW YORK (UP!) -Fred
President Stan Malless.
After a tough match with Smith, who wrote the "March
~ the women's doubles Solomon , Connors didn't of Time" radio program and
finals, South Africans Linky "even want to think about it was a former dean of the
Boshoff and Ilana Kloss (the finals) until game time ." Cincinnati College
turned away American Laura
Fibak and VUas locked in a Cooservatory of Music and an
DuPont and Australian ferocious two-set match official of radio station WLW
Wendy Turnbull, 6-Z, S-3, to S.unday lor nearly three in Cincinnati, died here
hours. In the first set, Fibak Sillurday. He was 88.
take the title.
Coonors, a familiar face in -...s bebirMI four games ID one
Smith was studio director
tennis tourney finals, and but broke Vilas' serve three and announcer , for WL W
Fibak, a not'IIO.familiar face straight times while holding when it ~ in 1923. He
in that position, stwed their hill own all but ooce ID win 7.:i. traveled to'EUrope and Wrote
views on the grueling match Each player held service a syndicated column called
through regulation play in the "Broadcasting Abroad" 1111d
ahead.
"Every match is 110 tough,'' second set and Fibak won the returned to the U.S. to write
said Poland's No. I player, tiebreaker, ~ to move Into for Time magazine. He
"thai by the time you get to the finals.
originated and authored the
the finals, you're really tired.
Connors, Belleville, Ill., "March of Time" progrllm.
But I'll play my best, of jroke Solomon's serve thr~
Smith was named head of
course."
limes In the first set and held the Cincinnati College of
This II Fibak's - first his own all but once to fashioo Music in 1941 and was name4
appearance in the finals of a a &amp;-2 victory. He started out director when it merged with
major tDumament.
the second set winning the the conservatory in 1956.
"Getting to the finals is •first two games but Solomoo
what I play aU week for," lroke serve twice ·and held
said Connors. "You may beat three tlmea to take a 5-2 lead.
. llli! in the ffrllt or second Coonors turned the match
round but YOu'll have a back around by winning the
belluva time beating me in nell five games to win the set
the finals."
and the match and the right
Flbak, who hasn't yet to play Fibak in the linala.

· Special.value

not."

Warring parties do
close ranks on one

Highway funding

WASHINGTON - Rep.
Clarence
Miller
has
reintroduced his bill to alter
the funding fOMI)ula for the
Appalachian Highway
system with the supporl .of
eight co-aponsors in the
House of Representatives.
Miller's bill, whiCh would
switch the ARC highway
fcrmula from its present 71).31)
percent federal-elite level to
90-10 participation, ~ first
introduced In May. Since
then,
Miller
has
communicated with State
officials oo the impact of the
bill in Ohio and sister ARC
states, He has also Chaired a
lor a touchdown.
meeting ol House and Senate
representatives
fl'OOI the IllDetroit's ooly OCher TD
state
Appalachian
reglonl!ld
came too !ate to matter-« 4an
upcoming
ARC
yard paas from Bill M1111$01l
Governor's
meeting
whiCh
Ill rookie Lawrence Gaines
with just 11 seconds left in the. will concentrate on the new
90-10 funding proposal
game.
''The completioo of the
The Bengals got a 2'1-yard Appalachian Highway
field goal from rookie OlrlB network .is important to the
Bahr and the gift of a safety . continued growth of the
when Detroit center Ed entire region,'' Miller IOI.d his
O'Neil heaved a snap above-~ House colleagues in seeking
the head of pmter Herman support for the bill.
.
Weaver and out of the Lions
Joining in reintroducing the
end zone.
bill were Rep. Goodloe Byroo

CINCINNATI (UP!) - It
had been a dull first half of an
ezhibition football game.
Ten punts, lour fi~ld goal
attempts and a 10.0 halftime
score. Ho-lnun.
But Cincinnati rookie
Danny Reece knew how tD
liven up a dull affair.
He grabbed the second bell
kickoff away froin a
teammate and dashed 86
yards for a touchdown that
sparked the Bengals to a 26-14
win over the Detroit Lions.
And just to cap off the play
that woke up 47,289 fans
Saturday night, Reece held
the baU in an extended hand
and tantaliJingly waVed it at
the hapless Detroit defenders
as be galloped the !ina! 1o
yards.
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) But Bengals head coach Pre-tourney favorite Jimmy
Bill Johnson figured that . Connors wiU trY to hold off
move was a little too exciting. the upset tid of Poland's
And dangerous.
Wojlek Fibak in the finals of
"I was enjoying !baking• the ns7,000 •U.S. Open Cay
the baU at Detroit, but I Courts tennis championship
immediately got told about oil !might.
by Johnson," chuckled Reece . Connors, the 1975 Clay
after the game. "The coach Court chimp and this year's
told me never to bold tlle baU No. 1 seed, topped No. 6 seed
out until I got Into the end Harold Sol(llloo, &amp;-2, 7-9, in
:wne."
the .aemifmal round SUnday.
Gregg · says his players'
The
rookie
from
Southern
No.
11 seed Fiball advanced
attitude in camp at Kent
Cal
alSo
was
told
a
story
to
to
the
finals by beating
State University has been
bring home the point-{! second-seeded Guillermo
good.
'
a-n•l Ken Viilas ol ArgentliiB,
·
,.,. .,.....,...
7-S, 7-'.
" Tbe guys have been · recoIIect ton ·~-t
In the w(lllen's finals, No.
working bard," relates Riley was ooce ao exci\!!d
returning
an 11 seed Kathy May became
Gregg. "I can't complain after
interception !Gr an apparent queen ol the Clay Courts by
about that.
touchdown !bat be spiked the defeating No. 10 Brigitte
"! feet like progress has baU-oo the five-yard line. CUypers 6-4, "'· G-2. May
been made. But there's The other team recovered. qualified for the finals by
always something better you , "Oh well," 'shrugged ousting top-~eeded Lesley
can do. There's always room Reece, "it was a greatleeling Hunt in the quarierfinals and
to improve. We think we'ft and l was enjoying it."
eliminating unaeeded
improved some (from last
~really shouldn't haw Fiorella Bonicelli in the
season). You bave to be fielded the kickoff because it semis.
inspired to play against Min· "!IS headed stralgh~ toward
The win, which earned the
neaota and we are."
co-;eturn man Willie Shelby ... 20-year-i!ld from Beverly
Besides scatback Greg
"II was W'dlie's baU but HUla $6,000, was the first of
Pru!U
and
Cleo
Miller,
the
from
the side I could 1ee it ber y~ pro tenn1a career.
•
&amp;owns plan tO· use rookie was dropping quickly and
May didn't em~ 11ee111 to
Mike Pruitt, their No. 1 draft figured Willie couldn't tell. So mind !bat lhe had nn-(1 her
Galia Christian School choice,inthebackfieldaloog Iranover,saidlwastaklngit lliglt to T&lt;ronto, !be next
with Larry Poole, sidelined and look oft.''
stop on the tour. She was to
•null claaes
with injuries most of last
The win was Cincinnati's have left at 6 p.m. &amp;wday
·quality educaUoa
season. (
. third straigbl pre-season
•-deiiiOIIIIIUIUaaal
victory without a lou, while
·
"~ also want to 1ee Dave Detroit suffered ita third
EdaeUlag lbe •whole cbOd Logan,"Greggsaldolh!JNo. exhibition defeat in four
to live ....ad• ally loday. 3 draft choice, a wide outings.
(Jolm 11:11)
receiver, who's expected ID
"We can't play any worse
be paired with Reggie Rucker offensively," grimaced Liona
Appllealioas aow beiag since Paul Warfield didn't head coach Rick Fonano,
accepted.
practice last week due to the noting his club made ooly one
Phoae: 441-3e41
death of his mother, who had 1st and 10 in 16 key third·
cancer.
down plays and netted only 56
offensive yards the first hall.
"Receivers dropped balls,
pass protection lroke down,
guy• ran the wrong routes
and caused the qUarterback
. to be sacked," Forzano
enumerated.
"But we're not that bad
oll-alleast, I certainly hope

-·

t-,.....

"

with Coupon
Lim II 2

SCHOOL bAG ·
Reg. S1 .49

$
99

Wilh Coupon

Llmll2

�•
A- 'l'he DallvSentlnel,Micldletlor&gt;-PameroY. 0 .. Monday, Aug. 16, 1t'IS
IIOTIC E OF SALI!
IN THE COMMON P'LI!AS
COUitT
OF
MI!IG S
COUNTY , Ohio
The Athen s Coun ty Savlnts &amp;
Loin C:o., 1n Otl to corp .

:t:~~:::~:~::~~:::u: For Fast Resul's Use The Sentinel Classifieds
B.
Serf, •
Lotn, an Ohio corp.

I

Yl .

VI.

Fred I . Gottleln &amp; B• rbu•~
A. Gotgl t ln, t t 11 .
Clll No. U ,OSI
Pursuant to an ORDER OF
SALE Issued by the Common

Plus c ourt of Meigs County,
01'110 , 1 w ill offer for sale a t
publ ic au cti on on t he lrd day

of Sepltmber , 1976, ot 10 :00
A.M . on tP'It courthouse steps

1t lht COURTHOUSE In

Pomeroy , Ohio, the follow ing
descrl btd reel es111e :
Situa te In the Township of
Orange , County of Meigs and
Stt tt Of Ohio and descr ibed ·

as.rouows : Situate In section

3, Town • North , Range 12
West ,
Ohio · Company ' s
F'.urc hase.
In
Orange
Township , Me igs county ,
Ohio, being tra ct No . 2,
described ai follows: Star -

ting et a Concrete marker at

ttl e northwe!t

Frtd B. Goetll ln &amp; ltrbara
A. Gotvltln, ot ol

,

WANT ADI
INFORMATION

Oh iO, I wil l otter for Ule et
public auction on the 3rd day
of September , 1976, ot 10 :00
A.M. on the covrthaul • 51tps
ot t h•
~ourthou s • In
Pom oroy , Oh io , the following
descr ibed real est lie :
.
Sit ua te In the Townsh ip of
Rutland , Meigs Co.u lnty ,
Ohio; and In Frocton 2. Town
6, ~anQe u ol t he Oh io
Com~any 's Purchase, end
being lot Na . 19 of Hutchinson
Subd ivision as is recordtd in
Plat Boo k 4. Page s7, ot the
Records ot Plots of Me igs
county, Ohio.
TERM S OF SALE : Cash ,
tor not 1m than two .th lrds of
the at:~p r a l s.ed nlue .
Property appraised e t

Ilona accepted tlr1t diY Of
Pllbllcatlon .
· RIGULATIONS
The Publlthor reserves
the rlghl to odlt or reject
onv ad I dumed Ob ·
lectlontl. The publish or
will nat be ruponllblt for
more then one Incorrec t
Insertion .
·
RATES
For wont Ad Strvlco
S cenls per word one
Insertion .
Minimum Chorge 11 .00.
t; conts per word threo
cons,cutlve Insertion• .
26 tontl por word six
conJtcutlvt lnswtlons .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ada and ads ~old
with~~~~ dJ'¥'THANKS

OIUT~ARY

. &amp;

for
80
word
min imum .
· Each additional word 3
S2 .00

cents .

I"LtND ADS
Additional 25c cnerge
per Advertlsem,nt.
OFFICE HOURS
1:30 1 .m . to l :OO p .m .
Dolly, 1 : 3~ o .m . to 12 :00
Noon Saturday . ·
Phone today 992 -21 56.

Astra-

Graph

•

,

·

QUALm

1970RENAULT4DR.

$750

1970CAMAROCPE.
·
·
Sl095
v.1, aulomatlc, P. sfeerln9, exira good radial II res .

NeedS some bodr work .

t

~Sa:d~l~r~m~l·~·od~b~y~Fo~m~ily~.~~~

JOe'S Corry Out, 5M locust , MidV.IRGO {Aug. 23-hp1. 22) You
dleport, Ohio. New hours .
may h~ve to contend wll h
9:00 Iii li :00. Fridoy ood Sotur·
someone ·today who'u ·· try to
•oo h"II 12:00 ' Phone
cia
auy . "
bloc;·~ your efforts underhanded992-3152.
ly. II you're alert tie'11 have little
NOW accepting piano students ,
effect.
beginners~ intermediate, od·
LleRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) If
vanced studentS . Call 992you're involved with the wrong
2270.
person in a venlure loday, the
reSults will ' be und8sirable.
Select associates ·wisely.

SCORPIO (Ool. 24·Nov. 221 FOUND 2 breed of coondogs in
Make concessions when dealing
Plea5e
Racine
vicinity .
with others today. provided ~ou
clescribo. Phone 9;9.2350.
don 't have to do something cpa
HErFfR found on New l imo Rood.
posed to your bE!st interests.
owner niust ;de-ntify and poy
far ad. Phone 7;2-2125.
SAGinARIUI {Nov. 21-Doc.
21, Be sensible about health LOST-i'tr . !*!molt English Spr·
habits toda y or you're apt to
inger ~ -~~ mixed with
overindulge, or anernpt to burn
lleoglo: sho&lt;t hoir,. block of)d
the candle at both ends.
white with docked toil. lost in
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-.fon. 1t)
Rice Run orea , east of Tuppers
It you're qtfered something today
Ploins. REWARD I Phonol. Alan
from one whom you know isn't
DuvoU , (61;)667 -~71 .
too fond of you , look around for
LOST: St . llerncJI'd Dog lost in Long
~he strings attached.
Hollpw ROod oreo. Brown,
AOUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.Fob. 1t)
block and white. If onron. hen
any information concMning the
No matter how hard you try towhereabouts or welfare of the
day you may find it Impossible to
dog, please phone 992·3538.
please certain people . Don't
collect gu ilt over something
thai's not your f3ult.

Your
'WJBirthday

Canier Wanted

B
~'

TRAil FULL OR
PART TilE

.r.

•11,0
· ..

R-

'

•

'

&gt;

•

""

WI..S

AT949 2101
· · OR. ·

AUIID

.,

DM.I.
.,.... IIIII ,...._.
• ...__Complete'
tnw
Remodeling Service
r r Your"'--...
r0
nu .. ,..

l i t..Wu~~

... lftUIII

POMEROY MQTOR 00.
·

OPEN EVEsla:oo P.M.
. POMEROVJ OMIO
I

@)
(}t.

~

--

19"0 Olds Cullan S; 2 dr ., factory
oir, outo., power steering , 350
2 bbl . $1200. Coli m -75:W .

FURNISHED·. 2 bedrm . apart ment,
.
adults only . In Middleport. 1974 MONTE CARLO, green with
green vinyl lop. Alr, p.b., p.s.,
PMne992-3874 .
good ct&gt;fldition . Phone 9923 AND 4 RM. fufn iah~ and un·
3625.
furnished opts. Phone "992s.J.o .
!976 GMC ~ wnee-1 dr ive pickup ,
$5500.
cOuNTRY Mobile Honle Pork , Rt .
33. len miles nort h ol Pomeroy. 1971 Montego, good conditon , air
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
p.s .,
low
cond ition ing,
$idewolks: runners ond off
mileage , $1350 . Phone "Glenn
sfr"t poriting. Phone 992~ 7•79 .
Bissell . 9.49-2901.
3 Room ft.~rnished house with
both . Aduhs · on.ly . Phone 992·
5535.
__,.c..::_:___ _ _ _ _ _ __
oNE bedroom opartmen's ot LOCUST POSTS, round or spli t.
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
Phone 949·2n4.
for $10l monthly plus .elec. or
51~
I
d
I
OWE
&lt;J~Y inc u ing ·• ectric. l
R cOAL, limestone, and calcium
-RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
chiQride ·and calci um brine for
Conven ient t.o shoppir.g on
duSt control ond sJM!Ciol mixing
Third ond Mill Streets in Midsolt for larmers . Main Street.
dleport . Srond new hign quoliPomeroy, Ohio or phone 992tr apartments . See the
3891.
monoger ot Apt , 16. or- coli · CANNING peaches now ready
992.n21. ·
thru AUgust. Several varieii~u
APT. for rent , 5 rooms and bath.
by the bu5hel, 1ft lwshel or
Phone (61&lt;)985·3350.
peck _ Pl~ s e br ing own con·
tolner,
2 cQnvenient locations :
2 Bedroom trailer, real nice,
Midway Market , Po'meroy,
utilities.poid. Phone 992-l32•.
992 ·2S8'2; Sob's "Market, Mason ,
n3-5721 .
)975 Mobile home, 3 bedrooms in
Mason , W. Va. 1150 per month.
1971· Kawosoki 175, Enduro, $250 .
Phone (614)6'18-2922.
Set 9f motorcyCle carriers, $13 .
AVAILABlE ot Riverside ApartPhone 992-~523.
ments , I ·bedroom apartments, $100 per month : 2
bedroom apartments, $133 per
month . One price tol" all . Phone
992·m3 .
1--Good used 30 cu. It.
3 room fumished aportment,
utilities fumished. Call m . freezer
OnfpSI$0
31:19.
1- New S.OOG BTU Air
TRAILER lot for rent . Nice yard
ond garden spaca. Coli 9.-9- Conditioner.
Rt9. $2$0.95
2525, 9o .m. tobp.m.
·
SPECIALS175.00
5 ROOMS. 11&lt;62 lincoln Hgto.
!-Good used 12 cu. ft.
Phone (JIU) 768-4041.
frMter.
2 Bedroom mobile home~ Racine .
aroo. Phone 9'12·S8S8,

FREEZER SAl£

;~
-·~ANY PITCH

•·

BoK21·A

.TEAFORD

MIDDLEPORT - 516,500.
A good 4 bedroom home.
1'12 baths, large dining and
living, gas hot water heat.
Nice woodwork.
NEW LISTING - 10 room

apartment

house ,

separate apartments. All
utilities with natural gas
heat . Lot 121x&lt;IOO. Wont
only $12,000.
NEW LISTING - Nice
split level 3 BR home, nat.
oak varnished floors,
equipped kltchen· stoye,
ref. and bar , din. area,
base, family rm.. 2
porches, garage and 11
acres. s.ll,500.0G .
SEEING IS BELIEVING ,
A
BARGAIN
IS
~\WAITING YOU. CALL
992·3325.

HOUSE for sale , 2 Iorge
bedrooms, Iorge llvln9 room,
kitchen; dining. corpetd. $9,000
in Harrisonville. Phone 7"'2·

27%.

I

'CIJNS(

....

Start play unhonorably

Mlddloport
PHPNE "2-1724
7· 21· 1 mo.

HOUSE for- sale , 391 South Second
Ave ., Middleport. Phone 992• 2265.
.3 8edr~m hoin~~ -b;;it.~~d on&amp;.'
holf . Call 992·31:19 or 992 ·54~ .
2 11ew 3 bedroom hOme• for sol•
on acra trodt, one with
ment, one without . Call 9923.154 cr (6U) 446·9568, , LH
Construction.

bo••·
kit ·
Lin -

• 76 4

• A K 65

WEST

.

EAST

•QJi Q3
.A 8 765
.82
. 53
tA 98
.Q J 10 3
• J 10 8 1
• 92
SOL!Tti IDI '

'W'IIe

.2

STAAl'~~ 4Ct&gt;R.

• A Q J 10 6 4
t K 52

.Q 7 3

lll\iOO\]T'
S/KlK\fh!

East-West vulnerable
\Vest

'

Auto Sales

North East

Wlnshlold Ropllcomont
FrH Eslimates

CLEARANCE SALE
20 Pet. dlscounl .on' olf
mowwnln stock.
2-5 H P riders 26" cut
t--1 H P rlcllr :10" cut
2-21" self propelled

mowwn
2-11" pull! mow.rl
30 I'd. discount on Snapper
lllllrs
.
t-5 H.P chain drive tillers
)-3 H P chi In drive !Ilion

Gravel¥
Tractor~
·iiomtniv, Ohio
Ph.fn-2975

..
•
.•
....

I

-- - .

ANNIE

.

Jim ; " The play from dummy at trick one doesn'l often
make much difference, but
there are times when it is

I.ITT-LII: ORPHAN AMMII-TBI: BLACK. WATCH.

~POC!l
"'~O'II!R

crucial. "
Oswald : " Soulh covered
West's queen of spades with
dummy's king. Ea'st won with
the ace and , after long
thought, sllifted 1o the queen
of diamonds , whereupon the
defense added three diamond
tricks to the spade trick
alrea\ly in the bank. South
consoled himself for his poor
play by remarking thal he
could not make the hand in
any event , but he ·was wrong
there also."
Jim : " Assuming South

COMe CtJT.!

SEPTIC Systems Installed by
licensed 'ln5toller. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7.-2-2409.
SE~TiC TANKS cleaned . Modern
SonitotiQn, 992-3954 or 992·
2428.
wiLL do l"ooflng , Construction,
plumbing ond heoting . No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742·2~8.

' CARPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992~275P.
vERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·
VICE . Meigs-Athens County ..
Bolera from $3995 up . Merrilll
Chooo. (614) 6'18·3021.
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TAN~S INSTALLED. LOW
8t:IY AND. DUMP TRUC~S. BILL
PULUNS ,.PHONE 992·2478 DAY .
OR NIGHT.
BulL PING, remodeling. and ,
rapaln. Quality work , aftlcient l
sarvlce. Jesse Rodman, phona 1
992·5980.
ANTIQUE r"torations , reproduc. tioJll , cabinet making and fur·
nlture repair. ,131 v, 3rd, Middleport, 992·5735 day and
evening.

WHAT HE W'INT,
ALLEYOOP?

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

•

.. '
••

e\.

DOWN
1 Dl!clll'd

Z French
.river

3 Get -

solid
9 Account

(succeedl
(3 wds. I

13 Tease
14 Adroit
15 "Many -

t Caddoan

Indian

GASOllNE AILEY

gaDery

•

Qui.es

· Southern
style

2% Dessert

11 Permeate

7 Tanan's

wine

•

0.

Z7 Calling or

business -

THI?Y'S

TAST/ERTHEYS
FREE!r

-8:) THEYLL 1RY Afo.N

SNEAKY LI'L TRICK TO
INID A FRY/rJ' PAN !-

b-+-+-t-

- --

•.

.

2 : ~;11), 000

Pyramid 13; Dinah I 6; BI-Ways 33.
2:31&gt;-Dodors3,4,15:Cl!le Life to Live 13; Guiding Light
8,10; Unto the Hills 33.
3:00-Another World 3••• IS; 11.11 In the Family 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Catch·33 33.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
.
3:30-Bewllched 6; Match Game8,10; Lilias, Yoga ancj
You 20; Title X 33.
4:0G-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somer...t 15;
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "These Three" 10; Dinah I 13.
4:30-Be)'lltched 3; Mod Squad 6: Andy Grlttlth 8;
Sesame Street 20,33; .Filntstonts 1~ .
5:00-FBI3; Partridge Family B; Mission: Impossible

15.

•

.

.

5 :»-Adam· l2 4, 13; News 6; Fal)'lily Affair B; Electric
Companv 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6 :o6-News :i,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :30-NBC N.ws3,4, 15; ABC Newsl3; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS 'llews . 8, to; Hodgepodge Lodge ·20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6; Let's Go to the Races 8;
Price Is Right 10; NameThatTune 13; Family
Affair lS; Romagnolls' Table 20; Strauss Family
33.
7 :30-RopublicanConventlon 3;4, 10,1 S; Let's Deal With
It 6; MatcltGame PM 8; To Tell The Truth 13;
Robert MacNeil Report 20.
8:00-Happy Days 6, 13; RepubllcanConvenllon 8;
Music Prolecf Presents 33; At TheTop 20.
8:30-Capfaln and Tennille 6, 13; Consumer Survival
Kif 33.
9:00-Evenlng al Pops 33; MenWho Made the Movlr
20.
.
9:31&gt;-Republlcan Convention 6, 13.
IO:OO....Oiymplad 33.
10 :31&gt;-News 20.
11 :oo-New&gt; 6, 13; Black Perspective on the News 20;
ABC News 33.
11 :3()-News 3,4,15; Mystery of theWeek 6,13; Janakl
33.
12:oo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; News 8,10.
12 :3()-Movie "G inger In fhe Morning" 8; Movie " A
Man Called Dagger" 10·.
1:oo-News 13.
I :3()-Tomorrow 3,4.

WINS BUS ROADEO

cry

OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Nick
Lang, 29, Cincinnati, a public
transit driver for the Queen
~+-+--+-t-~ City Metro who won the first
Bua Roadeo Saturday, will
f.-.--1--l--t 1ept esent the Buckeye State

J.,.-+-+-

Cincinnati, Cleveland Toledo,
Akroo, Kent, Dayton and
Columbus.
The group waa judged 111
the basis of their a~ty to
maneuver buell over aerpen·
at the national championshlp line eoursea, through narrow
k--+--4----l In San Francisco next clearances, in and out of tic1Jt

~+---+---" October.

-+-+--+-1

king

33 Wide St.
34.35 Study
:r7 Neighbor
of

corners, and in simulated btl.

Lang ,was the overall stops
showing
winner in field of 14 drivers opet:ation. ·
won local cmtests al

safe

I~

~lYMffi~;::t.:::!!:·~=

WY.O.

Unscramble theoo four Jumbl ..,
one letter to eat:h square, to '
form four ordinary words.

38 Actress,
Claire:....

(~q

39 Asseverate b-4-~--+-+-lf­

~-'lc-~

•

tt Gras&amp;bopper's
critic

.

:L$11LLMY)()U . HUSH, PAWJ HE!&gt;
OLD ENOUt.:&gt;H 1D
D:lf&gt;/T WLVE

ANYTHING- BY
RUNNING-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how

KNONH I80NN

Ia

MIND ...:L GUE5&amp;1

AWAY/

to

work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One leller simply stands lor another. ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X l or lhe Lwo O's, etc. Single leiters.
apostrophes, the lenglh and formlllion of lhe ll'ords are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.

..

CRYPTOQUOTES
WZZG

JVCXFJ

~.I

GLORV BE!! TH' SHOT

PNBF
PQJ

ZL

RZUP

••

'
.
I.
"
Mon., Tue~.. Wed ', (,.,

K.

CFG

MZN

IJG

QCYJ

KZYJBU . -

RZZBJ

Yesterday's Cryploquote: THE ELECTION ISN'T VERY F ;\R
OFF . WHEN THE CANDIDATE CAN RECOGNIZE YOU
A~

TilE STREET. -

KIN HUBBARD

HEEREO 'ROUND
TH' WORLD!!

rn

Dl

t
. I I J ·I· I

IEMBLAG

IBRO$YI [ ~ I fl"'! .t!'t
~~~~~~~~~~~ ~by the~·~
IL. _:MII=.,===-=•==•==•=-=~~n=--.~1 ( I I I X I r l
Now orrar110 the eiftltd

ourprioe anowtr, •

to

...

,.,. .....,.. IJ•..W...

WHEAT ILAZ£

(A.twen ••••rrew)
PAUPER AUTUIIN

Aalwera WJNrw tile • .,,... upert'tf•Mteltnr
n.,frw•-ntltAP

TE~L. THEM NOT TO

. HIT THE Q.\1.(, SO HARD!

.
•••••••••••

•... · Close §.It At 5 p.m.
.
-

6 :55 Cood Morning, Trl State 13.
7:00-Toda)I .3,4,1S; Good Morning. Amerlca6,13; CBS
News I; Chuck1Whlte Reports 10.
7:0S-Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolln 10.
8:()()-Jeff's Collie In Captain Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Street 33.
'
8:30-Big Vafle.y 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,1S; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning Wlfh D. J . 13; Mister Rogers
33.
9:»-Cross·Wits 3; One Lilt to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas' 13; Carrascolendas 33.
to :OO-Santord and San 3,A, IS; Price Is Right 1, 10; Bit
. With Knlf h
. ·
IQ : Is-General Hospital 6.
10:»-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Lilias, Yoga and
You 33.
11 :00-Witeel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday A; Edge· ol
Night 6; Gambit 8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13;
Electric Company 33.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Love or Life 8,10; Biography 33.
11 :55-Take Kerr B; Ms. Fix it 10.
12 :00-Fun Factory 3, IS; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8,10; Sesame Streat 33.
12 : 3~ong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Searclt
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :55-NBC New• 3,15:
1:00-News 3; Rya.n'sHope 6,13;; Phil Donahue I;
Young and theReslless10 r Nol For Women Only 1S;
Electric Company 33.
1:30-Days of our Lives 3.;,15; Family Feud 6,13; As '
the World Turns 8,10; Family Theilre 33;
· ·

voyage

&lt;;,~

.,
•''

sz ~~nlte

fruit

·:n Lambkin's

;;...............-

!8Corvine
cry

v----:--:---~-:-~- %9 Composite

:M Grapelike

~de

partner

' ...

Street's

31 Vestibule

Z!i Uon's ·

rider
12 Concordat

Z3 Quite pale
25 It "talks"
Z6 Sonny's

%9 Della
boss
30 His gooae
is cooked

Z3 Resign
10 Beyond
oneself to
(3 wds.)
Z4 Father's
11 Midnisht __ Day gift

clinch

%7 Concealed

1t Four (Ger.)

OJeeta

Gardner Z1 Ema1111t
2% Break a

••
•

11 Bucolic
dance hall

&amp; Beauty,

ze Cartoonist,

••

Yesterday's Answer

s Arched

caned ... "
1• Fonnaj
dance {Fr. I
17 One rJ. the

carvinq!

~-

U Ethereal

1 Disparage
5 Atab
gannent
8 Geometric

Up WOOd·

8:00tll S:OO

tOo you have a question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
the JacQb~s " care ol this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
if stamped. sell-addreued
en velopes are enclosed. The
mos.t interesting questions
will be use(! in this · column
and will recei ve copies ol
JACOBY MODERN. I

.~,.Wd'

She's

.

We have had so many
questions about point count
that we will answer them in
this and our neKt several articles .
To start with , poinl count is
basically · a method of hand
valuation . High cards are
valued :
Ace-4, king·3, queen-2, and
jack-1.
Thus , there are 10 high-card
points in each suit and 40 highcard points in the pack.

l•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
U'l'l'LE ORPHAN

IIOW DIP I

m.215f or 992·2561

Pas.s
Pass

Pass

On BodY Work ·

WE HAVE'"2 NEW 3
bedroom homes lust baing
completed. Both have
garages with work area,
baths, utllll'f R.. carpeted.
~\bout 1 . acre of ground.
$22,900.00.
CARRY OUT- Has been
established In the same
location . for many years.
Doing
an
excellent
business. Priced riglit. WE
HAVE
3
OTHER
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
- CALL If lnternted .
A NEAT PLACE- 5 yrs.
old, 3 bedrooms. bath, din•
In kitchen, utility R.,
carport,
air
cond.,
carpeted, t;, aero with
meta• storage building,
S16,800.QO.
,
GRI\CIOUS 2 story older
home . Formal dining R., 4
BRm., bath, nice kltchon,
carpeting, paneling, 2 car
111raoe. Some fruit tr...
.69 acre , $18,800.00.
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
NOTED IN THIS 11.0 CI\L:L
FOR
INFORMATION.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

2•
4•

Opening lead - Q •

Export Po inti,.
lnsuranc:e Work
Wolcoino
St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio
U.T.:J127
7-29-1 mo.

MAIN

Pass
Pass

Clucked the spade lead , there
is no chance that East would
put up his ace, Soutb would
ruff the second spade and
draw lrumps with two leads to
leave one trump in dummy .
Then he would ruff dummy's
last spade and start on clubs .
East would show out on the
third club, but South would
lead the last club and discard
a diamond ll'om his hand .
West would be in and would
have to lead a diamond to establish South 's king or give
South' a .ruff and discard."

~~~

South
l •

ZFJ

SNAPPER

16

• K91
• K97

Alnerieln
--

~OMEROY,

TUESDAY, AUOII5T 17, tt ••
6:oo-Summer S.mftler 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Rev . Cltophus Robinson 13.
6: 30-Cofumbus Today A; News 6; Summer Stmnter
I; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
, 4·-Morning Report 3.
' • 'i&lt;. -Good Morning, West Virginia 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

.

..

·• ' 3C """-I1Ch·33 33.
11 :00-News 6;13,20; ABC News 33.
11 : »-News 3,4,15; Honeymoon Suite 6,13; JIMkl 33.
12 :0G-Johnny Carson 3,A,15; News 1, 10.
12: 30-Movle " Lady L" I; Movie " Hoi Rods to Hell"
. 10.
.
1:00-- -· .. 13.
1:30-Tomorrow 3,A.

. Ways~'

Noble summit Rd.,

HOME SITES lor sale , 1 acre ond
up. Middleport, near Rutkmd .
Coll992·7481.
NEW 3· bedroom house. 2 baths,
oil elec., 1 ocre , Middleport, ,
close· lo Rutland . Phone 992·
74B1.
SMAll farm for sole, 10,-, down ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun · .
ty , W. Va . Phone (304) 772·
3102 or {30i)772·3227.
COUNTRY farmland with itdud ed woods. water and good accanln Monraa County, W. Va .
$1,000 down, coli {304) 772.
3102 cr (304)772·3227 .
3 bedroom house for sole ot 520
Sycamore St ., Middleport, good
buy for $8.000 . Phone 992·3S78,
or992-7b67 . .

2

'

S\\I.TII Dlll1

GOOD CA TILE FARM FOR SALE
BY OwNER, 71 a cres MIL
JQCkson Co . .Fenced, modern 5
roo m
h o use ,
neV~Iy
redacoroted ,
comp letely
co("peted . 55 acres good
posture , 15 acre s wooded
vi rgin timber, d8 veloped sprIngs, . good born , ond ,othel"
buildings , high country . rolling 1
KEN GROVER
hills, e xCel lent 'llltw. Appoint- 4
fT'tenl only. Phone (614) 384·
PfloiOtroplty
2591 af ter 5 p.m. Price
915.. 155
550,000.
Clint or, Oltio
L 15 acres of. land on lead ing
7:.14-! rna.
( r~k Rood with water top.
Coli 992·S3S2 or 992·2•96.
HOUSE lor sole, 3 bedrobfns, all BRADFORD, Auct ioneer, Com plete Service. Phone 949-2487
electric. Fam ily room fully
or
949-2000. Racine . Ohio , Critt
carpeted with wood.burn ing
BradfQrd.
firep lace , large lot Yl'ifh storage
bu ilding and garden space. ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Rustic Hills, Syrocuse. Phone
Sweepers. toasters. irons, all
992-7836 .
small appliances . Lawn mower ,
next to State HighWay Garage
2Q Acre form wit h pond, bor n,
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985·
smok,ehouse and cellar plus op·
382S,
pie ·orchard and peach trees.
Also on property 2 story house REMODELING, Plumbing , heating
ond o 2 yeor old doub!e'!Nide
and oil types of general repair ,
trailer. On County Rood 18 . Air
Work guaranteed 20 yean ••·
for $:19,000.00. Call 992-7590
perience. Phone992-2,.09 .
during week .
O&amp;D TREE Trimming 1 20 years ex ·
a room house for sole at 126 perience . Insured free
Laurel St. , Pomeroy. Phone
estimates. Coli 992·238.4 or
992-5741.
(614)698·7257 Albony .
SIX rooms , bath, workshop. sEWING MACHINE Repoirs 1 ser·
vi~ e. oil makes, 992-2264 . The
storage building, Iorge lot, wall
Fabric Shop , Pomer·oy.
maintained\ r&amp;asonablr priced.
Phone 992-S3H after 5 p.m.
Authorized Singer SOles and
-::;::;;;;;;;;;;:::::;:~=:i;;;;
Servii:e . We sharpen Scissors.
r
ExCAVATING, dozer, loodE!r and
backhoe work; dump trucks
ond lo-boy1 for hire ; will haul
Virgil B. Sr.. R~all~r
fill dirt, to soil . limestone and
.no ·Mechanic Pomeroy; ()
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger JefPllont~-331~,
.
fers , doy phon• 992·7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992RUTLAND- Nice older 9
5232.
room home, 2 baths, 3 Brs.,
or more wlfh closets, full EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
basemen1, large front · ond· ditcher, CharleS R. Hatporclt , 2 car garage with 2
field , Bock Hoe Ser11ice,
Rutland, Ohio . Phone 742·2008.
rooms . Big ~orner lot.
$rl0,000.
GREG"S CB SALES , located of Erwin's Gulf Service , Middleport , Ohio. Phone .992.
44 ACRES - On Rt. 143.
2438 .
Mobile home 12&gt;&lt;60 with 2
Bn .. drilled well, woods &amp;
some bottom land.

NEAR RUTLAND- New 3
bedroom home, sleps over
kitchen, large living , full
basement, Sf. doors, &amp;
windows. Carporl wllh
u1illly, 2 acres . $31,000.

.CAPTAIN EASY

D. Bumpdner

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
-Aorlll-lndustrlol
Construction Prag...O
-Comp:f.~heol S.rY!i.• .
un
riiluatu,
Elomenlory
Schoof Pac~ ·l'fcturos
Seniors a YMrbook
-Wedell......

'

I'.·

-

PlttZ-1174

HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
bedrooms, nice modern
bath , large modern kitchen
wlfh dining, full basement,
and large lot. $20,000.

I

'!!'·

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

Rutland, Ohio 4Sn5
Ph. (614) 742-2409
Wo Dotllvor
7·28-4 mos .

•

Allevo ond INlow ground
pool klb for 1llot . do-lt· '
rouruH mon.
'
'
All pool supplln .ovalllblo,

......

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

.'

SWIMMING
PQOU__

EXPIRIINCID .
·ladlator-.r""""'~

' A.NY SIZE

MONDAY. AUGUST!•. 1916
S:&lt;IO- FBI3; Partrldgf Family I ; Mlulon : 'lmposstble
15.
.
5:30-Adam-12 ~.13 : Ne.w s 6: Fomlly Affolr I; Elec.
Co. 20,33 .
6:00-News 3,4,1, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC NeWs J,A, U; ABC Newsl3; Andy (;rlfflfh 6;
CBS News 1, 10; Hodgepodge Lodgo 20;
Carroscoltnda1 33.
7:00-Meias Fair Preview (cl S; Truth or Cons. 3; To
Tell the Truth A; Bowling lor Dollars 6; Buck Owens
8; High R..c! to AdventureiD; Candid Cam..ra 13;
Family Mlalr U ; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20;
West Vlrvlnia Journal 33.
.
7:30-Ropubllcan Convention 3,;,10,151 Baseball 6,13;
Prlca Is Righi 8; Robert MacNeil Report 20,33.
8:00-Ntovle "African Queen (c) 5; Republican Con.
venllon. 8; Tennis 20; Whaf Country 33.
9:oo-Gaad Old Days of Radio 33. .
1D:OG-700Ciub (C) S; Republican Convention 6, 13; Bl·

tlunona
74i-ZIU
, All Werk Gulr1nt_,
, _ EIIII1NII•
'

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-·
PLEASE
NO SUNDAy, CALLS
8·9-761 month ,

4-tO.I

'"'r

1 _,.

949 2160

·

mlnum Sidlnt, -

7, ,.&amp;.1.1..
,

11

GLEH R. BISSEU.

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ESTJMaJESI
.

I(M...,,.EIIT

SlOt~

II.
, '

CONTACT
·~

$10111

Wl•a• lOGOIS

J

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•

PISCES (Fob. :ZO.Mit'ch 20) Be
realiStic regarding your .talents A GREAT
OPPORTUNITY I
Unlimited
earnings .
ROBERT C. HARTENBACH, today. Don't attempt projects
Sheriff of beyond your scope. You're not
Demonstrate Toys and Giftt a
Meigs County , OhiD . expected to be an expert 1n atf
few evening• a . week . NO ex~rience . NO paperwork. NO
areas.
&lt;al 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, stc·
GIMMIC~S!
Gasoline TWO 'motor boots with 35. h.p.
motora; 1965 Volkswa94t". CANNING tomotoes ond sweep
plowonce. Earn FREE Sample
Phone 992-5741 .
p•ppers. · Cleland Form a.
Kit. Call 742-23n. Write ·TOY
Gel"oldine Cleland . Rocint,
LADIES PARTY PLAN ,
Ohio.
Johnstown, Po. 15904.
NOTICE OF SALE
-· --1
1971
HONDA CL·450; 12,000
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Aug. 17, tt71
IF VOU hove a service to offer,
mllea, siny bor, crcnh bal"s,
• COURT
OF
MEIGS
wont to buy or stllsomettling.
COUNTY, OHIO
pull back handle ban, new tire
Small enterprises you carl han·
oe
looking for work . . . or
and seols, Scrambler side
die in your spare lime could
- .. The Athens County Savlnts &amp;
whote'oler ... you'll get results
~ipeo , $650. Coii9A9-2i00.
produce a source of additional
For Pomeroy, Ohio
LOin Co.
foster
with o Sentinel Wont Ad .
revenue
this
year.
·
J
ust
lake
care
vs.
197.4 Suzuki G.T. 380 , txcellent
Area
Coii9'12·21S6.
they don't become too timeFred B. GOtlltin, ltal.
condition. Call 742-21-43 after 5
YARD Sale, Aug. 17 ot423 Beech
Cue No. 1605~
consuming.
p.m . or contact Do !los Weber.
Carriers win Vlluoblo
Pursuont to an ORDER OF
St., Middleport, 9-.- . Some tiJce
prl11s ond earn exlro
SALE IISUfd by the Common
CONSOLE
stereo , om·fm rad iO, _.
sch'ool doth.s , women't and
IJII!nding money.
Pleu Court of Meigs County ,
speed
changer. Balance
men's clothinfil.
Ohio, I will offer tor sale at
$102.10 or terms . Coll992-3965.
Phone
The
Publl' auction on the lnt day
yARD Sale, 3 Family Sale, goad
ADDRESSERS won led IMMEDI,O. TE·
of Septembtr, 1976, at 10 :00
Dally Sentinel
teenage, oduh and children 's 1~2 16 It. CreOIIinor boo! , 1973
LY! Work at home, no exA.M, on the courthouse steps
85 h.p. Mercury motor. and
Electrolull floor shomclothet.
perience necessary .- ex:Afm-2156
P
at the COUR ·T HOUSE In
rroller, with ex:tras . $2995.
pooer,
inch
worm
,
books
and
cellenr
pay
.
Write
American
Or
Slop
In
At
1!\ Pomeroy, Ohio. the following
Phone
(6ii)667·3S07 .
monyh
misc.
items
.
Monday
Service,
b950
Woyzoto
Blvd
.,
- described reel tstate :
111 Court Sine!
ond
Tutsdoy
.
9
a
.m.
till4
p.m.
Suite 132, Minneapolia. MN
Situated
In
Orange
FOUR
good
Guernsey cOws , price
Pomoroy, o.
253 South Fifth Avenue. MidTownship, Meigs County ,
55&lt;26.
firm . Phone 949·2179 .
Ohio, and being In Section 3,
dleport.
AND
Town .-North, Range 12 West , DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX· DEMONSTRATORS
MANAGER
noeded
to
work
YARD
810 South Second St.,
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
~I
of the Ohio .. Company 's
with tho oldest Toy &amp; Gift Shop
Ohio . Old
I?..! '•. Purchase, and dncrlbed as
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
Party Pion in the country. '
books. pictures,
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA.
'. follows:
LOT NO . 3: BeQinnlnQ ot a
Highest commissions . No In·
clothing, ADULT'S walker , women '•
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
point South 15 degrees •5'
clothing, slippers, curtains Ond
Call
or
write
today,
vestment
.
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INEST·
Eut 23S feet ond South I
midget tope recorder, bran
SANTA's Porti11, Avon , .Conn.
MENT,
NO
COLLECTING
OR
d•Qre• lS' Well 2S7.S IHI
06001.
Phone
1
(203)
6~~55
.
floor
lamp, •tereo albums .
DELIVERING: CALL COLLECT TO
from the. Northeast corner of
Phone 992.5655.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
CAROL DAY 518·489·8395 OR
;:: the Kenneth E . Rlgga and
,_.. Judith A. Riggs 21 2-3 ocre
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR· NEED someone to cut Q:rau . RAIIITS for solo. Phone 742·2656. NEW garden seed sower, $35;
trect No. 1, as described In
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE .,
Phone 992·5798.
Pull out bumper lor one-half
TO GIVE AWAY TO GOOD HOME,
Volume 2•5, Page 1029, of the
ALBANY , N.Y. 12205.
ten pickup truck , $125:031 Stlhl
3 l.,ale Collie pups, already
Meigs County Deed Records ;
Chain sow, $165; I:J1J Ford tracwormed ,
mother
thence North 50 degrees 20'
tor ond S fl. brush hOI!. $2500.
Wts~ 293 .5 ftet to a toncrtte
Thorov~hbred , father mixed.
N. E. Vanaman , New Lima
marker; thence South 26
Phone 992·2667.
degrtes 30' West 9 feet to an
Road .
A~C IRISH SETTER pu~pies, 550.
lronpln ; then'• south 3.- WILL DO odd jobt , roofing, pain·
WI~TER potatoes and peach••·
'- detrtta oo' West 45 feet tO an
Phone 949·2726. .
ling,
hauling,
tree
work,
and
Charita R. Horrit 1 Portland ,
-, Iron pin ; thence South 37
mowing. Phone 992-7.-09.
PLEASURE horaes and ponies.
de9rHs 00' West 53 feet to.,
Ohio . Phona 8.43-2693 .
will do training. Phone
...,. lrOI' pin; thence soulh 34
FOR
SALE - good used T.V."t,
t:l dqrees 15' West 11 fttt to a
RufhReevta .
color ond block and white. Hor """ ' concrett marker ; · ~thence
South 50 degrees 20' East 380
riaon 's TV Service; 276
Sycomora St. , ,Middleport, .
fttt to 1 ftnct; .ftltntt N'orth 1 OLD furniture. Ice boxes, bran
deQrt• IS' EUt 154.5 lOti to
·beds, wall telephones and
Ohio . Phono992·2522.
WILL 00 babysitting weekdays
the point of bq~lnnlng, con.
ports, or compl" households.
ond ~omt evenin~a . Phone 1973 HONDA 350 4 cyl., like now ,
...... talnrng 0.91 acres, more. or
Wrlle M. D. MiUer, Rt. 4, You don't ht" to quit your
1111.
9•9·2322.
2800 mles, extros . $800 firm .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli 992·7760.
prtStnt job to tr1in to drive 1
The
above
propertv
Must sell , Phone 9.49-2181 ,
ASH
ld
f
11
_._
d
traetor-tralltr.
In
only
7
to
8
dncrlbed Is LOT NO . 3 In
0
C
po
or
ml,R\es
on
WHktnds
PART
liME
!reining
I.OCALL Y owned boauly sho for
RlgQICrHI Monor Addition
modele of mobile homtt.
u rocorded In Volume 4,
sole or leas• or will sell equipPhone oroo cade 614·423·9531 .
IStturdays 6 SundiiYsl • qual·
Pogo .u, Meigs County Plot
ifild driftr an be •ning
MOifLE flame for .aale or rent, 3
ment consisting of two waah
Records.
bedrooms, ol utilities pold.
r;md combout stotlona and 2
$tcosh$$
for
junhd
auto.
Frye's
Excepting and rlltrvlnQ to
Truck Auto Ports. Rutland.
Phone 992.7751.
dry•rs.
Equipment It only two
ttlt Grantors, 111 minerals
Phone 742·2081.
1970 DOUBLE wide mobile home
years old. Writ• Box 729·8, % .
under 111d rtll ntate with
set on permonent .tounrftttlon, ,, . Tha Doily Sentinel , ~omeroy ,
the right to mfne and remove cOINS, currency, tokena, gold per yur •nd up. t3w•lu in 1
the aamt without In fury to the
and allv•r jewelry. We need
FULL TIME Mdent trelning
front porttl, 2.46 o~res ODout l _cO
;::h.::l:o:.:::
45::7::
111::·_ _~--aurfact.
1\164 ond oldor U.S. coins . Coli · progrtml,
.
mile
from
Raclnt.
3
bedroom5,
4
on
and
off
rood tirea . Fir.. tone'
TIRMS OF · SALE: ·Cuh,
c-"trol air conditioning, stove
Town and Country truck tires.
for other 7.. 2-2331 Or come out
REVCO Tractor Tr.tler Tr•infor not lftl thoo fwa.lhlrds at
and refrigerator, Tuppers
10.:16.5 tubeless, like new , $35'
to our coin thop on Rutland and ine, 1nc. wiN tnln yau on mod·
lite IPIN'IIN&lt;I voluo.
Plains, rul"ol water, $17,225.
eoch. Phone992·57!i0.
"''"rfy IPPrlllld II
loading Crook . lid.
om, profosolontl ,...ipmon,,
u1 .oao.eo.
Wom1ley.
·llf1d 111n1m•tt _.__ il
~n~ 949 ' 28 " or 9AHS89.
MUST soli,. 1972 Harley David;;:
TIMlER,
Potnoroy
Forost
Pro·
'
tvtlloblt
upon
f,oduo~on.
3 BEDROOM mobile homo, with
5portoter, chopped, good con·
Rlllltrt c. Horltnboch
land, 12 • 60, compl~toly fur·
ducts. Top pri~o for stondlng CALL NOWI .,;!2-4080
dillon, $1600 or best
onorill
nlahtd, priced reasonable.
reasonable offer. Phona 9.-9MoiGs Countp,Ohlo
~~~: Coli Kent Hanby ,• PARKERSBURG, W, VA."
(I) 2, 9, 16, 21, 30, Stc
2328.
Phcne 992-5491 or 992-3255.

A

-~~~~-··"""'

$!695
1973 VEGA ST. WAGON
Locoll owner, automatic Irons ., powerst..,.lng, radio,
red finish, good llres, really clean .

.

after lo ok reaso nably e ncourag lng today, but it's not likely that which you 'll acquire will
make you happy.

fR£~

n.locioc-

Good tires, clean Interior, grey fin ish, redlo, A speed .
1

..

~

Y- - · - - ·
con MVI hund....
ovon thOusond&amp; ef ctolilrt
wltll olumlnum .. vinyl
lltllng.
•

1111111111111 Senk•

1

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.....

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ustness_· "• :~.,. I TIJ~~~es

I

Moto.r C:o.

1975 Stout II , I.S ,()C() mHet . Ex·
callent shape. Phone 985·33-41
betwetn 8-5:30 p.m.

IN Memory of Lindo Lou Stewart
who passed away 3 years ago
~ todoy , A1,1gust 16th.
!t doesn't matter where we go;
Ormott•rwhotwedo,
There'll alway5 be 5ome little
Thingstomakeusthinkofyou .
Your fact and voice are fresh in
. mind,
.
W• nev•r shall forget .
No matter how the years go by.
Our .love_Is with you yet .

-

e

~~~r~mt~:~~~~o:~~::. ~~b~cE~;i:o::~·'~::::c~ @)
pomeroy
.
(#. 2 SIGNS;
()f

corner of
m .ooo.oo
A. lgQsc:rest
Manor,
as
recorded In Plat Book No . "'·
Robert C. HarttnbiCh
Page No. _.,., Plat Re:c:ords of
Sheriff
Meigs Cdunty , Ohio ; the,nce
M~ l gs County, Oh io
North 31 degrees 15' West 32.0
teft to a con crete marker on
(8) 2. 91 16, 23, 30, Stc
the North side ot Towtr LanJ ,
31 .0 feet wide streitt ; thence
along the north side of Tower
Lane1 south Jl degree~ 30'
West 98.5 feet to an Iron pin ,
corner to a 0.302 acre lot and
a OA34 aczrt lot ; thence South
33 degrees 15' west 250.50 teet
to an iron pin at the po int of
beginning of the tract sur .
veyed, and being the south ·
Bernice Bade Oaol .
west corner of a 1.000 acre
tract, puslng an Iron pin at
Tuoedor, Aug. 17, t•n
125.5 feet at the corner of the
ARIES
(Morch 2t·Afll'll 1t) A
0. 43.4 aeres and 1.000 "re ;
thence leaving Tower Lane wise stance for you to take today
North 67 degrees 02' we:st bus lnesswlse Is to be tlght· fisted
ass.ao ftet to an Iron pin ; and not to expect a lot fOr a little.
thence North 4-4 40' Eut
308 .98 feet to an Iron pin ; TAURUS (April 20·MIJ 20)
lhti)Ct South 59 degrt!es 17 '
Sometimes when we. are uncer·
East 288 .89teet to the iron pin
at the point of beg inn ing , taln Of something we can blutt
containing 2,000 acre, ex . our way through i1. This method
ceptjnt;l all legal rlght -61 -way . will only do half the lob today.
And furtner excepting one .
halfacrescld to Roy F . Riffle GEMI.NI (Mor 21-Juno 20)
and Frona K. Riffle, Aug . 6, Others !',; annat be depended
1974, described· In Vol . 258, \ upon to solve your problems toPage 371 Deed Records Of day . use your Imagination to exa
Meigs County, Ohio .
trlcate yourself from the tight
TERMS OF SALE: Cosh ,
/
tor not less than two -thirds of spols.
the appraised value .
CANCER (June 21-JUIJ 22) You
Appraised
value
of may be tempted today to fracpro~erty : $12,000.00
tu re yo ur fina nces to get
Robert C. Hartenbach something you feel you should
Sheriff have, just because so.meone
Meigs County. Oh.lo else has one .
18) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, Stc
LEO (.tulr 23-JUIJ 22) 'four
chances of getting what you gO
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF'S SALE
By virtue of an order duly
issued out of the Co'!rt of
Common Pleas of Mi!lgs
county, Ohio. In the use of
Spencer R .
Buchanan.
Plaintiff, vs , Fredl!l E.
Buchanan , Defendant, upon 1
judgment tnereln rendered.
and being Case No . 16,1,15 In
said Court,! will offer for sale
at the front door of the court
House in Pomeroy , Meigs
County, Ohio_, on the 2nd day
of September, 1976, at 10
o'clock A.M.. the following
lands end tenements, to.wit :
Situate in the Township of·
Olive, County of Meigs ahd
State Of Ohio. being In· the
northeast quarter of Stctlon
No . Twenty .four , Township
No . Four, Range No. Elev!n ,
and beginning at the north ·
east c.orr~er of JacoD cr .. mer
estate ; thence north fifty rods
to the county Line ; then·c e
west eighteen rods and
eighteen links; thence south
fiffr ·three rods to the road
and to the north line of Jacob
Creamer estate; thence north ·
elghty.one degrees east one
rod and twenty links; thence
north etghty.three degrees ,
east seventeen rOds to the
place of beglnnnlng, ~on ­
tainin9 six acres. more or
less . Deed
Reference :
Volume 203, Page 7, Meigs
County Deed Records.
Said r:eal estate is appraised at $1.000.00. Terms of
sale1 cash upon delivery of
derd . ·

Televisio~ log for easy
viewi~g
.
-. - ·

•

. P.UTLAND PUIMRUB
AtiNUL6ifiATI

T.

I

•

.,

�•
A- 'l'he DallvSentlnel,Micldletlor&gt;-PameroY. 0 .. Monday, Aug. 16, 1t'IS
IIOTIC E OF SALI!
IN THE COMMON P'LI!AS
COUitT
OF
MI!IG S
COUNTY , Ohio
The Athen s Coun ty Savlnts &amp;
Loin C:o., 1n Otl to corp .

:t:~~:::~:~::~~:::u: For Fast Resul's Use The Sentinel Classifieds
B.
Serf, •
Lotn, an Ohio corp.

I

Yl .

VI.

Fred I . Gottleln &amp; B• rbu•~
A. Gotgl t ln, t t 11 .
Clll No. U ,OSI
Pursuant to an ORDER OF
SALE Issued by the Common

Plus c ourt of Meigs County,
01'110 , 1 w ill offer for sale a t
publ ic au cti on on t he lrd day

of Sepltmber , 1976, ot 10 :00
A.M . on tP'It courthouse steps

1t lht COURTHOUSE In

Pomeroy , Ohio, the follow ing
descrl btd reel es111e :
Situa te In the Township of
Orange , County of Meigs and
Stt tt Of Ohio and descr ibed ·

as.rouows : Situate In section

3, Town • North , Range 12
West ,
Ohio · Company ' s
F'.urc hase.
In
Orange
Township , Me igs county ,
Ohio, being tra ct No . 2,
described ai follows: Star -

ting et a Concrete marker at

ttl e northwe!t

Frtd B. Goetll ln &amp; ltrbara
A. Gotvltln, ot ol

,

WANT ADI
INFORMATION

Oh iO, I wil l otter for Ule et
public auction on the 3rd day
of September , 1976, ot 10 :00
A.M. on the covrthaul • 51tps
ot t h•
~ourthou s • In
Pom oroy , Oh io , the following
descr ibed real est lie :
.
Sit ua te In the Townsh ip of
Rutland , Meigs Co.u lnty ,
Ohio; and In Frocton 2. Town
6, ~anQe u ol t he Oh io
Com~any 's Purchase, end
being lot Na . 19 of Hutchinson
Subd ivision as is recordtd in
Plat Boo k 4. Page s7, ot the
Records ot Plots of Me igs
county, Ohio.
TERM S OF SALE : Cash ,
tor not 1m than two .th lrds of
the at:~p r a l s.ed nlue .
Property appraised e t

Ilona accepted tlr1t diY Of
Pllbllcatlon .
· RIGULATIONS
The Publlthor reserves
the rlghl to odlt or reject
onv ad I dumed Ob ·
lectlontl. The publish or
will nat be ruponllblt for
more then one Incorrec t
Insertion .
·
RATES
For wont Ad Strvlco
S cenls per word one
Insertion .
Minimum Chorge 11 .00.
t; conts per word threo
cons,cutlve Insertion• .
26 tontl por word six
conJtcutlvt lnswtlons .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ada and ads ~old
with~~~~ dJ'¥'THANKS

OIUT~ARY

. &amp;

for
80
word
min imum .
· Each additional word 3
S2 .00

cents .

I"LtND ADS
Additional 25c cnerge
per Advertlsem,nt.
OFFICE HOURS
1:30 1 .m . to l :OO p .m .
Dolly, 1 : 3~ o .m . to 12 :00
Noon Saturday . ·
Phone today 992 -21 56.

Astra-

Graph

•

,

·

QUALm

1970RENAULT4DR.

$750

1970CAMAROCPE.
·
·
Sl095
v.1, aulomatlc, P. sfeerln9, exira good radial II res .

NeedS some bodr work .

t

~Sa:d~l~r~m~l·~·od~b~y~Fo~m~ily~.~~~

JOe'S Corry Out, 5M locust , MidV.IRGO {Aug. 23-hp1. 22) You
dleport, Ohio. New hours .
may h~ve to contend wll h
9:00 Iii li :00. Fridoy ood Sotur·
someone ·today who'u ·· try to
•oo h"II 12:00 ' Phone
cia
auy . "
bloc;·~ your efforts underhanded992-3152.
ly. II you're alert tie'11 have little
NOW accepting piano students ,
effect.
beginners~ intermediate, od·
LleRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) If
vanced studentS . Call 992you're involved with the wrong
2270.
person in a venlure loday, the
reSults will ' be und8sirable.
Select associates ·wisely.

SCORPIO (Ool. 24·Nov. 221 FOUND 2 breed of coondogs in
Make concessions when dealing
Plea5e
Racine
vicinity .
with others today. provided ~ou
clescribo. Phone 9;9.2350.
don 't have to do something cpa
HErFfR found on New l imo Rood.
posed to your bE!st interests.
owner niust ;de-ntify and poy
far ad. Phone 7;2-2125.
SAGinARIUI {Nov. 21-Doc.
21, Be sensible about health LOST-i'tr . !*!molt English Spr·
habits toda y or you're apt to
inger ~ -~~ mixed with
overindulge, or anernpt to burn
lleoglo: sho&lt;t hoir,. block of)d
the candle at both ends.
white with docked toil. lost in
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-.fon. 1t)
Rice Run orea , east of Tuppers
It you're qtfered something today
Ploins. REWARD I Phonol. Alan
from one whom you know isn't
DuvoU , (61;)667 -~71 .
too fond of you , look around for
LOST: St . llerncJI'd Dog lost in Long
~he strings attached.
Hollpw ROod oreo. Brown,
AOUARIUS (Jon. :ZO.Fob. 1t)
block and white. If onron. hen
any information concMning the
No matter how hard you try towhereabouts or welfare of the
day you may find it Impossible to
dog, please phone 992·3538.
please certain people . Don't
collect gu ilt over something
thai's not your f3ult.

Your
'WJBirthday

Canier Wanted

B
~'

TRAil FULL OR
PART TilE

.r.

•11,0
· ..

R-

'

•

'

&gt;

•

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WI..S

AT949 2101
· · OR. ·

AUIID

.,

DM.I.
.,.... IIIII ,...._.
• ...__Complete'
tnw
Remodeling Service
r r Your"'--...
r0
nu .. ,..

l i t..Wu~~

... lftUIII

POMEROY MQTOR 00.
·

OPEN EVEsla:oo P.M.
. POMEROVJ OMIO
I

@)
(}t.

~

--

19"0 Olds Cullan S; 2 dr ., factory
oir, outo., power steering , 350
2 bbl . $1200. Coli m -75:W .

FURNISHED·. 2 bedrm . apart ment,
.
adults only . In Middleport. 1974 MONTE CARLO, green with
green vinyl lop. Alr, p.b., p.s.,
PMne992-3874 .
good ct&gt;fldition . Phone 9923 AND 4 RM. fufn iah~ and un·
3625.
furnished opts. Phone "992s.J.o .
!976 GMC ~ wnee-1 dr ive pickup ,
$5500.
cOuNTRY Mobile Honle Pork , Rt .
33. len miles nort h ol Pomeroy. 1971 Montego, good conditon , air
Lorge lots with concrete patios ,
p.s .,
low
cond ition ing,
$idewolks: runners ond off
mileage , $1350 . Phone "Glenn
sfr"t poriting. Phone 992~ 7•79 .
Bissell . 9.49-2901.
3 Room ft.~rnished house with
both . Aduhs · on.ly . Phone 992·
5535.
__,.c..::_:___ _ _ _ _ _ __
oNE bedroom opartmen's ot LOCUST POSTS, round or spli t.
VILLAGE MANOR in Middleport
Phone 949·2n4.
for $10l monthly plus .elec. or
51~
I
d
I
OWE
&lt;J~Y inc u ing ·• ectric. l
R cOAL, limestone, and calcium
-RATES FOR SENIOR CITIZENS.
chiQride ·and calci um brine for
Conven ient t.o shoppir.g on
duSt control ond sJM!Ciol mixing
Third ond Mill Streets in Midsolt for larmers . Main Street.
dleport . Srond new hign quoliPomeroy, Ohio or phone 992tr apartments . See the
3891.
monoger ot Apt , 16. or- coli · CANNING peaches now ready
992.n21. ·
thru AUgust. Several varieii~u
APT. for rent , 5 rooms and bath.
by the bu5hel, 1ft lwshel or
Phone (61&lt;)985·3350.
peck _ Pl~ s e br ing own con·
tolner,
2 cQnvenient locations :
2 Bedroom trailer, real nice,
Midway Market , Po'meroy,
utilities.poid. Phone 992-l32•.
992 ·2S8'2; Sob's "Market, Mason ,
n3-5721 .
)975 Mobile home, 3 bedrooms in
Mason , W. Va. 1150 per month.
1971· Kawosoki 175, Enduro, $250 .
Phone (614)6'18-2922.
Set 9f motorcyCle carriers, $13 .
AVAILABlE ot Riverside ApartPhone 992-~523.
ments , I ·bedroom apartments, $100 per month : 2
bedroom apartments, $133 per
month . One price tol" all . Phone
992·m3 .
1--Good used 30 cu. It.
3 room fumished aportment,
utilities fumished. Call m . freezer
OnfpSI$0
31:19.
1- New S.OOG BTU Air
TRAILER lot for rent . Nice yard
ond garden spaca. Coli 9.-9- Conditioner.
Rt9. $2$0.95
2525, 9o .m. tobp.m.
·
SPECIALS175.00
5 ROOMS. 11&lt;62 lincoln Hgto.
!-Good used 12 cu. ft.
Phone (JIU) 768-4041.
frMter.
2 Bedroom mobile home~ Racine .
aroo. Phone 9'12·S8S8,

FREEZER SAl£

;~
-·~ANY PITCH

•·

BoK21·A

.TEAFORD

MIDDLEPORT - 516,500.
A good 4 bedroom home.
1'12 baths, large dining and
living, gas hot water heat.
Nice woodwork.
NEW LISTING - 10 room

apartment

house ,

separate apartments. All
utilities with natural gas
heat . Lot 121x&lt;IOO. Wont
only $12,000.
NEW LISTING - Nice
split level 3 BR home, nat.
oak varnished floors,
equipped kltchen· stoye,
ref. and bar , din. area,
base, family rm.. 2
porches, garage and 11
acres. s.ll,500.0G .
SEEING IS BELIEVING ,
A
BARGAIN
IS
~\WAITING YOU. CALL
992·3325.

HOUSE for sale , 2 Iorge
bedrooms, Iorge llvln9 room,
kitchen; dining. corpetd. $9,000
in Harrisonville. Phone 7"'2·

27%.

I

'CIJNS(

....

Start play unhonorably

Mlddloport
PHPNE "2-1724
7· 21· 1 mo.

HOUSE for- sale , 391 South Second
Ave ., Middleport. Phone 992• 2265.
.3 8edr~m hoin~~ -b;;it.~~d on&amp;.'
holf . Call 992·31:19 or 992 ·54~ .
2 11ew 3 bedroom hOme• for sol•
on acra trodt, one with
ment, one without . Call 9923.154 cr (6U) 446·9568, , LH
Construction.

bo••·
kit ·
Lin -

• 76 4

• A K 65

WEST

.

EAST

•QJi Q3
.A 8 765
.82
. 53
tA 98
.Q J 10 3
• J 10 8 1
• 92
SOL!Tti IDI '

'W'IIe

.2

STAAl'~~ 4Ct&gt;R.

• A Q J 10 6 4
t K 52

.Q 7 3

lll\iOO\]T'
S/KlK\fh!

East-West vulnerable
\Vest

'

Auto Sales

North East

Wlnshlold Ropllcomont
FrH Eslimates

CLEARANCE SALE
20 Pet. dlscounl .on' olf
mowwnln stock.
2-5 H P riders 26" cut
t--1 H P rlcllr :10" cut
2-21" self propelled

mowwn
2-11" pull! mow.rl
30 I'd. discount on Snapper
lllllrs
.
t-5 H.P chain drive tillers
)-3 H P chi In drive !Ilion

Gravel¥
Tractor~
·iiomtniv, Ohio
Ph.fn-2975

..
•
.•
....

I

-- - .

ANNIE

.

Jim ; " The play from dummy at trick one doesn'l often
make much difference, but
there are times when it is

I.ITT-LII: ORPHAN AMMII-TBI: BLACK. WATCH.

~POC!l
"'~O'II!R

crucial. "
Oswald : " Soulh covered
West's queen of spades with
dummy's king. Ea'st won with
the ace and , after long
thought, sllifted 1o the queen
of diamonds , whereupon the
defense added three diamond
tricks to the spade trick
alrea\ly in the bank. South
consoled himself for his poor
play by remarking thal he
could not make the hand in
any event , but he ·was wrong
there also."
Jim : " Assuming South

COMe CtJT.!

SEPTIC Systems Installed by
licensed 'ln5toller. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7.-2-2409.
SE~TiC TANKS cleaned . Modern
SonitotiQn, 992-3954 or 992·
2428.
wiLL do l"ooflng , Construction,
plumbing ond heoting . No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742·2~8.

' CARPENTER, flooring, ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992~275P.
vERMEER BALER SALES AND SER·
VICE . Meigs-Athens County ..
Bolera from $3995 up . Merrilll
Chooo. (614) 6'18·3021.
EXCAVATING , BACKHOES AND
DOZER - LARGE AND SMALL,
SEPTIC TAN~S INSTALLED. LOW
8t:IY AND. DUMP TRUC~S. BILL
PULUNS ,.PHONE 992·2478 DAY .
OR NIGHT.
BulL PING, remodeling. and ,
rapaln. Quality work , aftlcient l
sarvlce. Jesse Rodman, phona 1
992·5980.
ANTIQUE r"torations , reproduc. tioJll , cabinet making and fur·
nlture repair. ,131 v, 3rd, Middleport, 992·5735 day and
evening.

WHAT HE W'INT,
ALLEYOOP?

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

•

.. '
••

e\.

DOWN
1 Dl!clll'd

Z French
.river

3 Get -

solid
9 Account

(succeedl
(3 wds. I

13 Tease
14 Adroit
15 "Many -

t Caddoan

Indian

GASOllNE AILEY

gaDery

•

Qui.es

· Southern
style

2% Dessert

11 Permeate

7 Tanan's

wine

•

0.

Z7 Calling or

business -

THI?Y'S

TAST/ERTHEYS
FREE!r

-8:) THEYLL 1RY Afo.N

SNEAKY LI'L TRICK TO
INID A FRY/rJ' PAN !-

b-+-+-t-

- --

•.

.

2 : ~;11), 000

Pyramid 13; Dinah I 6; BI-Ways 33.
2:31&gt;-Dodors3,4,15:Cl!le Life to Live 13; Guiding Light
8,10; Unto the Hills 33.
3:00-Another World 3••• IS; 11.11 In the Family 8, 10;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Catch·33 33.
3: Is-General Hospital 13.
.
3:30-Bewllched 6; Match Game8,10; Lilias, Yoga ancj
You 20; Title X 33.
4:0G-Mister Cartoon 3; Merv Griffin 4; Somer...t 15;
Lucy Show 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8; Mister Rogers
20,33; Movie "These Three" 10; Dinah I 13.
4:30-Be)'lltched 3; Mod Squad 6: Andy Grlttlth 8;
Sesame Street 20,33; .Filntstonts 1~ .
5:00-FBI3; Partridge Family B; Mission: Impossible

15.

•

.

.

5 :»-Adam· l2 4, 13; News 6; Fal)'lily Affair B; Electric
Companv 20,33; Adam-12 13.
6 :o6-News :i,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :30-NBC N.ws3,4, 15; ABC Newsl3; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS 'llews . 8, to; Hodgepodge Lodge ·20; Lilias, Yoga
and You 33.
7:00-Truth or Consequences 3; To Tell The Truth 4;
Bowling for Dollars 6; Let's Go to the Races 8;
Price Is Right 10; NameThatTune 13; Family
Affair lS; Romagnolls' Table 20; Strauss Family
33.
7 :30-RopublicanConventlon 3;4, 10,1 S; Let's Deal With
It 6; MatcltGame PM 8; To Tell The Truth 13;
Robert MacNeil Report 20.
8:00-Happy Days 6, 13; RepubllcanConvenllon 8;
Music Prolecf Presents 33; At TheTop 20.
8:30-Capfaln and Tennille 6, 13; Consumer Survival
Kif 33.
9:00-Evenlng al Pops 33; MenWho Made the Movlr
20.
.
9:31&gt;-Republlcan Convention 6, 13.
IO:OO....Oiymplad 33.
10 :31&gt;-News 20.
11 :oo-New&gt; 6, 13; Black Perspective on the News 20;
ABC News 33.
11 :3()-News 3,4,15; Mystery of theWeek 6,13; Janakl
33.
12:oo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; News 8,10.
12 :3()-Movie "G inger In fhe Morning" 8; Movie " A
Man Called Dagger" 10·.
1:oo-News 13.
I :3()-Tomorrow 3,4.

WINS BUS ROADEO

cry

OOLUMBUS (UP!) -Nick
Lang, 29, Cincinnati, a public
transit driver for the Queen
~+-+--+-t-~ City Metro who won the first
Bua Roadeo Saturday, will
f.-.--1--l--t 1ept esent the Buckeye State

J.,.-+-+-

Cincinnati, Cleveland Toledo,
Akroo, Kent, Dayton and
Columbus.
The group waa judged 111
the basis of their a~ty to
maneuver buell over aerpen·
at the national championshlp line eoursea, through narrow
k--+--4----l In San Francisco next clearances, in and out of tic1Jt

~+---+---" October.

-+-+--+-1

king

33 Wide St.
34.35 Study
:r7 Neighbor
of

corners, and in simulated btl.

Lang ,was the overall stops
showing
winner in field of 14 drivers opet:ation. ·
won local cmtests al

safe

I~

~lYMffi~;::t.:::!!:·~=

WY.O.

Unscramble theoo four Jumbl ..,
one letter to eat:h square, to '
form four ordinary words.

38 Actress,
Claire:....

(~q

39 Asseverate b-4-~--+-+-lf­

~-'lc-~

•

tt Gras&amp;bopper's
critic

.

:L$11LLMY)()U . HUSH, PAWJ HE!&gt;
OLD ENOUt.:&gt;H 1D
D:lf&gt;/T WLVE

ANYTHING- BY
RUNNING-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how

KNONH I80NN

Ia

MIND ...:L GUE5&amp;1

AWAY/

to

work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One leller simply stands lor another. ln this sample A is
used for the three L's, X l or lhe Lwo O's, etc. Single leiters.
apostrophes, the lenglh and formlllion of lhe ll'ords are all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.

..

CRYPTOQUOTES
WZZG

JVCXFJ

~.I

GLORV BE!! TH' SHOT

PNBF
PQJ

ZL

RZUP

••

'
.
I.
"
Mon., Tue~.. Wed ', (,.,

K.

CFG

MZN

IJG

QCYJ

KZYJBU . -

RZZBJ

Yesterday's Cryploquote: THE ELECTION ISN'T VERY F ;\R
OFF . WHEN THE CANDIDATE CAN RECOGNIZE YOU
A~

TilE STREET. -

KIN HUBBARD

HEEREO 'ROUND
TH' WORLD!!

rn

Dl

t
. I I J ·I· I

IEMBLAG

IBRO$YI [ ~ I fl"'! .t!'t
~~~~~~~~~~~ ~by the~·~
IL. _:MII=.,===-=•==•==•=-=~~n=--.~1 ( I I I X I r l
Now orrar110 the eiftltd

ourprioe anowtr, •

to

...

,.,. .....,.. IJ•..W...

WHEAT ILAZ£

(A.twen ••••rrew)
PAUPER AUTUIIN

Aalwera WJNrw tile • .,,... upert'tf•Mteltnr
n.,frw•-ntltAP

TE~L. THEM NOT TO

. HIT THE Q.\1.(, SO HARD!

.
•••••••••••

•... · Close §.It At 5 p.m.
.
-

6 :55 Cood Morning, Trl State 13.
7:00-Toda)I .3,4,1S; Good Morning. Amerlca6,13; CBS
News I; Chuck1Whlte Reports 10.
7:0S-Bugs Bunny and Friends 10.
7:30-Schoolln 10.
8:()()-Jeff's Collie In Captain Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Street 33.
'
8:30-Big Vafle.y 6.
9:oo-A.M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,1S; Lucy Show 8; Mike
Douglas 10; Morning Wlfh D. J . 13; Mister Rogers
33.
9:»-Cross·Wits 3; One Lilt to Live 6; Tattletales 8;
Mike Douglas' 13; Carrascolendas 33.
to :OO-Santord and San 3,A, IS; Price Is Right 1, 10; Bit
. With Knlf h
. ·
IQ : Is-General Hospital 6.
10:»-Celebrlty Sweepstakes 3,4,15; Lilias, Yoga and
You 33.
11 :00-Witeel of Fortune 3,15; Weekday A; Edge· ol
Night 6; Gambit 8,10; Farmer's Daughter 13;
Electric Company 33.
11 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Love or Life 8,10; Biography 33.
11 :55-Take Kerr B; Ms. Fix it 10.
12 :00-Fun Factory 3, IS; Hot Seat 13; Bob Braun 4;
News 6,8,10; Sesame Streat 33.
12 : 3~ong Show 3,15; All My Children 6,13; Searclt
for Tomorrow 8, 10.
12 :55-NBC New• 3,15:
1:00-News 3; Rya.n'sHope 6,13;; Phil Donahue I;
Young and theReslless10 r Nol For Women Only 1S;
Electric Company 33.
1:30-Days of our Lives 3.;,15; Family Feud 6,13; As '
the World Turns 8,10; Family Theilre 33;
· ·

voyage

&lt;;,~

.,
•''

sz ~~nlte

fruit

·:n Lambkin's

;;...............-

!8Corvine
cry

v----:--:---~-:-~- %9 Composite

:M Grapelike

~de

partner

' ...

Street's

31 Vestibule

Z!i Uon's ·

rider
12 Concordat

Z3 Quite pale
25 It "talks"
Z6 Sonny's

%9 Della
boss
30 His gooae
is cooked

Z3 Resign
10 Beyond
oneself to
(3 wds.)
Z4 Father's
11 Midnisht __ Day gift

clinch

%7 Concealed

1t Four (Ger.)

OJeeta

Gardner Z1 Ema1111t
2% Break a

••
•

11 Bucolic
dance hall

&amp; Beauty,

ze Cartoonist,

••

Yesterday's Answer

s Arched

caned ... "
1• Fonnaj
dance {Fr. I
17 One rJ. the

carvinq!

~-

U Ethereal

1 Disparage
5 Atab
gannent
8 Geometric

Up WOOd·

8:00tll S:OO

tOo you have a question
lor the experts? Write "Ask
the JacQb~s " care ol this
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
if stamped. sell-addreued
en velopes are enclosed. The
mos.t interesting questions
will be use(! in this · column
and will recei ve copies ol
JACOBY MODERN. I

.~,.Wd'

She's

.

We have had so many
questions about point count
that we will answer them in
this and our neKt several articles .
To start with , poinl count is
basically · a method of hand
valuation . High cards are
valued :
Ace-4, king·3, queen-2, and
jack-1.
Thus , there are 10 high-card
points in each suit and 40 highcard points in the pack.

l•

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
U'l'l'LE ORPHAN

IIOW DIP I

m.215f or 992·2561

Pas.s
Pass

Pass

On BodY Work ·

WE HAVE'"2 NEW 3
bedroom homes lust baing
completed. Both have
garages with work area,
baths, utllll'f R.. carpeted.
~\bout 1 . acre of ground.
$22,900.00.
CARRY OUT- Has been
established In the same
location . for many years.
Doing
an
excellent
business. Priced riglit. WE
HAVE
3
OTHER
BUSINESSES FOR SALE
- CALL If lnternted .
A NEAT PLACE- 5 yrs.
old, 3 bedrooms. bath, din•
In kitchen, utility R.,
carport,
air
cond.,
carpeted, t;, aero with
meta• storage building,
S16,800.QO.
,
GRI\CIOUS 2 story older
home . Formal dining R., 4
BRm., bath, nice kltchon,
carpeting, paneling, 2 car
111raoe. Some fruit tr...
.69 acre , $18,800.00.
OTHER LISTINGS NOT
NOTED IN THIS 11.0 CI\L:L
FOR
INFORMATION.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

2•
4•

Opening lead - Q •

Export Po inti,.
lnsuranc:e Work
Wolcoino
St. Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio
U.T.:J127
7-29-1 mo.

MAIN

Pass
Pass

Clucked the spade lead , there
is no chance that East would
put up his ace, Soutb would
ruff the second spade and
draw lrumps with two leads to
leave one trump in dummy .
Then he would ruff dummy's
last spade and start on clubs .
East would show out on the
third club, but South would
lead the last club and discard
a diamond ll'om his hand .
West would be in and would
have to lead a diamond to establish South 's king or give
South' a .ruff and discard."

~~~

South
l •

ZFJ

SNAPPER

16

• K91
• K97

Alnerieln
--

~OMEROY,

TUESDAY, AUOII5T 17, tt ••
6:oo-Summer S.mftler 10.
6: 15-Farm Report 13.
6:20-Rev . Cltophus Robinson 13.
6: 30-Cofumbus Today A; News 6; Summer Stmnter
I; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
, 4·-Morning Report 3.
' • 'i&lt;. -Good Morning, West Virginia 13.

WIN AT BRIDGE
NORTH

.

..

·• ' 3C """-I1Ch·33 33.
11 :00-News 6;13,20; ABC News 33.
11 : »-News 3,4,15; Honeymoon Suite 6,13; JIMkl 33.
12 :0G-Johnny Carson 3,A,15; News 1, 10.
12: 30-Movle " Lady L" I; Movie " Hoi Rods to Hell"
. 10.
.
1:00-- -· .. 13.
1:30-Tomorrow 3,A.

. Ways~'

Noble summit Rd.,

HOME SITES lor sale , 1 acre ond
up. Middleport, near Rutkmd .
Coll992·7481.
NEW 3· bedroom house. 2 baths,
oil elec., 1 ocre , Middleport, ,
close· lo Rutland . Phone 992·
74B1.
SMAll farm for sole, 10,-, down ,
owner financed . Monroe Coun · .
ty , W. Va . Phone (304) 772·
3102 or {30i)772·3227.
COUNTRY farmland with itdud ed woods. water and good accanln Monraa County, W. Va .
$1,000 down, coli {304) 772.
3102 cr (304)772·3227 .
3 bedroom house for sole ot 520
Sycamore St ., Middleport, good
buy for $8.000 . Phone 992·3S78,
or992-7b67 . .

2

'

S\\I.TII Dlll1

GOOD CA TILE FARM FOR SALE
BY OwNER, 71 a cres MIL
JQCkson Co . .Fenced, modern 5
roo m
h o use ,
neV~Iy
redacoroted ,
comp letely
co("peted . 55 acres good
posture , 15 acre s wooded
vi rgin timber, d8 veloped sprIngs, . good born , ond ,othel"
buildings , high country . rolling 1
KEN GROVER
hills, e xCel lent 'llltw. Appoint- 4
fT'tenl only. Phone (614) 384·
PfloiOtroplty
2591 af ter 5 p.m. Price
915.. 155
550,000.
Clint or, Oltio
L 15 acres of. land on lead ing
7:.14-! rna.
( r~k Rood with water top.
Coli 992·S3S2 or 992·2•96.
HOUSE lor sole, 3 bedrobfns, all BRADFORD, Auct ioneer, Com plete Service. Phone 949-2487
electric. Fam ily room fully
or
949-2000. Racine . Ohio , Critt
carpeted with wood.burn ing
BradfQrd.
firep lace , large lot Yl'ifh storage
bu ilding and garden space. ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Rustic Hills, Syrocuse. Phone
Sweepers. toasters. irons, all
992-7836 .
small appliances . Lawn mower ,
next to State HighWay Garage
2Q Acre form wit h pond, bor n,
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985·
smok,ehouse and cellar plus op·
382S,
pie ·orchard and peach trees.
Also on property 2 story house REMODELING, Plumbing , heating
ond o 2 yeor old doub!e'!Nide
and oil types of general repair ,
trailer. On County Rood 18 . Air
Work guaranteed 20 yean ••·
for $:19,000.00. Call 992-7590
perience. Phone992-2,.09 .
during week .
O&amp;D TREE Trimming 1 20 years ex ·
a room house for sole at 126 perience . Insured free
Laurel St. , Pomeroy. Phone
estimates. Coli 992·238.4 or
992-5741.
(614)698·7257 Albony .
SIX rooms , bath, workshop. sEWING MACHINE Repoirs 1 ser·
vi~ e. oil makes, 992-2264 . The
storage building, Iorge lot, wall
Fabric Shop , Pomer·oy.
maintained\ r&amp;asonablr priced.
Phone 992-S3H after 5 p.m.
Authorized Singer SOles and
-::;::;;;;;;;;;;:::::;:~=:i;;;;
Servii:e . We sharpen Scissors.
r
ExCAVATING, dozer, loodE!r and
backhoe work; dump trucks
ond lo-boy1 for hire ; will haul
Virgil B. Sr.. R~all~r
fill dirt, to soil . limestone and
.no ·Mechanic Pomeroy; ()
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger JefPllont~-331~,
.
fers , doy phon• 992·7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992RUTLAND- Nice older 9
5232.
room home, 2 baths, 3 Brs.,
or more wlfh closets, full EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
basemen1, large front · ond· ditcher, CharleS R. Hatporclt , 2 car garage with 2
field , Bock Hoe Ser11ice,
Rutland, Ohio . Phone 742·2008.
rooms . Big ~orner lot.
$rl0,000.
GREG"S CB SALES , located of Erwin's Gulf Service , Middleport , Ohio. Phone .992.
44 ACRES - On Rt. 143.
2438 .
Mobile home 12&gt;&lt;60 with 2
Bn .. drilled well, woods &amp;
some bottom land.

NEAR RUTLAND- New 3
bedroom home, sleps over
kitchen, large living , full
basement, Sf. doors, &amp;
windows. Carporl wllh
u1illly, 2 acres . $31,000.

.CAPTAIN EASY

D. Bumpdner

COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
-Aorlll-lndustrlol
Construction Prag...O
-Comp:f.~heol S.rY!i.• .
un
riiluatu,
Elomenlory
Schoof Pac~ ·l'fcturos
Seniors a YMrbook
-Wedell......

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PlttZ-1174

HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
bedrooms, nice modern
bath , large modern kitchen
wlfh dining, full basement,
and large lot. $20,000.

I

'!!'·

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

Rutland, Ohio 4Sn5
Ph. (614) 742-2409
Wo Dotllvor
7·28-4 mos .

•

Allevo ond INlow ground
pool klb for 1llot . do-lt· '
rouruH mon.
'
'
All pool supplln .ovalllblo,

......

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

.'

SWIMMING
PQOU__

EXPIRIINCID .
·ladlator-.r""""'~

' A.NY SIZE

MONDAY. AUGUST!•. 1916
S:&lt;IO- FBI3; Partrldgf Family I ; Mlulon : 'lmposstble
15.
.
5:30-Adam-12 ~.13 : Ne.w s 6: Fomlly Affolr I; Elec.
Co. 20,33 .
6:00-News 3,4,1, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC NeWs J,A, U; ABC Newsl3; Andy (;rlfflfh 6;
CBS News 1, 10; Hodgepodge Lodgo 20;
Carroscoltnda1 33.
7:00-Meias Fair Preview (cl S; Truth or Cons. 3; To
Tell the Truth A; Bowling lor Dollars 6; Buck Owens
8; High R..c! to AdventureiD; Candid Cam..ra 13;
Family Mlalr U ; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20;
West Vlrvlnia Journal 33.
.
7:30-Ropubllcan Convention 3,;,10,151 Baseball 6,13;
Prlca Is Righi 8; Robert MacNeil Report 20,33.
8:00-Ntovle "African Queen (c) 5; Republican Con.
venllon. 8; Tennis 20; Whaf Country 33.
9:oo-Gaad Old Days of Radio 33. .
1D:OG-700Ciub (C) S; Republican Convention 6, 13; Bl·

tlunona
74i-ZIU
, All Werk Gulr1nt_,
, _ EIIII1NII•
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PLEASE
NO SUNDAy, CALLS
8·9-761 month ,

4-tO.I

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949 2160

·

mlnum Sidlnt, -

7, ,.&amp;.1.1..
,

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GLEH R. BISSEU.

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ESTJMaJESI
.

I(M...,,.EIIT

SlOt~

II.
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CONTACT
·~

$10111

Wl•a• lOGOIS

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PISCES (Fob. :ZO.Mit'ch 20) Be
realiStic regarding your .talents A GREAT
OPPORTUNITY I
Unlimited
earnings .
ROBERT C. HARTENBACH, today. Don't attempt projects
Sheriff of beyond your scope. You're not
Demonstrate Toys and Giftt a
Meigs County , OhiD . expected to be an expert 1n atf
few evening• a . week . NO ex~rience . NO paperwork. NO
areas.
&lt;al 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, stc·
GIMMIC~S!
Gasoline TWO 'motor boots with 35. h.p.
motora; 1965 Volkswa94t". CANNING tomotoes ond sweep
plowonce. Earn FREE Sample
Phone 992-5741 .
p•ppers. · Cleland Form a.
Kit. Call 742-23n. Write ·TOY
Gel"oldine Cleland . Rocint,
LADIES PARTY PLAN ,
Ohio.
Johnstown, Po. 15904.
NOTICE OF SALE
-· --1
1971
HONDA CL·450; 12,000
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Aug. 17, tt71
IF VOU hove a service to offer,
mllea, siny bor, crcnh bal"s,
• COURT
OF
MEIGS
wont to buy or stllsomettling.
COUNTY, OHIO
pull back handle ban, new tire
Small enterprises you carl han·
oe
looking for work . . . or
and seols, Scrambler side
die in your spare lime could
- .. The Athens County Savlnts &amp;
whote'oler ... you'll get results
~ipeo , $650. Coii9A9-2i00.
produce a source of additional
For Pomeroy, Ohio
LOin Co.
foster
with o Sentinel Wont Ad .
revenue
this
year.
·
J
ust
lake
care
vs.
197.4 Suzuki G.T. 380 , txcellent
Area
Coii9'12·21S6.
they don't become too timeFred B. GOtlltin, ltal.
condition. Call 742-21-43 after 5
YARD Sale, Aug. 17 ot423 Beech
Cue No. 1605~
consuming.
p.m . or contact Do !los Weber.
Carriers win Vlluoblo
Pursuont to an ORDER OF
St., Middleport, 9-.- . Some tiJce
prl11s ond earn exlro
SALE IISUfd by the Common
CONSOLE
stereo , om·fm rad iO, _.
sch'ool doth.s , women't and
IJII!nding money.
Pleu Court of Meigs County ,
speed
changer. Balance
men's clothinfil.
Ohio, I will offer tor sale at
$102.10 or terms . Coll992-3965.
Phone
The
Publl' auction on the lnt day
yARD Sale, 3 Family Sale, goad
ADDRESSERS won led IMMEDI,O. TE·
of Septembtr, 1976, at 10 :00
Dally Sentinel
teenage, oduh and children 's 1~2 16 It. CreOIIinor boo! , 1973
LY! Work at home, no exA.M, on the courthouse steps
85 h.p. Mercury motor. and
Electrolull floor shomclothet.
perience necessary .- ex:Afm-2156
P
at the COUR ·T HOUSE In
rroller, with ex:tras . $2995.
pooer,
inch
worm
,
books
and
cellenr
pay
.
Write
American
Or
Slop
In
At
1!\ Pomeroy, Ohio. the following
Phone
(6ii)667·3S07 .
monyh
misc.
items
.
Monday
Service,
b950
Woyzoto
Blvd
.,
- described reel tstate :
111 Court Sine!
ond
Tutsdoy
.
9
a
.m.
till4
p.m.
Suite 132, Minneapolia. MN
Situated
In
Orange
FOUR
good
Guernsey cOws , price
Pomoroy, o.
253 South Fifth Avenue. MidTownship, Meigs County ,
55&lt;26.
firm . Phone 949·2179 .
Ohio, and being In Section 3,
dleport.
AND
Town .-North, Range 12 West , DO YOU HAVE PARTY PLAN EX· DEMONSTRATORS
MANAGER
noeded
to
work
YARD
810 South Second St.,
PERIENCE? FRIENDLY TOY
~I
of the Ohio .. Company 's
with tho oldest Toy &amp; Gift Shop
Ohio . Old
I?..! '•. Purchase, and dncrlbed as
PRTIES HAS OPENINGS FOR
Party Pion in the country. '
books. pictures,
MANAGERS IN YOUR AREA.
'. follows:
LOT NO . 3: BeQinnlnQ ot a
Highest commissions . No In·
clothing, ADULT'S walker , women '•
RECRUITING IS EASY BECAUSE
point South 15 degrees •5'
clothing, slippers, curtains Ond
Call
or
write
today,
vestment
.
OEMS HAVE NO CASH INEST·
Eut 23S feet ond South I
midget tope recorder, bran
SANTA's Porti11, Avon , .Conn.
MENT,
NO
COLLECTING
OR
d•Qre• lS' Well 2S7.S IHI
06001.
Phone
1
(203)
6~~55
.
floor
lamp, •tereo albums .
DELIVERING: CALL COLLECT TO
from the. Northeast corner of
Phone 992.5655.
ALSO BOOKING PARTIES.
CAROL DAY 518·489·8395 OR
;:: the Kenneth E . Rlgga and
,_.. Judith A. Riggs 21 2-3 ocre
WRITE FRIENDLY HOME PAR· NEED someone to cut Q:rau . RAIIITS for solo. Phone 742·2656. NEW garden seed sower, $35;
trect No. 1, as described In
TIES, 20 RAILROAD AVE .,
Phone 992·5798.
Pull out bumper lor one-half
TO GIVE AWAY TO GOOD HOME,
Volume 2•5, Page 1029, of the
ALBANY , N.Y. 12205.
ten pickup truck , $125:031 Stlhl
3 l.,ale Collie pups, already
Meigs County Deed Records ;
Chain sow, $165; I:J1J Ford tracwormed ,
mother
thence North 50 degrees 20'
tor ond S fl. brush hOI!. $2500.
Wts~ 293 .5 ftet to a toncrtte
Thorov~hbred , father mixed.
N. E. Vanaman , New Lima
marker; thence South 26
Phone 992·2667.
degrtes 30' West 9 feet to an
Road .
A~C IRISH SETTER pu~pies, 550.
lronpln ; then'• south 3.- WILL DO odd jobt , roofing, pain·
WI~TER potatoes and peach••·
'- detrtta oo' West 45 feet tO an
Phone 949·2726. .
ling,
hauling,
tree
work,
and
Charita R. Horrit 1 Portland ,
-, Iron pin ; thence South 37
mowing. Phone 992-7.-09.
PLEASURE horaes and ponies.
de9rHs 00' West 53 feet to.,
Ohio . Phona 8.43-2693 .
will do training. Phone
...,. lrOI' pin; thence soulh 34
FOR
SALE - good used T.V."t,
t:l dqrees 15' West 11 fttt to a
RufhReevta .
color ond block and white. Hor """ ' concrett marker ; · ~thence
South 50 degrees 20' East 380
riaon 's TV Service; 276
Sycomora St. , ,Middleport, .
fttt to 1 ftnct; .ftltntt N'orth 1 OLD furniture. Ice boxes, bran
deQrt• IS' EUt 154.5 lOti to
·beds, wall telephones and
Ohio . Phono992·2522.
WILL 00 babysitting weekdays
the point of bq~lnnlng, con.
ports, or compl" households.
ond ~omt evenin~a . Phone 1973 HONDA 350 4 cyl., like now ,
...... talnrng 0.91 acres, more. or
Wrlle M. D. MiUer, Rt. 4, You don't ht" to quit your
1111.
9•9·2322.
2800 mles, extros . $800 firm .
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli 992·7760.
prtStnt job to tr1in to drive 1
The
above
propertv
Must sell , Phone 9.49-2181 ,
ASH
ld
f
11
_._
d
traetor-tralltr.
In
only
7
to
8
dncrlbed Is LOT NO . 3 In
0
C
po
or
ml,R\es
on
WHktnds
PART
liME
!reining
I.OCALL Y owned boauly sho for
RlgQICrHI Monor Addition
modele of mobile homtt.
u rocorded In Volume 4,
sole or leas• or will sell equipPhone oroo cade 614·423·9531 .
IStturdays 6 SundiiYsl • qual·
Pogo .u, Meigs County Plot
ifild driftr an be •ning
MOifLE flame for .aale or rent, 3
ment consisting of two waah
Records.
bedrooms, ol utilities pold.
r;md combout stotlona and 2
$tcosh$$
for
junhd
auto.
Frye's
Excepting and rlltrvlnQ to
Truck Auto Ports. Rutland.
Phone 992.7751.
dry•rs.
Equipment It only two
ttlt Grantors, 111 minerals
Phone 742·2081.
1970 DOUBLE wide mobile home
years old. Writ• Box 729·8, % .
under 111d rtll ntate with
set on permonent .tounrftttlon, ,, . Tha Doily Sentinel , ~omeroy ,
the right to mfne and remove cOINS, currency, tokena, gold per yur •nd up. t3w•lu in 1
the aamt without In fury to the
and allv•r jewelry. We need
FULL TIME Mdent trelning
front porttl, 2.46 o~res ODout l _cO
;::h.::l:o:.:::
45::7::
111::·_ _~--aurfact.
1\164 ond oldor U.S. coins . Coli · progrtml,
.
mile
from
Raclnt.
3
bedroom5,
4
on
and
off
rood tirea . Fir.. tone'
TIRMS OF · SALE: ·Cuh,
c-"trol air conditioning, stove
Town and Country truck tires.
for other 7.. 2-2331 Or come out
REVCO Tractor Tr.tler Tr•infor not lftl thoo fwa.lhlrds at
and refrigerator, Tuppers
10.:16.5 tubeless, like new , $35'
to our coin thop on Rutland and ine, 1nc. wiN tnln yau on mod·
lite IPIN'IIN&lt;I voluo.
Plains, rul"ol water, $17,225.
eoch. Phone992·57!i0.
"''"rfy IPPrlllld II
loading Crook . lid.
om, profosolontl ,...ipmon,,
u1 .oao.eo.
Wom1ley.
·llf1d 111n1m•tt _.__ il
~n~ 949 ' 28 " or 9AHS89.
MUST soli,. 1972 Harley David;;:
TIMlER,
Potnoroy
Forost
Pro·
'
tvtlloblt
upon
f,oduo~on.
3 BEDROOM mobile homo, with
5portoter, chopped, good con·
Rlllltrt c. Horltnboch
land, 12 • 60, compl~toly fur·
ducts. Top pri~o for stondlng CALL NOWI .,;!2-4080
dillon, $1600 or best
onorill
nlahtd, priced reasonable.
reasonable offer. Phona 9.-9MoiGs Countp,Ohlo
~~~: Coli Kent Hanby ,• PARKERSBURG, W, VA."
(I) 2, 9, 16, 21, 30, Stc
2328.
Phcne 992-5491 or 992-3255.

A

-~~~~-··"""'

$!695
1973 VEGA ST. WAGON
Locoll owner, automatic Irons ., powerst..,.lng, radio,
red finish, good llres, really clean .

.

after lo ok reaso nably e ncourag lng today, but it's not likely that which you 'll acquire will
make you happy.

fR£~

n.locioc-

Good tires, clean Interior, grey fin ish, redlo, A speed .
1

..

~

Y- - · - - ·
con MVI hund....
ovon thOusond&amp; ef ctolilrt
wltll olumlnum .. vinyl
lltllng.
•

1111111111111 Senk•

1

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ustness_· "• :~.,. I TIJ~~~es

I

Moto.r C:o.

1975 Stout II , I.S ,()C() mHet . Ex·
callent shape. Phone 985·33-41
betwetn 8-5:30 p.m.

IN Memory of Lindo Lou Stewart
who passed away 3 years ago
~ todoy , A1,1gust 16th.
!t doesn't matter where we go;
Ormott•rwhotwedo,
There'll alway5 be 5ome little
Thingstomakeusthinkofyou .
Your fact and voice are fresh in
. mind,
.
W• nev•r shall forget .
No matter how the years go by.
Our .love_Is with you yet .

-

e

~~~r~mt~:~~~~o:~~::. ~~b~cE~;i:o::~·'~::::c~ @)
pomeroy
.
(#. 2 SIGNS;
()f

corner of
m .ooo.oo
A. lgQsc:rest
Manor,
as
recorded In Plat Book No . "'·
Robert C. HarttnbiCh
Page No. _.,., Plat Re:c:ords of
Sheriff
Meigs Cdunty , Ohio ; the,nce
M~ l gs County, Oh io
North 31 degrees 15' West 32.0
teft to a con crete marker on
(8) 2. 91 16, 23, 30, Stc
the North side ot Towtr LanJ ,
31 .0 feet wide streitt ; thence
along the north side of Tower
Lane1 south Jl degree~ 30'
West 98.5 feet to an Iron pin ,
corner to a 0.302 acre lot and
a OA34 aczrt lot ; thence South
33 degrees 15' west 250.50 teet
to an iron pin at the po int of
beginning of the tract sur .
veyed, and being the south ·
Bernice Bade Oaol .
west corner of a 1.000 acre
tract, puslng an Iron pin at
Tuoedor, Aug. 17, t•n
125.5 feet at the corner of the
ARIES
(Morch 2t·Afll'll 1t) A
0. 43.4 aeres and 1.000 "re ;
thence leaving Tower Lane wise stance for you to take today
North 67 degrees 02' we:st bus lnesswlse Is to be tlght· fisted
ass.ao ftet to an Iron pin ; and not to expect a lot fOr a little.
thence North 4-4 40' Eut
308 .98 feet to an Iron pin ; TAURUS (April 20·MIJ 20)
lhti)Ct South 59 degrt!es 17 '
Sometimes when we. are uncer·
East 288 .89teet to the iron pin
at the point of beg inn ing , taln Of something we can blutt
containing 2,000 acre, ex . our way through i1. This method
ceptjnt;l all legal rlght -61 -way . will only do half the lob today.
And furtner excepting one .
halfacrescld to Roy F . Riffle GEMI.NI (Mor 21-Juno 20)
and Frona K. Riffle, Aug . 6, Others !',; annat be depended
1974, described· In Vol . 258, \ upon to solve your problems toPage 371 Deed Records Of day . use your Imagination to exa
Meigs County, Ohio .
trlcate yourself from the tight
TERMS OF SALE: Cosh ,
/
tor not less than two -thirds of spols.
the appraised value .
CANCER (June 21-JUIJ 22) You
Appraised
value
of may be tempted today to fracpro~erty : $12,000.00
tu re yo ur fina nces to get
Robert C. Hartenbach something you feel you should
Sheriff have, just because so.meone
Meigs County. Oh.lo else has one .
18) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30, Stc
LEO (.tulr 23-JUIJ 22) 'four
chances of getting what you gO
NOTICE OF
SHERIFF'S SALE
By virtue of an order duly
issued out of the Co'!rt of
Common Pleas of Mi!lgs
county, Ohio. In the use of
Spencer R .
Buchanan.
Plaintiff, vs , Fredl!l E.
Buchanan , Defendant, upon 1
judgment tnereln rendered.
and being Case No . 16,1,15 In
said Court,! will offer for sale
at the front door of the court
House in Pomeroy , Meigs
County, Ohio_, on the 2nd day
of September, 1976, at 10
o'clock A.M.. the following
lands end tenements, to.wit :
Situate in the Township of·
Olive, County of Meigs ahd
State Of Ohio. being In· the
northeast quarter of Stctlon
No . Twenty .four , Township
No . Four, Range No. Elev!n ,
and beginning at the north ·
east c.orr~er of JacoD cr .. mer
estate ; thence north fifty rods
to the county Line ; then·c e
west eighteen rods and
eighteen links; thence south
fiffr ·three rods to the road
and to the north line of Jacob
Creamer estate; thence north ·
elghty.one degrees east one
rod and twenty links; thence
north etghty.three degrees ,
east seventeen rOds to the
place of beglnnnlng, ~on ­
tainin9 six acres. more or
less . Deed
Reference :
Volume 203, Page 7, Meigs
County Deed Records.
Said r:eal estate is appraised at $1.000.00. Terms of
sale1 cash upon delivery of
derd . ·

Televisio~ log for easy
viewi~g
.
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. P.UTLAND PUIMRUB
AtiNUL6ifiATI

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8- Tbe Dilly Sentinel, Mldcleport·l'clmero)', 0 .. M onday1 A1Ji c~ 111'18

Scranton believed high on Veep list
"1 would bape tltlt 1111
is out of the 1'1111111n11IQDinee would lllrqtbeft
"I have ·. never been the put)' IIIII ~t UJ
enthlllialltlc for Jqher office, di•!Jive- wltbill [1.1111
and I'm not enthllliutk: for I'IIIU IIIICI, at tbe lime,
higher office now," Scranton haYe a IIUiflc:laltly brolld
said. "But if he wenta me to appeal 10 we will win In
do it, I would be beD-bent for November."
election, as I do everything
That eppeanod to tununo"
when I undertake it."
llmeliCbt on lllcll llll!denlel
~ally said Sunday he It ss Senl. Cbarlel Pllrcr ol
'
not
arroaant
and · 111incU 1111C1 Howard Baker of
Henry Woodrow Van Mary Flint, .Cheshire, who ·presumptuous, 111d he will Tenneuee, Deleon
Sickle,
59,
Rt . . Z, survives, In ilddltion to his not say he won't accept the SacrltarY Donald Rumlfeld,
Neighborhood Rd., died at wife, Virginia. Taylor. lbey vice presidential slot before It Govll. Robert Ray of IOWII
3:05 a.m. Monday at Holler were married Feb. 19; 1937. is offered by Ford.
,L~~
Medical Center. He had been Survivors Include his
Ford told the Chicago Trl- Allderaon of Dllno!J.
children, Mrs . Michael · bune beltn fiytng here for
In falling health one year.
~ 1!4.11an hu _, _ _..u
A retired employe of the (Darlene) Cthon, GallipoliS; the GOP Convention ~
~ lll!llecf&lt; liberal Sell,
City of Gallipolis where he Mrs. Roger (Janet) Scott,
worked over 30 years, he was Bucyrus; · Mrs. Jerry
:::,rtvlllla
born Feb. 2, 1917 In Maaoil (Wanda) Hecker, Gallipolis;
OJimty, W. Va. to the late Mrs. 'Patrida Taylor,
Franklin Van Sickle and Gallipolis; · M,rs. Danny
FELLOW TRAVELERS In the campaign homestretch, Rooald Reagan and his vice(Shirley) Palmer, Cheshire;
presldentjll choice, Sen. Richard Schweiker of Pennsylvania, want President Ford to follow
Ronnie, at hqm e; seven Veterans Memorial Hospllal
their lead. Reagan backers pushed in the Rules committe~ for a requirement that a
Admlnlobs K~hler · grandchildren; these SaturdayLawson,
presidenlill candidate name a running mste in advance of voting on the presidential
(OinUnued fral!l JIICI})
MinersHerman
brothers and sisters, Marvin,
nomination,
individual
members'
Columbus; Char les, ville.
preferenc~
on
the
lint ballot.
Saturday Discharges 0\eshlre; Foster, Galllpolls;
Mr . and Mrs. John Olrrather
t~an
as
a blOc:
lildred Bissell, Juanita
TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY
Mrs. Fred (Magdelene J St.
. dray, Fullerton, California,
reflecting
'
t
he
majority.
That
LOST AND FOUND
Clair; Cheshire; 'Mrs. hstis, Janice Groggel, way, said Ford suppo~ GU
aJ1l visi ling here with his
Black, brown and white
Matsena Denny, Hogsett, W. Bernice Brothers, E))er Cannlchael, the President
mother, Mrs. Beulah Olrdray
. (Cootlnued from page I)
beagle female lost In the
Va.; Mrs. Monroe (Ruby) Gillilan, Esther Olmstock, would get a 110lld 1&amp;-vote
and brother-in-taw and sister,
vicinity of Leading Creek helping Lnckheed sell 21 of Its Trlstar jets to All · Nippon Mr. and Mrs. Reed jeffers
Sheets, Gallipolis; Mrs. Lee. Dale Nicholson .
Sunday Admissions - Ina majority in ..Mlaslsslppl 111d
and Van Zandt Rd. near the Airways, Japan's largesl domestic airline. A second count and other relatives here and
(Naomi) Senes, Ollwnbus;
REEDSVILLEPearl
G.
'
Howell, Rutland ; Mary capture the nomination.
GaWa·Melgs dounty Une. charged the stocky, gravel-voiced politician with violating in Athens.
Koehler,
64, Rt. 1, Reedsville, Lee, Columbus; Mrs .
"They
!ll'e
reluctant
king·
Reward. Phon~ 992-2220. Japan's foreign currency control law, which requires all
,Mr: and Mrs. Earl Starkey, died Sunday morning at Ernestine Blake, Ollumbus, Russell, Pomeroy; Avery mskers," said Harry Dent,
Searles, Middleport; Rose
parments of money to Japanese by 'foreigners be reported to local, accompanied by their Veterans Memorial Hospital and John, Columbus.
Ford's chief Southern slrltethe government.
One brother preceded him McGhee , Portland ; Ralph glst, of the Mlssissipplanl.
daughters,
Mrs . Roy following a brief illness.
. Foster, Minersville.
Wiseman, Harrisonville, and
He was born at Rt. I, in death.
REVIVAL SET
AKRON -A ·BASIC ECONOMIC AGREEMENT, the first Mrs.
Sunday Discharges - "They don't want to break
had
served
as
Green
He
Donald
J ones, Reedsville , a son of tlle late
Reagan's back."
MIDDLEPORT - The step toward ending the 117-dayo()ld nationwide United Rubber
Twp. trustee since January, Sarah Dunn, Flora Pratt,
Ford scored several new
Independent Holiness Workers Union strike,, is receiving general approval from Nelsonville, were recent William and Leonora Keller
Gladys Dillon, Lucille Wise,
prelinninary
proced\ll'al te8tll
Church, Fourth and Uncoin union members - but they say they are still ready to stay out guests of Mr . Starkey 's Koehler . He was · also 1978.
Funeral oervices will be 2 Herman Lawson, Neal White. &amp;mday: The most lmportant
Slreets, Middleport, will hold "until ChriStmas" to get everything they want from the sister, Mrs. Jessie Jewell in preceded in death by his wife, p.m. Wednesday at WalighColumbus.
Cleta Bahr Koehler, in 1963.
a weekend revival with the !Uition's leading tire mskers. .
Holzer Medical Center
saw the convention rules
'Ricky
Bailey,
son
of Mr.
A retired tool and die Halley-Wood Funeral Home
Rev. Troy Fields as guest
(Births,
Aug.
l3)
committee reject, ~to 44, a
A Sat\ll'day telephone survey by United Press
with the Rev. Alfred Holley
speaker. There wiU be special International indicated union members are willing to approve and Mr·s. Dana Bailey, is in a maker, he worked at the officiating. Burial will be in
Mr. and Mrs. Carnell Reagan bid 111 force Ford to
singing each evening. Ser- the major .elements in an "understanding" , reached Friday Morehead, Ky . Hospital after General Motors Corp. in St. Nick Cemetery. Friends Vance, son, Cheshire ; Mr . annoiiiiCe ltlJ Cllolce 01 a
vices wiU be at 7:30p.m. The between un ion and management negotiators. The agreement suffering serious injuries in a Columbus 22 years. ~
and Mrs. Stanley Russell, running mate Wednesday
Survivors include a son, may call at the funeral home daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and morning, about ·u .hours
Rev. O'Dell Manley invites came during talks mediated by Labor Secretary W. J. Usery in motorcycl e accident near
Randy S. Koehler, Coolville; 2to4 and 7to 9 p.m. Tuesday. Mrs. Harold Aul t, daughter, before the first ballotin(! for
the public.
Washington. The strike, which began Aprll 21 at nearly aU there.
and W. C. Peck spent two daughters, Mrs. Okey
Gallipoiis ; Mr. and Mrs . the presidential nomination.
Goodrich, Goodyear, Firestone and Uniroyal plants In the thePaul
weekend
in
Parkersburg,
(Janet
)
Connolly,
Reedsville,
James Connor, son, D-own But that did not end the
nation, has cost the unioo 's 70,000 rank and me members an
W
.
Va
.
witll
their
brolher-in;
and
Mrs.
Wilbur
(Marilyn)
City;
Mr. and' Mrs. James President's problems. ·
AUT()S COLLIDE
estimated ~125 million in wages.
'
.
law
and
sister,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robinson
,
Coolville
;
a
·
Two cars had moderate
Gnmm, son, Pomeroy; Mr . Reagan 's camp•lgn
Emzie
Davis.
brother,
Clarence
R.
Koehler,
and Mrs. Michael Wright, director, John P. Sears,
dainage in an accident on SR
NEW LEANS - LOUISIANA VOTERS, reacting to
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Reedsville ; three grand·
daughter, WeUston.
·
promptly amounced Reagan
124 in RuUand Twp. at 5:40 charges o~ expense account cheating, dumped ~year · Ho~
(Birth, Aug. IS)
will carry the rules fight p.m. Saturday. A car driven veteran Otto Passman, In favor of a politically unknown dairy Jordan, Bryan and Sarah; cllildren, Bryan, Reedsville,
"
Mr . and Mrs. Russ Willis, and possibly platfonn
by Joyce M. Hall, 26, Mid· . fai'Jller in the state's weekend Democratic primary. But voters and Mr. and Mrs. Mendal and Lori and Lee Ann coJlUJlg year
son,
Gallipolis
;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
issues
to
the
convention
dleport, pulled from an in- paid Httle heed to Rep. ·Joe Wassonlfer's alleged involvement Jordan spent Friday night Robinson, CoolviUe.
The Racine Baseball Assn. Joe Eskew, daughter, floor "so that everybody will
Funeral services will be
teraection Into the path of a In a Washington sex solicitation case involving police-decoy and Saturday ·traveling to
at
its annual picnic Aug. 6, at
Wolf
Lake
near
Fort
Wayne,
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the
car driven by Kenneth K. [li'Ostltutes and renominated the congressman with 83 per cent
the
Sllrir: Park in Racine Galli polis ; Mr . and Mrs. be able to ~ where our
Indiana, where they picked White Funeral Home here
ISnyder. Mrs.. Hall was cited of the 4th DiStrict vote.
elected the following officers : Marven Bennett, daughter, · strength, lies . .
for falllli'C to .yield right of
· Passman, who sought his 16th term, managed only 46 per blueberries on Saturday with the Rev . Richard
President, Libby Fisher ; Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs. Sears , strategy Is to
way. There we're no injuries. cent of the vote in Louisiana's 5lh District against dairy returned home Saturday Thomas officiating. Burial Vice-President, Don Beegle ; Darvin Malone, daughter, presstnFord~to disclosing
wiU be in tlle Tuppers Plains
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd a running mste 10 advance of
fanner Jerry Huckaby, 35, of rwal Ringgold, La. The 76-year- night .
Mrs. Madge Blackwood Christian Cemetery. Friends secretary-treasurer, Lillian Baker da u •hter Jackson. the
Wednesday night
old Passman was hurt by reports he cheated on his travel
Weese , and
business
'
'
ballotin(! In the belief that
expenses and used.. his Influence to obtain contracts for and daughter, Lisa Dye, maycallatthefuneralh~ managers, Luci lie Diehl and
enjoyed a vacation camping . anytime.
whoever it is will cost Fcrd a
shipping firms. He deoied any wroogdoing.
Dorolhy Johnson,
TITLE WON
trip through the E.aslern
few precious ·VQtes here and
Ball suits are to be given to
NORTON, Ohio (UPI)- there.
Unitro States and parts of
Lucille
Diehl
as
soon
as
·
Kristie
Ann Chrisman, 17,
Canada.
Falllng that, Sears hopes at
possible' and aU ball equip- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. least to show the delegates
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
ment to Don Beegle. The next Jess Chrisman, Peninsula, some persuasive ' new
spent Saturda y night in
project to be worked on is won the Miss Ohio Teenager evldeDCe that Reagan is .a
Carroll, Ohio with his
new~niforms . Donations are title 'Sunday night in com· winner worth joining, ·
•
paren ts, Mr . and Mrs.
being acceptro by .any of- petition with 38 contestants
Manford Sm th . On Sunday
Another wild card In the
from aU over the state.
ficer .
they
all
were
in
Olntinental,
suspenseful
power strugale
' an Independent
Aa
"""''tll
·on
MASSILLON - Lisle C.
Ohi o for the ""''
was Sen. James L. Buckley,
lnaurence agency,, our
c-.
returning by Edisonreuru
, Ohio,, Weaver, 77, formerly of
the
New York conservative.
primary function Is to
.
where they were supper Middleport, died here
of a Draft
Organizers
provide polic ies which
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A . guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Saturday at Massillon City ·
Buckley for President
afford financial. protection
strike threate!'S deliveries to Stanley and Anna (Oleva Hospital.
Committee said he probably
In caae of loss.
85 central Ohto stores 10 the Smith)beforecomlngbackto · Aresident'o!Massillon, Mr.
But, we also have,a vital
wlll decide by Tues 1y
Kroger grocery cham today. Carroll.
Weaver had been ill several
Interest In toss prevention .
whether to let his name oe
as llhould our clients. We
Members .of Lncal 1471 of
Columbia Grange No. 2435 years. Besides his parents, he
placed in nomination againat
encourel@ care, caution
the International Asanclatlon held their postponed meeting was preceded in deatb by two
Ford and Reagan. ·
ufety ... preventive
of Machinists went on strike on Thursday evening and wives, Alvina Peart WoodOne of the organizers, Rep.
mNIIK.t l which cpn keep
Sunday and Teamsters Un- inspection was held. Cont.es\i ford Weaver in 1958 and Edna
Philip
Crane,
R·lll.,
1hat car acclderil from .
ion
truck
drivers
refused
will
be
held
at
the nexl Alena 'litomas Weaver in
originally
a
Reagan·
hacker,
happening, thai building
to cross picket lines at the meeting ·and members are 1962, four sisters and a son,
aald Buckley .could get about
fire from alartlng, that
company
warehouse and urged to participate.
Usle, Jr., in 1974.
home burglary from being
?XIacattered delegate votes on
M• ., ,-;;;,.d,~ll)lll.,. meat plant on the east side of
Mr.and Mrs. John Dunham
Surviving are a daughter,
committed. ·
the first ballot. But If by the
Columbus.
(Janet Jeffers ), Connie, Dustin Swaney, and a son ,
Prevention saves life.
time balloting begins "this
limb and property . .. and
Both sides met with a Yvonne John Carl and Robert A. Weaver, both of
thin(! hasn't gotten off the
Remember
back
when
it
helps control Insurance
federal mediator Sunday Richard, New . Boston, Massillon; eight grandwas
only
night
air
that
was
gro1111d,
then I'm aoing to
cooh end premiums.
nlgbt but no progress was Dllnols, •are spending some children, and five grandsupposed
to
be
bad for your
vote
for
Ford,"
Whtn losses do occur,
reported made toward Ume here with their parents children.
health . , .
Ford's aides said he still
our pollcyholderscan count
Improper air conditioner settling the contract dispute. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dunha~
Mr. Weaver retired in 1963
had
made no decision on a
an proledlon and service In
filtering is not only bad far
The warehouse provides and Mr. and Mrs. Reed after serving · as paymaster
running
mate. But the
lime of noed . Bvt we still
your health, it can also cost
about
50
per
cent
of
the
Jeffers
and
olher
relatives
In
for
the
Indiana
and
Michigan
say-prl'l'entlon Is the best
President
indicated In an
you in added fuel bills. Do
perishables ~ other goods the area.
Power OJ. for several years.
policy.
yourself a favor by
lnterviC)V with the Olicago
Martha Mays, who spent A veteran of World War I, he
stopping and buying a new to central Ohio Kroger stores.
Tribune that he might prefer
filter this week.
Company offfeials said some time in O'Bieness · belonged to Veterans of someone else than the
other deUverles 'lri1l not be Memorial Hospital, has been Foreign Wars, Chapter 3124,
controversial John B.
affected and stores will released following s\ll'gery at Massillon. He was a
Connally of Texia - ~omeone
remain open. A spokesman and is convalescing at her member of the .Army and
who "would strengthen the
said management pel'I!OIInel -home here . .Recent guests of Navy Union, the Eagles
992·2145
party and prevent any
will
make
some
of
the
Mrs.
Mays
were
her
son
and
lodge
at
Massillon
and
atdivisiveness
within the party
The Department Store of
deHveries this week.
daughter-in-law , Mr. and tended
the
Epworth
102 W. Main Pomeroy
Buitdln Since 1915.
ranks." .
Mrs. Albert Quivey of Stras- Methodist
Church
in
Sears .at.d Ford would have
Massillon.
burg, Ohi o.
Reagan's siiJlPOl'(lf he won
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry StansFuneral services will be
the nomllration, but that
GOOD NEWS for President Ford appeared to come
bury, Reva and Aaron, were held at 10 a.m. Tuesday at the
"
uqder no
out of preconvention skirmishing In Kanaaa City. Ford
WOMAN HELD
g~ests of her brother-in-law Gordon -Shaldnagle·llollnger
clrcumstances
...abeolu!A!Iy
forces held an edge in most cases in struggles with Ronald
MANSFIELD,OIDO (UPI) and sister, Mr. and Mrs. John Home for Funerals In
not"
would
Reagan
ac&lt;:ept a
Reagan's backers for control of key convention
- A 19-yearo()ld woman was Throckmorton and Leslie In MassiUon. Graveside rites
Ford
offer
to
be
hLI
I'UIII4n8
committees.
held by police over. the Charleston, South Carolina will be held at Z p.m. at lhe
mate.
weekend as a SUBpeCt in the recently.
Gravel Hill Cemetery at
lata! shooting of Tina Smith,
Mr, and Mrs. Dale Stans· Chesllire with Mr. George
20, Mans~ield, . at tbe burg accompanied their son Glaze officia tlng.
•downtown Rex's Blllial'd and daughter-in-law, Mr. and'
· Patlor late Saturday.
Mrs. Jerry Stansburg, Reva
Awitness told police that a · and Aaron, to Annapolis,
woman having a shotgun Maryland, where they visited
entered the pool hall and with Mr . and Mrs. Ben RIJMSFEU) I'IEfiER
.
"
,
WASHINGTON (UP!)
opened lire. The blast hit the Gryctko (Eileen Stansbury)
Defl!ose Secretary Donald H.
victim in the lower abdomen. for a few days.
Rumafeld Is expected to leave
A few minutes later pollCI)
Bethesda Naval Hospital
took the IIUBpect lnto 'custody.
early
this week to cootlnue
No motive was revealed for ·
PICNIC SET
his
,
recovery
from an
the botnlcide.
RACINE
Racine
.
operation
in
which
part of his
Made of sanforized 10 oz. blue deriim American Legion Post 602
thyroid
&amp;land
W88
remDYed.
'
'
will hold Its annual picnic
A
Pentagon
spokesman
_
·100%
cotton
triple
stitched
.bar
.'
Sunday, August 22, at noon at
said
Ruln8feld,
44,
considered
Shrine Park here. Bring a
tacked points of strain - lengths
covered dish and table ser- one of President Ford's
CLOSED
possible
l'IIJ1IIintl
mates,
is
in
vice.
Aug. 16 tt~ru Aug, 26
from 29 to 34.
"satisfactory condition;
For Meigs Co. Fair
awake, talking and allowed to
5
MEETING CAlLED
move about," he said.
The past presidents' club of
&lt;in Friday, the richt lobe of
Drew .Webster Unit 39, Rumlfeld's thyroid gland in
American Le&amp;lon Auxiliary h!J throat was removed
Open Friday 9,:30to I p.m. and Saturday 9:l0to 5p.m.
Aug. 21-21-29
will
meet Wednelday at 7:30 becallle docton bad found a
Molhtr J..Sincl SPttd
p.m. at the home of Mrs. lump there durina a physical
Show sfartaol 7 p.m.
Rlloda Hackett, Sr., Second eumlnatim. The lump was
Street, Middleport.
found to be noncancerous.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- WliUii:ii ·Scrantm ~ high
on President Ford's vice
presldentlalu.t ancl Scranton
Slid today 'lri1l take the job If
liked.
"Bill Ia very high on the
President's list," said Sen.
Hugh Scott; R·Pa. "I happen
to know that. I happen to
know that he Is very )llgh
Indeed of the list of the nine
chairmen of the eastern
states. He has a very real
chani:e."
Scott (IJ'edlcled at a news
briefing tbat Scranton,
former Pennsylvania
governor and currently
Ford's ambassador to the
United Nations, will be

among

"The

his choice to five - Sen.

lui

Howard Baker, Treasury
three or four who 'lri1l be Secretary William Simon,
considered."
William RuckelshaWI, Ronald
The rumors about the vice Reagan
and • Anne
presidency continued to BUr· Armstrong,
the U.S.
face. The Washington Poet ambasslldor to Britain - and
rt!ported Ford had narrowed that Ford has told fOI'll)er

Henry Van Sickle dies
.

:r

:

Rk!;d

HOSPITAL ::~
NEWS Ford still

Carpenter
Pearl
Personals

News .. in Briefs

Teu.a Gav. John Cotl1llly he

aemlf!naU.S, among the last

of Reedsville

died Sunday ·

'

Keno Bridge U-bolis found C.orroded
I

Wesley Buehl, County cent of the cross section of light 4" steel deck with
asphalt lUI. Thla will increase
Engineer, seated right, and some of them is gone.
the commissioners also
These U-Botts - all being lhe live load capacity of the
Monday eumined. U-bolts replaced - .support the floor bridge enough so that It will
from the 1\eno Bridge pver beams at each panel point of not need to be posted for load
Shade River on County Road the lrusses. The floor beams limits.
When completed in time for
C-28 just south of State Route in turn support t(1e floor
248 in Chester Township.
stringers and bridge deck and school opening these repairs
Regular bridge inspection roadway over which the should extend the useful life
of this bridge another 25
had revealed that these U· lrafflc passes.
Bolts, over tlle years, had
The new U-Bolt hangers years.
Shown are . front, l·r,
corroded from. water, salt, are made of high strength
cloders and the elements to steel. The heavy concrete Bernard Gilkey, and Buehl,
which · they were exposed to 'deck is being replaced with a back row, Wells and Ours.
the extent that nearly 50 per

Kroger stores

POLICY

Lisle Weaver

died Saturday
in Massillon

•

POMEROY

. CEMENT BLOCK

CHAD ROBERTS AND ms FATHER, Randall
Roberta, Route 2 Racine, groom Chad's New Zealand
Whites preparatory to the 4-H and open competition In
rabbit judging at the Meigs Olunty Fair. The eider
Roberts Is superintendent. of the rabbit department.
":'.:::::::::;::::;:::::::::::::x::::::;:;:o:::;;;:::::::;:~:~~:!8;:::~:~:=:::~::8::::~::!::::::::::~~~::::~::::::::::::~::~::::~,

fN~ws.
..

lJSBON, OIDO .- DEMOCRATIC PARTY leaders in
Ohio's 18th congressional dlatrict have. given state Sen.
. Douglas Applepte of Steubenville the task of trying to keep
·· the seat Rap, Wayne Hays has held for 211 years.
Repraentatives · from the district's nine counties met
Monday night and tabbed the 47-year:ald leg!Jiator as the
party's choice to replace Hays on the November general
election ballot .
CINciNNATI - THE U.S. HOUSE OF Rapresentatlvea Is
"well rid of Wayne L. Hays," the Cincinnati Poet says in an
editorial headlined "Good ridance."
·

been a notable offender in the use of taxpayers' money on trips
abroad. Altogether, the House Is well rid of Wayne L. Hays."

MEN'S BLUE DENIM' ,

WORK DUNGAREES

equal to majcr earthquakes. ·
There were no Immediate reports of Injuries. Offldals
earner had evacuated residents In the "death zone" around the
4,900.foot mountain when acieiltlsta warned an eruption of
atomic bomb Intensity was Inevitable. It was not clear If the
volcano - Ill name means Brimlltone Mountain - had .
ac:tually erupted since clouds and .darknesa obscured the
IUIIIIIIit.

fuming

PARIS ~ TIUEVES TUNNEDIED INTO the vault of a
l"'rrs brlllch of the Societe Generale banlt and I'IIIIIICked 191
sale depolit boas over the weekend, euct1y a montb after an
ldenUel! burglary ol another branCh of the same bank in Nice,
poi.ICil said today.
Astatement by tbe bank said the thieves tiled blowtorches

'7'
'I"

SIZES 32 to 42 WAISf..........................
SIZES 44 TO 50 WAIST••••••••••••••••••••••••

I,

•

t

paiHnte~~~lllt..AIIIfU..Mittlwlllltwtatl

l

By ROBERT M. ANDREWS

KANSAS CITY, Mo.
- President Ford
achieved the fruit of
incredible months r4

......~

(UP!)
today
seven
bitter
' 1: 11111111
tit

u•

•
THE STAFF oF THE COUNTY QII'II'ICE of Qlpt. of Schoola Robert Bowen wu h8rd at
work at the Rock Springs Fairgrounds Monday setting up the aunual display of projects by
irtuctents over .the past year. At the display above In Floral Hall are, 1tor, Qretta SUttle,
Russ Moore and Mary Bacon, who set up the display.

·

5:E?..::~~Full
POINTE-A·PITRE, GUADELOUPE - THE IUIIU1lit of
La Soufrlln wleano, spewing a.!hes and geysers r4
fire, ezploded M111dar al&amp;bt with a ferocity that set off tremor~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) - Here Is the schedule for
tonight's session of the Republican National Convention (all
times EDT) :
8 p.m. - Call to order, Opening ceremonies.
8:?XI Pfl· - Speech, Patricia Hutar, president, National
Federation of Republican Women.
8:35p.m. - Reporl, credentials coounittee.
8:39p.m. '- Speech, John B. CoiU181ly, fonner secretary r4
the Treasury and former governor of Tezas.
8:57 p.m. -Rules committee report.
.
9:02 p.m. - Pennanent organization comnnittee report.
9:09 ·p.m. :..__ Speech, Rep. John Rhode• of Ari.zona,
permanent convention chairman and House minority leader ..
9:?,8 p.m.- Speech, Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, chairman
National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee.
9:45 p.m. - Platform ccxnmltlee report.
Adjournment untO 8 p.m. Wedneaday follows debate and
vqtlng on committee report·.

Gallia agrees to school
Gallia County commissioners Monday signed an
agreement · with the Meigs
County Board of Mental
Retardation for students
attending the Guiding Hand

char~es

sChool at Cheshire from
Meigs County. The contract
runs from Sept. !, 1976 to May
3, 1977, and caDs for payment
of $76,000.

to tunnellhroulh a reinforced concrete wall from the sewers
·Gel Into tile depotit vault of the Societe Generale'a lie SaintIAiula br-"cll· Amount ollosa"'ru undetermined.
(Oontinued on page 10)

'

Rock Springs Fairgrounds. A new hub fence (going
around the inside of the track, was pot In earlier.

Ford winner-by one delegate

By Ualted Press laterDaUOIUII
CHARLESTON, W.VA. - APPALACHIAN COALmlnel'l, .
fresh off a month-long strike In whiCh dissent was aimed at the
federal judiciary, won a major court batde Monday when a
lmge fine impolled on the United Mine Workers union a year
ago was erased.
Miners In West VIrginia and seven· other c(llll-fl'oduclng
slates were back at work Monday, crankin(! up production that
waa silent four weeks In an Illegal walkout. In another court
development, a contampt motion against l)llners wu dropped
when they resumed c111l production.
., As workers went back to the minea, U.S. District Judge K.
K. Hall in Charleston removed a $700,000 he placed on the
' UMW last August.

81G SHIPMENT

.

Convention schedule

UNDER SUPERVISION . OF FAIR JIOARD
MEMBER Bill Smith , workers Monday completed ·
construction of a new outside fence of the race track of !he

-·

MEIGS lltEATRE

f

. . in BriefsJ

. The 113th annual Meigs Counly Fair got underway today'
under sunny s~es for its first full day r4 activities.
Opening the fair l8st night was a choir of 110me 40 Meigs
Counllallll directed by June Van Vranken, accompanied by
[l(rothy Karr, who presented a bicentennial musical, "Ring
the Bells for ·Freedom". The group's appearance was
sponsored by the Meigs County Ministerial Assn.
Tonight at 8 p.m. falrgoers will attend the first demolition
derby ever held in Meigs County. Although the event is listed
tor 7 p.m. m premitun books, the contest with $400 in cash
.prizes and several trophies to be awarded will not start untO 8.
It will be in front of the grandstand and drivers will report
at least one hour before the starting time. There are several
local drivers Involved in the derby. The laat vehicle stiU going
after a group of cars bit each qt)ler Is the winning car in eaCh
event.
Judging got underway today In domestic arts, ca~g and
baked goods and art work in the senior fair and grange booths
will be judged tonight. Traditionally four granges 'lri1l exhibit.
On Wednesday, junior fair swine and beef judging will be
held and the first of two senior fair Oower shows will be judged
at !2:30p.m. The second show Is on Friday. Opening class beef
judging will begin at 1p.m. Wednesday and at 4p.m. there will
be twilight harness horse racing, the first of three consecutive
evenings of the harness racing.
Fair Board President Wallace Bradford sald thllt there are
numerous entries in the horse racing program. In fact, so
many that lome of the races will have to be divided into iwo
groups.
~
At 8 Wedllesday evening, there will be the annual observance
of junior fair night, and the open class horse show in center
field and the gtandsland attraction will be the annual pmy

,.

ElBERFELDS IN POMEROY :
JUST RECEIVED -

'

Perfect·weather .greets opening day .of Fair

are threat·nned

DM.E E. WARNER

county

·;~~~~~mj~;~~~~~j;~~~m~~;ijrj~~il~ii;~1~~~~~t~;~~~;:~~~~ttftJi~}~~f~j~r~~~tr~~li~~l~~~~t~~~?:?t:ltif:I~·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1976

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

Deliveries to

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

and Gilkey, commissioners, Wesley Buehl,
Bartha Chambers; clerk and engi~eer .

~

officers for

· PREVENTION .
IS lHE
l BEST

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday
and Friday and a chaace of
showers Saturday. Highs
will be In he mid 80s to the
lower 90s and tows wlll be
In the 60s.
·

Retarded Citizens Inc.
The board of com·
missioners may send mentally retarded students to
Gautpolis at a cost of
$56,297.74 which pays from
Oct. 11176 to Aug. 1m.
Asked how the cost of
operation of the new school
will be met a commission
spokesman said that problem
has not been solved yet.
All preliminary work on the
construction of the bullding
will be done by the State of
Ohio, at no cost to the county.
One sta\e approved site for
the building was on the
Carleton College property
iocaled
in
Syracuse.
However, this is not definite
at the present time, as the
trustees of the college have to
take action and no action has
been reported to the com·
missioners.
Attending ~ere Wells, Ours

enttne

a1y
VOL
. . .XXVIII
.
... NO. 85

vo4lrs.
In June 1975, a 1.6 miD for
10 years, an additional levy
for operating expenses of the
school, alSO failed, as did a 1.0
mill Jor 10 years, additional,
in November 1975.
Meeting with the commissiooers this morning were
parents, members of the
Board of Mental Retardation,
Doug Roberts, director of
Ohio Legal Rights, and Bob
Miller, executive director of
·the Ohio Association. for

•

•

Group names

I

Meigs Co~nty will buDd a
school for the mentally
retarded the Meigs County
Commissioners decided
Monday evening.
Henry Wells , president,
ste pped down, and with
Bernard Gilkey serving a~
president, took Wells' motion
to build the school. Warden
Ours seconded:' Gilkey did
not vote.
Meigs County voters In
November 1973 passed a
$250,000 pond issue to buDd
the school. The state will
provide matching . funds,
making a total of $500,000 for
the school.
· The $250,000 bond issue was
a 1h mill levy Tor a 20 year
period. In November 1974, a
renewal of .75 mills and an
increase of 2·mills making it
'2.75 mills for five years for an
operating levy for the school
was turned down by the

votes for a first ballot
presidential nomination
victory
from
Ronald
Reagan.
Shortly after the first night
session of the GOP National
Cooventlon adjourned early
today, Mississippi delegate
Doug Shanli:a told UPI ·he
would defy his state's unit
rule :
"Coole heU or high water,
I'm going to vote for
President
Ford," he
declared.
-·-·
That, plus an earHer shift of
one uncomnnitted delegate
from Virginia and a later
switch b~ one from
Delaware, ' pushed the
President to 1,131-one vote
over the 1,130 needed for
nomination-according to
UPI 's
state -by-sti te
tabulation. Reagan had 1,036
votes
with
92 still
uncommitted.
The latest Ford convert
was state Sen. C.E. Hughes of
Delaware, who announced
early today he was going
from uncommitted to Ford
because he thought Ford had

a better chance of winning in
November.
The two candidates'· battle
for a winning edge , however
thin, continued undiminished
by Conservative New York
Sen. James L. Buckley's
declsioo to.abandm his brief
flirtation as a th!rd
prospective nominee.
One of the Reagan floor
strategems to stop the Pres!·
dent's climb was a platform
challenge of Ford-Klaslnger
foreign policy, but the crucial
test involved a proposed rules
Change intended to force
Ford to make an early- and
potentially
costly
disclosure of his running
mate choice.
Both sides have been
bringing Intense pressure on
Mississippi to yield its
glittering lode of 30
uncommitted votes, and slate
Chairman Clarke Reed
thought his delega lion
probably would not decide
untO a few hours before the
Wednesday night balloting.
The President is telllng no
me- not even his wife Betty

.

- the names on his list of vice
presidential possibilities. His
aides said five or six contend·
era were prominent among
those represented by party
leaders, legislators and other
Ford advisers.
The Washington Post said
the list had been narrowed to
five - Simon, Reagan,
former Deputy Attorney
Genera I Wi IIi am
Ruckelshaus, Sen. Howard H.
Baker of Tennessee and Anne
Armstrong, U.S. ambassador
to London.
Aides to Vice ~ President
Nel~n Rockefeller said the
Ford list had been narrowed
to Simon, Baker, former
Pennsylvania Gov. William
Scranllln, and Commerce
Secretary Elliot Richardson.
Reagan said there was "no
way" he would he Ford's
running mste.
But For.d said he wanted
someone ''who appeals to
areas with a large number of
eleetoral votes," and a White
House spokeiiJllan said he
would consult Reagan before
(Continued on page !OJ

.

.

funding for town hall, maybe
·

Mayor Clarence Andrews .Sanitation due to the inc 1u d 1 n g stoves ,
held out hopes to Pomeroy numer ous complaints refrigerators etc. Manley
Council Monday night of 100 received over a long period of stated .that elderly residents
percent funding to remodPI time ·and issue a license to who cannot place their bags
Pomeroy Senior High Lawrence Manley and Son or containers at the curb will
Building Into a new viUage effective Sept. I.
present no problem·as he will
hall .
Manley's . rates will be pick them up wherever
Mayor Andrews said a comparable to !hose of H&amp;P, located . Manley said he will
grant may be obtained · tJJal is, $3 per month for as solicit customers, and will
through the PubHc Works many containers as the pick ·up once a week .
Emplorment Act of 1976 to customer has and for $4 a
Mayor Andrews disclosed
renovate the second and third month he will pick up the cemetery Is in bad con·
floors of the school. He said anything pla~ed at the curb diUon and that a larger
grants of 100, 80 and 75 per
mower is needed if council
cent are available and
Intends to cut the weeds
Pomeroy could get as much
there . Councilman Harry
as $125,000. The mayor will
eat
Davis opened that "We owe it
attend a metting on the
to the people of the viUage to
grants in Columbus on Aug.
Clear and cool tonight, lows get the grass cut at the
21.
in the upper 50s. Sunny and cemetery."
· In other business, on a warmer Wednesday , highs in
The mayor and Davis said
motion made by Ralph the mid 80s. Probability of they had priced two Gravely
W~rry , councll vot~ to rain near zero today, tonight mowers and suggestro that
revoke the license of H&amp;P and. Wednesday.
· one' be bought . Council ,

W h

er

granted permission to the
mayor, Davis and cemetery
trustees to make a decision
following demonstration of
the mower. Council voted to
transfer $1 ,000 from the

parking meter fund to the maintained the cemetery.
The Rev. Bill Perrin, who
general fund to pay for the
opened the meeting with
mower, if purchased.
ll was pointed out that prayer, statro that if the
residents turned down a one cemetery is not cleaned up he
mill levy that would · have would suggest that local
church congregations pitch in
to help get the wor k done.
The mayor's report for the
month of July in the amount
months or more next of $3,127 .?XI was read and
preceding tlle date of making accepted.
application for either a
Attending were Mayor
hunting or fishing license Andrews, Ralph Werry,
.must be issued a non ...esident Davis, Dr. Harold Brown,
license and charged the ' Phil Globaker, Charles
regular non-resident fee . Bartles, Lou Osbor ne,
Applicant must have resided councilmen, Phyliss Henin Ohio for six months or nessy, treasurer ; Jane
more nexl preceding the Walton, clerk; Rev . Perrin,
date. Anon-resident license is Lawrence Manley, Lawrence
required of all persons not Manley, Jr ., Trell Schoenleb
qualifying as a resident.
and Seidenabel, cemetery
trustees.

Ohio grandP,as can fish
Meigs County Clerk of
Court offi ce sal&lt;;t today
permanent hurl!ing license
are now available to aU ap·
plicants 65 years of age or
over.
"However," Clerk Larry
Spencer said, " the legal
residence of the applicant
must first be de !ermined
before the license is issued."
All applicants who have not
been a conlinuous resident of
this State for a period of six
~

1

'

I.

),

•

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