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                  <text>10- The Da1ly Sentinel, Mio.•.coMt.Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 19, 1978

Leaders fearing revolt
could reduce services
ATLANTA (UP! ) - The
nation's municipal leaders
fear the property tax revolt in
California will lead to a
disruption of city services,
massive layoffs and an
inability to sustain growth.
Meeting in Atlanta this
week to try to head off a
potential
nationwide
taxpayers' revolt, the U.S.
Conference of Mayors
membership blames the
federal government for
causing their problems. They
plan to urge the Carter
adrninstration to take more
responsibility in local health ,
education and welfare
programs.

govenunent to pick up the tab
of some of these programs ll
forces on the cities."
John Gunther, executive
director of the mayor's
con ference , said a formal
request would be forwarded
to President Carter asking
that funding formulas be
revised in light of Proposition
13
An estimated 800 city
officials are attending the
conference. Speeches are
scheduled by V1ce President
Waller Mondale; Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, D·
Mass.; Commerce Secretary
Juanita Kreps and Housing
and Urban Development
Secretary Patricia Harris.
Oakland Mayor L10nel
W1lson said what started as a
lax revolt turned into an
attack
on government.
I
" Reason went out the
Silver Run Baptist Church window and emotions took
w1th the Rev . Howard Kimble over," he said of the
officiating. Bunal will follow California vote last week.
10 Me1gs Memory Ga rdens.
W1lson
said
when
Fnends ma y call at mWJi clpai budget cutbacks
Rawlings -Coats runeral force cities to start laying off
home 10 Middleport at any workers, the first to go Will be
t1me up until I :30 Tuesday . those holding menial, low·
paymg jobs - most often
poor blacks.
Alexander sa1d schools also
The mayors, hoping to
develop ways to deal w1th the
effects of the passage of
Proposition 13 in Ca lifornia,
believe
the
federal
government must help cit1es
shoulder the burden of the
taxpayer-{)rdered property
lax rollback . But only
through a massive infusion of
federal dollars can c1lles
meet the challenge, they said.
" As mflallon h1ls, the
fed era I gove rnm ent's
revenue mcreases because of
the tax structure:" sa1d
Syracuse
Mayor
Lee
Alexander, president of the
conference. That as one
more reason for the
11

---------------------------,

!

!

Area Deaths

I
HARVEY G. WHITLATCH
Harvey Gene Whitlatch, 136
Laurel St., Pomeroy, died
Sunday
at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital at the age
of 38. He was the son of the
late Lawrence and Opal Little
Whitlatch. Mr Whitlatch was
a member of the Pomeroy
F.O.E. 5171 .
Surviving are his wife,
Betty Jane Whitlatch ; one
son, Harvey, Jr , at home;
three daughters, Barbara,
Belinda and Opal, all at

home ; two brothers, James
Whitlatch, Middleport, and
Harland Whitlatch, Reedsville; three sisters, Imogene
Ruff, Cleveland ; M1ldred
Hudson , Pomeroy, and
Juanita Wnghl , Columbus;
and one half-sister, Delsie
Whitlatch, Columbus.
Funeral serv1ces will be
held Wednesday at I p m. at
the Ewing Chapel in Pomeroy
with the Rev. Wilbur Pemn
officiating. Burial will follow
in the Gravel Hill Cemet ery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p.m
Monday .

PEARL EDWARDS
Pearl (Penny ) Edwa rds.
65, (Storys Run Road ), Rt. 1
Cheshire, died Saturday
evening at Holzer Medical
Center.
Born AprH 29, J9t3 in Meigs
County, Mr. Edwards was the
son of the late Lewis and
Dora Otey Edwards. He. was
also preceded in death by
several brothers and Sisters.
Surviving are his wife,
Blanche Bobo Edwards; two
daughters , Mrs . James
(Elsie) folmer , Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Frederick 1June )
Thomas, Cheshi re: three
sons, Pearl (Buddy ) Ed·
wards of Lnng Bottom; Ralph
Edwards of Middleport and
Joe Edwards of Cheshi re;
thirteen grandchildren; one
sister, Sus1e Edwards.
Middleport ; one brother .
Thomas Edwards, Oak Hill ;
his mother·in·la w, Mrs. Nora
Bobo, and several meces and
nephews.
Funeral serv1ces will be
held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the

Oil freeze
GENEVA, Switzerland
1UPI) - 011 mm1sters of the
Organization of Oil E&lt;porting
Countries agreed today to
maintain the freeze on oil
prices at current levels until
the end of the year.
Oil Minister Ali Khahfa AiSabah of Kuwait, who
presided at the mm1steriai
co nference,
sai d " no
decisions" were reached on
mcreasing prices. curr ently
$12.70 a barrel
Asked whether this means
prl ces remam fr ozen,
KhaUfa,
year.' '

sa1d, ..

,.-·or

th1s

m July to st udy the dollar
question, " the comm unique
said.
The next full sess1on, unless
an extraordinary meeting is
convened in between, will be
Dec 16 10 the Pers1an Gulf
Em1rate of Abu Dhabi.
"We have put off the inflation battle utnil December
but there probably will he an
extraordinary meeting on the
dollar · before," L1byan
Minister Ezzedin Mabrok
told reporters
Mabruk had argued for a
move rrom the dollar to a
basket of strong currencies
and he criticizes those who
oppgsed immediate action.
"Some countries have no
political will," he said.
iraq• 011 Minister Tayeh
Abdul·karim said he was
satisfied w1th the meeting.
"It was a good meeting
co nside r•n g the
weak
positions of OPEC," he sa1d.
United Arab Emirates
Minister Mana AI·Oteiba
concurred

The Kuwaiti minister sa1d
the conference agreed the 13
OPEC co untries, acting in·
div1dually, would draw up
poSlllons on what they thmk
should be done to co unter
losses resulting from in·
nation and depreClallon of
the U. S. dollar.
"We w1ll study the problem
individually and submit
reports to Abu Dhabi, Khahfa
said, "The dollar is the most
ideal currency ."
The OPEC communique
said the conference rev.ewed
NOW YOU KNOW
the situation relating to ex·
Theodore Roosevelt was
change rates and "expressed
11s deep concern in this the first pres1dent to ride in
an automobile, but he d1dn't
respect
"A high-level committee of like 1t and rarely allowed h1s
experts" pres1ded over by Secret Serv ice chauffeur to
Khalifa will meet 10 l.ondaon tak e him for a drive.
H

''New''
Money Market
Certificates
EARNS A NEW HIGH INTEREST RATE ON SHORT TERM SAVINGS
Farmers Money Market Certificate is rated on the average
yield of 6 month U.S. Treasury Bills as set at weekly auction.
(The week of June 15, that average interest rate was 7.12t Pet . ).
Mtnimum deposit of $10,000.00 for a term of 6 months w1th
Interest paid at maturity.

YEARS EARNS 775

%

OUR NEW 8 YEAR CERTIFICATE PAYS A 7.75% INTEREST RATE
WITH A MINIMUM DEPOSIT OF $1,000 WITH THE INTEREST
BEING PAID QUA~TERLY.
Federal law and r egul tti 10n
p roh i bit the pa ymen t of a
t i me de pos i t pr 1o r to
malurtfy
un l ess
l hr ee

mon th s of 1nter est ther eon
i s forfei!ed an d 1nt e re s t on
the amount wi thdrawn Is
re du ced

rate ,

to

the

pass book

Lightning
kills pair
Two men attending a picnic
m Leetonia in Columbiana
County were struck by
lightning and killed Sunday
as severe storms skirted
parts of Ohio.
Leetoma pollee said Gary
F. Indeamill, 30, and William
R. Hall, 30, both of Leetonia,
were at a picnic at the
Leetonia Sportsman's Club
when they were hit by
lightning.
A seve re thunderstorm
watch had heen posted for
eastern Ohio when the storm
hit, bul a police spokesman
said "the storm was not that
bad It was just one of those
freak things."
The two men were rushed
to the hospital, but were dead
on arrival.
Parts of Ohio were under a
tornado watch Sunday after·
noon, and most of the state
was under a severe storm
watch for several hours
Sunday.
Northern
areas
of
Co lumbus reported some
severe thunderstorms and
parts of eastern Ohio were
buffeted by highs w10ds, but
most damage was minor.

Farmers
Bank
POMEI&lt;OY, OHIO
Member FDIC

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial •
Saturday admissions Nelhe Roush, Marshfield ;
Milford Bailey, Athens ;
James Haggerty, Cheshire ;
Maywood Johnston , Port·
land ;
Helen
Melton,
Cheshire; George Mortimer,
Reedsville ; Julie Maxey,
Hartford ; Phyllis Blake,
Middleport , and Sherry
Patterson, ReedsviUe.
Saturday discharges Herman Lawson, Debra
Burke , Norma Burnside,
Everett Call way, Emlstine
Fisher, Charles Knapp,
Edward LeMaster, John
Moon, Bobbie Roy, Audrie
Wood, Suzanne Kibble ,
George Hackett ; Sr., and Lela
Robinson .
Sunday admissions Russell Morris, Pomeroy ;
George Molden, Pomeroy ;
Gaye Oliver , Middleport;
Lora Bryan, New Haven ;
Bernard LaValley, Racine,
and Johnny Kr1aaer, LOOK
Bottom .
·
Sunday discharges Richard DeMoss, Franklm
Coe. and Russell Morris.
GET LICENSES
Marriage licenses were
issued to Ronald Douglas
Herdman, 19, Pomeroy, and
Tammie Corinne Smith. 18,
Rutland ; Jeffrey Don Friend,
22, Bashan, and Kimberly
Jean Ward , 16, Portland ,
John Ray Hughes, 27,
Parkersburg and Roxa1ma
Patterson, 21 , Rutland .
KIKKLAND, Wash. (UP! )
- Keith Butler, the SeBttle
Seahawks' second · round
draft choice, has agreed to
terms, General Manager
John Thompson announced
Sunday.
Butler, a IH, 225-pound
linebacker from Memphis
State, became the sixth
player drafted by Seattle to
reach terms With the
Seahawk.l.

Patrol investigates

(Continued from page I)
the boat. Smashed cha1rs lay
tumbled against the railing.
Some card tables on the
upper deck, which was
reduced to a pile of debris,
were hanging upside down
from the awning .
"The wind here bad been
wicked, but be!ore . it (the
tornado) came down through
here, there was a dead calm,
not a leaf stirring," said
another camper, Robert
Green, of Bonner Springs,
Kan .
.
" Il came right down the
m1ddle of the lake," Green
said, "with the water just
a'boiling. Everywhere else
was smooth as glass."
The dead were identified as
Grace Vogel , 67, of Topeka,
Kan .; Pamela Nelson, 28, of
Wichita, Kan ; Norris E.
Weiss, 47, of Wichita ; Judy
Patterson, 2!i, of Topeka, who
was pregnant: Mildred Ully,
in her 70s, of Topeka; Sarah
Reed, 64, of Emporia, Kan. ;
Mur1el Fuller, in her late 50s
or early 60s, of Madison ,
Wis.; Charles Griffin, 33, of
Topeka; Donald Hawthorn,
35, of Meden , Calif.; Tina
Kramer , 17, of Quenemo,
Kan .; Dr. Norman Schwartz,
48 Pra1rie Village, Kan .;
S~ndra Wright, 34, of
Topeka ; Carolyn Hartwich,
age unknown, of Topeka, and
Zubaidah !sa, 55, of Emporia.

Registration is
underway here

maintained·

Farnters Bank

8

will suffer because they
depend on property taxes lor
a large portion of their
budgets.
"Until the federal government asswnes a larger share
of funding education, there is
little we can do to cut
property taxes without
hurting our schools," he said.
"And I don't think anyone
wants to do that.
"People wiU only let you
cut services so far . They want
their
policemen
and
firemen.''
Alexander said California
voters sounded a "clarion
call" with the passage of the
property tax cut, wh1ch not
only reduced property taxes
but also 1mposed a limit on
future tax growth.
Mayor Robert J. Quirk of
Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, said
the spreading tax revolt was
not
aimed
at local
govenunent, but rather at
inefficiency on the federal
level.
"The federal government 1s
in sulated from all this,"
Quirk sa1d . ''We've been
tightening our belts and now
it's tune for the federal
government to do the same."

14 die

Children four and five
years old wishmg to par·
t1c1pate in the "Big Wheel"
race to be held Saturday ,
June 24, during Big Bend
Re2atta may reg ister at
Dav1s Insurance.
The event will be held at the
Pomeroy tennis courts at 11
a.m. Big wheels will be
provided and all children will
receive a prize The event is
being sponsored by GaUia·
Meigs Fraternal Order of
Police.

13 killed

seven·weekend wrecks
The Gallia-Meigs Post,
H1ghway Patrol investigated
seven accidents on Saturday
and Sunday.
Saturday at 3:50p.m. on SR
160 at SR 325, David Me·
Cormick, 26, Bidwell; was
injured in a mishap involving
his motorcycle and an auto
driven by Phyllis Hager, 33,
Vinton.
According to the patrol,
both vehicles were south·
bound on 160, when · Me·
Cormick atle!Dpted to pass
the Hager auto, striking the
vehicle in the left side.
McCormick was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the E squad, where he was
admitted for observation.
In
McCormick
is
sallsfactory condition.
At 10:30 a.m., on SR 279 at
Mill St. in Thurman, the
patrol investigated an ac·
cident involving a bicycle
ridden by Randy Layton, 12,
Thurman, and an auto driven
by Roy Lawrence, 71,
Thurman.
According to the in·
vestigating officer, Lawrence
was traveling west on 279
when Layton rode into the
path of his vehicle.
There were no mjuries.
Layton was cited for failure
to yield the right of way.
There was slight damage to
both vehicles.
The patrol investigated a
m1shap at ll :30 a.m. on SR 7,
at Township Rd. 293, in Me1gs
County. According to the
patrol, an auto driven by
Clarence B1ggins, 43, Athens,
started to pass as an auto
dnven by Nora Buchanan. 67,
Reedsville, started lo turn
leff off 7.
The Biggins auto struck the
Buchanan vehicle in the rear.
Buchanan claimed injuries,
but was not immcdl3tely
treated.

There was moderate
damage to both vehicles.
Biggins was cited for
passing at an intersection.
At II :20 p.m. Saturday, the
patrol Investigated two ac·
cidents involving a cow on
U.S . 35, six-tenths of a mile
west of SR 32!i.
According to the pat.·ol the
first mishap occurred when
Glenn Elkins, 27, Bidwell,
struck a cow which ran in
front ·of his auto.
The impact caused severe
damage to the Elkins vehicle.
The cow was killed.
The patrol states that the
owner of the cow has not been
located.
In a related incident, an
auto driven by John Birch·
field, 29, Bidwell, incurred
moderate damage when it
struck the dead cow, which
had not yet been removed

from the roadway .
The patrol investigated an
accident involving a deer at
11 :30 p.m. Saturday on
Adamsville • COra Rd., onetenth of a mile south of U.S.
~.

According to the in·
vestigating officer, Gregory
Balm, 18, Rio Grande,
swerved his auto to avoid a
deer on the road, skidded off
the road, and struck an
embankment.
There was moderate
damage to the vehicle. No
citation was issued.
On Sunday, at 3:36 p.m.,
the patrol investigated a
mishap on SR 141, one-tenth
of a mile south of Neigh·
borhood Rd.
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Margaret
Brim, 74, incurred moderate
damage when the vehicle
went off the right side of the
road, lost control and passed
off the left side of the road·
way.
Brim was uninjured. There
was no citation.

ELBERFELD$
LADY DEVON.
Focusing on Fall , lhe
all important vest,

newly deiined wllh side
lies. over a great
lie front flare sklrl,
both polyesler-acryllc.
Coordlnallng long
oleeve printed
polyester shirt . All,
easy -care, easy-wear.
In grey, all sptece. pine
qreen or gabordtne. By
Lady Devon
for lhe
large size

woman .

Tickets
can be
reserved

Advance sale of tickets to
the Hoxie Brothers Circus to
be held at Gallia County
Fairgrounds Wednesday ,
June 21,6 and 8 p.m. may be
reserved by calling Ray
Manley at 992·2302 or 992·
3305.
Tickets m advance are
At least 13 people were $3.2!i for adults and S2.2!i for
killed 10 as many traffic
children 11 and under .
accidents around the state Tickets at the gate will be S4
this weekend , an Ohio for adults and $3 for children.
Highway Patrol spokes· The event is being sponsored
woman said today .
by Gallia • Meigs Fraternal
Two of the victims lost their
Order of Police.
lives friday night, five Satur·
Gallipolis residents wishing
day and six Sunday.
to secure tickets may call the
Ohio's nonholiday weekend
abuve numbers collect.
roadway death count runs
from 6 p.m. Fridays until
midnight Sundays.
SHRINETIES MEETING
The Twin City Shrinettes
Friday Nlgbt
will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thurs·
Fremont: Andrew W. Seils,
day
at the home of Lora
17, Fremont, killed when his
Byers
in Gallipolis
b1cycie was struck by an
automobile on a Sandusky
County road.
Newark : Joseph E. Eswor·
thy, 29, Newark, killed in a
onecar accident on a ucking
County road.
Saturday
Cleveland : John
H.
Nichols, 73, Olmsted Fails,
killed ln a tw~ar accident on
Pearl Road .
Moraine : Phyllis Geiger,
49, Centerville, killed in a
one-car
accident
off
Interstate 75 m suburban
Dayton .
Dayton : Christopher l..
Smith, 20, Dayton, killed in a
one-car accident off Ohio 48.
Hamilton : George Bell Jr ..
21, Fairfield, killed in a city
auto crash .
Dayton : Carlos William
McLemore Jr ., 31, Dayton,
killed when his car hit a tree
along a city street.
Sunday
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ironton : William Johnson
Jr ., 36, South Point, killed
A 64 oz. bottle of IC a iul a
when the car he was driving
swerved off a Lawrence
Frl1baa with tho purcha10 of
County road.
any lluckat, llarral or family
Mansfield: Kurt J . Skeen ,
17, Belleville, killed when the
valu pak
car ln which he was riding
crashed on Ohio 97 in
GREAT SERVICE! GREAT atiCKENI
Richland County.
Delaware: David Watson ,
20, Marysville, killed when
the car he was driving hit a
bridge abutment on a
Delaware County road.
Fremont:
Saul
D.
Basaldua , 11, Harlingen,
Teus, killed in a two~ar
TIY OUI ALL NEW
accident on a Sandusky
DIIVI THIU WINDOW
County road
IT Xenia : Elton R.
Cummins, 21, Jamestown,
killed in a twocar accident on
U.S. 61 in Greene County.
IT Cincinnati : Clay Allen
Dickerson, 21, Cincinnati,
lying on a city street and

on Ohio

highways

I

I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday. June 20, 1978

e

Although the general fund
of the Meigs Local School
District is $33,000 richer as
the result of a state audit, a
request for a finan cial .
analysis to determine if there
is a necessity for closmg
schools was made at Mon·
day's regular meeting of the
Me~gs Local Board of
Education.
At the end of that audit, the
closing date will be sent to the
state auditor's office.
Supt. Charles Dowler said
that as a result of a week's
state audit, it had been
recommended some $33,000
be transferred from other
funds into the district's
general fund . He also
reported that "finances are in
a quandary" but that as state
regulations now provide, the
Meigs District will receive no
less than 10 percent more
than it did last year. The 10
percent would amount to
$104,000, meaning an additional $52 ,000 for the
remainder of 1978, Dowler
stated.
He pointed out provisions
are being made for school
districts to borrow money,

but indicated that really will
not help.
Dowler said projection is
difficult, but it appeared that
the district will not have
enough money to operate.
Upon his recommendation it
was agreed to ask for a
financial analysis by the stale
auditor. Such an analysis
would .indicate if there is a
necessity for closing Meigs
Local Schools and if so, what
the closing date should be.
This mlormation must be
conveyed to the State
Superintendent of Instruction
before any closing could take
·place.
In view of the cash analysis
request, no date was set for
the start of school m the fall.
All except semors of the
Meigs Local District will be
in classes through Wed·
nesday of this week.
Although the board took no
action on the matter last
night, it IS expected that
another mathematic course
will be required at the h1gh
school before a student can
graduate hegmmng with the
next school year.
Dan Morris, director of

instruction and curriculum,
presented the proposal for
board study. Morris said the
proposal of two math units as
a graduation requirement
instead of one unit has the full
support and agreement of all
parties.
Morris stated declining low
math scores show the ad·
ditlonal course 1s needed.
Such a course would provide
better preparation for
technical
and
college
programs
and
better
preparation for trades and
industrial programs.
Tim Flesher, guidance
counselor, was present and
Indicated feedback from
various departments 10·
dicates that the addilwnal
math course is needed. If
approved, the course would
be made effective in the fall
of 1976 and the freshman
class of 1978·79 would be the
f1rst class to meet the
requirement.
At last night's meeting,
continuing contracts were
granted to Mona Knapp,
Mary Rice and Carol Wolfe,
teachers, and it was agreed to
renew the coo perative

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Showing of color slides of
the victim, Kathryn Ellen
Fitchpatrick, 21, Middleport,
by Herman Henry, Bureau of
Criminal Investigation,
highlighted second day of the
aggravated murder trial of
Leonard Fltchpatrick, 21,
Middleport , in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Tuesday morning.
The slides of Mrs. Fitchpatrick, who was allegedly
shot by her husband on April
9, were shown over the objection 9! Defense Attorney
Bernard Fultz who stated
Prosecuting Attorney Rick
Crow had black and white
photographs which were
adequate for presentation to
show the scene at the Fitchpatrick home to the jury.
However, Judge John C.
Bacon permitted some of the
slides to be shown . Fultz had
charged in his objection that
the prosecution wanted to
prejudice the jury by showing
the color slides of the victim,
the living room where the
shooting took place and the
bathroom where blood stains
were on the wall.
However, Crow said the
slides were more clear and
would present a better idea to
the jury.
Before
they
were
presented, the slides were
shown to the judge in the
presence of both attorneys
and some of the more
gruesome photos which
Judge Bacon said did not
particularly show any points
were eliminated.
The jury was then returned
to the jury box and the slides
were shown and explained by
Agent Henry, who also
showed some 10 black and
white Photos of the victim and
the home while explaining
aspects of them to the jury.

First
person
ca li ed
Tuesday mornmg was
Deputy Sheriff Mike Zirkle
who told of going to the Fitch·
patrick home early on the
morning of Apni 9. He explamed by making a sketch of
the livmg room where the
s!looting took place. He told of
helping transport Leonard
F1tchpatrick to jail and of
later that morning, (about 4
or 4:30 a.m.) transporting
Sheila Edwards, who had
been babysitting with the
Fitchpatrick children to the
sheriff's office.
Upon cross examination,
Fultz challenged the opinions
of all of the officers involved
m the investigation as to the
path the shell had taken in the
death of Mrs. Fitchpatrick. It
was again brought out that no
autopsy had been performed.
At one point in the cross
examination, Fultz had
Deputy Zirkle representing
the victim and had him take a
position in which Fultz In·
dicated the shot could have
traveled.
After showing the slides
and the black and white
photos Henry remained on
the stand to tell of his work in
the Investigation.
Three Middleport poll ee
officers were the first wit·
nesses called in the
aggravated murder trial of
Leonara ~· •tzhpatrick, 21,
Middleport, in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Monday. The jury was seated
Monday morning. In the
early afternoon jurors were
taken to the scene of the
aUeged crime a\389 Williams
St. Fltchpatrick is charged
with the alleged shooting of
his wife, Kathryn Ellen, 21,
the morning of April 9.
Rick Crow, prose cuting
attorney, in his opening
statement to the jury said the

prosecution would prove that
the death of Mrs. Fitch·
patrick was with calculation
and design. He sa1d Mr. and
the late Mrs. Fitchpalrick left
their home between 8:30 and
9 p.m. on AprilS to "go out on
the town ." He said they
returned home at I :30 a.m.
and that the defendant
smashed a glass window out
of the front door.
Crow charged the two were
fighting 10 the bathroom and
there was blood as evidence
on the walls of the bathroom.
He said the argwnent &lt;:~~n·
tinued and that the defendant
threatened to kill Mrs. Fitch·
patrick.
Crow said the prosecution
would prove Fitchpatnck
· went upstairs during the
argument; brought down a
gun, loaded it and shot his
wife. Crow said an eye wit·
ness to the shooting would be
introduced. He said a time
lapse het ween the threats on
Mrs. Fitchpatrick and the
shooting established that
calculation and design were
present m her death .
On the other hand, Defense
Attorney Bernard Fultz said
ills the burden of the stale to
provide beyond a reasonable
doubt that prior calculation
and des1gn were prsent m the
death. He indicated that the
event was more complicated
than Prosecutor Crow had
presented.
Fultz maintained evidence
will show on the day in
question, the couple bad no
domestic problems. The
evidence will show, Fultz
stated, that the couple spent
three or lour hours on
Saturday afternoon, April 8,
with her parents and that the
defendant and the father of
Mrs. Fitcbpatrick did some
drinking .
He said the couple went to

~\

\(•~·~,....._~

.,?

I

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29. No. 46

agreement with the Meigs
County Board of Education
for the work-study coor·
dinator for the new school
year.
Brian and Dennis Tate
were approved as tuition
students lor the remainder of
this school year. Extra hours
for cosmetology mstructors,
Linda Yorker and Mary
Powell were approved.
As a step toward s
lliscouraging the collection of
unemployment com·
pensation, the board em·
ployed substitute teachers for
the new school year. They
included Patricia Adleta,
Lmda Aikman, Ladona Boyd,
Allee Brauer, John Coffman,
Becky Cotterill, Barbara
DeYoung, Francis Foster,
Grace Hawley, Susie Heines,
Dallas Hill, Alan Holt er,
Martha Husted, Betty Hut·
ch1son, Pauline Hysell , David
Jenkins, Rose Ann Jenkins,
Jane Ann Karr, l'arie Ken·
nedy, Vinas Lee, Margaret
Lew1s, Sandy Luckeydoo ,
Helen
Maag,
Madhu
Malhotra, Margaret Parsons,
W. H. Perrin, Dorolha Petrel,
Ceci lia Rinal di. Eiame

Rouse, Gayle Salyer, Edward
Schaekel, Jr., Robert Shaver.
Randy S1mmons, Jeanne
Siawter, Jeannie Taylor.
Juha Vaughan, Paul E. Voss,
Diana Williams, Dorothy
Woodard and Bill Young. The
employment is contingent
upon proper certification.
The board approved the
1979 Me1gs Local School
District Librayr budget of
$63,112 and agreed to keep an
eye on the bookmobile
program which has been
threatened as far as service
to the schools of the county 1s

concerned
It was agreed to advertise
for b1ds on student accident
insurance; fleet insurance;
t1res and tubes ; gasoline, oll
and anti-freeze; fuel oil,;
coal; milk and dairy
products; bread and bakery
products ; meat; produce and
dry goods.
Michael Wilfong and
Ronald Logan were employed
as driver education m·
structors for June, July and
August.
Arequest for a yea r's leave
of absence by Ina Meadows , a
teacher, was demed The

board
indicated
Mrs.
Meadows plans to teach for a
year 10 another locality and
did not wish to grant the leave
for that purpose.
Dan Morns was named
project director and Barbara
Shultz and J eanne Brown as
project trainers for a new
federally fu nd ed reading
program. The trainers will
each train five other teachers
m the techmques of the
program The grant is for
$11 ,888 and the program w1ll
be conducted for grades one
through eight.
It was agreed to make
payroll adJustments for
principals and lunchroom
personnel lor the1r work
during the teachers' stri ke
since the days worked were
over the contract period.
Employed as subslltutes
for the next school year were .
Substit ut e custodians Eva
Mae
Chnstian,
Gladys Barrett. Pamela Sue
C1ark, Nora Nitz , substitute
secretaries, Lmda Stobart,
Deborah Hawley, substitute
aides,
Daria
Hawl ey,
Deborah Ha wley, Jeanni e
Taylor; cooke: . lnnnie

Quivey, Ruby King, Joan
Kaldor, Merium Hoffman,
Marie Birchfield, Shirley
Pr1ddy, Belva Glaze, Audrey
Wood, Mary Dorst, Frances
Ca rlton , Vtoiet Walk er .
Darlene Tillis , bus drivers ,
pending certifi catiOn, Lois
Wyant, Ralph Stone, Pam
Ogdin, Harold White, Ida
Martm, Amos T1ilis, Da vid
Chase, Gloria Oiler, Wilham
Schultz, Lee Wood, Kay Hale,
Virgil Carl, Leland Parker ;
mechamcs , Norman Wood,
William Thornton and Amos
TilliS.
Arthur Arnold was named
full
tim e
vocatiOnal
agncuiture teacher and the
resignatiOns of Sandy Gar·
nes , a1de; Bernice Garnes,
cook; Ella M Southern, bus
driver; Richard Roseberry ,
weld ing in stru ctor, and
Dorsei Smith, mine main·
tenance teacher. were accepted
A trip lo Cincinnati by the
Harrisonville sixth grade was
approved providing liability
insurance 1s purchased. The
trip will not cost the school
d1strict anythmg
The next regular meeting

was selfor Thursday, July 13,
at which time the budget will
be adopted. Several transfer s
were approved and the clerk
was authorized to make till•
July and August dedudiun
payments for the state
teachers retirement system
by July IS and was autho mc~ i
to request an advance dr~t w
to meet June payrolls.
Attending the meetmg were
board members, Wendell
Hoove r , Jenmfer Sheet s,
Virgil King and Carol Pie ret•;
Supt . Dowler; Dwight Goins,
administ rative assistant ;
Dan Morri s, director of illstructlOn and curri cu1ulll ,
Clerk -Treasurer J1111t
Wagner, Principals J awcs
Diehl, Bob Morri s and John
Mora . John Redovian of the
Meigs Loca I Tea che rs
Assuciation, and Flesher vf
the gmdance department .
Mrs

Wagne r

gave

11

detailed account of the stalt'
audit and Dowler gave ; r
l'O mplicated decision fr on
the sta te attorney gcneroi
offi l'c in regard to the distrk
havmg heen demcd th e f11·
additional calamity days

Slides given to jury

Restaurant

,

en tine

Meigs Local board wants financial analysis

Crow's Family

lliiiiiiiiiii--1

at y

•

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

killed when run over by an ..............................._._.........................
automobile.

•

BREAK ~LES REOORD- Frog Wayland, this year's Grand O'oaker, last year sold
560 memberllblp UckeiB to the Ohio Society for Promotion of Bullfrol!ll, Inc. This year he
il'~ke hiJ l'eC(I'd when he sold Judy Owen a ticket making !hill year's 118le thus far 551.

their home and later that
evening, spent hours bet ween
Headquarters in Middleport
and the Regalia Inn in
Pomeroy drinking. "They
were having what they
characterized as a good
time," Fultz remarked.
Fultz said the glass in the
front door broke accidentaUy
as Fitchpatnck made his way
into the house . Fultz sa1d
evidence will indicate that
Fitch patrick at one time after
the couple returned home,
brought two guns downstairs
and took one upstairs after
unloading one of them Fultz
said Fltchpatrick e•me back
downstairs after taking one
gun lo the upstairs and with
the other gun Mrs. Fitchpatrick was " unintentionally
shot."
David Woolard, Middleport
police officer, was first on the
stand. He told of arriving at
the F1tchpatrick home about
2:13a.m. on Apnl 9. He said
he and three other officers,
U. George Miller, officer
John King, both of the Mid·
dleport Police Department,
and Deputy Sheriff Randall
Carpenter were at the Wafne
Shop in Middleport hav10g
coffee when they received
word via radio to go to the
Fitchpatrick home as quickly
as possible.
Woolard, John King and U.
Miller were all permitted to
say that they were met on the
porch by F1tchpatr1ck, who
had a small baby 10 his arms
and told them to enter the
Fitchpatrick home . They
were also permitted to say
that Fitchpatnck told them
he had shot hiS w1fe and that
he "knew she was dead."
However, other comments
allegedly made by Fitch·
patrick were not permitted to
be entered in testimony of
any of the officers, all of
whom told practically the
same story about the mor·
ning of April 9 and their visit
to the Fitchpatr1ck residence .
Woolard told or en·
countering Sheila Edwards ,
who was babysitting with two
small children at the fitch·
patrick home.
Woolard said the babysitt er
was hysterical and described
the defendant , Fitchpatr1ck,
as being nervous but he said
he observed no signs that
Fitchpatrick was intoxicated.
The Middleport officer
testified to seeing Mrs. Fitch·
patrick seated in a chair in a
corner of the living room, a
shotgun on the floor , two
shells on the couch and
another on the floor. He
testified as to the blood and
"debris" from the shooting
on the wall in back of Mrs.
Fitchpatrlck 's body.
On cross · examination.
(OonUnued on JIBC' 10)

fiMSER
,I

i

t'

'' ~

CL

~

)
LATEST ENTRY - A heavy favorite in Saturday's
B1g Bend Regatta Frog Race is Bigfoot, held here by
owner Jerry Grove of Pomeroy. Captured last month 1n
Scotland's Loch Ness, Bigfoot has heen trained endlessly
and will be jockeyed in the big event by Ed Ellis of
Barberton. While Bigfoot is of questionable heritage,

Sheriff
•
ISSUeS

reminder

94 pints of blood taken
One hundred and seven
persons, 23 of whom were
first time donors, gave 94
p1nts of blood at the Pomeroy
Elementary School Monday.
Of
those ,
69
were
replacements.
Homer B. Sm1th, Pomeroy,
became a 10-gallon donor
while Kathleen Wells, also of
Pomeroy, reached the five
gallon mark.
Becoming th ree-gallon
donors were Homer G.
Baxter, Pomeroy, and
Charles Kmg, Rutland ; two
ga ll on donor s, Eric A.
Pearch, Pom eroy, and
Sandra Taylor, Middleport ;
and one gaUon donor, Billy J .
Spencer, Pomeroy.
Persons and groups help10g
at the bloodmobile were
Ferndora Story and Lenora
Leifheit, nurses; Dr. L. D.
Telle. Dr. E. S. Villanueva ,
and Dr. Raymond Boice ;
Grace Pratt, Veda Davis,
Faye Wil dermuth , Marge
Reuter, and Gemma Case• of
the American Legion Post
No . 39 auxiliary at the can·
teen ; and Homer Turner,

Meigs Count y Sheriff
James J. Proffitt advises his
off1ce is receiving com plaints
daily regarding motorcycles
being operated illegally in
various parts of the county.
Co mplaints range from
running through fields to
being operated by underage
operators.
Sheriff Proffitt reminds
residents thalli is a violation
of Ohio Law to operate a
motorcycle on any road or
highway unless the operator
has a motorcycle operator
endorsement and is wearmg
eye protecllon and helmet .
The cycle must also display
valid license plate.
Sheriff Proffitt said, "If you
are going to operate a cycle
on the roadways - this
means township roads as well
as county and state highways
- then the cycle must have a
license plate and the operator
must have a cyc le's
operator's endorsement. "
" Dirt bikes," advised
Sheriff Proffitt, "are to be
ridden in fields, not on the
SQUAD RUNS
roadway("
T
h
e
M 1d d 1e p 0 r t
"Make sure that you
have the landowner's per· Emergency Squad answered
mission before riding in the two medical calls Monday
fields, how ever ," added evenmg.
At 5:04p.m. the squad went
Sheriff Proffitt.
to 1041 S. Second Ave. for
Robert R. Lewis who suffered
bums on his legs and feet. He
was
taken to Veterans
Showers, thundershowers
Memorial
Hospital.
developing tonight, con·
At
10:29
p.m. Rose Ellen
linulng Wednesday . Lows
tonight in the low 60s. Highs Lee, Beach Street, was trans·
Wednesday ln the upper 70s. ported to Veterans Memorial
Probability of precipitation Hospital.

Weather

ON TV WEDNESDAY
A 1978 Big Bend Regatta )0 percent today, 40 percent
Preview will be shown on tonight, 50 percent Wed·
Channel5 television at 7 P.M. nesday.
Wednesday.
'(eh preview will feature
highlights from last year as
NOW YOU KNOW
well as personal interviews
There are more television
with participants of this sets in the United States than
year's event .
there are people In Japan.

rumors arc circu latmg that the amphibious creature's
descent may be linked directly to the infamous monster
himself. Pictured with Grove and his frog are, center,
Charles "Frog " Waylan d, grandcroaker, and left , Dn1·c
Jenkins, president of the Meigs County Jaycees.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad this morning at 6:16
a.m . was called to the Village
Green Apartments
in
Pomeroy lor Mrs. Helen
Johnson, a medical patient,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Claren ce McNeal , Kermit Stark ey and Vernon Ncasr ,
McElroy , Homer Young, clen cai workers , Pnul
Maurice Loll, W1111 am Smart, Dick Karr, Bernadi n&lt;'
Frecker, and Blythe '!1w1ss, Meier, and Clarence Struble
Rellred Volunt eer Senior of the Retired Seni or
C11lzens helping with loading Volunteer Program, clerical
and unloading .
workers; and the Quality
Also , helping were Mary Print Shop, The Da1iy SenNease, Jean Nease. Juamta tinel, The Athens Messengrr ,
Sayre, Jena Sayre, Mace! W.M.P.O.
Radio,
till'
Barton. Joyce Hoback. Luia Pomeroy Emergency Squud,
Hampton, Sue Taylo r, and Veterans Mem ori:II
Theresa Starr, Sharon Hospital, donations.
Wnghl, Patt1e Childer, Beth
(Continued on page 10)

Council agrees
to option land
Pomeroy co uncil Monday
night agreed to an option to
selhng a portiOn of land
owned by Beec h Grove
Cemetery Trustee;, to Meig;
Count y Commissioners for II
to construct an access road to
the new Mul ti -Purp ose
bu1ld10 g. It w1ll be built near
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Meeting With council was
co unt~ engineer, Wesley
Buehl, who explamed where
the property is located. It is
the old Sugar Run Road
located on the left side or
'Mulberry Heights across
from the pond at Beech Grove
Cemetery.
As an emergency measure,
' co uncil approved an or·
dinance providing for the
issuance of $30,000 ln notes on
the Village of Pomeroy in
anticipation of the issuance of
bonds for the purpose of
resurfacing streets.
Council will spend $50,000
on street paving with $20,000
com ing
fr om revenu e
sharing.
To be resurfa ced are
portions of Butternut and
Mulberry and such sundry
streets designated by council.
Council also agreed to
advertise for sealed bids for
the sale of $30,000 in notes to
be received by Jane Walton,
1\1

clerk, by noon on July 10.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
reported the water tester W:JS
in use and letters were ready
to be mailed to property
owners, who have weet\s
growing on their property .
Paul Simon, vice prcsidt'nl
of the Pomeroy Qlarnbcr of
Comrncrcr met with council
regarding blockage or Lynn
Street during the Regatta, the
closmg of the upper parking
lot for concession stands, usc
of the old senior high buildint~
and permissiOn for th e
Jaycee-cttcs to sell balloon~
du ring Hegatta.
Council granted permission
on aU requests Membc• ~
again aired the tr:~ff i c
problem at the bridge dui ing
the early morning hou~s :tn&lt;l
stray cats runnmg loose.
The mayor's report in the
amount of $3,182.60 for the
month of May was accepted.
The next meeting of council
will bo July 10.
Att end ing were Mayo r
Andrews, Mrs. Walton, clcrlt ,
Lou
Osborne,
Larry
Wehrung, Bill Young, Jim
Neutzling and Harold Brown,
cou ncil members, Donnie
Ward , Jack Krautter, Chief
Jed Webster, Edith Sisson,
Aaron Kelton and Bill
Quickel.

�3- The Dally Senlmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy 0 Tuesday June 20 1978

%-The Dally Sentinei,Mtddleport P!XIleroy 0 Tuesday June 20 1978

The notorious jumping frog of Calaveras Co.
By Mark Twain
I found Sunon Wheeler d02
mg comfortably by the bar
room stove of the dilapidated
tavern m the decayed numng
camp of Angel s and I nolle
ed that he was fat and
baldheaded and had an ex
pr essiOn of winntng
gentleness and sunphc1ty
upon
his
tranquil
countenance He roused up
and gave me good day
I told hun that a fr1end of
nune had corrumss10ned me
to make some mqwnes about
a cheriShed compamon of his
boyhood named Leomdas W
Smiley - Rev Leorudas W
Smiley a ) oung mmlSier of
the Gospel who he had heard
was at one tune a resident of
Angel s Camp I added that if
Mr Wheeler could tell me
anything about this Rev
Leomdas W Snuley I would
feel under many ubhgallons
to hun
Sunon Wheeler backed me
mto a corner and blockaded
me there with his chair and
then sat down and reeled off
U1e monotonous narrative
which follows this paragraph
He never Sllllled he never
frowned he never changed
his ' mce from the gentleflowmg key to which he tuned
his Imttal senlen&lt;'e he never
betrayed the slightest susp1
c on of enthusiasm but all
through the mtenmnable nar
rallve there ran a vem of un
press1ve earnestness and
smcenty which showed me
plamly that so far from his
unagmmg that there was
anything nd culous or funny
about his story he regarded
It as a really Important mat
ter and admired Its two

heroes as men of transcen
dent gemus m fmesse I let
him go on m hts own way and
never mterrupled him once
Rev Leonulas W H m
Reverend Le - well there
was a feller here once by the
name of Jun Sllllley m the
wmler of 49 or maybe 11 was
the spnng of SO - I don I
recollect exactly somehow
but anyway he was the
cunousest man about always
bcllmg on anything that tum
ed up you ever see If he could
gel anybod) to bel on the
other side and If he couldn I
he d change sides Any way
that swted the other man
would sui! him -any way JUS!
so s he gut a bet he was
satiSfied But still he was
lucky uncommon lucky he
must always come out wm
ner He was always ready
and laymg for a chance
there couldn t be no soh! ry
thing mentwncd but that
feller d offer to bet on II and
lake ary stde you please as I
was JUS! teltmg you
If there was a horse race
you d fmd him flush or you d
fmd him busted at the end of
II if there was a dog fight
he d bet on It lf there was a
cal fight he d bet on t if
there was a chicken fight
he d bel on II why If there
was two b rds settmg on a
fence he would bet you which
one would fl y first Why II
never made no difference to
him- he d bel on any thing
the dangdest feller Parson
Walker s wife laid very siCk
once for a good while and It
seemed as lf they warn I gumg to save her but one mom
mg he come m and Srruley up

and asked hun how she was
and he sa d she was con
s1dera ble better - thank II e
Lord for his mf mte mercy and commg on so smart that
w th the blessing of Pruv dence she d get well yet
and Smiley before he
thought says Well I ll resk
two and a half she don (
anyway
ThlSh yer Srruley had a
mare - the boys called her
the fifteen rrunute nag but
that was only m fun ) ou
know because of course she
was faster than that -and he
used to wm money on that
horse for all she was so slow
and always had the asthma
or the distemper or the con
sumphon or something of
that kmd They used to give
her two of three hundred
yards start and then pass
her under way but always at
the fag end of the race she d
get exc tted and desperate
like and come cavortmg and
straddling up and scattermg
her legs around limber
somelunes m the air and
somellmes out to one side
among the fences and k ck
mg up m-{&gt;-r;, dust and rats
mg m-{&gt;-r;, racket with her
cuughmg and sneezmg and
blowmg her 1use - and
always fetc h up at the stand
JUSt about a neck ahead as
near as you could cipher 11
down
And he had a little small
bull pup that to lock at him
) ou d lhmk he wam l worth a
cent but to set around and
lock ornery and lay for a
chance to steal somelhmg
But as soon as money was up
on htm he was a different
dog hiS under Jaw d beg n to

st ck out like the fo castle of a
steamboat and hts Ieeth
would uncover and shme hke
the furnaces And a dog
nught tackle him and bully
rag h m and bile him and
Uirow him over hiS shoulder
two or three limes and An
drew Jackson whtch was
the name of the pup Andrew
Jackson would never let on
but what he was satiSfied and
hadn t expected nothmg else
and the bets bemg doubled
and doubled on the other side
all the ltme ltll the money
was all up and then all of a
sudden he would grab that
other dog Jest by the Jill! of
his hind leg and freeze to It not chaw you understand
but only JUSI gnp and hang on
till they throwed up the
sponge 1! II was a year
Smtley al11ays come out wm
ner on that pup
Well thlSh yer Slll!ley had
rat tamers and chtcken
cocks and tomcats and all
them kmd of things llll you
couldn I rest and you
couldn t fetch nothing for him
to bel on but he d match you
He ketched a frog one day
and look him horne and sa d
he ca llaled to educate hun
and so he never done nothing
fu1 three months but set m his
back yard and learn that frog
to Jump And you bet you he
did learn him toe He d giVe
him a little punch behtnd and
the next mu ule you d see
thai frog whirlng m the a r
Ukc a doughnut
see hun
turn one sununerset or
rna) be a couple If he got a
good start and come down
flat footed and all nght hke a
cat He got him un so m the

too Iter of catching flies and
kep him m praclwe so coilS
tan I that he d nat I a fly every
time as fur as he could see
him Smiley said all a frog
wanted was education and he
l'tluld do most anything
-and I beheve hun
Why I ve seen hun set
Dan 1 Webster down here on
this floor - Dan 1 Webster
was the name of the frog and s11g out Flies Da 1 I
flies
and quicker n you
could wmk he d spnng
stratghl up and snake a fly
off n the counter there and
flop down on the floor ag m as
solid as a gob of mud and fall
to scralchmg the side of his
head with hts hmd foot as m
different as If he hadn I no
dea be d been dam any
more n any frog mtghl do
You never see a frog so
modest and straight!or ard
as he was for all he was so
gtfted And when 1t come to
fair and square Jumpmg on a
dead level he could get over
more ground at one straddle
than any ammal of hts breed
you ever see J umpmg on a
dead level was hts strong sui I
you understand and when 11
eome to that Slll!ley would
ante up money on him as long
as he had a red Smiley was
monstrous proud of his frog
and well he might be for
fellers that had traveled and
been everywheres all said he
latd over any frog that e\ er
they see
Well Smiley kep the
beast 11 a 1 ttle lattice box
and he used to fetch htm
doll n town sometimes and
lay for a bel One day a feller
- a stranger m the camp he
was -eome acrost him with

hunger strtke m protest he
said
II s naive to believe that
profess tona l drug pushers
can be rehabilitated
Heavy drugs like herom are
now firmly established m
Sweden Herom was almost
non-emtant m 1975 but m
1976 the amoWlts diSCOvered
had Increased to more than 3S
pounds One gram (0 03!i
oUIICes) of herom lS worth
$430 on the street
In 1977 there were 49
deaths m Sweden attributed
to drugs This year all the
ill(hcations poml to 60 maybe
70 deaths Augustsson satd
Herom addicts who die m
hospital are net registered
and are not mcluded m these
f1gw-es he said
The drug problem starts
early In school whe re
chtldren are Wlder little or no
su pervis ion
he
satd
Teachers don t know where
the kids are One boy was
absent for two weeks and no
one told the parents until he
was picked up Augustsson
said
Many youngsters come to
a drug treatment center just
to ta lk to an adult who ll
hsten They don t have a drug
problem yet They have a
for
crymg
need
unde rst andin g
so cia l
worker Hakan Reuterlov
OPPOSES GIVEAWAY
MARION Ohio ( UPI )
Peter Thayer a trustee of the
Harding
Memonal
ASSOCiatiOn
flied SUit
Monday to prevent the
executive committee of the
association Monday from
g1vmg away the home of
PreSident
Warren
G
Harding
The
assoc1allon
IS
conSldermg tummg over the
prestdentlal home
an
adjacent museum and a
memorial on the site of
Harding s tomb Thayer also
wants to stop the association
from turrung over about 5 7
acres of land worth about
$150 000 across the highway
from the memorial Ill the ctty
of Marion

said
We often get them too
late Even after tr~tmenl
relapses are common More
money should be spent oo
preventive care he said
Herom addicts must steal
or prosltlule themselves m
order to pay for their
addiction Many tee n age
In downtown
hookers
Stockholm get herom from
the r punps the pollee said
Sweden s econo mi c
recession has meant a great
mcrease
In
youth
unemploy ment
Listless
you ngs ters
f ee lin g
themselves to be outcasts
excluded from the massive
protective apparatus of the
Swedish welfare slate were a
new disturbmg element on
the drugs scene J ohansson
Conlamment of the drugs
problem IS the best we can
hope for he said Jnterna
t1onal pohce cooperation s
havmg an eff ect however
Joml action to seal borders m
the hunt for urban guenlla
groups has strangled many
couri er routes produ cmg
acute drug shortages and

Athe011 Uvestoci Sales
Satw-day June17 1978
Feeder Steers (400-1100 lbs J
Olmce 55 ~ Good 4:&gt;5350
Feeder Heifers ( 400 700
Ills ) Choice 49 25-49 75 Good
35 85-47 75
Feeder Bulls (4()().8()0 lbs )
Olmce 52 SG-Ii3 Good J&amp;.
47 so
Slaughter Bulls (over I 000
Ills ) 3S :!S-49
Slaughter Cows Utilities
35 8S 43 60 Ca nners and
Cutlers 31 39 25
Veals (Choice and Prune)
5S-69
Baby Calves (by the head)
3S-6I1
{Hogs Head )
Hogs (No I Barrows and
Gilts 200-230 lbs ) 49 60-49 85
Sows 35-40
Boars r1 3().37 40
Pigs (by the head ) 17 35

Trimble sponsoring Kitty Wells
Th e Tnmble Township
Chamber of Commerce Is
sponsonng a Kitty Wells
Shows celebratmg Burr
Oak Festival Days
The
show will be held on Monday
July 3 at 7 p m at the
Glouster Stad urn
Advance tickets are bemg
sold by Gloubter merchants
and members of the 7 II CB
Cl ub (Adults S3 children 12
years and under $1 50 ) The
public IS InVIted to bring lawn
chairs room will be provided
on front of the stage to allow

•

'

addtllonal seating room
The Trimble Local Band
Boosters and The 7 II CB
Club wtll be haVIng ron
cessions
Kitty Wells
Johnny
Wright Bobby Wright and
The Tennessee Mounta in
Boys from Nashvllle make up
a family show that plays
close to 200 personal appearances ann uall y
traveling over 100 000 miles a
year In their customized
stlver Eagle
Almost every success and
I

ma km g for
mcreased
desperation among addicts
he satd
Stockholm store owners m
fashiOnable downtown streets
have mslalled entry buzzers
for greater secunty One
coffee shop m the equiValent
of London s Bond Street
employs a bouncer Ill keep
out the drug addicts
Parts of Stockholm are
now like the Bronx m New
York m mm1atw-e Its a
fnghten mg development
Johansson satd

sald

honor that ca n come to a
rountry music performer has
come to KIlly Wells
Blllboard Award Nwnber
One Country Female Artist
1954 thru 196$ 1953 thru 1962
Cash Box Magazme Special
Award for Number One
Female Arltst 1974 Woman
of the Year from Nashville
Assoctauon of Business and
Professional Women In 1976
she was named to tbe Country
Mustc Hall of Fame In Nash
ville Tenn She has 23
number one rerords to her
credit

HEALTH
lawrence E Lamb, M 0

I t&gt;&lt;'t th m
facts
DEAR DR LAMB - lfound
your colwnns on high blood
pressure helpful and I reduc
ed some 15 pounds and got off
hig h blood pressure
mcd c ne With my normal
blood pressure I suspect I
wouldn t have needed to take
medica l on n the first place
if 1had done this ear her
I have a different up mon
about your remarks about
lec1U 111 You slate that
lecithm IS a combmallon of
lnglycendes and choline
That Is all I believe lec1lhm
also conlatns mosltol and
other B vitamins Allhuugl I
reahze that the lecith n Is
digested before II can be absorbed m the blood stream
meamng 11 IS broken down m
to the fatly acids and choline
I thmk we probably need the
d ohne and the Inositol
It Is true that chol ne IS
found m meat eggs and
livers but rna y doctors ad
vtse us nut to cat too many
c~gs or 1 ver because of lhCir
cl olesterol content so how
about usmg lec1thm as a g Kl
source of choline a 1d U1
OSIIol '
DEAR READER - l m
glad you benef ted from your
weight red uctwn and w sh
more people would do the
same I can\ say thai I m so
pleased about your lack of
knowledge about lecithin
l.ec1Unn does nul conla n m
us11&lt; 1 and It does not con lam
any B v1tamms whaL1oever
Wherever you got that m
f rmatwn
you should
dtsca rd It Leciihmis lccithm
JUSI as I have descnb&lt;&gt;d 11 m
the past
It s true we do need choline
but I suspect that you do not
reahzc that chdme IS present
n nany other foods lliei c IS

dollars along With Smiley s
and set down to wait
So he set there a good
while thinking and thinkmg to
himself and then he got the
frog out and prtzed his mouth
open and look a teaspoon and
filled him full of quatl shot
-filled hun pretty near up to
his chm - and set htm on the
floor Smiley he went to the
swamp and slopped around m
the mud for a long lime and
fmally he kelched a frog and
fetched hun m and gave hun
to tlus feller and says
Now if you re rea dy set
him alongside of Dan 1 w lh
his fore paws JUSt even with
Dan 1s and Ill give the
word Then he says One two - three gtl and him and
the feller touched up the frogs
from behmd and the new
frog hopped off lively but
Dan I giVe a heave and
hysled up hts shoulders so
- hke a Frenchman but II
warn I no use - he couldn I
budge he was planted as
solid as a church and he
couldn I no more sltr than tf
he was anchored out Sllllley
was a good dea l surprtsed
and he was dtsgusted too but
he d1dn l have no Idea what
the rna Iter was of course
The feller look the money
and started away and when
he was gomg out at the door
he sorter Jerked his thumb
ove r his shoulder so at
Dan I and says aga m very
deliberate Well he says I
don I see no p mls about that
frog that s any better n any
other frog
Srruley he stood scral
ching his head and lockmg
down at Da1 I a lung tune

and at la$1 he says I do
wonder what m the nation
that frog throw d off for - I
wonder tf ther e am t
something the matter wtth
him - he pears to look
rrughly baggy somehow
And he ketched Dan I by the
nap of the neck and hefted
him and says Why blame
my cai.'ltf he don I wetgh five
pound and turned hun upstde
down and he belched out a
double handful of shot And
then he see how 11 was and he '
was the maddest man - he set "'
the frog down and look out
after the feller but he never
ketched htm And(Here Simon Wheeler
heard his name called from
the front yard and got up to
see what was wanted ) And
turnmg to me as he moved
away he said
Just set
where you are stranger and
rest easy I am I gomg to be
gone a second
But by your leave I dtd not
think that a conlmuation of
the history of the enterprising
vaga bond Jun Srruley would
be likely to afford me much
informahon concermng the
Rev Leomdas W Smiley
and so I started away
At the door I mel the
SOCiable Wheeler returnmg
and he buttonholed me and
recommenced
Well lhish yer Srruley had
a yaller one-eyed cow that
didn I have no tail only just a
short stump like a ban
nanner and Ho11ever lackmg both llme v
and mchnalton I dtd not wait
to hear about the afflicted "
cow but look my leave
(Origmally published m 1865 )

Meigs airmen honored

Young Swedes fall, too
By TIM DONOGHUE
STOCKHOLM
Sweden
(UP!) - Thousands of yoWlg
Swedes have fallen through
the safety net of tht s
co untry s advanced social
welfare system a nd are
tummg to prostitUtion and
VIolent crune to hnance their
addiction to hard drugs
ab users
are
Drug
graduating to "'ll&amp;tes like
morphine and herom Girls
tum to prostituuon to pay for
theu addtctiOn Youths
desperate lor cash ta ke
greater and greater rtsks to
obtam money Robbenes are
mcreasmg month by mooth
we can t keep track of them
aU
a police spokesman
lamented
PreVIously Sweden and the
((her ScandinaVIan countrtes
were stopovers foc row-1ers
en route to Amsterdam and
other European drug centers
But now narcotics COW"Iers
are attracted by the nch
Swedish market Inspector
Bo Johansson of SIDckholm s
drugs squad said
In 1976 pollee confiscated
400 pounds of amphetalll!Oes
In Europe More than 320
pounds of those drugs were
confiscated m Sweden
Two
pounds
of
amphetammes Is worth
$53 750 on the street m
Stockholm
Actual narcotics abose ts
not a cr1me In Sweden
Possession or smugglmg of
small quanuues 1s classthed
a a mi.sdemeanot.
The penally var es from
fines to two years m JBil
though fines are most usual
said Karl Enk Augustsson
chief IIISpector of the national
nar co ti CS
prevent on
bureau
Push ers profiteer ng on
drug abuse can get a
maxunurn of 10 years m Jail
bot can still organize theu
busmess from a pnson cell
Johansson said
Sweden s humane prison
policy Is misused Drug abuse
m prison Is wides pread
man y Inmates become
addiCts while m jail When we
try to search VIS tors more
cl ~~ ly the pnsoners go on

his box and sa) s
What llllghl It be thai
you ve got m the box'
And Smtley says sorter
Indifferent like It might be a
parrot or 11 lll!ght be a
canary maybe but It am t 11 s oniYJusl a frog
And the fe ller look II and
looked at It careful and tum
ed 11 round this way and that
and says H m- so lis Well
what s he good for'
Well Srruley says easy
and careless he s good
e1 ougl for one lhmg !should
JUdge - he can ouljump any
frog m Calaveras County
The feller look the box
agam and took another long
particular look and gtve II
back to Srruley and says
very deliberate Well he
says I don t see no p mts
about that frog thai s any bel
ler n any other frog
Maybe you don I
Smiley says Maybe you
understand frogs and maybe
you don t understand em
maybe you ve had ex
penence and maybe you
am I only a amature as II
were Anyways I ve got my
opm101 and Ill resk forty
dollars that he ean ouljump
any frog m Calaveras Coun
ty
And the feller studted a
llllnule and then says kmder
sad Ike Well I m only a
stra nger here and I am I got
no frog bull! I had a frog I d
bet )OU
And then Sllllley says
That s all right - that s all
nght- If you ll hold Ill) box a
mmule I ll go and gel you a
frog And so the feller took
the box and put up his forty

an abundant amount of
chohne I lean meal And II s
perfecUy all right fur people
to eat a moderate amount of
lean meal from whicl all the
fat has been removed even If
they re on a low fa t diet Also
cereals conlam a reasonable
amount of choline SO to 100
mgs In a three and-&lt;~ne ha If
ounce pert on And 1! you
want to be a real health
nut wheat germ s one of
the highest sour ces of
choline contammg 350 to 400
mgs of choline
Now lm nul recorrunen
dmg that people run out and
eat spectal foods to get
choline Why' Because your
body can manufaeture
chuhne anyway If you re gel
t ng an adequate amount of
protem m your diet all your
body has to do IS use two
ammo acids glyc ine and
nethtomne to make all the
chohne your own body needs
Smce your body can make the
chohne ) ou need If you re on
a senstble dtel paymg good
money for ad diiiona l
amouni.'l of II that won l be us
L'li IS really a ralh~r useless

exerctse
So m swnmary you don t
ICed to eat eggs or liver or
take lecithin to gel your
d 1uhne and you re not gettmg
one smgle blessed v lamm or
mos1tol from lectthin tablets
Facts are facts
I m sending you The Health
I e ll e r number I 2
Cholesterol Tnglycmdes
Blood Fats Atherosclerosis
to give you a better
Widerslandmg of blood fats
Involved In fatty cholesterol
blockage Others who want
llus mformalwn can send SO
cents wtth a long stamped
self-iiddressed envelope for 11
to me Ill care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
Radio City Station New
York NY 10019

PERU lnd - Technical
Sergeant Tunothy R Pnddy
son of Mr and Mrs Guy L
Prtddy Rl 2 Pomeroy and
Techn cal Sergeant James 0
Norton son of Mr and Mrs
Carl H Narron Pomeroy are
members of a GriSSOm AFB
lnd umt which has recetved
the strategic atr rommand s
General Bruce K Holloway
Humamtanan Award They
were honored for rescwng
stranded motorists durmg
two crtppllng blizzards and
for sponsormg summer youth
encampment
Sergeant Norton ts an
atrcraft pneudraullc systems
technician wtth Grissom s
305th Air Refuelmg Wing
Airman Priddy IS a lire
protecuon specialiSt with the
same umt
Accordmg
to
the
nommating letter Grissom
a irmen manned wreckers
ard fow- wheel vehtcles to
pull semi4rucks and ca rs
from hi ghway U S 31 after SO
m p h wmds brought wmd
chill temperatures down to
mmus 70 degrees and stacked
snow drifts five feet tall The
winds kept VISibility near
zero and buned many of the
200 stranded vehicles wtthm
mmules
During the first 1977 Winter
storm Jan 26-30 the base
housed more than 60 stranded
motorists a day Atrmen
voluntarily worked m the
Noncomllllsstoned Officers
at1d Offtcers Clubs cooking
and serVIng more than 300
meals Cots were loaned to
commumty shelters
Gmsom also supplled
water cans and plastic bags
wthe city of Kokomo lnd to
relieve a water shortage
caused by broken mains
Base people traveled to the
highway to start and refuel
trucks so the roadway could
be plowed They also helped
locate and rescue stranded
motorists
The ba~ citizens band
rad1o club opened and
manned the commissary and
servtce station so crillcal
food and fuel supplies could
be replenished Many people
were treated at the base
hospital
In addttlon Ill clearing the
base Grissom civil engineers
cleared more than ISO miles
of off-base roads and a local
rurport
Severe weather hit the local
area agaIn Dec 9-11 Grissom
repeated the emergency
tactics This Ume more than
900 ve hicle assists were
added to the record along
with 100 grocery deliveries
and live hospital I'UIUI the
nommallng letter said
Grlssom also hosted a

VInegar whose name
&lt;'()Illes from the French
meamng sow- wine can be
made from any hqmd that
can be converted to alcohol

youth encampment for 160
eco nomtcally and soc tally
deprived youths from three
counties surroundin g the
base The program mcluded
picnics rap sessiO ns an
mghl
when
adopllo n
members mv1ted youths Ill
thetr homes for dmner and

recreational activ!Ues
Atnnan Prtddy ts a 1967
graduate of Rutland (Ohio)
High School HIS Wife Linda
Is the daughter of Mr and
Mrs Dale M Ja cobs of 98 S
Second St Middleport Ohio
Sgt Norron graduated from
Pomeroy High School m 1960

peopletalk
By Uulted Praalnteruatloaal
PlJ'ITJNGOUTTHE FIRE For the first Ume m 32years the
candles - real candles - m the copper chandelier of New
Yorks Palladium were Ughted for a show - but that s not aU
that was lit for the Rolling Stones concert Monday night As the
Stones - led by Mldt Jagger In red plasltc pants and a white
jacket - went through some old materl81 and a few numbers
from their new album Some Girls for the full-house
audtence - some of whom patd scalpers up to $75 for $10
tickets Toward the end of the show Jagger picked up a fue
bucket at each end of the mirrored stage and splashed water
over the dellrtous audience - With no explanallon
NEVER SAY DIE Thirtythree years one bwn marriage
and a world war later Joan HarrtiiS now Joan Signer - and
Irving Signer has a war bride who lS evidently worth waiting
for Back dw-tng World War II Signer - then an Army
lieutenant from Chicago - met MISS Harris and fell In love
wtth her dunng a furlough in Australia But Mw HarriS was
already engaged so Signer went his srotc way But he kept m
much with her parents and finally learned she was divorced
He visited her 10 Australia a year and a half ago - and srole
her heart fcc good AI the wedding In Olicago Monday a 4year-old nephew of Signer asked lmpalie~]Uy Well are you
married yet' Signer replled We re married and tt has
be'en a long long time coming A long time

JUST RUMORS There s been talk - and now a published ~
report - that heiressturned-terrorlst Patricia Heanl plans to:
marry Bernard Sbaw 30 the San FrancLSCo cop who.
moonlighted as her bodyguard whtle she was free on ball In •
San Francisco Mw Hearst smother Catberble, sal&lt;! Monday'::
the talk - and the report In this week s Newsweek - are :
rotally ridiculous Mrs Hearst says She sIn priaon There •
are so many rumors about Patty that I don t even bother my •
mind about t)lern

Giants hope to
up division lead
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )The Clncmnah Reds and San
Francisco Gtants red hot
teams vymg for the National
League West lead open the
most Important series so far

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Spol'll Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Who do you thmk should have the last
word when 11 comes to the ballplayers on the learn the
clubowner or the manager'
Pure fogtc says the owner After all he has the btggest
mveslment financtally anyway and he s the one who has Ill
pay the bllls If the team loses money the manager or the
players don I have w come up with more money the owner
does
The buck stops With him and he knows 11 making It rather
natural that he wishes hiS team to be made up of those players
he personally wants And that s where a problem o!len ariSes
At one end of the scale you have an owner like Charlie
Finley who C!XIles close Ill bemg absolutely autocratic Not
only does he go out and get all his players himself he also
lllstructs hiS manager when and when not Ill play them and
deals them off or sells them himself
ArtiStically Finley has done mcredibly well Fmanctally
he s having trouble hangmg on
Many owners prtvately feel the same way Finley does They
think they can JUdge a ballplayer s abtlily as good lf not
better than thetr managers Feeling that way about 11 they
sometimes shell out btg money for a particular player over
their manager s objectton
One owner who was on the verge of such a move notified hiS
manager what he was about wdo
You can get him but I don t have Ill play him the
manager satd to the owner about the player mvolved
The owner backed off
AI the other end of the spectrum from Finley lS an owner llke
Bud Selig of Milwaukee He likes to be apprised of the
Brewers player movementa but generally lets his general
manager Harry Dalton take care of that end
I constder Harry Dalton one of the best baseball men m the
busmess says Selig I have complete faith m his ability
Moreover George Bamberger lS demonstrating he s an
excellent manager so when 11 comes to brmgmg up any
players or making deals I leave 11 str1cUy up wthem
When Bob Short owned the Texas Rangers he realized hts
manager Billy Martin knew far more about ballplayers than
he dtd so he gave hun carte blanche mall declStons pertammg
Ill players
That pohcy changed after Short sold the club Ill Brad
Corbett Martin ultimately lost hiS JOb because he pushed too
hard on a question over a lhird.!!trmg catcher Tom Egan
The day he was aiUiounced as the Yankees manager Martin
said he expected Ill be coMulled on player moves but would
leave aU tile flrial decisions to the front offtce RecenUy he
made hts aJU\oyance fell when the press was Informed before
he was that the Yanks had brought up another third..strmg
catcher Mtke Heath from West Haven of the Eastern League
AI Rosen president of the Yankees explamed the move had
been made whtle a Yankee game was In progress and Marlm
was busy managmg on the bench and there had been no
attempt Ill keep tl from him Still Martin and Rosen had words
over 11
During a recent trip to the Southwest I spoke with Billy
Martin s buddy and focmer roommate Mtckey Mantle and
asked him what he thought about the episode
Ninety percent of bemg a good manager lS haVIng the
respect of the players and If he doesn I have anyting to say
about moVJng the players then he can I have their respect
sa1d Mantle
He thinks Billy Martm ts an outstanding manager as does
most everyone else In baseball
But whallf Mantle was an owner ' Would he IIISISI on havmg
the last word'
H I owned the ball club I d like to think I could tell my
manager what w do he srud But when It came w the
players I don I think I d butt m The manager should be the
boas there If he 1sn tallowed to be like I say the playe rs won t
respect hlm I don t think the situation with the Yankees really
lS as bad as they say Billy and George Steinbrenner gel along
very well
So dtd Marlm and Brad Corbett for awhile Funny thmg now
that Marlin no longer Is with the Rangers Corbett says he II
take him back anytime he doesn I have a job and gtve hun one
evaluating players
Probably wlll some day too

--

GLIMPSES Author Mario Puo celebnlled the record saiC::
of the paperblick righls to hill new novel Fools Ole (o~
$2 550 000 to the New American Ubrlll')' at New York 1 Aigon.:
qum Hotel Monday q.Jre m- and Robert V•cbaa are tn:
Hollywood fllming an eighthour NBC miniseries Backltatrs:
at the White House about Woodrow wo- IInce DlvlloC
and Krlaty McNichol haVll jult finished filrnq &amp;unmer rlMy German Soldier In AUanta
Bob Hope and c~
Sleveu opened at the Weatbury (N Y ) Music Fair Monday:
night and helped ralle a record $192 375 for the Loog laland:
Cancer Society which aeeiJJ contrllaltl0111at the playho- .;:
Sopbla LGrell and Vlaeeal Ganleala wW spend lmlght In New•
Yorks Grand Central Tennlnal to JJhoot ICellel from Mlcllae~·
Wlllller • upcoming 111m thriller Firepower
The tinging
group (David) Cl"'Oby (Sie[J'a) SIOill and (GIUam) Nub
bad llllllar plleed oe Hollywood u..Jmlnl'• Walk of Fune
Monday
•

l

~

Knepper
Bonham was forced out of
Saturday s game agamst Sl
Louis when hts pitching
fmgers were hit by a line
drive However the mjury
wasn t sertous and the
docrors have gtven Bonham
the go-ahead to make hiS
regular rotation start
Thw-sday mght
M1ss1ng the unporlant west
coast trtp IS Reds catcher
Johnny Bench who has been
out Since May 27 Wlth lower
back muscle spasms Bench
lS undergoing therapy at
Cincmnati s OlrlSI Hospital
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson lS hoping a two-day
rest will help slugger George
Fosler fmd the groove agam
In a ().for 11 slump Foster
didn I play Sunday agamst
the Cardinals
Despite Foster s sl1ght de
ctme the Reds as usual are
hoggmg the Nallonal League
hittmg leaders liSt
Ken Griffey ts the rop httler
m the league wtth a 321
average
whtle Davey
Concepcion IS eighth at 309
and Danny Driessen lS nmth
at 308
A couple of Reds pttchers
also are among the league
leaders- Seaver who got off
to a miSerable I-I start now
has won seven m a row and lS
8-4 Bonham ts rollmg a long
wtth a 7 I mark
After the San Fran and LA
games the Reds wind up
their road trip next week With
a fourgame senes at
Houston
Cincy then returns h!XIle
June 30 for a tw1 night
doubl eheader against the
Dodgers That 5 30 p m
Fr day evenm g date was sold
out last month

OFFERS THANKS
Members of the Syracuse
Min e rsvtlle Baseball
AssociatiOn extend thelf
tha nks to all those people who
donated to the Assoclallon on
tag day held 10 Pomeroy and
Syracuse Saturday
Atotal of $483 was collected
m donallons

Wayside Furniture
QUASAR TV SALE

HE HAD A DREAM The man on the bandstand at New •
York sfamed Roseland Dance hall was shaking at the knees - .
not from too much dancing but because Eutba KIU had just
drawn his name as top winner of $1 million In the New York •
Stale Lottery Where s my wife • muttered a tearyeyed :
Jusepb Knuaa, 5S as he 1n1 swarmed by wellwlshers •
photographers and reporters Lottery officials fowtd him a
chair and hiS wife Lydia 54 found him l.ater still bllnklng :
back tears Krauss a selfemployed carpenter from suburban :
Medford NY explained I dreamed I was going to win about~
two nights ago

QUOTE OF ntE DAY Muluimmad AU, after a meeting,:
with Soviet Prealdeot LtGnld Breduaev tn MOIICOw Monday 1:
love the system of America !love the food In America !love:
the televi.!Jton the movies I love the highways and the cars I•
love the flaR and the oresldent I also love the truth
:

Francisco for a lhree11ame
set wtth the Giants who have
won nine of their last 10
The G1ani.'l enter romghl s
Wednesday mght s and
Thursday mghl s games with
a twogame lead over the
Reds m the National League
West title chase
Los Angeles where the
Reds go for a thref-ilame
weekend sertes after San
Francisco also IS m the thtck
of the race The Dodgers are
utthird ftve and a half games
behind San Fran
All National League West
learns were Idle Monday
Paul Moskau will pitch for
the Reds tontght opposing
J ohn
The
Count
Montefusco
Wednesday mghl Tom
Seaver who pitched a no
hitter agamsl the Cardinals
m hts last oulmg Friday
mght will go agamst Ed
Halicki
In the ser1es fmale
Thursday mghl Cmcy s Bill
Bonham will fa ce Bob

this season for both clubs
romght
The Reds fresh from
sweeping a three game
weekend sertes over the St
I..AlulS Cardmals are m San

World champs
walloped 10-4
By BIU. MADDEN
UPI SJklrtS Writer
A rughtmare of an eighth
mnmg m Boston has left the
world champiOn New Y&lt;rk
Y a nk ees bothered
bewtldered but not yet
broken
In the first of a pivotal
threegame sertes with the
Amencan League East
le adm g Red Sox
the
Yankees after forgmg a 4-1
lead looked more like an
~xpans10n team as Boston
rallted for Sll runs In the
etghlh mnmg en route to a J().
4 vtclory
George Scott s RBI..smgle
snapped a 4-1 tie And after a
sacriftce and a walk Rick
Burleson smgled to rtght
center but Yankee right
fielder Reggte Jackson
bobbled the ball allowmg
another run Ill score Sparky
Lyle came on Ill relieve RICh
Gossage and was greeted by
Jerry Remy s double Ill rtghl
center Once agam however
Jackson miSplayed the ball
and two more Boston runs
scored
What does my rnakmg an
error have to do wtth a 10-4
loss' asked the dtsgusted
Jackson We got beat fatr
and square and that s the
name of the lwte
An RBI-smgle by J un Rice
capped the mmng fo r
Boston
BeSides the hitters In the
eighth the hero for the Red
Sox who have won 10 of 11
was reliever Tom Burgmeter
Burgme1er came on after the
Yankees scored four runs off
starter Lws Tianl and went
on w hurl 5 I.J rnnmgs of
scoreless rehef
The loss dropped the
Yankees lnro fourth plac e m
the AL East and left them
eight games behmd the Red

Pete, Karolyn
have separated
CINCINNATI ( UPI) Pete Rose and his wife of 14
years
Karolyn
hav e
separated says the Rose
family lawyer
They have separated but
we hope II s temporary said
atrorney Reuven Katz As
far as I know II s nothing
Irreparable
Rose the Clncmnall Reds
star thtrd bas eman and
Karolyn have two children
Fawn Renee 13 and Pete
Jr 8
Rose 37 was In San
Francisco roday for the Reds
game tomght agamst the
Gtants Karolyn was at home
m Clncmnaii bu t would not
discuss details of th e separa
tion Katz said the couple had
him disclose the separat on w
the public
We agreed that thiS was
the proper thmg to do said

Summer league results
In this week s Little League
act10n the Hubbard s Green
house team defeated th e
Racme Royals by a sco re of 7
4 Most of the act ton occurred
m the first three IJU\tngs as
Racme ptcked up 4 runs and
Syracuse 5
Dennis Teaford recetved
credtt for the wm while Steve
Fisher for Racme recetved
the loss The Jeadmg hitter
for Racme was Nick Bostick
with a triple and a double m
three tnps to the plate
For the Syracuse team 11
was Tony RifRe leading the
way wtth two hom e runs and
Greg Nease with one home

run

SALE ENDS SATURDAyI JUNE 24, 1978
LIMITED SUPPLY
THIRD &amp; OliVE
MON &amp; FRI
~

We Sell To Sell Agarn

4461830

TUE , WED,

THUR~

9-5

SAT

Katz
Make a stmple
statement that they have
separated but we hope It s
only temporary
Katz said he knew what the
martial problems were but
refused to diSCuss them
I have talked to both Pete
and Karolyn about the problems and I m hopeful they
wtll get ba ck together he
said
Katz refused to say when
the couple separated but said
11 has not been very long
Rose mamed the former
Karolyn Englehardt on Jan
25 1!164 Both are native
Cmcmnatians and II was lbe
first mamage for both
Rose playmg m his 16th
consecullv e season for
Cmcmnall
last month
became only the 13th player
m baseball history to get 3 000
hils

I03 000---f S
221 02x- 7 6
In the Met gs Mason County
Pony League action the
Pomeroy A s defeated
Syracuse 19-3 Big mnlngs for
the Pomeroy A s came m the
second and sixth mnmgs
when they picked up eight
runs m each
Harvey Whitlatch was the
winning pitcher for the A s as
he combmed wtlh R
Kovalchik for 12 strike-outs
and only five walks
Rece lvtng the loss for
Syracuse was Mike Collins
The top hitters for the
Syracuse team were M
Collms and John Wllllams
each wtth a double For the
A s It was J Fields leading
the way with a Grand Slam In
the sixth along wtth three
doubles and Chris McKinney
With a triple and a double
Box score
Syracuse 012 002 o- S 6 10
Pomeroy 182 008 x- 19 IS 3
The Racine Rlnkt Oinks
are 2 I oow in T Ball action
alter three games So far this
year they have downed the

Sports
··~ L~-·~
•
transactton
SCOREBOARD
By

Ma1or Leagu'

s'and ngs

P t sb gh
New York
St Lou s

Batt ng

W L Per
35 26 574

GB

28
33 32

J

31

Ph a
Montreal

525

508 •
33 459 7
38 433 9

28
71
23 43 348
Wesl
W L Pet

Sa n Fra n

4

22

651

C nc na
LOS Ang

40 25
36 28

6 5

Hous on
SanD ego

28 31

467

29 35
25 36

4.53
410

A lanta

GB

2
5h

n

2
5

Mondays Result

2

Ch 6 Pllsbgh 4 0 nns
Today s Probabl e P t chers
(All T mes EDT)

Montrea

Gr ms ey 11 3

at

Esp nosa 56

N ew Yo k

pm

B 05

S
Lous (Fo sch 76
at
Ph ade ph a Ch s enson 4 5
7 35 p m

Ch cago
P

pm

Burr s

sburgh

a

4 A

Rooker

2 5)

7 35

C nc nnat
(MosKau 0 2 a
San Franc sco (Mont efusco 6
2 OJSpm
Houston ( Bann s er 2 3 a

Los Angeles ( ohn 8 4

10 30

pm

A tan a

N ek o 1 7) a

D ego Jones 5 5

San

0pm

Wednesda ys Games

a

Mon r ea

New York n gt1

St Lou s a Ph a n gh
Ch cago a P sb u g!) n gh
Hous on a Los Angeres n gh
A an a a San D ego n gh
C nc nna a San F an n gh

A m er can league

East
W
46
38
37
37

Boson

Sa me

New York
M lwauke
De ro
C eve nd

L Pet
20 697
26 594
27 578
27 578

GB
7
8
B

2

42

333 23

We st
W l

ca

Pet

34 19
JJ J
32 J2
33 JJ

Kan C y
f

Texas

Oak and
Ch cago

s6
500
500

M neso a

3
2

33
JS

48.4
435

Se a

2

47

309

e

GB

540

Monda ys Resu ts

Boson

0 New Yo k 4

Sea t e 7 Ch cago 4
Kansas C ty 6 C eve and 5
Oak and 2 TeKas
Today s Probabl e P che s
(A IT mes EDTJ
New Yo k
Gu e
0 at

Boston Torrez o 2 7 JO p m

Se att e
M
Ch cago (S one
C eve and
Kansas c ty

pm

Oak and

ch e
27
&amp; 4 8 30 p
W se
49

m

Gu a 4

a 30

(Keough

Te)(as Med ch

Ca lorn a

M nn eso a

pm

3

a
a

44

a

8 35 p m

Tanana

03 a

Emerson 7 4

8 30

54 94 62 320 of Maywood

Sm h LA
53 195 62 3 8
Bowa Pt1
57 246 77 3 3
53 2 ~ 67 3 3
Puh Hou
Madlock SF
.48 187 58 3 0
Cn cpc on C n
6 233 12 309
D essen C n
58 208 64 308
Monday LA
52 63 50 307
Amer can League
G AB H Pet
Ca ew M n
57 2 3 77 362
P n el a NY
tl5 158 52 329
Cu bbag e M n
50 157 51 325
Reyno d s Sea
63 223 72 323
R ce Bas
66 276 89 322
Lynn Bos
59 218 70 32 1
Ja ckson ca
49 168 54 32 1
Mo tor M
54 228 72 316
Lezcano M 1
55 78 56 315
Bel Cle
62 247 76 31tl
Home Runs
Nat onel Leagu e
Luz nsk
Ph I
S
K ngman
Ch and
Foster C n 14 Monday LA 2
Sm h LA Parke
P
and
W n e d SD
Amer can League R ce Bos
22 Bay or Ca Thompson De
and Thomas M
16
Evans
Bos 5
Runs ean ed In
Nat onal Leagu e F os e C n
48 Montane z NY 44 Mor gan
C n Ce y and Ga ve y L A and
Parker P t 42
AmeriCan League R ce Bos
64 S aub De 46 Z sk Te x 43
Bay o
Cll Th omas M and
Ford M nnn 4
Sto en Bases
Nat onal League
Mo eno
P I 28 Cedeno Hou 23 Lopes
LA and Tave as
P
20
MaddO)( Ph
9
Amer can League
w son
KC 26 C uz Sea 22 LeF ore
De and D lone Oak 2
w s

Montrea
S gned Steve
M ch ael ou f e der and h d
round draft p cK from Ar zona
Stale and ass sgned h m to
Memoh s c t y of
Southern
League s gned sho tstop Dave
Pe ez of S1anl ord and ass gned
h m to West Pa m Beach ot
F o da State League s gned
p t he
Ronn e
Pea ce
of
Stetson Un vers ty
outf e der
G ay ng To b as of Normandy
M ss
p tcher Jeff Ta y or o
Gar e tsv le
Oh o
cath cer
Jer y Ge-orge of P nev 1 e La
p tcher R chard
Ramos of
Lockpor
and out e der Pa
Roone of Ar t ng on He gh s II
and ass gned them to eam s
summe rll n ng tra n ng camp
n James own N Y
Col ege Basketball
s Lou s un ver s y - F eel
Head Coach Ron Colem~m
soccer
Tu sa - B 1 Fou kes es gned
as coach of he Tu sa Rough
necks o f he NASL
San Jose - Named Gerry
F sher as head coa ch
De o
Traded S eve
Dav d o theCa forn a Surf for
cash and a secan e ound 97~

P t ch ng
V dor es
Nat onal League
G ms ey
Mt 1 3 B ue SF 9 4 Zach y
NY 8 2
Norman
C n 83
R Reusche t Ch
Seave
Cn
John LA and Knepp er SF 8 4
Amencan Lea gue
G d y
NY
10
To r ez
Bo s o 2
Ta nana Ca 0 3 F anagan and
Pa me Salt 10 4
Earned Run Awe age
I Ba sed on 63 nn ngs p tched
Na t onal League R Reusche
Ch
2 07
Rogers M 1 2 7.9
Blue SF 2 4
Knepper SF
2 53 swan NY 2 54
Ame r can Lea gue
Gu dry
NY
45
Pamer Batt
62
Keough., Oak 1 99 Ta nana Ca
2 43 wars c ev 2 49
Str keouh
Nat ona
League
R cha d
Hou
16
Nrek o
At
92
Se ave
C n 87 B ue SF 84
Mon ef usco SF 83
Amer~can League R van c a
li J Gu dry NY 103 F anagan
79
Leon ard
K C 66
Ba
Tana a Ca l and Matlack Tex

pm

d aH cho

Ed tors
NL bat ng ead e
G
ey C n had a percen age
a 30 ot 32196 and Bu oughs A
32 84

Hockey
nd anapo s { WHA - S gned
f o ward C aude Larose to a
th ee yea r con rac t
Ba sketball
Houslon
s gned t he r top
draf cho ce Sus er Matheny a
to ward fro m Utah

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Blade Away wore down Hey
MISter very late m the game
but won the featured $5 :!1
allowance ra ce at River
Down by a neck
Perry Outzs rode the
wmner over the mile and 70
yards m I 47 oh'i for payoffs of
$4 60 S3 $2 40 Crunson Pnde
came m third
A 1 3 daily double of
Tr1pbque and Plumed Price
paid $72 60
Sandiot Slugger Glory s
Ai1b1 and Wendy Wonderful
combmed for a I 9 10 tnfecla
worth $300 30
The 3 595 fans bel
$379 973

THIS WEEKS SPECIAL
F

·~~·

Wednesday s Games

New Yo k a Boson n gh
De ro a To ont o n g h

Ba

m ore at M waukee

n ght

Ca torn a a M nn n gh
Clevelan d a Kan C y n gh

Ma1or League Resu ts
By Un ted Pren lnt ernat ona l
Nat ona League
( 0 nn ng s)

Ch

Ptsbg
Roberts
hen ( 0

lnlernat1onal League
Unottd Press lnternatoonal
W L Pet GB
Charleston
42 21 667
Pawlu ckel
34 27 557 7
R chmond
34 28 546 7 ,
T dewater
31 32 492 I
To edo
29 30 491 I
Columbus
26 31 456 3
Rochesler
26 32 448 J '
Syracuse
20 4 328 21
Monday s Result•
Pawtu cke t 4 T dewa1er 0

R chmond 2 Toledo I
Cha eston I Syracuse 0
Col umbus 6 Rochester 2
Today s Game s

Pawtu ckel at T dewaler
Toledo at R chmond
Syra cuse at Char eston
Rochester at Co umbus

Wednesday s Games
Pawtu cket at T dewater

Toledo al R chmond

Syra cuse a t Cha r eston

Rochesler at Columbus

Rutland As 23-1 5 and the
M ddleport Tigers 38 38
The r only loss was to the
M,!ddleport Rams'lls they lost
the game m the last tnnmg
10 II Thetr coaches are
Larry FISher Benny Wilson
and Tom Wolfe all of Ra cme

East Tech
coach resigns

SCIOTO
COLUM llUS (UP! )
Tuxedo Honor runnmg In
thtrd place turned on the
speed In the stretch Monday
mght to edge Pacific Reef at
the wtre and wm the featured
etghth race at Sctoto IloWflS
Guided by Richard Buxton
the wliUler covered the mtle
m 2 trl and returned $7 S3 80
and $3 60
Paciftc Reef patd $4 and $4
for second whtle Eastern
Scot came m third and kicked
back $4
A crowd of 4 393 wagered
$347 315

CLEVELAND (UP! ) Ve1eran Cleveland East Tech
H1gh School basketball coach
John Chavers has resigned to
JOin the ctly schools offtce of
de seg regation
m
plementallon
Chavers has coached at
East Tech smce the 1963-M
season He had a number of
outstandmg Svarab teams
mcludmg the 1973 stale Class
AAA championship squad
I feel that sports sports
figures and athletes have a
place to play m helpmg the
City to be peaceful Olavers
sa id
I hope
that
desegregation can happen to
that end
Desegregation of the ctty s
schools IS slated to begm m
the fa ll

ce

62

4 a

Tra"e s 3 2

st

Na ona l League
Oak and s ;ned ve eran
G AB H Pet second baseman T o Fuen es
Gr fey C n
65 264 85 311 and second baseman and No c
Bu ogh s A
6 202 65 321 drat cho ce M chael Woodard

De o
B ngham 5 4 a
Toon o{Gl! 11n26 730 pm

Bat mo e McG r egor

Pla ced No an

21 dav d sabled
ret oa ct ve o June 3

Te)( 19

335003
27 35 435 7

To on o

Ca fo n a Ryan on

( Bued on 150 at batu

Lopes LA

..

563

Mondey

Bneball

Bv Un t ed Press nternar ona

Nat ona League
East

Ch cago

Sports Tr1nsectlons
Press 1ntern1t1onat

Un•ted

Mator league Luders

By Un ted Pre ss lnternat onal

M waukee

R
H

ALL 25 INCH QUASARS
ARE PRICED '5000 OVER COST
CLOSE-OUT ON ALL 1978
MODELS

Sox But even m the face of
two more games at Fenway
Park where the Ro!d Sox are
29-5 this year Martm refused
to admit his learn could be
broken
The fa ct that we re not
makmg the big play dtsturbs
me said Martm
(But) I
know my players wtll come
around We JUSI haven t hit a
real hot streak yet
Els ewhere 1n th e AL
Kansas
City
mpped
Cleveland 6 5 Seattle
downed Chicago 7-4 and
Oakland beat Texas 2-1
Chicago beat Pittsburgh 64 m 10 mnmgs m the only
Nallonal League contest
Royals 6 Indians 5
Rookte Clint Hw-dle had
two hils scored twice and
knocked m a rWl to pace
Kansas City DenniS Leonard
went etght mnmgs to gam hts
seventh VICtory agamst mne
losses
Marin ers 7 White Sox 4
Bob Robertson s three-run
homer capped a five-run
third mnmg to carry Seattle
over Chicago Rookte Mike
Parrott earned his fir st
VICtory by allowmg just three
hils n hve mnmgs
A s 2 Rangers I
Jeff Newman hit his fourth
homer w snap a I I tie m the
eighth mnmg enablmg the
A s Ill break an 1111ame
losmg streak Steve Renko
got his second v1clory m !owdeciSions
Cubs 6 Plrstes 4
Doubles by Larry Buttner
and Manny Tnllo plus two
Pittsburgh errors keyed a
three run lOth mmng for
Chicago Rei ever Bruce
Sutter got the wm wh ch
mcreased th e first pl ace
Cubs lead to three games
over Idle Philadelphia m the
NL East

~
BASEBALL

:·:]1
• •
•• •j• ' =·=l
••

00 200 000 3

6 10

USED CARS

00 000 020 1 t1 1 3
Su ter 8
M eG o
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Special!
1975 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

He n 1mde

Roo ker
Teku 11e
8
Jackson ( 10 and Dye
wSu e s 2 L - ackson 7. J
On y games scheau ed

Amer can Leag u e

NY

Power &amp; a r

00040000D-49 3

Bos
100 300 06x o J o
Cay Gos sage 4 Lye B
and Mu nson T ant Bu gme er
( 4 S anley 9 and F sk W
Bu gme er 17.
L Gossage
(3 7
HRs- New York Wh te
(5 Munson (4

05 00 ooo- 7 10
200 001 oo- 4 8
Parra
House 16 Romo 17
and St nson Kucek H n on ( J
and Nahorodny W Par oft (
0
L - Kuce k
01
HR
Se a t e Rober son 2)

•3995

1976 DODGE
ASPEN

Sea
Ch

C eve
K C

002 020 0

4 Or

v ny roof a r

•3895

o- 5

90
0 QOO- 6 10 2

004
C vde Monoe (5 Sp liner 8
and A exander Leona d H a
bosky
9 and Po e
W
L eonard (7 9 L - Ciyde 4 2
HR Cleve and Thorn on 11

Oak
00 000 o 0- 2 6 1
Texas
000 o 0 000
30
Renko Lacey (8
Sosa 9
anc1 Newman
Mat ack and
Sun dbe g W- Renko 2 2 L
Mat ack ( 58 ) HR Oak and
Newman ( 4

sharp

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Middleport 0

�3- The Dally Senlmel Mtddleporl Pomeroy 0 Tuesday June 20 1978

%-The Dally Sentinei,Mtddleport P!XIleroy 0 Tuesday June 20 1978

The notorious jumping frog of Calaveras Co.
By Mark Twain
I found Sunon Wheeler d02
mg comfortably by the bar
room stove of the dilapidated
tavern m the decayed numng
camp of Angel s and I nolle
ed that he was fat and
baldheaded and had an ex
pr essiOn of winntng
gentleness and sunphc1ty
upon
his
tranquil
countenance He roused up
and gave me good day
I told hun that a fr1end of
nune had corrumss10ned me
to make some mqwnes about
a cheriShed compamon of his
boyhood named Leomdas W
Smiley - Rev Leorudas W
Smiley a ) oung mmlSier of
the Gospel who he had heard
was at one tune a resident of
Angel s Camp I added that if
Mr Wheeler could tell me
anything about this Rev
Leomdas W Snuley I would
feel under many ubhgallons
to hun
Sunon Wheeler backed me
mto a corner and blockaded
me there with his chair and
then sat down and reeled off
U1e monotonous narrative
which follows this paragraph
He never Sllllled he never
frowned he never changed
his ' mce from the gentleflowmg key to which he tuned
his Imttal senlen&lt;'e he never
betrayed the slightest susp1
c on of enthusiasm but all
through the mtenmnable nar
rallve there ran a vem of un
press1ve earnestness and
smcenty which showed me
plamly that so far from his
unagmmg that there was
anything nd culous or funny
about his story he regarded
It as a really Important mat
ter and admired Its two

heroes as men of transcen
dent gemus m fmesse I let
him go on m hts own way and
never mterrupled him once
Rev Leonulas W H m
Reverend Le - well there
was a feller here once by the
name of Jun Sllllley m the
wmler of 49 or maybe 11 was
the spnng of SO - I don I
recollect exactly somehow
but anyway he was the
cunousest man about always
bcllmg on anything that tum
ed up you ever see If he could
gel anybod) to bel on the
other side and If he couldn I
he d change sides Any way
that swted the other man
would sui! him -any way JUS!
so s he gut a bet he was
satiSfied But still he was
lucky uncommon lucky he
must always come out wm
ner He was always ready
and laymg for a chance
there couldn t be no soh! ry
thing mentwncd but that
feller d offer to bet on II and
lake ary stde you please as I
was JUS! teltmg you
If there was a horse race
you d fmd him flush or you d
fmd him busted at the end of
II if there was a dog fight
he d bet on It lf there was a
cal fight he d bet on t if
there was a chicken fight
he d bel on II why If there
was two b rds settmg on a
fence he would bet you which
one would fl y first Why II
never made no difference to
him- he d bel on any thing
the dangdest feller Parson
Walker s wife laid very siCk
once for a good while and It
seemed as lf they warn I gumg to save her but one mom
mg he come m and Srruley up

and asked hun how she was
and he sa d she was con
s1dera ble better - thank II e
Lord for his mf mte mercy and commg on so smart that
w th the blessing of Pruv dence she d get well yet
and Smiley before he
thought says Well I ll resk
two and a half she don (
anyway
ThlSh yer Srruley had a
mare - the boys called her
the fifteen rrunute nag but
that was only m fun ) ou
know because of course she
was faster than that -and he
used to wm money on that
horse for all she was so slow
and always had the asthma
or the distemper or the con
sumphon or something of
that kmd They used to give
her two of three hundred
yards start and then pass
her under way but always at
the fag end of the race she d
get exc tted and desperate
like and come cavortmg and
straddling up and scattermg
her legs around limber
somelunes m the air and
somellmes out to one side
among the fences and k ck
mg up m-{&gt;-r;, dust and rats
mg m-{&gt;-r;, racket with her
cuughmg and sneezmg and
blowmg her 1use - and
always fetc h up at the stand
JUSt about a neck ahead as
near as you could cipher 11
down
And he had a little small
bull pup that to lock at him
) ou d lhmk he wam l worth a
cent but to set around and
lock ornery and lay for a
chance to steal somelhmg
But as soon as money was up
on htm he was a different
dog hiS under Jaw d beg n to

st ck out like the fo castle of a
steamboat and hts Ieeth
would uncover and shme hke
the furnaces And a dog
nught tackle him and bully
rag h m and bile him and
Uirow him over hiS shoulder
two or three limes and An
drew Jackson whtch was
the name of the pup Andrew
Jackson would never let on
but what he was satiSfied and
hadn t expected nothmg else
and the bets bemg doubled
and doubled on the other side
all the ltme ltll the money
was all up and then all of a
sudden he would grab that
other dog Jest by the Jill! of
his hind leg and freeze to It not chaw you understand
but only JUSI gnp and hang on
till they throwed up the
sponge 1! II was a year
Smtley al11ays come out wm
ner on that pup
Well thlSh yer Slll!ley had
rat tamers and chtcken
cocks and tomcats and all
them kmd of things llll you
couldn I rest and you
couldn t fetch nothing for him
to bel on but he d match you
He ketched a frog one day
and look him horne and sa d
he ca llaled to educate hun
and so he never done nothing
fu1 three months but set m his
back yard and learn that frog
to Jump And you bet you he
did learn him toe He d giVe
him a little punch behtnd and
the next mu ule you d see
thai frog whirlng m the a r
Ukc a doughnut
see hun
turn one sununerset or
rna) be a couple If he got a
good start and come down
flat footed and all nght hke a
cat He got him un so m the

too Iter of catching flies and
kep him m praclwe so coilS
tan I that he d nat I a fly every
time as fur as he could see
him Smiley said all a frog
wanted was education and he
l'tluld do most anything
-and I beheve hun
Why I ve seen hun set
Dan 1 Webster down here on
this floor - Dan 1 Webster
was the name of the frog and s11g out Flies Da 1 I
flies
and quicker n you
could wmk he d spnng
stratghl up and snake a fly
off n the counter there and
flop down on the floor ag m as
solid as a gob of mud and fall
to scralchmg the side of his
head with hts hmd foot as m
different as If he hadn I no
dea be d been dam any
more n any frog mtghl do
You never see a frog so
modest and straight!or ard
as he was for all he was so
gtfted And when 1t come to
fair and square Jumpmg on a
dead level he could get over
more ground at one straddle
than any ammal of hts breed
you ever see J umpmg on a
dead level was hts strong sui I
you understand and when 11
eome to that Slll!ley would
ante up money on him as long
as he had a red Smiley was
monstrous proud of his frog
and well he might be for
fellers that had traveled and
been everywheres all said he
latd over any frog that e\ er
they see
Well Smiley kep the
beast 11 a 1 ttle lattice box
and he used to fetch htm
doll n town sometimes and
lay for a bel One day a feller
- a stranger m the camp he
was -eome acrost him with

hunger strtke m protest he
said
II s naive to believe that
profess tona l drug pushers
can be rehabilitated
Heavy drugs like herom are
now firmly established m
Sweden Herom was almost
non-emtant m 1975 but m
1976 the amoWlts diSCOvered
had Increased to more than 3S
pounds One gram (0 03!i
oUIICes) of herom lS worth
$430 on the street
In 1977 there were 49
deaths m Sweden attributed
to drugs This year all the
ill(hcations poml to 60 maybe
70 deaths Augustsson satd
Herom addicts who die m
hospital are net registered
and are not mcluded m these
f1gw-es he said
The drug problem starts
early In school whe re
chtldren are Wlder little or no
su pervis ion
he
satd
Teachers don t know where
the kids are One boy was
absent for two weeks and no
one told the parents until he
was picked up Augustsson
said
Many youngsters come to
a drug treatment center just
to ta lk to an adult who ll
hsten They don t have a drug
problem yet They have a
for
crymg
need
unde rst andin g
so cia l
worker Hakan Reuterlov
OPPOSES GIVEAWAY
MARION Ohio ( UPI )
Peter Thayer a trustee of the
Harding
Memonal
ASSOCiatiOn
flied SUit
Monday to prevent the
executive committee of the
association Monday from
g1vmg away the home of
PreSident
Warren
G
Harding
The
assoc1allon
IS
conSldermg tummg over the
prestdentlal home
an
adjacent museum and a
memorial on the site of
Harding s tomb Thayer also
wants to stop the association
from turrung over about 5 7
acres of land worth about
$150 000 across the highway
from the memorial Ill the ctty
of Marion

said
We often get them too
late Even after tr~tmenl
relapses are common More
money should be spent oo
preventive care he said
Herom addicts must steal
or prosltlule themselves m
order to pay for their
addiction Many tee n age
In downtown
hookers
Stockholm get herom from
the r punps the pollee said
Sweden s econo mi c
recession has meant a great
mcrease
In
youth
unemploy ment
Listless
you ngs ters
f ee lin g
themselves to be outcasts
excluded from the massive
protective apparatus of the
Swedish welfare slate were a
new disturbmg element on
the drugs scene J ohansson
Conlamment of the drugs
problem IS the best we can
hope for he said Jnterna
t1onal pohce cooperation s
havmg an eff ect however
Joml action to seal borders m
the hunt for urban guenlla
groups has strangled many
couri er routes produ cmg
acute drug shortages and

Athe011 Uvestoci Sales
Satw-day June17 1978
Feeder Steers (400-1100 lbs J
Olmce 55 ~ Good 4:&gt;5350
Feeder Heifers ( 400 700
Ills ) Choice 49 25-49 75 Good
35 85-47 75
Feeder Bulls (4()().8()0 lbs )
Olmce 52 SG-Ii3 Good J&amp;.
47 so
Slaughter Bulls (over I 000
Ills ) 3S :!S-49
Slaughter Cows Utilities
35 8S 43 60 Ca nners and
Cutlers 31 39 25
Veals (Choice and Prune)
5S-69
Baby Calves (by the head)
3S-6I1
{Hogs Head )
Hogs (No I Barrows and
Gilts 200-230 lbs ) 49 60-49 85
Sows 35-40
Boars r1 3().37 40
Pigs (by the head ) 17 35

Trimble sponsoring Kitty Wells
Th e Tnmble Township
Chamber of Commerce Is
sponsonng a Kitty Wells
Shows celebratmg Burr
Oak Festival Days
The
show will be held on Monday
July 3 at 7 p m at the
Glouster Stad urn
Advance tickets are bemg
sold by Gloubter merchants
and members of the 7 II CB
Cl ub (Adults S3 children 12
years and under $1 50 ) The
public IS InVIted to bring lawn
chairs room will be provided
on front of the stage to allow

•

'

addtllonal seating room
The Trimble Local Band
Boosters and The 7 II CB
Club wtll be haVIng ron
cessions
Kitty Wells
Johnny
Wright Bobby Wright and
The Tennessee Mounta in
Boys from Nashvllle make up
a family show that plays
close to 200 personal appearances ann uall y
traveling over 100 000 miles a
year In their customized
stlver Eagle
Almost every success and
I

ma km g for
mcreased
desperation among addicts
he satd
Stockholm store owners m
fashiOnable downtown streets
have mslalled entry buzzers
for greater secunty One
coffee shop m the equiValent
of London s Bond Street
employs a bouncer Ill keep
out the drug addicts
Parts of Stockholm are
now like the Bronx m New
York m mm1atw-e Its a
fnghten mg development
Johansson satd

sald

honor that ca n come to a
rountry music performer has
come to KIlly Wells
Blllboard Award Nwnber
One Country Female Artist
1954 thru 196$ 1953 thru 1962
Cash Box Magazme Special
Award for Number One
Female Arltst 1974 Woman
of the Year from Nashville
Assoctauon of Business and
Professional Women In 1976
she was named to tbe Country
Mustc Hall of Fame In Nash
ville Tenn She has 23
number one rerords to her
credit

HEALTH
lawrence E Lamb, M 0

I t&gt;&lt;'t th m
facts
DEAR DR LAMB - lfound
your colwnns on high blood
pressure helpful and I reduc
ed some 15 pounds and got off
hig h blood pressure
mcd c ne With my normal
blood pressure I suspect I
wouldn t have needed to take
medica l on n the first place
if 1had done this ear her
I have a different up mon
about your remarks about
lec1U 111 You slate that
lecithm IS a combmallon of
lnglycendes and choline
That Is all I believe lec1lhm
also conlatns mosltol and
other B vitamins Allhuugl I
reahze that the lecith n Is
digested before II can be absorbed m the blood stream
meamng 11 IS broken down m
to the fatly acids and choline
I thmk we probably need the
d ohne and the Inositol
It Is true that chol ne IS
found m meat eggs and
livers but rna y doctors ad
vtse us nut to cat too many
c~gs or 1 ver because of lhCir
cl olesterol content so how
about usmg lec1thm as a g Kl
source of choline a 1d U1
OSIIol '
DEAR READER - l m
glad you benef ted from your
weight red uctwn and w sh
more people would do the
same I can\ say thai I m so
pleased about your lack of
knowledge about lecithin
l.ec1Unn does nul conla n m
us11&lt; 1 and It does not con lam
any B v1tamms whaL1oever
Wherever you got that m
f rmatwn
you should
dtsca rd It Leciihmis lccithm
JUSI as I have descnb&lt;&gt;d 11 m
the past
It s true we do need choline
but I suspect that you do not
reahzc that chdme IS present
n nany other foods lliei c IS

dollars along With Smiley s
and set down to wait
So he set there a good
while thinking and thinkmg to
himself and then he got the
frog out and prtzed his mouth
open and look a teaspoon and
filled him full of quatl shot
-filled hun pretty near up to
his chm - and set htm on the
floor Smiley he went to the
swamp and slopped around m
the mud for a long lime and
fmally he kelched a frog and
fetched hun m and gave hun
to tlus feller and says
Now if you re rea dy set
him alongside of Dan 1 w lh
his fore paws JUSt even with
Dan 1s and Ill give the
word Then he says One two - three gtl and him and
the feller touched up the frogs
from behmd and the new
frog hopped off lively but
Dan I giVe a heave and
hysled up hts shoulders so
- hke a Frenchman but II
warn I no use - he couldn I
budge he was planted as
solid as a church and he
couldn I no more sltr than tf
he was anchored out Sllllley
was a good dea l surprtsed
and he was dtsgusted too but
he d1dn l have no Idea what
the rna Iter was of course
The feller look the money
and started away and when
he was gomg out at the door
he sorter Jerked his thumb
ove r his shoulder so at
Dan I and says aga m very
deliberate Well he says I
don I see no p mls about that
frog that s any better n any
other frog
Srruley he stood scral
ching his head and lockmg
down at Da1 I a lung tune

and at la$1 he says I do
wonder what m the nation
that frog throw d off for - I
wonder tf ther e am t
something the matter wtth
him - he pears to look
rrughly baggy somehow
And he ketched Dan I by the
nap of the neck and hefted
him and says Why blame
my cai.'ltf he don I wetgh five
pound and turned hun upstde
down and he belched out a
double handful of shot And
then he see how 11 was and he '
was the maddest man - he set "'
the frog down and look out
after the feller but he never
ketched htm And(Here Simon Wheeler
heard his name called from
the front yard and got up to
see what was wanted ) And
turnmg to me as he moved
away he said
Just set
where you are stranger and
rest easy I am I gomg to be
gone a second
But by your leave I dtd not
think that a conlmuation of
the history of the enterprising
vaga bond Jun Srruley would
be likely to afford me much
informahon concermng the
Rev Leomdas W Smiley
and so I started away
At the door I mel the
SOCiable Wheeler returnmg
and he buttonholed me and
recommenced
Well lhish yer Srruley had
a yaller one-eyed cow that
didn I have no tail only just a
short stump like a ban
nanner and Ho11ever lackmg both llme v
and mchnalton I dtd not wait
to hear about the afflicted "
cow but look my leave
(Origmally published m 1865 )

Meigs airmen honored

Young Swedes fall, too
By TIM DONOGHUE
STOCKHOLM
Sweden
(UP!) - Thousands of yoWlg
Swedes have fallen through
the safety net of tht s
co untry s advanced social
welfare system a nd are
tummg to prostitUtion and
VIolent crune to hnance their
addiction to hard drugs
ab users
are
Drug
graduating to "'ll&amp;tes like
morphine and herom Girls
tum to prostituuon to pay for
theu addtctiOn Youths
desperate lor cash ta ke
greater and greater rtsks to
obtam money Robbenes are
mcreasmg month by mooth
we can t keep track of them
aU
a police spokesman
lamented
PreVIously Sweden and the
((her ScandinaVIan countrtes
were stopovers foc row-1ers
en route to Amsterdam and
other European drug centers
But now narcotics COW"Iers
are attracted by the nch
Swedish market Inspector
Bo Johansson of SIDckholm s
drugs squad said
In 1976 pollee confiscated
400 pounds of amphetalll!Oes
In Europe More than 320
pounds of those drugs were
confiscated m Sweden
Two
pounds
of
amphetammes Is worth
$53 750 on the street m
Stockholm
Actual narcotics abose ts
not a cr1me In Sweden
Possession or smugglmg of
small quanuues 1s classthed
a a mi.sdemeanot.
The penally var es from
fines to two years m JBil
though fines are most usual
said Karl Enk Augustsson
chief IIISpector of the national
nar co ti CS
prevent on
bureau
Push ers profiteer ng on
drug abuse can get a
maxunurn of 10 years m Jail
bot can still organize theu
busmess from a pnson cell
Johansson said
Sweden s humane prison
policy Is misused Drug abuse
m prison Is wides pread
man y Inmates become
addiCts while m jail When we
try to search VIS tors more
cl ~~ ly the pnsoners go on

his box and sa) s
What llllghl It be thai
you ve got m the box'
And Smtley says sorter
Indifferent like It might be a
parrot or 11 lll!ght be a
canary maybe but It am t 11 s oniYJusl a frog
And the fe ller look II and
looked at It careful and tum
ed 11 round this way and that
and says H m- so lis Well
what s he good for'
Well Srruley says easy
and careless he s good
e1 ougl for one lhmg !should
JUdge - he can ouljump any
frog m Calaveras County
The feller look the box
agam and took another long
particular look and gtve II
back to Srruley and says
very deliberate Well he
says I don t see no p mts
about that frog thai s any bel
ler n any other frog
Maybe you don I
Smiley says Maybe you
understand frogs and maybe
you don t understand em
maybe you ve had ex
penence and maybe you
am I only a amature as II
were Anyways I ve got my
opm101 and Ill resk forty
dollars that he ean ouljump
any frog m Calaveras Coun
ty
And the feller studted a
llllnule and then says kmder
sad Ike Well I m only a
stra nger here and I am I got
no frog bull! I had a frog I d
bet )OU
And then Sllllley says
That s all right - that s all
nght- If you ll hold Ill) box a
mmule I ll go and gel you a
frog And so the feller took
the box and put up his forty

an abundant amount of
chohne I lean meal And II s
perfecUy all right fur people
to eat a moderate amount of
lean meal from whicl all the
fat has been removed even If
they re on a low fa t diet Also
cereals conlam a reasonable
amount of choline SO to 100
mgs In a three and-&lt;~ne ha If
ounce pert on And 1! you
want to be a real health
nut wheat germ s one of
the highest sour ces of
choline contammg 350 to 400
mgs of choline
Now lm nul recorrunen
dmg that people run out and
eat spectal foods to get
choline Why' Because your
body can manufaeture
chuhne anyway If you re gel
t ng an adequate amount of
protem m your diet all your
body has to do IS use two
ammo acids glyc ine and
nethtomne to make all the
chohne your own body needs
Smce your body can make the
chohne ) ou need If you re on
a senstble dtel paymg good
money for ad diiiona l
amouni.'l of II that won l be us
L'li IS really a ralh~r useless

exerctse
So m swnmary you don t
ICed to eat eggs or liver or
take lecithin to gel your
d 1uhne and you re not gettmg
one smgle blessed v lamm or
mos1tol from lectthin tablets
Facts are facts
I m sending you The Health
I e ll e r number I 2
Cholesterol Tnglycmdes
Blood Fats Atherosclerosis
to give you a better
Widerslandmg of blood fats
Involved In fatty cholesterol
blockage Others who want
llus mformalwn can send SO
cents wtth a long stamped
self-iiddressed envelope for 11
to me Ill care of this
newspaper P 0 Box 1551
Radio City Station New
York NY 10019

PERU lnd - Technical
Sergeant Tunothy R Pnddy
son of Mr and Mrs Guy L
Prtddy Rl 2 Pomeroy and
Techn cal Sergeant James 0
Norton son of Mr and Mrs
Carl H Narron Pomeroy are
members of a GriSSOm AFB
lnd umt which has recetved
the strategic atr rommand s
General Bruce K Holloway
Humamtanan Award They
were honored for rescwng
stranded motorists durmg
two crtppllng blizzards and
for sponsormg summer youth
encampment
Sergeant Norton ts an
atrcraft pneudraullc systems
technician wtth Grissom s
305th Air Refuelmg Wing
Airman Priddy IS a lire
protecuon specialiSt with the
same umt
Accordmg
to
the
nommating letter Grissom
a irmen manned wreckers
ard fow- wheel vehtcles to
pull semi4rucks and ca rs
from hi ghway U S 31 after SO
m p h wmds brought wmd
chill temperatures down to
mmus 70 degrees and stacked
snow drifts five feet tall The
winds kept VISibility near
zero and buned many of the
200 stranded vehicles wtthm
mmules
During the first 1977 Winter
storm Jan 26-30 the base
housed more than 60 stranded
motorists a day Atrmen
voluntarily worked m the
Noncomllllsstoned Officers
at1d Offtcers Clubs cooking
and serVIng more than 300
meals Cots were loaned to
commumty shelters
Gmsom also supplled
water cans and plastic bags
wthe city of Kokomo lnd to
relieve a water shortage
caused by broken mains
Base people traveled to the
highway to start and refuel
trucks so the roadway could
be plowed They also helped
locate and rescue stranded
motorists
The ba~ citizens band
rad1o club opened and
manned the commissary and
servtce station so crillcal
food and fuel supplies could
be replenished Many people
were treated at the base
hospital
In addttlon Ill clearing the
base Grissom civil engineers
cleared more than ISO miles
of off-base roads and a local
rurport
Severe weather hit the local
area agaIn Dec 9-11 Grissom
repeated the emergency
tactics This Ume more than
900 ve hicle assists were
added to the record along
with 100 grocery deliveries
and live hospital I'UIUI the
nommallng letter said
Grlssom also hosted a

VInegar whose name
&lt;'()Illes from the French
meamng sow- wine can be
made from any hqmd that
can be converted to alcohol

youth encampment for 160
eco nomtcally and soc tally
deprived youths from three
counties surroundin g the
base The program mcluded
picnics rap sessiO ns an
mghl
when
adopllo n
members mv1ted youths Ill
thetr homes for dmner and

recreational activ!Ues
Atnnan Prtddy ts a 1967
graduate of Rutland (Ohio)
High School HIS Wife Linda
Is the daughter of Mr and
Mrs Dale M Ja cobs of 98 S
Second St Middleport Ohio
Sgt Norron graduated from
Pomeroy High School m 1960

peopletalk
By Uulted Praalnteruatloaal
PlJ'ITJNGOUTTHE FIRE For the first Ume m 32years the
candles - real candles - m the copper chandelier of New
Yorks Palladium were Ughted for a show - but that s not aU
that was lit for the Rolling Stones concert Monday night As the
Stones - led by Mldt Jagger In red plasltc pants and a white
jacket - went through some old materl81 and a few numbers
from their new album Some Girls for the full-house
audtence - some of whom patd scalpers up to $75 for $10
tickets Toward the end of the show Jagger picked up a fue
bucket at each end of the mirrored stage and splashed water
over the dellrtous audience - With no explanallon
NEVER SAY DIE Thirtythree years one bwn marriage
and a world war later Joan HarrtiiS now Joan Signer - and
Irving Signer has a war bride who lS evidently worth waiting
for Back dw-tng World War II Signer - then an Army
lieutenant from Chicago - met MISS Harris and fell In love
wtth her dunng a furlough in Australia But Mw HarriS was
already engaged so Signer went his srotc way But he kept m
much with her parents and finally learned she was divorced
He visited her 10 Australia a year and a half ago - and srole
her heart fcc good AI the wedding In Olicago Monday a 4year-old nephew of Signer asked lmpalie~]Uy Well are you
married yet' Signer replled We re married and tt has
be'en a long long time coming A long time

JUST RUMORS There s been talk - and now a published ~
report - that heiressturned-terrorlst Patricia Heanl plans to:
marry Bernard Sbaw 30 the San FrancLSCo cop who.
moonlighted as her bodyguard whtle she was free on ball In •
San Francisco Mw Hearst smother Catberble, sal&lt;! Monday'::
the talk - and the report In this week s Newsweek - are :
rotally ridiculous Mrs Hearst says She sIn priaon There •
are so many rumors about Patty that I don t even bother my •
mind about t)lern

Giants hope to
up division lead
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )The Clncmnah Reds and San
Francisco Gtants red hot
teams vymg for the National
League West lead open the
most Important series so far

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Spol'll Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Who do you thmk should have the last
word when 11 comes to the ballplayers on the learn the
clubowner or the manager'
Pure fogtc says the owner After all he has the btggest
mveslment financtally anyway and he s the one who has Ill
pay the bllls If the team loses money the manager or the
players don I have w come up with more money the owner
does
The buck stops With him and he knows 11 making It rather
natural that he wishes hiS team to be made up of those players
he personally wants And that s where a problem o!len ariSes
At one end of the scale you have an owner like Charlie
Finley who C!XIles close Ill bemg absolutely autocratic Not
only does he go out and get all his players himself he also
lllstructs hiS manager when and when not Ill play them and
deals them off or sells them himself
ArtiStically Finley has done mcredibly well Fmanctally
he s having trouble hangmg on
Many owners prtvately feel the same way Finley does They
think they can JUdge a ballplayer s abtlily as good lf not
better than thetr managers Feeling that way about 11 they
sometimes shell out btg money for a particular player over
their manager s objectton
One owner who was on the verge of such a move notified hiS
manager what he was about wdo
You can get him but I don t have Ill play him the
manager satd to the owner about the player mvolved
The owner backed off
AI the other end of the spectrum from Finley lS an owner llke
Bud Selig of Milwaukee He likes to be apprised of the
Brewers player movementa but generally lets his general
manager Harry Dalton take care of that end
I constder Harry Dalton one of the best baseball men m the
busmess says Selig I have complete faith m his ability
Moreover George Bamberger lS demonstrating he s an
excellent manager so when 11 comes to brmgmg up any
players or making deals I leave 11 str1cUy up wthem
When Bob Short owned the Texas Rangers he realized hts
manager Billy Martin knew far more about ballplayers than
he dtd so he gave hun carte blanche mall declStons pertammg
Ill players
That pohcy changed after Short sold the club Ill Brad
Corbett Martin ultimately lost hiS JOb because he pushed too
hard on a question over a lhird.!!trmg catcher Tom Egan
The day he was aiUiounced as the Yankees manager Martin
said he expected Ill be coMulled on player moves but would
leave aU tile flrial decisions to the front offtce RecenUy he
made hts aJU\oyance fell when the press was Informed before
he was that the Yanks had brought up another third..strmg
catcher Mtke Heath from West Haven of the Eastern League
AI Rosen president of the Yankees explamed the move had
been made whtle a Yankee game was In progress and Marlm
was busy managmg on the bench and there had been no
attempt Ill keep tl from him Still Martin and Rosen had words
over 11
During a recent trip to the Southwest I spoke with Billy
Martin s buddy and focmer roommate Mtckey Mantle and
asked him what he thought about the episode
Ninety percent of bemg a good manager lS haVIng the
respect of the players and If he doesn I have anyting to say
about moVJng the players then he can I have their respect
sa1d Mantle
He thinks Billy Martm ts an outstanding manager as does
most everyone else In baseball
But whallf Mantle was an owner ' Would he IIISISI on havmg
the last word'
H I owned the ball club I d like to think I could tell my
manager what w do he srud But when It came w the
players I don I think I d butt m The manager should be the
boas there If he 1sn tallowed to be like I say the playe rs won t
respect hlm I don t think the situation with the Yankees really
lS as bad as they say Billy and George Steinbrenner gel along
very well
So dtd Marlm and Brad Corbett for awhile Funny thmg now
that Marlin no longer Is with the Rangers Corbett says he II
take him back anytime he doesn I have a job and gtve hun one
evaluating players
Probably wlll some day too

--

GLIMPSES Author Mario Puo celebnlled the record saiC::
of the paperblick righls to hill new novel Fools Ole (o~
$2 550 000 to the New American Ubrlll')' at New York 1 Aigon.:
qum Hotel Monday q.Jre m- and Robert V•cbaa are tn:
Hollywood fllming an eighthour NBC miniseries Backltatrs:
at the White House about Woodrow wo- IInce DlvlloC
and Krlaty McNichol haVll jult finished filrnq &amp;unmer rlMy German Soldier In AUanta
Bob Hope and c~
Sleveu opened at the Weatbury (N Y ) Music Fair Monday:
night and helped ralle a record $192 375 for the Loog laland:
Cancer Society which aeeiJJ contrllaltl0111at the playho- .;:
Sopbla LGrell and Vlaeeal Ganleala wW spend lmlght In New•
Yorks Grand Central Tennlnal to JJhoot ICellel from Mlcllae~·
Wlllller • upcoming 111m thriller Firepower
The tinging
group (David) Cl"'Oby (Sie[J'a) SIOill and (GIUam) Nub
bad llllllar plleed oe Hollywood u..Jmlnl'• Walk of Fune
Monday
•

l

~

Knepper
Bonham was forced out of
Saturday s game agamst Sl
Louis when hts pitching
fmgers were hit by a line
drive However the mjury
wasn t sertous and the
docrors have gtven Bonham
the go-ahead to make hiS
regular rotation start
Thw-sday mght
M1ss1ng the unporlant west
coast trtp IS Reds catcher
Johnny Bench who has been
out Since May 27 Wlth lower
back muscle spasms Bench
lS undergoing therapy at
Cincmnati s OlrlSI Hospital
Reds manager Sparky
Anderson lS hoping a two-day
rest will help slugger George
Fosler fmd the groove agam
In a ().for 11 slump Foster
didn I play Sunday agamst
the Cardinals
Despite Foster s sl1ght de
ctme the Reds as usual are
hoggmg the Nallonal League
hittmg leaders liSt
Ken Griffey ts the rop httler
m the league wtth a 321
average
whtle Davey
Concepcion IS eighth at 309
and Danny Driessen lS nmth
at 308
A couple of Reds pttchers
also are among the league
leaders- Seaver who got off
to a miSerable I-I start now
has won seven m a row and lS
8-4 Bonham ts rollmg a long
wtth a 7 I mark
After the San Fran and LA
games the Reds wind up
their road trip next week With
a fourgame senes at
Houston
Cincy then returns h!XIle
June 30 for a tw1 night
doubl eheader against the
Dodgers That 5 30 p m
Fr day evenm g date was sold
out last month

OFFERS THANKS
Members of the Syracuse
Min e rsvtlle Baseball
AssociatiOn extend thelf
tha nks to all those people who
donated to the Assoclallon on
tag day held 10 Pomeroy and
Syracuse Saturday
Atotal of $483 was collected
m donallons

Wayside Furniture
QUASAR TV SALE

HE HAD A DREAM The man on the bandstand at New •
York sfamed Roseland Dance hall was shaking at the knees - .
not from too much dancing but because Eutba KIU had just
drawn his name as top winner of $1 million In the New York •
Stale Lottery Where s my wife • muttered a tearyeyed :
Jusepb Knuaa, 5S as he 1n1 swarmed by wellwlshers •
photographers and reporters Lottery officials fowtd him a
chair and hiS wife Lydia 54 found him l.ater still bllnklng :
back tears Krauss a selfemployed carpenter from suburban :
Medford NY explained I dreamed I was going to win about~
two nights ago

QUOTE OF ntE DAY Muluimmad AU, after a meeting,:
with Soviet Prealdeot LtGnld Breduaev tn MOIICOw Monday 1:
love the system of America !love the food In America !love:
the televi.!Jton the movies I love the highways and the cars I•
love the flaR and the oresldent I also love the truth
:

Francisco for a lhree11ame
set wtth the Giants who have
won nine of their last 10
The G1ani.'l enter romghl s
Wednesday mght s and
Thursday mghl s games with
a twogame lead over the
Reds m the National League
West title chase
Los Angeles where the
Reds go for a thref-ilame
weekend sertes after San
Francisco also IS m the thtck
of the race The Dodgers are
utthird ftve and a half games
behind San Fran
All National League West
learns were Idle Monday
Paul Moskau will pitch for
the Reds tontght opposing
J ohn
The
Count
Montefusco
Wednesday mghl Tom
Seaver who pitched a no
hitter agamsl the Cardinals
m hts last oulmg Friday
mght will go agamst Ed
Halicki
In the ser1es fmale
Thursday mghl Cmcy s Bill
Bonham will fa ce Bob

this season for both clubs
romght
The Reds fresh from
sweeping a three game
weekend sertes over the St
I..AlulS Cardmals are m San

World champs
walloped 10-4
By BIU. MADDEN
UPI SJklrtS Writer
A rughtmare of an eighth
mnmg m Boston has left the
world champiOn New Y&lt;rk
Y a nk ees bothered
bewtldered but not yet
broken
In the first of a pivotal
threegame sertes with the
Amencan League East
le adm g Red Sox
the
Yankees after forgmg a 4-1
lead looked more like an
~xpans10n team as Boston
rallted for Sll runs In the
etghlh mnmg en route to a J().
4 vtclory
George Scott s RBI..smgle
snapped a 4-1 tie And after a
sacriftce and a walk Rick
Burleson smgled to rtght
center but Yankee right
fielder Reggte Jackson
bobbled the ball allowmg
another run Ill score Sparky
Lyle came on Ill relieve RICh
Gossage and was greeted by
Jerry Remy s double Ill rtghl
center Once agam however
Jackson miSplayed the ball
and two more Boston runs
scored
What does my rnakmg an
error have to do wtth a 10-4
loss' asked the dtsgusted
Jackson We got beat fatr
and square and that s the
name of the lwte
An RBI-smgle by J un Rice
capped the mmng fo r
Boston
BeSides the hitters In the
eighth the hero for the Red
Sox who have won 10 of 11
was reliever Tom Burgmeter
Burgme1er came on after the
Yankees scored four runs off
starter Lws Tianl and went
on w hurl 5 I.J rnnmgs of
scoreless rehef
The loss dropped the
Yankees lnro fourth plac e m
the AL East and left them
eight games behmd the Red

Pete, Karolyn
have separated
CINCINNATI ( UPI) Pete Rose and his wife of 14
years
Karolyn
hav e
separated says the Rose
family lawyer
They have separated but
we hope II s temporary said
atrorney Reuven Katz As
far as I know II s nothing
Irreparable
Rose the Clncmnall Reds
star thtrd bas eman and
Karolyn have two children
Fawn Renee 13 and Pete
Jr 8
Rose 37 was In San
Francisco roday for the Reds
game tomght agamst the
Gtants Karolyn was at home
m Clncmnaii bu t would not
discuss details of th e separa
tion Katz said the couple had
him disclose the separat on w
the public
We agreed that thiS was
the proper thmg to do said

Summer league results
In this week s Little League
act10n the Hubbard s Green
house team defeated th e
Racme Royals by a sco re of 7
4 Most of the act ton occurred
m the first three IJU\tngs as
Racme ptcked up 4 runs and
Syracuse 5
Dennis Teaford recetved
credtt for the wm while Steve
Fisher for Racme recetved
the loss The Jeadmg hitter
for Racme was Nick Bostick
with a triple and a double m
three tnps to the plate
For the Syracuse team 11
was Tony RifRe leading the
way wtth two hom e runs and
Greg Nease with one home

run

SALE ENDS SATURDAyI JUNE 24, 1978
LIMITED SUPPLY
THIRD &amp; OliVE
MON &amp; FRI
~

We Sell To Sell Agarn

4461830

TUE , WED,

THUR~

9-5

SAT

Katz
Make a stmple
statement that they have
separated but we hope It s
only temporary
Katz said he knew what the
martial problems were but
refused to diSCuss them
I have talked to both Pete
and Karolyn about the problems and I m hopeful they
wtll get ba ck together he
said
Katz refused to say when
the couple separated but said
11 has not been very long
Rose mamed the former
Karolyn Englehardt on Jan
25 1!164 Both are native
Cmcmnatians and II was lbe
first mamage for both
Rose playmg m his 16th
consecullv e season for
Cmcmnall
last month
became only the 13th player
m baseball history to get 3 000
hils

I03 000---f S
221 02x- 7 6
In the Met gs Mason County
Pony League action the
Pomeroy A s defeated
Syracuse 19-3 Big mnlngs for
the Pomeroy A s came m the
second and sixth mnmgs
when they picked up eight
runs m each
Harvey Whitlatch was the
winning pitcher for the A s as
he combmed wtlh R
Kovalchik for 12 strike-outs
and only five walks
Rece lvtng the loss for
Syracuse was Mike Collins
The top hitters for the
Syracuse team were M
Collms and John Wllllams
each wtth a double For the
A s It was J Fields leading
the way with a Grand Slam In
the sixth along wtth three
doubles and Chris McKinney
With a triple and a double
Box score
Syracuse 012 002 o- S 6 10
Pomeroy 182 008 x- 19 IS 3
The Racine Rlnkt Oinks
are 2 I oow in T Ball action
alter three games So far this
year they have downed the

Sports
··~ L~-·~
•
transactton
SCOREBOARD
By

Ma1or Leagu'

s'and ngs

P t sb gh
New York
St Lou s

Batt ng

W L Per
35 26 574

GB

28
33 32

J

31

Ph a
Montreal

525

508 •
33 459 7
38 433 9

28
71
23 43 348
Wesl
W L Pet

Sa n Fra n

4

22

651

C nc na
LOS Ang

40 25
36 28

6 5

Hous on
SanD ego

28 31

467

29 35
25 36

4.53
410

A lanta

GB

2
5h

n

2
5

Mondays Result

2

Ch 6 Pllsbgh 4 0 nns
Today s Probabl e P t chers
(All T mes EDT)

Montrea

Gr ms ey 11 3

at

Esp nosa 56

N ew Yo k

pm

B 05

S
Lous (Fo sch 76
at
Ph ade ph a Ch s enson 4 5
7 35 p m

Ch cago
P

pm

Burr s

sburgh

a

4 A

Rooker

2 5)

7 35

C nc nnat
(MosKau 0 2 a
San Franc sco (Mont efusco 6
2 OJSpm
Houston ( Bann s er 2 3 a

Los Angeles ( ohn 8 4

10 30

pm

A tan a

N ek o 1 7) a

D ego Jones 5 5

San

0pm

Wednesda ys Games

a

Mon r ea

New York n gt1

St Lou s a Ph a n gh
Ch cago a P sb u g!) n gh
Hous on a Los Angeres n gh
A an a a San D ego n gh
C nc nna a San F an n gh

A m er can league

East
W
46
38
37
37

Boson

Sa me

New York
M lwauke
De ro
C eve nd

L Pet
20 697
26 594
27 578
27 578

GB
7
8
B

2

42

333 23

We st
W l

ca

Pet

34 19
JJ J
32 J2
33 JJ

Kan C y
f

Texas

Oak and
Ch cago

s6
500
500

M neso a

3
2

33
JS

48.4
435

Se a

2

47

309

e

GB

540

Monda ys Resu ts

Boson

0 New Yo k 4

Sea t e 7 Ch cago 4
Kansas C ty 6 C eve and 5
Oak and 2 TeKas
Today s Probabl e P che s
(A IT mes EDTJ
New Yo k
Gu e
0 at

Boston Torrez o 2 7 JO p m

Se att e
M
Ch cago (S one
C eve and
Kansas c ty

pm

Oak and

ch e
27
&amp; 4 8 30 p
W se
49

m

Gu a 4

a 30

(Keough

Te)(as Med ch

Ca lorn a

M nn eso a

pm

3

a
a

44

a

8 35 p m

Tanana

03 a

Emerson 7 4

8 30

54 94 62 320 of Maywood

Sm h LA
53 195 62 3 8
Bowa Pt1
57 246 77 3 3
53 2 ~ 67 3 3
Puh Hou
Madlock SF
.48 187 58 3 0
Cn cpc on C n
6 233 12 309
D essen C n
58 208 64 308
Monday LA
52 63 50 307
Amer can League
G AB H Pet
Ca ew M n
57 2 3 77 362
P n el a NY
tl5 158 52 329
Cu bbag e M n
50 157 51 325
Reyno d s Sea
63 223 72 323
R ce Bas
66 276 89 322
Lynn Bos
59 218 70 32 1
Ja ckson ca
49 168 54 32 1
Mo tor M
54 228 72 316
Lezcano M 1
55 78 56 315
Bel Cle
62 247 76 31tl
Home Runs
Nat onel Leagu e
Luz nsk
Ph I
S
K ngman
Ch and
Foster C n 14 Monday LA 2
Sm h LA Parke
P
and
W n e d SD
Amer can League R ce Bos
22 Bay or Ca Thompson De
and Thomas M
16
Evans
Bos 5
Runs ean ed In
Nat onal Leagu e F os e C n
48 Montane z NY 44 Mor gan
C n Ce y and Ga ve y L A and
Parker P t 42
AmeriCan League R ce Bos
64 S aub De 46 Z sk Te x 43
Bay o
Cll Th omas M and
Ford M nnn 4
Sto en Bases
Nat onal League
Mo eno
P I 28 Cedeno Hou 23 Lopes
LA and Tave as
P
20
MaddO)( Ph
9
Amer can League
w son
KC 26 C uz Sea 22 LeF ore
De and D lone Oak 2
w s

Montrea
S gned Steve
M ch ael ou f e der and h d
round draft p cK from Ar zona
Stale and ass sgned h m to
Memoh s c t y of
Southern
League s gned sho tstop Dave
Pe ez of S1anl ord and ass gned
h m to West Pa m Beach ot
F o da State League s gned
p t he
Ronn e
Pea ce
of
Stetson Un vers ty
outf e der
G ay ng To b as of Normandy
M ss
p tcher Jeff Ta y or o
Gar e tsv le
Oh o
cath cer
Jer y Ge-orge of P nev 1 e La
p tcher R chard
Ramos of
Lockpor
and out e der Pa
Roone of Ar t ng on He gh s II
and ass gned them to eam s
summe rll n ng tra n ng camp
n James own N Y
Col ege Basketball
s Lou s un ver s y - F eel
Head Coach Ron Colem~m
soccer
Tu sa - B 1 Fou kes es gned
as coach of he Tu sa Rough
necks o f he NASL
San Jose - Named Gerry
F sher as head coa ch
De o
Traded S eve
Dav d o theCa forn a Surf for
cash and a secan e ound 97~

P t ch ng
V dor es
Nat onal League
G ms ey
Mt 1 3 B ue SF 9 4 Zach y
NY 8 2
Norman
C n 83
R Reusche t Ch
Seave
Cn
John LA and Knepp er SF 8 4
Amencan Lea gue
G d y
NY
10
To r ez
Bo s o 2
Ta nana Ca 0 3 F anagan and
Pa me Salt 10 4
Earned Run Awe age
I Ba sed on 63 nn ngs p tched
Na t onal League R Reusche
Ch
2 07
Rogers M 1 2 7.9
Blue SF 2 4
Knepper SF
2 53 swan NY 2 54
Ame r can Lea gue
Gu dry
NY
45
Pamer Batt
62
Keough., Oak 1 99 Ta nana Ca
2 43 wars c ev 2 49
Str keouh
Nat ona
League
R cha d
Hou
16
Nrek o
At
92
Se ave
C n 87 B ue SF 84
Mon ef usco SF 83
Amer~can League R van c a
li J Gu dry NY 103 F anagan
79
Leon ard
K C 66
Ba
Tana a Ca l and Matlack Tex

pm

d aH cho

Ed tors
NL bat ng ead e
G
ey C n had a percen age
a 30 ot 32196 and Bu oughs A
32 84

Hockey
nd anapo s { WHA - S gned
f o ward C aude Larose to a
th ee yea r con rac t
Ba sketball
Houslon
s gned t he r top
draf cho ce Sus er Matheny a
to ward fro m Utah

RIVER DOWNS
CINCINNATI (UPI)
Blade Away wore down Hey
MISter very late m the game
but won the featured $5 :!1
allowance ra ce at River
Down by a neck
Perry Outzs rode the
wmner over the mile and 70
yards m I 47 oh'i for payoffs of
$4 60 S3 $2 40 Crunson Pnde
came m third
A 1 3 daily double of
Tr1pbque and Plumed Price
paid $72 60
Sandiot Slugger Glory s
Ai1b1 and Wendy Wonderful
combmed for a I 9 10 tnfecla
worth $300 30
The 3 595 fans bel
$379 973

THIS WEEKS SPECIAL
F

·~~·

Wednesday s Games

New Yo k a Boson n gh
De ro a To ont o n g h

Ba

m ore at M waukee

n ght

Ca torn a a M nn n gh
Clevelan d a Kan C y n gh

Ma1or League Resu ts
By Un ted Pren lnt ernat ona l
Nat ona League
( 0 nn ng s)

Ch

Ptsbg
Roberts
hen ( 0

lnlernat1onal League
Unottd Press lnternatoonal
W L Pet GB
Charleston
42 21 667
Pawlu ckel
34 27 557 7
R chmond
34 28 546 7 ,
T dewater
31 32 492 I
To edo
29 30 491 I
Columbus
26 31 456 3
Rochesler
26 32 448 J '
Syracuse
20 4 328 21
Monday s Result•
Pawtu cke t 4 T dewa1er 0

R chmond 2 Toledo I
Cha eston I Syracuse 0
Col umbus 6 Rochester 2
Today s Game s

Pawtu ckel at T dewaler
Toledo at R chmond
Syra cuse at Char eston
Rochester at Co umbus

Wednesday s Games
Pawtu cket at T dewater

Toledo al R chmond

Syra cuse a t Cha r eston

Rochesler at Columbus

Rutland As 23-1 5 and the
M ddleport Tigers 38 38
The r only loss was to the
M,!ddleport Rams'lls they lost
the game m the last tnnmg
10 II Thetr coaches are
Larry FISher Benny Wilson
and Tom Wolfe all of Ra cme

East Tech
coach resigns

SCIOTO
COLUM llUS (UP! )
Tuxedo Honor runnmg In
thtrd place turned on the
speed In the stretch Monday
mght to edge Pacific Reef at
the wtre and wm the featured
etghth race at Sctoto IloWflS
Guided by Richard Buxton
the wliUler covered the mtle
m 2 trl and returned $7 S3 80
and $3 60
Paciftc Reef patd $4 and $4
for second whtle Eastern
Scot came m third and kicked
back $4
A crowd of 4 393 wagered
$347 315

CLEVELAND (UP! ) Ve1eran Cleveland East Tech
H1gh School basketball coach
John Chavers has resigned to
JOin the ctly schools offtce of
de seg regation
m
plementallon
Chavers has coached at
East Tech smce the 1963-M
season He had a number of
outstandmg Svarab teams
mcludmg the 1973 stale Class
AAA championship squad
I feel that sports sports
figures and athletes have a
place to play m helpmg the
City to be peaceful Olavers
sa id
I hope
that
desegregation can happen to
that end
Desegregation of the ctty s
schools IS slated to begm m
the fa ll

ce

62

4 a

Tra"e s 3 2

st

Na ona l League
Oak and s ;ned ve eran
G AB H Pet second baseman T o Fuen es
Gr fey C n
65 264 85 311 and second baseman and No c
Bu ogh s A
6 202 65 321 drat cho ce M chael Woodard

De o
B ngham 5 4 a
Toon o{Gl! 11n26 730 pm

Bat mo e McG r egor

Pla ced No an

21 dav d sabled
ret oa ct ve o June 3

Te)( 19

335003
27 35 435 7

To on o

Ca fo n a Ryan on

( Bued on 150 at batu

Lopes LA

..

563

Mondey

Bneball

Bv Un t ed Press nternar ona

Nat ona League
East

Ch cago

Sports Tr1nsectlons
Press 1ntern1t1onat

Un•ted

Mator league Luders

By Un ted Pre ss lnternat onal

M waukee

R
H

ALL 25 INCH QUASARS
ARE PRICED '5000 OVER COST
CLOSE-OUT ON ALL 1978
MODELS

Sox But even m the face of
two more games at Fenway
Park where the Ro!d Sox are
29-5 this year Martm refused
to admit his learn could be
broken
The fa ct that we re not
makmg the big play dtsturbs
me said Martm
(But) I
know my players wtll come
around We JUSI haven t hit a
real hot streak yet
Els ewhere 1n th e AL
Kansas
City
mpped
Cleveland 6 5 Seattle
downed Chicago 7-4 and
Oakland beat Texas 2-1
Chicago beat Pittsburgh 64 m 10 mnmgs m the only
Nallonal League contest
Royals 6 Indians 5
Rookte Clint Hw-dle had
two hils scored twice and
knocked m a rWl to pace
Kansas City DenniS Leonard
went etght mnmgs to gam hts
seventh VICtory agamst mne
losses
Marin ers 7 White Sox 4
Bob Robertson s three-run
homer capped a five-run
third mnmg to carry Seattle
over Chicago Rookte Mike
Parrott earned his fir st
VICtory by allowmg just three
hils n hve mnmgs
A s 2 Rangers I
Jeff Newman hit his fourth
homer w snap a I I tie m the
eighth mnmg enablmg the
A s Ill break an 1111ame
losmg streak Steve Renko
got his second v1clory m !owdeciSions
Cubs 6 Plrstes 4
Doubles by Larry Buttner
and Manny Tnllo plus two
Pittsburgh errors keyed a
three run lOth mmng for
Chicago Rei ever Bruce
Sutter got the wm wh ch
mcreased th e first pl ace
Cubs lead to three games
over Idle Philadelphia m the
NL East

~
BASEBALL

:·:]1
• •
•• •j• ' =·=l
••

00 200 000 3

6 10

USED CARS

00 000 020 1 t1 1 3
Su ter 8
M eG o
end Co'll.

Special!
1975 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

He n 1mde

Roo ker
Teku 11e
8
Jackson ( 10 and Dye
wSu e s 2 L - ackson 7. J
On y games scheau ed

Amer can Leag u e

NY

Power &amp; a r

00040000D-49 3

Bos
100 300 06x o J o
Cay Gos sage 4 Lye B
and Mu nson T ant Bu gme er
( 4 S anley 9 and F sk W
Bu gme er 17.
L Gossage
(3 7
HRs- New York Wh te
(5 Munson (4

05 00 ooo- 7 10
200 001 oo- 4 8
Parra
House 16 Romo 17
and St nson Kucek H n on ( J
and Nahorodny W Par oft (
0
L - Kuce k
01
HR
Se a t e Rober son 2)

•3995

1976 DODGE
ASPEN

Sea
Ch

C eve
K C

002 020 0

4 Or

v ny roof a r

•3895

o- 5

90
0 QOO- 6 10 2

004
C vde Monoe (5 Sp liner 8
and A exander Leona d H a
bosky
9 and Po e
W
L eonard (7 9 L - Ciyde 4 2
HR Cleve and Thorn on 11

Oak
00 000 o 0- 2 6 1
Texas
000 o 0 000
30
Renko Lacey (8
Sosa 9
anc1 Newman
Mat ack and
Sun dbe g W- Renko 2 2 L
Mat ack ( 58 ) HR Oak and
Newman ( 4

sharp

Karr &amp; VanZandt
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Way of Doing Bus1noss
GMAC FINANCING

992 5342

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Open Eve01ngs trl6 00

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DOWNINc;..cHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY
Middleport 0

�Chester gardeners discuss f
·
·
i·
cut flower .arran0aements
·
'
CHESTER--C utting and
preparing flowers lor arl"dngemenls was discussed by
Mrs . Pat Holter at a recent
meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held at the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co. social room.
Mrs. Holter, an outstanding
arranger, noted that the best
time to cut flowers is before 10
in the morning or after 6 in
the evening. She said that
more important than lhe lime
of day is culling flowers when
you have the time to properly
care for them.
When going out to cut
flowers, she said a bucket of
warm water should always be
taken along. Shears to cut the
flowers should be sharp and
clean and flowers should be
cui at the proper sU.ge
development. As for roses she
sai d the pel&lt;lls should be just
ready to unfold . Each stem
should have two or more
leaflets and the cutting place
should be just above the five
leaf branch.
Gardening lips for June
were given by Mrs. Jennie
Machir. Mrs. Charles Kuhl
reported that she had laken a
sunshine gift to Mrs. Pauline
Ridenour who is recuperating
at home. Members signed a
ca rd for her and also one for
Mrs. Nora Brown, mother of
a member.
Reports were given on
nower arrangements made
for the band and alumni banquets of Eastern and Chesler.
Areport was also given on the
recent regional meeting held
at Royal Oak Park. Plans
were made to purchase bud
vases to use for banquet arrangements.
It was noted that Mrs.
Holter and Mrs. Kuhl had atlend'ed a recent judge 's
school and Mrs. Kuhl discussed how to exhibit iris. A
thank you nole was read from

TO SING - The Tell-It Singers, pictured above, will be special guests at the annual
weekend youth rell'eat of the Gallipolis Christian Church. They will be in concert June 23,
8:45 to 10 p.m. The sin~ers are from Massillon , Ohio and are seventh through 12th graders
who are oo tour for the summer . The concert is entitled "The Apostle" (Apostle Paul ). Th~
public is warmly welcome to attend the outdoor event. Denny Coburn is minister and Jim
Younkin is youth director. For more information call 4.0.7318.

Dinner held
POLLY"$ POINTERS at Racine
Polly Cramer
A persp irat i on

problem

one or two lmy blobs of wax
mtu the center. or put a copper penny in the water .

DEAR POLLY - My 15yea r-{)ld daughter has a terrible perspiration problem. She
has tried a number of
deodorants but sti ll all· her
clothing is stained . l have
foun d nothing that wi ll
remove them so would appreciate any help. She is a
cheerleader to bout.
One of my Pet Peeves when
dining out is to get a glass of
water that is lwcrthirds ice.
Why do they do this ' Some
people like to drin k water, nut
ice . When ordertng a soft
dri nk the situation is the
same - one gels about onethird of a glass of the pop.
This is indeed a royal ri p-{)f(
and they gel away with 11 FRUSTRATED N.H.
OEAR N.H. - Soaking in a
strong sail water solution
before laundering will
remove any perspi ration odor
in your daughter's clothing.
Place stains face down on
paper towels. sponge back
with a dry cleaning solvent
and rinse. Rub in undil uted liquid detergent , rinse and
l&lt;lunder using the hottest
water lhol is safe fur the
fobrics.- POLLY
DEAR POJ.J.Y - l would
like to share some of my proven Pointers with my friends.
Tree sap on your car wind·
sh1eld can be removed with a
i1quid glass cleaner.
Planl'l absorb sound waves.
A thick rowof them in front of
your home will deaden the
stre€l noises.
To prevent freshly cut
tulips from opening wide drop

When you cut a melon and
discover it is not ripe enough
wrap 1lm foil and store out of
the refrigerator. It will ripen
nicely without discoloration
and the foil will conta in
strung odors. My children
and I use rnanv of the
Pumters so keep up the good
work . - MH.S. W.R.
DEAR POLLY - I think
Carol K. wiU find the answer
lo her problem with washing
the o oL~ide of second·Ooor
windows in one of those lillie
gadget ·catalogues we all
receive in the mail. l recently
purchased a handy little
squeege€ and sponge (the
type ma ny gas attendants
use 1 on an adjustabl e length
of metal stripping that is very
slim ond wi ll fit between the
tWo windows when the lower
one is raised. It rea lly works.
- CAROI.Y!&gt; M.
DEAH POLLY - When
dusting small delicate antiques l use my hand-held elec·
tric hair dryer on low heat
and hokl il back fa r enough so
it dusts but doesn 't disturb
my collectibl es. This also
works on silk lampshades. JUDI
DEAH POLLY - To keep
the bird s from pecking at
your freshly planted garden
slick one of those loy wind·
mills in the middle of it. MARYS.
Polly wiU send you one of
he r Signe d t hank-yo u
~e wspapcr coupon clippers if
she uses your fovori te
Pomter, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY 'S
PO INTERS In care of this
·newspaper.

9P€1D€L
Digital Watch.

The

You'll feel good getting one.
You'll feel good giving one.

The Speidel Digital Watch is an extra special
gift. Because it's not just a gift of time, it's an
elegant 91ft of jewelry too.
· There a re 2 women 's LCD's, with !he time
always showing. Both are a unique blend of
delicate Jewelry and sophisticated electronics.
The Speidel Digital Watch. isn't it time you look
a look at one?

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy,O.

RACINE- Past officers of
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
the Eastern Star, enjoyed a
covered dish dinner Thursday evening at the dining hall
at the RaeineShriner 's Park .
Members were sealed at a
long U.ble covered in white
and centered with an arrangement of ned roses. Mter
the dinner Mrs. Laura Circle
conducted a short business
meeting. Mrs. Bernard Diddle gave devotions which included reading and scripture and concluded with the
Lord 's Prayer in unison.
A program on how to have
and hold friends was given by
Mrs. Bert Grimm . Each
member gave a short inspirational thought on friends .
Readings were ·'To a Friend"
by Mrs . Circle, "A Friend
That Just SU.nds By" by
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
"F'riimds are Like a Garden
of Fl owers" by Mrs. Diddle,
"Growing Friends " by Mrs.
Grell;! Si son, "Old Friends
Are the Best" by Mrs. Don
Weese, "Dare to be Yourself"
by Mrs. Bert Grimm, "A
Descr iplion of True Friends"
and a prayer by Mrs. Ralph
Webb.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Carpenter on
Aug. 10 with Mrs. Diddle to
have the program and Mrs.
Clifford Murris, the devcr
lions.

a

BRIAN JOHNSON
ATTENDS CAMP
Brian Johnson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Johru;on,
Portland, Is attending the
Ohio Forestry Camp.
Conducted by the Ohio
Forestry Assodallon for
teens between 15-19 years
of age, tbe academic camp
Is nationally known and
held to educate young
people about the .various
aspects of forestry and
wise forestry practices .
Tbe c1mp Is held at Hidden
Holfow Camp In Richland
County wh.re almOllf 3110
students from alf of Ohio's
counties gather.

TUESDAY
GROUP TWO of tHe First
United Presbyterian Church,
Middl eport, Tuesday 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl
Horky . Ruth Zavltz will serve
as co-hostess. Lennie Haptonstall will give devotions.
REGULA R MEETING ,
Southern Local Schoo l

Wl(ATEIBECOULDHEEXPEcr!
HELEN AND SUE :
.
I'm a gay male who looks older tllan I. am (19). I dcm't
und~rsland why I'm this way, but I can face tt since I nolqer
hide.
When !finally told my family, their response wu incr!dlble,
they took it so well. Even my brother and ~ ~e seem cl0111r .
than before. At home, things are !me. Outstde ts the problem.
You see 1met this man who took metomy first gay bar. I've
been the~ several times as !like the music and dancing. But
men are always trying to pick up on me. I'm not bad looking,
maybe that's the reason.
1drink very little and don't ll.awtt. How could I let men know
I'm not outlookingforsex]-GAY AND CONFUSED
DEMW. ANQC.:
,
.
If you don't want to be hit on, stay out of gay baf?. Or at Jeaat
lind an escort who doesn't mingle.
Are there low-key public spots for homoseiiUBis who aren't
into the cruising scene? That'sa good question.
·
Perhaps some of our readers will teU us more than we
formerly knew about the kind of gay discos where (like
Friday-night singles bars) you can go to enjoy the music and
dancfug -but go home alone should you wish. -HELEN AND
SUE

.

.CHUCK STEAK ..................~t. 99~

$}19
GROUND BEEF. •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.
TONY'S HOMEMADE
$
29

.

CHOICE ROUND

SANDWICH SPREAD ............. ~~: •• !

$109
BONE SHOULDER RO~ ............... ~ .. .
LB

PERSONAL TO "AMBITIOUS": ColwnnlstSydney J. Harris
writes, "You need to be only 10 percent beller at what you do
than most people, to go 100 percent farther ." Belleve itl HELEN AND SUE

All in the name of love
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pullins
TO CELEBRATE - Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pullins,
29879 Betzing Road (Silver Ridge Road ), Reedsville, will
celebrale their 25th wedding anniversary on Sunday, June
25. An open house wilf be held at their home from 2 to 6
p.m. Mr . and Mrs. Pullins, who have resided in Meigs
County their entire lives, were married on June 26, 1953 a:t
St. Marys, W. Va. They have two daughters, Diana Lynn
Pullins, a student at Ohio University, and Kathy Jean
Pullins, a grad uate of Eastern Hi gh School now living at
home. Mr. Pulfins is employed as a maintenance man in
the Easte rn Loca l School District and is also a trustee of
Orange Township. They attend the South Bethel United
Methodist Church. Relatives and friends are invited to
call during the open house hours.

The Gallipoli s Chri sti an
Church will have Vacation
Bible School June 26 through
the 30th at 6: 30 to B:30 each
evening.
Classes will be offer ed fo r
all ages nursery through
adult s. Denny Coburn ,
minister, will teach the adult
class each even ing.
Th e ce ntral go al of
Vacation Bible School will be

that so uls be won to Christ
and grow in Christ. Biblebased lessons will be taught
with excitement and variety
through the use of many
advanced teaching methods.
Students will he challenged
and involved through such
activities as song time, Bible
study, interesting visual
demonstrations, classroom
int era ction , craft making ,
and many other innovative
methods in keeping with the
theme, Jesus, God's Wonderful Gilt.
For more information call
Barbara King, ~9553 or
Odealla Tay lor 245-5064 .
Everyone is warmly welcome
to attend.

•

schoo l cafeteria.

MICHAEL NARDIE
TURNS SEVEN Michael Nardel, ~o
Mr. and Mrs. A
Nardel, celebrated h s
seventh birthday with a
party given by his grandmother, Mrs. F. Ray
Wilson, at the Pomeroy
Elementary School first
grade class. Jolalng In the
ce lebration were his
teacher, Mrs. Carol OhlInger, his mother, Mrs. Anthony Nardel, his sister,
Michelle, and Mrs. Audrey
Wood who baked the cake.
Cake, Ice cream, koolafd
were served. Favors were
balloons.

MONTREAL (UPI ) - A
young Algerian woman who
fled to Canada to escape her
ll'adition-minded family and
broke Islamic Jaw by
marrying a ChrisUan was
drugged, abducted and flown
ba ck home to marry a
stranger, her husband says.
Dalila Maschino, 26, Thurs.
day was depictw. by her
friends
at
Concordia
University where she was a
student, as a spirited and
sophisti c&amp;ted woman des perate to gain her freedom
from a brother who pursued

her acr!W three continenti.
Her husband of only a few
weeks, Dents, reportedly wu
in hiding, fearful of poulble
attacks by his il'other4n·
law's friends.
Dalila told a Monll'eal Jour·
nallst in a telephone
interview from her home In a
village near Algiers thlt lhe
feared for her hulband'allfe.
"I love my husband," Mrs.
Maschino said. "I want to see
him again but I can't.
Tradltlcms are 10 Important
here. The family hla
decided."

prices of all steel mill
products except tin effective
PRICE HLKE
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio with shipments July. 30.
The in crease will amount to
( UPI) - Youngstown Sheet
about
3 percent, the same
and Tube Company, a unit of
announced
by other major
the Lykes Corporatloo, said
Monday It was increasing steel companies last week.

GROCERY SPECIALS
GOLDEN ISLE

FRESH-TENDER

32 oz.~~ 49~
MUSTARD .....•...•..........•.....

SWEET
CORN .••••••••••~~~!~~.E

....~l OO

PEACHES ....... ~.~~~·...

PEACHES ..•............... ~~-~z~.~~- 59~
GOLDEN ISLE

$

FRESH JUICY

GOLDEN ISLE

l

00

29 oz. can

PEARS .•.••.•••..............•.••••.••
GOLDEN ISLE

LANE

FRUIT

30 oz. can 69~
CocKTAI L••.••......•..•

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE .•.....•1.:~~~~~~. 69~

Outstanding style, quality,

DINTY MOORE

value. In a word: Lane

BEEF STEW...........•.•.•• ~!.~:.~.".. 99~

Clean. uncluttered lines. Lots of emphasis
on the natural beauty of richly grained
woods . Scaled for modern needs. Styled
with a flair for understated contempor.ary
elegance: Crafted with the Integrity of a
Company whose name has stood for quality
furniture for more than 60 years. And priced
realistically . This is the Lane story . One to
live with happily ever after .

JIF

8

PEANUT BUTTER....•.. .2. .~~-~!~~ 1
10 oz. can

GOLDEN ISLE

39

~

All STAR

2% MILK .........••.•..•......G.a!~~ •.$149

BAKER FURNITURE

-

cou&lt;&gt;oN

1

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

.

5 LB. BAG

L

ggc

COU PO N_-

No. 355
POUND CAN

W/C

•r
•
•

- Available through your
local Time Insurance agent
- Offers excellent accident
coverage with principle
sums of t&amp;.OOO to

WINDEX . . . ... . . : : ~

49t

12N~~ ~~~

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Limit One Pleue with This Coupon
Coupon Expires June 24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

a.ooo.

$249
W/C

J
J

•
•

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TRASH BAGS
W/C

No.205
10 CT. BOX'

DAVIS INSURANa
AGENCY

! Limit Ono

House in Pomeroy"
•
•

..••
•

W/C

FABRIC SOFTENER
No. 75
'h GAL JUG

W/C

PINI &lt;• with This ~11110n

8 ROLl PKG.

$139

Limit Ono Please with ThiS couaon
Coupon Exptres June 24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUIOON

JOY LIQUID

3

FOR DISHES

ASST. COLORS
JUMBO
ROLLS

$119

Limit One Pleue with This Coupon
Coupon Exptres June 24, 19/~
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

PAPER TOWELS
W/C

69t

Limit One PleiiSe with Thi s Coupon

DELTA

BATHROOM TISSUE

June 24, 1978
TEWAY

"Across from tilt Court
\

49~

89¢

Limit One Pleue with This Coupon
Coupon Expires June24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

This Coupon
June 24, 1978
TEWAY

CORONET

SPRAY STARCH
No. 255
22 OZ. CAN

STA·PUF PINK

LOUPON

EASY ON .
~

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CO U&lt;&gt; O N

HEFTY 2 PLY

( (llJPON

And to be sure you'tl have
everything you need on
your trip. use our handy
checklist of vacation
supplies

One

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COU PON

No. 155 ·

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ASSORTED FlAVORS
No. 205
33 OZ. CAN
l .i mit

June 24, 1978
GATEWAY

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49¢

No. 105
POUNO BOX

COUPON

KOOL-AID

SALTINE CRACKERS

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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COFFEE

GLASS CLEANER W/PUMP:
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Coupon Expires June 24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Are you taking a trip, going hunting or planning a weekend camp·
ing adventure - if so you'll need
to take along:
Time's Hunting·Travei'-Accident
Insurance

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CAMPING

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FROZEN STRAWBERRIES...

YOURS F.REE AT:

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GROUND FRESH MANY TIMES DAILY
LEAN

GREAT FOR OUTDOOR GRILLING

DEAR D.:
But don 't think a move will bring Josh back. If a man reaUy
wants to see the mother of his child, he'll find a way, diaapproving Mwna or not.
I'd predict support payments are all you can expect, and
these may not last. You'd betler not count on them to help.
fin;~nce an apartment- or even sitter's fees.- HELEN

District Board of Education,

. CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of Americ a,
meeting, 8 p.m. Tuesday with
initiation to be held. Members are to wear white.
WEDNESDAY
SPE CIAL MEETIN G,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Work
in EA Degree. AU master
masons invited.
THURSDAY
OHIO NURSES Assn.,
Southern Hills -District ,
regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday at Mil Schneider, 46
Eden Place, Athens. Potluck
picnic, take one dish .
·
TWIN CITY Shrinettes ,
7: 30p.m. Thursday at horne
of Lora Byers in Gallipolis.
ROCK SPRI NGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church .
Mrs. Nancy Morris will be
hostess, the program will be
presented by Mrs. Lottie
Leonard, and the contest by
Mrs. Wihnetta Leifheit.

By Helen and Sue Hottel

DEAR RAP :
I'm single and recently became a mother. My own mother is
the problem. She hates Jooh, the baby's father, becattse he
doesn't want marriage. We're both in coUege. She puts him
down when he comes by, so he's stopped seeing me, but calli
and sends money. (Mom and I clash on many other matters
too!)
,
I've tried lallting to her but she vows she won't change her
mind. As a result, Josh and I don't dale .
. I'm thinking of moving into my own apartment. Would that
be the soluUon?- D.C.
DEAR D.:
If you're old enough, ~olvent enough, and capable enough to
handle a tiny baby, still attend college and perbapa ITllnage a
part-time job - yes. Are you ~ -SUE

7:30 p.m., Tuesday in high

,------·-·1·
I Social I
I Calendar!

auction was held following
the meeting with proceeds gcr
ing into the horticulture fund
and the lund lor the park for
the handicapped.
Mrs . Ginther , Mrs.Joan
Kautz , Mrs. Macil Barton,
served a dessert course. Mrs.
Ann Radford won the door
prize. Next meeting will be
held on July 5 at Royal Oak
. Park with husbands and-&lt;&gt;r
gues ts to attend . with
member s. Mrs. RIChard
Koblentz was voted into
membership.

Gallipolis ·Christian
announces VBS plans

Bible school
to begin
Bible school at the Middleport First Baptist Church
will begin Monday and continue through Friday, June
30.
Classes for children two
through the sixth grade will
be held from 7 to 8:45 each
evening. There will be a picrue on July I, and the program
will be presented on July 2.
Mrs. Martha Klein is director
with Mrs. Kathryn Metzger
as ce&gt;-director.
For the nursery class of two
and three yea r ol d children,
Kathy Riggs is the leacher
with Dan Ri ggs the craft
leacher, and Vicky Boy les,
the helper. Beginner class
leacher will be David Swis her
with Sandy Swisher as the
craft leacher, and Velvet
Swisher .as the helper. Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hudson will be
the teacher and craft teacher
with their daughter, Joy, as
helper for the primary class
of first and second graders.
Betty Jo Lieving will be the
teacher, Elean or Burks, the
craft teacher, and Susie Met·
zge r, the helper for the mid·
dler class of third and fourth
graders. For the junior class
of fifth and sixth graders, the
teacher will be Mrs. Ma ry
Brewer with Dorothy Jenkins
as the helper and Sue Imboden as the craft teacher. In
charge of refreshments will
be Coke Ambrose and Anci I
Van Meter. Jayne Hoeflich is
music director, and Jennifer
Liev ing, the accompanisl.

Mrs. Dorothy Karr anq also
the Eastern ! Alumn i
Associati on.
Arrangements on exhibit
were judged with Mrs. Rose
Ginther receiving a blue for
he r orange bl ossom
specimen; Maci l Barton for
an arrangement of climbing
rll'!es; Mrs. Kuhl fur an ar·
rangement, and Mrs. Pearle
Karr for a rll'!e specima n, all
blues.
For roll call members
answered with "a rose
reminds me of .. .... " A plant

Generation Rep

W/C

32 OZ. BTL.
Limit

$115

One Please with This Coupo"
June 24 , 1978
GATEWAY

W/C

�Chester gardeners discuss f
·
·
i·
cut flower .arran0aements
·
'
CHESTER--C utting and
preparing flowers lor arl"dngemenls was discussed by
Mrs . Pat Holter at a recent
meeting of the Chester
Garden Club held at the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co. social room.
Mrs. Holter, an outstanding
arranger, noted that the best
time to cut flowers is before 10
in the morning or after 6 in
the evening. She said that
more important than lhe lime
of day is culling flowers when
you have the time to properly
care for them.
When going out to cut
flowers, she said a bucket of
warm water should always be
taken along. Shears to cut the
flowers should be sharp and
clean and flowers should be
cui at the proper sU.ge
development. As for roses she
sai d the pel&lt;lls should be just
ready to unfold . Each stem
should have two or more
leaflets and the cutting place
should be just above the five
leaf branch.
Gardening lips for June
were given by Mrs. Jennie
Machir. Mrs. Charles Kuhl
reported that she had laken a
sunshine gift to Mrs. Pauline
Ridenour who is recuperating
at home. Members signed a
ca rd for her and also one for
Mrs. Nora Brown, mother of
a member.
Reports were given on
nower arrangements made
for the band and alumni banquets of Eastern and Chesler.
Areport was also given on the
recent regional meeting held
at Royal Oak Park. Plans
were made to purchase bud
vases to use for banquet arrangements.
It was noted that Mrs.
Holter and Mrs. Kuhl had atlend'ed a recent judge 's
school and Mrs. Kuhl discussed how to exhibit iris. A
thank you nole was read from

TO SING - The Tell-It Singers, pictured above, will be special guests at the annual
weekend youth rell'eat of the Gallipolis Christian Church. They will be in concert June 23,
8:45 to 10 p.m. The sin~ers are from Massillon , Ohio and are seventh through 12th graders
who are oo tour for the summer . The concert is entitled "The Apostle" (Apostle Paul ). Th~
public is warmly welcome to attend the outdoor event. Denny Coburn is minister and Jim
Younkin is youth director. For more information call 4.0.7318.

Dinner held
POLLY"$ POINTERS at Racine
Polly Cramer
A persp irat i on

problem

one or two lmy blobs of wax
mtu the center. or put a copper penny in the water .

DEAR POLLY - My 15yea r-{)ld daughter has a terrible perspiration problem. She
has tried a number of
deodorants but sti ll all· her
clothing is stained . l have
foun d nothing that wi ll
remove them so would appreciate any help. She is a
cheerleader to bout.
One of my Pet Peeves when
dining out is to get a glass of
water that is lwcrthirds ice.
Why do they do this ' Some
people like to drin k water, nut
ice . When ordertng a soft
dri nk the situation is the
same - one gels about onethird of a glass of the pop.
This is indeed a royal ri p-{)f(
and they gel away with 11 FRUSTRATED N.H.
OEAR N.H. - Soaking in a
strong sail water solution
before laundering will
remove any perspi ration odor
in your daughter's clothing.
Place stains face down on
paper towels. sponge back
with a dry cleaning solvent
and rinse. Rub in undil uted liquid detergent , rinse and
l&lt;lunder using the hottest
water lhol is safe fur the
fobrics.- POLLY
DEAR POJ.J.Y - l would
like to share some of my proven Pointers with my friends.
Tree sap on your car wind·
sh1eld can be removed with a
i1quid glass cleaner.
Planl'l absorb sound waves.
A thick rowof them in front of
your home will deaden the
stre€l noises.
To prevent freshly cut
tulips from opening wide drop

When you cut a melon and
discover it is not ripe enough
wrap 1lm foil and store out of
the refrigerator. It will ripen
nicely without discoloration
and the foil will conta in
strung odors. My children
and I use rnanv of the
Pumters so keep up the good
work . - MH.S. W.R.
DEAR POLLY - I think
Carol K. wiU find the answer
lo her problem with washing
the o oL~ide of second·Ooor
windows in one of those lillie
gadget ·catalogues we all
receive in the mail. l recently
purchased a handy little
squeege€ and sponge (the
type ma ny gas attendants
use 1 on an adjustabl e length
of metal stripping that is very
slim ond wi ll fit between the
tWo windows when the lower
one is raised. It rea lly works.
- CAROI.Y!&gt; M.
DEAH POLLY - When
dusting small delicate antiques l use my hand-held elec·
tric hair dryer on low heat
and hokl il back fa r enough so
it dusts but doesn 't disturb
my collectibl es. This also
works on silk lampshades. JUDI
DEAH POLLY - To keep
the bird s from pecking at
your freshly planted garden
slick one of those loy wind·
mills in the middle of it. MARYS.
Polly wiU send you one of
he r Signe d t hank-yo u
~e wspapcr coupon clippers if
she uses your fovori te
Pomter, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY 'S
PO INTERS In care of this
·newspaper.

9P€1D€L
Digital Watch.

The

You'll feel good getting one.
You'll feel good giving one.

The Speidel Digital Watch is an extra special
gift. Because it's not just a gift of time, it's an
elegant 91ft of jewelry too.
· There a re 2 women 's LCD's, with !he time
always showing. Both are a unique blend of
delicate Jewelry and sophisticated electronics.
The Speidel Digital Watch. isn't it time you look
a look at one?

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Court St.

Pomeroy,O.

RACINE- Past officers of
Racine Chapter 134, Order of
the Eastern Star, enjoyed a
covered dish dinner Thursday evening at the dining hall
at the RaeineShriner 's Park .
Members were sealed at a
long U.ble covered in white
and centered with an arrangement of ned roses. Mter
the dinner Mrs. Laura Circle
conducted a short business
meeting. Mrs. Bernard Diddle gave devotions which included reading and scripture and concluded with the
Lord 's Prayer in unison.
A program on how to have
and hold friends was given by
Mrs. Bert Grimm . Each
member gave a short inspirational thought on friends .
Readings were ·'To a Friend"
by Mrs . Circle, "A Friend
That Just SU.nds By" by
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
"F'riimds are Like a Garden
of Fl owers" by Mrs. Diddle,
"Growing Friends " by Mrs.
Grell;! Si son, "Old Friends
Are the Best" by Mrs. Don
Weese, "Dare to be Yourself"
by Mrs. Bert Grimm, "A
Descr iplion of True Friends"
and a prayer by Mrs. Ralph
Webb.
Next meeting will be at the
home of Mrs. Carpenter on
Aug. 10 with Mrs. Diddle to
have the program and Mrs.
Clifford Murris, the devcr
lions.

a

BRIAN JOHNSON
ATTENDS CAMP
Brian Johnson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Don Johru;on,
Portland, Is attending the
Ohio Forestry Camp.
Conducted by the Ohio
Forestry Assodallon for
teens between 15-19 years
of age, tbe academic camp
Is nationally known and
held to educate young
people about the .various
aspects of forestry and
wise forestry practices .
Tbe c1mp Is held at Hidden
Holfow Camp In Richland
County wh.re almOllf 3110
students from alf of Ohio's
counties gather.

TUESDAY
GROUP TWO of tHe First
United Presbyterian Church,
Middl eport, Tuesday 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Carl
Horky . Ruth Zavltz will serve
as co-hostess. Lennie Haptonstall will give devotions.
REGULA R MEETING ,
Southern Local Schoo l

Wl(ATEIBECOULDHEEXPEcr!
HELEN AND SUE :
.
I'm a gay male who looks older tllan I. am (19). I dcm't
und~rsland why I'm this way, but I can face tt since I nolqer
hide.
When !finally told my family, their response wu incr!dlble,
they took it so well. Even my brother and ~ ~e seem cl0111r .
than before. At home, things are !me. Outstde ts the problem.
You see 1met this man who took metomy first gay bar. I've
been the~ several times as !like the music and dancing. But
men are always trying to pick up on me. I'm not bad looking,
maybe that's the reason.
1drink very little and don't ll.awtt. How could I let men know
I'm not outlookingforsex]-GAY AND CONFUSED
DEMW. ANQC.:
,
.
If you don't want to be hit on, stay out of gay baf?. Or at Jeaat
lind an escort who doesn't mingle.
Are there low-key public spots for homoseiiUBis who aren't
into the cruising scene? That'sa good question.
·
Perhaps some of our readers will teU us more than we
formerly knew about the kind of gay discos where (like
Friday-night singles bars) you can go to enjoy the music and
dancfug -but go home alone should you wish. -HELEN AND
SUE

.

.CHUCK STEAK ..................~t. 99~

$}19
GROUND BEEF. •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~.
TONY'S HOMEMADE
$
29

.

CHOICE ROUND

SANDWICH SPREAD ............. ~~: •• !

$109
BONE SHOULDER RO~ ............... ~ .. .
LB

PERSONAL TO "AMBITIOUS": ColwnnlstSydney J. Harris
writes, "You need to be only 10 percent beller at what you do
than most people, to go 100 percent farther ." Belleve itl HELEN AND SUE

All in the name of love
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pullins
TO CELEBRATE - Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Pullins,
29879 Betzing Road (Silver Ridge Road ), Reedsville, will
celebrale their 25th wedding anniversary on Sunday, June
25. An open house wilf be held at their home from 2 to 6
p.m. Mr . and Mrs. Pullins, who have resided in Meigs
County their entire lives, were married on June 26, 1953 a:t
St. Marys, W. Va. They have two daughters, Diana Lynn
Pullins, a student at Ohio University, and Kathy Jean
Pullins, a grad uate of Eastern Hi gh School now living at
home. Mr. Pulfins is employed as a maintenance man in
the Easte rn Loca l School District and is also a trustee of
Orange Township. They attend the South Bethel United
Methodist Church. Relatives and friends are invited to
call during the open house hours.

The Gallipoli s Chri sti an
Church will have Vacation
Bible School June 26 through
the 30th at 6: 30 to B:30 each
evening.
Classes will be offer ed fo r
all ages nursery through
adult s. Denny Coburn ,
minister, will teach the adult
class each even ing.
Th e ce ntral go al of
Vacation Bible School will be

that so uls be won to Christ
and grow in Christ. Biblebased lessons will be taught
with excitement and variety
through the use of many
advanced teaching methods.
Students will he challenged
and involved through such
activities as song time, Bible
study, interesting visual
demonstrations, classroom
int era ction , craft making ,
and many other innovative
methods in keeping with the
theme, Jesus, God's Wonderful Gilt.
For more information call
Barbara King, ~9553 or
Odealla Tay lor 245-5064 .
Everyone is warmly welcome
to attend.

•

schoo l cafeteria.

MICHAEL NARDIE
TURNS SEVEN Michael Nardel, ~o
Mr. and Mrs. A
Nardel, celebrated h s
seventh birthday with a
party given by his grandmother, Mrs. F. Ray
Wilson, at the Pomeroy
Elementary School first
grade class. Jolalng In the
ce lebration were his
teacher, Mrs. Carol OhlInger, his mother, Mrs. Anthony Nardel, his sister,
Michelle, and Mrs. Audrey
Wood who baked the cake.
Cake, Ice cream, koolafd
were served. Favors were
balloons.

MONTREAL (UPI ) - A
young Algerian woman who
fled to Canada to escape her
ll'adition-minded family and
broke Islamic Jaw by
marrying a ChrisUan was
drugged, abducted and flown
ba ck home to marry a
stranger, her husband says.
Dalila Maschino, 26, Thurs.
day was depictw. by her
friends
at
Concordia
University where she was a
student, as a spirited and
sophisti c&amp;ted woman des perate to gain her freedom
from a brother who pursued

her acr!W three continenti.
Her husband of only a few
weeks, Dents, reportedly wu
in hiding, fearful of poulble
attacks by his il'other4n·
law's friends.
Dalila told a Monll'eal Jour·
nallst in a telephone
interview from her home In a
village near Algiers thlt lhe
feared for her hulband'allfe.
"I love my husband," Mrs.
Maschino said. "I want to see
him again but I can't.
Tradltlcms are 10 Important
here. The family hla
decided."

prices of all steel mill
products except tin effective
PRICE HLKE
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio with shipments July. 30.
The in crease will amount to
( UPI) - Youngstown Sheet
about
3 percent, the same
and Tube Company, a unit of
announced
by other major
the Lykes Corporatloo, said
Monday It was increasing steel companies last week.

GROCERY SPECIALS
GOLDEN ISLE

FRESH-TENDER

32 oz.~~ 49~
MUSTARD .....•...•..........•.....

SWEET
CORN .••••••••••~~~!~~.E

....~l OO

PEACHES ....... ~.~~~·...

PEACHES ..•............... ~~-~z~.~~- 59~
GOLDEN ISLE

$

FRESH JUICY

GOLDEN ISLE

l

00

29 oz. can

PEARS .•.••.•••..............•.••••.••
GOLDEN ISLE

LANE

FRUIT

30 oz. can 69~
CocKTAI L••.••......•..•

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN

ORANGE JUICE .•.....•1.:~~~~~~. 69~

Outstanding style, quality,

DINTY MOORE

value. In a word: Lane

BEEF STEW...........•.•.•• ~!.~:.~.".. 99~

Clean. uncluttered lines. Lots of emphasis
on the natural beauty of richly grained
woods . Scaled for modern needs. Styled
with a flair for understated contempor.ary
elegance: Crafted with the Integrity of a
Company whose name has stood for quality
furniture for more than 60 years. And priced
realistically . This is the Lane story . One to
live with happily ever after .

JIF

8

PEANUT BUTTER....•.. .2. .~~-~!~~ 1
10 oz. can

GOLDEN ISLE

39

~

All STAR

2% MILK .........••.•..•......G.a!~~ •.$149

BAKER FURNITURE

-

cou&lt;&gt;oN

1

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

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5 LB. BAG

L

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No. 355
POUND CAN

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•
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- Available through your
local Time Insurance agent
- Offers excellent accident
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sums of t&amp;.OOO to

WINDEX . . . ... . . : : ~

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Coupon Expires June 24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

a.ooo.

$249
W/C

J
J

•
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TRASH BAGS
W/C

No.205
10 CT. BOX'

DAVIS INSURANa
AGENCY

! Limit Ono

House in Pomeroy"
•
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FABRIC SOFTENER
No. 75
'h GAL JUG

W/C

PINI &lt;• with This ~11110n

8 ROLl PKG.

$139

Limit Ono Please with ThiS couaon
Coupon Exptres June 24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUIOON

JOY LIQUID

3

FOR DISHES

ASST. COLORS
JUMBO
ROLLS

$119

Limit One Pleue with This Coupon
Coupon Exptres June 24, 19/~
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

PAPER TOWELS
W/C

69t

Limit One PleiiSe with Thi s Coupon

DELTA

BATHROOM TISSUE

June 24, 1978
TEWAY

"Across from tilt Court
\

49~

89¢

Limit One Pleue with This Coupon
Coupon Expires June24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

This Coupon
June 24, 1978
TEWAY

CORONET

SPRAY STARCH
No. 255
22 OZ. CAN

STA·PUF PINK

LOUPON

EASY ON .
~

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CO U&lt;&gt; O N

HEFTY 2 PLY

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And to be sure you'tl have
everything you need on
your trip. use our handy
checklist of vacation
supplies

One

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COU PON

No. 155 ·

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No. 205
33 OZ. CAN
l .i mit

June 24, 1978
GATEWAY

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49¢

No. 105
POUNO BOX

COUPON

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SALTINE CRACKERS

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TWIN CITY GATEWAY

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Limit One Please with 1hls Coupon
Coupon Expires June 24, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Are you taking a trip, going hunting or planning a weekend camp·
ing adventure - if so you'll need
to take along:
Time's Hunting·Travei'-Accident
Insurance

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CAMPING

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GROUND FRESH MANY TIMES DAILY
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GREAT FOR OUTDOOR GRILLING

DEAR D.:
But don 't think a move will bring Josh back. If a man reaUy
wants to see the mother of his child, he'll find a way, diaapproving Mwna or not.
I'd predict support payments are all you can expect, and
these may not last. You'd betler not count on them to help.
fin;~nce an apartment- or even sitter's fees.- HELEN

District Board of Education,

. CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of Americ a,
meeting, 8 p.m. Tuesday with
initiation to be held. Members are to wear white.
WEDNESDAY
SPE CIAL MEETIN G,
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Work
in EA Degree. AU master
masons invited.
THURSDAY
OHIO NURSES Assn.,
Southern Hills -District ,
regular meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday at Mil Schneider, 46
Eden Place, Athens. Potluck
picnic, take one dish .
·
TWIN CITY Shrinettes ,
7: 30p.m. Thursday at horne
of Lora Byers in Gallipolis.
ROCK SPRI NGS Better
Health Club, 1:15 p.m. Thursday at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church .
Mrs. Nancy Morris will be
hostess, the program will be
presented by Mrs. Lottie
Leonard, and the contest by
Mrs. Wihnetta Leifheit.

By Helen and Sue Hottel

DEAR RAP :
I'm single and recently became a mother. My own mother is
the problem. She hates Jooh, the baby's father, becattse he
doesn't want marriage. We're both in coUege. She puts him
down when he comes by, so he's stopped seeing me, but calli
and sends money. (Mom and I clash on many other matters
too!)
,
I've tried lallting to her but she vows she won't change her
mind. As a result, Josh and I don't dale .
. I'm thinking of moving into my own apartment. Would that
be the soluUon?- D.C.
DEAR D.:
If you're old enough, ~olvent enough, and capable enough to
handle a tiny baby, still attend college and perbapa ITllnage a
part-time job - yes. Are you ~ -SUE

7:30 p.m., Tuesday in high

,------·-·1·
I Social I
I Calendar!

auction was held following
the meeting with proceeds gcr
ing into the horticulture fund
and the lund lor the park for
the handicapped.
Mrs . Ginther , Mrs.Joan
Kautz , Mrs. Macil Barton,
served a dessert course. Mrs.
Ann Radford won the door
prize. Next meeting will be
held on July 5 at Royal Oak
. Park with husbands and-&lt;&gt;r
gues ts to attend . with
member s. Mrs. RIChard
Koblentz was voted into
membership.

Gallipolis ·Christian
announces VBS plans

Bible school
to begin
Bible school at the Middleport First Baptist Church
will begin Monday and continue through Friday, June
30.
Classes for children two
through the sixth grade will
be held from 7 to 8:45 each
evening. There will be a picrue on July I, and the program
will be presented on July 2.
Mrs. Martha Klein is director
with Mrs. Kathryn Metzger
as ce&gt;-director.
For the nursery class of two
and three yea r ol d children,
Kathy Riggs is the leacher
with Dan Ri ggs the craft
leacher, and Vicky Boy les,
the helper. Beginner class
leacher will be David Swis her
with Sandy Swisher as the
craft leacher, and Velvet
Swisher .as the helper. Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Hudson will be
the teacher and craft teacher
with their daughter, Joy, as
helper for the primary class
of first and second graders.
Betty Jo Lieving will be the
teacher, Elean or Burks, the
craft teacher, and Susie Met·
zge r, the helper for the mid·
dler class of third and fourth
graders. For the junior class
of fifth and sixth graders, the
teacher will be Mrs. Ma ry
Brewer with Dorothy Jenkins
as the helper and Sue Imboden as the craft teacher. In
charge of refreshments will
be Coke Ambrose and Anci I
Van Meter. Jayne Hoeflich is
music director, and Jennifer
Liev ing, the accompanisl.

Mrs. Dorothy Karr anq also
the Eastern ! Alumn i
Associati on.
Arrangements on exhibit
were judged with Mrs. Rose
Ginther receiving a blue for
he r orange bl ossom
specimen; Maci l Barton for
an arrangement of climbing
rll'!es; Mrs. Kuhl fur an ar·
rangement, and Mrs. Pearle
Karr for a rll'!e specima n, all
blues.
For roll call members
answered with "a rose
reminds me of .. .... " A plant

Generation Rep

W/C

32 OZ. BTL.
Limit

$115

One Please with This Coupo"
June 24 , 1978
GATEWAY

W/C

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-~ameroy, 0., Tuesday, June lD, 19'18

7-

r.-:~--·-· -· -·-··-. --..-·- ------------i

Blanks are·available
Uated below are coupons
for entries in the Regatta

weekend Frog Jump to be
held Saturday, JWJe 2t, at 6

f

p.m. Also the Ohio State
championship frog jwnp and
list of prizes.

JUNIOR DIVISION
SIOO.OO- lot PRIZE
tsO.OO - 2nd PRIZE
.25.00 .,. 3rd PRIZE

$500 TO ANYONE

FROG RACING'

Breokinjl World'• Reeord
Now 25'11"

O.omplon•hlp - 150.00
,,~

NAME OF FROG
Feet

CmLDRI!N - U•"- Ia - fl .OO

lncludn Ju11plnr 1M Raciar

PrtvioUI Jump Ouby E:ttpertence (U.t below)

THE WRA.IN CAithoard Racing Club will stage the 1978 Big Bend Regatta power boat races oo the Ohio River in Pomeroy at 12:30 p.m.
. Sunday.

At a specia l meeting of
Chester PTO the group voted
to donate $1,000 to the Chester
Elementary Gym lund.
Bo b -Davis, president.
commended th e Chester
citizens for the support given
to the passage of the recent 10
mill school operating levy.
The levy passed in three
Chesler precincts.
The PTO set Sept. 30 as the
day for the annual school
ca rn ival. Serving on the
carni val committee are
Karen Werry, Becky Mankin,
and Jean Norton.
In other business the y
voted to serve a dinner lor the
Meigs Cou nty Retired Senior
Citizens In October.
The next regular meeting
will be Sept. 18 al 7:30p.m.

Good travel

Bnlry No. ----~·············w•-·······

For Adna&lt;td Eolry Relllftl hlry 1llmk To
Ohio Slalo ChapiOMltll Frot' Joap
BW Yo..,, Bot lUI
Po•eroy, Ohio 41719
Telcphoae 614-tt2·M81

Po•ltion in aund final ----- ------------ -- ---

ENTERED BY ----------------- - ------ ---- -

ADDRESS

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

Fill In 1bt addreee label below &amp;o ban r oar ,...,
Fill in the adrireu lAbel below to have JOW' froa
jump dist.&amp;nce mailed to you (cl o DOt cltt&amp;ch label)
(PLEASE P RINT)

TOWN -- -- --------,----- --- ---- ---- ---- -Aie ----- -

ENTRY FEE PAID -------------------------

-------------------------- -----------ENTRANTS MAY ENTER
ANYTIME DURING FlOG JUIIP

Gr&amp;nd Croak11r ---- -- Charle1 "fi'roi'" W&amp;)llllld
Grand Croaker in chure of Vice ____ Bill Yo\Ulf
Box 603, Pomeroy, Ohio

Phon• 992-6681

The boat doctor
By MARIAN E. McQUIDDY
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI )
- Leroy Amble says he's the
new best friend of Iowa 's boat
owners, although he doesn 't
even own a boat.
"That doesn 't matter," he
said. " I have been in the
boating business for 2() years
and know a lot about the
industry and we settled in
centrallowa from Milwaukee
to try to provide a service and
help the boaters and not play
in the water. So if need be, I
can find a boat."
It also doesn't matter to
Amble that there are no large
bodies of water in central
Iowa and the nearest ocean in

many thousands of miles couldn't afford to move any
away.
further east or west - so this
He said there is plenty of was ideal. Iowans seemed to
water in Iowa - someplace be the best to accept the new
- and Iowans aren't afraid to service," he said.
go to lind it.
Amble said he plans to do
"That's no problem either. most of his work on the
We 've got some Anny Corps telephone and his new linn
of Engineer lakes and little will be set up to offer advice
bodies of water and people for
boaters
and
In
are boat-happy in this part of . emergencies to offer on-thethe country even if they are in water service.
the middle of the nation and
"Service and advice are
ideally quite high and dry," where it's at," he said.
he said.
Amble said boat owners
Amble said Des Moines was generaly are just looking for
a perfect location for his new a little advice on their boat
business.
because they like to do their
"I didn't like the Great own work - when they know
Lakes area physically and we what to do.

Bolivar has strawberries
Ualled Prm lllleraallonal
There'll be strawberries in
Bolivar In Tuscarawas
County and cherries in
Bellevue, plus plenty of food
and enterta irunent at other
festivaL• and events in Ohio
this wet:...
The fifth annual Volivar
Strawberry- Festival pays
tribute to the community's
largest
industry,
a
strawberry farm. The
festival begins Friday with a
Queen's Ball where the queen
must be over the age of 66.
This year's royalty is Helen
·
Lash, 82.
Festival • goers can taste
the delicacies made with
strawberries, and participate
in a strawberry - eating
contest. Festivities wind up
with a fiddler 's contest , a
parade and round and square
dancing Sunday afternoon.
Bellevue's cherry festival
Is also live years old,
featuring not only food , but a
five-state original art and
craft show, horse pull and
garden trador event Friday
through Sunday.
Henry Macini will be the
guest condudor for Friday
ni~hl ' s presentation, while

Mitch Miller, the bearded
sing-along director. perfonns
Sunday. Tuesday lind Friday
performances are at 8:30
p.m. while Sunday performances are at 7:30p.m.
Blossom maintains a dining
room and a snack bar as well
as space for picnics.
Two House and Garden
tours are this weekend' s
agenda. Hudson has a House
and Garden Pilg rimage
Wednesday through Friday
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with
tickets available on the
village green.
The annual Haus Und
Garten Tour in German
Village of Columbus will be
Sunday afternoon . Ten
private homes open their
doors to the public. There is a
small admission charge.
The frog is king at Pomeroy
this weekend for the Big Bend
Regatta Friday thro ugh
Sunday.
This ' festival
features the International
Frog Jumping Contests ,
besides parades, power boat
races and carnivals.
Cincinnati's Riverfront
Stadium is tranafonned from
a baseball diamond to the
setting lor a Jazz Festival

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

OPEN:
· MOn .• Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til5 :00
Thursday Ti I 12 Noon
Friday Until5 P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason , W. Va.

Friday and Saturday. This is
billed as the largest .Soul
Musical Festival in the
Midwest and promoters
advise advance ticket pur·
chases.

plans advised
Automobile travel is the
great
American
trip.
Whether it's a good or a bad
one depends on how well you
plan. II you're taking your
car on vacation, be sure to
have it services thoroughly
before you leave.
Check your driver license,
ownership papers and Insurance. Be aware of in·
su rance requirements in
other countries you want to
visit. Canada doesn't demand
any specia l auto insurance,
but Mexico has coverage
rules if you'll be there more
than '13 hours.
Automobile clubs are a
great source of lnfonnation ,
maps and alternate routes.
Oil companies offer excellent
guides, broken down into
geographical regions, on
where to stay, where to eat,
what to see. Check your local
bookstore or service station.
For extreme temperatures
and terrain , mak e sure your
car iS properly tuned and
equipped. Be sure your jack
is in working order, and testload your luggage in trunk or
top rack before you go.

Ford, North
head golfing evenl
BLOOMFIELD HILLS ,
Mich. (UP! i - Former
President Gerald R. Ford an&lt;t·
U.S. Open champ Andy North
head a fie ld of amateurs and
pros who will compete today
in the 6th annual J .P.
McCarthy-Police Athletic
League Invitational Golf
tournament at the Wabeek
Country Club.
The tournament was
expected to raise an
estimated $100,000 for PAL,
which provides sports
programs for disadvantaged
youths in the Detroit area .

Boat tickets
still available

Pygmies are noted as having the highest human basal
metabolic rate in the world.

THE RIO GRANDE College Chorale under the
direction of Merlyn Ross will be appearing at the Big Bend
Regatta . The vocal group, pictured at a recent Pomeroy

Buffet hosted by Mtlls'

HOST COOKOUT
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Young
and Mindy , Rt. 1, Middleport,
entertained Saturday ·evening
with a cookout for Fred and
Elizabet h Hibbs, former
Middleport residents, who
are vacationing fr om
Florida. Attending were
Susan and Larry Cleland and
Mary and Greg Hib bs,
grandchildren of Mr. and
Mrs. Hibbs . Mary and Greg
will return to Tampa with
their grand parent s lor a
vacation.
REUNION SET
The descendants of Albert
and Eliza Hill will hold a
reunion Sunday, June 2S at
Port land Park. All relatives
and friends are invited. In
case of rain it will be held at
the Letart Falls Community
Building .

REVIVALINPROGRESS
Reviva l is being held this
week al 7:30p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ. c. E.
Shepard is the speaker and
the song le~der is Don Hitchcock from Kentucky Chrislian College. Dun Kennedy is
pastor of the church. The
public is invited. Services willcontinue through Sunday
evening.
IN THE HOSPITAL
Franklin (Giny ) Ginther,
formerly of Middleport, is a
surgical patient atlhe Riverside Hospital in Colu us.
Cards may be sent to him at
Room 4014. He underwent
surgery there t.his morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Childs were
in Columbus to visit him last
Wednesday .
HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Snyder of Cleveland were
surprise weekend visitors of

MAKES LIST
RUTLAND
Robin
Dewhurst, a student at Rio her mother ! Mrs. Bernice
Grande College, has been Grucser of Middleport.
named to the dean 's list
having maintained a lour
point average. Robin, a 1977
graduate of Meigs High
Satu rn's rings cannot be
School, is the daughter of Mr. seen except through a
and Mrs. Harold Dewhurst, . telescope of at least 3-inch
Rutland.
aperture.

A buffet dinQer was held
recently by Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mills, Pomeroy, in
honor of Mary_
Iu M'lls
1 , wI10
graduated with lop honors
from , the Holzer School of
Nursmg, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
,Mills, the fonner Sandra Kay
Hensley, recently married in
. Phoenix, Arizona, and Lt. and

M,rs. Michael (Robyn) Bur·
mg. Syracuse, N. Y.,
celebrating their fourth wed·
·" •anmversary.
· ·
•
·
wng
Friends and . relatives attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Fischer, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Ebersbach, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert McClure and
Wesley, Pomeroy; Mrs. Nora
Mills Mr. and Mrs . Don
. .'
..
.
.
Molls, Cynthia Mills and
Nicky, Middleport; Mr. and
•
Mrs. Carl Schwarz and
granddaughter, Heather,
Mrs. Steve Morns, Jeff Riley,
Mrs. Erruna Adams hosted Mason, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
a meeting of the Ruth Mis- ~~~~YBu~:~~: ~~lp!~~ ~~~sionary Circle of the !!&lt;~cine
First Baptist Church at her
home Thursday night.
Mrs. Marg Grimm led in
the opening prayer and Mrs.
Helen Slack had the program.
A program in tribute to
Members sang "Let the fathers was presented at the
Lower Lights Be Burning" recent meeting of the United
and there was a responsive Methodist Women of the Aj}reading, "Reasonable Ser- pleGrove Church.
vice." Readings included
Mrs. Lucille Rhodes was
"How to Work in a Women's
program
leader with Mrs .
Society" by Mrs. Slack,
Jan
Norris
at the piano.
"Christ as a Missionary" by
Members sang "Faith of Our.
OUie May Cozart, "We Must Fathers" with Mrs. Dolly
Never Give Up " by Naomi
Wolfe giving prayer and Mrs.
Stobart ; " What Price Eileen Buck reading the
Disciples hip " by Vera
Beegle, " The Best of scripture. Readings included
"Bread of l.Jfe " by Mrs. DolAmerica " by Doris Hensler, ly Wolfe; "Happy Father's
"The Missionary Book " by Day" by Bess Parsons;
Nondus Hendricks, "G lue "Bread of Life" by Mrs. Julia
Together" by Barbara Norris, " My Father's Hand"
Gheen, "The Message of the by Mrs .. Donna Hill who also
Empty Pew" by Marg had questions un men of the
Grinun, "Taking All to God in Bible.
Prayer" by Theresa Van
Mrs. Hill presided at the
Meter, and "Sacrifica l Giv- meeting with officers' reports
ing" by Martha Lou Beegle.
being given. A gift will be
Sentence prayers by the 13 sen t to the Rev. and Mrs.
members attending conclud- David Harris. Two birthdavs
ed the program.
were celebrated and a dun-a·
Mrs. Adams served sand- tiun was made to the
wiches, cake and ice cream American Legion Auxiliary
during the social hour.
poppy lund and for support uf

Mrs. Adams

hOStS meeting

By DICK KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate gave final
legislative approval Monday
night to a bill extending the
deadline three mooths lor the
installation of automatic
smoke detectors in high rise
apartment buildings and
condominiums.
The bill, which was sent to
Gov. James A. Rhodes on a
2:Hl Senate vote, amends a
bill passed by the Legislature
earlier this sessioo .
The earlier bill required the
Board of Building Standards
to adopt rules and regulations
by May 27 coocerning the
mandatory installation of the
nre safety devices, which had
to be in place no later than
July I.
The board did adopt the
standards May '!1, but Sen.
Ronald Nabakowski, Dl..orain, noted that that left
but 34days to comply with the
rules - a near impossibility
lor colleges and universities
which had to put out for bids a
contract for large numbers of
the devices for use in student
dorms.
The bill sent to Rhodes will

In other action, the Senate,
which adjourned until I :30
p.m. Tuesday, passed
unanimously an~ ·forwarded
w the House legislation to
make a technical change in
current law to allow the
payment of unemployment
compensation benefits to
school district employees
who administer state aid to
nonpublic schools from a
special flmd .
The Legislature set up a,
program in 1976 of state
assistance to nonpublic
schoo ls administered by
" auxiliar y service
personnel."
The concept has since been
upheld by the U.S. Supreme
Court. The Ohio legislation
enacted at that time also set
up a special unemployment
compensation fund for such
employees.

Is it possible to wlthclr1w tile Iundt contrlbuttd to

1

lox •dv•nt•gos of tho phln!

Yes and no. It Is possible to withdraw the funds In a
lump sum but the ta x treatment Is different from fund s
withdrawn on a pay-out basts . However. there is still a
definite tax advantage lin the form of a generous tax
break) as compared to other Investments. To qualify
tor thl• ta x break , .payment must ba made In one
taxable year for the entire balance of your Keogh plan
after porflclpotlon In the plan tor five taxable years.
Distribution can only ba made In cases of : I) after the
owner-employee reachlo age 59lf,; 2) death of the
owner-employee ; J) If the owner-employee becomes
disabled.

INCLUDES BREASTS,

mE.M11n

"2-5130

BOLOGNA ....................... ~~:..

I .

.

.
.-:. ..

.

--

BREAD .

$109 '
POLISH SAUSAGE.. ......~~: ...
SUPERIORS

DAIRY VALLEY
HR S. : 10:00 A.M . tilll :OD P .M.

4 LOAVES•1

Svn .-Thurs. 10 : 00

til 12 : oo P .M. Friday and Saturd•v.
Us At The Pomeroy Beud Bridge

SPLIT
BREASTS ......... )~. .

99

THIGHS ................. ~~:

89~

89¢

, ,.

.....
.::;e
HI.ORI

MILK. ~.~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~~~~ . .$1
~~~EERMILK ........................ ~..~~~~~... 79~
GRADE B

,•.

ADOLPH'S

LB.

39

LARGE EGGS .........\................... ~~.~~.....59

....... '

..

'\

-....

- ~1\

~

'-

~

4ge
H~
99
TRASH CAN LINERS ............. -~~.~~·.... ~

VALLEY BEU
FESTIVAL

$ gg

MILK

TASTERS CHOICE

ICE

FREEZE DRY COFFEE ...........~-~~:.~~~ .. 4

¥2 GALLON

•

BANANAS .............:...................... ~.~~·... ~ 100
EDON

CORNED BEEF ...... ~~l:t ...........~~..~~:.~~~ .. 99~ TOILET TISSUE .........................~..~~~. 69~
(BUDGET BUY) CARRIER MILLS

WISK

LIQUID DETERGENT.. ..........~~.~~..~~ ... 79~ MACARONI &amp; SPAGHETTI ..~.~~:-~.~~· 89
POP..~-.~~~~~.. 69'

%

FRIDAY
ONLY

DR. PEPPER

~

C·ANNED
PEPSI
&amp;CAN
PKG.

PEPSI OR 7-UP
3 QUARTS

THURSDAY
ONLY

RC COLA
OR

8- 16 oz.
BOffiES

DIET RITE
8- 16 oz.
BOffiES

Farmers
Fs
.Bank
........ ....,

suzo

.

.

1

ARMOUR

OUR NEW 8 YEAR CERnFICATE PAYS A7.75% INTEREST RATE
WITH AMINIMOM DEPOSIT OF $1,000 Wl11t THE INTEREST
BEING PAID QUARTERLY.

..._

'

SCOTtAD

YEARS EARNS J75

time deposit prior to ,
maturit y unless three
mon th s ot Interest thereon
Is fort eifed ano Interest on
the amount withdrawn Is
reduced to the panbook
rate .

.

DRUMSTICKS

BROUGHTON

Farmers Money Market Certificate is rated on the average
yield of 6 month U.S. Treasury Bills as set at weekly auction.
(The week of June 15, that average interest rate was 7.121 Pet.).
Minimum deposit of SIO,Ooo.oo for a term of 6 months with
interest paid at maturity .

Federal taw and regu lat ion

~

HOMO MILK ............................~~.~.~~.~~- 89~ TOWElS ............................... ~~~~~..~~~..

FAVORITE

prohibit the payment of a

..
--~..
..

-

BROUGHTON

EARNS ANEW HIGH INTEREST RATE ON SHORT TERM SAVINGS

The solid red, seven story tall, hot alr balloon has been
appearing at festivals and fairs lor several years. Capt.
Charles Hurst , a graduate of the University of Kentucky
and a native of Louisville, is a balloonist. He is the 19n
champion balloonist of the Kentucky Derby Festival
balloon race and placed second In the l.Jttle Kentucky
Derby Balloon Race in Lexington, Ky . He WIIB third In the
1977 Indiana State Falr balloon race. Flight.. are
conducted from sun up until three hours after sun up a"!!
from three hours prior to sunset, providing other wind and
weather coodltions are right.

89~

RED CASING

Pomttoy,O ..

Farmers Bank

~

COM 80 PACKS ..t!!1~.H.s.!.P.~~~~!!~~~ ........ ~~~. &amp;9e

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
The 1nsur1nc1 Store

Shortcake, with or without
Whipped Cream.

CHICKEN PARTS

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

Keogh p11n In one l1rge omount whllo m•lntolnlng tho

Try Our Delicious Strawberry

GRADE A

MENUS!

Certificates

THE FALLS CITY BEER hot air baUoon will return

HOMECOMING SET
LETART, W. Va .
Homecoming will be held at
the Fairview Bible Church,
Route I, Letart, W. Va.
Sunday. There wiU be Sunday
school at 9:30 a.m . followed
by services at 10 :45 a.m.
Dinner will be held on the
grounds at 12 noon. Those
allending are to bring a
covered dish. There will be a
song and worship service
beginning at I :30 p.m. The
Newsmen, a gospel group
from Charleston, W.Va., will
be singing. Speaker will be
Bob Albright, Henderson, W.
Va. The public is invited.

SUMMER

"New"
Money Market

!hill year to the Big Bend Regatta on Friday and Saturday.

. ·:·:

111ft·

23.

8

The Phitathea Women of band composed of Becky
the
Middleport Church uf Glaze, Sharon Stewart, ColHugh Martin, Michael and
Christ
hosted a father-son leen Van, Meter, Belly
Mllllhew Reedsville · Mr
and Mrs.' Gene Cole~n and banquet at the church Friday McKinley , Peggy Brickles,
and Dorothy Roach.
Jane Mr . . and Mrs. Jerry evening.
Recogmzed and presented
Mrs. Van Meter had a
Cute'ma n and Jer emy
gill'
were
Clarence
McNeal,
lather
's day poem, Mrs.
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs:
the
oldest
father,
Gene
Davis,
Brickles
accompan ied by
Dave Mills Melinda and
the
younge
st.
Day
to
n
Mrs.
Glaze,
sang the Lord 's
Mi chael, Springfield.
McElroy,
the
lather
with
the
Prayer,
and
Ed Evans had
Marylu has accepted
most
children,
and
Ron
the
closing
prayer.
employment with O'Bleness
Attending were Greg
H ·tat Ath
M . d Evans, Columbus, the the one
osp1 ,
. ens.
r. an
traveling the farthest. The Stewart. Lawrence Stewart,
Mrs. Dave Molls have return· blessing preceding the d1nner Mack Stewart, L. D. fl ar·
ed to their home in Phoenix,
was given by Mack Stewart.
linger, Clarence McNeal,
'and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
For the program there Dana Swift ' Haroid Wolfe
Mills and Marylu ac- were severa l numbers by the Dari n Woll e, Ri chard
companied Lt. and Mrs. Bur- hillbilly band. Mrs, Nora Rice Pickens. Scull Evans. Jelf
ing to their hume ii1New York was the announcer with Mrs. F.v~ms. Run evans, Ed Evans,
fur~ short visit.
Beulah Roush directing the Gene Da vis, Paul Brickles,
Pete Brickles, Dayton
McElroy, George Glaze, Trey
Glaze, Clinton Glaze, Mike
HYMN SING SET
There will be a hymn sing Stewart, Cliff Stewart, J ared
at the Eden U. B. Church at 1 Stewart, Raymund Roach,
a foreign child.
p.m. Sunday featuring the and Da rin Roach .
The Lord's prayer was Freedomairs from ParkersServmg on the dinner comgiven in unison to close the burg, W. Va . Local groups mittee were Mrs. McKinley,
meeting. Mrs. Rhodes and will also be present. A potluck Mrs. Ri ce. Miss Thelma
Mrs . Parsons served dinner will be held at 12 noon Boyer, Mrs. Vwt Meter, Mrs.
refreshments to those named at the church. The public is Roach, and Miss Frances
and Mrs. Shirley Ables, Mrs. invited.
n:uush.
Alice Balser, Karen Rhodes,
and Tracy Norris.

S~

appearance, will sing following the crowning of the
regatta queen at 8:30p.m. Friday on Lynn St.

require installation of the
equipment no later than Nov .

Father-son banquet held

Program honors fathers

Final legislative approval

Tickets to the excursion
boat P, A. DeMy are still
available Emmogene
Holstein, Chamber secretary
announced today. There wiU
be two disco dances on
Friday one from 8 to 10 p.m.
and the other from 10:30 to
12:30 p.m.
On Saturday there wiU be a
ride for senior citizens from
10 until noon and rides to the
general public will be from
12 :46 to 2:4:1 p.m., 3:30 to 5:30
p.m., 6:15 to 8:15p.m.
Rides are 15 per per110n
except senior citizens and
they wiU be charged 13.
Tickets to the excursion
dance are 110ld out, however,
Mrs. Holstein is still taking
reservations In case of
cancellations.
Persons wishing to reserve
tickets are to call Mrs.
Holstein at 992-5006 ony day
this week or Kyle Allen at 9922121.
FIRE DEATH
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UP!) - Joe Ccmer, 50, died
of smoke inhalation Mooday
when fire destroyed a smaU
cotta ge at the Bethesda
Youth
Home
near
Springfield.
A »-year-&lt;&gt;ld reaident of
the home also had to be
hospitalized for smoke
inhal!'tion ,
The fire was diJCovered at 3
a.m. and while no ca~~~e h.u
been olflcially llaled, 1ulhorl·
ties noted that on electrical
storm was over the area at
that time.

H
b .·
,
MaggyS;h egmner teachers, Hawk will be in . charge of
1
U rs.d F aron "'Folmer • Mrs · re fres hments. Mrs.· Dorene
n a Oster, and Mrs. Cathy ,Jeffers,
secre~ary
~arberry; nu~sery teachers, treasurer, will assist th e
rs. Jean Wnght and Mrs. program.
Ida Mac Martin. Mrs. Dada
Those wishing to register
Hawley Will ~erve as p1amst . children may do so by calling
Mrs. Aladme Baker, Mrs. the Rev. Floyd Shook at 992Ann Mash and Mrs. Dolores S326.

.PTO meets

SENIOR ENTRY - 12.150 -.It

Inehea

Btble school announced r
3 1

.

•

1

Vacation Bible Sch I 'II
be held_ at the La 001 Cwilfl
Free Methodist ure
Ch I h
Monday throu h F _urc
June 2Bthrough June ~ 1 day,
rom
9 to 11 .30 am
"J es~s God's W
.
Gift" 18• the B'bl on:e~fu:
theme in classes ~o:eac~ aoo
ge
group. A program and
display of handicrafts will be
presented for pare t
d
friends Sunday Juln~ ~\
p.m.
• y a
The Bible School staff ineludes the Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook, co-directors;
youth teachers, Mrs. Sharon
Wright and Mrs. Becky
Tannehill; junior teachers,
Mrs. Shirl ey Friend and Mrs. ·
Patty Johnson; primary
teachers, Mrs. Don na
Gilmore and Mrs. Brenda

Coupon for Entrieo In Regatta Week~nd Frog Jump
6o00 P.M. Sorurdoy, June 24, 1978
Ohio State Cbomplombip Fro~ ]IIDlp
FROG JUMPING PRIZES
SENIOR DMSION
t:!OO.OO - I.t PRIZE
SIOO.OO- 2nd PRIZE
S50.00 - 3rd PRIZE

T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 2(), 1978

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
I

~

¢

A. M.

'

,,
::
·'
·'•

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-~ameroy, 0., Tuesday, June lD, 19'18

7-

r.-:~--·-· -· -·-··-. --..-·- ------------i

Blanks are·available
Uated below are coupons
for entries in the Regatta

weekend Frog Jump to be
held Saturday, JWJe 2t, at 6

f

p.m. Also the Ohio State
championship frog jwnp and
list of prizes.

JUNIOR DIVISION
SIOO.OO- lot PRIZE
tsO.OO - 2nd PRIZE
.25.00 .,. 3rd PRIZE

$500 TO ANYONE

FROG RACING'

Breokinjl World'• Reeord
Now 25'11"

O.omplon•hlp - 150.00
,,~

NAME OF FROG
Feet

CmLDRI!N - U•"- Ia - fl .OO

lncludn Ju11plnr 1M Raciar

PrtvioUI Jump Ouby E:ttpertence (U.t below)

THE WRA.IN CAithoard Racing Club will stage the 1978 Big Bend Regatta power boat races oo the Ohio River in Pomeroy at 12:30 p.m.
. Sunday.

At a specia l meeting of
Chester PTO the group voted
to donate $1,000 to the Chester
Elementary Gym lund.
Bo b -Davis, president.
commended th e Chester
citizens for the support given
to the passage of the recent 10
mill school operating levy.
The levy passed in three
Chesler precincts.
The PTO set Sept. 30 as the
day for the annual school
ca rn ival. Serving on the
carni val committee are
Karen Werry, Becky Mankin,
and Jean Norton.
In other business the y
voted to serve a dinner lor the
Meigs Cou nty Retired Senior
Citizens In October.
The next regular meeting
will be Sept. 18 al 7:30p.m.

Good travel

Bnlry No. ----~·············w•-·······

For Adna&lt;td Eolry Relllftl hlry 1llmk To
Ohio Slalo ChapiOMltll Frot' Joap
BW Yo..,, Bot lUI
Po•eroy, Ohio 41719
Telcphoae 614-tt2·M81

Po•ltion in aund final ----- ------------ -- ---

ENTERED BY ----------------- - ------ ---- -

ADDRESS

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

Fill In 1bt addreee label below &amp;o ban r oar ,...,
Fill in the adrireu lAbel below to have JOW' froa
jump dist.&amp;nce mailed to you (cl o DOt cltt&amp;ch label)
(PLEASE P RINT)

TOWN -- -- --------,----- --- ---- ---- ---- -Aie ----- -

ENTRY FEE PAID -------------------------

-------------------------- -----------ENTRANTS MAY ENTER
ANYTIME DURING FlOG JUIIP

Gr&amp;nd Croak11r ---- -- Charle1 "fi'roi'" W&amp;)llllld
Grand Croaker in chure of Vice ____ Bill Yo\Ulf
Box 603, Pomeroy, Ohio

Phon• 992-6681

The boat doctor
By MARIAN E. McQUIDDY
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI )
- Leroy Amble says he's the
new best friend of Iowa 's boat
owners, although he doesn 't
even own a boat.
"That doesn 't matter," he
said. " I have been in the
boating business for 2() years
and know a lot about the
industry and we settled in
centrallowa from Milwaukee
to try to provide a service and
help the boaters and not play
in the water. So if need be, I
can find a boat."
It also doesn't matter to
Amble that there are no large
bodies of water in central
Iowa and the nearest ocean in

many thousands of miles couldn't afford to move any
away.
further east or west - so this
He said there is plenty of was ideal. Iowans seemed to
water in Iowa - someplace be the best to accept the new
- and Iowans aren't afraid to service," he said.
go to lind it.
Amble said he plans to do
"That's no problem either. most of his work on the
We 've got some Anny Corps telephone and his new linn
of Engineer lakes and little will be set up to offer advice
bodies of water and people for
boaters
and
In
are boat-happy in this part of . emergencies to offer on-thethe country even if they are in water service.
the middle of the nation and
"Service and advice are
ideally quite high and dry," where it's at," he said.
he said.
Amble said boat owners
Amble said Des Moines was generaly are just looking for
a perfect location for his new a little advice on their boat
business.
because they like to do their
"I didn't like the Great own work - when they know
Lakes area physically and we what to do.

Bolivar has strawberries
Ualled Prm lllleraallonal
There'll be strawberries in
Bolivar In Tuscarawas
County and cherries in
Bellevue, plus plenty of food
and enterta irunent at other
festivaL• and events in Ohio
this wet:...
The fifth annual Volivar
Strawberry- Festival pays
tribute to the community's
largest
industry,
a
strawberry farm. The
festival begins Friday with a
Queen's Ball where the queen
must be over the age of 66.
This year's royalty is Helen
·
Lash, 82.
Festival • goers can taste
the delicacies made with
strawberries, and participate
in a strawberry - eating
contest. Festivities wind up
with a fiddler 's contest , a
parade and round and square
dancing Sunday afternoon.
Bellevue's cherry festival
Is also live years old,
featuring not only food , but a
five-state original art and
craft show, horse pull and
garden trador event Friday
through Sunday.
Henry Macini will be the
guest condudor for Friday
ni~hl ' s presentation, while

Mitch Miller, the bearded
sing-along director. perfonns
Sunday. Tuesday lind Friday
performances are at 8:30
p.m. while Sunday performances are at 7:30p.m.
Blossom maintains a dining
room and a snack bar as well
as space for picnics.
Two House and Garden
tours are this weekend' s
agenda. Hudson has a House
and Garden Pilg rimage
Wednesday through Friday
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. with
tickets available on the
village green.
The annual Haus Und
Garten Tour in German
Village of Columbus will be
Sunday afternoon . Ten
private homes open their
doors to the public. There is a
small admission charge.
The frog is king at Pomeroy
this weekend for the Big Bend
Regatta Friday thro ugh
Sunday.
This ' festival
features the International
Frog Jumping Contests ,
besides parades, power boat
races and carnivals.
Cincinnati's Riverfront
Stadium is tranafonned from
a baseball diamond to the
setting lor a Jazz Festival

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

OPEN:
· MOn .• Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30til5 :00
Thursday Ti I 12 Noon
Friday Until5 P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason , W. Va.

Friday and Saturday. This is
billed as the largest .Soul
Musical Festival in the
Midwest and promoters
advise advance ticket pur·
chases.

plans advised
Automobile travel is the
great
American
trip.
Whether it's a good or a bad
one depends on how well you
plan. II you're taking your
car on vacation, be sure to
have it services thoroughly
before you leave.
Check your driver license,
ownership papers and Insurance. Be aware of in·
su rance requirements in
other countries you want to
visit. Canada doesn't demand
any specia l auto insurance,
but Mexico has coverage
rules if you'll be there more
than '13 hours.
Automobile clubs are a
great source of lnfonnation ,
maps and alternate routes.
Oil companies offer excellent
guides, broken down into
geographical regions, on
where to stay, where to eat,
what to see. Check your local
bookstore or service station.
For extreme temperatures
and terrain , mak e sure your
car iS properly tuned and
equipped. Be sure your jack
is in working order, and testload your luggage in trunk or
top rack before you go.

Ford, North
head golfing evenl
BLOOMFIELD HILLS ,
Mich. (UP! i - Former
President Gerald R. Ford an&lt;t·
U.S. Open champ Andy North
head a fie ld of amateurs and
pros who will compete today
in the 6th annual J .P.
McCarthy-Police Athletic
League Invitational Golf
tournament at the Wabeek
Country Club.
The tournament was
expected to raise an
estimated $100,000 for PAL,
which provides sports
programs for disadvantaged
youths in the Detroit area .

Boat tickets
still available

Pygmies are noted as having the highest human basal
metabolic rate in the world.

THE RIO GRANDE College Chorale under the
direction of Merlyn Ross will be appearing at the Big Bend
Regatta . The vocal group, pictured at a recent Pomeroy

Buffet hosted by Mtlls'

HOST COOKOUT
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Young
and Mindy , Rt. 1, Middleport,
entertained Saturday ·evening
with a cookout for Fred and
Elizabet h Hibbs, former
Middleport residents, who
are vacationing fr om
Florida. Attending were
Susan and Larry Cleland and
Mary and Greg Hib bs,
grandchildren of Mr. and
Mrs. Hibbs . Mary and Greg
will return to Tampa with
their grand parent s lor a
vacation.
REUNION SET
The descendants of Albert
and Eliza Hill will hold a
reunion Sunday, June 2S at
Port land Park. All relatives
and friends are invited. In
case of rain it will be held at
the Letart Falls Community
Building .

REVIVALINPROGRESS
Reviva l is being held this
week al 7:30p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ. c. E.
Shepard is the speaker and
the song le~der is Don Hitchcock from Kentucky Chrislian College. Dun Kennedy is
pastor of the church. The
public is invited. Services willcontinue through Sunday
evening.
IN THE HOSPITAL
Franklin (Giny ) Ginther,
formerly of Middleport, is a
surgical patient atlhe Riverside Hospital in Colu us.
Cards may be sent to him at
Room 4014. He underwent
surgery there t.his morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Childs were
in Columbus to visit him last
Wednesday .
HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Snyder of Cleveland were
surprise weekend visitors of

MAKES LIST
RUTLAND
Robin
Dewhurst, a student at Rio her mother ! Mrs. Bernice
Grande College, has been Grucser of Middleport.
named to the dean 's list
having maintained a lour
point average. Robin, a 1977
graduate of Meigs High
Satu rn's rings cannot be
School, is the daughter of Mr. seen except through a
and Mrs. Harold Dewhurst, . telescope of at least 3-inch
Rutland.
aperture.

A buffet dinQer was held
recently by Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Mills, Pomeroy, in
honor of Mary_
Iu M'lls
1 , wI10
graduated with lop honors
from , the Holzer School of
Nursmg, Mr. and Mrs. Dave
,Mills, the fonner Sandra Kay
Hensley, recently married in
. Phoenix, Arizona, and Lt. and

M,rs. Michael (Robyn) Bur·
mg. Syracuse, N. Y.,
celebrating their fourth wed·
·" •anmversary.
· ·
•
·
wng
Friends and . relatives attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Fischer, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Ebersbach, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert McClure and
Wesley, Pomeroy; Mrs. Nora
Mills Mr. and Mrs . Don
. .'
..
.
.
Molls, Cynthia Mills and
Nicky, Middleport; Mr. and
•
Mrs. Carl Schwarz and
granddaughter, Heather,
Mrs. Steve Morns, Jeff Riley,
Mrs. Erruna Adams hosted Mason, W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
a meeting of the Ruth Mis- ~~~~YBu~:~~: ~~lp!~~ ~~~sionary Circle of the !!&lt;~cine
First Baptist Church at her
home Thursday night.
Mrs. Marg Grimm led in
the opening prayer and Mrs.
Helen Slack had the program.
A program in tribute to
Members sang "Let the fathers was presented at the
Lower Lights Be Burning" recent meeting of the United
and there was a responsive Methodist Women of the Aj}reading, "Reasonable Ser- pleGrove Church.
vice." Readings included
Mrs. Lucille Rhodes was
"How to Work in a Women's
program
leader with Mrs .
Society" by Mrs. Slack,
Jan
Norris
at the piano.
"Christ as a Missionary" by
Members sang "Faith of Our.
OUie May Cozart, "We Must Fathers" with Mrs. Dolly
Never Give Up " by Naomi
Wolfe giving prayer and Mrs.
Stobart ; " What Price Eileen Buck reading the
Disciples hip " by Vera
Beegle, " The Best of scripture. Readings included
"Bread of l.Jfe " by Mrs. DolAmerica " by Doris Hensler, ly Wolfe; "Happy Father's
"The Missionary Book " by Day" by Bess Parsons;
Nondus Hendricks, "G lue "Bread of Life" by Mrs. Julia
Together" by Barbara Norris, " My Father's Hand"
Gheen, "The Message of the by Mrs .. Donna Hill who also
Empty Pew" by Marg had questions un men of the
Grinun, "Taking All to God in Bible.
Prayer" by Theresa Van
Mrs. Hill presided at the
Meter, and "Sacrifica l Giv- meeting with officers' reports
ing" by Martha Lou Beegle.
being given. A gift will be
Sentence prayers by the 13 sen t to the Rev. and Mrs.
members attending conclud- David Harris. Two birthdavs
ed the program.
were celebrated and a dun-a·
Mrs. Adams served sand- tiun was made to the
wiches, cake and ice cream American Legion Auxiliary
during the social hour.
poppy lund and for support uf

Mrs. Adams

hOStS meeting

By DICK KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate gave final
legislative approval Monday
night to a bill extending the
deadline three mooths lor the
installation of automatic
smoke detectors in high rise
apartment buildings and
condominiums.
The bill, which was sent to
Gov. James A. Rhodes on a
2:Hl Senate vote, amends a
bill passed by the Legislature
earlier this sessioo .
The earlier bill required the
Board of Building Standards
to adopt rules and regulations
by May 27 coocerning the
mandatory installation of the
nre safety devices, which had
to be in place no later than
July I.
The board did adopt the
standards May '!1, but Sen.
Ronald Nabakowski, Dl..orain, noted that that left
but 34days to comply with the
rules - a near impossibility
lor colleges and universities
which had to put out for bids a
contract for large numbers of
the devices for use in student
dorms.
The bill sent to Rhodes will

In other action, the Senate,
which adjourned until I :30
p.m. Tuesday, passed
unanimously an~ ·forwarded
w the House legislation to
make a technical change in
current law to allow the
payment of unemployment
compensation benefits to
school district employees
who administer state aid to
nonpublic schools from a
special flmd .
The Legislature set up a,
program in 1976 of state
assistance to nonpublic
schoo ls administered by
" auxiliar y service
personnel."
The concept has since been
upheld by the U.S. Supreme
Court. The Ohio legislation
enacted at that time also set
up a special unemployment
compensation fund for such
employees.

Is it possible to wlthclr1w tile Iundt contrlbuttd to

1

lox •dv•nt•gos of tho phln!

Yes and no. It Is possible to withdraw the funds In a
lump sum but the ta x treatment Is different from fund s
withdrawn on a pay-out basts . However. there is still a
definite tax advantage lin the form of a generous tax
break) as compared to other Investments. To qualify
tor thl• ta x break , .payment must ba made In one
taxable year for the entire balance of your Keogh plan
after porflclpotlon In the plan tor five taxable years.
Distribution can only ba made In cases of : I) after the
owner-employee reachlo age 59lf,; 2) death of the
owner-employee ; J) If the owner-employee becomes
disabled.

INCLUDES BREASTS,

mE.M11n

"2-5130

BOLOGNA ....................... ~~:..

I .

.

.
.-:. ..

.

--

BREAD .

$109 '
POLISH SAUSAGE.. ......~~: ...
SUPERIORS

DAIRY VALLEY
HR S. : 10:00 A.M . tilll :OD P .M.

4 LOAVES•1

Svn .-Thurs. 10 : 00

til 12 : oo P .M. Friday and Saturd•v.
Us At The Pomeroy Beud Bridge

SPLIT
BREASTS ......... )~. .

99

THIGHS ................. ~~:

89~

89¢

, ,.

.....
.::;e
HI.ORI

MILK. ~.~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~~~~ . .$1
~~~EERMILK ........................ ~..~~~~~... 79~
GRADE B

,•.

ADOLPH'S

LB.

39

LARGE EGGS .........\................... ~~.~~.....59

....... '

..

'\

-....

- ~1\

~

'-

~

4ge
H~
99
TRASH CAN LINERS ............. -~~.~~·.... ~

VALLEY BEU
FESTIVAL

$ gg

MILK

TASTERS CHOICE

ICE

FREEZE DRY COFFEE ...........~-~~:.~~~ .. 4

¥2 GALLON

•

BANANAS .............:...................... ~.~~·... ~ 100
EDON

CORNED BEEF ...... ~~l:t ...........~~..~~:.~~~ .. 99~ TOILET TISSUE .........................~..~~~. 69~
(BUDGET BUY) CARRIER MILLS

WISK

LIQUID DETERGENT.. ..........~~.~~..~~ ... 79~ MACARONI &amp; SPAGHETTI ..~.~~:-~.~~· 89
POP..~-.~~~~~.. 69'

%

FRIDAY
ONLY

DR. PEPPER

~

C·ANNED
PEPSI
&amp;CAN
PKG.

PEPSI OR 7-UP
3 QUARTS

THURSDAY
ONLY

RC COLA
OR

8- 16 oz.
BOffiES

DIET RITE
8- 16 oz.
BOffiES

Farmers
Fs
.Bank
........ ....,

suzo

.

.

1

ARMOUR

OUR NEW 8 YEAR CERnFICATE PAYS A7.75% INTEREST RATE
WITH AMINIMOM DEPOSIT OF $1,000 Wl11t THE INTEREST
BEING PAID QUARTERLY.

..._

'

SCOTtAD

YEARS EARNS J75

time deposit prior to ,
maturit y unless three
mon th s ot Interest thereon
Is fort eifed ano Interest on
the amount withdrawn Is
reduced to the panbook
rate .

.

DRUMSTICKS

BROUGHTON

Farmers Money Market Certificate is rated on the average
yield of 6 month U.S. Treasury Bills as set at weekly auction.
(The week of June 15, that average interest rate was 7.121 Pet.).
Minimum deposit of SIO,Ooo.oo for a term of 6 months with
interest paid at maturity .

Federal taw and regu lat ion

~

HOMO MILK ............................~~.~.~~.~~- 89~ TOWElS ............................... ~~~~~..~~~..

FAVORITE

prohibit the payment of a

..
--~..
..

-

BROUGHTON

EARNS ANEW HIGH INTEREST RATE ON SHORT TERM SAVINGS

The solid red, seven story tall, hot alr balloon has been
appearing at festivals and fairs lor several years. Capt.
Charles Hurst , a graduate of the University of Kentucky
and a native of Louisville, is a balloonist. He is the 19n
champion balloonist of the Kentucky Derby Festival
balloon race and placed second In the l.Jttle Kentucky
Derby Balloon Race in Lexington, Ky . He WIIB third In the
1977 Indiana State Falr balloon race. Flight.. are
conducted from sun up until three hours after sun up a"!!
from three hours prior to sunset, providing other wind and
weather coodltions are right.

89~

RED CASING

Pomttoy,O ..

Farmers Bank

~

COM 80 PACKS ..t!!1~.H.s.!.P.~~~~!!~~~ ........ ~~~. &amp;9e

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
The 1nsur1nc1 Store

Shortcake, with or without
Whipped Cream.

CHICKEN PARTS

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

Keogh p11n In one l1rge omount whllo m•lntolnlng tho

Try Our Delicious Strawberry

GRADE A

MENUS!

Certificates

THE FALLS CITY BEER hot air baUoon will return

HOMECOMING SET
LETART, W. Va .
Homecoming will be held at
the Fairview Bible Church,
Route I, Letart, W. Va.
Sunday. There wiU be Sunday
school at 9:30 a.m . followed
by services at 10 :45 a.m.
Dinner will be held on the
grounds at 12 noon. Those
allending are to bring a
covered dish. There will be a
song and worship service
beginning at I :30 p.m. The
Newsmen, a gospel group
from Charleston, W.Va., will
be singing. Speaker will be
Bob Albright, Henderson, W.
Va. The public is invited.

SUMMER

"New"
Money Market

!hill year to the Big Bend Regatta on Friday and Saturday.

. ·:·:

111ft·

23.

8

The Phitathea Women of band composed of Becky
the
Middleport Church uf Glaze, Sharon Stewart, ColHugh Martin, Michael and
Christ
hosted a father-son leen Van, Meter, Belly
Mllllhew Reedsville · Mr
and Mrs.' Gene Cole~n and banquet at the church Friday McKinley , Peggy Brickles,
and Dorothy Roach.
Jane Mr . . and Mrs. Jerry evening.
Recogmzed and presented
Mrs. Van Meter had a
Cute'ma n and Jer emy
gill'
were
Clarence
McNeal,
lather
's day poem, Mrs.
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs:
the
oldest
father,
Gene
Davis,
Brickles
accompan ied by
Dave Mills Melinda and
the
younge
st.
Day
to
n
Mrs.
Glaze,
sang the Lord 's
Mi chael, Springfield.
McElroy,
the
lather
with
the
Prayer,
and
Ed Evans had
Marylu has accepted
most
children,
and
Ron
the
closing
prayer.
employment with O'Bleness
Attending were Greg
H ·tat Ath
M . d Evans, Columbus, the the one
osp1 ,
. ens.
r. an
traveling the farthest. The Stewart. Lawrence Stewart,
Mrs. Dave Molls have return· blessing preceding the d1nner Mack Stewart, L. D. fl ar·
ed to their home in Phoenix,
was given by Mack Stewart.
linger, Clarence McNeal,
'and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
For the program there Dana Swift ' Haroid Wolfe
Mills and Marylu ac- were severa l numbers by the Dari n Woll e, Ri chard
companied Lt. and Mrs. Bur- hillbilly band. Mrs, Nora Rice Pickens. Scull Evans. Jelf
ing to their hume ii1New York was the announcer with Mrs. F.v~ms. Run evans, Ed Evans,
fur~ short visit.
Beulah Roush directing the Gene Da vis, Paul Brickles,
Pete Brickles, Dayton
McElroy, George Glaze, Trey
Glaze, Clinton Glaze, Mike
HYMN SING SET
There will be a hymn sing Stewart, Cliff Stewart, J ared
at the Eden U. B. Church at 1 Stewart, Raymund Roach,
a foreign child.
p.m. Sunday featuring the and Da rin Roach .
The Lord's prayer was Freedomairs from ParkersServmg on the dinner comgiven in unison to close the burg, W. Va . Local groups mittee were Mrs. McKinley,
meeting. Mrs. Rhodes and will also be present. A potluck Mrs. Ri ce. Miss Thelma
Mrs . Parsons served dinner will be held at 12 noon Boyer, Mrs. Vwt Meter, Mrs.
refreshments to those named at the church. The public is Roach, and Miss Frances
and Mrs. Shirley Ables, Mrs. invited.
n:uush.
Alice Balser, Karen Rhodes,
and Tracy Norris.

S~

appearance, will sing following the crowning of the
regatta queen at 8:30p.m. Friday on Lynn St.

require installation of the
equipment no later than Nov .

Father-son banquet held

Program honors fathers

Final legislative approval

Tickets to the excursion
boat P, A. DeMy are still
available Emmogene
Holstein, Chamber secretary
announced today. There wiU
be two disco dances on
Friday one from 8 to 10 p.m.
and the other from 10:30 to
12:30 p.m.
On Saturday there wiU be a
ride for senior citizens from
10 until noon and rides to the
general public will be from
12 :46 to 2:4:1 p.m., 3:30 to 5:30
p.m., 6:15 to 8:15p.m.
Rides are 15 per per110n
except senior citizens and
they wiU be charged 13.
Tickets to the excursion
dance are 110ld out, however,
Mrs. Holstein is still taking
reservations In case of
cancellations.
Persons wishing to reserve
tickets are to call Mrs.
Holstein at 992-5006 ony day
this week or Kyle Allen at 9922121.
FIRE DEATH
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio
(UP!) - Joe Ccmer, 50, died
of smoke inhalation Mooday
when fire destroyed a smaU
cotta ge at the Bethesda
Youth
Home
near
Springfield.
A »-year-&lt;&gt;ld reaident of
the home also had to be
hospitalized for smoke
inhal!'tion ,
The fire was diJCovered at 3
a.m. and while no ca~~~e h.u
been olflcially llaled, 1ulhorl·
ties noted that on electrical
storm was over the area at
that time.

H
b .·
,
MaggyS;h egmner teachers, Hawk will be in . charge of
1
U rs.d F aron "'Folmer • Mrs · re fres hments. Mrs.· Dorene
n a Oster, and Mrs. Cathy ,Jeffers,
secre~ary
~arberry; nu~sery teachers, treasurer, will assist th e
rs. Jean Wnght and Mrs. program.
Ida Mac Martin. Mrs. Dada
Those wishing to register
Hawley Will ~erve as p1amst . children may do so by calling
Mrs. Aladme Baker, Mrs. the Rev. Floyd Shook at 992Ann Mash and Mrs. Dolores S326.

.PTO meets

SENIOR ENTRY - 12.150 -.It

Inehea

Btble school announced r
3 1

.

•

1

Vacation Bible Sch I 'II
be held_ at the La 001 Cwilfl
Free Methodist ure
Ch I h
Monday throu h F _urc
June 2Bthrough June ~ 1 day,
rom
9 to 11 .30 am
"J es~s God's W
.
Gift" 18• the B'bl on:e~fu:
theme in classes ~o:eac~ aoo
ge
group. A program and
display of handicrafts will be
presented for pare t
d
friends Sunday Juln~ ~\
p.m.
• y a
The Bible School staff ineludes the Rev. and Mrs.
Floyd Shook, co-directors;
youth teachers, Mrs. Sharon
Wright and Mrs. Becky
Tannehill; junior teachers,
Mrs. Shirl ey Friend and Mrs. ·
Patty Johnson; primary
teachers, Mrs. Don na
Gilmore and Mrs. Brenda

Coupon for Entrieo In Regatta Week~nd Frog Jump
6o00 P.M. Sorurdoy, June 24, 1978
Ohio State Cbomplombip Fro~ ]IIDlp
FROG JUMPING PRIZES
SENIOR DMSION
t:!OO.OO - I.t PRIZE
SIOO.OO- 2nd PRIZE
S50.00 - 3rd PRIZE

T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 2(), 1978

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC
I

~

¢

A. M.

'

,,
::
·'
·'•

�.'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesdav, June ~.1978

Kingsbury
'News Notes

lsiiO:y&amp;iaPt. Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
Bernice Bede Osol

-

The Carleton Sunda y
School had an attenda nce of
62 on June II Followrng
Sunday School the superintendent.
Ralph
Carl.
presented Bibles to two
graduates of Meigs High
School , Debbie Carl and
Karen DeMoss
Recent VISitors of Mr. and
Mrs V1rgil Kmg were Mr
and Mrs. Russell Hoffman of
Anderson , lnd
Mr and Mrs . Norman
Wood v1s1ted w1th Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Br1ckles and baby
at Ga1tersburg . Maryland .
Recent VISitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Br1ckles were Mr
and Mrs. Donald Br1ckles,
Mr and Mrs Floyd Br1ckles
of Darwm and Mrs. Faye

Pratt
Mrs. Ola St. Clair and Mrs.
Homer Bailey were at Portsmouth to vistt their Sister,
Mrs Bessie Williams, who
has been 1ll
Recent VISitors of Mrs.
Hazel Arnold were Mr. and
Mrs Patnck Williams and
children of McArth ur and Mr .
and Mrs Dale Mora of
Bambridge, Oh10 .
Mr
and Mrs . John
Dean, Mr and Mrs John
Walter Dean and Jeremy and James, Mr and
Mr s . Ke nneth Marktns,
Racine, Mr and Mrs Robert
Reed . David. Rodney , Kevm,
Bruce, Edith and Bruce. Jr ,
all of Pataskala, Mr and
Mr s
Walter
Terrell.
Pataskala, spent the weekend
at the campsite of Mr and
Mrs D1ck Harm at Great
Bend.
Spendmg a da) recently
With Mrs. Janeth Beal was
Mrs Russell Henderson of
Columbus.
Recent VISitors of Mr and
Mrs. John Walter Dean ,
Jeremy and James, were Mr
and Mrs. Hobart Smalley of
Muskogee , Okla
Several from here attended
graduation at Me1gs High
Schoo l Tuesday night.
Mrs. Brenda Roush had a
tupperware party at her
home recently Demonstrator
was Mrs. Ellen Thoma .
Spendmg some lime w1th
Mr . and Mrs . Norman Wood
were Mrs. Kenneth Wood and
daughter Remaming for a
longer visit were the grandchildren
Recent visitors of Mr and
Mrs Homer Ba1Jey werP Mr
1nd Mrs Sam Partl ow.
PomeroY, Mr and Mrs J ohn
Roberts" of Chillicothe, Mr
and Mrs. K1rk Chevalier and
J ess1ca of Chester
Mr . and Mrs Wayne Beal
had as Sunday Vlsnors Mr
and Mrs . Kirk Chevalm and
Jess1ca of Chester, Mr and
Mrs. Roge r Young , Wesley
and Yvete .
The Km gsbur y M1ss10nary
Qub met at the home of its
leader , Mrs Mar y Lo u
Houdashelt. The enure group
enJoyed lunch aft er ~h1 ch the
devotional meetmg was held
whtch opened with prayer by
Ehl.abeth Murray Scnpture
was taken from Hebrews
chapter 12 w1th each member
taking pa rt Those attendmg
were Mrs Neva Kmg , Mrs

Yvonne Young , Mrs 'Virg1ma
Dean , Mrs Janeth Beal, Mrs
Ruby
Burnside ,
Mrs
Elizabeth Murray , Mrs .
Anita Dean. Mrs. Brenda
Co uga r . Mrs . Mary Lou
Houda she lt , Jeremy and
Ja mes Dean. Yvete Young
and Karen The M1ss1onary
t1ub sponsors the Rev . and
Mrs John Je sburg who serve
in France and other coun-

tri es

Is that you , Melamc '
Melame 111llY have · Gone
W1th the Wmd .'' 111 that
class1c f1lm of the Old South,
but Olivia · de Havilland IS
bit ck for a VISit. She's Signed
tu play another member of
the Southern anstoc racy as
Henry Fonda' s w1f e 111
" K.uuts· The Next Genertt-

ti uns ''

PUBLIC NOT IC E
E
Bost c w hose
last ll.nown pl ace ol r es n:lence
is Apt No J R v r r s1de Apt s,
R ona ld

M 1dd lepor1
Oh1o J 5760
1S
hereby not f 1ect ltl&lt;tl on the
19t h day o t May 19 7e Mary
Cather 1ne
Bosttc , be1ng

pta ,nlttt t il ed her co mpta,nt
aga tnSI h 1m as defendant 1n

the Courl ot Co mmo n Plea s.

M eigs Countv . Qh ,o. Case No
16, 826, praymg tor d ivo r ce

fr om sa 10 Ronald E Bost ic or1
th e grounds ot gro\s neglect
ot duty and e~~:treme cruelt y,
Pld1nt 1ff also prays for other
prop er rel 1e f ~a1d cause wtll
be for near 1ng on or afl er the
25th day of Jul y, 1978
Mary Ca ther 1ne Bost1c
Pla 1n t1ff
O' Br1en &amp; 0 Br ien
F'atr ic k. H O' Br ien
' Attor n~y\ tor Pta lnt tfl
' l51 23,

jO

161 6, 13 , 20, 27 , 61&lt;

f - The DailY. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'ueSday, June 20, 1978

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

WANT AD
CHARGES
June 11 , 1978
rt115 com1ng yea r an 1nterestmg
new acquaintance Will for m a
strong at ta chment lor you She
wtl l tntroduce you to fresh
1nterests and a happtet way of
hie

1d.ll.y
Zl.l&lt;ty~

Jl.lttys
6W.ys

15 Words or UmJer
Cl&amp;.'ih
100
II&lt;!

1.80
300

aa.rgt
I !.I
190

2.!.1
3 71

E.it(h word uv f!" the nunimwn l:t
wortb: L'i ~ c-entJJ ptr "oH per W.y
~db rwmu1..: oUler U11.n ('Ufl»e\.'\.lll\'t
days w11l l:w. dwrgt!d .11.1 tht' I d11y

CAN CER (June 11-Ju ly 22) In rate
partnNShtp arrangements to·
day you re hkety to l1nd your111 menwr.). Qml of Thanks wnd
setl tn the g1ver rol e w1th your Otutuary 6 cents per word, S3 00
assoc1a tes as the taker s Stn\'e mulUnWn Cash m HdVllnl'e
lor a fa1r er balance F1nd ou t to
Mobile Home ~lc; !ukl Y1u'd ~lt,!j
Y.h om you re roman t1catly
ltt'l'q&gt;l~ only" w1lh l'll!th Wllh
su1ted by send1ng lor your copy art'
IJI"der z:; t-ent d1.11 r~e for lllb carry
ol As!l o-Graph Letter Mad 50 , 111g Box NumiJer l11 C!m t1f Tl~ Sencents tar ea ch and a long self· llr"'l
addressed stampe d envelope
Tilt! Publi:sher r~rve~ Lhe nght
to ASiro-Graph P 0 Bo&lt; 489 ,
tu alit or re.)l!'l111n)' ud.ol deemed obRod1 0 Clly Station NY 10019
Tht: Pullll:iht:r w11l nut bt:
Be sure to specify btrlh stgn . )rtltotUtl
rtsponstiJW
LEO tJ uly 13-Aug . 12) Someone rr&lt;1 utst!ruonfur more thalll)llt' ua•urNdl be lookmg to dump theH
P!Ule 991:·2156
woes on yo ur broad shoulders
today It could be !a r more
straw s tha n a ny came l co uld
carry
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl. 12) Thrs
ma,. be one of those da ys
"' here d ma y ap pea r everyone
•S gangtng up aga1n st you
You II suspect e11en yo ur close
buddy·budd 1es
LIBRA (Se pt 13-0ct 13) Gtve
creon wnere cred tt 15 due
Monday
toda v but afo;o appra1se the
Noon un Sttturday
op pOSi tiOn reai1S I1Ca lty Don 1
concede lhem stren gths tney
Tuesdll)
aon t possess
thru F'nilil)
SCORPIO (Oct 24- Nov 11)
4p M
Ult' WI }' before publu: Hlion
Normtt ll\ '(Ou re not ver y gullible ana 11 s ddhcult to pu ll the
Sw1W.)
woot over you r eyes Toda y
•PM
however you may take what
fnd.l.ty llfWnWI.Irl
you hear ver bal tm
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov 13-Dec
211 For someone w1'10 takes
p110e 1n nts or ner 1naepend·
en ce you co uld be cast tn the Wf UNI NTENTIONALl Y om ttted
un la mil1at rol e ol :e " nu'lg too
!he nome• ol the Middleport
!'leavlly on o thers toda~
Emerg ~ ncy Squad and Veterans
CAPRI COR N (Dec. 22-Jen 19)
Memor•ol Hospilo l lrorp the
Poor JUdgrnent 10day coul d
ortgmol cord ot than ks tor
Eu lah lee Fron[ IJ We also w1sh
lead ;ou 1n to Involvemen ts
whe re the od ds a re agamst
to !honk anyone el•e who
helped •n ony woy
you S1ze s1 1uatrons up careMothtH Floro B Barley. Husband
fu lly befor e you leap tn
Mor1on G Fronc•• . chtldre n 7
AQUAR IUS (Jan 10-Feb 19)
grandchildren aunts uncles
True hum tll!y rs a no ble -v•rtue
ond COUS inS
but tooay you could numbte
~ourself unt&gt;ecommgly Let at
lea st a portron of your ego
shme through
PISCES tFe b 20-Ma rch 101 LOST WHITE k111en w1th block
spots P1ck8CI up on Eou Mo1n
There are 11mes when 11 tS
It Coli 9'12·3871
ao sotute ty ne cessar y to be
asser t1ve Today you m1ght oe LOST A block ond wh 1te
so wt!h the wrong people
Polom•no pony onswers 10 the
unaer !h e wrong Ci rcum nome of Potches Very ger'llle
stances
wPOrtng green hotter Bull Ru n
ARI ES (March Z1·Aprll 19) Be
Wolt~
Ru n oreo Con tact
carefu l today les t you enter the
997 73:J7 O&lt; 992·52()()
fra y 1ee11ng you ha"w"e s !ro ng
--force~ oen,na you Tne ranks
foll ow1ng your ba nn er may be
qu1!1? th1 n
TAURUS (April 10-May 10) WA ITRESS
No e,.peoe nc v
Tnere IS a danger toda~ that
necessary "'pply m person at
you mtght for mula te plans
81u ~ lorton , M1ddleport
-.,-based upon ex aggerated ~n l o r ­
MA
lURE RESPONSIBLE womon os
mat ton Make no mo-ve s !Ill
bobys :tler housekeeper. l1ve m
you re absolu tely certarn of the
po~1t10n
seporote house•ng
fact&amp;
and
excellent
benel 1ts No
GE MINI !May 21 -June 20)
smoktng
Must
drtve
Some one w1th ftna nc1at probColl3o.t 863-6088 offer Spm
lems may be lookmg to you to
Dati mem out today Unfor
tunatel y yo u ma y not nave
eno ugh buckets aboar d to do NO ITEM fOO large or too small
lhe 10b
Wdl buy 1 ptece or com plete
tNEWSPAP[R [NllRPJ.liSf ASSN 1
household New . used, or 01"111
ques MarTtn s Furniture , 10 N
2nd 51
M1ddlepo rt Phone
997 1&gt;370
CHI P WOOD
Poles mox
dtomeler 10 on largest end , $8
per 1011 Bundled slob, $6 per'
ton Del1vered to Oh10 Pollet
Co Rt_ 1 Pomeroy q92 ·2689...:
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e to ll owmg documents
COI
NS. CU RRENCY tokens . old ·
were rece i\led or prepared by
poc~et wot c he~ and chotns,
Tne Oh 10 Env 1ronmental
51lver ond gold We need 1%4
Protect 1on Agency dunno the
prev 1 0u~ week. The eflec11ve
and older 5tl\lfH cams 8uy sell
aate ot each l1r'lal act 1on 1S
or !rode Col i Roger Wamsley
5tat ed Anyone aggr 1e-ved or
741 -1331
adversely attected by a ftnal
cl Ct10n to ISSUe , deny , mOd ify , TIMBER POMEROY Fores t Prorevoke , or renew a perm 1t,
ducts lop pnce for stondmg
l1c ens e or vartance , or to
50w limber Coli 99'1-5qb5 or
appr ove or d1sapprove p l~ns
Kent
Honb~ 1 446·857_:0.:..._ _
and ~pec l t tc!l t lo ns , may Ide
an appeal w1th The Env1 ron
OLD FURNITURE tee bol(es bran
men ta l Bo11rd of Re-v te w
bed~ . .ron beds desks , e tc ,
Sut le 30~. 39~ E Broad St ,
compleTe households Wrrte
Co lum bus , Oh 10 43?16, wllhtn
M D Mdlar Rt 4 Pomeroy o•
th trty (]O J days of the et
fOil 99') bJ7Q
tect tve tlale , pursuan t to Oh tO
Rev 1Sed Coae Sec tion 3745 07 ,
unless sucn f1n a t a ct1on was WANT OT buy Good uJed trai ler
7&lt;2 71&lt;5
preceded by the same or
wost ant ta ll y the same
proposea a c110n All suct1
hna l aclions are so 1dentil led
Such persons mav reQuest an
LEGAL
ad 1Ud1cat lon hea rlnQ before
ADVERTISEMENT
The Oh to EPA on a proposed
FORBIDS
act ton to 155u e, denv . mod 1fy ,
Separate , sealed proposa ls
re voke , or rer'lew a permtt , for !he repl).rS to the Chester
l1c ense , or vanar'lce 1 or to E lementary school bu ll ding
ap prove or d 1sapprove plan~ Wtll be recerved at the orf• ce
and spe c if iC at io ns , With in of the cler k of the board of
lh 1rfy 130 1 d~y!l ot the educat1on ol Eastern Local
1ssuance dale ORC 3745 07 School Dlstr1ct , R.e~ctsvll le
does not prov tde for ad
Me igs CounTy , Ohio un tti
tu diC i!I IOn hear1ng requests 12 00 o'cloc k noon , EsT ,
or appea Is on orders , ver~fied June '17 , 1978 and W ill be
compl a 1n ts or enforcement publ iCl y opened and read by
co mplt an ce sch~dute letters
the clerk. the reafter at the
Wl!h tn 30 days of publication usual place of sa1a bOa rd of
1n a newspaper In the affected eaucatton , tabulated and .,
county , anv person may atso
report thereof made by the
Il l !lubm ll wr ittf!n comments clerk. 10 sa 1d ooaro ar t1S ne~~:t
re 1at 1ng 10 act ions , proposed meet .ng
act1ons , ver lf1ed comp la ints,
Oescr lpt 1on of the 1m
or enfor cement com pl ia nce provemenT
toc .tted
at
sc hedule tellers , (2) request
Chester . Oh 10. 1 e repairs to
a public meeting reoardlno
11'1e Ch ester Elementary
proposed a ct1ons , and or (3) SChOOl bu 1la 1ng
reaues t not1ce of further
Co p1es ot the spec llt cations ,
acttons or proceedings All
tnslrucl tOn&amp; to 01aders , and
reQues ts tor adluctica t ion oroposa l forms mt~y be ob
t'lea r1ngs
ar'!d
publ ic ta~ned at the off ic e of th e
mee tmgs , and oftler com
c lerk of the boa rd ot
mun lc at 1ons
conce rn lr'IQ
educat1on of Eastern Locel
public meet ings , ad jud lc al10n
Sch oo l 01stnct , Reeasville,
ne ar ,r'lgs , veri t1ed com
Ohi O
pla 1nts . and regulat 1ons ,
A ce rllfted chtcto. payable
snould be ttddressea to The to the cl erk treasu rer of !he
Leg a l Records Sect10n , Ohio above board of educat ion or a
EPA , P
0
Bo)( 1049, sat1 sta c tory
bi d
bond
Colu mbus , OhiO 43/16, (614) executed by !he b l dd~r and a
466 6017 Unless ot1'1erw 1!:1e su rely compa ny , in a n
stared In particula r not tces . am ount equal to five percent
a ll otner commur'l tcat•ons of the bid shalt be subm 1tled
.n clu ct ,ng comments on w1th each b 1d
proposed act 1ons , should be
Sald board or educat ion
addressed either to TM Arr
reserves the r ight to wa 1vl!
Per m!ls and Compt1ance ,ntormal1tles . to accept or
MOO IIO rtnO
O IVtSt On or
re lect any and a ll , or parts ot
Per mtl l!lnd Approval Sec !ton. any and all bids
wh tchev er Is appropr iate , ttl
The successf ul bidder Will
Tne Oh iO EPA , P 0 80 )(
be reQuired 10 turn 1sh a
1049 , Colum bus , Oh 10 43116
sa t rs la ctor y pertormer'lce
Approval ot plans a nd
bond tor one hundred percent
spec lftcat ions
of the contract price
Ohio POwer Company
NO bidS ma y be withdrawn
~actne Townsh ip, Oh iO,
tor at letts! th irty (3 01 davs
effectiv~ date 06 1.4 ?8 .
after the scheduled closing
This f inal a cti on not
t imt: lor receipt ot bids .
prec~aed by pro posed ectJon
Board of Education of
and 15 I!IPpealabl~ to EBR: ,
Eastern Local School Dis tr ict
temporarlly
sanitary
By Doug Bisse ll
wastewate r
tre atm ent
Ftresldenl
tac fllll es for the Racine
Hyoroelectr ic Pro ject ,
Eloise Boston
Clerk
(6 ) 20 , l!c
(5) 30 (6) 6, 13, 20, .ti C

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

-----

'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

TRACY

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer , MASSEY FERGUSON Hoy cond1·
wan! to buy or sell somethtng,
hone r $500 Very good cond•·
ae looking for work
or
tlon Reeds_:: : 1lle 614 378 -6~1whatever . . you tl get results 1978 YZ 12S Yomoho Coli
IQUer w1th o Senttnel Want Ad
991 -5013 Ex:cellent cond•t•on
Colt~ - 2156
tncu bofor~ used
YARD SALE ond Bokie Sole Frr a nd SEAR'SElECTRiC
tw 1ce. Lorge buffet, Rolloway
Sat at Fronk Imboden's across
bed , l1ke new CW'J 3079
from Racrne Grode School,
-- - 1973
YAMAHA 250 MX 38 mm
YARD SALE. Monlyn Powells .
rocmg
corburator
Good runn
Vme Street, Roclne. Thu rs
1ng
cond1tton
992
7409 Also .
Children's ond adult dothmg
~qt1 c woshe;'"~--choir. m1sc Ram conce l$

-

YARO SALE Wed. Thurs and Frr
9-5 On Raetne Bashor'! Road
Paul Er"m res1dence Ntce
items ,
Let Pomeroy Landmark
THREE FAMILY Yard Sale Thurs
ond Fn , 22nd and 23rd From soften &amp; ·condition your
9 4 108 Pearl St. M1ddlepor1
1water with Co-op . water
sof1ener, Model UC-SVI ,
Now Only

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•289.95

Business Services

~
MODERN SUPPLY

S~PTIC

TANK
CLEANING

R.e s i d e n t Ia I
ond
commercial . Coli for
esllmate, 24 hour service.
Anyd1y, onyllme.
Phone 985-310.
'
Jack Ginter 985·3106

Small engine &amp; mower
service, Mossey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Tlllero. Lown Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service.

ti:'~

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph , 992-2164

BoxJ

Chester, Ohio
10-3o., .

5-4-1 mo

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

'

I
C. II AHer 5:00 or
Anytime Soturdoy
t92-7119or m :50!1
&lt;-27-Hc

Let us test vour water Free
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy , sell
!rode or troin New ond used
saddles . Ruth Reeves . Albany
(61&lt;) 698 3290.
RISING STAR Kennel, Boord1ng
Indoor and outdoor runs
Groommg all breeds (leon
son1tory focd1 t1es Cheshire
Phone (6U )367 0292
1'1 DOBERMAN PUPS AIt look l1ke
Dobes $20 each Call 94q 2654

1973 MON TE CARlO Londou P I
P 8 , A C , AM 8 track stereo
Ewcellent cond1 t1on
$1 700
8&lt;3·2622.
I%8 VW BUG S&lt;OO '192 585B
1976 YEllOW TR7 AM FM tope
A ~ h:cellent gas mtleage
Be st offer over $4000
614·b75 1345 or 614 -675 2553.
1q79 GMC 4 wheel dr1 ve Toke
O\ler poymenls and older cor
992-5301
OLDSMOBilE DELMONTE 88 h
cellent work cor or wtll !rode
for odmg horse , or mo torcycle
or nd•ng town mower Phone
-------~~

Pomeroy Landmark

ROGER HYSEll

9 ..:.:!_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
tAi:il Pho~e992-2t81

-

USEO GAS COOKING STOV E GE
' garbage dr sposol
15 It
wooden boa t 40 h p mo tor
1 and !Ioder 992 3573
1976 SS0-4 800 mtles Very good
condd1on Anyl1mc ofter 5
'1'17 b350
BABY BED and mollress $25 Sofa
bed. SSO Platform ro(ker $25
Coil before 4 pm 9.49 24.49 or
949 7575
1967 GS 400. 43-4, lOlly wheels.
FM , newpatnt 1Q72 350.1 8utck
eng1ne 400 turbo tro ns $125
985 412b ol!er 6 pm
1977 MERCURY P S P B A C
No 7.7 lnternottonol baler 2000
bu eor corn 985 3537 oflc' 6
pm 9854131
1976 F 150 FORO p1 ckup Power
~1eer1 n g brakes, oulo Irons
AM·FM ~!ereo wtlh tope
player 37 000 m1les E)lcellent
cond1t1on $3750 Coli doys
~2 ~54 5 ~~ evemn_gs q49~

7&lt;7-7067

'I• mile off Rt. 7 by-peu 011
St . Rt. 1'l41oword Rutlend,

0.

.
Lef us capture •nd
preserve those precious
moments forever Wedd1ngs
Silver and
Golden Anniversary
Family Reunions
SpecJOI Occasions
Photography
IS
our
bvsineu, not a side line

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

-

Pomeroy Landmark

6 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES . Pr Plea
sont , W Va besrde Heck s
~ock W. Corsey , Mgr
1973 8roadmore 14 • b-4 1
· Phone 992-2t81
bedroom
1'il73 Do non 14 x 60 'l bedroom
1971 Vtclonon 14 w67 J bedroom,
Will CARE lor the elderly 10 our
7 borh
home Phone 992 7314
1971 co .. entry 12 I( b5 3 bedroo m
.
1969 Sta tesma n 17 11: bQ 2 WA lER WEll drtl li ng Wtlltom T
bedroom.
Grant . 742 2879
COAL LIMESTONE sand, gravel
col(lum chlonde, fer tlltzer , dog
food. and oil type!!. of solt h ·
cels1or Sol! Works Inc., E Ma in
~P omeroy . 992-3891
BES T SELECTION of the best wood
stoves 1n Southeosiern Oh•o
Jo!ul Mono, Efet l•roha ,
Tempwood and Nofhuo z,on
Heat Co , 8 Putnam Or {olf Mdl
St ) Athens 614 592·6079 or
bl&lt;-69b-1187
Any U.S. mode cor- oort,sl
BURROUGHS IE NSI -MATIC OC·
extr1
If needed. Ex,cluclesl
counting mach1ne
Phone
drive cars.
front-whttl
9912156 , The Dolly Sent1nel ,
I l l Court StreeT f'omeroy ,
Ohio
USED TRACTORS
MFI35 Otes.el · MF230 Ouuel
MF150 01esel · MF73S D1esel ·
MF16S D1esal · MF285 01esel
MF1 135 Diesel , Cob oir &amp;
heater
.._._•••• W. C.rsey, Mgr.
NEW &amp; USED IMPL EMENTS .
MF9 Boler - MFIO Boler . MF120
Phone m -3111
Boler · Matth• ws Rotary Scythe
MF880 Semi -mounted 6 bot ·
tom Plow MF520 12' Disc
MF200 'J Row Chopper . MF39 1
Row Planters · Mechan ical
Transplanter.
1S ACFIES FOR sale Complete ~e t
SHINN'S TRACT~ SAlES
up lot a lro1ler . city water near
Phone 4.58·1630
Coolville. t-6 1&lt; 61&gt;7 3933 .
Leon . W Vo .
HOUSE , In Tu ppers Pla1ns All
e leCtric, A C. 3 bedroom s, 11l
1971 DATSUN 'II ton pickup. 4
both , Basement Lorge lot
1peed. new clutch , muffler ,
992
-3585 "' '192 2196
brokes ond pomt 25 m p g
$1300. Call 9'12-7539
15 ACRES IOCA TED on Sand R;dge
Rood 985·&lt;255.
AlliS CHI\lMERS small &lt;ou nd
bo!er S1800 Purchased new HOUSE FIVE room• ond borh
1972. hcellent condition
close to down town Middleport.
Roodtvl tlo 61&lt;-378·1&gt;311
Phone q91.Jdb

----

WH EEl
ALIGNMENT

SPECIAL

Call Now For
Appointment

Pomeroy Landmark

4-30-ttc

VINYL SIDING
Sofli1, Room Additions
&amp; A-Frame Homes.
For Free Es1imates
CALL
992-6323 or 992-601 t
6-1_9-1 mo. pd .

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks . Tires
Battery.
Installation Service
Ph 992-2841

ncn~
-~#
Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

The Photo Place
! Sob

Hoeflich)
Pomeroy
ttl'l High St.
5-JI · l mo.

MOORE'S

TRA DE TWO lots tn Pomeroy W1ll
trade lor bulldozer or motor
home Call I 304 6.48 5602 Fort
Goy , WV

Aut• &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

ALUM. &amp;

.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

1977 APACHE lold down camper
u~ed fwlce $20C(l 992-2849
GROUND PlANE ontenno for C B
18 FOOT SElF CONTAIN EO llo&lt;
w11h 75 coo w w1lh lrllmgs on
croh l 1'e new Contact Ow 1ght
both e nd ~ Also Re ll' ond
Holey 108 Peor l St
M1d
S. t ame~e robb1t!&gt; lor 4 H ond lo 1t
die port
pr o, ~ c t s
Rt 33 Burl mghorn
ocroH lorm 8ur'&gt;on 5 G10Ce1y
\974 ESCAPADE 25 f1 motor
home .wrh e.-tros ~ m1te, J95J FERGUSON TRAClOR Very
Pr iCe S14 CXlJ 614 9'l"J 2438 or
good cond 1t10n 2 young sow
30&lt; 773 5707
hog5 10 bor ~! oo l5 I ~moll
cob1n cruiSfH boot 99'} 7609
HONDA I75 on ofl rood moto rcy
cle lor 50ic . E..:cellent cond1
11on Phone 949 7219
1976 FORD f-350 heovy duty B ~
3 AND 4 RM fu rn1$hed ond un
10 bed 6 It cattle rock 4
furntshed opts . Phone 992
~peed P S
P 8 All gouge!&gt;
5434
17 ,000 mtles q49.1173
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Momfy'tot.oan
large Iota Coli ~2 - 7479
SENIOR CITIZE NS Our new lOANS AVAILABLE $25 000 ro
renters antstonce you moy be
51 0 o&lt;Xi,OOO fo• onv commemol
oble to lt"e in our apartment
or bustneH purpm;e Coli
fo1 leu than $50 o monlh For
1·614 593 8400 between 9 om &amp;
more •nlormo11on contact
5pm
V1lloge Manor Apartment$
992-7787 .
CORNER lOT for !ra1ler space on
ttvedr ont
qq') 7138
992-530&lt;
TWO BEDROOM unlurn1shad opl
Coll992 2286

MASH BROTHERS

GARAGE

985-4155
Chester, Ohio 45720

1970 PI YMOUTH DUSTER
auto Whee l Horse
mower Phone 992 6011
1q77 VOLARE ROAD Ru nner 318,
black w1th Super Pock , A C ,
stereo After 5 30 or onylime
wee~•nds coll949-2829.
t97• PINTO w1th rodiol tire• ond
new shocks In good cond1hon
~2 7285 offer •.~p:..m
c.:__ __

TUESDAY, JUNE 20,1978
5: 3(}-()dd Couple 4, News 6; E leclrlc Co. 20,33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,
Making Th 1ngs Grow 33 .
6:3o--NBC News3,4,t5 ; ABC News 13; Andy Grlff&lt;th 6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33
7 ·oo--Cross-W&lt;ts 3,4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Pop Goes
1he Country 8, News 10, Gilligan' s Island 15;
French Chef 20; West V&lt;rglnla, We Love You 33.
7 .3o--Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go to the Races 8;
Hollywood Squares 4: Candid Camera 6; MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33 ; Price Is Right 10; That's
Hollywood t3 ; Cliffwood Avenue K!ds 15.
8 oo-Man from Atlanl&lt;s 3,4, t5 , Happy Days 6,13, CBS
Reports 8,10, James Michener's World 20,33.
8 3o--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 : 9:0G-Mo.vle "Scott
Jopl in" 3,4, 15, Three's Company 6, 13; Mov&lt;e
"Escape from Bogen Countyjj 8,10 , Good Morn In'
Blues 20,33.
9 3o--Carter Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13
IO :Oo--20-20 6,13. The Unwanted 33 ; News 20 10 · 3~
Black Perspect ive on the News 20
II :00 - News 3,4,6, 8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 ·3o--Johnny Carson 3,4, t5; Soap 6, 13; Columbo 8:
ABC News 33 ; Movie " Two Loves " 10.
12 ·0G-Janak l 33. 12 os-Movle " The Stoolie" 6, 13.
ID~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
by HenrtArnoldandBoD Lee

-

-

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-t51fc

BEAUTIFUL ONE Acre wooded lots
for sa le Rock Sprmg5. Oh10 (,
ty water nea r uhool'!. . Col i
a lter 5 pm JO.t -273·'1276
HOUSE AND Store butldmg m
Reedsvil le 985 3519 .
FIVE A( RfS w1th 197 4 Xhul11
mobile home Addtt 1onol t1ode1
!&gt;pa[e in Tuppen Plo ms area
bl&lt;-bb7 3305
IN MIDDLEPORT 3 bedroom
house 10 " 10 utdt ty budd1ng
Storm w 1ndow~ ond door~ New
roof
Pr1ce SqSOO Phone
747 7893
TUPPERS PlAI NS 17 , 11J
Pork wood trot ler on 7 acres of
wooded oreo overlookrng Tup
pers Pla 1ns Pede(! for couple
th o! pions lo bu1ld later trader
hos Ioyer , 5lep up kllchen ond
dtn1n g oreo w1 th corner ~1 T
chen wo5her and dryer 2
bedr ooms , newly carpeted and
furni shed
Sellrng
pr1ce
$17 qoo Fo1 more mforom1ion ,
_:oU b 14·667 33.41 alter 4 pm
TVVO BEDROOM house tn Hor ·
rrson vdle wllh pan eling
corpettng and Cily water Call
oh1H 5 pm, 742 7256
8 ACRES FOR so le . Solem Twon
sh1p , Me1gs Counly Has rural
water Colt 6! 4-669-3636 or
b" 61&gt;9·31&gt;33

~·S~R~.
-"'I..~~~
, P~
- 2a e. s.co~d -Streoi I
VI Rei L.EB!..
- 991 -ll2S

BRICK 7 rooms , •
bedrooms ,
P/7 baths
natural gas centra l heat,
ci t y water, nice level lot
and 2 car garage with
workshop over Near stores
too Asking S30,000. ·
7 ACRES PLUS - On good
Slate Route with rural
water
and
e lec1r lc
available. Lots of road
frontage
and
no
restr ic tions .
4 TO 5 ACRES - Located
west of Ro ute 7 on paved
road . Water li ne b{
properly and electric on I .
Assorled sizes and prices.
FAMILY HOME - Good 10
room hou se with
4
bedrooms, 2 ba1hs , fam ily
room, shop. garage and 3
lots . Covered picnic patio,
and n Ice shade trees. V A.
approved .
7 ROOM HOME - 3
bedroom s, balh . gas floor
furnace. garage nnd lot
70' &lt;100' . All city u111111es
and nice back yard for
$9,500
NEW LISTING Lot
125xl25 on Powell Street in
Middleport. $6,000.
NEW LISTING - Old 6
room house In need of
repairs. 75 acres of land, all
minerals and several nice
hoy fields . S25,000
LOOK
AHEAD
FOR
TOMORROW . INVEST
TODAY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
G. BAUC E TEAFORD
REALTOR ASSOCIATES

f,\\1/rrkh,

f_

TILMI

J

t?f~

I I I

Sf

JDUGAY

tJ

I

,,.

0

r ll XXXX)

I

H. L WHITESEL

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

ROOFING

SALES AND SERVICE
tl -9-tfc

'il'ltli1.\..ft

J I I

CARTER
300/"'ln St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy m-6212
or 992-6263 ·
8A .M. Io4 :30P.M.

o.

1

7:3o--Schoolles 10; 8:00--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10;
Sesame 51. 33.
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Emergency One
CAPTAIN EASY
6; Brady Bunch 8; Match Game 10; Studio See 33.
9·3o--Andy Griffith 8: Family Affair 10, Feeling Freo
He WA~N'T FE!Ltt.IIS
CAPTAIN EAjioY'
33.
TQO CHIPPeR·· SO HE
WHEitE'5 UNCLE
10·00-Cord Sharks 3.4. 15; Edge of Night 6: Pass The
Ai&gt;KEP Me T'FILL
Buck 8; Joker's Wild 10: To Tell The Truth 13; Over
tiJ FOR HIM~
Easy 33 .
10 :3o--Hollywood Squares 3,4,1 5: High Hopes 6: Price
Is Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13: Patn1 Along with
Nancy Kom lnsky 33.
11 :oo-Hlgh Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Charlie' ;s Pad 33 .
11 : 3o--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Family Feud 6, 13;
Partridge Family 4, Love of Life 8, to, Erica JJ;
11 ·45-Theonle 33; 11 55-CBS News 8; Loving
Free 10.
12 :oo'-Newscen1er 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15,
Gambl18; Midday Magazine 13; Watch Your Mouth
Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one 1ener 10 each square, to form
33
four ordmary words
12:3o--Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
.:: /) 1 i\ l
Search for Tomorrow 8, tO; French Chef 33
1:oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,t3,
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
'l .11
1
Only 15 : Austin City Llm&lt;ts 33.
L~~. \W!I.~STEI2, I ~D
1 3o--Days ot Our Lives 34, t5; As The World Turns
8,10; 2 OO-One Life to Live 6, 13; 51&lt; Amer ican
~D WHAT I'M~!
Families 33 .
2 3o--Doctors 3,4, 15, Gu iding Light 8, 10.
3 oo-Anolher World 3,4,15; General Hospl1al 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
3 30-Ail In The Family 8,10 ; Ohio Journal 20; Tur4
nabout 33 .
4:&lt;l0-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4, For Ri cher, For
WHAT THE
Poorer 15; Merv Grlftln 6, Addams Family 8;
Dt~!SJRUNiLED ZOO
Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Dlnoh 13.
KEEPER 5AID Hl5
4:3o--My Three Sons 3: Gilligan's Is . 4,8, Brady Bunch
10; Utile Rascals 15.
WORK WA'S.
5·0G-Here Come The Brides 3; My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33;
Now arrange the circled letters to
Hogan' s Heroes 10: Emergency One 13; Pe111coat
form the surprise answer, as sug·
Junct
ion 15.
gested by the above cartoon
5 3o-odd Couple 4; News 6: Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,
Printanswerhere:
Mak&lt;ng Things Grow 33 .
WELL, I'VE LEARNED
' I HOPE
(Answe rs tomorrow)
6:3o--NBC News 3,4,t5, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6,
TO 8E HAPPY
NEVER
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
WITH OR WITHOUT
MEAN
YeSle&lt;days Jumbles AGENT SNACK DISCUS BARIUM
7:tlO--Oral Roberts 3; Cross-Wits 4; Newlywed Game
SOME
Answer
Whet
Cleopatr•
got
from
c
....
,_
..
A
SCARE"
IIJ-c.,.....,..-.___'=OMPI\HY..
6, 13; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15 , Dick
KIDS'"
Cavell 20.
7 . 3o--Sha Na Na ~ ~ Between lhe Wars 6; Family Feud
8, MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ; The Judge 10; In
Search Of 13 , Wild Kingdom 15.
8 OG-Grlzzly dams 3,4, t5 ; Eight is Enough 6,13; Carol
Burnell 8, 10, Nova 20 ,33.
9 oo-Davld Frost3,4,15: Charlie's Angels 6,t3; Movie
"Brink's The Great Robbery," 8, 10; Grea1 Per by THOMAS JOSEPH
formances 33; Poldark II 20 .
ACROSS
40 Card
10:0G-Pollce Woman 3,4, t5; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6. 13;
I Decorate
player's
ALLEYOOP
News 20.
anew
three
10:3o--Amerlcan Enterprise 20, Book Beal 33.
YES, A\.LE'II,
11 :oo-News 3,&lt;,6,8,10, 13, 15, Dick Cavett 20, Lilias
s Rose
DOWN
PtEASE '11EU..
Yoga &amp; You 33.
US WJ.IAT
1 Of the
J.IA~NEDI
11 :3o--J ohnnv Carson 3,&lt;,15, Pollee Story 6,13 , Hawaii
kidneys
Flve-0 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie " The Savage" 10
Indisposed to 2 Ham tl up
12 :&lt;o--Janakl 33; 12: &lt;o--Mystery of the Week 6,t3 ;
Kojak 8; 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 2 1o--News 13
Notwlth3 Railroad
Movie
Channel 4 standing
car
5 &amp; 9 P.M - Annie Hal l ( PG )
Yesterday's
Answer
14 Studio
4 City on
7 &amp; 11 P .M - King Kong (PG )
19 Inlet
26 Had ezpect"'"_.~,~· '1',"-t''!"'IIS Kook
the Oka
Cable Channel 5 211 Seedcase
ations
16 Celtic sea
5 Prevent
6 30 PM - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7·00 - Regatta Preview
deity
6 - AviV
21 Water and gin- 28 Mushroom
tO :OO - 700 Club
17 " Heater"
7 New Jerger ale, e g.
2!1 Frolic
11 00 - Wahama Band
18 Song syllable sey city
22 Wishful
30 Expiate
_:~:...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....2.!!!!.!1~~~!.!!!~ 19 Showmg
8 Convinced
phrase
31 Piggy
23 Short
bank
embar9 Put in
1tem
operatic
other words
rassment
The mind pla4s stranqe ro India 's
song
34 Decay
11 Leadmg
bedfellows! l was t'in~ i nq
36 Sununer,
13 Symbol of 24 Was
Tagore,
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
t'irt4 for me and e.g.
regarded
in Caen
ferocity

tSELING

SMITH NELSON ·
MOTORS, INC.

1·()0-Tomorrow 3,&lt;; 1· 15-Ko.Uk 8, 1. 55-Newsl3.
Movie Chlnnol •
· ·
5 and 9 p.m. - Silver Streak lpg)
7 and 11 p.m - Eagle has Landed lpgl
Cable Chlnnel 5
7 p m. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7:3o--Wahama Band
10.00 - 100 Club
11 :30 - Paul Gaudino
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21,1978
5:4h-Farm Report 13; 5:51).-PTL Club 13; 6:()0-PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester tO.
6:3o--News Conference 4; !olews 6, Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10; 6 :45-Mornlng Repor13;
6:so--Good Morning, West VIrginia t3; 6 55-News
13.
7:oo-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6,1 3, CBS
NewsB; Porky Pig 10; 7·235-Chuck White Reports

New or Repair
GutteJS and
Downspouts
Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

HOMESITES for sale , 1 ocr e ond BRADFORD , Auc ttoneer , Com
plete Ser~1ce Phone 949 2487
up M• ddl~Jport neor Rutland
or 949 2(X)Q Roc1ne . Ohio, (rrll
Coll997 7&lt;81.
Bradford
NEW 3 bedroom hou!&gt;e 'J balhs
all elec . I acre Mtddleporl, ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
Sweepers , tom te rs ~r ons , all
clo!&gt;o to Rutland , Phone 992small appliances. low n mower ,
7&lt;81
next to Sta te H1ghway Garage
VA.f HA , 30 yr lmonnng also
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
ref inoncmg Ireland Mortgage
3a75
77 E State, Athens phone (614 )
597.30)1
REMODEl tNG. Plumbing, htottng
and oil types of general re pair
TWO STORY fram e hou~e . b
Wor~ guoronteed '10 yeor1 ew·
rooms end both, ce llor , out.
penance. Phone 992 24()'q
butldmg~ 4 ocre~ lond , at edg11
of Rutland Complete troller SEWING MACHINE Repotr' ser·
vtce all makes, 991228.4 , The
hook up olso 1 bonks opprolt
Fobr~ c
Shop
Pomer o y
ed propeny or $15,500 Phone
992 709&lt;c:________
Authonzed Singer Soles and
Ser"rce . We sharpen Sc,nors .
EXCAVA riNG , dozer . loader ond
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys lor hrre, wil l haul
till dtll. to sOli , ltmestone and
gravel. Coli Bob 01 Roger Jel·
fers day phone 992·7089, night
phone 99'} 3525 or ~2 5232.
EXCAVATING
, dorer backhoe
MAIN
and dltcher Charles R. Hoi·
POMEROY. o.
Bock Hoe Service ,
f1e ld
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742 '2008
NEW LISTING - In tho
country, large garden, J
WILL do roohng, construction.
bedroom remodeled home.
plumbing and heoh ng No JOb
Ntce country kitchen wlth
loo Iorge or too ~moll Phone
snack bar Dining room ,
7&lt;2-2348
large utility workshop . HOWERY AN D
MARTIN E• ·
Barn and other buildings .
co.,ot1ng
.
!
eptic
systems ,
New aluminum siding
dozer
,
backhoe,
dump
truck ,
Only $15,000.00,
limestone, grovel , blacktop
COOKS DELIGHT - In
po.,ing Rt. 143 Phone 1 (61A)
Pomeroy - one or the
696-7331 .
ni cest kitchens anywhere
Level lot . 2 slor les of
PUlliNS EXCAVATING Comple Jo
Service Phone 992·2.478
beau1ifully
remodeled
------llvabili1y Basement plus
POOLS All sites and
many other fea tures . PUDDLE
shopel · Sw1m pools , 'l yean
$27.200 00.
expenence , free 8!Uimotes ,
HEW "LISTING In
any thing you need fo r
Middlepor t - 2 story older
undergrour'ld sw1m pools New
home on good street. Could
chemtcol and supply store .
be good Investment for
Albon)l
Ohio
Phone
re n1al s
Lots
ol
61&lt;-698-6555 ( Alio&lt; 6 pm ,
remo deling . Asking
6 t 4-b89-S2S 1 John Jeffers or
m .ooo oo.
689.5265 Bill Gtllette ) We are
HEW LISTING - what you
NOT all wet on PRICES
have been walling for .
Approx 73 acres of the SPEEDY DRilliNG ' WaTer well
dril ling . com me rd al and
mosf des ir ab le building
st ie s In Meigs County .
domestic . Pump soles and ••r·
vice 992 6295 or 30.4 895 3802.
Secluded and close to
Pomeroy , on a good
township rood. Waler and
electric a.allable. Asking
$23,000.00.
OWNER SAYS SELL And he will help finance
th is older
home
In B K 35 . Sleeps \11( . Both New
Pomero y $6,725 .00.
ca rpeting and curtain• . Mu1t
RANCH - 3 bedrooms,
see lo app recia te Phone
to'"'f kt1chen . 2 years old,
696 1235.
exce lent condition , all
electric. Garage, I acre. 14 " 56 Memory loto l e lectric
trorler. Pbone 949 23.48.
S26,000.00
WE HAVE TWO BEDROOM mobile home
EXCELLENT
with awning, patio, and ottoc.h·
INVESTMENT
ed storage building Situated
RENTALS
AND
on 1'/• acre level lot in Five
BUSINESS - CALL FOR
Points ar.a Or'le m1le from Rt. 7.
MORE INFORMATION,
Pnca St 1.900. Phone 992·2679 .
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU. LIST
WITH US FOR RESULTS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; ;;,LiipiiJi
ONE lONGHAIRED groy klnon .
CLELAND
r
White feet . 985· 3~ e..,enlnga
ASSOCIATES
orwHkends.
m -22st
THREE PUPPIES to good homo
ft2·61"
9'12-228&lt; or 9&lt;9 275&lt;,

~

BRIDGE

one for 4ou!

~~~"'""!":"'..,

21 Preside

Clubs by the book

---

NORTH

f,-.!11-A

• Q .l

• AK
t A K Q .I 2

+ 9 (; I .1

from

---

27 Bee:

~~~~~~~~~~
;
.

WEST
• 8 71
• J 10 9 8 6
• 63
+ A82

comb.
fonn

I Z8 WittiCism
%9 Swnmit

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

tiAV! A

Cl

NICE

Dlff

.•

+ A .J!09
• 75
• 8 54
K J 75

+

+ K 6 52
• Q1 .12
• 10 9 7
• Q 10

Vulnerable : Ne ithe r
Dea ler . North

s

- --

East was able to cash his

EAST

SOUTH

32 Comprehend
33 Manage
35 Under·
took
37 Decayed
38 Alpine

~

Wes t

North East South
It
Pass! ¥

Pass

:J •

Pass

Pa ss

Pass

Pa ss

:I NT

l
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

Opening lead

• J

AXYDl,BAr\XR
It

tONGFEl.I.OW

One lelter simply stnnds for ~ma ther. tn this sanlple A is
used for the three f.'s, X ro, the two O's C'lC ~tn g lc letters
apostrophes, the length &lt;~nd rormati nn of the \\O rrls nrc all
hin ts Each d:Jy the code lettrrs are diffcr£'nt

CRVPTOQUOTES
PGGVBPCJ
NM Y P G

PB

DTECAB

DTM
PJ

NVBD
DTM

DTM
MOMB

C K DTM
KCCGPBT . - ZPJJH HJDEPZ
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE PROSPERITY OF A COUNTRY IS IN ACCORDANCE WITH ITS TREATMENT OF THE
ELDERLY.-HASIDIC SAYING

By Oswald Jarobv
and Alan Sontag •
Sout h Jed dummy 's three
of spades at tnck two. It was
up to East to f1gurc out his
problem . It wa sn 't too tough
for Spamsh e•pert Rafael
Munoz. South was try ing to
score a spade tnck t o add to
three hea rts a nd f1ve dia monds. So Munoz went nght
up with his ace of s pa des
It was now up to him to go
after the club s Uit and he
selected the nght club . He
planked the kmg '
West signalled by drop-

(f) 111T8 Kin1 Features S1 ndtrate , 1M

THAR'S A ROCK SLIDE HEADIN'
FER TH' HOUSE, MAW!!

IF WE BECAME LOST
IN THE WOODS, HOW

RUN FER
'lORE LIFE!!

LONG COULD WE GO

WITHOUT REAL FOOD?

•

ping hiS e1ght. 1t was a
come·on Signa l , but it also
was an csscnllal play . Munoz co ntm ucd w1th the ftve
West took the ace and led
back the deuce, whereupon
jack and seven of c lubs .
Tins hand was r e por ted by
V1ctor Mollo in his book
" How Good I s Your
Def~nse ''" We take the a ce
of spades play as authentic,
but wonder 1f someone d1dn 't
do somethmg with the club
sui t to set up a standard but
very d1fficult book poSitiOn.
East must lead the kmg.
Wes t must drop the e1ght .

A Washington , D . C
reader asks if we ever open
one notrump with a worthless dou bl eton.
The answer is that we
don't recommend it unless
the doubleton includes the
jac k or a higher card , but we

do vwlate our recommendatwn on occaswn and bid that
w ort hl ess doubleton
not rump .
1 NF. W ~PAPF.Il FNTFHPH!SF: ASSN t
(Do you have a questiOn for
the experts ? Wrrte 'Ask th e

Experts care of thiS newspaper lndlvtdual questrons w111
tJe answered If acco mpamed
by stamped. self-addressed
envelopes The most mteresrmg quest1ons w111 be used m
tf11s column and will rece1ve

copies of JACOBY MODERN )

�.'
8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesdav, June ~.1978

Kingsbury
'News Notes

lsiiO:y&amp;iaPt. Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
Bernice Bede Osol

-

The Carleton Sunda y
School had an attenda nce of
62 on June II Followrng
Sunday School the superintendent.
Ralph
Carl.
presented Bibles to two
graduates of Meigs High
School , Debbie Carl and
Karen DeMoss
Recent VISitors of Mr. and
Mrs V1rgil Kmg were Mr
and Mrs. Russell Hoffman of
Anderson , lnd
Mr and Mrs . Norman
Wood v1s1ted w1th Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Br1ckles and baby
at Ga1tersburg . Maryland .
Recent VISitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Br1ckles were Mr
and Mrs. Donald Br1ckles,
Mr and Mrs Floyd Br1ckles
of Darwm and Mrs. Faye

Pratt
Mrs. Ola St. Clair and Mrs.
Homer Bailey were at Portsmouth to vistt their Sister,
Mrs Bessie Williams, who
has been 1ll
Recent VISitors of Mrs.
Hazel Arnold were Mr. and
Mrs Patnck Williams and
children of McArth ur and Mr .
and Mrs Dale Mora of
Bambridge, Oh10 .
Mr
and Mrs . John
Dean, Mr and Mrs John
Walter Dean and Jeremy and James, Mr and
Mr s . Ke nneth Marktns,
Racine, Mr and Mrs Robert
Reed . David. Rodney , Kevm,
Bruce, Edith and Bruce. Jr ,
all of Pataskala, Mr and
Mr s
Walter
Terrell.
Pataskala, spent the weekend
at the campsite of Mr and
Mrs D1ck Harm at Great
Bend.
Spendmg a da) recently
With Mrs. Janeth Beal was
Mrs Russell Henderson of
Columbus.
Recent VISitors of Mr and
Mrs. John Walter Dean ,
Jeremy and James, were Mr
and Mrs. Hobart Smalley of
Muskogee , Okla
Several from here attended
graduation at Me1gs High
Schoo l Tuesday night.
Mrs. Brenda Roush had a
tupperware party at her
home recently Demonstrator
was Mrs. Ellen Thoma .
Spendmg some lime w1th
Mr . and Mrs . Norman Wood
were Mrs. Kenneth Wood and
daughter Remaming for a
longer visit were the grandchildren
Recent visitors of Mr and
Mrs Homer Ba1Jey werP Mr
1nd Mrs Sam Partl ow.
PomeroY, Mr and Mrs J ohn
Roberts" of Chillicothe, Mr
and Mrs. K1rk Chevalier and
J ess1ca of Chester
Mr . and Mrs Wayne Beal
had as Sunday Vlsnors Mr
and Mrs . Kirk Chevalm and
Jess1ca of Chester, Mr and
Mrs. Roge r Young , Wesley
and Yvete .
The Km gsbur y M1ss10nary
Qub met at the home of its
leader , Mrs Mar y Lo u
Houdashelt. The enure group
enJoyed lunch aft er ~h1 ch the
devotional meetmg was held
whtch opened with prayer by
Ehl.abeth Murray Scnpture
was taken from Hebrews
chapter 12 w1th each member
taking pa rt Those attendmg
were Mrs Neva Kmg , Mrs

Yvonne Young , Mrs 'Virg1ma
Dean , Mrs Janeth Beal, Mrs
Ruby
Burnside ,
Mrs
Elizabeth Murray , Mrs .
Anita Dean. Mrs. Brenda
Co uga r . Mrs . Mary Lou
Houda she lt , Jeremy and
Ja mes Dean. Yvete Young
and Karen The M1ss1onary
t1ub sponsors the Rev . and
Mrs John Je sburg who serve
in France and other coun-

tri es

Is that you , Melamc '
Melame 111llY have · Gone
W1th the Wmd .'' 111 that
class1c f1lm of the Old South,
but Olivia · de Havilland IS
bit ck for a VISit. She's Signed
tu play another member of
the Southern anstoc racy as
Henry Fonda' s w1f e 111
" K.uuts· The Next Genertt-

ti uns ''

PUBLIC NOT IC E
E
Bost c w hose
last ll.nown pl ace ol r es n:lence
is Apt No J R v r r s1de Apt s,
R ona ld

M 1dd lepor1
Oh1o J 5760
1S
hereby not f 1ect ltl&lt;tl on the
19t h day o t May 19 7e Mary
Cather 1ne
Bosttc , be1ng

pta ,nlttt t il ed her co mpta,nt
aga tnSI h 1m as defendant 1n

the Courl ot Co mmo n Plea s.

M eigs Countv . Qh ,o. Case No
16, 826, praymg tor d ivo r ce

fr om sa 10 Ronald E Bost ic or1
th e grounds ot gro\s neglect
ot duty and e~~:treme cruelt y,
Pld1nt 1ff also prays for other
prop er rel 1e f ~a1d cause wtll
be for near 1ng on or afl er the
25th day of Jul y, 1978
Mary Ca ther 1ne Bost1c
Pla 1n t1ff
O' Br1en &amp; 0 Br ien
F'atr ic k. H O' Br ien
' Attor n~y\ tor Pta lnt tfl
' l51 23,

jO

161 6, 13 , 20, 27 , 61&lt;

f - The DailY. Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., 'l'ueSday, June 20, 1978

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

WANT AD
CHARGES
June 11 , 1978
rt115 com1ng yea r an 1nterestmg
new acquaintance Will for m a
strong at ta chment lor you She
wtl l tntroduce you to fresh
1nterests and a happtet way of
hie

1d.ll.y
Zl.l&lt;ty~

Jl.lttys
6W.ys

15 Words or UmJer
Cl&amp;.'ih
100
II&lt;!

1.80
300

aa.rgt
I !.I
190

2.!.1
3 71

E.it(h word uv f!" the nunimwn l:t
wortb: L'i ~ c-entJJ ptr "oH per W.y
~db rwmu1..: oUler U11.n ('Ufl»e\.'\.lll\'t
days w11l l:w. dwrgt!d .11.1 tht' I d11y

CAN CER (June 11-Ju ly 22) In rate
partnNShtp arrangements to·
day you re hkety to l1nd your111 menwr.). Qml of Thanks wnd
setl tn the g1ver rol e w1th your Otutuary 6 cents per word, S3 00
assoc1a tes as the taker s Stn\'e mulUnWn Cash m HdVllnl'e
lor a fa1r er balance F1nd ou t to
Mobile Home ~lc; !ukl Y1u'd ~lt,!j
Y.h om you re roman t1catly
ltt'l'q&gt;l~ only" w1lh l'll!th Wllh
su1ted by send1ng lor your copy art'
IJI"der z:; t-ent d1.11 r~e for lllb carry
ol As!l o-Graph Letter Mad 50 , 111g Box NumiJer l11 C!m t1f Tl~ Sencents tar ea ch and a long self· llr"'l
addressed stampe d envelope
Tilt! Publi:sher r~rve~ Lhe nght
to ASiro-Graph P 0 Bo&lt; 489 ,
tu alit or re.)l!'l111n)' ud.ol deemed obRod1 0 Clly Station NY 10019
Tht: Pullll:iht:r w11l nut bt:
Be sure to specify btrlh stgn . )rtltotUtl
rtsponstiJW
LEO tJ uly 13-Aug . 12) Someone rr&lt;1 utst!ruonfur more thalll)llt' ua•urNdl be lookmg to dump theH
P!Ule 991:·2156
woes on yo ur broad shoulders
today It could be !a r more
straw s tha n a ny came l co uld
carry
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl. 12) Thrs
ma,. be one of those da ys
"' here d ma y ap pea r everyone
•S gangtng up aga1n st you
You II suspect e11en yo ur close
buddy·budd 1es
LIBRA (Se pt 13-0ct 13) Gtve
creon wnere cred tt 15 due
Monday
toda v but afo;o appra1se the
Noon un Sttturday
op pOSi tiOn reai1S I1Ca lty Don 1
concede lhem stren gths tney
Tuesdll)
aon t possess
thru F'nilil)
SCORPIO (Oct 24- Nov 11)
4p M
Ult' WI }' before publu: Hlion
Normtt ll\ '(Ou re not ver y gullible ana 11 s ddhcult to pu ll the
Sw1W.)
woot over you r eyes Toda y
•PM
however you may take what
fnd.l.ty llfWnWI.Irl
you hear ver bal tm
SAGITTAR IUS (Nov 13-Dec
211 For someone w1'10 takes
p110e 1n nts or ner 1naepend·
en ce you co uld be cast tn the Wf UNI NTENTIONALl Y om ttted
un la mil1at rol e ol :e " nu'lg too
!he nome• ol the Middleport
!'leavlly on o thers toda~
Emerg ~ ncy Squad and Veterans
CAPRI COR N (Dec. 22-Jen 19)
Memor•ol Hospilo l lrorp the
Poor JUdgrnent 10day coul d
ortgmol cord ot than ks tor
Eu lah lee Fron[ IJ We also w1sh
lead ;ou 1n to Involvemen ts
whe re the od ds a re agamst
to !honk anyone el•e who
helped •n ony woy
you S1ze s1 1uatrons up careMothtH Floro B Barley. Husband
fu lly befor e you leap tn
Mor1on G Fronc•• . chtldre n 7
AQUAR IUS (Jan 10-Feb 19)
grandchildren aunts uncles
True hum tll!y rs a no ble -v•rtue
ond COUS inS
but tooay you could numbte
~ourself unt&gt;ecommgly Let at
lea st a portron of your ego
shme through
PISCES tFe b 20-Ma rch 101 LOST WHITE k111en w1th block
spots P1ck8CI up on Eou Mo1n
There are 11mes when 11 tS
It Coli 9'12·3871
ao sotute ty ne cessar y to be
asser t1ve Today you m1ght oe LOST A block ond wh 1te
so wt!h the wrong people
Polom•no pony onswers 10 the
unaer !h e wrong Ci rcum nome of Potches Very ger'llle
stances
wPOrtng green hotter Bull Ru n
ARI ES (March Z1·Aprll 19) Be
Wolt~
Ru n oreo Con tact
carefu l today les t you enter the
997 73:J7 O&lt; 992·52()()
fra y 1ee11ng you ha"w"e s !ro ng
--force~ oen,na you Tne ranks
foll ow1ng your ba nn er may be
qu1!1? th1 n
TAURUS (April 10-May 10) WA ITRESS
No e,.peoe nc v
Tnere IS a danger toda~ that
necessary "'pply m person at
you mtght for mula te plans
81u ~ lorton , M1ddleport
-.,-based upon ex aggerated ~n l o r ­
MA
lURE RESPONSIBLE womon os
mat ton Make no mo-ve s !Ill
bobys :tler housekeeper. l1ve m
you re absolu tely certarn of the
po~1t10n
seporote house•ng
fact&amp;
and
excellent
benel 1ts No
GE MINI !May 21 -June 20)
smoktng
Must
drtve
Some one w1th ftna nc1at probColl3o.t 863-6088 offer Spm
lems may be lookmg to you to
Dati mem out today Unfor
tunatel y yo u ma y not nave
eno ugh buckets aboar d to do NO ITEM fOO large or too small
lhe 10b
Wdl buy 1 ptece or com plete
tNEWSPAP[R [NllRPJ.liSf ASSN 1
household New . used, or 01"111
ques MarTtn s Furniture , 10 N
2nd 51
M1ddlepo rt Phone
997 1&gt;370
CHI P WOOD
Poles mox
dtomeler 10 on largest end , $8
per 1011 Bundled slob, $6 per'
ton Del1vered to Oh10 Pollet
Co Rt_ 1 Pomeroy q92 ·2689...:
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th e to ll owmg documents
COI
NS. CU RRENCY tokens . old ·
were rece i\led or prepared by
poc~et wot c he~ and chotns,
Tne Oh 10 Env 1ronmental
51lver ond gold We need 1%4
Protect 1on Agency dunno the
prev 1 0u~ week. The eflec11ve
and older 5tl\lfH cams 8uy sell
aate ot each l1r'lal act 1on 1S
or !rode Col i Roger Wamsley
5tat ed Anyone aggr 1e-ved or
741 -1331
adversely attected by a ftnal
cl Ct10n to ISSUe , deny , mOd ify , TIMBER POMEROY Fores t Prorevoke , or renew a perm 1t,
ducts lop pnce for stondmg
l1c ens e or vartance , or to
50w limber Coli 99'1-5qb5 or
appr ove or d1sapprove p l~ns
Kent
Honb~ 1 446·857_:0.:..._ _
and ~pec l t tc!l t lo ns , may Ide
an appeal w1th The Env1 ron
OLD FURNITURE tee bol(es bran
men ta l Bo11rd of Re-v te w
bed~ . .ron beds desks , e tc ,
Sut le 30~. 39~ E Broad St ,
compleTe households Wrrte
Co lum bus , Oh 10 43?16, wllhtn
M D Mdlar Rt 4 Pomeroy o•
th trty (]O J days of the et
fOil 99') bJ7Q
tect tve tlale , pursuan t to Oh tO
Rev 1Sed Coae Sec tion 3745 07 ,
unless sucn f1n a t a ct1on was WANT OT buy Good uJed trai ler
7&lt;2 71&lt;5
preceded by the same or
wost ant ta ll y the same
proposea a c110n All suct1
hna l aclions are so 1dentil led
Such persons mav reQuest an
LEGAL
ad 1Ud1cat lon hea rlnQ before
ADVERTISEMENT
The Oh to EPA on a proposed
FORBIDS
act ton to 155u e, denv . mod 1fy ,
Separate , sealed proposa ls
re voke , or rer'lew a permtt , for !he repl).rS to the Chester
l1c ense , or vanar'lce 1 or to E lementary school bu ll ding
ap prove or d 1sapprove plan~ Wtll be recerved at the orf• ce
and spe c if iC at io ns , With in of the cler k of the board of
lh 1rfy 130 1 d~y!l ot the educat1on ol Eastern Local
1ssuance dale ORC 3745 07 School Dlstr1ct , R.e~ctsvll le
does not prov tde for ad
Me igs CounTy , Ohio un tti
tu diC i!I IOn hear1ng requests 12 00 o'cloc k noon , EsT ,
or appea Is on orders , ver~fied June '17 , 1978 and W ill be
compl a 1n ts or enforcement publ iCl y opened and read by
co mplt an ce sch~dute letters
the clerk. the reafter at the
Wl!h tn 30 days of publication usual place of sa1a bOa rd of
1n a newspaper In the affected eaucatton , tabulated and .,
county , anv person may atso
report thereof made by the
Il l !lubm ll wr ittf!n comments clerk. 10 sa 1d ooaro ar t1S ne~~:t
re 1at 1ng 10 act ions , proposed meet .ng
act1ons , ver lf1ed comp la ints,
Oescr lpt 1on of the 1m
or enfor cement com pl ia nce provemenT
toc .tted
at
sc hedule tellers , (2) request
Chester . Oh 10. 1 e repairs to
a public meeting reoardlno
11'1e Ch ester Elementary
proposed a ct1ons , and or (3) SChOOl bu 1la 1ng
reaues t not1ce of further
Co p1es ot the spec llt cations ,
acttons or proceedings All
tnslrucl tOn&amp; to 01aders , and
reQues ts tor adluctica t ion oroposa l forms mt~y be ob
t'lea r1ngs
ar'!d
publ ic ta~ned at the off ic e of th e
mee tmgs , and oftler com
c lerk of the boa rd ot
mun lc at 1ons
conce rn lr'IQ
educat1on of Eastern Locel
public meet ings , ad jud lc al10n
Sch oo l 01stnct , Reeasville,
ne ar ,r'lgs , veri t1ed com
Ohi O
pla 1nts . and regulat 1ons ,
A ce rllfted chtcto. payable
snould be ttddressea to The to the cl erk treasu rer of !he
Leg a l Records Sect10n , Ohio above board of educat ion or a
EPA , P
0
Bo)( 1049, sat1 sta c tory
bi d
bond
Colu mbus , OhiO 43/16, (614) executed by !he b l dd~r and a
466 6017 Unless ot1'1erw 1!:1e su rely compa ny , in a n
stared In particula r not tces . am ount equal to five percent
a ll otner commur'l tcat•ons of the bid shalt be subm 1tled
.n clu ct ,ng comments on w1th each b 1d
proposed act 1ons , should be
Sald board or educat ion
addressed either to TM Arr
reserves the r ight to wa 1vl!
Per m!ls and Compt1ance ,ntormal1tles . to accept or
MOO IIO rtnO
O IVtSt On or
re lect any and a ll , or parts ot
Per mtl l!lnd Approval Sec !ton. any and all bids
wh tchev er Is appropr iate , ttl
The successf ul bidder Will
Tne Oh iO EPA , P 0 80 )(
be reQuired 10 turn 1sh a
1049 , Colum bus , Oh 10 43116
sa t rs la ctor y pertormer'lce
Approval ot plans a nd
bond tor one hundred percent
spec lftcat ions
of the contract price
Ohio POwer Company
NO bidS ma y be withdrawn
~actne Townsh ip, Oh iO,
tor at letts! th irty (3 01 davs
effectiv~ date 06 1.4 ?8 .
after the scheduled closing
This f inal a cti on not
t imt: lor receipt ot bids .
prec~aed by pro posed ectJon
Board of Education of
and 15 I!IPpealabl~ to EBR: ,
Eastern Local School Dis tr ict
temporarlly
sanitary
By Doug Bisse ll
wastewate r
tre atm ent
Ftresldenl
tac fllll es for the Racine
Hyoroelectr ic Pro ject ,
Eloise Boston
Clerk
(6 ) 20 , l!c
(5) 30 (6) 6, 13, 20, .ti C

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

-----

'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

TRACY

IF YOU hove a serv1ce to offer , MASSEY FERGUSON Hoy cond1·
wan! to buy or sell somethtng,
hone r $500 Very good cond•·
ae looking for work
or
tlon Reeds_:: : 1lle 614 378 -6~1whatever . . you tl get results 1978 YZ 12S Yomoho Coli
IQUer w1th o Senttnel Want Ad
991 -5013 Ex:cellent cond•t•on
Colt~ - 2156
tncu bofor~ used
YARD SALE ond Bokie Sole Frr a nd SEAR'SElECTRiC
tw 1ce. Lorge buffet, Rolloway
Sat at Fronk Imboden's across
bed , l1ke new CW'J 3079
from Racrne Grode School,
-- - 1973
YAMAHA 250 MX 38 mm
YARD SALE. Monlyn Powells .
rocmg
corburator
Good runn
Vme Street, Roclne. Thu rs
1ng
cond1tton
992
7409 Also .
Children's ond adult dothmg
~qt1 c woshe;'"~--choir. m1sc Ram conce l$

-

YARO SALE Wed. Thurs and Frr
9-5 On Raetne Bashor'! Road
Paul Er"m res1dence Ntce
items ,
Let Pomeroy Landmark
THREE FAMILY Yard Sale Thurs
ond Fn , 22nd and 23rd From soften &amp; ·condition your
9 4 108 Pearl St. M1ddlepor1
1water with Co-op . water
sof1ener, Model UC-SVI ,
Now Only

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

•289.95

Business Services

~
MODERN SUPPLY

S~PTIC

TANK
CLEANING

R.e s i d e n t Ia I
ond
commercial . Coli for
esllmate, 24 hour service.
Anyd1y, onyllme.
Phone 985-310.
'
Jack Ginter 985·3106

Small engine &amp; mower
service, Mossey Ferguson
&amp; Gilson Tlllero. Lown Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Service.

ti:'~

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph , 992-2164

BoxJ

Chester, Ohio
10-3o., .

5-4-1 mo

DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

'

I
C. II AHer 5:00 or
Anytime Soturdoy
t92-7119or m :50!1
&lt;-27-Hc

Let us test vour water Free
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy , sell
!rode or troin New ond used
saddles . Ruth Reeves . Albany
(61&lt;) 698 3290.
RISING STAR Kennel, Boord1ng
Indoor and outdoor runs
Groommg all breeds (leon
son1tory focd1 t1es Cheshire
Phone (6U )367 0292
1'1 DOBERMAN PUPS AIt look l1ke
Dobes $20 each Call 94q 2654

1973 MON TE CARlO Londou P I
P 8 , A C , AM 8 track stereo
Ewcellent cond1 t1on
$1 700
8&lt;3·2622.
I%8 VW BUG S&lt;OO '192 585B
1976 YEllOW TR7 AM FM tope
A ~ h:cellent gas mtleage
Be st offer over $4000
614·b75 1345 or 614 -675 2553.
1q79 GMC 4 wheel dr1 ve Toke
O\ler poymenls and older cor
992-5301
OLDSMOBilE DELMONTE 88 h
cellent work cor or wtll !rode
for odmg horse , or mo torcycle
or nd•ng town mower Phone
-------~~

Pomeroy Landmark

ROGER HYSEll

9 ..:.:!_ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
tAi:il Pho~e992-2t81

-

USEO GAS COOKING STOV E GE
' garbage dr sposol
15 It
wooden boa t 40 h p mo tor
1 and !Ioder 992 3573
1976 SS0-4 800 mtles Very good
condd1on Anyl1mc ofter 5
'1'17 b350
BABY BED and mollress $25 Sofa
bed. SSO Platform ro(ker $25
Coil before 4 pm 9.49 24.49 or
949 7575
1967 GS 400. 43-4, lOlly wheels.
FM , newpatnt 1Q72 350.1 8utck
eng1ne 400 turbo tro ns $125
985 412b ol!er 6 pm
1977 MERCURY P S P B A C
No 7.7 lnternottonol baler 2000
bu eor corn 985 3537 oflc' 6
pm 9854131
1976 F 150 FORO p1 ckup Power
~1eer1 n g brakes, oulo Irons
AM·FM ~!ereo wtlh tope
player 37 000 m1les E)lcellent
cond1t1on $3750 Coli doys
~2 ~54 5 ~~ evemn_gs q49~

7&lt;7-7067

'I• mile off Rt. 7 by-peu 011
St . Rt. 1'l41oword Rutlend,

0.

.
Lef us capture •nd
preserve those precious
moments forever Wedd1ngs
Silver and
Golden Anniversary
Family Reunions
SpecJOI Occasions
Photography
IS
our
bvsineu, not a side line

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

-

Pomeroy Landmark

6 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES . Pr Plea
sont , W Va besrde Heck s
~ock W. Corsey , Mgr
1973 8roadmore 14 • b-4 1
· Phone 992-2t81
bedroom
1'il73 Do non 14 x 60 'l bedroom
1971 Vtclonon 14 w67 J bedroom,
Will CARE lor the elderly 10 our
7 borh
home Phone 992 7314
1971 co .. entry 12 I( b5 3 bedroo m
.
1969 Sta tesma n 17 11: bQ 2 WA lER WEll drtl li ng Wtlltom T
bedroom.
Grant . 742 2879
COAL LIMESTONE sand, gravel
col(lum chlonde, fer tlltzer , dog
food. and oil type!!. of solt h ·
cels1or Sol! Works Inc., E Ma in
~P omeroy . 992-3891
BES T SELECTION of the best wood
stoves 1n Southeosiern Oh•o
Jo!ul Mono, Efet l•roha ,
Tempwood and Nofhuo z,on
Heat Co , 8 Putnam Or {olf Mdl
St ) Athens 614 592·6079 or
bl&lt;-69b-1187
Any U.S. mode cor- oort,sl
BURROUGHS IE NSI -MATIC OC·
extr1
If needed. Ex,cluclesl
counting mach1ne
Phone
drive cars.
front-whttl
9912156 , The Dolly Sent1nel ,
I l l Court StreeT f'omeroy ,
Ohio
USED TRACTORS
MFI35 Otes.el · MF230 Ouuel
MF150 01esel · MF73S D1esel ·
MF16S D1esal · MF285 01esel
MF1 135 Diesel , Cob oir &amp;
heater
.._._•••• W. C.rsey, Mgr.
NEW &amp; USED IMPL EMENTS .
MF9 Boler - MFIO Boler . MF120
Phone m -3111
Boler · Matth• ws Rotary Scythe
MF880 Semi -mounted 6 bot ·
tom Plow MF520 12' Disc
MF200 'J Row Chopper . MF39 1
Row Planters · Mechan ical
Transplanter.
1S ACFIES FOR sale Complete ~e t
SHINN'S TRACT~ SAlES
up lot a lro1ler . city water near
Phone 4.58·1630
Coolville. t-6 1&lt; 61&gt;7 3933 .
Leon . W Vo .
HOUSE , In Tu ppers Pla1ns All
e leCtric, A C. 3 bedroom s, 11l
1971 DATSUN 'II ton pickup. 4
both , Basement Lorge lot
1peed. new clutch , muffler ,
992
-3585 "' '192 2196
brokes ond pomt 25 m p g
$1300. Call 9'12-7539
15 ACRES IOCA TED on Sand R;dge
Rood 985·&lt;255.
AlliS CHI\lMERS small &lt;ou nd
bo!er S1800 Purchased new HOUSE FIVE room• ond borh
1972. hcellent condition
close to down town Middleport.
Roodtvl tlo 61&lt;-378·1&gt;311
Phone q91.Jdb

----

WH EEl
ALIGNMENT

SPECIAL

Call Now For
Appointment

Pomeroy Landmark

4-30-ttc

VINYL SIDING
Sofli1, Room Additions
&amp; A-Frame Homes.
For Free Es1imates
CALL
992-6323 or 992-601 t
6-1_9-1 mo. pd .

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks . Tires
Battery.
Installation Service
Ph 992-2841

ncn~
-~#
Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

The Photo Place
! Sob

Hoeflich)
Pomeroy
ttl'l High St.
5-JI · l mo.

MOORE'S

TRA DE TWO lots tn Pomeroy W1ll
trade lor bulldozer or motor
home Call I 304 6.48 5602 Fort
Goy , WV

Aut• &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

ALUM. &amp;

.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

1977 APACHE lold down camper
u~ed fwlce $20C(l 992-2849
GROUND PlANE ontenno for C B
18 FOOT SElF CONTAIN EO llo&lt;
w11h 75 coo w w1lh lrllmgs on
croh l 1'e new Contact Ow 1ght
both e nd ~ Also Re ll' ond
Holey 108 Peor l St
M1d
S. t ame~e robb1t!&gt; lor 4 H ond lo 1t
die port
pr o, ~ c t s
Rt 33 Burl mghorn
ocroH lorm 8ur'&gt;on 5 G10Ce1y
\974 ESCAPADE 25 f1 motor
home .wrh e.-tros ~ m1te, J95J FERGUSON TRAClOR Very
Pr iCe S14 CXlJ 614 9'l"J 2438 or
good cond 1t10n 2 young sow
30&lt; 773 5707
hog5 10 bor ~! oo l5 I ~moll
cob1n cruiSfH boot 99'} 7609
HONDA I75 on ofl rood moto rcy
cle lor 50ic . E..:cellent cond1
11on Phone 949 7219
1976 FORD f-350 heovy duty B ~
3 AND 4 RM fu rn1$hed ond un
10 bed 6 It cattle rock 4
furntshed opts . Phone 992
~peed P S
P 8 All gouge!&gt;
5434
17 ,000 mtles q49.1173
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Momfy'tot.oan
large Iota Coli ~2 - 7479
SENIOR CITIZE NS Our new lOANS AVAILABLE $25 000 ro
renters antstonce you moy be
51 0 o&lt;Xi,OOO fo• onv commemol
oble to lt"e in our apartment
or bustneH purpm;e Coli
fo1 leu than $50 o monlh For
1·614 593 8400 between 9 om &amp;
more •nlormo11on contact
5pm
V1lloge Manor Apartment$
992-7787 .
CORNER lOT for !ra1ler space on
ttvedr ont
qq') 7138
992-530&lt;
TWO BEDROOM unlurn1shad opl
Coll992 2286

MASH BROTHERS

GARAGE

985-4155
Chester, Ohio 45720

1970 PI YMOUTH DUSTER
auto Whee l Horse
mower Phone 992 6011
1q77 VOLARE ROAD Ru nner 318,
black w1th Super Pock , A C ,
stereo After 5 30 or onylime
wee~•nds coll949-2829.
t97• PINTO w1th rodiol tire• ond
new shocks In good cond1hon
~2 7285 offer •.~p:..m
c.:__ __

TUESDAY, JUNE 20,1978
5: 3(}-()dd Couple 4, News 6; E leclrlc Co. 20,33, Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15
6:00-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,
Making Th 1ngs Grow 33 .
6:3o--NBC News3,4,t5 ; ABC News 13; Andy Grlff&lt;th 6 ;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33
7 ·oo--Cross-W&lt;ts 3,4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Pop Goes
1he Country 8, News 10, Gilligan' s Island 15;
French Chef 20; West V&lt;rglnla, We Love You 33.
7 .3o--Hollywood Squares 3; Let's Go to the Races 8;
Hollywood Squares 4: Candid Camera 6; MacNeil
Lehrer Report 20,33 ; Price Is Right 10; That's
Hollywood t3 ; Cliffwood Avenue K!ds 15.
8 oo-Man from Atlanl&lt;s 3,4, t5 , Happy Days 6,13, CBS
Reports 8,10, James Michener's World 20,33.
8 3o--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13 : 9:0G-Mo.vle "Scott
Jopl in" 3,4, 15, Three's Company 6, 13; Mov&lt;e
"Escape from Bogen Countyjj 8,10 , Good Morn In'
Blues 20,33.
9 3o--Carter Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13
IO :Oo--20-20 6,13. The Unwanted 33 ; News 20 10 · 3~
Black Perspect ive on the News 20
II :00 - News 3,4,6, 8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 ·3o--Johnny Carson 3,4, t5; Soap 6, 13; Columbo 8:
ABC News 33 ; Movie " Two Loves " 10.
12 ·0G-Janak l 33. 12 os-Movle " The Stoolie" 6, 13.
ID~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
by HenrtArnoldandBoD Lee

-

-

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-t51fc

BEAUTIFUL ONE Acre wooded lots
for sa le Rock Sprmg5. Oh10 (,
ty water nea r uhool'!. . Col i
a lter 5 pm JO.t -273·'1276
HOUSE AND Store butldmg m
Reedsvil le 985 3519 .
FIVE A( RfS w1th 197 4 Xhul11
mobile home Addtt 1onol t1ode1
!&gt;pa[e in Tuppen Plo ms area
bl&lt;-bb7 3305
IN MIDDLEPORT 3 bedroom
house 10 " 10 utdt ty budd1ng
Storm w 1ndow~ ond door~ New
roof
Pr1ce SqSOO Phone
747 7893
TUPPERS PlAI NS 17 , 11J
Pork wood trot ler on 7 acres of
wooded oreo overlookrng Tup
pers Pla 1ns Pede(! for couple
th o! pions lo bu1ld later trader
hos Ioyer , 5lep up kllchen ond
dtn1n g oreo w1 th corner ~1 T
chen wo5her and dryer 2
bedr ooms , newly carpeted and
furni shed
Sellrng
pr1ce
$17 qoo Fo1 more mforom1ion ,
_:oU b 14·667 33.41 alter 4 pm
TVVO BEDROOM house tn Hor ·
rrson vdle wllh pan eling
corpettng and Cily water Call
oh1H 5 pm, 742 7256
8 ACRES FOR so le . Solem Twon
sh1p , Me1gs Counly Has rural
water Colt 6! 4-669-3636 or
b" 61&gt;9·31&gt;33

~·S~R~.
-"'I..~~~
, P~
- 2a e. s.co~d -Streoi I
VI Rei L.EB!..
- 991 -ll2S

BRICK 7 rooms , •
bedrooms ,
P/7 baths
natural gas centra l heat,
ci t y water, nice level lot
and 2 car garage with
workshop over Near stores
too Asking S30,000. ·
7 ACRES PLUS - On good
Slate Route with rural
water
and
e lec1r lc
available. Lots of road
frontage
and
no
restr ic tions .
4 TO 5 ACRES - Located
west of Ro ute 7 on paved
road . Water li ne b{
properly and electric on I .
Assorled sizes and prices.
FAMILY HOME - Good 10
room hou se with
4
bedrooms, 2 ba1hs , fam ily
room, shop. garage and 3
lots . Covered picnic patio,
and n Ice shade trees. V A.
approved .
7 ROOM HOME - 3
bedroom s, balh . gas floor
furnace. garage nnd lot
70' &lt;100' . All city u111111es
and nice back yard for
$9,500
NEW LISTING Lot
125xl25 on Powell Street in
Middleport. $6,000.
NEW LISTING - Old 6
room house In need of
repairs. 75 acres of land, all
minerals and several nice
hoy fields . S25,000
LOOK
AHEAD
FOR
TOMORROW . INVEST
TODAY.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
G. BAUC E TEAFORD
REALTOR ASSOCIATES

f,\\1/rrkh,

f_

TILMI

J

t?f~

I I I

Sf

JDUGAY

tJ

I

,,.

0

r ll XXXX)

I

H. L WHITESEL

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

ROOFING

SALES AND SERVICE
tl -9-tfc

'il'ltli1.\..ft

J I I

CARTER
300/"'ln St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy m-6212
or 992-6263 ·
8A .M. Io4 :30P.M.

o.

1

7:3o--Schoolles 10; 8:00--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10;
Sesame 51. 33.
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Emergency One
CAPTAIN EASY
6; Brady Bunch 8; Match Game 10; Studio See 33.
9·3o--Andy Griffith 8: Family Affair 10, Feeling Freo
He WA~N'T FE!Ltt.IIS
CAPTAIN EAjioY'
33.
TQO CHIPPeR·· SO HE
WHEitE'5 UNCLE
10·00-Cord Sharks 3.4. 15; Edge of Night 6: Pass The
Ai&gt;KEP Me T'FILL
Buck 8; Joker's Wild 10: To Tell The Truth 13; Over
tiJ FOR HIM~
Easy 33 .
10 :3o--Hollywood Squares 3,4,1 5: High Hopes 6: Price
Is Right 8,10; $20,000 Pyramid 13: Patn1 Along with
Nancy Kom lnsky 33.
11 :oo-Hlgh Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Charlie' ;s Pad 33 .
11 : 3o--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Family Feud 6, 13;
Partridge Family 4, Love of Life 8, to, Erica JJ;
11 ·45-Theonle 33; 11 55-CBS News 8; Loving
Free 10.
12 :oo'-Newscen1er 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15,
Gambl18; Midday Magazine 13; Watch Your Mouth
Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one 1ener 10 each square, to form
33
four ordmary words
12:3o--Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
.:: /) 1 i\ l
Search for Tomorrow 8, tO; French Chef 33
1:oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,t3,
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
'l .11
1
Only 15 : Austin City Llm&lt;ts 33.
L~~. \W!I.~STEI2, I ~D
1 3o--Days ot Our Lives 34, t5; As The World Turns
8,10; 2 OO-One Life to Live 6, 13; 51&lt; Amer ican
~D WHAT I'M~!
Families 33 .
2 3o--Doctors 3,4, 15, Gu iding Light 8, 10.
3 oo-Anolher World 3,4,15; General Hospl1al 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
3 30-Ail In The Family 8,10 ; Ohio Journal 20; Tur4
nabout 33 .
4:&lt;l0-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4, For Ri cher, For
WHAT THE
Poorer 15; Merv Grlftln 6, Addams Family 8;
Dt~!SJRUNiLED ZOO
Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10, Dlnoh 13.
KEEPER 5AID Hl5
4:3o--My Three Sons 3: Gilligan's Is . 4,8, Brady Bunch
10; Utile Rascals 15.
WORK WA'S.
5·0G-Here Come The Brides 3; My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33;
Now arrange the circled letters to
Hogan' s Heroes 10: Emergency One 13; Pe111coat
form the surprise answer, as sug·
Junct
ion 15.
gested by the above cartoon
5 3o-odd Couple 4; News 6: Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6:0G-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20,
Printanswerhere:
Mak&lt;ng Things Grow 33 .
WELL, I'VE LEARNED
' I HOPE
(Answe rs tomorrow)
6:3o--NBC News 3,4,t5, ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6,
TO 8E HAPPY
NEVER
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
WITH OR WITHOUT
MEAN
YeSle&lt;days Jumbles AGENT SNACK DISCUS BARIUM
7:tlO--Oral Roberts 3; Cross-Wits 4; Newlywed Game
SOME
Answer
Whet
Cleopatr•
got
from
c
....
,_
..
A
SCARE"
IIJ-c.,.....,..-.___'=OMPI\HY..
6, 13; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15 , Dick
KIDS'"
Cavell 20.
7 . 3o--Sha Na Na ~ ~ Between lhe Wars 6; Family Feud
8, MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ; The Judge 10; In
Search Of 13 , Wild Kingdom 15.
8 OG-Grlzzly dams 3,4, t5 ; Eight is Enough 6,13; Carol
Burnell 8, 10, Nova 20 ,33.
9 oo-Davld Frost3,4,15: Charlie's Angels 6,t3; Movie
"Brink's The Great Robbery," 8, 10; Grea1 Per by THOMAS JOSEPH
formances 33; Poldark II 20 .
ACROSS
40 Card
10:0G-Pollce Woman 3,4, t5; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6. 13;
I Decorate
player's
ALLEYOOP
News 20.
anew
three
10:3o--Amerlcan Enterprise 20, Book Beal 33.
YES, A\.LE'II,
11 :oo-News 3,&lt;,6,8,10, 13, 15, Dick Cavett 20, Lilias
s Rose
DOWN
PtEASE '11EU..
Yoga &amp; You 33.
US WJ.IAT
1 Of the
J.IA~NEDI
11 :3o--J ohnnv Carson 3,&lt;,15, Pollee Story 6,13 , Hawaii
kidneys
Flve-0 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie " The Savage" 10
Indisposed to 2 Ham tl up
12 :&lt;o--Janakl 33; 12: &lt;o--Mystery of the Week 6,t3 ;
Kojak 8; 1:oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 2 1o--News 13
Notwlth3 Railroad
Movie
Channel 4 standing
car
5 &amp; 9 P.M - Annie Hal l ( PG )
Yesterday's
Answer
14 Studio
4 City on
7 &amp; 11 P .M - King Kong (PG )
19 Inlet
26 Had ezpect"'"_.~,~· '1',"-t''!"'IIS Kook
the Oka
Cable Channel 5 211 Seedcase
ations
16 Celtic sea
5 Prevent
6 30 PM - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7·00 - Regatta Preview
deity
6 - AviV
21 Water and gin- 28 Mushroom
tO :OO - 700 Club
17 " Heater"
7 New Jerger ale, e g.
2!1 Frolic
11 00 - Wahama Band
18 Song syllable sey city
22 Wishful
30 Expiate
_:~:...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....2.!!!!.!1~~~!.!!!~ 19 Showmg
8 Convinced
phrase
31 Piggy
23 Short
bank
embar9 Put in
1tem
operatic
other words
rassment
The mind pla4s stranqe ro India 's
song
34 Decay
11 Leadmg
bedfellows! l was t'in~ i nq
36 Sununer,
13 Symbol of 24 Was
Tagore,
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
t'irt4 for me and e.g.
regarded
in Caen
ferocity

tSELING

SMITH NELSON ·
MOTORS, INC.

1·()0-Tomorrow 3,&lt;; 1· 15-Ko.Uk 8, 1. 55-Newsl3.
Movie Chlnnol •
· ·
5 and 9 p.m. - Silver Streak lpg)
7 and 11 p.m - Eagle has Landed lpgl
Cable Chlnnel 5
7 p m. - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7:3o--Wahama Band
10.00 - 100 Club
11 :30 - Paul Gaudino
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21,1978
5:4h-Farm Report 13; 5:51).-PTL Club 13; 6:()0-PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester tO.
6:3o--News Conference 4; !olews 6, Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10; 6 :45-Mornlng Repor13;
6:so--Good Morning, West VIrginia t3; 6 55-News
13.
7:oo-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning America 6,1 3, CBS
NewsB; Porky Pig 10; 7·235-Chuck White Reports

New or Repair
GutteJS and
Downspouts
Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

HOMESITES for sale , 1 ocr e ond BRADFORD , Auc ttoneer , Com
plete Ser~1ce Phone 949 2487
up M• ddl~Jport neor Rutland
or 949 2(X)Q Roc1ne . Ohio, (rrll
Coll997 7&lt;81.
Bradford
NEW 3 bedroom hou!&gt;e 'J balhs
all elec . I acre Mtddleporl, ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
Sweepers , tom te rs ~r ons , all
clo!&gt;o to Rutland , Phone 992small appliances. low n mower ,
7&lt;81
next to Sta te H1ghway Garage
VA.f HA , 30 yr lmonnng also
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985
ref inoncmg Ireland Mortgage
3a75
77 E State, Athens phone (614 )
597.30)1
REMODEl tNG. Plumbing, htottng
and oil types of general re pair
TWO STORY fram e hou~e . b
Wor~ guoronteed '10 yeor1 ew·
rooms end both, ce llor , out.
penance. Phone 992 24()'q
butldmg~ 4 ocre~ lond , at edg11
of Rutland Complete troller SEWING MACHINE Repotr' ser·
vtce all makes, 991228.4 , The
hook up olso 1 bonks opprolt
Fobr~ c
Shop
Pomer o y
ed propeny or $15,500 Phone
992 709&lt;c:________
Authonzed Singer Soles and
Ser"rce . We sharpen Sc,nors .
EXCAVA riNG , dozer . loader ond
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys lor hrre, wil l haul
till dtll. to sOli , ltmestone and
gravel. Coli Bob 01 Roger Jel·
fers day phone 992·7089, night
phone 99'} 3525 or ~2 5232.
EXCAVATING
, dorer backhoe
MAIN
and dltcher Charles R. Hoi·
POMEROY. o.
Bock Hoe Service ,
f1e ld
Rutland , Oh1o Phone 742 '2008
NEW LISTING - In tho
country, large garden, J
WILL do roohng, construction.
bedroom remodeled home.
plumbing and heoh ng No JOb
Ntce country kitchen wlth
loo Iorge or too ~moll Phone
snack bar Dining room ,
7&lt;2-2348
large utility workshop . HOWERY AN D
MARTIN E• ·
Barn and other buildings .
co.,ot1ng
.
!
eptic
systems ,
New aluminum siding
dozer
,
backhoe,
dump
truck ,
Only $15,000.00,
limestone, grovel , blacktop
COOKS DELIGHT - In
po.,ing Rt. 143 Phone 1 (61A)
Pomeroy - one or the
696-7331 .
ni cest kitchens anywhere
Level lot . 2 slor les of
PUlliNS EXCAVATING Comple Jo
Service Phone 992·2.478
beau1ifully
remodeled
------llvabili1y Basement plus
POOLS All sites and
many other fea tures . PUDDLE
shopel · Sw1m pools , 'l yean
$27.200 00.
expenence , free 8!Uimotes ,
HEW "LISTING In
any thing you need fo r
Middlepor t - 2 story older
undergrour'ld sw1m pools New
home on good street. Could
chemtcol and supply store .
be good Investment for
Albon)l
Ohio
Phone
re n1al s
Lots
ol
61&lt;-698-6555 ( Alio&lt; 6 pm ,
remo deling . Asking
6 t 4-b89-S2S 1 John Jeffers or
m .ooo oo.
689.5265 Bill Gtllette ) We are
HEW LISTING - what you
NOT all wet on PRICES
have been walling for .
Approx 73 acres of the SPEEDY DRilliNG ' WaTer well
dril ling . com me rd al and
mosf des ir ab le building
st ie s In Meigs County .
domestic . Pump soles and ••r·
vice 992 6295 or 30.4 895 3802.
Secluded and close to
Pomeroy , on a good
township rood. Waler and
electric a.allable. Asking
$23,000.00.
OWNER SAYS SELL And he will help finance
th is older
home
In B K 35 . Sleeps \11( . Both New
Pomero y $6,725 .00.
ca rpeting and curtain• . Mu1t
RANCH - 3 bedrooms,
see lo app recia te Phone
to'"'f kt1chen . 2 years old,
696 1235.
exce lent condition , all
electric. Garage, I acre. 14 " 56 Memory loto l e lectric
trorler. Pbone 949 23.48.
S26,000.00
WE HAVE TWO BEDROOM mobile home
EXCELLENT
with awning, patio, and ottoc.h·
INVESTMENT
ed storage building Situated
RENTALS
AND
on 1'/• acre level lot in Five
BUSINESS - CALL FOR
Points ar.a Or'le m1le from Rt. 7.
MORE INFORMATION,
Pnca St 1.900. Phone 992·2679 .
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU. LIST
WITH US FOR RESULTS.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; ;;,LiipiiJi
ONE lONGHAIRED groy klnon .
CLELAND
r
White feet . 985· 3~ e..,enlnga
ASSOCIATES
orwHkends.
m -22st
THREE PUPPIES to good homo
ft2·61"
9'12-228&lt; or 9&lt;9 275&lt;,

~

BRIDGE

one for 4ou!

~~~"'""!":"'..,

21 Preside

Clubs by the book

---

NORTH

f,-.!11-A

• Q .l

• AK
t A K Q .I 2

+ 9 (; I .1

from

---

27 Bee:

~~~~~~~~~~
;
.

WEST
• 8 71
• J 10 9 8 6
• 63
+ A82

comb.
fonn

I Z8 WittiCism
%9 Swnmit

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

tiAV! A

Cl

NICE

Dlff

.•

+ A .J!09
• 75
• 8 54
K J 75

+

+ K 6 52
• Q1 .12
• 10 9 7
• Q 10

Vulnerable : Ne ithe r
Dea ler . North

s

- --

East was able to cash his

EAST

SOUTH

32 Comprehend
33 Manage
35 Under·
took
37 Decayed
38 Alpine

~

Wes t

North East South
It
Pass! ¥

Pass

:J •

Pass

Pa ss

Pass

Pa ss

:I NT

l
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it :

Opening lead

• J

AXYDl,BAr\XR
It

tONGFEl.I.OW

One lelter simply stnnds for ~ma ther. tn this sanlple A is
used for the three f.'s, X ro, the two O's C'lC ~tn g lc letters
apostrophes, the length &lt;~nd rormati nn of the \\O rrls nrc all
hin ts Each d:Jy the code lettrrs are diffcr£'nt

CRVPTOQUOTES
PGGVBPCJ
NM Y P G

PB

DTECAB

DTM
PJ

NVBD
DTM

DTM
MOMB

C K DTM
KCCGPBT . - ZPJJH HJDEPZ
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE PROSPERITY OF A COUNTRY IS IN ACCORDANCE WITH ITS TREATMENT OF THE
ELDERLY.-HASIDIC SAYING

By Oswald Jarobv
and Alan Sontag •
Sout h Jed dummy 's three
of spades at tnck two. It was
up to East to f1gurc out his
problem . It wa sn 't too tough
for Spamsh e•pert Rafael
Munoz. South was try ing to
score a spade tnck t o add to
three hea rts a nd f1ve dia monds. So Munoz went nght
up with his ace of s pa des
It was now up to him to go
after the club s Uit and he
selected the nght club . He
planked the kmg '
West signalled by drop-

(f) 111T8 Kin1 Features S1 ndtrate , 1M

THAR'S A ROCK SLIDE HEADIN'
FER TH' HOUSE, MAW!!

IF WE BECAME LOST
IN THE WOODS, HOW

RUN FER
'lORE LIFE!!

LONG COULD WE GO

WITHOUT REAL FOOD?

•

ping hiS e1ght. 1t was a
come·on Signa l , but it also
was an csscnllal play . Munoz co ntm ucd w1th the ftve
West took the ace and led
back the deuce, whereupon
jack and seven of c lubs .
Tins hand was r e por ted by
V1ctor Mollo in his book
" How Good I s Your
Def~nse ''" We take the a ce
of spades play as authentic,
but wonder 1f someone d1dn 't
do somethmg with the club
sui t to set up a standard but
very d1fficult book poSitiOn.
East must lead the kmg.
Wes t must drop the e1ght .

A Washington , D . C
reader asks if we ever open
one notrump with a worthless dou bl eton.
The answer is that we
don't recommend it unless
the doubleton includes the
jac k or a higher card , but we

do vwlate our recommendatwn on occaswn and bid that
w ort hl ess doubleton
not rump .
1 NF. W ~PAPF.Il FNTFHPH!SF: ASSN t
(Do you have a questiOn for
the experts ? Wrrte 'Ask th e

Experts care of thiS newspaper lndlvtdual questrons w111
tJe answered If acco mpamed
by stamped. self-addressed
envelopes The most mteresrmg quest1ons w111 be used m
tf11s column and will rece1ve

copies of JACOBY MODERN )

�10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, June 20, 1978

Two-day hearings on
school hill underway

Slides

(Continued from pace 1)
Woolard told of t~e arrival of
the Middleport Emergency
S!juad, the Middleport Police
Olief, representatives of the
sheriff's department, the
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The for the first time.
welfare benefits about 9 pe r- coroner and others to the
A $40 million school loan cent.
Ohto House Finan ce and.
home. He stated he did not
Appropriations Cmnmittee program aimed at school
Another $1Q million in recall smelling alcohol on
will begin a scheduled two district wh ich otherwise surplus stale revenues is Fitc hpatr ic k's breath .
da ys of hearings today on the would close thts year is also allocated toward industrial Woolard sa id Fitchpatrick
took the baby to the home of a
Senatepassed, $199.9 million authoriz ed in the bill deve lopment.
supplemental appropriations ap propriating suplus state
Some
attem pts
are neighbor , but thathe noticed
bill design ed to keep public revenues at the end of the expected in the House to add nothing unusual in Fitch·
schools open through the end current fiscal year June 30. another $10 million for patrick 's wa lk. Woolard
The leg islation also parcels welfare in the appropriations testified all three shells he
of the year .
had seen in the Jiving room
The committee, c haired by among school districts $8.2 bill.
Rep. Myrl Shoemaker, D- mi llion in disadva nta ged
The
Se nate,
wh ic h were live.
Bourneville. was scheduled to pupil impact aid, $8.6 million convened Monday night and . Lt. Miller told of arriving at
have its fi rst hearing after in vora tiona! ed uca tion recessed until 1:30 p.m. the Fitchpatrick residence
the 11 a.m. House fl oor instruction and $7.4 million in today, passed all five bills on with the other three officers.
session . The hearings are other state aid to education ' its calendar by 2S.Q margins. He testified Fitchpalrick kept
schedul ed to continue programs.
. One bill , given final legisla- talking, but he was not
Wednesday.
The other two main aspects tive approval and sent to Gov . permitted to repeat any of the
The bill .eleared the Senate of the bill include $34. 9 James A. Rhodes. extends conversation.
last week and contains $60.6 million to fu nd the public the deadline until Nov . 23 for
Judge Bacon had ruled that
million in additional funds for e mployee
pay
raise the insta llation of automatic this would not be permitted
the equal yield schoo l founda · a uthor ized earlier this year smoke detectors in hig h rise because law required that if
CLEANUP COMMI'ITEE - Members of the Meigs
tion formula, fully fu nding a nd $20 million to increase apartm en t buildings and this were to be used in the
County
Jaycees aloog with the Jaycee-&lt;!ttes cleaned up
the state aid to district pla n Aid to Dependent Ch ildren con dominiums.
trial, the content of the
tile outside of the old senior high school on Pomeroy 's
TI1e original deadline of alleged remarks would have
East Main Street in preparation for tile Big.Bend Regatta
July I would have been onl y had to be in the hands of the
34 days after the Board of defense attorn ey by June 10
Building Standards adopted and this had not been done.
rules a nd re·gulatio ns
Lt. Miller testified Fitch·
Holzer Medical Center
concerning the insta llation of pa trick wa s nervous. He Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - Jean Hawk,
the mandatory fir e safety described the wound to the
I Discharges June 19)
Reedsville; Robert Bowles,
equipment.
Richard Arthur, John
left area of the deceased as a
Sen. Rona ld Na bakowski, result of the shooting . He sa id Pomeroy: Daisy Glassburn , Boggs, Phyllis Carter, Susan
DLorain, who carried the bill he had noticed no signs of Bidwell ; Homer Bradshaw , Cochran, Anita Dyso n,
E lliott,
Jac k
in the upper chamber, sa id intox ication about Fitch· Pomeroy: Harry Thoma s, Hom er
Pomeroy; Ca rolyn Kin g, Hildenbrand, Joa n Joseph,
the deadline for compliance patrick.
plac ed a n unworkable
Howeve r, during cross Long Bottom: Tina Smith , Greta Kennedy, Neil Kuhn,
hardship on college and examination, Lt. Miller sa id, Middleport ; Ethel Carson, J udith Living ston, Nora
uni versittes, which have In let "that he was sure an accident Tupper s Plains: Bernard Loomis, Mrs. Richard Lusher
a contract for bids for a large can have a 'sobering effect' Milhoan , Long Bottom; and son , Colin Maidens, Cora
number of the devices for on an intoxicated person." Tamm y J ohn so n, Mid· Massie, Sandra Reese, Grey
mstallation in dorms.
John King testified to his dleport ; and Eliza Forman , Robinson, Marjorie Robin·
The Sena te also :
son, Ora Smith, Hazel
arriving at the Fltchpatrtck Portland.
Discharges - Jacquelyn Spencer, Joseph Sulliva n.
-Sent to the House legisla- home' with the other officers
tion In allow th e payment of and told of Sheila Edwards, Naylor, Kathryn Pierce and
unemployment compensation the babysitte r and her Sh erry Patterson.
benefi ts to school district hysterical behavior. He
Holzer Medical Center
employees who adm inister described Mrs . Fitch·
(Discharges, June 16)
sta te aid to nonpublic schools patri ck's wound and the area Patrici a Baker, Dorace
Far-sighted li ttle cr itt e rs . Came
from a special fund.
behind the chair as a result of Barber, Betty Betz, Moni ca
-Sent to the House a bill In the shooting.
Brwnfield, Pamela Burns,
fall they sta r t storing up for the
In accordance with Ohio
allow funds generated by fire
In cross examination by Vi ckie Cain , Margaret
statues,
the Meigs County
protection levies tn also be Fultz, it was brought out no Calvin, Merle Clark, Kim·
Republican
Ce ntral Com·
used for emergency medical autopsy had been performed berly Conley,·Mrs. Glen Crisp
winte r aheao . Get the habit too , and
mittee
held
its
organi zational
se r vice and ambulance on Mrs. Fitchpatrick.
and son, Walden Darst , meeting at the Meigs Inn last
maintenan ce.
Serving on the jury are Carolyn Dernosky , Cind y
start pulling some of your earnings
-Sent to th e House a bill In Gene Mitch, Paul Roush, Di ckens, Will iam Dunfee , Friday.
Officers elected for the
sell a sta te-{l wned building in Sha ron Buffin gton, Joa n Amelia Elkins, Olad Fitch,
Central
Committee we re
away now for the future .
Columbus to the Kroger Co. Cord er , Norman Hysell , Roscoe Fowl er , Harold
Robert
H.
Hy sell, Pomeroy,
for the possible expansion of Patricia Noel, J anet Do wnie, Gibbs, Grace Hankins, Salley
Cha
irman
;
Alvin Reed,
its bakery.
John Chapman, Pa tri cia Hill, Rhoda Hoffman, Ora
We will not be open
Reedsville,
Vice
Olairman;
- Returned to the House a Shain, Cecil To ban, Ra ymond Holb rook, 'Gladys Hun·
and
Elizabeth
Hobstett
er ,
bill ex emptin g certa in Cole and Joe Si5son. The tington, Gle nn Ice nhower,
Friday Evening, June 23rd
private emp loyment agencies alternates are Bruce Hoff· Shirley Jenkins, Mary Kerns, Rutland , Secretary.
Those elected as officers
from state regulation .
man and J ames Gaston.
Shirl ey Lane, Mrs. Donald
for the Ex ec utive Committee
Due to the Regatta Parade.
McCoy and son, Rita were Leslie F . Fultz,
Mc Ki bb e n ,
Ta uri c e Pomeroy, Chairman ; Donald
McKinl
ey,
Ava
McNece, Collin s, Pomeroy, Vice
WALK -UP T ELLER WINDOW AND
FU NDS DISTRffiUTED
Virgie
Ours,
Rita
Payne, Olalnnan: David Ohlin ger,
AUTO TEL LER WINDOW OPEN
State Auditor Thomas E.
Jane
Phipps,
La
ura
Riddle,
F RI. EV ENIN GSS To7 P. M.
Ferguson's office report ed
Middleport, Treas urer; and
Rose,
Anna Mrs. Hobstetter, Secretary.
(Continued from p&amp;Je 1) Teresa
toda y th e first ad van ce
Donors were, Pomeroy - Spaulding, James T. Spencer,
di strib uti on of 1978 stat e Barbara
"Tille' FRIEND/. l /JAN/\ "
Fiel d s , Patric ia
motor vehicle registration Vaughan , Pamela Vaughan, Mrs . Ca rl Stove r and
President Woodrow Wilson,
fees totaling $18,537,340.00 to Ma ry Star che r , Ja net Am - daughter , Phyll is Turner ,
Kathleen
Wade,
Eth
el
1914, became the first
in
Ohio co un t ies ~ cities. town· br ose , Dale Da vis, Leo
Watso
V
aug
han,
Ramona
Va
ughan,
n,
Mildred
Westfall
,
president
since John M ams,
ships and vill ages.
Oscar T. Sm ith, Jellrey J. Mrs. Larry Whetstone and in 11100, to deli v.er a message
Meigs Count y's portion was Hil leary , Walter Ro bert
$18,711.64 .
Couch. Mar jor ie Re uter , son, Beverly White , Jonathan (Stale of the Union ) to Con·
Helen E. Blackston , Harlan Wilk ins, Hattie Williams, gress in person.
H. Wehrung, Karyn Da vis , Ruth Willis, John Wilt, Mr s.
H arvey
Va n Vrahk en , James Woltz and daughter,
Hl·LUW TEMPS
William Ra df or d. Roger Leora Wri ght , Sandra Wyant,
NEW YORK (UP! I - The Da vis. Evel yn Strauss and
Wendi Young.
highest temperature reported Edna Tri plett .
Jon
Ka
r
schn
ik
,
David
M
.
Birth
Monday to the National
King , Sher ri Clark , Kathleen
Mr
.
and
Mrs . Richard
Weatller Service, excluding Wells, Ted Reed, Homer B.
1
Lusher,
a
son,
Gallipolis.
Alaska and Hawaii, was 113 Smtih , Clyde E. Kennedy,
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corooration
Discharges,
June 17)
Joh
n
A.
Anderson,
Deb
ra
degrees at Buckeye, Ariz.
Windon,
Homer
G.
Bax
ter
,
Carolyn
Ak
ers, Mrs .
Today's low was 27 degrees at
Howard Loga n, Joann An- Dennis Blakeman and son,
DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000
Butte, Mon t.
derson, Robert W. Vaughan.
Er ic A. Pearch , Gera ld Betty Brinson, Debra Cart er,
Mary Casto, Mrs. Steven
Rou qht , Ja co uel lne D.
,................llllitfllllllllllit!llll~~~~-----~~~~~~llllitfllllll_._......_.......llllll. Bri
ckles. Bill y J. Spencer, Fetherolf and son, Shannon
La rry E. Mily . . Harry L. Frisby, Heather Hastwell,
Ba iley. Vir gil Windon, Mrs. Norman Hill and son,
'
Dorothy J. Oliver , Debbie
Buck , She ila J . Ta ylor , Mary Hoo ver, Goldye
Mar vin E. Taylor , Malcal m Johnson, Truman Johnson,
Mees , Rich ard Vaughan, Ann Mrs . Paul
Kauff and
M. Gry cza. and 5all y Pierce. da ught er , Mr s. Walter
From Sy ra cu ~e - Aaron L.
Sayre and Kath y J. Cum- Krodel \ and .son, Virgi e May,
mings .
Froud Mercer, Ga ry Mullins,
From Middleport - Robert Tonda Phillips, Sue Pierce,
V. King . Joyce V. Bar trum , Daran Rees, Alva Shafer,
Pa tri cia K. Logan, Sandra K.
Taylor, Edward W. Dorsi, Timoth y Shaffe r, Rickie
Sarah Fow ler , Ju di th K. Shriver , Marga ret Sm ith ,
Hunter . Debbie Carder , Gerri George Stanley, Linda Webb,
Rought, Martha J. Hackel! ,
Nora Rice, Den Yer Rice, Ira Wolfe.
.,
Births
Freda Durkham , James R.
- -'
MONDAY
Da iley, and Belly Pooler
Mr . and Mrs. Gary
Fr om Long Bottom Davisson, a son, Mill Wood.
Shirl ey Bell. Howard Parker. W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
AT
Thoma s Stone, and Darrell
Edwa rds, a son, Mason.
Hawthorn e.
Fr om
M i nersvi l le
(Discharges, June IS)
\ ...._ - .J
Ca ro lyn Charles and James
Ra nd ell Bentley, Edith
R. Ander son .
-- r
From Ra cine - Thomas G. Bisc hoff , Elbert Brooks,
Tu cker , De bra Holsinger . E uge ne Butterbau gh ,
Ei leen
Buck,
Lorello Bever ly Fletc her, Stacy
l'orn eroy, Ohio
Holsinger, Phyll is Edwards. Flory, Billy Games, Da vid
Lorello K. Hill , Jane l E. Hill ,
William H. Hoba ck, Milrtin Grindstaff , Mildred Lemley,
A 64 oz. bottle of RC and a
Dennis Parson , Arnold
Bush , Da vid Harr is , Larry
Pantsu it Styl e No . 950
Fisher . Charles W. Bush, Sharp, Beulah Swindler ,
f rltbee with the purchaM of
Don na Joh nson, Ma rvi n Hil l, Goldie Van Matre, Sheryl
I '""
Larry Ball, Hobart Childress ,
Walters,
Mary
Ward,
Ruth
Donna Hil l, Lawrence Bush,
any bucket, barrel or family
• I I .Jt I . I I I
\I '
Davi d Fox, June Wic ker - Wilbur.
•
l'
l ,•t
sh
am
.
l
amara
Hi
l
l
,
and
Births
'
.
valu pok
Harold E. Hager .
I• 'I 1 I I ' 1)1• 1! hI· ~
Mr. and Mrs . Th omas
From Reed sv il le - Mar ie
GREAT SERVICE! GREAT .CHICKEN!
: I !" ''
Probert , Ma cel Barton , and Albert , a son, Jackson . Mr.
and Mrs. Dennis Fraley, a
R!chard Barton .
! 1 1 ~t' l WITh \ 1·1 I ,. t
From Rutland - Clarence daughter, Rio Grande. Mr.
I•• I
jl~Jrl l ~
Busk irk , Robert Bu skir k, and Mrs. Roy Heath, a son,
C1 ll HI ~ SA OOUBll , Nil
Rosel la Birchf ield, Charles C. Beaver. Mr. and Mrs. John
King and Shlrly Smi lh.
IC10 "' nac ror1- Polynk'l
From Chesh ire - Joe Stroth, a daughter, Wellston.
~'I ReiC'OSC Fm1 ~h
White and Charles W.
Wt· ,,, only
Searles .
Too late

HOSPITAL NEWS

SQUIRRELS DO IT!

Hysell heads

Republicans

94 pints

Eye witness gives testimony in murder trial

tllat will get underway· Thursday. Shown 1-r, are Cindy
Smith, Juanita Weaver , Joni Sellers, Beverly cw:muns ·
back, Dave Jenkins, Bill Young, Susan Fleshman and
Karen Triplett.

I

JAMES G. WORTHEN
STANLEY WARD
James
Garrett Worthen , 78,
Sta nley M. Ward, 69, a
Ca
nton,
died June 6 at his
resident of 699 E. Wei sheimer
home.
His
death was due to
Rd ., Columbus, died Monda y.
an
apparent
heart attack.
He was a retired employee of
Born
in
Meigs
County Mr.
the J efFery Minin g and
Worthen
.has
been
a resident
Manufacturing Co., member
of
Canton
for
the
past 38
of North Broadway United
years
and
retired
from
the
Methodist Church, Siloam
Canton
Drop
Forge
in
1959.
Lodge No. 456 F and AM
Cheshire, Scottish Rite, He was a member of the
Plain s
First
Valley of Columbus, Alad-din Tuppers
Christian
Church.
Temple
Shrine,
Vet·
Preceded in death by a ·
eran U. S. Ar my WW
daughter,
Helen Worthen,
II
and
a
member
Mr.
Worthen
is survived by
of Post 82 American Legion
four
sons,
James
of Norfolk,
and the Barefoot Club of
Va
.,
nail
of
Atlanta,
Robert
Jeff ery's.
of
Ak
ro
n
and
Duane
of
He is survived by his wife,
Mas
sillon
;
one
daughter,
Agnes; daughter, Mrs. Fred
(June ) Aysee of Fayetteville, Mrs. Ray (Olarlotte) Cline of
N. C. ; three grandchildren, Louisville; two si sters, Mrs.
and one great-grandchild ; Garnet Zorn of Florida and
sister, . Mrs. Ll oyd (Ruth ) Carrie Swa t¥of Pomeroy; II
Roush, Ches hire; brother, grandchildren and five great·
Fred Ward, Vienna, W. Va. grandchildren.
Funera l services were held
Friends may call at South·
June
9 at the Reed Funeral
wick Funeral Chapel, 3100 N.
R'
o
rne
with Ted Walker of·
High St. Wednesday , 2-4 and
ficiating.
Burial was in the
7-9 p.m. where services will
Forst
Hill
Cemeter y.
be held 10 a.m. Thursday. .
Burial will be in Union :-:-:-:.:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:::::·:::::·:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:
Cemetery , Rev. William
EXTENDED FORECAST
Tolliver officiating.
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday, lair and warm
through tbe· period, wltb
blgbs In lbe 80s and lows
PAPER FOLDS
CINCINNATI (UP! I - The ranglag from the upper 50o
' 'Ci ncinna ti Repor ter," a to tbe mid lOti.
weekly newspaper, has gone -:-:-::;::::::::::::::::::.:-:-:.:.:-:-:-:-;.";.;.:-:·:·:-:-:-:-:·:-:-:-:-:-:out or business because of
fi nancial losses.
Cloves, the pungent and oilOffi cial s of the paper , ri ch dried unopene&lt;l buds of a
which had been publishing tropica l evergreen, are nam·
less than a year, said Mooday ed after nails, which they
they hoped to start another somewhat resemble, from
weekly pape r.
the Latin "clavus," for nail.

.

::

TRY OUR ALL NEW
DRIVE THRU WINDOW
OW OPEN

From Tuppers Plains -

Joan G. Smith and Lois
Deem .
Hllah Loyne from Cedar
Blu ff , Va . and Charl es
Johnston, Alaska
·

Be Sure To See
All The Other
Styles Women's
Unifolms

Silky Shawl Preferred
A tailored blazer should
never be worn with a party

iijjiijjjjiijj---ijjiii;jii;jii;jii;i;;;;;;;;;;;-...1 stead
dress. Try a silky shawl In·
.

l ...llllllllllllfllllllfllllllfllllllllfll...............

f

Open FriclaJ Ni&amp;ftt

ru

BIG YA IW 5ALE Wed . B: Thursday
Ci to? Corn ple te bedroom su1te '
book.co 1e , fan. movie pro iec:
lor , glonwo re , drapes . rug s,
bedspread, liHie gi rl s ' clo thes,
some J.( llt , also women's
wood e n w ind ows &amp; doors . lo t~
more , mi sc. Cla rence' Boyle s ,
_!_7_8 O l1ve St., Middle port, Oh.

Shop Other Week

MISSES

AND

~_l_

HALF SIZES

DaJS 9:30 a.m.
to 5 p.m.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I

there" but she commented
th~t Leonard would not let
her take the baby, (Tara) .
The couple conti nued to
argue now about the children ,
Edwards said and Ell en told
Leonard tha t she wanted a
divorce.
According to Edwa rds,
Leonard told his wife to
leave, but warned her that
she could not take their
da ughter.
Ellen said she would pack
and she went upstairs.
Mi ss Edwards answered a
call to join Ell en upstai rs but
she did not go up beca use
Leonard warned her not to .
Al berta Rt chards, a sister of
Ell en, did join her sister
upstairs. however. Mi ss
Edwa rds said she laid down
on the couch with the babie s.
She told of Ellen returni ng
to the living room and the

en tine

WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 21 , 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

::.:__~~_::...::_::.:_:_.::....::__ _.,..._ _ _ _ _ __:_:._--.::::_:_.::::~.::_

Workers search
for casualties
•

t-

building co\lapsed, and one the school was not darn ·
person died at a village near aged. Most of the pupils had
Serres, 50 miles fro m already left for th eir summer
vacations , and there were no
Salonica.
injuries
..
At least 82 people were
hospitalized in Sa\onica, and
Sweltering heat - tern·
another 50 injured were at pe ratures hit 100 degrees
private clinics in the city.
before the quake struck "The place looks like a apparently saved many lives.
dese rt ed batt le zone' this
"Most people were out on
morning," sai d Sotiris the streets seeking relief
Zlatanis, a Salonica office from the heat," one offi cia l
worker.
said. "Had the y been inside
,;There is broken glass and those buildings, casualti es
fallen plaster everywhere." woul d have been much
Bu t apart from the higher."
co ll a pse d
a par t me nt
Tuesday's quake was the
building, authorities sa id, the fourth strong tremor to str ike
most serious damage was the Sa!onica ,region in less
confined to older buildings in than a month , but the first to
the center of the city.
cause any deaths.
Streets were littered with
chunks of concrete, broken
glass and toe batt ered
remains of cars half-buried
under the debris.
Police and army patrols
moved through the streets
searching through the debris,
helping the homeless and
gua rdi ng shops against
loote rs. Telephone and
electricity lines were down in
United Press International
some areas.
Today marks the beginning'
A historic landmark, the
of
the swnmer season and
medieva l White Tower, lost
Ohioans
were greeted by
part of its battlements in the
showers
and
thundershowers,
shock.
which
spread
eastward
, A spokes man for the
across
Ohio
overnight.
American Farm School, five
The heaviest rainfall was
miles outside Salonica, said
rc'()Orted in the Toledo and
Cin cinnati areas. Toledo had
rece ived three-quarters of an
inch and Cincinnati reported
one-half
inch
of
precipitation.
Dayton an d Mar iett a
received better than one·
quarter inch of rain but
rainfall amounts in other
sections of the state were
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) - Gov. James A. Rhodes urged senior generally less than a tenth of
citlzens,Tuesday In unite " with their collet1ive voices to make
an inch.
their wishes known to him and th e General Assembly .''
The rainfall has been gene·
Rhodes, keynote speaker at the annual Governor's rated along of, and ahead of,
Conference on Aging, predicted Ohio lawmakers will soon a cold front . That frontal
adopt legislation to provide for "a fixed term for the hoodlums system early today extended
who prey on the senior citizens of this state."
fr om central Lake Eri e,
southw es tward
between
Cleveland and Akron, to near
Cincinnati.
The front will be moving to
MOREHEAD, Ky. (UPI ) - The alternate federa l. the east and so uth today and
cochairman of the Appalachian Regional Commission
(Continued on page 10)
Tuesday told the Kentucky Applachian Development
Conference the coal industry is currently experiencing a
generation gap.
WW111111 E. Alberts said with the current coal boom, many
young miners are corning lntn the mines without any
experience. "During the most recent bust cycle, a generation
of Appalachians did not go lntn coal mining," he said .

By JOHN RIGOS
SALONICA, Greece (UPI)
- Rescue workers searched
the ruins of toppled buildin gs
today for casualties from a
severe earthquake that killed
more than a dozen people and
injured at least 150.
The government declared a
state of emergency in nor·
them Greece and called in
anny troops to help police.
The quake Tuesday night
had a strength of 6.5 on the
open-&lt;!nded Richter Scale. It
jolted most of northern
Greece at 11 :03 p.m. but the
w.orst damage was .in
Salonica, an lndUIIrial center
of 700,00() people located 30
miles from the shock's
epicenter.
By mid·moring poli ce
reported there were 14 known
victims of the quake, in·
eluding nine who died in the
collap5e of an eight-story , 45·
family apartment house .
Author ities said many
people were outside their
homes seeking relief from a
heat wave, a factor that
shortened the casualty lists.
" Three people died of heart
attacks brought on by the
shock," a hospital spokesman
said.
A police spokesman said a
Yugoslav tourist staying at
an old hotel died of Injuries
received when the roof of the

Summer
season
hegins

.

tu classify
Yard Sale

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Industry has generation gap

'&gt;I •

sP::J~~

-

NO. 47

- - - - -- -- - - -- - -- - - - - - - -- - ---..:_..:_:...:.__ __ _

Senior citizens are urged

Crow's Family
Restaurant

to tee\

at y

e
VOL XXIX

~'harlie ha d tri ed to gel into Tall Timb ers . Edwards
ilie house while she was testified Fitchpatrick called
ba thing, Edwa rds said. She his wife severa l obscene
then let them in the house. names. Mr. and Mrs. Fitch·
She said the gro up settled in patrick went to the bathroom
the living room and ap- and Miss Edwards testified
parently all fell asleep.
she could sec Fitchpatrick's
Miss Edwards sa id she was arms movin g and she could
awakened about 1:30 a.m. bY hea r Leonard hitting Ellen .
E11en slanuning the fr ont E11en yelledforhertoca11the
door. She said that Fitch· Jaw but Leonard yelled that
pa trick was on the porch and . ··she'd better not," Edwards
ye1led to his wife to let him in told the jury . She said she
the house, call ing her an wa s afraid to call for help.
obscene name. Edwards sa id
Leonard return ed to the
E11en was trying to expl ain living room and Ellen, who
that the doo r had locked · was behin d shoved hi m,
automatically and she was Edw ards testifi ed with
attempting to reopen it when Leonard then swinging at his
Fitchpatr ick rammed hts fist wife but he missed her .
through a glass in the doo r. . Edwa rds said EUen ca ll ed
Fitchpatrick shoved E1len her hu sband an obsc ene
from behind as he entered the name and he smacked her.
living room , Edwards stated
In the Jivin g room, Ed·
and the two were arguing wa rds
testified
El len
beca use he had taken Ellen to "wanted me to tak e her out of

•

i;_);..._,r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_

-

said she fixed something to
eat and during this time,
Ellen called on the phone. She
said she talked to Mrs. Fitch·
patrick and volunteered to
babysit with the two children
(one belonging to Mrs. Fitch·
patrick and one the child of
Mr. and Mrs. Fitchpatrick) if
the couple wanted to gc out
for the evening.
Leonard and Ellen Fitch·
patrick returned home about
8:35p.m., andgotreadyto go
out leaving the house about
8:55p.m., Edwards test ified.
ThiS left Miss Edwa rds,
Alberta Richards and the two
children, Charlie the eldest
and Tara , the Fitchpatrick
child in the house.
Miss Edwards said she took
a bath and during this tim e
the door had automaticall y
locked . Alberta who had been
on th e front porch with

''

I

READY TO WEAR
DEPT. 2ND FLOOR

She discussed her problems
With the l~te Ellen Fitch·
patnck until about 6:30a .m.
that mo~mg. She said Mrs.
Fttchpatnck told her she
could stay at the home until
she got settled down . Ed·
~ards SB!d she left the_F_1tch·
patnck hom.e .at 389 Williams
St., about .9.30 a.m . .
The Witn ess sa1d . she
ret~rned to the Fltchpatnck
residence ~bout n"?n and !~at
Mr. and Mrs. F1tchpatnck
played cards while she ate
lunch. She stayed at the home
th1s tllile for about 25 rnmutes
and then left. She returned to.
the F1tchpalnck hom e about
8 p.m. but no one was home.
M1ss Edwards sa1d she was
preparmg to leave when t~e
l~ t e Mrs . Fllchp_atrt ck s
s1ster, Albert a Richards ,
arrtved with the door key and
let her m the house. Edwards

•

r--------------------------,
: Area Deaths !

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

THRU THURSDAY

Sheila Edwards, 20,
Pomeroy, babysitting friend
o~ Leona~ and the late Ellen
F1tchpat:1ck, who Witnessed
the shootrn~ death last Aprtl9
gave a detailed account of the
incident thiS morning In
. Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. .
,
.
Followmg mstrut11on by
the court, Miss Edwards
quoted the foul language and
threats lhal alleg~dly took
place on tbe rnornmg_or the
shooting as she testified for
th~ defense in Fitchpatrlck's
Ina! on aggravated murder
cha~ges.
.
M1ss Edwards sa1d she had
known F1tchpatnc_k fo~ some
four years and his w1fe for
some SIX years. He sa1d 7he
went to the. F1tchpatrtck
horne. about 3 ~ .m . on the
mommg of Aprtl 8 because
she had personal problems.

THESE ARE SOME of the contest ants for the title of Big Bend Regatta Queen this year.
From the left , seated, are Brenda Frecker , Car la Kauff and Brenda Boyles: standing from
the left , Cathy Blaettnar, Teresa Carr, Terri Tobin, and Cindy Pitzer. The queen will be
crowned at· th e Lynn St . sta ge following Friday evening's parade and the Rio Grande
Chorale will be on hand to present a program.

Final work completed
for new county maps
Final details were com·
pleted fo r a new Meigs
County map when Meigs
County Commissioners met
in regular session Tuesday
night.
'
Meeting with the board to
discuss the project were Dr.
Bloo mer of Ohio Universit y,
wh o Is superv ising th e
project; and J eff Bun of
Buckeye Hills.
Dr. Boomer reported th e
new, up-to-date color map
should be available to th e
public by early August.
Th e project is financed by
Buckeye Hill s with the ex·

ception of the pr i ~ti n g which
will be absorbed by the
county.
Pete Simpson also met wi th
the board to di sc uss a
ma intenance co ntract on
ce rtain
count y
radio
eq uipment. Simpson was
advised to submit a firm
proposal for the board to
st udy.
Bob Baile y, administrator
ol the Meigs Emergency
Medi ca lService, met with the
board discussing pu rchasing
procedu res fur the Meigs
EMS.
Sherman White of Naylors

Run Hill was present to seek
help in getti ng township road
77 repaired and blacktopped
if possible.
White was advised this
road is under the control of
Salisbury Township and he
should contac'l the township
tru stees and seek their
assista nce.
On a motion made by
Richard Jones, seconded by
Jim Roush, the fo11owing
resolution was adopted .
" Wh ereas, the severe
winter weather, experienced
in Ohio the last two years, has
(Continued on page 10)

Woman gets her Corvette
CHARlESTON, W. Va . tUPI) - A Columbus Ohio
intent on owning a special 25th anniversary 'edition'
Corvette hauetUed out of court with a Fayette County, w. v a .,
Otevrolel dealer!hlp that tried to cwtcel her purchase.
Paula N, Routte sent a $1,000 deposit to Crawford Motor
0!. of Lookout, W. Va ., and Dew down In sign the purchase
agreement last February. The dealership, however ,
IIUbaequenUy notified Ms. Routte it was canceling the
qreement.
..,.
wm~an

Loan bill is approved ·
WASHINGTON (UP! )- A bill liberalizing loan term.t lor
natioN purchasing Amerlcllllann exports includes a special
provilion encoll'lg\ng Otinl to buy more U. S. !ann products.
The bill, approved Tuesday by a 3&amp;-1 vote of the Holl9e
Agriculture Committee, would authorize the Agriculture
Department to eltend to 10 years from the current
years
Ut~=:•Uon• are given to repay loano made by the U. S.
go
nt'l Coolmodity Credit Corporation.
}.

Utree

GE'ITING READY - Nolan Amusements which'
cooststs of rides and coocesslon stands Is almost ready for
the Big Bend Regatta weekend. The midwa y will open

'"'

Thursday from 8to 10 when persons can ride all they want
for $2.t\O. The rides are located behind lhe former
Pomeroy Junior High Building which now houses the
senior ,citizens center.
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arguing continuing. Edwards
said Ellen threatened to call
''J . J ." (Cremeans ) lo help
he r leave . Edwa rds said
Leonard responded that he
had two guns upstairs and
knew how to use them and
that he would blow the. head
off the fi rst person to step on
theporch. He also threatened
that he would blow the head
of Tara off if it had to be.
" You're not taking her,"
Leonard ~a rn ed, according
lo the test llllony of Edwards.
Continuing, Miss Edwa rds
sa1d Ellen went to the phone
but hung it up after Leonard
warned that he would go get
hts guns and be ready .
At th1s po mt, Leonard went
upstatrs and brought the guns
down to the hvmg room,
acc? rdm g to Edw_a rds
testimony. Ellen urged htm to
put them away because they
were nothing to pl ay with,

Edwards stated. She said that
Leonard , standin g In the
middle of the room. broke
down the gun and it sounded
as though he were loading it.
'"You didn't load that gun .
You're just kidding around,"
Mrs. Fitchpatrick said ac·
cording to Edwards .
" O.K. I' ll show you ,"
Fitchpatri ck replied , Ed·
wards test ified.
Miss Edwards said she
heard the repeat of the
sounds of the gun apparently
being loaded . "I sa t up ' It
scared me," Miss Edwards
commented .
i
According to Miss Ed·
wards, Fit ch patrick then put
the gun to his wife's temple
but he did not have his finger
on the trigger. "I ought to
blow your .... brains out right
now, " Fitc hpatri ck said
according to Miss Edw•r~s .
(Continued on page 10)

12 accidents
investigated
The Ga \\i a-Mei gs Post,
A two-car mishap occurred
Highwa y Patrol invest igated at5:25 p.m. on US 35, at the
twelve accidents Tu esday. junction of SR 7.
A t wo·car mishap occurred
According to the patrol, an
on SR 7 at !0 :35 a.m. Ac· auto driven by Cheryl Metz
cording to the patrol, an auto 30. Letart , W. Va., was strud
driven by Harriet Smith, 70, in the rea r by a vehi cle drive
Pt . Pleasant, was struck in by Rulh N. Young. 56
the rear by a vehicle driven Ga\lipolis.
by Nina McCor mi ck, 59,
No injuries were reported
Bowling Green , Florida.
Young wa s cited for assured
Smith claimed injuries clear distance.
and was trea ted and released
Al 12:15 a.m. an acciden&gt;
fr om Pl easan t Va ll ey occurred on SR 7 at the
Ho spital.
juncti on of Ftfl h Ave .,
McCorm ick was treated Kanauga . Offi cer s said an
and released for abrasions of auto driven by Lonnie C.
the right hand and forearm at McGUire. Jl , Rodney, had
Holzer Medical Center.
&gt;topped to tu rn left , when it
McCormick wa s cited for was struck in the rear by a
vehicle operated by Jeffr ey
assured clear distance.
At 6:14a.m. on US 35 at th e Viars, 21, Gallipolis.
junction of Buck Ridge, autos
McGuire claimed in juries.
driven by Debra Smith, 23, bul was not immediately
Bidw ell , an d Te r ry G. treated.
Bradley , 21 , Winford, W. Va ,
lin acc ident involving a
deer occurred at I : 10 a.m. on
collided head-on.
According to the report , Co unty Road 5, one and one·
Smith was traveling east on fifth of a mtle from SR 7 in
35, Bradley west, when the Meig s Count y where th e
accident occurred.
animal ran into the path of an
Smith claimed injuries and auto driven by Charles Diehl,
was taken to Holzer Medical · 22 , Pomeroy . Offi ce rs report
Center, where she' was no injuries.
treated and released.
A t w o~ ar mishap occurred
Smith was cited for fail ure on SR 7 at 5 p.m. According to
to yield.
patrol, an auto driven by Paul
The patrol investigated a D. Raines, 19, Charleston,
mishapinvolving an unknown was struck in the rear by a
vehi cle at 11 :35 a.m. on Sand vehi cle operated by Robert C.
Hollow Rd., four-tenths of a Mitche11, 22 , Cheshire.
mile nort h of Ingles Rd.
The report states the north
According to the report, an bo und Raines' auto was at·
auto driven by Morris F. tempting to tum right off 7,
Blazer, Jr ., !9, Gallipoli s, when it was st ruck in the left
was forced off the roadway rear by the Mitchell vehicle.
by an unidentified vehicle.
Mitche11 claim ed injuries
Officers report the Blazer but was not immediately
auto passed on the ri ght side treated . Mitchell was cited
of the road and struck a for assured clear distance.
telephone pole.
The. patrol investigated an
Blaze r claimed tnJunes , accident at 11 : 10 a.m. on SR
but was not immediately 7, two-tenths of a mile south
treated. A pa ssenger, Dia ne of Co unty Road 2.
According to the report an
L. Blazer, 19, also claimed
inJuries, but was not treated. auto dnven by Venessa R.
At 12:40 p.m.. offi ce rs Pleasant, 20, Bidwell , was
investigated- an accident on forced off the roadway and
SR 124, fi ve-tenths of a mile struck a utility pole owned by
north of App le St. in Ohio Bell. There was no in·
Syracuse.
jury.
According to the patrol. an
At 3:30 a.m. on SR 218,
auto driven by Kenneth D. seven-tenths of a mile north
Koehler, 17, Syracuse, went of SR 55l, an auto driven by
off the right side or the road Wi\l iam M. Watson, 27.
&gt;1riking a utility pole owned Crown City, was traveling
by the Ohio Power Co.
north on 218 when it st ruck a
There were no injuries. large hole in the road, lost
Koehl er was cited for ex· control, and passed off the
cessive speed for conditions .
(Continued on page 10)

Human rights dominate
By JlM ANDERSON
WASH INGTON (UP!) - A
dialogue on human rights is
expected to domin ate the 10
days of the general assembly
of the Or ganization of
Amer ic an Sta tes, openin g
today .
President Carter was sche·
duled In make the opening
address , and Secretary of
State Cyrus Va nce will make
the principal U.S. spee ch
Thursday.
The 26-nalion organization
alread y has
had
a
preliminary look at three
sta If reports on human rights
abuses in the hemisphere :
one on Uruguay , one on
Parguay and a general report
that focuses on the situation
in Olile .
The reports are described
by American offi cials as "extremely tough, " containing
serious accusations of
violations of human rights in
all three countries.
Some member s of the
organization wanted human
rights to be discussed in
conjunt1ion with the battle
against terrorism. But the
United states objet1ed on the
ground that some nations
may try to justify some
human rights abuses by the
need to fi ght. terr orist

activity.
Terrorism wi\1 be discussed
m a separate session of the
assembly.
The United States al so is
seeking to have its traditional
financia l levy reduced. At
present the United Sta tes
pays th e maximum quota, 66
per cent of the OAS annual
budget of $70 million . The
United States wants it¥ levy
to be reduced to 49 per cent.
The American suggestions
for fin ancial reorganization
have been discussed for the
past five years, but have been
at an impasse for the past two
years. U.S. offi cials served
notice they intend to push the
matter at this year's session .
The OAS also will review
the Panama Canal treaties,
at the request of Panama,
which insists the U.S.·
Pananamlan agreement
cannot confli ct with the
charter of the OAS which,
among other things, bans
agg ression by one state
against another.
In all, the assembly of the
OAS will consider oome 30
agenda topics, but human
rights and the financial reor·
ganizatlon ·of the OAS are
expected to generate moot of
the political heat.
\

.,

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