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The Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • 2
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The Tribune du lieu suivant : Coshocton, Ohio • 2

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The Tribunei
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Coshocton, Ohio
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The Coshocton Tribune Tuesday, May 24, 1977 Seen And Heard The Keene Hill Grange will meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday. Members are to bring snacks for refreshments. 1975 Caprice, air, low mileage. Excellent condition.

$3750 or best offer. 623-0954. Adv. Virgil Hutchison, 705 Franklin Conesville, has been admitted to Licking Memorial Hospital, Newark, with a broken hip. He is in Room 502 west, recovering from surgery.

For Sale-Six good cows with spring calves at side. Phone 545- 7247. Adv. Mrs. James Burkey, Fresno Route 2, has been dismissed from Bethesda Hospital, Zanesville and is now recuperating at home.

VFW 2040 Dance, Saturday, 28, 9:30 to 12:30, featuring "The Drifters." Members and Guests. 250 S. 11th Street. Adv. Coshocton County's share of public assistance money totals $20,434.04, according to the ofice of State Auditor Tom Ferguson.

Cooperdale Yard Sale: May 25th through 28th. 9 to 5. Adv. The Tribune is gradually running out of Snap Back pictures of historical events in this county. Those interested may bring their pictures of yesteryear to the news department of the Tribune, using the Main St.

entrance to the newspaper office. Bingo! Thursday May 26 and Sunday May 29. Doors open 5:30, games start 7 p.m. Door prize $200. $500.

(American Legion Coshocton. Jackpot, Sponsored by Warsaw Volunteer Firemen. Adv. A special meeting of the Ridgewood Local Board of Education will be held today at 8 p.m. in the Ridgewood Junior High School Home Economics Room.

The meeting is called for the purpose of evaluating the extra curricular positions. Any other business to come before the board at the meeting may also be acted on. Attention: 1972 Class of Coshocton. Plans for class reunion to be held on June 25th are underway and if you haven't been contacted please call 622- 2393. No entry was gained in an attempted breaking and entering Monday as reported to city police.

Two subjects were reported by Fran Foster of 125 S. Second as attempting to cut' their way through a screen door at the rear of an apartment. They fled when an occupant yelled at them. 1971 Mustang Sportroof, V-8 automatic, excellent condition. Reasonably priced.

Phone 545- 9581 or 545-7788. Adv. George Carey of 151 S. 10th reported to Coshocton police that a 4x8 foot piece of exterior plywood was stolen from his car while parked at his residence Monday. Weather Partly cloudy and continued warm tonight and Wednesday with a chance of thundershowers tonight.

Lows tonight will be in the lower 60s. Highs Wednesday will be in the low 80s. The probability of precipitation is 40 per cent tonight and 30 cent Wednesday. Winds will be generally less than 10 miles an hour tonight. In the extended forecast it will be generally fair and warm through the period, with highs in the 80s or low 90s and lows in the 60s.

High Monday 86; low 55. High a year ago, 68; low 35. No precipitation was recorded Monday. Curtains shield schoolroom where South Wednesday for their demands to be met. The Moluccan terrorists have been holding 105 Dutch Smilde, Holland, school is surrounded by police schoolchildren hostage since Monday.

The and parents awaiting the fate of their young. terrorists have made a deadline of midday (UPI Most Americans To Get More Money Each Pay By DON PHILLIPS WASHINGTON (UPI) The nation has a new tax law, and its first impact will come in early June when withholding rates are adjusted to add up to $4 per week to most paychecks, while subtracting $1 per week from middle and upper income single Behind Curtains persons. But the real impact is expected between Jan. 1 and April 15 next year- when almost 50 million Americans who use the standard deduction discover that tax filing has been made simple, and some of the others find they owe money because of Wonder Dog Got His CB Funeral GREENFIELD, Mass. (UPD) The bright summer sun dropped below the horizon as a convoy of 150 trucks and cars quietly wound its way down the Mohawk Trail to fulfill the last wish of 11-year-old Tommy Copley.

Tommy's voice had been a familiar one to area Citizens Band radio the last two years. last wish was another visit from the caravan that Deaths Frantz MILLERSBURG--Frank W. Frantz, 69, of S. Main Killbuck died suddenly Monday at 11:45 p.m. at Pomerene Memorial Hospital.

He was born Dec. 17, 1907 in Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada to Dr. Alvin D. and Gertrude Van Wyck Frantz. He was married to Freda Lemke, who survives, and was a ship fitter in Detroit, and California for over 40 years.

Frantz was a member of the Berlin Mennonite Church. Surviving besides his wife are two sons, David W. Frantz of Allen Park, and Donald F. Frantz of Rogers, two daughters, Mrs. Aden (Deanna) Wengent of Walnut Creek and Mrs.

David (Susan) Westerdale of Monroe, 12 grandchildren; one greatgrandchild; and two halfbrothers, Alvin Frantz of Plymouth, and Charles Frantz of Watertown, Wisc. One brother and one half-sister are deceased. Services will be Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Berlin Mennonite Church with the Rev. David R.

Clemens officiating. Burial will be in the Berlin Cemetery. Friends may call at the Elliott Funeral Home in Millersburg Thursday afternoon and evening. NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST 10 7AM EST 25 29.77 29.77 30.00 30.00 YORK LOS LOWEST UP WEATHER Lots Of Heat Dry Georgia, Alabama and and St. Louis to lows of 50 in southern Florida will get rain Seattle.

Most east of the Great tonight while elsewhere fair Plains are feeling the heat with skies prevail. Temperatures average temperatures ranging around the nation will range from highs in the mid 80s to from highs of 88 in New Orleans lows in the mid 60s. (UPI) Lafayette To Insist On Building ng Permits From PAGE 1 cabinets, and construction of mobile home pads. Those found guilty of not complying with this ordinance will be guilty of a minor misdemeanor and will be fined not more than one hundred dollars and assessed court costs. Each day of failure to obtain a building permit after construction has commenced will constitute a separate offense.

Given a third reading and adopted was an ordinance which established parking limits on Main and Kirk Sts. No one can park a motor vehicle for a time in excess of two hours on Main St. from Oak to Orchard Sts. or on Kirk St. between Main St.

and Russell Ave. on Monday through Saturday from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. Richard Owens, president of Council, reported on a meeting held Thursday with officials from Barnesville. Barnesville is disbanding the Board of Public Affairs and had earlier asked for advice from the local officials on village administration.

Barnesville is a chartered city with a population of 5,000. They have more equipment to use but not as many employees as West Lafayette. Owens said they are disbanding the board for the same reasons West Lafayette Village Council did, to have one person responsible instead of several and to tie costs down closer. Following lengthy discussion, on a motion by Owens and a second from Owens, the council approved a 10 per cent pay across the board retroactive. on January 1 to members of the police, street, water and sewer departments with the exception of the recent grade 1 rate set at a previous meeting.

Council has been discussing for several months the possibility of purchasing insurance for the employees. Mayor Elmer Gress suggested the insurance was out of the council's means with the present taxation in the village. Work to install a water line on Park Street was authorized. The line which is one of the main lines which feeds the water reservoir must be lowered to eliminate the possibility of freezing. Mayor Gress was authorized to advertise in various newspapers for a village CHESTIER MALESTER Frank Osanka, a sociology titled "Chester the professor, appeared before the which depicts a cartoon House Judiciary subcommittee character who entices children on Crime.

He showed Hustler into sexual acts. (UPI) Court Delays Distribution Of Ballots For UMW's President By SARA FRITZ WASHINGTON (UPI) Lee Roy Patterson, challenger for United Mine Workers president, announced today he has won a temporary court order delaying distribution of the ballots for the June 14 union election. Union election officials said the lawsuit brought by Patterson may force a postponement of the election, causing an increased financial burden on union members. A temporary restraining order against distribution of the ballots was issued late Monday by Judge Sylvia Bacon of the District of Columbia Superior Court, pending a hearing Friday on Patterson's complaint. Patterson charged that the that withholding change.

President Carter, surrounded congressmen in a Rose Garden ceremony Monday, appeared happy with his task of signing the bill, saying that lowering taxes was "one of the most pleasant things for a President or a congressman to do." Forgotten for the moment was a section of the bill he fought against a tax credit for business of $630 to $1,806 for each employe hired above last year's employment levels. If all goes as planned, one look at the table which fits the number of family members will be all that is required to figure how much tax is owed. All credits, exemptions and the standard deduction will be folded into these tables, eliminating the need for arithmetic. 2, Even those who itemize a deductions will be able to use the new tables, although they still face the task of assembling and adding deductions. Those who itemize also will benefit initially from the change in withholding rates.

Although the tax cut is intended only for those who use the standard deduction, it is impossible for the Internal Revenue Service to determine in advance who will itemize and who will not. election tellers ignored a majority vote of the union's international executive board to nulify the candidacy of Tony Testa, a running mate of incumbent President Arnold Miller. The executive board reportedly voted last week to remove Testa from the ballot on grounds he had not paid adequate dues to the union. The vote was designed to dissolve the Miller slate. Patterson does not have a full slate of running mates, as do Miller and the third presidential candidate, Harry Patrick.

The tellers have ruled that a single can be marked on the ballot for the Miller or the Patrick slates, but 12 separate Judge Seeks Review Of Court Facilities Current Municipal Court facilities was the subject of a letter read by Council Clerk Richard Brown to fellow members at City Hall Monday night. The letter was written by Paul R. Scherbel of the Coshocton County Bar Association as follows: Council President Daniel Moody: On May 16, 1977, the Coshocton County Bar Association appointed a committee of Paul R. Scherbel, chairman, David Burns, C. Fenning Pierce and Joseph Skelton, to review the present Coshocton County Municipal Court's facilities and make recommendations.

committee would appreciate the opportunity to discuss with you or the Ad-Hoc Citizens Committee the Coshocton County Bar Association's position toward the current Municipal Court facility and to provide consultation of the needs and requirements of a more modern and functional municipal court facility in the City of Coshocton. "Please contact either myself or David Burns if we may be of administrator. cnarles Gossett, who has been in the village a little over two years, recently resigned, without a stated reason, effective June 1. The minimu qualifications for the administrator is a Class Two in Sewer and a Class One in Water. Gossett said that last night's meeting would probably be the last one he would attend as West Lafayette Village Administrator.

He said the time had been enjoyable and said it has been better the last six months when the newspapers settled down and got off his back. Gossett has reportedly accepted a position with the Uhrichsville- Dennison communities. The Village of West Lafayette must have a licensed person to sign the tests of water and sewer department required the government. Gossett said he would sign the tests and act as consultant for $75 per month until he could find a home and move estimated from to the area, about which two months. There still has not been a decision made on any work to be done on the village alleys.

To complete all the alleys in the village it is estimated to cost $15,000. More dog complaints have been received. In the Johnson Road area there are complaints of dogs running loose late at night, and Gress and ruining Police gardens. Chief Freeman Graham said biggest problem is getting the dog catcher into the village. If the dogs are caught, Mayor Gress said the owners will be taken to court and fined.

Councilman Dean Welker suggested a clamp-down on cats in the village. Mayor Gress said that effective immediately the existing curfew law in the village will be enforced. The ordinance states that no one under 18 can be on the streets after midnight and that parents will be liable for their children. Gossett said he had employed Hermon Dingy to work as a laborer for the village. are to contact Coshocton officials to discuss the possibility of having the Coshocton street cleaner come West Lafayette to clean up the village streets.

The next regular meeting of council 7 p.m. on June 13 in the Lafayette Room of the local branch of Coshocton National Bank. House Witness Begs BegsLawmakers ers To Stop Kidporn came last year when he was dying of cancer. More than 350 of his friends from Connecticut. New York and Vermont gathered Monday night at the local high school and drove single file and without disrupting traffic down Rte.

2, the Mohawk Trail, to a Shelburne Falls funeral home. Six 18-wheel trucks were among the vehicles that arrived at the funeral home where drivers got out and filed silently past the casket. The fifthgrader, "Wonder funeral, for, Dog" to his citizen band radio friends, will be today. He died last Saturday. "These are working people," said Ron Weller of Greenfield, whose handle or CB identity is "Bat "See these trucks?" Weller said.

"They've come off the road just to be here Tommy had sick for four years, but managed to win an years, but managed to win an outstanding player award in Little League baseball last year. Bike Safety Program To Be Held Police Chief Eugene L. Border reported to members of Coshocton City Council Monday night that a "safety rodeo," known as a Bike Rama will be held Saturday, June 18, and Sunday, June 19. The Bike-0-Rama will be held at three locations, Warsaw Grade School at 9 a.m.; West Lafayette High School at 10:30 a.m. and the Coshocton County Fairgrounds at 1 p.m.

There will be three age groups participating, 7 to 10 to 12 and 13 to 15. The events are sponsored by the Coshocton County Boy Scouts, county sheriff's department and Coshocton police department. Ribbons and certificates will be issued to each rider. There will trophies for the winners. Winners from each age at each location will compete grand champion on Sunday 19, at 1 p.m.

at the fairgrounds. Smitley Gets 1-5 In Prison Kenneth Smitley, address unavailable, was sentenced to serve one to five years in the Coshocton County Jail Tuesday after pleading guilty to grand theft in Coshocton County Common Pleas Court. Judge William F. Brown sentenced Smitley after accepting the plea. Representing Smitley was local attorney Van Blanchard while Assistant County Prosecutor David Hostetler handled the state's case.

By RONALD E. COHEN WASHINGTON (UPI) She waved magazines called "Baby Dolls" and "Lollitots" and it didn't take much imagination to guess what they were about. But she told you anyway. Right there to a subcommittee of the U.S. House of Representatives, Dr.

Judianne DensenGerber talked dirty. that adorned gutter, the slick She used the language publications. She told how her 17-year-old daughter bought one called "Family F- She begged the lawmakers to stop the traffic in "kid-porn," saying the minds and bodies of millions of children hang in the balance. The subcommittee was sympathetic to her views, but uncomfortable with her methods. Rep.

John Conyers, the chairman, lectured: "It serves no purpose to show those magazines. Please try to restrict your comments to the merits or demerits of legislation." Rep. Allen Ertel, a former prosecutor, clearly was upset. "We've listened to your litany, watched you wave your magazines in front of the television cameras," he said. "Don't you think you've been a little counterproductive? Why didn't you submit the magazines as evidence to us?" "The situation is so terrible and the leadership is so poor that you have to call this to everyone's attention," she replied.

"So you want to inform my 4- year-old, my 8-year-old, my 12- year -old on the evening news?" Ertel asked. "I hope when your children watch television they are equally upset by, crime and violence," she said. "My wife and children who would watch the news can't choose what's on television Ertel began. "So why don't you clean it up SO I won't have any magazines to show?" she interrupted. "We can read," Ertel said.

"I just question whether you have to wave those is this not counterproductive the juveniles you are trying to protect?" Besides those children who pose, she said, there are other of "kid-porn" children whose parents read the publications and act out their fantasies. "No First Amendment good I can possibly see in telling a man to go home and have intercourse with his 9-year-old daughter," she said. "If Thad to give up a portion of my First Amendment rights to stop this stuff, then I'd be willing to do it." votes must be recorded for Patterson and his 11 runningmates. Tellers' counsel Isaac Groiner said he will argue that the tellers were not required to follow the order of the executive board removing Testa from the ballot. He said the UMW constitution states the tellers are completely independent of the union officers.

Groiner also noted that a related complaint filed by Patterson was rejected recently by U.S. District Judge Barrington Parker. Teller Dallas Hutchinson, a candidate on Patrick's slate, said the tellers were preparing to mail the ballots to local union officers this week. He said the Patterson suit could delay the election beyond June 14. Hutchinson said an election delay would require the local unions to mail a second notice to all members an expense that many locals could not afford.

Fire Hits Cambridge Road Home Flames and smoke caused by a possible malfunction of the air conditioning system resulted in extensive damage to the home and contents belonging to Roger Eastman, 504 Cambridge at 5:17 p.m. Monday. Firemen, who extinguished the blaze, estimated the damage to the building at $4,000 and to the contents at $2,000. The flames damaged the dining room and the walls to a second floor bedroom. A short in the wiring also caused about $100 damage to a police cruiser at the police station, Main at 10 a.m.

Monday, firemen, who extinguished the blaze, reported. Lint in a fan belt in a processing machine caught fire at the Edmont-Wilson Co: plant, S. Third at 12:01 p.m. Monday. Firemen said the fire was out on their arrival.

Long John Silver's FISH MORE NOT. $1.49 A COMPLETE MEAL PRICED LIKE A SNACK assistance or if you are interested in meeting with us." Al Shore, owner and operator of Golden's Women's Wear Store, 410 Main complained to council last night that his water and sewer bill is "too high," and seeks a remedy. The store during the hot months operates a water-cooling air conditioning system. He said he has requested a deduct meter for his system, but can't get one. He complained that his combination water and sewer bill totaled about $1,300 over a six-month period.

His bill is high, according to Service Director Charles (Chuck) Turner, because he is obliged to dispose of the surplus water through a sanitary sewer and is charged as such. There being no storm sewer to dispose of the water, said Turner, he is not allowed to run the surplus from the cooling system water onto the street. Councilman Jon Husted, chairman of the water and sewer committee, said he would contact the city's water consultants, Finkbeiner, Pettis and Strout, Toledo, in an effort to find a solution to his problem. The Fish is two of our golden fish fillets. The More is hushpuppies, fryes and slaw.

The price is a mere $1.49. be group for June county So next time you're good deal on a good Long John Silver's Fish More. It's a for the price of a looking for a meal, come to and ask for complete meal, snack. Bring a big appetite. But don't bring a lot of money.

Long A John Silvers SEAFOOD SHOPPES DOWNTOWNER PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER SOUTH 2ND VINE STS..

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