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                  <text>D-8- The Sunday Times.Sentinel, Sunday, June 25. 1978

le aders
and
Council
President George Forbes has
fou ght
tl)e
mayor's
legislative efforts.
" Dur ing Wat e r gate .
Americ a witnessed the
tyrann y of the executive
branch," Kucini ch sa1 d.
''Now , locally. we have the
tyranny of the legislative
CLE VELAND ( UPI ) - branch. "
Mayor Dennis Kucini ch
The 31-year-o ld ma yor and
bega n cam paigning ha rd his sta ff said they are
Saturday to keep the office he co nfident the vote rs will
won in November. billing decide to retain Kucinich.
himself as "The People 's
"Recalls have a way of
Mayor."
boomeranging ," sa id the
Having decided to abandon mavor 's executive secretary ,
his court challenges of the Robert Weissman. "I've seen
recall campaign mounted no evidence of any of our
aga inst him, Kucinich has support eroding.
laken the offensive. He said
"The people who voted for
he will campaign against big us in November will vote for
business, city council and the us again. And a substantial
leader s of the recall percentage of those who
movement.
voted against us will
The Ohio Supreme Court understand the outrageous
declined to hear the mayor's nature of the recall and will
ret'all appeal last week. In vote for us this time."
t•ffect , the state's top court
Weissman, accused of
upheld a 2-1 decision that being arrogant, tactl ess and
went against him in the Ohio ruthless in his role as hatchet
8th District Court of Appeals. man. for the mayor, was a
Cit v council will meet major reason for the recall
ThW.sday to set the date for campaign. The other major
th e recall vote, probably reason was the mayor's firin g
some time ea rly in August. of Ri chard Hongisto, th e
City council appears to be former sheriff of San
one of the mayor 's main
Francisco County , Calif. , as
targets. Councilman William police chief after only three
Sullivan was one of the reca II months .

Mayor, 31,
asks vote
in recall

~al ~

CEstate:•

BRIDGE

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Diamond defeats diamonds
NOR Til

+ Q10!l 7
¥ J \09 7'
• 84

He -won that firs t di a mond

and proceeded lo lead a

EAST
+ II .J :!

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Vu lnerable : Ne ither
Dea ler : South
Ntlrth

Eas t

So.uth

I+

Pass

t•

It
H

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Pass

Pass

An

+4

Swiss team events.

ai1d Alm1 Sontag ·

lkn: is a nu.:c probl em for

1·uu n·"dc rs. llftc1· Wes t
ieods th(• four of s pudes
ag ;nnst Snul.h "s three dia :
rnorH.Is t'&lt;lrl yo u find a w ::ry to
dde~r t lh t· l'lllltract 'I
)~ 1 \' l'

you a hint Au.s-

t rali&lt;rrl lllle nu-tt lona lisl T im
St_•rt'S dul at tlw t ablt.• and
dt•c l;lrL·r h; 1d no c h ~llll ' l'

aJ,,UHnsl Tnn ·s pla y.
'l 1111 I\ on the f1rs t t r ick
w1tll the Jih'k of sp ad r s .
lil&lt;'n he i&lt;' d ba ck Ius ll1 " f
trumps

As long as they aren't used
f&lt;w ma jor national and world
championships we just love
them. They arc good fun fo r
ex pert to the veriest beginner a nd at the same time
arc a good test of everyone's

abilit y.
\; EW SI'A I' I: H E ~ H: Ili'H I SE ASSN

be answe1ed d acco mpamed
lJ ~
stampect self-addressed
('nvelopt:.~s
lf1e most mte restlflQ qu c s/1011!&gt; w1ll /Je used m
tll/ ll t'."

wr/1 rPce 1ve

oi .JACOBt MODERN )

SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1978 - 2:00 P.M.
Location : From Gatlipotis fotlow Route 7 to Junction
218 follow 21B for 16 miles and turn left on Hannan
Tr~ce Road and go 2 miles turn \ell on Sowards Ridge .
The fotlowing witt be offered :
HOUSEHOLD : 1 beds, 3 dressers , coffee table. l erd
tabl es. sewi ng machi ne, 2 kitchen ta bles, 9xl2 wool
r ug, washi ng machine (wringer type ), wood cook
stove, kdc hcn ca b1nct, hcar,ng sTove, trui1 ia rs, and
omer odd s and en ds.

MACHINERY : Ford Ferguson tra ctor , 3 pt. disc. HD
disc

smal l manure spreader , 2 wheel tra iler ,
Dea~born sc raper , 2- 14" plows, H O mowing mach ine.
HO wagon, 1 horse sled. HD hay rake. HD corn planter ,
smal l tabl e saw , toba cco press. hillside plow and oth er
plows r~nd numerous hand tools and miscellaneous
items .

TERMS : CASH

GILBERT JOHNSON,
OWNER
AUCTIONEER- LEE JOHNSON
CROWN CITY - 256-6740

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
AT

Crow~s

Family
Restaurant
Pomeroy, Ohio

A 64 oz. bottle of RC and a
frisbee with the purchase of
any bucket, barrel or family

·c,eto

\(S 1-''~~...rtt a

se?'P'--

TRY OUR ALL NEW
DRIVE THRU WINDOW

I

1Do 1 ou f1a ve a Qllf'SI10n fo r
tfl(' e 1. oerts ' Wute
Ask the
E ~ tJCIIS
.;are o f nus ne wsoapel lndmrJual QueS ftOnS wJif

PUBLIC SALE

GREAT SERVICE! GREAT CHICKEN!

KHOEHLER
LIVING ROOM SUITES

ever yone from the greatest

lfi1S t·oi umn t1 11d

Afl f'r th1s frrw lr ad .':oiouth

valu pale

were Gordon Downard, first;
Tim Toth, second, and Glen
Jeffers, third. in ,the Mod-50
heat ; Mike Combs, first; Bill
Brown, second, and Kenneth
Au, third, in the s-J class;
and Downard, first; Au,
second , and Combs, third, in
the Mod-100 and Mod·U
division . Downard also
placed first in all three
classes in the 10 lap race with
Browne taking first in the S·J
class and Zi!U(y Klemens
placing .second. Jeffers
placed second. in the Mod-50
division in that race.
A new twist· was added to
the power boat show this year

when canoe races were held
between heals.
Steve Peters of Mason
rowed to a first place finish in
that race, with Kevin Wolfe
and Perk Aull bringing their
canoe in for second. Rowing
with Peters was Lewis
Peters. Trophies were
awarded to those winners.
Officials for this year's
races were Bill Grueser and
Bill Quickie, co-chairmen ;
Walter Hayden , Ferndale,
Mi. , referee ; Max Beerman,
Springfield, inspector; and
Rosealene Au, Mansfield ,
Chief Scorer.
Quickie, who presented the

1700 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR AND OTIOMAN ........................... SALE *1278
1729 SOFA, TRADITIONAL OFF WHITE .......................................... SALE *566
11080 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRADITIONAL ........................................... SALE •877
sg98 SOFA &amp; CHAIR FLORAL, EARLY AMERICAN ......................... SALE *749
1750 SOFA &amp; CHAIR' EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID ............................ SALE '588
sg79 SOFA &amp; CHAIR: EARLY AMERICAN, VELVET FLORAL.. ............ SALE *666
1739 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, GREEN TWEED ............... SALE *533
1864 SOFA &amp;CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PlAID ........................... SALE *599
1815 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, VELVET FLORAL............... SALE *599
1749 SOFA AND CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, GREEN TWEED ............ SALE '549
11296 2 PC. SECTIONAL W/CORNER TABLE .............................. SALE •888
1767 LOVESEAT AND CHAIR, VINTYL PATCH ................................ SALE '444
1849 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL .......................... SALE *599
1779 SOFA AND CHAIR EARLY AM. PLAID .................................... SALE *588
11049 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, QUILTED VELVET ........... SALE '699
1779 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL ......................... SALE '588
'940 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TUXEDO STRIPE NYLON .............................. SALE •666
11098 SOFA &amp; ROCKER, FLORAL, EARLY AMERICAN .............. :...... SALE *177
1579 SOFA, TRADITIONAL ........................................................... SALE *444
'669 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN FLORAL .......'..................... SALE *511
1789 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN FLORAL ........................... SALE '599
1489 SOFA, TRADITIONAL, MATALASSL ....................................... SALE '369
1878 SOFA AND LOVESEAT, TRADITIONAL ..................... ;.............. SALE '599
11300 SOFA AND LOVESEAT, EARLY AM., GOLD TWEED ................. SALE '899
11203 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, BROWN NAUGAHYDE .................... SALE '799
'947 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID ............................ SALE •747
SS95 SOFA, TRADITIONAL MATAiASSE .........................................SALE '499
1549 SOFA AND ROCKER, EARLY AM·, TWEED (McAfee) ................ SALE '422
1779 SOFA AND CHAIR EARLY AMERICAN TWEED ........................ SALE '479
'595 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN PLAID ............................. SALE '399
1879 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRADITIONAL VELVET FLORAL ....................... SALE *599
SS24 SOFA, TRADITIONAL, GOLD VELVET....................................... SALE •449
SS29 SOFA, TRADITIONAL, VELVET ............................................... SALE •449
1354 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL ........................... SALE '599
1898 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, FLORAL .......................... SALE '699
11636 SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AM., PRINT. .............. SALE '1199
'961 SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT, MODERN, FLAME STITCH ....................... SALE •599
1549 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID (McAfee) ............... SALE '422
1774 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, EARLY AMERICAN, PLAID ............................. SALE '599
11073 SOFA, LOVESEAT, CHAIR, TRAD. MATALASSE ........................ SALE '777
s2068 16-PC. PIT GROUP, RUST VELVET... ................................. SALE *1499
'982 SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT, TRAD~, VELVET ....................................... SALE '699
'684 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRAD., MATAI.ASSE.. ....................................SALE •499
11089 SECTIONAL3 PC. W/SLEEPER, MODERN ........................... SALE '666
SS98 SOFA &amp; CHAIR, TRAD·, MATALASSE ..................................... SALE '499
11087 SOFA &amp; 2 SWIVEL ROCKERS, OFF WHITE Trad.................... SALE '799

VOL XXIX NO. 50

OTHER WEEKDAYS 9:30 AM TO 5 PM

.;. ..........

SWEEPS THE RACE - Gordon Downard, in boat No.
4, took first place honors in the Mod SO, Mod 100 and Mod-

•

enttne

MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1978

U heats at Sunday afternoon's boat races . Here Downard
circles in front of the levee after winning the Mod-U race .

Central Ohio
man murdered
with a . 22~aliber Stoeger
Lu ger, the gun of Nazi
offic ers.
Police have had few clues
in their search for the killer,
although composite pictures
of three men seen near one
murder site have been made .
11le men are in Uleir 20's,
skinny and have long
strangly hai r. But poli ce
aren 't convinced they have
had anything to do with the
killings.
The cases began De e. 10,
when two women were found
shot to death outside Forker 's
Cafe in Newark. Karen P.
Dodnll , 33, and waitr ess
Joyce L. Vermill ion, 38, both
had their pocket books taken
before they were murdered.
Other victims incl ude :
Jerry ;., Martin . 47. and his
51-year-&lt;Jid wife Martha, of
north Columbus: Jenkin T.
Jones Sr., a 77-year-old man
known to keep large sums of
money in his back&lt;ountry
Li cking County home; the
Rev. Gerald Fields , 35, a
Baptist minister. killed while
working part time as a
securi ty guard at a private
club ; bar-owner Robert
McCann, his mother Dorothy,
and hi s go -go dancer
g irlfr iend Chr isti ne
Herdma n, 26 , kill ed in
MeCann's westside Columbus
home.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONTAUK, L.l. (UP)) Somewhere in the dark, cold
waters of the AUantic Ocean
the monster lurks - wounded
but powerful and deadly as
ever.
Today is the fourth day
fishermen will hunt and try to
kill the Great White shark
spotted last week off Montauk
oo the tip of Long Island.
SUnday, a fishennan said
he spotted a Great While
shark with a fresh wound
behind the dorsal fin . But, as
in two previous days of
hunting, the shark slipped
into the depths and out of
range of harpooners.
"All the boats came back
without capturing the fish ,"

dockmaster Tom Edwards "Cookie Two" that was
said at the Montauk Marine searching the waters nearby .
Basin, which is coordinating Murray's crew tried to bail
the shark hunt. "But they 'II the shark with chum, but had
be out again Monday (today ). no luck in keeping it nearby.
"Most of those going out ...
The crew of the "Cookie
are professional fishennen Two," a 42-foot, deep-sea
and I know more of them are boat, tried to track the shark
planning to have harpoons with sonar equipment, but the
with them," he said.
fish was quickly out of range.
K.en Grimshaw , pilot of a The huge sharks can swim at
special "fish-spotting" plane ' speeds up to 40 mph .
that has been assisting scores
During the brief time the
of shark hunt ers in the mammoth shark lurked in the
search, spotted a shark 30 sun-glinted waters off s\armiles south off Montauk board, the crew spotted a
Polnt Sunday .
gash in his right side by the
"She's 500 yards to star- dorsal fin.
board, " Grimshaw shouted
Murray said the wound
over his radio to Edward appeared fresh, leading him
Murray. skipper of the and other fishermen to
believe the shark was the
same Great White that had
eluded hunters and their
harpoons since Friday.
Fishermen and touri•ts
poured during the weekend
into Montauk, a resort on the
tip of Long Island, hoping for
even a glimpse of the fish that
KINSHASA, Zaire (UP!) - Zaire is seeking military help is estimated to be 30 feet long
from China and has ma~ a first move toward liberalizing its and weigh 5,000 pounds.
govenunent by proposing an amnesty for an estimated half a
"There hasn 't been this
mlllinn refugee~ living abroad.
much excitement out here
Ol!oeae Deputy Defenae Minister Gen. Chi Hoa-Tien and
his 11-man delegation, which arrived Saturday night, started a since that New Jersey folia
caught that giant shark last
week rJ. talks with Zairean government officials Sunday.
year," one commercial
fishennan said as the flotilla
of boats headed out Sunday.

i~)_r_he_w_o_rl_d_To_cl_a_y_
Zaire seeks Chinese help

1J. S. dollar continues fall

LONOON (UP! )- The U. S. dollar fell to another postwar
low in Tokyo today and slipped on most European markets. ·
Gold also dropped, going from $185.875 an ounce in Zurich
at Friday's close to $1114.875 at today's opening. In London the
metal fell from $186.125 to $1114.75.
In Tokyo lhe dollar ended the day at 206 .5 yen, down from
209.85 and the lowest postwar closing rate.

Fire resulls in

I

THIS Dimensional first place frog art entry in the Grand Croakers Division , done by
Mrs. Vilma Pikkoja , was presented to Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crow Sunday afternoon for use in
the Frog Room of their Syracuse residence. Making the presentation was Mrs. Pat Holter,
r.n-chalrman oi the annual Frog Art Contest of the Big Bend Regatta .

Deputies
probing
complaints

Tornadoes hit Midwest
United Press International
Tornadoes, torrential rains
and flash floods have
pounded the upper Midwest,
inflicting heavy damage from
the Dakotas through Indiana .
At least one person was
killed and more than a dozen
injured in the violent weather
Sunday.
A tornado tore through the
Nebraska Panhandle town of
Gordon, injuring at least six
persons
and
causing
hundreds of thousands
dollars in damage lo
buildings and homes.
High winds swept through
Indianapolis' northwest side,
heavily damaging three
apartment co mplex es and
causing some minor injW"ies .
South Dakota Gov. Richard
Kneip is sued disaster
decla rati ons
for
fo ur

Meigs Cou nty Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reported his
department is investigating
the theft of saddles and tack
HARRISONVILLE - The taken between Tuesday and 4
modular home of Bessie p.m. Sunday.
SOUTHGATE, Ky. (UP!) - A new chief heads the Graham located east of here
John Cline, Rl. I, ReedsvoiWlteer fire departrpent that one year ago fought the Beverly oo Route 143, was heavily ville, told deputies his 1969
Rills Supper Club fire .
damaged when it was struck Del Ray Camper had been
Assistant Chief Simon Jewell , a 11)-year veteran of the by fir e at 1:46 p.m. Sunday. ente red. Trophies, bell
department , was elected fire chief Friday night. He succeeds
The
Rutland
Fire buckle, coolest saddle, and
Richard Riesenberg, who vacated the post earlier this month . Department reported the show saddle and other items
Riesenberg, fire chief when tbe May 28, 1977, Supper Club interior of the heme was were
m1ssmg .
Cline
fire raged, said he was quitting wiUtoul animosity, "but I've engulfed in flames when the estiamted the loss at $1,258.
had my fill of eating smoke."
department arrived. There
Sunday afternoon deputies
was no one at home at tbe were called to Chester after a
time of the fire and cause has Chester resident caught two
not been determined . The juveniles attempting to steal
SAGAMORE HILLS, Ohio (UP I) - Dr. Timothy Moritz, Pomeroy Fire Department a motorcycle.
·
Upon in ves tigation,
director of the state Department of Mental Health and Mental assisted.
deputies
found that the 12
Retardation, says lhe stale wants to drop plans to build a
year-old
and 13 year-old
ho!!pital for the criminally insane in Sagamore Hills.
SPEAKS TIJESDA Y
youths
were
walkaways from
Moritz says the state would rather place two or more
Matthew Palmer of the
!.akin
State
Hospital. They
Bmaller maximum security centers in northeastern Ohio .
Public Utilities Commission
Moritz told a group Saturday in Sagamore Hills that the of Columbus, will be the guest were return ed to Lakin.
state wUl have to ask the Fedetal Court in Akron for speaker at the Middleport Saturday afternoon, deputies
United Press lnterualioaal
perrnissioo to drop the Sagamore Hills building proposal Chamber of Commerce took a theft report from
At least 14 people were
James
Rohrbaugh,
Rt.
3,
because It would be up to the court to change its order lhatthe meeting Tuesday at6:30 p.m.
killed in traffic accidents
(Continued
on
page
10)
state must Improve its mental health facilities .
at the Meigs Inn .
around Ohio during th e
weekend, including tw o
victims who lost their lives in
mishaps on private roadways.
One person died Friday
night, seven Saturday and
four Sunday, according to the
Ohio Highway Patrol, which
counts fatalities from 6 p.m.
Friday until midnight Sunday
each nooholiday weekend.
Not included in the patrol
count was a motorcycle accident on the Ohio State

heavy damage

Southgate has new chief

Hospital plans dropped

counties , three hit by
tornadoes Saturday night and
one lashed by winds up to 110
mph Sunday. Damage was
estintated at $2 .5 to $3
million. Several farm
building complexes were
destroyed by ttie twisters, but
there were no ser ious
injuries. A honte wa s
destroyed by the high winds
in Springfield .
In north-ce ntral Illinois,
pounding rains, lightning and
severe winds combined to
cause an estimated $1.25
million in damages in
Livingston County. At least
seven funnel clouds were
sighted , four of them in the
Chatsworth area . The high
winds destroyed one home
and ripped the roofs from the
post office and a plumbing
company . There were no

reports of inju ries .
In l.ee Coun ty , IlL , an 1Myea r-old woman whose
daughter 's car stalled on a
rain-slick road and veered
into a draina ge ditch,
drowned while trying to swim
to safety.
A spokesman for the Lee
County Sheriff"s Department
said numero us roads and
br idges were closed because
of heavy rain s and some
power outages had been
reported.
"It would be too numerous
to name all the roads cl osed,"
deputy Randy Jordan sa id.
~~ Ju st
say it's rain in ~
buckets."
In Gordon , Neb., a mobile
home was overturned and its
occupant slightly inj ured.
Auth orities sa id another
house trailer - staked with
teleph one poles driven four

14 die on Ohio highways

..,.
.,..~~ , ~

-'

. ..

.

~. ~

~

"

",(

• ' \1

FREE ORIVERY

•
-A GRUDGE RACE - One of the derby events was a

8J'ud&amp;e race bit- Blmplq,e,llld Whirl-A-Way. Bimplne
II owned b)' 87bll Ebenbach and Whlri·A·Way II owned

.

b)' Georp Holllt.tter al Hoblletter Realty . Jocldes

feet into the ground - was
lifted and thrown 100 yards
down th e road .
About
150
ch ildren
evacua ted th e munici pal pool
moments before the twister
Uluched down.
Ben Sanders , who lived in
the trailer, li terally had to
cl ing for his life.
Sande rs said his daughter
woke him up when she saw
the twister a half mile away .
She ran out of the trailer, but
by the time Sanders could
leave, the tornad o was too
close . He said he put his arms
aroWld a tree while winds
from the twister stretched his
200-po und frame at a 9().
degree angle.
Winds up to 45 mph caused
a large plastic canopy over a
stage to collapse at a rock
concert ea rl y Sunday at the
Iron Horse Racewa ys 2 miles
north of Kearney, Neb.
Authorities said the group
performing at the time, The
Bachman Turner Overdrive,

dashed Off th e stage seconds
before the 8,500 square foot
cover and lighting equipment
came crashfng down in front
of 4,500 fa ns .

Fairgrounds, which loo k the
life of a Pennsylvania man,
and a one-tar crash near
Norwalk that killed a
Monroeville man.
Mark D. Huston, 20, Unionto\m, Pa., died Saturday
when the mot orcycle he was
operatin g crashed into
another motorcycle at the
intersection of two unnamed
btreets on state fairgrounds.
Two other peopl e were
injured in that accident.
Paul B. Smith, 64, of
Monroeville, died Saturday In
a one-&lt;:ar mishap on private
property north of Norwa lk.

There were two double
fatality accidents during the
weekend , both of which occurred on public roadways.
A van went out of control
and rolled over several times
on Interstate 270 north of
Columbus Saturday, killing
two Cleveland residents and
injuring seven other people in
the vehicle.
Quincy Cancelsllor, 26, died
after being thrown out of the
van and striking a guardrail
about )(I fe el from where the
vehicle came to rest on its
side on the median. Maggie
A very successful tourHulbert, 66, died Sunday in nament wa s held at the
University Hos pital from Pomeroy Golf Course Sun·
injuries suffered in lhe same day . Other s are planned
accident.
through out the summer .
Two Cincinnati residents lnfonnation can be obtained
lost their lives Sunday when by calling or contacting John
their ca r crashed on Thoma s, manager, or John
Interstate 74 west of Teaford, course professional.
Cincinnati .
Uonel Boggs won low gross
touch their entries during the
honors by scoring a 70. First
(Continued on page li))
race, but they are allowed to
place low net was captured
prod them with a yardstick .
by Clyde Wright and Bernard
ln the distance event, Fritz
ISS'JE WARNING
Fultz had second place low
was named Ohio Stale
Syracuse Mayor Eber net.
Champion after he jumped 15 Pickens warned residents
Mik e Nesselroad won the
reel, 3'h inches. He was raced that people representing the longest drive and George
by John Weese of Racine, Church of Unirication, Harris won the longest putt.
Ohio.
seeking donations , have not Don Mills and Roy Long each
The frog contests, which been given perSillisslon by won a new ~utter .
attracted 140 entries from village officials to solicit the
Fred Crow, Pomeroy at·
four states this year, are village.
torney. recently scored a hole
annual events sponsored by
Residents are asked, if in one at Pomeroy's fourth
the Ohio Society for approached , to contact hole. It wa s 152 yards and
Promotion of Bull Frogs, Mayor Pickens or any council witnessed by his partner,
Inc., Pomeroy .
members.
Dale Dutton,

Successful

tournament
concluded

Goodie's Goofer
wins frog crown

ASK ABOUT OUR CREDIT PLAN .

ELBERFELDS -IN POMEROY

-

Highs today and Tuesday in
the upper 80s or lower 90s and
.lows tonight between 70 and
75.
Probability
of
precipitation Is 60 percent
today and 30 percent tonight
and Tuesday.

Shark hunt continues

1

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 8

Weather

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,,

awards, extended his thanks
on behalf of the Chamber to
local media personel, · the
Lorraine Boat Club·, the
Akron Boating Association,
and various other commun.ity
members who helped to make
the '78 races a success.

•

e

Americetn Contract

Bridge League offi cial has
asked us what we think of

·- - - - - - - - - - - '
lh• Oswald .la r ob\'

We' ll

made the proper shift to the
lU of clubs. Declarer ducked.
But it was no problem at all
for Roelof Smilde, sittmg
West. to take his queen and
lead ba ck .the king to
smother dummy 's jack so
that Tim 's nine of clubs and·
Roc Iof' s king of hea rts were
good for the last two decisive
tricks.
liood play looks easy. but

Over loo persons turned out
to cheer on members of the
Lorraine, Ohio, Power Boat
Oub, hosts for the annual
Regatta Power Boat Races
Sunday afternoon at the
Pomeroy levee.
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce awarded cash
prizes to winners in each of
the four heats and the ten lap
race for boats in all divisions.
First pla ce .finishers
received ~ . second place
$25, and third place · $15.
Winners In the len lap race
received $50 for first place
and $40 for second place.
Taking home the money

it sure pays off.

Wt•s t

Oprning lead :

hi ~h

diamond back . Now Tim
was in with the a cr a nd

• J :!
WEST

••

\ee\

SUMME" FURNITURE SALE

had to lose two clubs and one
trick in each other suit.
He madC a valiant effort.

DoWnard.capt:ures .h.o. at race

Saturday were, left 1o right, Hobstetter and Fred Crow .
Hobltetter's Whiri·A-Way won easily over Bimpine,
ending a dl1p11te over a three year period.

A Licking County man
prodded his frog with a
yardstick to win the National
Frog Derby at an annual
c'Ontest during the weekend.
Goodie's Gooier, owned
and jockeyed by John Goodin
of Granville, leaped around a
20-foot circular track In 24
~onds to win the crown .
A native Meigs County
frog , Delight Dame, came in
second.
The derby is the onl y timed
frog race in the co untry.
Jockeys arc nul permil!cd tu

•I

J

�,_The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June ?Ji, 1970

2- The Daily Sentinel. M1ddleport-Pumemy . U.. Mund~' . Junt·1l; . 1!liR

Librium, methapyrilene connected to cancer
BOSTON
(UP! )
Libriwn, Ute secon d most
commonly prescribed dr ug in
the Unite d Sta tes. and
methapyri lene , the act ive
ingredient
in
several
nonprescri pti on sleeping
aids, have lx&gt;en associated
with cancer in rats ,
researchers reported today .
Tbe·drugs are 111embers of
the chemica l famil y ca lled
antines and when eaten with

doc s
Fur ttlt•r ,
nitrites · the)'
fo rm htg}t per cen tag e, Wi llt a 111 lHH'nn
stmnach
adds
c&lt;tn
cml,lbine
nit rOsamine, one o£ the IJ/nsky reported .
·
with
nttntes
lt•ft
l.IVl'
l' from
Hwnans h&lt;::~ve a l'on stcwt
deadliest ca ncer-causing
t
uring
t
o
prudu
ce
substam:es km1Wll to man , supply 11f mtritr in tht•tr
nitru.samine.
saliv
H
and
ingt&gt;st
rutri
tt•
when
resea rchers · fr om
the
Lijinsky 's research ~ if
Frederick Ca ncer Research the\· c&lt;:~t 111ealS cw·ell with
substantiated
b) 11tht'r scie nsud.iwn
nitrite.
such
as
b&lt;-~l'!
lll
,
r-en ter told the Northeast
r e~! I O nal

sausage and ham .
Bacon has been a top tl' of
L'Ontrovcrsy 1n rcrent yt:ars
becau!)C tt has bern shown
th(Jl while raw bacon dot' sn't

meeting of the

Amertcan Chemical Society.
When nitrites were fed to
rat s m eom bination with the
dru gs, li ver cwd nervo us
system tunlors resulted ln a

cont&lt;ltn mt rosarnines ,

L'C ul k l'fl

ti sts - shows arwther wa y
~ ubsta n l't'S

!lllltJ('t-•n t b} t hl~lll -

:-;t• [Vl'S l 'l::IIl l'liUSe

l 'ilfl('l' l' Ul

with

l 'OIJIIJ II Hil l ll ll

olhl'r

substa nl't•s

l.ijinsky, drredor 10f lilt•

Old practice becoming
new trend in schools
WASHI NGTON 1UPI l An old practice - flunkmg ~
is becoming a new trend 111
big city school systems .
Educa tion off i.da ls say the
trend is toward an unbending
refusal to promote children
from grade to gra de JUSI to
get rid of them. And they say
it is rapidly paying off in
better basic skills for
granunar and hrgh school
students.
Pre.ssured by 14xpa)·ers for
better results, many big ci ty
school systems rt~·entiy have
adopted the no-nonsense ap·
proach to probl em students
and apathe tic parents .

"' We nunked abuul J:UIOO
students t wu year s ago.·· said

to SUJili i icr s•. :htitillh1 s ~t:ar to
copr with htg,h S('huttl."

Noting that tax pay t.&gt; rs arr
.Jar ksonv rlle . Fla . sehoul
turnm
g down ~-~:h o(11 bond
l~llr rd member Bill Carter .

"'That number dropped \{t
:1.1100 last year . A lot more

are now osking how

parents

thr rr krds are doing."'
Cilrc ago sc hool board
memb{'r Henn· McGee sa id:
" 1. fr.- one. am glad thase
da y~
uf tok t.: n ·so cial
promotion' of student s are
ov~;&gt;r . WL• ' ve gunc thruugh a

pro\)(tSals in llliHI)' areas,
some rittes iJlso arc t csti n~
tee~rht'r

ski\ls to Wl't!d ~JUt
mstructors.
llalla s schoo l urw rd
ll H.'rtlber Sa r&lt;:~ h Haskins satrt
Uw rt.&gt;sults , to be re)e(;lsed Lim;
swnrne r , of so me teacher·
Wl q u;:~lified

generatllln who fe lt they had
no responsibilities - only
w oup ng ll ts . We're teslinK

students and we find th ~ 1 a lol
more eighth graders must gu

Racine Social Events
By Mrs . Francis Mor ris
Mrs . Co ra Webb was
hostess for the meeting of the
Booster Sunday School Class
Friday evening, June 16. at
her home. Mrs. Helen Slack.
presi dent , opened
the
meetin g with th e group
singin ~ the first and second
verses of "Standing on the
Promises" and prayer by
Ma rjorie G rimm. Mrs. Slack
read Psalm s 199 :16 and a
reading ·' The Forgott en
Book." She closed devoti ons
with the singing uf the last
two verses of ""Standrng on
the Promises." A pro~ ram
follo wed prese nted
by
Marjo rie Gr imm . " Love
Lifted Me" wa s sung .
Scripture reading John 3: 13·
21 and prayer. .. A Loving
God " wa s her trit e and
r ea d in gs
i n c ! u d ed
"Somebody · Everybmly ·
Anybody and Nobody , .... He
Maketh No Mistak&lt;&gt;," •·He
Rose Again ," "Chastening...
"Never /\lone," 'What Does
a Pastor do," "One Solitary
Life," "No Time for God,"
"Entertain Strang ers." "'The
Greatest of These is Love."
" The Praying Hand s,"
'Make Every Day a Won·
derful Day," "Osmosis of the
Spirit," "' The Valley ." The
business session was held
with the presiden1 presrding
Fourteen members answN cd
rull call with a Blbic verse Ora Hill, Ura Morns, Helen
Slack, Clara Powell. Ga111el
Ervine, Wanda Powell , Mane

Hur . Ma q unt.• Gr imm , Ven1

Beegle, Velma Taylor . Helen
Simpsun. Durothy Badgl&lt;')'.

Gretta Si mpson .. Cora Webb.
Blest He The Tre That Br nds
and The Lord 's Prayer in
u1usun dusecl Ihr meeting,

The refreshmerl1 1ablc was

testing in her district ··may

c h~uu c~ I t:CI rcin o~e nes1 s

~ram

at

pro·

Mar yland's

Frede rick center , dlstussed
his rt•sem·eh with rats in an
mtenH!W .

His work on methapyrilene
led tn a proposed bc:tn nf the
subshtn t'e by tlw l'ood ::u1d
Dr ug Administra tiO n. ~·t e­
thapyr ilene
is
an
;111 ti lus ta miu e used as a
n1,n prcscrtp tion, nr,nnarcntk
slct.• piu g
cti d
bcl' a use
J lll lhi s tam in cs co mm only
L'U U!)t' drowsinm)s as &lt;J side

nu mber

than

the

me·

thapyrilene, l.ijinsky said the
res ult was signifi ca nt
beca use the tumor fo rm ed
most fr equently was in the
rats' nervous system, a mu ch
rarer form of twnor than in
the liver.
IJ jinsky and researchers at
Hoffman l.aHoche , th e
effect .
'l11irty per cent of the rats manufa cturer of Librium ,
rl! d
mt't ha pyr il e nt'
in are repeating his exreriment

to see if its results match. His Antabuse , a drug given
new .experiment, begun a. alcoholics to niake them sick
year ago, alrea dy has when they drink, and a
produced two lwnors among number of herbicides and
the 00 experimental animals. insecticides.
·nwir suspicions of the
" I don 't want to make a
rea l big bang-the-drum substances ' ·carcinogenicity
cvangelica1 presentation, " were strengthened by
IJjinsky cautioned . " I'm not t'OI"roboration from another
going to proJect the risk (of type test , where substances
cancer in humans) beca use I are fed to bacteria t.o see if
don 't think anyone's able to they cause mutations. That
do that yet. I'm just test is less reliable than
finding actual tumors in
presenting th e data ."
.
Lijinsky's group has tested animals, Lijinsky said, but it
nther amine chemicals for did t"Orrelate with the animal
cancer,causing ability and test findin gs.
they are suspicious of

pnu ntsing l tJ uphuld thl' lr
thL'
rt' SIH_Insibi li t it•s In
L'dur&lt;tlhln pro t.'t'!'iS.
('I•UJIVtl L'h&lt;:ll rr!HIIl (~t.·nr gt•
Hm wn .Jr . nf Mcrnplm; said
."ic l u~!.Ji s llllbl
k.J ww tht:·~ t11'i..'

let tJixpaycrs
fi ghting waste
pspcdally in hght nf ti n~
m_tl tu nwtd e tax revu ll th ct t
st•t•ms tu have been hera lded
b~ l'&lt;tll fnnua 's Prnpvsitiun

t:t
"" I tlnnk the pmlliem of

dt St'tp\irH.' iS S OI!lt:'li iii ~S
who should not ha\'e been ov t•rt.'lll ph aSJ 7.cd , ·' Hrf• wn
:;aid. •· We're cenlerin~ on
lcal'hing...
The comments came ct l a hclpin~ a ll studt.• nt ~ etchiew
wcL•kend mee tin g 11f th L' at lc &lt;tst basw skt lls. Tlw
l'oundl of Urban Boards of t&lt;:~xpay L'r c\dt.' Sn't wan t
Educattnn Hepr e::;e ntat ivcs t.•d ucattorl ltlllls . Ami we HI'C
fn1n1 man y of th(' nettion 's 65 IJ st t.: m n ~. ··
Dcnw r st.: houl b(I&lt;JJ'l.l Presi bi g~est £·1ti es sa id th eir
dent Oma r D. Blmr satd
St.·hwl systems nuw:
- Test 1he abil rty 11f students whn do n t~t ttduen·
elt'mentary und !ugh school an• 111 1t pets sed 111 Ius l'll)' . He
students at re~ u la r mtervals smd tilt' answer li e~ not only
and refuse to promote thosc._· 111 fo rt· tng studt, nl~ tJ1 d 11 their
ass1grwd \\urk. but tn ma kmg
who do not keep up
- Put mor e empl laSJS on till' work ;m Jn\t' l'l'Sttn g du!lre:-nting skills , i:i nd pn·ss UIT ll'ngt:• fnr ~ oungsters of cdl
bi.!rkgroumb
parent~ to Slk!ll
L'Plltra l' t ~

show we havf! sorne tea l'lwrs

CHAND CROAKERS were initiated during special

ceremonies Sa turday night at the annual frog jump a nd
frog derby. Front. left to right , are Joh n Goodin . Jim
Barto n. Ann• Marie Grycza, Bob Cooley, Greg Zegler,

c cntt:red wtth a lo\' e·t y
GluxuHa plHnt. for de licio us
refreshments served by lhc
h1•stcss .
HCXi.liUW Wr.llkcr. d ;:~ u g htl~r
l)f Ht•\' ond Mrs. Uun Wttlker
and .J eff Kn1 gh t1n g were

•

umtL•d m IIJarnagl' Solurdi:l y
t: \' t'll111~ . .) Ullt' I i . Ill a
bcauuful L' CrcnJon~ e:H Ftrst
Ba pti st Church
Mrs . Edna Neigler is a

'

:a.

.,.
)

patient al Hulzer Medtcal

Cent er.

•
•
lj

.

•

defeated Lan caster on
Sunday. During the three
games, Meigs had a total of 33
hits.
In the first game Saturday,
Logan defeated Meigs 11-5.
Bill Heft collected the win
and Mark Foglestrom the
loss . Heft walked three,
struck out seven and gave up
eight hits. For the · locals
Brian Hamilton, Mark
Fogelstrom, Ray Andres, and
Mark Forbes fanned six,
walked nine and gave "up nine
hits.
No runs were scored in the
first two innings of play, then
in the Meigs' third, IUly
Andrews was safe on errors,
Kenny Young doubled and
Dave Kennedy brought in two
runs on a single. Fogelslrom
was then hit by a pitch and
Kelly Winebrenner singled to
score Kennedy. Tim Hood
then collected an RBI when
he sin gled to bring
Fogelstrom across.
Logan then tied the score in
the last of the third when
Columber singled and
Lebam, Tucker, and Booth
walked. Heft came up with
two RBI's when he singled
and two more Logan men
walked.
Meigs' lone run in the
fourth came when Young and
Kennedy singled and a
ground out by Brian
Hamilton scored Young.
In the Logan fourth, four
walks, two singles and a

1:[

i\[~

Yankees fall 8%
behind Red Sox

triple by Heft combined to
Hitters for Meigs were Tim ::::
"oot I'll take a rest whene ve r Kansas City., 6-3, Miruiesota Marlaers 10, Brewers B:
score five runs . Logan scored Hood, two singles and a By MIKE TUILY
they give it to me."
hammered Chicago, 8-5 and
twointbefifthonawalkand double , Winebrenner, UPISports Writer
Bob Stinson' two-run single
Fogelstrom, Ebersbach each
Despite leading New York
a home run by Tucker.
Don Gullett won his third· 9-6, Cleveland split with with the bases loaded in the
winnin g
the ninth sna pped an 11-3 tie as
Hitting for Meigs were had a single and a double. to a 4-2 victory over the straight game since coming Toront o,
Kenny Young, a single and a Forbes and Hamilton bad two Tigers Sunday that ended a 3- oft the disabled list. Thurman nightcap , 3-2, after losing the Seattle overcame seven
double, Dave Kennedy and singles and Cliff Kennedy a 1 series in Detroit, embattled Munson drove In two runs opener, 2-1, and Texas errors to win its sixth game in
Kelly Winebrenner, two single.
Yankee Manager Billy ' with a pair of singles and bia nkl'd California , 7.{),
seven outings .
singles each, Brian Hamilton M.
001 220 1- 12 14 0 · Martin still is not secure in rookie Damaso Garcia had
Indians l-3, Blue Jays Z.2 :
and Tim Hood each with one L.
110 001 0- 3 7 5 his job.
two hits and scored three A's 6, Royals 3:
An dre Thornton's fift h·
single.
Tim Ebershacb and Mark
When Boston completed a runs as New York tagged
inn
ing home run in the
Tony Armas knocked in two
M.
004 100 0- 5 8 I Forbes. Lightfoot (LP ), three-game
sweep
of rookie Steve Baker with his runs with Iris fir st homer and nightcap gave Clevela nd a
L.
004 520 x- 11 9 2 Leham (2), Meyer (4) and Baltimore with a 4-1 victory first loss in two decisions.
a double. He homered to cap split. In the opener, Roy
Brian · Hamilton, Mark McDaniels.
over the Orioles, it left the
In Boston, Mike Torrez a two-r un seve nth tha~ gave Howell si ngled home the
In Sunday's game the YankeesH\lgamesoutofthe allowed nine hits for his 11th Oakland a 4-3 lead and winning run in the eighth and
Fogelstrom (4 LP), Rav
Andrews (4) . Mark Forbes Meigs American Legion , lead.
victory and Rick Burleson hit knocked in an insurance run rookie reliever ViciJlr Cruz
(6) and Dave Kennedy. Bill downed Lancaster 10-4. After
At least the relative calm in a homer , The viciJlry was with a double in a two-run picked up his first majorHeft and Tucker,
the second inning Meigs was the Yankee clubhouse Boston's 33rd in 39 games at ninth .
league save.
In the second game, Meigs in control all the way.
survived when Martin rested Fenway. Torrez fanned a Twins B-9, White Sox &gt;-6:
Rangers 7, Angels 0:
downed Logan by a score of
Terry Wall pitched ex- star outfielder Reggie season-high nine ba tters.
Geo rge " Doc " Medich
Mike Cub bage 's run12-3. Tim Ebersbach upped ceilent ball to win the game. Jackson, and Jackson did not Dennis Martinez, 6-5 , took the scoring single capped a three- turned in the third straight
his record to iHl by fanning He faMed two and walked s1x protest excessively.
loss.
run sixtl1 in the opener and shuto ut by a Texas pitcher
seven and walking five . and gave up seven bits. Ross
"I didn't ask for it," said
In other American Lea gue Roy Smalley hit a grand slam night when he tossed a sevenLightfoot was the losing was the losing pitcher. Jackson, who bas been known games, Seattle outlasted Mil, in the nig htcap 1Q complete hitter to send Texas into fir st
pitcher. Li~htfoot, Lebam, Lancaster's Rose, Ross, to get angry at being rested , waukee, 10-a, Oakland r ipped the sweco.
place in the West.
and Meyer combined to strike Reeves, and Pullins com'
out three and give up five bined to strike out 5 and walk
bases on balls for Logan.
8, while giving up II hits .
During Logan's first in·
Lancaster scored thre e
ning, one run was scored times in the first when Brockwhen Lebam walked, Me- man singled, Reed walked,
Daniels doubled and Tucker Ausic safe on erros, Hoshor
singled to right field to score then forced Reed at third and
Lebam. A run was taken Brockman scored the first
away from Logan when run. Shodding was safe on
Fogelstrom threw out Me· errors and Bates doubled to
Daniels at the plate.
score Au sic and Hoshor .
Corr ell and a single by
now.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) You can he lp cut down on
The big inning for Meigs ' Lancaster picked up its last U!e Lacy had no excuaes.
crime losses ... losses that
Paul
"Los Angeles and us are in starting pitc her
di rect l y
affect
yo u,
came in the second. Six runs •un of the game in the second Only regrets.
a critical situation because no Moskau, but Lopes homered
whether th ey happen to you
were scored. To start it off, inning when Bain was safe on
in
the
second
t.o
give
Los
And he shared them with one has pa id attention to San
or not .
Hood and Young walked and errors, Rose walked and Dodgers' manager Tommy Francicco.
Angeles a 3·1 lead .
Take t he cr ime of ar son .
Th e Reds tied the score in
Ebersbach upped his RBI Reed singled to score Bain. Lasorda.
"We 've been gelling the
You ' re
payi ng
an
the
seven
th
on
successive
total by two when he doubled
Meigs came alive in the
Lacy,_the ••tenth man' ' on pitching lately but are hitti ng
increasingly heavy subsidy
to bring Hood and Young in. second inning to score four the Dodger roster who has has been anemic. Most of our singles by Correll , Cesar
del iberately se t f ir es
Wayland was then safe on runs. Fogelstrom walked , been substituting in right hits have been with two Geronimo an d Ken Griffey , a
ough y our insurance
• ..,._,__ _"'"_ _._errors and Forbes singled to Wall singled, Ebersba ch field for injured Reggie Smith outs."
sacrifice by Rose and a
prer;,i ums.
ground
out
by
Dave
Collins.
score Ebersbach . Cliff walked and Cliff KeMedy of late, dropped a hard line
The two cluoo were tied 3-3
are
In suran ce
costs
Pedro llorbon pitched two
~
Kennedy singled to load the walked to score Fogelstrom. drive by Dave Concepcion at the top of the ninth with one
adver set y aff ecte d by
bases and Winebrenner Mike Wayland then singled to with two outs in the ninth out , when Rose walked, innings of shutout bali and
burglar ies, robber ies and
thefts ... plus
SAVE &amp; SHAVE
forced Wayland at the plate. score Wall and Ebersbach. inning Sunday, enabling Pete moved to second on an infield took the victory, raising his
Fogelstrom then cleared the Hood walked and Brian Rose to score the go-ahead out and ·came all the way record t.o f&gt;. J. Tpmmy John l r nu••tle·" CB radios
that turn
SPECIALS
bases with a double .
Hamilton sacrificed to score run in Cincinnati's 5-I victory bome on Lacy's dropped ball lasted into the nil)th and took
Ute loss, dropped his record IJl
1'--..._____..-----t In the Meigs fourth, four Kennedy ,
to put the Reds a head 4-3 .
over Los Angeles,
One th ing you ca n do is
singles
by
Hamilton,
In the third it was a one
" 1 was ruMing on the play fl.{; .
"I don't know what hap·
suppo r t
programs
The Dodgers open a four·
Winebrenner , Fogelstrom man show for the single run pened," Lacy, who puts in with two outs," he recalled
pro
viding
stiffer
penal t ies
and Hood plated two runs. when Terry Wall was safe on most of his playing time in later, "and was surpr ised to game series at Atlanta series
for
wrongdoers
and
a two base error and then the infield, said after the see the ball drop."
Monda y. while the Reds starJa
po sals for stre ngthened
The Departme11t
stole third and home. The game .
rime invest iga1ion efforts.
SUR FORM._
Dan Driessen followed Con- a fou r ~g am e senes ~~
fourth saw Wayland single
me
"I was sure I had it. But the cepcion IJl bat and singled Houston . The two clubs meet
You can also make it
No 2 9 ~
and Hood double to score one ball hit my glove and bounced him hom e with what proved again next weekend for three
Iaugher for crook s. Use
more games in Cmcinnati.
run.
oft, I think I've been playing to be the winning run .
good, strong locks. Mar k
Meigs picked up three more good defense lately. I feel
possessio ns wi th your
The Dod gers touched
social secu ri ty nu mber .
runs in the sixth when Hood real bad fer the team because · reliever Doug Bair for a run
Since 1915
singled and got to third on this is such a big game."
in the ninth on singles by
Mike Swiger
Our
agency
provides
!rrors. Hamilton walked and
Those were also Lasorda 's pinch-hitters Vic Davalillo
an ci al protection and
9n-71Sl
ser vice w)'l en crlme tosses l
•
n a hit and run situa tion , sentiments.
and Rick Monday and a
occur .. . but many can be
149
S.
fhir d St .
llinebrenner singled to right
"It was disheartening to sacrifice fly by Davey Lopes.
l oorevenled . That's why we
Middle
port.
0
.
to score Hood and move lose a game like that on a But Bill Russell then lin ed
- prevention is the
One Pee Wee game was Hamilton
SUR FORM "
to
third . dropped fly ball with two into a double play to end the
pol icy .
PLANE
played over the weekend, a Fogelstrom then singled to outs," he explained.
game.
·"See me for car, boiM,
makeup game between left to score Hamilton. With
Los .Angeles started the
"Otherwise we win with the
Powell's and the Middleport two outs, Hood singled to run in the bottom of the ninth. scoring with two runs in the 1ife, health aod
Mustangs. The Mustangs score Winebrenner in the It meant getting only one first inning oo a single by
i~
defeated Powell 's 13-11.
seventh. Hood was safe on game on the Reds over the Lopes and doubles by Steve
Todd Hysell was credited errors and scored on weekend instead of three ." Garvey and Dusty Baker.
992-2143
the loss and Donnie Hamilton 's double.
With the loss, The Dodgers, Cincinnati got its first run in ' .. ," .... u ,
t02 W. Main
Pomeroy
Becker the win . Hysell
Legion hillers were Tim wbo squeezed past tbe Reds I· the second oo a double by Vic
fanned six and walked seven. Hood, with a double and 0 and 4-J in the first two
Mustangs pitching staff of single, Wall and Wayland games of the sold-out
Tim Cassell, Darrin Drenner, with two singles, Hamilton weekend series , fell s ix
Donnie Becker and Terry with a double, Cliff KeMedY , games beh ind the San
Little combined to strike oul Winebrenner, Fogelstrom Francisco Giants, who split a
TOKYO(UP I) -Southpaw
nine and walk 12.
Derek
Tatsuno of Hawail
and Forbes with singles.
doubleheader from Atlanta .
Th e game was a slug fest as
pitched
a
five-hitler and Tim
Next Saturday the Legion The win left the Reds 2\l
beth teams hit welL Powells' ~ravels to Glouster to play a games back of the National Tolman and Bob Skube hit
Bryan Ingels was the Jeading double header.
ba ck-to-back doubles to lead
League West leaders.
hitter with a grand $lam, a L.
the
U.S. College All..S!ars IJl a
310 000 000- 4 7 3
"We couldn't aftcrd to fall
Our !l ta ff of dcntl \t\ and
triple
and
a
single.
3-0
triumph
over a Japanese
M.
041 103 10x- !O 11 4 any further behind the
t ec h nician ~ will ma ke yo ur
Other hitters for the losers
mm&gt;fn demure. 4lldl y and
IA!am
in
the
secon d game of
Rose, Ross (2 LP) , Reeves Giants," Cincinnati Manager
t conomiL"a ll y
were Mark Corbett, Todd (6 ), Pullins (7 ) and Bates.
the
annua
l U.S.-Ja pa n
Sparky Ander:r&gt;n said . "They
Hy sell, Gre g Fie lds, and
collegiate
baseball
series in
Terry Wail and Mark are clearly the favor ites right
Mark
Elliott,
all
with
singles.
Tokyo
Sunday.
Forbes.
One or two da y ful l
For the winners Donnie
The America ns lost the
Becker, Jeff Nelson and Tony
first game of the series,
Moebler all had triples, Tim
played Saturday," 7.J.
Cassell a double.
Colle cting singles wer e
Eric Johnson, (2) Darrin
Drenner, Tim Cassell, Donnie
Becker, Jeff Nelson , and
Tony
Moehler. This win gives
•Dr. A.i. Staehli• Or. C.W . Beai •Or. G.J. S10rnbaugh
the
Mustangs
a season record
•Or . W. O. Kirnb;.llt • De J.C. Murphy • Dr. J. Ochman
By FRED McMANE
into Philadelphia la st
of 9-1.
UPI
Sporll
Writer
·
Thursday
with a twQilame
The Riviere Cen1er
~
010 55- 11 8 I
P.
Herman
Frank's
ream,
the
lead
in
the
National League
9-49 E. Livi ngston Ave. Columbus
206 5x- 13 10 3
M.
Chicago Cubs, came waltzing East and a chance to show the
baseball wcrld they were to
be taken seriously as
coo tenders.
Sunday night they left town
with their egos badly bruised
and their faithful followers
shaking their heads in disgust
after the Phillies Cllllpleted a
four-game sweep with a 4-2
triumph.

Error gives Reds
5-4 win over LA

Prevention is the
best policy ...

FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

Stania.•

Mustangs

win ninth

ii

_,__

,

By Debbie Hoff
During this past 8egatta
.weekend the Meigs American
Legion split a twin bill with
Logan on Saturday and

POMEROY
CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

. . . ..

13 11

'

"

'

Mr. Ht.' nr y F:rv1nc was
taken back to Camden Clark
llusprwj. Pa rkersburg.

Ron Strickmaker, Bob Brenneman , Mike Wren, and llo yd
Ruth: back. Ernmogene Holstein, Barbara Chapman , Joe
McCon ahy, Vernon Weber, Dave Jenkins, Dave Fox,
Denny Hart. lJeMis Whea ldon and Dr . l-ewis Telle.

~

'

I

busillcss

P R O B ATE CO UR T O F
. MEIGSCO U N T Y . OHI O
E S TAlE O F AC1dii:O LOU IS (•
M tll~ ak.a M r:,
I
H Mdls ,

DECEASED
No
11 Jt 1 Do c k (&gt; !

Cas('

Pa ~t-

11

1:&gt; 5

N OT I CE O F
APPO INT ME NT

OF F IDU C I A R Y
JunP I~
19 78 •n

On
fVIe oqS
( d~ e

1h('

Coun tv Prooarc Cou n

N o 1/JI1 Pa ul•ne Jitn('
na L n col n Str ee t

Ru sse ll
Nl •d dt coor t

po•n t eCI

Oh•O

Execu tr

was
. ,.. C'l l

i'IP

DAN SMITil announced the jumps for the junior division. In the background is Pat
Holter who assisted. Smith has bee n faithful in taking over the duty of announcin g.

the

t'S idh.• l'l l /, dd1f' lOu1SC M illS
rl ~ &lt;,
Mrs
T
H
MilS
di• C: f.' ~ SL'd l a te o l 1J1 R u 11r1ncl
St M JCl Cli Cp (l rT Oh•O

Mr1 nn1n g 0 w eos ter

Prooa te Judge
Clerk.
16

}6 I I

j

10

j!(

~E VF: N TEEN

peopletalk
By KENNETH H. CI.ARK
Uoitt-d Press Jnt ernathmal
TEACHERS ' PET: For Elizabet h Gray Vining and Esthe r
B. Rhuad';, it was a royal reunion w1th a former studen t - one
now kno wn as Cruwn Prince Aldhitu of Japan. Th e prince, wi th
wife, Priocess Michiko, treated 7t;.y ear&lt;rld Mrs. Vining and 82year-o ld Miss Hhoads to a Philad elphia dinner party Sund•y.
Mrs. Vin ing tui&lt;Jred the prince, and other chrldren in the roya l
family, from 1946 through 1950. Mrss Hhoads - a teacher at the
Friends School in Tokyo before Wurid War II - took over the
prince's education from 1950 U~rough \960. The royal cou ple rs
visiting P hiladelphia on tlle homeward leg of a giubal vacatiOn.

liAMBUHGERS CONSUMED IN ONF:-HALF HOU H'' That is the record
of James Forsvthe. Clifton, N. J., second from right reccr vmg hrs $20 prize and ;r plaque
from Greg Gatrell. JocCII Buq~cr Chr f mamq~ (~r . l-IS first piHL't' winner of S~.:~ lu rda y's t!&lt;H-a-

QUOTE OF TH E DAY : Dave llohrofen, organizer of the
sixth annual Keota , Iowa , Cow Chip Thro win~ Contest, on rules
for pa rticlpBnl.'; : ·we won't let them lick their fmge rs in
between throws - it could be like throwing a spitter. We also
will disqualify them for trimm ing the chip, and they ca nn ot
wear ~loves .''
GUMPSES : Alice t'aye will attend a special "Salute to the
America n Dance " celebration Thursday at New York, New
Yrrk disco ... Canadian Prime Mlnlster Pierre Trudeau without estranged wife Margaret, but with sons. &amp;-year-old
Justin and 4-year-&lt;Jid Sac·ha . in tow - turned out Sunday Ill
Vankleek Hili, Ontano, to celebrate St. Jea li IJIIptlste Day .. .
Sean Connery, Donald Sutherland and u siey·Anne Down are
In London after two months un location in Ireland fi~ni ng UA's
"The Great Train Robbery '' ... New Ynrk songstress
Jacqueline Hankins , late of the Copara b• n• and the Village
Gate, has signed a two-year touri ng and recw di ng contra ct
with Europe's supe rstar C!XTlbo. the J01hn West Band and
Singers of Frankfurt , Germany The S"nny H,JIIns Quintet
and a 121&gt;iece band led by piamst Md'oy Tyner headlined the
opening of the first ·weekend uf ttw Ne WI)ort Jazz Festival
Sunday night in New York ...

Report from America:

Lhon . From the left are four young men who tied fur ~ccund !&gt;Iarc in t he semor division nf the

event st a~ed •s a part of U1c Brg Ben d Hegatw . Jnhn McDt rtney. Toledo : Don Snyder .
Pomeroy: Coy Starcher. Mi dd leport. and Arthur T10b1n . Mrddieport, who also brought Ill tht•
1nost dolla rs, $5i , frum spunsors. Muncy from tht· spunsur ~ will be divldl'll between the
Meigs Jaycees ttncl tll l' Mr1gs County Seruor l'111zens. S(•e Iunrc Hegalla pi ctures un Page 7.

VIRUS VICfiM : After an unsuccessful stint on the
campaign trail , followed by reentry after frve yea rs mt.o the
business of television moviemaking, Elizabeth Tay lor, 1s m a
Los Angeles hospital. Doctors di agnose the ma lad y as a mild
form of viral pneumooia - say she's in good condition and
should be able to go home soon . The 4&amp;-year-oid Miss Taylor
spent the last several months on the stump fo r husband Juhn
Warner in his abortive bid for a U.S. sena te seat rn Vrrg1ma .
She's ~n working on a Hallmark Hall of Fame productil&gt;n nf
"Return P.n'a'ement. " rosta r ring Juscuh Bottoms.

'

combinati on with a nitrite
deve lo ped li ver tumors,
I jjinsky said.
With ijbrium , 10 per cent of
the rat.'; tested developed
tumor s. Although a sm aller

Legion team earns two
•
wms over the weekend

11iESE AHE 'lliE JUN IOR WINNERS of an eat-a·\ hun held as a part of B1g &amp;nil
Hc~tttt a a cllvltl e~ nn SaturdrJy ~hern oon at tht! Bu rger Clwf 111 Purm:ro} Frmn the ldt w·L'
.Jenny MPHd11ws , Middleport. whu won a plaque for !Jnn~ 1 n~ tn the lllttst m o m·~ frun1

' lllJnsors: Trey Ca"ell, Middleport, ""coM place wtnner who conswned 7' ' lmmburgs
dunng Ow elll ·a·thon, and Billy Colmer, Pomeroy, first pl,.re winner wi th 13 hamburger&gt;.
Prc:-.t:ntm)4 thl' et wt.tr(L"i w;,,.s G i-e~ C;ut1 d l. riurgH ( 'ltcf JI J. •Iltl l-!.(' 1' . 1111 the ri~h l .
(

•

I.ONGVIEW, "I:exas t UPi i
- Ca rl Johnson speaks Texan
in spurts. Ask hint what
makes his Reo Palm Isle
da nce ha ll a red neck
mstitution and he's apt to
repl y simp ly : "' Atmos·
phere."
By day, the 90-by 200-foot
str uctur e loo ks like an
rmusually plain skating rink .
bu t at night it' s an East Texas
island of country and western
pl easure - war m, dark ,
smokey , boozy a nd loud .
Peace-keeping is required.
"' We ha ve rules . We don\
toler·ate any foolishness of
any kind," Johnson sa id.
"'They can't stay if tliey're
not nice . We put ·em out .
Now, onl'e in a while we
break a glass or two, but we
never fail to get ·em out the
door and into jail. "
In truth, the retired ba nker
from Mount Pleasant, Texas
- who bought the Reo in 1971
.. as a hobby" - isn 't sure
exactly what pulls 4,000 men
and women a wee k from the
surro undin~ woods to the
Reo.
"' There's something about
th1s clu b that eve rybody
likes, ur anyway the
majol'ity:· Johnson sa id. "I
don't knuw wha t it Is. I don 't
krww
what
makes

make sure she gets to her
car ."

The story was tha t
adve nturous housewives
would put supper in a
pressure-coo ker and sneak
over to the Reo to let oft
steam before husbands returned from work. There'd be
tr aveling salesmen, stray
farmers, juking, jiving - and
worse.
And there were fi ghts ,
an ot h e r · honky-t o nk
institution.
" It kind of got a bad
name," Johnson admitted.
"Everybody kind of looks
down on it locally, It's kind of
hard t.o draw local people.
They kind of fe lt everybody
here was on the make. ...
We're changing that.
"We've got younger people ·
and we 've got a lot more local
people, newer people, too, "
he said. "Young people don't
ra re where they go."

The entertainment and re·
creation also helps lure pa·
trons.
"You feel free lo dance,"
sa id Doroth y Harg is, a
middl e-a ged lady with
husband , Charles.
"I like the band and and I
like Kenneth Schane, the
singer," said Allie Palmer,
60ish but admitting only- "I'm
not a teen-ager."
The Heo has a mysteri ous
magic and Joh nson is wa~ of
any change !hat might di vert
traffic.
That' s why he has refused
to chan ge old tablecloths and
rundown d garette machines.
1"That 's atmosphere." I But
he agreed to renovate
restroorns and a~opted a
r:ountywide extension of club
hours from midnight to 2 a .m.
Johnson claims a wide
audience - " We have them ~
18 to 80" - and a national
reputa tion
" There's
d
nobody that eve r arnounte to
an ything in the business that
hasn't played here, It 's

----------n
r HE OAII. Y St:NTINt: l.

n ~:l·r rrm TH TH E
INTf: RF.."!i llt'

llt:lfoS·MA.SC &gt;NAKf.A
KIIRO: KT IIIIHJ.I('H
&lt;'il) F:dlh"

t'nt/1 1 :- h~'\,1 l l.HT I~ L'll l'Wpl S"'\ UI'llil)'

probably the oldest and most 11, 11 11 • 0 111u ~iillt·~ Pul.lh.!! hiiiJo:
successful club."
r;.m 1 x.ti) ·Mull\lllt'd l &lt;~ . Jut·..
111
Si nce it started CIS a • ol\11'1 St . ''"l lll' l'"~ · Ohtu Ul ti!J
1111:-LIIl',., Ul ftt 't' l'hulll' \r'J'l• :Wili
palmetto-r inged . open-alr bh lm liill'tll•nt·\l'l l·m ;

dan ce hall in 1936, the Reo
has bee n through changes of

.. .., ••1111 dtts-" Jlo~'u·~·· ,,..111 ~tl
,11,1muuJ ·· •1H•r·u:-. 111~ n· 1 ,rc~&gt;~.'fl ·

,,.,.ll,
. L&lt;.ml.. n ,\1\.'·r~-·t.tt ~·~t. ,11\1\
l· utht l \ \t' L' lt • \'t• bwd , UI II•• ·H l]~ ,

ownership, ruune {one owner

She1ia Wa lL~ . 25, who drove
3~ miles from Henderson,
emphasized secu rrty.
. .. ,, woman ca n come here
alone and she knows she's
prnte&lt;:led ... she su id as Chris
&amp;&lt; nf, rd . :!8, II IaSSI!Ked her
lwnd. "' When she walks out
that nr•or ' the; 'n• wa t&lt;·h ln ~ to

I Isl e Wlth a :-. 11Jl'*''llllun rhll'lt lk' IT\ t'l't.-d by
merged the Pam
Kilgore dub called the Reo 1 , · ·· ~·~··• ,, 11·n· ,,q utalJI•· 1s et&gt;uh• pt-•·
·

an d repuUIUOn.

Nutori ous locall y was

;,pressure-&lt;:ooker day" - the

Wednesday matinee. Johnson
d aims there n o longer is a
" pressure cooker, " but
Wednesday still a bi~ day.
t

Cust001 full
In ooe or too dags

Cubs shocked
by Phillies

Dr. Ronald ERiviere

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

PHONE

992-2156

\'••ITII 'Ilt&gt;. Uill•&gt;

at1nospherc,''

"''''k li\ M•llur 11•1\J h' wht rt' , ... ,·rwr
i'l ' l 1

, , •III II &lt;1\ itlhdllt•, l)fJ\.' IJ)UIL III.

,,.!&lt;I11 111 u•alltn lltlh •aw t w vjj .
1~"' • 't•:.•· S:!i! ••t: su •~•or•thll.
Sl• Jll: 'l'l l rt· t• lti•Jill hs , 11 00 ;

1.•1.,·wtlt'tt' t:.!•i ·~' a·dr : Six .. ..... 1 ll~
SI I J•' : 'l ll l l "l' ' u1u111hs. Ji$!1.
Silh ... npi i&lt;II!IJf l" '
' l ll ln '~,'\t'tl\1111'1

m··lude~

t\uttdit)'

1..--------'"'

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

I AM and 5 PM

J

Greg Luzlnskl and Garry
Maddox hllllered to spark the
Pblllles' victory and Larry
Christenson tosaed a sevenhitter in besling Rick
Reusebel. The triumph gave
the two-time defending NL
East champions a twQilame
lead over the Cubs In the
dlvlsloo race.
"How do you pull it all back
together? " opliml.st Franks
aaked an Inquiring reporter .
"How did the Pblllles? A few
key base hita. Ail soon as we
star! hitting, everything will
be all right."
Reuschel, who had an 11·2
lifetime record against Pblla,
delphia entering the game,
was forced to leave in the
third because of his hurting
arm,

•

Next time you see
a tree
think of me~
A Public Servi ce ofTh1!l Newspaper &amp; Tht Ad veni5ing Council

�,_The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June ?Ji, 1970

2- The Daily Sentinel. M1ddleport-Pumemy . U.. Mund~' . Junt·1l; . 1!liR

Librium, methapyrilene connected to cancer
BOSTON
(UP! )
Libriwn, Ute secon d most
commonly prescribed dr ug in
the Unite d Sta tes. and
methapyri lene , the act ive
ingredient
in
several
nonprescri pti on sleeping
aids, have lx&gt;en associated
with cancer in rats ,
researchers reported today .
Tbe·drugs are 111embers of
the chemica l famil y ca lled
antines and when eaten with

doc s
Fur ttlt•r ,
nitrites · the)'
fo rm htg}t per cen tag e, Wi llt a 111 lHH'nn
stmnach
adds
c&lt;tn
cml,lbine
nit rOsamine, one o£ the IJ/nsky reported .
·
with
nttntes
lt•ft
l.IVl'
l' from
Hwnans h&lt;::~ve a l'on stcwt
deadliest ca ncer-causing
t
uring
t
o
prudu
ce
substam:es km1Wll to man , supply 11f mtritr in tht•tr
nitru.samine.
saliv
H
and
ingt&gt;st
rutri
tt•
when
resea rchers · fr om
the
Lijinsky 's research ~ if
Frederick Ca ncer Research the\· c&lt;:~t 111ealS cw·ell with
substantiated
b) 11tht'r scie nsud.iwn
nitrite.
such
as
b&lt;-~l'!
lll
,
r-en ter told the Northeast
r e~! I O nal

sausage and ham .
Bacon has been a top tl' of
L'Ontrovcrsy 1n rcrent yt:ars
becau!)C tt has bern shown
th(Jl while raw bacon dot' sn't

meeting of the

Amertcan Chemical Society.
When nitrites were fed to
rat s m eom bination with the
dru gs, li ver cwd nervo us
system tunlors resulted ln a

cont&lt;ltn mt rosarnines ,

L'C ul k l'fl

ti sts - shows arwther wa y
~ ubsta n l't'S

!lllltJ('t-•n t b} t hl~lll -

:-;t• [Vl'S l 'l::IIl l'liUSe

l 'ilfl('l' l' Ul

with

l 'OIJIIJ II Hil l ll ll

olhl'r

substa nl't•s

l.ijinsky, drredor 10f lilt•

Old practice becoming
new trend in schools
WASHI NGTON 1UPI l An old practice - flunkmg ~
is becoming a new trend 111
big city school systems .
Educa tion off i.da ls say the
trend is toward an unbending
refusal to promote children
from grade to gra de JUSI to
get rid of them. And they say
it is rapidly paying off in
better basic skills for
granunar and hrgh school
students.
Pre.ssured by 14xpa)·ers for
better results, many big ci ty
school systems rt~·entiy have
adopted the no-nonsense ap·
proach to probl em students
and apathe tic parents .

"' We nunked abuul J:UIOO
students t wu year s ago.·· said

to SUJili i icr s•. :htitillh1 s ~t:ar to
copr with htg,h S('huttl."

Noting that tax pay t.&gt; rs arr
.Jar ksonv rlle . Fla . sehoul
turnm
g down ~-~:h o(11 bond
l~llr rd member Bill Carter .

"'That number dropped \{t
:1.1100 last year . A lot more

are now osking how

parents

thr rr krds are doing."'
Cilrc ago sc hool board
memb{'r Henn· McGee sa id:
" 1. fr.- one. am glad thase
da y~
uf tok t.: n ·so cial
promotion' of student s are
ov~;&gt;r . WL• ' ve gunc thruugh a

pro\)(tSals in llliHI)' areas,
some rittes iJlso arc t csti n~
tee~rht'r

ski\ls to Wl't!d ~JUt
mstructors.
llalla s schoo l urw rd
ll H.'rtlber Sa r&lt;:~ h Haskins satrt
Uw rt.&gt;sults , to be re)e(;lsed Lim;
swnrne r , of so me teacher·
Wl q u;:~lified

generatllln who fe lt they had
no responsibilities - only
w oup ng ll ts . We're teslinK

students and we find th ~ 1 a lol
more eighth graders must gu

Racine Social Events
By Mrs . Francis Mor ris
Mrs . Co ra Webb was
hostess for the meeting of the
Booster Sunday School Class
Friday evening, June 16. at
her home. Mrs. Helen Slack.
presi dent , opened
the
meetin g with th e group
singin ~ the first and second
verses of "Standing on the
Promises" and prayer by
Ma rjorie G rimm. Mrs. Slack
read Psalm s 199 :16 and a
reading ·' The Forgott en
Book." She closed devoti ons
with the singing uf the last
two verses of ""Standrng on
the Promises." A pro~ ram
follo wed prese nted
by
Marjo rie Gr imm . " Love
Lifted Me" wa s sung .
Scripture reading John 3: 13·
21 and prayer. .. A Loving
God " wa s her trit e and
r ea d in gs
i n c ! u d ed
"Somebody · Everybmly ·
Anybody and Nobody , .... He
Maketh No Mistak&lt;&gt;," •·He
Rose Again ," "Chastening...
"Never /\lone," 'What Does
a Pastor do," "One Solitary
Life," "No Time for God,"
"Entertain Strang ers." "'The
Greatest of These is Love."
" The Praying Hand s,"
'Make Every Day a Won·
derful Day," "Osmosis of the
Spirit," "' The Valley ." The
business session was held
with the presiden1 presrding
Fourteen members answN cd
rull call with a Blbic verse Ora Hill, Ura Morns, Helen
Slack, Clara Powell. Ga111el
Ervine, Wanda Powell , Mane

Hur . Ma q unt.• Gr imm , Ven1

Beegle, Velma Taylor . Helen
Simpsun. Durothy Badgl&lt;')'.

Gretta Si mpson .. Cora Webb.
Blest He The Tre That Br nds
and The Lord 's Prayer in
u1usun dusecl Ihr meeting,

The refreshmerl1 1ablc was

testing in her district ··may

c h~uu c~ I t:CI rcin o~e nes1 s

~ram

at

pro·

Mar yland's

Frede rick center , dlstussed
his rt•sem·eh with rats in an
mtenH!W .

His work on methapyrilene
led tn a proposed bc:tn nf the
subshtn t'e by tlw l'ood ::u1d
Dr ug Administra tiO n. ~·t e­
thapyr ilene
is
an
;111 ti lus ta miu e used as a
n1,n prcscrtp tion, nr,nnarcntk
slct.• piu g
cti d
bcl' a use
J lll lhi s tam in cs co mm only
L'U U!)t' drowsinm)s as &lt;J side

nu mber

than

the

me·

thapyrilene, l.ijinsky said the
res ult was signifi ca nt
beca use the tumor fo rm ed
most fr equently was in the
rats' nervous system, a mu ch
rarer form of twnor than in
the liver.
IJ jinsky and researchers at
Hoffman l.aHoche , th e
effect .
'l11irty per cent of the rats manufa cturer of Librium ,
rl! d
mt't ha pyr il e nt'
in are repeating his exreriment

to see if its results match. His Antabuse , a drug given
new .experiment, begun a. alcoholics to niake them sick
year ago, alrea dy has when they drink, and a
produced two lwnors among number of herbicides and
the 00 experimental animals. insecticides.
·nwir suspicions of the
" I don 't want to make a
rea l big bang-the-drum substances ' ·carcinogenicity
cvangelica1 presentation, " were strengthened by
IJjinsky cautioned . " I'm not t'OI"roboration from another
going to proJect the risk (of type test , where substances
cancer in humans) beca use I are fed to bacteria t.o see if
don 't think anyone's able to they cause mutations. That
do that yet. I'm just test is less reliable than
finding actual tumors in
presenting th e data ."
.
Lijinsky's group has tested animals, Lijinsky said, but it
nther amine chemicals for did t"Orrelate with the animal
cancer,causing ability and test findin gs.
they are suspicious of

pnu ntsing l tJ uphuld thl' lr
thL'
rt' SIH_Insibi li t it•s In
L'dur&lt;tlhln pro t.'t'!'iS.
('I•UJIVtl L'h&lt;:ll rr!HIIl (~t.·nr gt•
Hm wn .Jr . nf Mcrnplm; said
."ic l u~!.Ji s llllbl
k.J ww tht:·~ t11'i..'

let tJixpaycrs
fi ghting waste
pspcdally in hght nf ti n~
m_tl tu nwtd e tax revu ll th ct t
st•t•ms tu have been hera lded
b~ l'&lt;tll fnnua 's Prnpvsitiun

t:t
"" I tlnnk the pmlliem of

dt St'tp\irH.' iS S OI!lt:'li iii ~S
who should not ha\'e been ov t•rt.'lll ph aSJ 7.cd , ·' Hrf• wn
:;aid. •· We're cenlerin~ on
lcal'hing...
The comments came ct l a hclpin~ a ll studt.• nt ~ etchiew
wcL•kend mee tin g 11f th L' at lc &lt;tst basw skt lls. Tlw
l'oundl of Urban Boards of t&lt;:~xpay L'r c\dt.' Sn't wan t
Educattnn Hepr e::;e ntat ivcs t.•d ucattorl ltlllls . Ami we HI'C
fn1n1 man y of th(' nettion 's 65 IJ st t.: m n ~. ··
Dcnw r st.: houl b(I&lt;JJ'l.l Presi bi g~est £·1ti es sa id th eir
dent Oma r D. Blmr satd
St.·hwl systems nuw:
- Test 1he abil rty 11f students whn do n t~t ttduen·
elt'mentary und !ugh school an• 111 1t pets sed 111 Ius l'll)' . He
students at re~ u la r mtervals smd tilt' answer li e~ not only
and refuse to promote thosc._· 111 fo rt· tng studt, nl~ tJ1 d 11 their
ass1grwd \\urk. but tn ma kmg
who do not keep up
- Put mor e empl laSJS on till' work ;m Jn\t' l'l'Sttn g du!lre:-nting skills , i:i nd pn·ss UIT ll'ngt:• fnr ~ oungsters of cdl
bi.!rkgroumb
parent~ to Slk!ll
L'Plltra l' t ~

show we havf! sorne tea l'lwrs

CHAND CROAKERS were initiated during special

ceremonies Sa turday night at the annual frog jump a nd
frog derby. Front. left to right , are Joh n Goodin . Jim
Barto n. Ann• Marie Grycza, Bob Cooley, Greg Zegler,

c cntt:red wtth a lo\' e·t y
GluxuHa plHnt. for de licio us
refreshments served by lhc
h1•stcss .
HCXi.liUW Wr.llkcr. d ;:~ u g htl~r
l)f Ht•\' ond Mrs. Uun Wttlker
and .J eff Kn1 gh t1n g were

•

umtL•d m IIJarnagl' Solurdi:l y
t: \' t'll111~ . .) Ullt' I i . Ill a
bcauuful L' CrcnJon~ e:H Ftrst
Ba pti st Church
Mrs . Edna Neigler is a

'

:a.

.,.
)

patient al Hulzer Medtcal

Cent er.

•
•
lj

.

•

defeated Lan caster on
Sunday. During the three
games, Meigs had a total of 33
hits.
In the first game Saturday,
Logan defeated Meigs 11-5.
Bill Heft collected the win
and Mark Foglestrom the
loss . Heft walked three,
struck out seven and gave up
eight hits. For the · locals
Brian Hamilton, Mark
Fogelstrom, Ray Andres, and
Mark Forbes fanned six,
walked nine and gave "up nine
hits.
No runs were scored in the
first two innings of play, then
in the Meigs' third, IUly
Andrews was safe on errors,
Kenny Young doubled and
Dave Kennedy brought in two
runs on a single. Fogelslrom
was then hit by a pitch and
Kelly Winebrenner singled to
score Kennedy. Tim Hood
then collected an RBI when
he sin gled to bring
Fogelstrom across.
Logan then tied the score in
the last of the third when
Columber singled and
Lebam, Tucker, and Booth
walked. Heft came up with
two RBI's when he singled
and two more Logan men
walked.
Meigs' lone run in the
fourth came when Young and
Kennedy singled and a
ground out by Brian
Hamilton scored Young.
In the Logan fourth, four
walks, two singles and a

1:[

i\[~

Yankees fall 8%
behind Red Sox

triple by Heft combined to
Hitters for Meigs were Tim ::::
"oot I'll take a rest whene ve r Kansas City., 6-3, Miruiesota Marlaers 10, Brewers B:
score five runs . Logan scored Hood, two singles and a By MIKE TUILY
they give it to me."
hammered Chicago, 8-5 and
twointbefifthonawalkand double , Winebrenner, UPISports Writer
Bob Stinson' two-run single
Fogelstrom, Ebersbach each
Despite leading New York
a home run by Tucker.
Don Gullett won his third· 9-6, Cleveland split with with the bases loaded in the
winnin g
the ninth sna pped an 11-3 tie as
Hitting for Meigs were had a single and a double. to a 4-2 victory over the straight game since coming Toront o,
Kenny Young, a single and a Forbes and Hamilton bad two Tigers Sunday that ended a 3- oft the disabled list. Thurman nightcap , 3-2, after losing the Seattle overcame seven
double, Dave Kennedy and singles and Cliff Kennedy a 1 series in Detroit, embattled Munson drove In two runs opener, 2-1, and Texas errors to win its sixth game in
Kelly Winebrenner, two single.
Yankee Manager Billy ' with a pair of singles and bia nkl'd California , 7.{),
seven outings .
singles each, Brian Hamilton M.
001 220 1- 12 14 0 · Martin still is not secure in rookie Damaso Garcia had
Indians l-3, Blue Jays Z.2 :
and Tim Hood each with one L.
110 001 0- 3 7 5 his job.
two hits and scored three A's 6, Royals 3:
An dre Thornton's fift h·
single.
Tim Ebershacb and Mark
When Boston completed a runs as New York tagged
inn
ing home run in the
Tony Armas knocked in two
M.
004 100 0- 5 8 I Forbes. Lightfoot (LP ), three-game
sweep
of rookie Steve Baker with his runs with Iris fir st homer and nightcap gave Clevela nd a
L.
004 520 x- 11 9 2 Leham (2), Meyer (4) and Baltimore with a 4-1 victory first loss in two decisions.
a double. He homered to cap split. In the opener, Roy
Brian · Hamilton, Mark McDaniels.
over the Orioles, it left the
In Boston, Mike Torrez a two-r un seve nth tha~ gave Howell si ngled home the
In Sunday's game the YankeesH\lgamesoutofthe allowed nine hits for his 11th Oakland a 4-3 lead and winning run in the eighth and
Fogelstrom (4 LP), Rav
Andrews (4) . Mark Forbes Meigs American Legion , lead.
victory and Rick Burleson hit knocked in an insurance run rookie reliever ViciJlr Cruz
(6) and Dave Kennedy. Bill downed Lancaster 10-4. After
At least the relative calm in a homer , The viciJlry was with a double in a two-run picked up his first majorHeft and Tucker,
the second inning Meigs was the Yankee clubhouse Boston's 33rd in 39 games at ninth .
league save.
In the second game, Meigs in control all the way.
survived when Martin rested Fenway. Torrez fanned a Twins B-9, White Sox &gt;-6:
Rangers 7, Angels 0:
downed Logan by a score of
Terry Wall pitched ex- star outfielder Reggie season-high nine ba tters.
Geo rge " Doc " Medich
Mike Cub bage 's run12-3. Tim Ebersbach upped ceilent ball to win the game. Jackson, and Jackson did not Dennis Martinez, 6-5 , took the scoring single capped a three- turned in the third straight
his record to iHl by fanning He faMed two and walked s1x protest excessively.
loss.
run sixtl1 in the opener and shuto ut by a Texas pitcher
seven and walking five . and gave up seven bits. Ross
"I didn't ask for it," said
In other American Lea gue Roy Smalley hit a grand slam night when he tossed a sevenLightfoot was the losing was the losing pitcher. Jackson, who bas been known games, Seattle outlasted Mil, in the nig htcap 1Q complete hitter to send Texas into fir st
pitcher. Li~htfoot, Lebam, Lancaster's Rose, Ross, to get angry at being rested , waukee, 10-a, Oakland r ipped the sweco.
place in the West.
and Meyer combined to strike Reeves, and Pullins com'
out three and give up five bined to strike out 5 and walk
bases on balls for Logan.
8, while giving up II hits .
During Logan's first in·
Lancaster scored thre e
ning, one run was scored times in the first when Brockwhen Lebam walked, Me- man singled, Reed walked,
Daniels doubled and Tucker Ausic safe on erros, Hoshor
singled to right field to score then forced Reed at third and
Lebam. A run was taken Brockman scored the first
away from Logan when run. Shodding was safe on
Fogelstrom threw out Me· errors and Bates doubled to
Daniels at the plate.
score Au sic and Hoshor .
Corr ell and a single by
now.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) You can he lp cut down on
The big inning for Meigs ' Lancaster picked up its last U!e Lacy had no excuaes.
crime losses ... losses that
Paul
"Los Angeles and us are in starting pitc her
di rect l y
affect
yo u,
came in the second. Six runs •un of the game in the second Only regrets.
a critical situation because no Moskau, but Lopes homered
whether th ey happen to you
were scored. To start it off, inning when Bain was safe on
in
the
second
t.o
give
Los
And he shared them with one has pa id attention to San
or not .
Hood and Young walked and errors, Rose walked and Dodgers' manager Tommy Francicco.
Angeles a 3·1 lead .
Take t he cr ime of ar son .
Th e Reds tied the score in
Ebersbach upped his RBI Reed singled to score Bain. Lasorda.
"We 've been gelling the
You ' re
payi ng
an
the
seven
th
on
successive
total by two when he doubled
Meigs came alive in the
Lacy,_the ••tenth man' ' on pitching lately but are hitti ng
increasingly heavy subsidy
to bring Hood and Young in. second inning to score four the Dodger roster who has has been anemic. Most of our singles by Correll , Cesar
del iberately se t f ir es
Wayland was then safe on runs. Fogelstrom walked , been substituting in right hits have been with two Geronimo an d Ken Griffey , a
ough y our insurance
• ..,._,__ _"'"_ _._errors and Forbes singled to Wall singled, Ebersba ch field for injured Reggie Smith outs."
sacrifice by Rose and a
prer;,i ums.
ground
out
by
Dave
Collins.
score Ebersbach . Cliff walked and Cliff KeMedy of late, dropped a hard line
The two cluoo were tied 3-3
are
In suran ce
costs
Pedro llorbon pitched two
~
Kennedy singled to load the walked to score Fogelstrom. drive by Dave Concepcion at the top of the ninth with one
adver set y aff ecte d by
bases and Winebrenner Mike Wayland then singled to with two outs in the ninth out , when Rose walked, innings of shutout bali and
burglar ies, robber ies and
thefts ... plus
SAVE &amp; SHAVE
forced Wayland at the plate. score Wall and Ebersbach. inning Sunday, enabling Pete moved to second on an infield took the victory, raising his
Fogelstrom then cleared the Hood walked and Brian Rose to score the go-ahead out and ·came all the way record t.o f&gt;. J. Tpmmy John l r nu••tle·" CB radios
that turn
SPECIALS
bases with a double .
Hamilton sacrificed to score run in Cincinnati's 5-I victory bome on Lacy's dropped ball lasted into the nil)th and took
Ute loss, dropped his record IJl
1'--..._____..-----t In the Meigs fourth, four Kennedy ,
to put the Reds a head 4-3 .
over Los Angeles,
One th ing you ca n do is
singles
by
Hamilton,
In the third it was a one
" 1 was ruMing on the play fl.{; .
"I don't know what hap·
suppo r t
programs
The Dodgers open a four·
Winebrenner , Fogelstrom man show for the single run pened," Lacy, who puts in with two outs," he recalled
pro
viding
stiffer
penal t ies
and Hood plated two runs. when Terry Wall was safe on most of his playing time in later, "and was surpr ised to game series at Atlanta series
for
wrongdoers
and
a two base error and then the infield, said after the see the ball drop."
Monda y. while the Reds starJa
po sals for stre ngthened
The Departme11t
stole third and home. The game .
rime invest iga1ion efforts.
SUR FORM._
Dan Driessen followed Con- a fou r ~g am e senes ~~
fourth saw Wayland single
me
"I was sure I had it. But the cepcion IJl bat and singled Houston . The two clubs meet
You can also make it
No 2 9 ~
and Hood double to score one ball hit my glove and bounced him hom e with what proved again next weekend for three
Iaugher for crook s. Use
more games in Cmcinnati.
run.
oft, I think I've been playing to be the winning run .
good, strong locks. Mar k
Meigs picked up three more good defense lately. I feel
possessio ns wi th your
The Dod gers touched
social secu ri ty nu mber .
runs in the sixth when Hood real bad fer the team because · reliever Doug Bair for a run
Since 1915
singled and got to third on this is such a big game."
in the ninth on singles by
Mike Swiger
Our
agency
provides
!rrors. Hamilton walked and
Those were also Lasorda 's pinch-hitters Vic Davalillo
an ci al protection and
9n-71Sl
ser vice w)'l en crlme tosses l
•
n a hit and run situa tion , sentiments.
and Rick Monday and a
occur .. . but many can be
149
S.
fhir d St .
llinebrenner singled to right
"It was disheartening to sacrifice fly by Davey Lopes.
l oorevenled . That's why we
Middle
port.
0
.
to score Hood and move lose a game like that on a But Bill Russell then lin ed
- prevention is the
One Pee Wee game was Hamilton
SUR FORM "
to
third . dropped fly ball with two into a double play to end the
pol icy .
PLANE
played over the weekend, a Fogelstrom then singled to outs," he explained.
game.
·"See me for car, boiM,
makeup game between left to score Hamilton. With
Los .Angeles started the
"Otherwise we win with the
Powell's and the Middleport two outs, Hood singled to run in the bottom of the ninth. scoring with two runs in the 1ife, health aod
Mustangs. The Mustangs score Winebrenner in the It meant getting only one first inning oo a single by
i~
defeated Powell 's 13-11.
seventh. Hood was safe on game on the Reds over the Lopes and doubles by Steve
Todd Hysell was credited errors and scored on weekend instead of three ." Garvey and Dusty Baker.
992-2143
the loss and Donnie Hamilton 's double.
With the loss, The Dodgers, Cincinnati got its first run in ' .. ," .... u ,
t02 W. Main
Pomeroy
Becker the win . Hysell
Legion hillers were Tim wbo squeezed past tbe Reds I· the second oo a double by Vic
fanned six and walked seven. Hood, with a double and 0 and 4-J in the first two
Mustangs pitching staff of single, Wall and Wayland games of the sold-out
Tim Cassell, Darrin Drenner, with two singles, Hamilton weekend series , fell s ix
Donnie Becker and Terry with a double, Cliff KeMedY , games beh ind the San
Little combined to strike oul Winebrenner, Fogelstrom Francisco Giants, who split a
TOKYO(UP I) -Southpaw
nine and walk 12.
Derek
Tatsuno of Hawail
and Forbes with singles.
doubleheader from Atlanta .
Th e game was a slug fest as
pitched
a
five-hitler and Tim
Next Saturday the Legion The win left the Reds 2\l
beth teams hit welL Powells' ~ravels to Glouster to play a games back of the National Tolman and Bob Skube hit
Bryan Ingels was the Jeading double header.
ba ck-to-back doubles to lead
League West leaders.
hitter with a grand $lam, a L.
the
U.S. College All..S!ars IJl a
310 000 000- 4 7 3
"We couldn't aftcrd to fall
Our !l ta ff of dcntl \t\ and
triple
and
a
single.
3-0
triumph
over a Japanese
M.
041 103 10x- !O 11 4 any further behind the
t ec h nician ~ will ma ke yo ur
Other hitters for the losers
mm&gt;fn demure. 4lldl y and
IA!am
in
the
secon d game of
Rose, Ross (2 LP) , Reeves Giants," Cincinnati Manager
t conomiL"a ll y
were Mark Corbett, Todd (6 ), Pullins (7 ) and Bates.
the
annua
l U.S.-Ja pa n
Sparky Ander:r&gt;n said . "They
Hy sell, Gre g Fie lds, and
collegiate
baseball
series in
Terry Wail and Mark are clearly the favor ites right
Mark
Elliott,
all
with
singles.
Tokyo
Sunday.
Forbes.
One or two da y ful l
For the winners Donnie
The America ns lost the
Becker, Jeff Nelson and Tony
first game of the series,
Moebler all had triples, Tim
played Saturday," 7.J.
Cassell a double.
Colle cting singles wer e
Eric Johnson, (2) Darrin
Drenner, Tim Cassell, Donnie
Becker, Jeff Nelson , and
Tony
Moehler. This win gives
•Dr. A.i. Staehli• Or. C.W . Beai •Or. G.J. S10rnbaugh
the
Mustangs
a season record
•Or . W. O. Kirnb;.llt • De J.C. Murphy • Dr. J. Ochman
By FRED McMANE
into Philadelphia la st
of 9-1.
UPI
Sporll
Writer
·
Thursday
with a twQilame
The Riviere Cen1er
~
010 55- 11 8 I
P.
Herman
Frank's
ream,
the
lead
in
the
National League
9-49 E. Livi ngston Ave. Columbus
206 5x- 13 10 3
M.
Chicago Cubs, came waltzing East and a chance to show the
baseball wcrld they were to
be taken seriously as
coo tenders.
Sunday night they left town
with their egos badly bruised
and their faithful followers
shaking their heads in disgust
after the Phillies Cllllpleted a
four-game sweep with a 4-2
triumph.

Error gives Reds
5-4 win over LA

Prevention is the
best policy ...

FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

Stania.•

Mustangs

win ninth

ii

_,__

,

By Debbie Hoff
During this past 8egatta
.weekend the Meigs American
Legion split a twin bill with
Logan on Saturday and

POMEROY
CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

. . . ..

13 11

'

"

'

Mr. Ht.' nr y F:rv1nc was
taken back to Camden Clark
llusprwj. Pa rkersburg.

Ron Strickmaker, Bob Brenneman , Mike Wren, and llo yd
Ruth: back. Ernmogene Holstein, Barbara Chapman , Joe
McCon ahy, Vernon Weber, Dave Jenkins, Dave Fox,
Denny Hart. lJeMis Whea ldon and Dr . l-ewis Telle.

~

'

I

busillcss

P R O B ATE CO UR T O F
. MEIGSCO U N T Y . OHI O
E S TAlE O F AC1dii:O LOU IS (•
M tll~ ak.a M r:,
I
H Mdls ,

DECEASED
No
11 Jt 1 Do c k (&gt; !

Cas('

Pa ~t-

11

1:&gt; 5

N OT I CE O F
APPO INT ME NT

OF F IDU C I A R Y
JunP I~
19 78 •n

On
fVIe oqS
( d~ e

1h('

Coun tv Prooarc Cou n

N o 1/JI1 Pa ul•ne Jitn('
na L n col n Str ee t

Ru sse ll
Nl •d dt coor t

po•n t eCI

Oh•O

Execu tr

was
. ,.. C'l l

i'IP

DAN SMITil announced the jumps for the junior division. In the background is Pat
Holter who assisted. Smith has bee n faithful in taking over the duty of announcin g.

the

t'S idh.• l'l l /, dd1f' lOu1SC M illS
rl ~ &lt;,
Mrs
T
H
MilS
di• C: f.' ~ SL'd l a te o l 1J1 R u 11r1ncl
St M JCl Cli Cp (l rT Oh•O

Mr1 nn1n g 0 w eos ter

Prooa te Judge
Clerk.
16

}6 I I

j

10

j!(

~E VF: N TEEN

peopletalk
By KENNETH H. CI.ARK
Uoitt-d Press Jnt ernathmal
TEACHERS ' PET: For Elizabet h Gray Vining and Esthe r
B. Rhuad';, it was a royal reunion w1th a former studen t - one
now kno wn as Cruwn Prince Aldhitu of Japan. Th e prince, wi th
wife, Priocess Michiko, treated 7t;.y ear&lt;rld Mrs. Vining and 82year-o ld Miss Hhoads to a Philad elphia dinner party Sund•y.
Mrs. Vin ing tui&lt;Jred the prince, and other chrldren in the roya l
family, from 1946 through 1950. Mrss Hhoads - a teacher at the
Friends School in Tokyo before Wurid War II - took over the
prince's education from 1950 U~rough \960. The royal cou ple rs
visiting P hiladelphia on tlle homeward leg of a giubal vacatiOn.

liAMBUHGERS CONSUMED IN ONF:-HALF HOU H'' That is the record
of James Forsvthe. Clifton, N. J., second from right reccr vmg hrs $20 prize and ;r plaque
from Greg Gatrell. JocCII Buq~cr Chr f mamq~ (~r . l-IS first piHL't' winner of S~.:~ lu rda y's t!&lt;H-a-

QUOTE OF TH E DAY : Dave llohrofen, organizer of the
sixth annual Keota , Iowa , Cow Chip Thro win~ Contest, on rules
for pa rticlpBnl.'; : ·we won't let them lick their fmge rs in
between throws - it could be like throwing a spitter. We also
will disqualify them for trimm ing the chip, and they ca nn ot
wear ~loves .''
GUMPSES : Alice t'aye will attend a special "Salute to the
America n Dance " celebration Thursday at New York, New
Yrrk disco ... Canadian Prime Mlnlster Pierre Trudeau without estranged wife Margaret, but with sons. &amp;-year-old
Justin and 4-year-&lt;Jid Sac·ha . in tow - turned out Sunday Ill
Vankleek Hili, Ontano, to celebrate St. Jea li IJIIptlste Day .. .
Sean Connery, Donald Sutherland and u siey·Anne Down are
In London after two months un location in Ireland fi~ni ng UA's
"The Great Train Robbery '' ... New Ynrk songstress
Jacqueline Hankins , late of the Copara b• n• and the Village
Gate, has signed a two-year touri ng and recw di ng contra ct
with Europe's supe rstar C!XTlbo. the J01hn West Band and
Singers of Frankfurt , Germany The S"nny H,JIIns Quintet
and a 121&gt;iece band led by piamst Md'oy Tyner headlined the
opening of the first ·weekend uf ttw Ne WI)ort Jazz Festival
Sunday night in New York ...

Report from America:

Lhon . From the left are four young men who tied fur ~ccund !&gt;Iarc in t he semor division nf the

event st a~ed •s a part of U1c Brg Ben d Hegatw . Jnhn McDt rtney. Toledo : Don Snyder .
Pomeroy: Coy Starcher. Mi dd leport. and Arthur T10b1n . Mrddieport, who also brought Ill tht•
1nost dolla rs, $5i , frum spunsors. Muncy from tht· spunsur ~ will be divldl'll between the
Meigs Jaycees ttncl tll l' Mr1gs County Seruor l'111zens. S(•e Iunrc Hegalla pi ctures un Page 7.

VIRUS VICfiM : After an unsuccessful stint on the
campaign trail , followed by reentry after frve yea rs mt.o the
business of television moviemaking, Elizabeth Tay lor, 1s m a
Los Angeles hospital. Doctors di agnose the ma lad y as a mild
form of viral pneumooia - say she's in good condition and
should be able to go home soon . The 4&amp;-year-oid Miss Taylor
spent the last several months on the stump fo r husband Juhn
Warner in his abortive bid for a U.S. sena te seat rn Vrrg1ma .
She's ~n working on a Hallmark Hall of Fame productil&gt;n nf
"Return P.n'a'ement. " rosta r ring Juscuh Bottoms.

'

combinati on with a nitrite
deve lo ped li ver tumors,
I jjinsky said.
With ijbrium , 10 per cent of
the rat.'; tested developed
tumor s. Although a sm aller

Legion team earns two
•
wms over the weekend

11iESE AHE 'lliE JUN IOR WINNERS of an eat-a·\ hun held as a part of B1g &amp;nil
Hc~tttt a a cllvltl e~ nn SaturdrJy ~hern oon at tht! Bu rger Clwf 111 Purm:ro} Frmn the ldt w·L'
.Jenny MPHd11ws , Middleport. whu won a plaque for !Jnn~ 1 n~ tn the lllttst m o m·~ frun1

' lllJnsors: Trey Ca"ell, Middleport, ""coM place wtnner who conswned 7' ' lmmburgs
dunng Ow elll ·a·thon, and Billy Colmer, Pomeroy, first pl,.re winner wi th 13 hamburger&gt;.
Prc:-.t:ntm)4 thl' et wt.tr(L"i w;,,.s G i-e~ C;ut1 d l. riurgH ( 'ltcf JI J. •Iltl l-!.(' 1' . 1111 the ri~h l .
(

•

I.ONGVIEW, "I:exas t UPi i
- Ca rl Johnson speaks Texan
in spurts. Ask hint what
makes his Reo Palm Isle
da nce ha ll a red neck
mstitution and he's apt to
repl y simp ly : "' Atmos·
phere."
By day, the 90-by 200-foot
str uctur e loo ks like an
rmusually plain skating rink .
bu t at night it' s an East Texas
island of country and western
pl easure - war m, dark ,
smokey , boozy a nd loud .
Peace-keeping is required.
"' We ha ve rules . We don\
toler·ate any foolishness of
any kind," Johnson sa id.
"'They can't stay if tliey're
not nice . We put ·em out .
Now, onl'e in a while we
break a glass or two, but we
never fail to get ·em out the
door and into jail. "
In truth, the retired ba nker
from Mount Pleasant, Texas
- who bought the Reo in 1971
.. as a hobby" - isn 't sure
exactly what pulls 4,000 men
and women a wee k from the
surro undin~ woods to the
Reo.
"' There's something about
th1s clu b that eve rybody
likes, ur anyway the
majol'ity:· Johnson sa id. "I
don't knuw wha t it Is. I don 't
krww
what
makes

make sure she gets to her
car ."

The story was tha t
adve nturous housewives
would put supper in a
pressure-coo ker and sneak
over to the Reo to let oft
steam before husbands returned from work. There'd be
tr aveling salesmen, stray
farmers, juking, jiving - and
worse.
And there were fi ghts ,
an ot h e r · honky-t o nk
institution.
" It kind of got a bad
name," Johnson admitted.
"Everybody kind of looks
down on it locally, It's kind of
hard t.o draw local people.
They kind of fe lt everybody
here was on the make. ...
We're changing that.
"We've got younger people ·
and we 've got a lot more local
people, newer people, too, "
he said. "Young people don't
ra re where they go."

The entertainment and re·
creation also helps lure pa·
trons.
"You feel free lo dance,"
sa id Doroth y Harg is, a
middl e-a ged lady with
husband , Charles.
"I like the band and and I
like Kenneth Schane, the
singer," said Allie Palmer,
60ish but admitting only- "I'm
not a teen-ager."
The Heo has a mysteri ous
magic and Joh nson is wa~ of
any change !hat might di vert
traffic.
That' s why he has refused
to chan ge old tablecloths and
rundown d garette machines.
1"That 's atmosphere." I But
he agreed to renovate
restroorns and a~opted a
r:ountywide extension of club
hours from midnight to 2 a .m.
Johnson claims a wide
audience - " We have them ~
18 to 80" - and a national
reputa tion
" There's
d
nobody that eve r arnounte to
an ything in the business that
hasn't played here, It 's

----------n
r HE OAII. Y St:NTINt: l.

n ~:l·r rrm TH TH E
INTf: RF.."!i llt'

llt:lfoS·MA.SC &gt;NAKf.A
KIIRO: KT IIIIHJ.I('H
&lt;'il) F:dlh"

t'nt/1 1 :- h~'\,1 l l.HT I~ L'll l'Wpl S"'\ UI'llil)'

probably the oldest and most 11, 11 11 • 0 111u ~iillt·~ Pul.lh.!! hiiiJo:
successful club."
r;.m 1 x.ti) ·Mull\lllt'd l &lt;~ . Jut·..
111
Si nce it started CIS a • ol\11'1 St . ''"l lll' l'"~ · Ohtu Ul ti!J
1111:-LIIl',., Ul ftt 't' l'hulll' \r'J'l• :Wili
palmetto-r inged . open-alr bh lm liill'tll•nt·\l'l l·m ;

dan ce hall in 1936, the Reo
has bee n through changes of

.. .., ••1111 dtts-" Jlo~'u·~·· ,,..111 ~tl
,11,1muuJ ·· •1H•r·u:-. 111~ n· 1 ,rc~&gt;~.'fl ·

,,.,.ll,
. L&lt;.ml.. n ,\1\.'·r~-·t.tt ~·~t. ,11\1\
l· utht l \ \t' L' lt • \'t• bwd , UI II•• ·H l]~ ,

ownership, ruune {one owner

She1ia Wa lL~ . 25, who drove
3~ miles from Henderson,
emphasized secu rrty.
. .. ,, woman ca n come here
alone and she knows she's
prnte&lt;:led ... she su id as Chris
&amp;&lt; nf, rd . :!8, II IaSSI!Ked her
lwnd. "' When she walks out
that nr•or ' the; 'n• wa t&lt;·h ln ~ to

I Isl e Wlth a :-. 11Jl'*''llllun rhll'lt lk' IT\ t'l't.-d by
merged the Pam
Kilgore dub called the Reo 1 , · ·· ~·~··• ,, 11·n· ,,q utalJI•· 1s et&gt;uh• pt-•·
·

an d repuUIUOn.

Nutori ous locall y was

;,pressure-&lt;:ooker day" - the

Wednesday matinee. Johnson
d aims there n o longer is a
" pressure cooker, " but
Wednesday still a bi~ day.
t

Cust001 full
In ooe or too dags

Cubs shocked
by Phillies

Dr. Ronald ERiviere

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

PHONE

992-2156

\'••ITII 'Ilt&gt;. Uill•&gt;

at1nospherc,''

"''''k li\ M•llur 11•1\J h' wht rt' , ... ,·rwr
i'l ' l 1

, , •III II &lt;1\ itlhdllt•, l)fJ\.' IJ)UIL III.

,,.!&lt;I11 111 u•alltn lltlh •aw t w vjj .
1~"' • 't•:.•· S:!i! ••t: su •~•or•thll.
Sl• Jll: 'l'l l rt· t• lti•Jill hs , 11 00 ;

1.•1.,·wtlt'tt' t:.!•i ·~' a·dr : Six .. ..... 1 ll~
SI I J•' : 'l ll l l "l' ' u1u111hs. Ji$!1.
Silh ... npi i&lt;II!IJf l" '
' l ll ln '~,'\t'tl\1111'1

m··lude~

t\uttdit)'

1..--------'"'

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

I AM and 5 PM

J

Greg Luzlnskl and Garry
Maddox hllllered to spark the
Pblllles' victory and Larry
Christenson tosaed a sevenhitter in besling Rick
Reusebel. The triumph gave
the two-time defending NL
East champions a twQilame
lead over the Cubs In the
dlvlsloo race.
"How do you pull it all back
together? " opliml.st Franks
aaked an Inquiring reporter .
"How did the Pblllles? A few
key base hita. Ail soon as we
star! hitting, everything will
be all right."
Reuschel, who had an 11·2
lifetime record against Pblla,
delphia entering the game,
was forced to leave in the
third because of his hurting
arm,

•

Next time you see
a tree
think of me~
A Public Servi ce ofTh1!l Newspaper &amp; Tht Ad veni5ing Council

�r

•
4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Jwte 26, 1978

lOlst Wimbledon
play underway

REVIVAL
ASH ST. FREE WILL
BAPT IST CHURCH

tn Middleport

Simpson of New zealand will
not be an exception .
But if .Connors reaches the
final as he did last year, once
again it will be despite the ·
crowd , which always throws
away its traditional British
politeness to cheer his every
mistake.
Half of the 16 seeds are
American players.
Gerulaitis, No. 3, opened
against Heinz Gwtthardt of
Switzerland, while Brian
Gottfried , seeded fifth , had to
overcome local hero John
Lloyd. Roscoe Tanner, No. 6,
came up against Egyptian
veteran Ismail El Shafei and
197~ winner Arthur Ashe,
seeded J5tll in his comeback
year , went against fellow
American Steve Docherty .
Mayer appeared to have :On
easy opener against Cze.choslovakia 's Tomas Smid, while
Dick Stockton, No. 10, and
John McEnroe, No . 11, met
players who came through
U1e qualifying competition.
The seed with the hardest
task was probably GuUlerrno
Vilas of Argentina . The man
in tlle No. 4 slot had to take on
1972 champion Stan Smith,
who now plays as hard as
possible to show he isn 't
really past his peak.
The first day's play in the
12-day tournament was
devoted to men's singles witll
the women not seeing action
until Tuesday or Wednesday
except in doubles. ·

DALLAS I UP! ) - Former
New York Yankee Mickey
Mantle was reported "doing
fine" at a hospital Sunday
afternoon recuperating from
a bleeding ulcer .
A sPQkeswoman for Brookhaven Hospital said, .. He 's
doing fine right now . He's in
sta ble coodition ." She said,
however , "l have no idea ..
when Mantle would be
released. ManUe, 47, said he
suspected hi s rigorous
schedul e of nationwid e
appearances con tributed
greatly to h&gt;s illness.

Services are at 7: 30 p.m .
wi1h Evangelist Paul
Taylor trom Price . Utah .

SPECIAL SINGING

In 1917, first troops of the
American Expeditionary
f orce reached France for
action in World War I.

east

W- L- Pet .

Ph il a
Ch ic ago
Montre111

36 '29 .554

35 32 . . 512
36 35 .507
J2 34 . 485

Pi tt sbrgh
New York
St. Lou is

2
3
41 2

42 .. 425
9 .
26 45 .366 13

31

West
W45
43
39

I 11. w. COMPTON, O.D. I
OPTOMETRIST
I
l1I OFFICEHOURS
: 9:30io12,21o5(CLOSE I
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT I
I

·------------------------~

W. L Pet.

so

Boston

GB

New York

Baltlmre
Milwauke
Detroit
Cleve tn d
loronto

41
40
39
34
31
22
West

w.

21
19
30
31
34
37

,704
586

.511

GB

e112
9 1h

10 11?

.557
.500
456
47 .319

loW?
17 1h
27

L. Pet.

GB

Mllor League Results
By United Press t"ternatlonal
Nallonill League
I ht game)
Alia
000 000 120- 3 6 0
San Frn
300 213 oox-.. 9 12 0
Hanna , Easterly (2). Car'np·
bell (6). Skok (8) and Pocoro.
ba : N\ontefusco and Sadek . WMontelusco t 1·2l. L- Hanna (6.
3) . HRs- San Francisco, Mad ·
lock {7) , Sadek ( 1) 1 Atlan ta,
Office (d).

'
-11'
•
•

(2nd game, 11 innings)
Alia
100 011 000 05- 8 13 2

SF

002 010 000 01 - 4 10 0

Mahler, Camp ( 5). Garber
38 32 .543
Pet . GB Te111as
17) , Cam pbel l ( 9). Skok (9 ),
Kan
City.
37
32
.536
''1
Sa n Fran
.64 3 SOlomon
(10)
and
Nolan ;
36 35 .507 2112
Cinc inati
.606 21 2 Ca l if
Halicki. Lavelle (8), Moffitt (9).
Oakland
35 37 .486 4
Los Ang
.557 6
Curtis (111 and H ill, Cerone (9) .
32 38 .45 7 6
San Diego
34 37 .479 11 1 2 Chicago
WSkok (1 .01 L- Moff itf 16·31.
1
30 39 .435 7 h
Houston
30 37 . 448 13 1 • Minesota
{6) ,
Seattle
25 48 .341 U lf2 HR s- A11anta , Murphy
Atlanta
28 40 . 41 2 16
Office (5) .
.
iat.urday's
Results
Saturday 's Results
Boston
Baltimore 3
Ptsbgh 7, N .Y . 4, 12 inns ,
(1st game)
Cleve l~nd 12, Toronto 3
Los AngeleS 4. Ci ncinnati J
Hous
000 100 000- 1 4 0
Detroit
4,
New
York
3
San Francisco 2, Atlan ta 1
San Ogo
000 500 Ob. - 6 B 0
Milwaukee
Seattle
Pniladelphia 6, Chicago 2
Richard , Williams (8) an~
Chicago 7, Minnesota A
Montreal 2, St . Louis 0
Ferguson . Shirley end SweeL
Kansas
City
7,
Oakland
5
San Diego o, Hous 5, 10 inns .
W- Shirley (4 ·9!. L - Richard
Texas J , California 0
Sunday's Results
(6.81 .
Sundily's R esultl
San Fra n 9, At l anta 3, 1st
Toronto 2, Cleve l , lst
At Ia 8, SF 4, 2nd, 11 inns .
(2nd gam e)
Cleve 3. TOronto 2, 2nd
San Diego 6, Houston 1, lsi
Hous
010 100'£\l- 4 13 6
M inn
Chicago 5, 1St
Sa n Diego 7, HOUSTOn 4, 2nd
San Ogo
011 01 1 1~x - 713 1
Minn 8, Chicago 6, 2nd
P hila delph ia 4, Chicago 2
McLaughlin , F or s c h (6),
New York 4, Detroit 2
Pi ttsb urgh 4, New Yor k. 0
Sambllo (7) , Williams (8) and
Boston
4,
Baltimore
1
St. Lo uis 7, Mont rei'll S
Baldwin , Ferguson (8) ; Ras .
Ol!kland 6, Kansas City 3
Cinci nnat i 5, Los An~elcs 4
mussen , D' Acquisto (6) and
Sea
!l
ie
10,
Milwaukee
8
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
Roberts . W- Rasmussen (4 .7) .
Texas 7, California 0
~All T i mes EDT)
L - McLaughl in (0 .1).
Today
's
Probable
Pitchers
New York (Br uhert 1·5 ) at
(All Times E DTI
Ch ic ago ( Burr is 4.5) , 2 :30p .m .
000 001 001 - 2 7 1
Baltimore (Flanagan 1J .4) at Chi
Philadelph ia (Carlton 8·6 ) at
Ph ita
201 100 OOx - 4 9 0
M ont r eal ( Roger s 8·7) , ·7: 35 Toronto &lt;Jefferson 5·7l. 7:30
R . Reuschel, Hernandez (3 ),
p.m .
p .m . .
Moore (5), Sutter {7) · and
Detroit &lt;Bill ingham 5·41 at Rader ; Chris tenson and Boone .
St . Louis (Vuck.ovich 4·4) at
P it1sburgh ( 0 Rob inson 4·2) , Cleveland ( Hood J.J J. 7: 30p .m .
(5 ·6 1.
L- R
Boston (Eckersly 7·2) at New W- Christenson
7.35p .m .
Reuschel (8 .5) . HR s- Philadel ·
York
(Messersmi
th
o.1).
8
p
.m
.
Los Angeles [ Rh oden 6 .3) at
Minnesota (Serum ].2) at phia. Luzinski (16L Maddox
Atlanta (M ahler 1 4). 7: 35 p .m .
Milwaukee
( 5ore,-,sen 9·4L 8· 30 151 .
Cinci nna t i &lt;Seaver 8 5l at
p
.m
.
.
Houston (An du iar 3·4l. 8 :35
Pfsbgh
000 070 200- 4 10 l
Kansas City (Gale 6·21 at
pm .
N.Y.
000000000- 0 50
San Fran ci sco ( Bt ue 10·4) at California ( Tanana l l ·3L 10 :30
Blyle1.1en a nd Ott : Espinosa .
San Diego (Owchin ko 5 ·6 L 10 p .m .
Metzger (8) and Stearns . wChic ago (Barrios 5·6) at
om .
Biyteven (7 .5) . L- Espinosa 16·
Sea nte ( M i tchell 3.7J , 10 35
Tuesday ' § Games
7J. HRs- Pittsburgh , StenneTt
pm
New York at Ch 1ca go
13). Mi lner (]).
Tuesday 's Games
Phila at Montreal , night
Boston
at
New
York,
night
St. Lou is at Pittsbgh , n ig ht
Mil
000 200 300- 5 6 1
Bait at Tor , 2, tw i .n ight
Los Ang at Atlan ta, n ig ht
SI . L
002 300 20x- 7 ll 3
Detroit
at
Cleve
.
n
ight
Ci nc 1 at Houston , night
Grimsley ,
Mav
(7)
and
M inn esota at Milw, n igh t
San Fr an at San Diego . night
Herrmann, Carter ( 1) ; Forsch ,
Kansas City at Calif. n ight
Schu ltz (7) and Swisher . W Texa s at Oakland. night
Sch ultz tl ·2 l. L ~ May (6 -8) .
Chicago at Seattle, night
HRs- S1. Lou is , Fors ch (1),
Swisher &lt;1 I .

e,

s.

GROUND
BEEF

!

•

3LB.

•

OR MORE

CHARCOAL BONELESS

99~

PICNIC HAM............... ~~~4

Major L.edggue Leaders
Bv United Press International
Batting
(Based o n 150 at bats)
Nat iona l League

G AB. H. Pcf.
Punt Hou
60 2-47 81 .318
Bo wa Ph il
63 267 86 .322
Burroghs All
64 211 68 .322
Madlock SF
52 193 62 .321
Gr i ffey Cin
71 286 91 .318
Lopes LA
60 220 70 .318
Smith LA
53 195 61 .318
Foster Cin
70 277 97 .J 14
S1mmons St . L
69 240 74 .308
Pa r ker Pit
66 258 79 . 306
Dr 1essen Cin
64 231 71 .306
American league
G. AB . H- Pet .
Carew M in
64 239 83 .34]
P1n iella NY
48 164 54 .329
Rice Bos
71 294 9$ .32 3
Revnolds Sea
67 241 78 .321
Cubbage M in
55 170 54 JlB
Sundberg Tcx
65 224 71 .317
Lynn Bo s
64 234 14 .316
J ackson Cal
54 18 4 58 .3 15
Coo per Mi l
51 195 61 3 13
LeTCano Mil
60 195 61 .3 13
Home Runs
National League : Fost er , Cin
and Luzinski , Phil 16 , K ing
man . Ch i 14 ; Monday , LA ,
Parker , P itt and W1nfi eld , SO

American Lugue : Ric e, Bos
22 ; Baylor , Cal 18 ; Thom pson ,
Det and Thomas , Mil
17 ;
Murray ,
Ball , Evan s and
Hobson , Bos 1S.
Runs Batted In
Nationa l Leagu e: Foster , Ci n
)J . Winl1eld . S O 47; Garvey,
L A 46 , Montanez. NY and
L utinsk i, Ph i l 45.
American League : Rice , Bos
65 . Staub , D el 49 ; Hobs on , Bos
and Thompson , Oet 48 ; Zisk ,
Te:.: 47

S1oten Bases
National

Leaque : .·Moreno ,

Pi tt 34; Cedeno , Hou 23 ; Lopes,
LA , Maddo:.: , Phil , T~veras ,
Pitt and R ichards , SO 20.
American League : .,Wilson ,
KC 27 ;
Oitone ,
oak 25 ;
LeFlore, Oet , Cruz , Sea and
Wills, Tex 13 .
Pitching
Vicforits
National League : Gr imsley .
Mil
lJ ..f ;
Blue ,
SF
10 ..( ;
Bonham . Cin 8. 1; Perry, SO e.
2: Zachrv . NY 8 3; Norman ,
Cin
8 ·.4 :
R.Reu sche l ,
Chi.
Se aver, Ci n, John , LA and
Knepper . SF 8·5; Carlton , Ph il
and Forscn , St.L 8 6 ; Rogers .
Mil 8·7 : Niekro , At I e.a.
American League : . Gu idr-y ,

NY

12.0 ;

Torrez ,

Bos

Md

TanCH'la , Ca l 11.J ; Flanagan ,
Sa l t 11 .4 ; Palmer, Batt 10·5.
Earned Run Aver ave
{Based on 63 innings pitched)
National League : Sarmiento,
Cin 1.88 ; Ha licki. SF 2. 22 ; Bl ue .
sr. 2.23 ; Rogers , Mil 2.25 ;
R.Reusche l, Ch i 2.27 .
American League : .Gu idry ,
NY 1 50 ; Palm er , Bait 2.06
Keo ugh , Oak 2.2e ; Mallack , Tex
1.50 , Tanana. Cal 2.52 .
Strlkeouh
National Lugue : . Rit:hard,
Hou 'J l ; Niekro , · Atl 101 ;
Montefusco, SF 100 ; Blyteven ,

P itt 9J : Blue , SF 9 1.
American Leilgue: Ryan , Cal
11 3. Guid ry , NY 112 ; Flanagan,
Batt 81 ; Leonard , KC 72 :
Matlac k . Tex 67 .

In 1948, the United States
began operation of the
"Berlin Airlift" to bypass a
Soviet road and rail blockade
of the divided German city.

Cinc i
010 000 202~ 5 12 1
LA
210 000 001 - 4 8 1
Moskau . Borbon (7) 1 Bair (9 )
and Correll ,· John , Rautzhan
(9) and Grote . W- Borbori (5 -ll.
L- Jonn (8.6) . HR s- Los An ·
geles, Lopes (8 ).
American League
t ht game&gt;
Tor
000 000 020- 2 6 1
Cleve
000 000 010- 1 7 0
Moore, Crt.Jz (8 ) and Cerone ;
Clyde, Kern (9) and A lexander .
W- !+IIOOre 13· 1L L - Civde (4. J).

59

FRYING CHICKEN THIGHS •••••••••• ~7

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

STEAKS

9e
'

FARM FRESH PRODUCE

WATERMELONS ..................... ~•.,, 79

Pound
TillS MOUNTED DEER HEAD, a 39-pointer, the most points of any of the ~.ooo deer
killed in Ohio last fall, was placed in the Meigs County Museum Friday just in time for Big
Bend Regatta Weekend. Presenting the head to C. E. Blakeslee, left, president of the Meigs
Cowtty Pioneer and Historical Society, were Andy Lyles, left, and James G. Splete of the
Ohio Department of Wildlife. Heritage Sunday was observed from 12 noon to 5 p.m.
yesterday at tlle museum. When the39point buck was killed last fall in Meigs County; It was
the decree of Meigs Cowtty Court Judge Robert Buck that the deer head be given to tlle
museum. Various sportsmen clubs of the county provided for the expense involved in
gettiing the head mounted.

Sport Parade

VAUGHAN'S

I

•

SAVE $39

By MILTON RICHMAN

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

UPI Sporta Editor

(2nd game)

Tor

000 010 010- 7 8 2
Cleve
002 010 OOx - J 10 0
Garvin and Ashby ; Wise,
Monge (8) and Diaz . W- Wise
(5 · 10 ~ . L - Garv in {2·7l. HRS Toronto , Howel l ( 4~ ; Cleve lan d,
Thornton (121 .

NEW YORK (UP!) - A couple of weeks back, when she was
playing so spectacularly that she not only was breaking par
but all the laws of nature, Nancy Lopez was asked a quesllon
she could 've easily ignored, but didn't.
She had just woo her fourth tournament in a row , the $150,000
Ladies
Professional Golf Association championship at Kings
( ht game)
Minn
101 013 020- 8 13 0 Island, Ohio, only one short of the women's record as well as
Ch i
101 030 000- 5 12 I the money record for either a male or female professional
Zahn , Scarce (5 ) , Marshall
161
and
Wynegar :
Stone, rookie, and someone wanted to know if she thought she was
Schueler ( 6 ) , LaGrow ( 6 ) and wtbeatable .
Nahorodny W- Mershall (2 ·6 ) .
"No," she responded, with that warm, natural smile of hers
L- Schueler (3 2)
HR - Min
that has a way of making everyone who sees it feel
nesota , Smalley ( 6 ).
immediately better, "but I'd like to win everything if I could ."
(2n d game )
Saying that, winsome , 21-year~ld Nancy Lopez realized she
000 700 011- 9 10 0
M inn
Ch i
003 100 200 - 6 U I was merely indulging in some wishful thinking, talking more
Er ic kson , Sca rce ( 6). Mlr ·
shall
(81
and
Borgmann , with her heart tllan with her head, yet she blithely moved along
Wvnegar (8 ) ; H inton , Wil lougn to the next stop on the women 's tour, which was Rochester, and
by (4 ), Kusec t5L LaGrow (81
and Nordhagen . W- Er ic kson won there also, making it five straight and smashin g both
(8.5 ). L - Hinlon (l . l l. HRsrecords.
M innesota , Smalley (7) ; Chi ca
Somew here, sometime, she knew it all had to come to an end ,
go , Ort a (9 ), Molinaro ( 1l .
and it did Sunday at Hershey, Pa ., where Lopez didn't look
N. Y .
001020 001 - 410 0 anything at all like tlle same relaxed,.carefree young girl in
Del
OlD 010 000- 2 9 0
Gullet!. Gossage (8 ) Md finishing 15 strokes behind the winner, Pal Bradley.
Munson . Baker , Hiller (6) and
Wha l happened '
Parr ish . W - Gullet (3 .Q) . L Nothing really . Nancy Lopez simply was worn out. Mentally
Bek er (J I l.
more than physically. She had given too much of herself
Bait
000 001 000- 1 9 1 accommodating autograph seekers, members of tlle media ,
8os
110 010 10~~; - 4 7 7
D . Mart inez an d Hendricks ; practically everyone who came up to talk with her, and all that
Model !446
Torrez ano F i~k . w- Torrez finally took its toll on her nerves and on her game .
111 31 . L- 0 . Mart inez (6·5 ).
She showed that during the tournament tlle past few days
HRs- Boston ,
Burleson
U );
Baltimore , Mora {4) .
when she admitted her concentration wasn 't what it should 've
Oak
000 200 202- 6 ll 2 been because she was Ill inking about interviews instead of her
K.C
OlD 070 000- 3 10 l golf game. Eventually, it got to he too much lor her.
Keough , Lacey (5). Sosa (9)
Lopez was scheduled to be on the Today show Tuesday but
and Essian ; Gura , Partin (7) ,
M lngori (8 ), Bird (9) and said no.
Port er, Kusnyer (7) , W- La cev
"It's ridiculous to be running around all the time," she said.
(6 3) . L .....Gura
(52) . HR ''I want to play golf. I don 't want to be running all over the
Oakland , Armas(] ) .
United Stales."
Sea
200010507- 1015 7
Well-wishers also took something out of Lopez , primarily
Mdw
232 000 010- 8 10 0
Parrott . Todd Ut i. Ramo (8) , because she didn't want it to look as if she were snubbing
Montague
(9 ) and St inson ; anyooe. People mean to be supportive when they flock around
Traver s, Castro 17 1. R . Stein
( 7), M cC lure (9) and Moor e. W an accomplisher to shower her or him with adulation but they
• Power .drlven
beater·bar
- Romo (4 21. L- R . Stein (2·21 . generate a kind of pressure tlley 're not even aware of.
.
brush
roll
loosens
HRs- Seatlle, Roberts (9). Rob·
Lopez
had
no
alibis
for
her
showing
when
she
came
into
the
oembedded
dirt
and
grlf,
ertson (3 I
while brushes sweep It up .
press tent Sunday . She had finished with a S.Over-par 221 to
0 Edge Kleener cleans tho!
Cali f
000 000 ooo- o 7 1
Texas
000 160 oox- 7 10 0 Bradley 's llklnder 206 but was still smiling.
last tough Inch along
"Do you have anything special to say?" an LPGA official
Aa se, Hartzell { 5) and Dow
baseboard
.
nlng ; Medlch and St.Jnober g. W asked her.
• Exclusive luxury Dial·• ·
- Medic h. 2 3. L- Ai"l Se , &lt;1 -&lt;1 .
"I'm going to dye my hair blonde next week so they won't
nap to clean all carpets.
Llfeflme lubricated motor .
recognize me," she said.
She will play in the next tournament, tlle Mayflower Classic
in Noblesville, Ind. , this coming weekend, she said, but when
Reg. S99 .99 w-tools
she was asked where she was going to spend the next few days,
she only laughed .
"Guess?" she parried the question.
"You're not going to say?"
"No," she said, still smiling .
FREE
So far this year, Nancy Lopez has earned more tllan $1~.000
TOOLS
in her rookie year, a record, and very likely will win a lot more
VANDALIA, Ohio (UP! ) -:
Jeffrey Genet of Barberton before the season is finished.
There is no question whatSoever about her ability. She could
captured the Ohio Handicap
turn
out to he the finest golfer ever to join the women 's tour
title in a shootoff with Paul
Keefer of Middletown Sunday and dominaw it the same way as Jack Nicklaus did the men's
10. N. lnd Ave.
in the 92nd aMual Ohio State tour for so many years.
Middleport, 0.
Trap
Shooting
championships.
Rocky Soike of Inglewood
beat Ed Carusattl . of
DO-IT-YOURSELf
Warrensville Heights in a
shootoff to win the Doubles
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
championship.
Other winners, rumers-up,
and tbelr divisions were :
For all your do-it.yourseH
Non-resident doubles
tl
champ- Daniel' Craite,
Home Improvement Supplies
Grosse Point Farms, Mich.,
~
over Leo Harrison, Hannibal,
see CriSS Hardware
K
Mo.
Lady Resident Champ• Housewares
0
''
K~thleen Cherupini ,
• Wallpaper
Zanesville, beat Merrill
• Paints
Cooper, Caledonia.
•
Electrical Supplies
A
Ohio Lady Handicap-Julie
• Plumbing Supplies
R' '
Wiltse, Lakewood, beat
Eileen Bischel, Gahanna.
E
Ohio Jwtior--Jim Walker,
Middletown.
Open Mon. thru Sal.
Ohio Sub-junior - Kenny
9:001oS:OO
Rapp, Dayton, heat Doug
71 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport
Wo!k, Cincinnati .

champ of Ohio

CABBAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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LB. 15c
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RADISHES ••••••••••••••• ,••••••• ,.,, •• ,,.,.,.,. 2PKGS. 29c
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BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!

In 1900, Dr. Walter Reed led
a medical team formed to
wipe out yellow fever in the
~anama Cana l Zone.

Barberton man
trap shooting

$69

SALE DATES
JUNE 26 • JULY l, 1978

SPRITE or COCA-COLA

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

Plus
FROZEN FOOD

Depos~

lim~

2

16- oz. btls.

99¢

NABISCO

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VALUES
KINGSFORD

CHARCOAL

MORTON

,.,. 69'

... $1··

.,,

1] Ol

FRIED CHICKEN 2~:~$1 99

Co"

IO·Lb.

L. J. HARRISS PIES

Pkg.

26 ·oz Apple
20 ·01. lemon M•ringue

Jumbo
Roll

20 ·0l . Botton Crum

iuitl . . . . . . . . . :. . .:. . . . 6C~~ 59'

HOUSEHOLD NEEDS

VIEnl HOT DOCi SAUCE ............. 3 ~~~: sI 00

Family
Size Box

CRIAMYo' CfiU NCHY

JIF PEANUT BUnER ... .... .. ........ .. . . .'~;~· s1 '
4

$45'

UNSWEI TE NfO

LIBBYS ORANGE JUICE .......................~!.~.: 791

lily J

DIAL

$

BAR SOAP .... ~~.'..!..~~..... 4 .~~

LIBBYS TOMATO JUICE ........... ......... ~!,~,: 591

DAIRY VALUES

VLAIIC IWUT R:ILIIH OR

..
1

:1--,

89
KRAFT PREPARED MUSTARD ...... .. .'~;~· 59'

CHEESE SINGLES ............. 1 ;~:~

LIBBYS SWEET PEAS ......................3 ·~.:: sI 00

KRAFT CHEEZ WHIZ ..................... ,.. s1•'

HAMBURGER DILL CHIPS ................. '~.~·

1

KRAFT AMEA . PIMf:NTO or SWISS

99c

FRUIT COCK AIL
2

PitiiiI BEANS 3g~~ $1
FOLGER'S

f.lb

COFFEE

CHIFFON

SOFT STICK MARGARINE ...........c'~::',, 2fl00

UNIWUTENEO

LIBBYS GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ..... ........ !!;~,: 591

REG., DRIP OR ELECT. PERK
LIMIT ONE WITH
1
10.00 PURCHASE

Borden's

HALF 4- HALF CEREAL MILK ...... ~:::,59'
Borden s

INSTANT

FRESH SMAll or LARGI: CURD

I ESTEl

COTTAGE CHEESE ........... 6:::~ 69c

3-oz
Jar

----PICNIC NEEDs-----.
LIBBVS

CORI

CREAM STYLE or WHOLE KERNEL

MARDI GRAS NAPKINS ......................·~~c· 691

MAXW£LL HO USE

liSTANT
COFFEE
"

1-LB. CAN

$259

46 -oz.
Can

GLAD TRASH BAGS .............................. .'~;~· s1"
REYNOLDS FOIL .................................... .&gt;::.,•· 79'

COU NTRY FLAIR

DIXIE COLD CUPS .... .......................... ~~c.s 1"

.

1

COUNTRY FlAIR

16-oz.
Cans

DIXIE PLATES .........................................~;;• 11at
DUtil

WHITE PAPER PLATES ........................·~~c· 89'
Rt:G or IUPftlfD

,

PRINGLE$ POTATO CHIPS ................. 'C:~
lO RI~ • LA HUINAtf OOU ST OH!S

LIQUID

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I

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Ollof •llfl ~
(..Mfl - , • •

Red . low Cal Aed.
Grape . Orange or V•rr Berry

HU.VY DUTY

to.... ~~ft
J..

w

CROSS HARDWARE

********
QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

INGElS
FURNITIJRE

16 West Washington , Athens

3-LB. CANNED BONELESS

e.

WIENERS

99

STEAKS........................~.!.l

o:

Leaders

39

CHIP CHOPPED HAM.~!.l

l75
28
Jl

11

~---~------------------~-,

J ST., POMEROY.

Amerlun League
east

Major League stanaings
By United Press International

National League

WIMBLEDON, England
i UP! ) - Bjorn Borg, the
defending champion , will
have the privilege of being
tlle rirst player to step onto
Wimbledon's gra ss ce nter
court today as he begins his
quest to become tlle first man
in 42 years tD win tlle men's
singles title tllree times in a
row .
According ID tlle tradillonal
command of tlle All England
!.awn Tennis and Croquet
Club, "play will begin at 2
p.m. precisely ''i 9 a .m. EDT )
in the JO ist Wimbl edon
Championships and Borg, the
No. 1 seed and 6-4 favorite,
will star t the $~12,2~0
Lo urnam en t agai nst
Amenca 's 6-foot- 7 Vi ctor
Amaya of Holland. Mich.
For the 22-year-old Swede,
Wimbledon is the only
tournament that really
matters . .. lt 's tradition . It 's
everything. And when you
play here you really don' t
care if you make one dollar.
Ill at's the truth ...
Borg's driving ambition
brought him tlle title in 1976
and i977. His form tllis year
has already brought him the
Italian and French titles back
to back and his opponents
agree he is playing better
tllan ever.
They also tllink Jimmy
Connors. the No . 2 seed , is the
only ma n among th e
remaining field of 127 who
can beat him. Th e London
bookmakers agree . Connors
is a 2-1 shot and U1e next man
in th eir sights, Vilas
Gerulaitis, is all the way out
at 8-1.
Con nors is tlle only man to
match the Swe de's si nglemindedness. Connors oozes
determination e'&gt;'ery time he
goes on court and his opening
match agai nst Russel l

5;:-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJ)&lt;&gt;rl·Pomcruy . 0 .. Munday. June :!ti, 1978

Linescores

l'""'

l1m11 .ne Wllfl ~

on.

DM c-.~fl

...

-it¥

..... ,,,.

ljjlt]\1

.
z

$129~

Valley Bell

GREAT
AMERICAN

POPS

12 pk.

79e

891
_..ts • CAR OtNA liO OOSJORI S Xii{eliJ:Jite]:l
DISHWASHER

ALL
Umrt w&gt;ttl """"""
eoupet~ p4r ......,

-"'
Q

Gooct • c....t "'''l lltJI IIO&lt;It
00

zo

011

~on

CARDINAl 1#

Ooq STORES

�r

•
4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Jwte 26, 1978

lOlst Wimbledon
play underway

REVIVAL
ASH ST. FREE WILL
BAPT IST CHURCH

tn Middleport

Simpson of New zealand will
not be an exception .
But if .Connors reaches the
final as he did last year, once
again it will be despite the ·
crowd , which always throws
away its traditional British
politeness to cheer his every
mistake.
Half of the 16 seeds are
American players.
Gerulaitis, No. 3, opened
against Heinz Gwtthardt of
Switzerland, while Brian
Gottfried , seeded fifth , had to
overcome local hero John
Lloyd. Roscoe Tanner, No. 6,
came up against Egyptian
veteran Ismail El Shafei and
197~ winner Arthur Ashe,
seeded J5tll in his comeback
year , went against fellow
American Steve Docherty .
Mayer appeared to have :On
easy opener against Cze.choslovakia 's Tomas Smid, while
Dick Stockton, No. 10, and
John McEnroe, No . 11, met
players who came through
U1e qualifying competition.
The seed with the hardest
task was probably GuUlerrno
Vilas of Argentina . The man
in tlle No. 4 slot had to take on
1972 champion Stan Smith,
who now plays as hard as
possible to show he isn 't
really past his peak.
The first day's play in the
12-day tournament was
devoted to men's singles witll
the women not seeing action
until Tuesday or Wednesday
except in doubles. ·

DALLAS I UP! ) - Former
New York Yankee Mickey
Mantle was reported "doing
fine" at a hospital Sunday
afternoon recuperating from
a bleeding ulcer .
A sPQkeswoman for Brookhaven Hospital said, .. He 's
doing fine right now . He's in
sta ble coodition ." She said,
however , "l have no idea ..
when Mantle would be
released. ManUe, 47, said he
suspected hi s rigorous
schedul e of nationwid e
appearances con tributed
greatly to h&gt;s illness.

Services are at 7: 30 p.m .
wi1h Evangelist Paul
Taylor trom Price . Utah .

SPECIAL SINGING

In 1917, first troops of the
American Expeditionary
f orce reached France for
action in World War I.

east

W- L- Pet .

Ph il a
Ch ic ago
Montre111

36 '29 .554

35 32 . . 512
36 35 .507
J2 34 . 485

Pi tt sbrgh
New York
St. Lou is

2
3
41 2

42 .. 425
9 .
26 45 .366 13

31

West
W45
43
39

I 11. w. COMPTON, O.D. I
OPTOMETRIST
I
l1I OFFICEHOURS
: 9:30io12,21o5(CLOSE I
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT I
I

·------------------------~

W. L Pet.

so

Boston

GB

New York

Baltlmre
Milwauke
Detroit
Cleve tn d
loronto

41
40
39
34
31
22
West

w.

21
19
30
31
34
37

,704
586

.511

GB

e112
9 1h

10 11?

.557
.500
456
47 .319

loW?
17 1h
27

L. Pet.

GB

Mllor League Results
By United Press t"ternatlonal
Nallonill League
I ht game)
Alia
000 000 120- 3 6 0
San Frn
300 213 oox-.. 9 12 0
Hanna , Easterly (2). Car'np·
bell (6). Skok (8) and Pocoro.
ba : N\ontefusco and Sadek . WMontelusco t 1·2l. L- Hanna (6.
3) . HRs- San Francisco, Mad ·
lock {7) , Sadek ( 1) 1 Atlan ta,
Office (d).

'
-11'
•
•

(2nd game, 11 innings)
Alia
100 011 000 05- 8 13 2

SF

002 010 000 01 - 4 10 0

Mahler, Camp ( 5). Garber
38 32 .543
Pet . GB Te111as
17) , Cam pbel l ( 9). Skok (9 ),
Kan
City.
37
32
.536
''1
Sa n Fran
.64 3 SOlomon
(10)
and
Nolan ;
36 35 .507 2112
Cinc inati
.606 21 2 Ca l if
Halicki. Lavelle (8), Moffitt (9).
Oakland
35 37 .486 4
Los Ang
.557 6
Curtis (111 and H ill, Cerone (9) .
32 38 .45 7 6
San Diego
34 37 .479 11 1 2 Chicago
WSkok (1 .01 L- Moff itf 16·31.
1
30 39 .435 7 h
Houston
30 37 . 448 13 1 • Minesota
{6) ,
Seattle
25 48 .341 U lf2 HR s- A11anta , Murphy
Atlanta
28 40 . 41 2 16
Office (5) .
.
iat.urday's
Results
Saturday 's Results
Boston
Baltimore 3
Ptsbgh 7, N .Y . 4, 12 inns ,
(1st game)
Cleve l~nd 12, Toronto 3
Los AngeleS 4. Ci ncinnati J
Hous
000 100 000- 1 4 0
Detroit
4,
New
York
3
San Francisco 2, Atlan ta 1
San Ogo
000 500 Ob. - 6 B 0
Milwaukee
Seattle
Pniladelphia 6, Chicago 2
Richard , Williams (8) an~
Chicago 7, Minnesota A
Montreal 2, St . Louis 0
Ferguson . Shirley end SweeL
Kansas
City
7,
Oakland
5
San Diego o, Hous 5, 10 inns .
W- Shirley (4 ·9!. L - Richard
Texas J , California 0
Sunday's Results
(6.81 .
Sundily's R esultl
San Fra n 9, At l anta 3, 1st
Toronto 2, Cleve l , lst
At Ia 8, SF 4, 2nd, 11 inns .
(2nd gam e)
Cleve 3. TOronto 2, 2nd
San Diego 6, Houston 1, lsi
Hous
010 100'£\l- 4 13 6
M inn
Chicago 5, 1St
Sa n Diego 7, HOUSTOn 4, 2nd
San Ogo
011 01 1 1~x - 713 1
Minn 8, Chicago 6, 2nd
P hila delph ia 4, Chicago 2
McLaughlin , F or s c h (6),
New York 4, Detroit 2
Pi ttsb urgh 4, New Yor k. 0
Sambllo (7) , Williams (8) and
Boston
4,
Baltimore
1
St. Lo uis 7, Mont rei'll S
Baldwin , Ferguson (8) ; Ras .
Ol!kland 6, Kansas City 3
Cinci nnat i 5, Los An~elcs 4
mussen , D' Acquisto (6) and
Sea
!l
ie
10,
Milwaukee
8
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
Roberts . W- Rasmussen (4 .7) .
Texas 7, California 0
~All T i mes EDT)
L - McLaughl in (0 .1).
Today
's
Probable
Pitchers
New York (Br uhert 1·5 ) at
(All Times E DTI
Ch ic ago ( Burr is 4.5) , 2 :30p .m .
000 001 001 - 2 7 1
Baltimore (Flanagan 1J .4) at Chi
Philadelph ia (Carlton 8·6 ) at
Ph ita
201 100 OOx - 4 9 0
M ont r eal ( Roger s 8·7) , ·7: 35 Toronto &lt;Jefferson 5·7l. 7:30
R . Reuschel, Hernandez (3 ),
p.m .
p .m . .
Moore (5), Sutter {7) · and
Detroit &lt;Bill ingham 5·41 at Rader ; Chris tenson and Boone .
St . Louis (Vuck.ovich 4·4) at
P it1sburgh ( 0 Rob inson 4·2) , Cleveland ( Hood J.J J. 7: 30p .m .
(5 ·6 1.
L- R
Boston (Eckersly 7·2) at New W- Christenson
7.35p .m .
Reuschel (8 .5) . HR s- Philadel ·
York
(Messersmi
th
o.1).
8
p
.m
.
Los Angeles [ Rh oden 6 .3) at
Minnesota (Serum ].2) at phia. Luzinski (16L Maddox
Atlanta (M ahler 1 4). 7: 35 p .m .
Milwaukee
( 5ore,-,sen 9·4L 8· 30 151 .
Cinci nna t i &lt;Seaver 8 5l at
p
.m
.
.
Houston (An du iar 3·4l. 8 :35
Pfsbgh
000 070 200- 4 10 l
Kansas City (Gale 6·21 at
pm .
N.Y.
000000000- 0 50
San Fran ci sco ( Bt ue 10·4) at California ( Tanana l l ·3L 10 :30
Blyle1.1en a nd Ott : Espinosa .
San Diego (Owchin ko 5 ·6 L 10 p .m .
Metzger (8) and Stearns . wChic ago (Barrios 5·6) at
om .
Biyteven (7 .5) . L- Espinosa 16·
Sea nte ( M i tchell 3.7J , 10 35
Tuesday ' § Games
7J. HRs- Pittsburgh , StenneTt
pm
New York at Ch 1ca go
13). Mi lner (]).
Tuesday 's Games
Phila at Montreal , night
Boston
at
New
York,
night
St. Lou is at Pittsbgh , n ig ht
Mil
000 200 300- 5 6 1
Bait at Tor , 2, tw i .n ight
Los Ang at Atlan ta, n ig ht
SI . L
002 300 20x- 7 ll 3
Detroit
at
Cleve
.
n
ight
Ci nc 1 at Houston , night
Grimsley ,
Mav
(7)
and
M inn esota at Milw, n igh t
San Fr an at San Diego . night
Herrmann, Carter ( 1) ; Forsch ,
Kansas City at Calif. n ight
Schu ltz (7) and Swisher . W Texa s at Oakland. night
Sch ultz tl ·2 l. L ~ May (6 -8) .
Chicago at Seattle, night
HRs- S1. Lou is , Fors ch (1),
Swisher &lt;1 I .

e,

s.

GROUND
BEEF

!

•

3LB.

•

OR MORE

CHARCOAL BONELESS

99~

PICNIC HAM............... ~~~4

Major L.edggue Leaders
Bv United Press International
Batting
(Based o n 150 at bats)
Nat iona l League

G AB. H. Pcf.
Punt Hou
60 2-47 81 .318
Bo wa Ph il
63 267 86 .322
Burroghs All
64 211 68 .322
Madlock SF
52 193 62 .321
Gr i ffey Cin
71 286 91 .318
Lopes LA
60 220 70 .318
Smith LA
53 195 61 .318
Foster Cin
70 277 97 .J 14
S1mmons St . L
69 240 74 .308
Pa r ker Pit
66 258 79 . 306
Dr 1essen Cin
64 231 71 .306
American league
G. AB . H- Pet .
Carew M in
64 239 83 .34]
P1n iella NY
48 164 54 .329
Rice Bos
71 294 9$ .32 3
Revnolds Sea
67 241 78 .321
Cubbage M in
55 170 54 JlB
Sundberg Tcx
65 224 71 .317
Lynn Bo s
64 234 14 .316
J ackson Cal
54 18 4 58 .3 15
Coo per Mi l
51 195 61 3 13
LeTCano Mil
60 195 61 .3 13
Home Runs
National League : Fost er , Cin
and Luzinski , Phil 16 , K ing
man . Ch i 14 ; Monday , LA ,
Parker , P itt and W1nfi eld , SO

American Lugue : Ric e, Bos
22 ; Baylor , Cal 18 ; Thom pson ,
Det and Thomas , Mil
17 ;
Murray ,
Ball , Evan s and
Hobson , Bos 1S.
Runs Batted In
Nationa l Leagu e: Foster , Ci n
)J . Winl1eld . S O 47; Garvey,
L A 46 , Montanez. NY and
L utinsk i, Ph i l 45.
American League : Rice , Bos
65 . Staub , D el 49 ; Hobs on , Bos
and Thompson , Oet 48 ; Zisk ,
Te:.: 47

S1oten Bases
National

Leaque : .·Moreno ,

Pi tt 34; Cedeno , Hou 23 ; Lopes,
LA , Maddo:.: , Phil , T~veras ,
Pitt and R ichards , SO 20.
American League : .,Wilson ,
KC 27 ;
Oitone ,
oak 25 ;
LeFlore, Oet , Cruz , Sea and
Wills, Tex 13 .
Pitching
Vicforits
National League : Gr imsley .
Mil
lJ ..f ;
Blue ,
SF
10 ..( ;
Bonham . Cin 8. 1; Perry, SO e.
2: Zachrv . NY 8 3; Norman ,
Cin
8 ·.4 :
R.Reu sche l ,
Chi.
Se aver, Ci n, John , LA and
Knepper . SF 8·5; Carlton , Ph il
and Forscn , St.L 8 6 ; Rogers .
Mil 8·7 : Niekro , At I e.a.
American League : . Gu idr-y ,

NY

12.0 ;

Torrez ,

Bos

Md

TanCH'la , Ca l 11.J ; Flanagan ,
Sa l t 11 .4 ; Palmer, Batt 10·5.
Earned Run Aver ave
{Based on 63 innings pitched)
National League : Sarmiento,
Cin 1.88 ; Ha licki. SF 2. 22 ; Bl ue .
sr. 2.23 ; Rogers , Mil 2.25 ;
R.Reusche l, Ch i 2.27 .
American League : .Gu idry ,
NY 1 50 ; Palm er , Bait 2.06
Keo ugh , Oak 2.2e ; Mallack , Tex
1.50 , Tanana. Cal 2.52 .
Strlkeouh
National Lugue : . Rit:hard,
Hou 'J l ; Niekro , · Atl 101 ;
Montefusco, SF 100 ; Blyteven ,

P itt 9J : Blue , SF 9 1.
American Leilgue: Ryan , Cal
11 3. Guid ry , NY 112 ; Flanagan,
Batt 81 ; Leonard , KC 72 :
Matlac k . Tex 67 .

In 1948, the United States
began operation of the
"Berlin Airlift" to bypass a
Soviet road and rail blockade
of the divided German city.

Cinc i
010 000 202~ 5 12 1
LA
210 000 001 - 4 8 1
Moskau . Borbon (7) 1 Bair (9 )
and Correll ,· John , Rautzhan
(9) and Grote . W- Borbori (5 -ll.
L- Jonn (8.6) . HR s- Los An ·
geles, Lopes (8 ).
American League
t ht game&gt;
Tor
000 000 020- 2 6 1
Cleve
000 000 010- 1 7 0
Moore, Crt.Jz (8 ) and Cerone ;
Clyde, Kern (9) and A lexander .
W- !+IIOOre 13· 1L L - Civde (4. J).

59

FRYING CHICKEN THIGHS •••••••••• ~7

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

STEAKS

9e
'

FARM FRESH PRODUCE

WATERMELONS ..................... ~•.,, 79

Pound
TillS MOUNTED DEER HEAD, a 39-pointer, the most points of any of the ~.ooo deer
killed in Ohio last fall, was placed in the Meigs County Museum Friday just in time for Big
Bend Regatta Weekend. Presenting the head to C. E. Blakeslee, left, president of the Meigs
Cowtty Pioneer and Historical Society, were Andy Lyles, left, and James G. Splete of the
Ohio Department of Wildlife. Heritage Sunday was observed from 12 noon to 5 p.m.
yesterday at tlle museum. When the39point buck was killed last fall in Meigs County; It was
the decree of Meigs Cowtty Court Judge Robert Buck that the deer head be given to tlle
museum. Various sportsmen clubs of the county provided for the expense involved in
gettiing the head mounted.

Sport Parade

VAUGHAN'S

I

•

SAVE $39

By MILTON RICHMAN

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

UPI Sporta Editor

(2nd game)

Tor

000 010 010- 7 8 2
Cleve
002 010 OOx - J 10 0
Garvin and Ashby ; Wise,
Monge (8) and Diaz . W- Wise
(5 · 10 ~ . L - Garv in {2·7l. HRS Toronto , Howel l ( 4~ ; Cleve lan d,
Thornton (121 .

NEW YORK (UP!) - A couple of weeks back, when she was
playing so spectacularly that she not only was breaking par
but all the laws of nature, Nancy Lopez was asked a quesllon
she could 've easily ignored, but didn't.
She had just woo her fourth tournament in a row , the $150,000
Ladies
Professional Golf Association championship at Kings
( ht game)
Minn
101 013 020- 8 13 0 Island, Ohio, only one short of the women's record as well as
Ch i
101 030 000- 5 12 I the money record for either a male or female professional
Zahn , Scarce (5 ) , Marshall
161
and
Wynegar :
Stone, rookie, and someone wanted to know if she thought she was
Schueler ( 6 ) , LaGrow ( 6 ) and wtbeatable .
Nahorodny W- Mershall (2 ·6 ) .
"No," she responded, with that warm, natural smile of hers
L- Schueler (3 2)
HR - Min
that has a way of making everyone who sees it feel
nesota , Smalley ( 6 ).
immediately better, "but I'd like to win everything if I could ."
(2n d game )
Saying that, winsome , 21-year~ld Nancy Lopez realized she
000 700 011- 9 10 0
M inn
Ch i
003 100 200 - 6 U I was merely indulging in some wishful thinking, talking more
Er ic kson , Sca rce ( 6). Mlr ·
shall
(81
and
Borgmann , with her heart tllan with her head, yet she blithely moved along
Wvnegar (8 ) ; H inton , Wil lougn to the next stop on the women 's tour, which was Rochester, and
by (4 ), Kusec t5L LaGrow (81
and Nordhagen . W- Er ic kson won there also, making it five straight and smashin g both
(8.5 ). L - Hinlon (l . l l. HRsrecords.
M innesota , Smalley (7) ; Chi ca
Somew here, sometime, she knew it all had to come to an end ,
go , Ort a (9 ), Molinaro ( 1l .
and it did Sunday at Hershey, Pa ., where Lopez didn't look
N. Y .
001020 001 - 410 0 anything at all like tlle same relaxed,.carefree young girl in
Del
OlD 010 000- 2 9 0
Gullet!. Gossage (8 ) Md finishing 15 strokes behind the winner, Pal Bradley.
Munson . Baker , Hiller (6) and
Wha l happened '
Parr ish . W - Gullet (3 .Q) . L Nothing really . Nancy Lopez simply was worn out. Mentally
Bek er (J I l.
more than physically. She had given too much of herself
Bait
000 001 000- 1 9 1 accommodating autograph seekers, members of tlle media ,
8os
110 010 10~~; - 4 7 7
D . Mart inez an d Hendricks ; practically everyone who came up to talk with her, and all that
Model !446
Torrez ano F i~k . w- Torrez finally took its toll on her nerves and on her game .
111 31 . L- 0 . Mart inez (6·5 ).
She showed that during the tournament tlle past few days
HRs- Boston ,
Burleson
U );
Baltimore , Mora {4) .
when she admitted her concentration wasn 't what it should 've
Oak
000 200 202- 6 ll 2 been because she was Ill inking about interviews instead of her
K.C
OlD 070 000- 3 10 l golf game. Eventually, it got to he too much lor her.
Keough , Lacey (5). Sosa (9)
Lopez was scheduled to be on the Today show Tuesday but
and Essian ; Gura , Partin (7) ,
M lngori (8 ), Bird (9) and said no.
Port er, Kusnyer (7) , W- La cev
"It's ridiculous to be running around all the time," she said.
(6 3) . L .....Gura
(52) . HR ''I want to play golf. I don 't want to be running all over the
Oakland , Armas(] ) .
United Stales."
Sea
200010507- 1015 7
Well-wishers also took something out of Lopez , primarily
Mdw
232 000 010- 8 10 0
Parrott . Todd Ut i. Ramo (8) , because she didn't want it to look as if she were snubbing
Montague
(9 ) and St inson ; anyooe. People mean to be supportive when they flock around
Traver s, Castro 17 1. R . Stein
( 7), M cC lure (9) and Moor e. W an accomplisher to shower her or him with adulation but they
• Power .drlven
beater·bar
- Romo (4 21. L- R . Stein (2·21 . generate a kind of pressure tlley 're not even aware of.
.
brush
roll
loosens
HRs- Seatlle, Roberts (9). Rob·
Lopez
had
no
alibis
for
her
showing
when
she
came
into
the
oembedded
dirt
and
grlf,
ertson (3 I
while brushes sweep It up .
press tent Sunday . She had finished with a S.Over-par 221 to
0 Edge Kleener cleans tho!
Cali f
000 000 ooo- o 7 1
Texas
000 160 oox- 7 10 0 Bradley 's llklnder 206 but was still smiling.
last tough Inch along
"Do you have anything special to say?" an LPGA official
Aa se, Hartzell { 5) and Dow
baseboard
.
nlng ; Medlch and St.Jnober g. W asked her.
• Exclusive luxury Dial·• ·
- Medic h. 2 3. L- Ai"l Se , &lt;1 -&lt;1 .
"I'm going to dye my hair blonde next week so they won't
nap to clean all carpets.
Llfeflme lubricated motor .
recognize me," she said.
She will play in the next tournament, tlle Mayflower Classic
in Noblesville, Ind. , this coming weekend, she said, but when
Reg. S99 .99 w-tools
she was asked where she was going to spend the next few days,
she only laughed .
"Guess?" she parried the question.
"You're not going to say?"
"No," she said, still smiling .
FREE
So far this year, Nancy Lopez has earned more tllan $1~.000
TOOLS
in her rookie year, a record, and very likely will win a lot more
VANDALIA, Ohio (UP! ) -:
Jeffrey Genet of Barberton before the season is finished.
There is no question whatSoever about her ability. She could
captured the Ohio Handicap
turn
out to he the finest golfer ever to join the women 's tour
title in a shootoff with Paul
Keefer of Middletown Sunday and dominaw it the same way as Jack Nicklaus did the men's
10. N. lnd Ave.
in the 92nd aMual Ohio State tour for so many years.
Middleport, 0.
Trap
Shooting
championships.
Rocky Soike of Inglewood
beat Ed Carusattl . of
DO-IT-YOURSELf
Warrensville Heights in a
shootoff to win the Doubles
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
championship.
Other winners, rumers-up,
and tbelr divisions were :
For all your do-it.yourseH
Non-resident doubles
tl
champ- Daniel' Craite,
Home Improvement Supplies
Grosse Point Farms, Mich.,
~
over Leo Harrison, Hannibal,
see CriSS Hardware
K
Mo.
Lady Resident Champ• Housewares
0
''
K~thleen Cherupini ,
• Wallpaper
Zanesville, beat Merrill
• Paints
Cooper, Caledonia.
•
Electrical Supplies
A
Ohio Lady Handicap-Julie
• Plumbing Supplies
R' '
Wiltse, Lakewood, beat
Eileen Bischel, Gahanna.
E
Ohio Jwtior--Jim Walker,
Middletown.
Open Mon. thru Sal.
Ohio Sub-junior - Kenny
9:001oS:OO
Rapp, Dayton, heat Doug
71 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport
Wo!k, Cincinnati .

champ of Ohio

CABBAGE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
LOCAL GROWN RACINE
LB. 15c
LETTUCE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~A~ 49c
RADISHES ••••••••••••••• ,••••••• ,.,, •• ,,.,.,.,. 2PKGS. 29c
TOMATOES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a. 39c

BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!

In 1900, Dr. Walter Reed led
a medical team formed to
wipe out yellow fever in the
~anama Cana l Zone.

Barberton man
trap shooting

$69

SALE DATES
JUNE 26 • JULY l, 1978

SPRITE or COCA-COLA

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

Plus
FROZEN FOOD

Depos~

lim~

2

16- oz. btls.

99¢

NABISCO

,(00KIES

VALUES
KINGSFORD

CHARCOAL

MORTON

,.,. 69'

... $1··

.,,

1] Ol

FRIED CHICKEN 2~:~$1 99

Co"

IO·Lb.

L. J. HARRISS PIES

Pkg.

26 ·oz Apple
20 ·01. lemon M•ringue

Jumbo
Roll

20 ·0l . Botton Crum

iuitl . . . . . . . . . :. . .:. . . . 6C~~ 59'

HOUSEHOLD NEEDS

VIEnl HOT DOCi SAUCE ............. 3 ~~~: sI 00

Family
Size Box

CRIAMYo' CfiU NCHY

JIF PEANUT BUnER ... .... .. ........ .. . . .'~;~· s1 '
4

$45'

UNSWEI TE NfO

LIBBYS ORANGE JUICE .......................~!.~.: 791

lily J

DIAL

$

BAR SOAP .... ~~.'..!..~~..... 4 .~~

LIBBYS TOMATO JUICE ........... ......... ~!,~,: 591

DAIRY VALUES

VLAIIC IWUT R:ILIIH OR

..
1

:1--,

89
KRAFT PREPARED MUSTARD ...... .. .'~;~· 59'

CHEESE SINGLES ............. 1 ;~:~

LIBBYS SWEET PEAS ......................3 ·~.:: sI 00

KRAFT CHEEZ WHIZ ..................... ,.. s1•'

HAMBURGER DILL CHIPS ................. '~.~·

1

KRAFT AMEA . PIMf:NTO or SWISS

99c

FRUIT COCK AIL
2

PitiiiI BEANS 3g~~ $1
FOLGER'S

f.lb

COFFEE

CHIFFON

SOFT STICK MARGARINE ...........c'~::',, 2fl00

UNIWUTENEO

LIBBYS GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ..... ........ !!;~,: 591

REG., DRIP OR ELECT. PERK
LIMIT ONE WITH
1
10.00 PURCHASE

Borden's

HALF 4- HALF CEREAL MILK ...... ~:::,59'
Borden s

INSTANT

FRESH SMAll or LARGI: CURD

I ESTEl

COTTAGE CHEESE ........... 6:::~ 69c

3-oz
Jar

----PICNIC NEEDs-----.
LIBBVS

CORI

CREAM STYLE or WHOLE KERNEL

MARDI GRAS NAPKINS ......................·~~c· 691

MAXW£LL HO USE

liSTANT
COFFEE
"

1-LB. CAN

$259

46 -oz.
Can

GLAD TRASH BAGS .............................. .'~;~· s1"
REYNOLDS FOIL .................................... .&gt;::.,•· 79'

COU NTRY FLAIR

DIXIE COLD CUPS .... .......................... ~~c.s 1"

.

1

COUNTRY FlAIR

16-oz.
Cans

DIXIE PLATES .........................................~;;• 11at
DUtil

WHITE PAPER PLATES ........................·~~c· 89'
Rt:G or IUPftlfD

,

PRINGLE$ POTATO CHIPS ................. 'C:~
lO RI~ • LA HUINAtf OOU ST OH!S

LIQUID

Xi( ]
I

WOOLITE
Ollof •llfl ~
(..Mfl - , • •

Red . low Cal Aed.
Grape . Orange or V•rr Berry

HU.VY DUTY

to.... ~~ft
J..

w

CROSS HARDWARE

********
QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

INGElS
FURNITIJRE

16 West Washington , Athens

3-LB. CANNED BONELESS

e.

WIENERS

99

STEAKS........................~.!.l

o:

Leaders

39

CHIP CHOPPED HAM.~!.l

l75
28
Jl

11

~---~------------------~-,

J ST., POMEROY.

Amerlun League
east

Major League stanaings
By United Press International

National League

WIMBLEDON, England
i UP! ) - Bjorn Borg, the
defending champion , will
have the privilege of being
tlle rirst player to step onto
Wimbledon's gra ss ce nter
court today as he begins his
quest to become tlle first man
in 42 years tD win tlle men's
singles title tllree times in a
row .
According ID tlle tradillonal
command of tlle All England
!.awn Tennis and Croquet
Club, "play will begin at 2
p.m. precisely ''i 9 a .m. EDT )
in the JO ist Wimbl edon
Championships and Borg, the
No. 1 seed and 6-4 favorite,
will star t the $~12,2~0
Lo urnam en t agai nst
Amenca 's 6-foot- 7 Vi ctor
Amaya of Holland. Mich.
For the 22-year-old Swede,
Wimbledon is the only
tournament that really
matters . .. lt 's tradition . It 's
everything. And when you
play here you really don' t
care if you make one dollar.
Ill at's the truth ...
Borg's driving ambition
brought him tlle title in 1976
and i977. His form tllis year
has already brought him the
Italian and French titles back
to back and his opponents
agree he is playing better
tllan ever.
They also tllink Jimmy
Connors. the No . 2 seed , is the
only ma n among th e
remaining field of 127 who
can beat him. Th e London
bookmakers agree . Connors
is a 2-1 shot and U1e next man
in th eir sights, Vilas
Gerulaitis, is all the way out
at 8-1.
Con nors is tlle only man to
match the Swe de's si nglemindedness. Connors oozes
determination e'&gt;'ery time he
goes on court and his opening
match agai nst Russel l

5;:-The Daily Sentinel, MiddleJ)&lt;&gt;rl·Pomcruy . 0 .. Munday. June :!ti, 1978

Linescores

l'""'

l1m11 .ne Wllfl ~

on.

DM c-.~fl

...

-it¥

..... ,,,.

ljjlt]\1

.
z

$129~

Valley Bell

GREAT
AMERICAN

POPS

12 pk.

79e

891
_..ts • CAR OtNA liO OOSJORI S Xii{eliJ:Jite]:l
DISHWASHER

ALL
Umrt w&gt;ttl """"""
eoupet~ p4r ......,

-"'
Q

Gooct • c....t "'''l lltJI IIO&lt;It
00

zo

011

~on

CARDINAl 1#

Ooq STORES

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday , June 26,1978

Chester gardeners meet

BEGINS PROGRAM
Ohio University ROTC
Cadet Steve Powell wilf spend
the next three weeks at the
Eglin Air Force Base in ·
Florida lor training m the
· Third Lieutenant Program.
While there he willlle assigned .lu active duty flying unit
and will asswne duties of a
junil&gt;r officer fur part of the
program. He will have in·
strudion in briefing for ac·
live duly, administration,
and will 1le flying with an of·
ficer. Cadel Powell, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Powell,
Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy, is
married to the former Sheila
Fulmer of Pomeroy. Mrs.
Powell, daughter, Misti, and
Mrs. Betty · Dill and son,
Todd are at Heartland, New
Bru~wlck, Canada visiting
relatives.

Fishing derby has
40 competitors

Huw lu build a mi~l bux and Forest Al'res Park on June
techniques for gJ·uwln ~ ruses 211,
were the tupics uf a program
Mrs. Murphy WdS named
presented by Mrs. Bulmy sw"hine gifl chai nnan for
Kuhl uf the Chesler Ga rden the dub. Members diScussed
Club when she mel Thursday chO&lt;JSJng a dub fl ower. For
"It 's not as easy as 11
with the r' cmwoud Ga rden • l'llll ca ll members displayed look~" was one youngster's
Club.
items fur a ~ilenl auction . comment as he tried to cast
field al the hurr lt' uf Mrs. Nexl meeting will be held at through a hoop in the fishing
Ida Murphy , m ember~ open· the home uf Mrs. Suzanne derby ~laged un the Pomeroy
ed the mwlt ng w1th Lord 's Warner. This will be an all· tennis court Saturday .
Prayer and the cl ub rolled. day meeting with polluck din- · The fishing derby was cunOff1cers' reports Wt"f"l' g!Vt:! ll ner. The Jay will indude a dueled by the Division pf
and $2 · was cullcded from hike from the Warn er Forestry and Wild life as a
ea ch merul)cr fur ttH.' Hor- reSJucrll·e to the hume uf feature uf Regatta weekend.
ticulture Sehukirsh1p Funcl Helen Ju lm ~un ga thering Tins year nearly 40 buys and
""d the Wn ght State Fund . wildflower ~pec1 m e ns along girl~ in lwu age categories
Mrs. Thelma Gtlt•s read a lhe wav . Fur rull call tha t en lcl'ed the cumpeliliun.
poem, .. Fm·ml:ihtp Flt•wers" &lt;kiy. in~mbers will talk abuul First. ~econd and third prizes
fur devotions. A eunununit'a- thm use fur the fl owers. Pru- were awal'ded in each of the
tiorl wa~ reod fl·t•lll the Otuu gram Will lJe on Wild flower calegunes. r' irsl place WillA.;sudatwn of !;arden Club~ cl(iS.Sifi caliUil
m~ rs were presented ruds and
regardin g tlw August eon v t~ n­
Mrs . Murp hy ~e rv e d reels. and the second and
llull to lx&gt; held 111 Dayton. refreshments lu those named third place winners got their
Me1nbers Wt!rt' 111\'lted to joi n and Mr~ . F:velyn Thuma, selection uf either a reel ur a
th e Rullanu Friendly Kathryn Johnson. Peggy and tackle box .
GClrdcllt:'l'::i fu r a PIL'Ili l' al the Barbara Murphy.
But everyone went away a
winner. Packets uf fishing

supplies and literature were
pr·csented tu each uf the par·
tid pants.
In the under 10 age
category. the winners were
Tum Perry, Route 3. Pumery,

firs!; Terry Newsum, Route
3, Pomeroy. secund ; and
Tunv Shoemak er. Mld dlep;,.l,lhird .
In the over 10 age category.
tht! winners were Bi ll Powe ll ,
Middlepurl, firs t ; Greg
Thomas, Pomeruy, sccund .
ami Allen Arnott, Middlepurl ,
third .
Handli ng !he casting derby
were Andy Lyles, Meigs
County game protector; Ted
Dea n, Di~trict4 education offil-er ; Jim Splete. wildlife
agent, and Brian Simpson.
education offieer.

UNDER 10 WINNERS in the casting derby Saturday murnfng were, left to right, Tom
Perry, first ; Terry Newsom, second; and Tony Shoemaker, third , pictured with Jim Splete,
wildlife agent from the Athens office, left, and Brian Simpson, an educallonal orflcer from
the C&lt;~ lwnbus offke.

OES honors matrons and patrons
Pasf

matruns

and

past

pal runs of Harrisonville
Chapter 2!&gt;5, Order of the
Eastern Star, were hon ored
at a meeting of lhe chapter
Tuesday night at tile Masonic
Temple.
The prog ram cunsisleU us
rt!adings, sungs, cmd a game
w1lh prizes going tu the Will·
ncrs uf thl! gcmtt.'. Each Ulll'
wos presented with H gift
from Mrs. Stdla Al kill&gt;, wor·
thy matron. Thusc honored
were Mrs. Atk ins, Gracrt:
Wilson, Belly Bishop . Berrllec

Hoff rnan.

George,

OVEH 10 WINNERS .
were, center front ,
Bill Powell. f1rsl . w1th Greg Thomas, left, second, and
Allen Arnon. third. Andy Lyles, Meigs County game pru-

lector,
,
offll'er.
worked wiU1the over 40 youngsters taking pari 111 the derby.

Ava nt!

Vranccs

Yuun~.

Pcwlin r At kin s, Sha ron
Jewell , Marjorie Hice, Luis
Pa uley, Pearle Canaday .

7- The DaUY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,'O., Monday, June 26, 1978

Here's scenes of the 1978 Big Bend Regatta
t J,

VBS BEGINS
Daily vacation Bible school
willllegin tonight at the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church
and'children of the community are invited to attend. The
Bible school will be held each
evening through Friday from
7 to 8:45p.m. There will be a
picnic on Saturday and a pr()gram on Sunday evening.
Mrs. Martha Klem is the Bi·
ble sehoul director.

NECK AND NECK - Gordon Downard in boat No . 4
and Mike Combs in Number II, race down the stretch in
U1e final heat of Sunday's Regatta Power Boat Races. In

this, the ten lap race for boats In all classes, Combs was
later disqualified for jumping the gun. Downard took the
money for placing first in the Mod·U, Mod-UlO, and Mod-50
divisions.

CRUISIN ' DOWN THE RIVER- The P.A. Denny
sternwheeler was one of the lllllny attractions fea lured al
this year's Big Bend Regatta . Friday afternoon the
excursion boat hosted Regatta queens, candidates, and

visiting festival royalty. and Friday evening two disco
dances were held on board. On Satu1·day , three cruises
were offered throughout the day and an excursion dance
was held Saturday night featurin g Orlando Columbo and
the Tophatter Orchestra .

: :.:::::;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;: ;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:; :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::;:; :: :: :: : : ::::::::::::::: ;::::::::·~·

Allegra Will, Elsie Housh,
Juan Kaldur, Doug Bishop,
Larry Well, Paul Pauley,
Norman Will, Stanley Kaldor,
Dana Hoffman, and Harold
~~
Rice.
Announcement uf Grand InG1fl ce rtificates and ribspection at Athens on June 2.1
buns were pre~enled lu the
· and of the annual banquet uf
winners m the four categories
Howard's St&lt;m; un July 29
of
the quilt show held over
was rne~d e .
galla weekend in the Trinity
Mrs. Atkins ~ n d La rry
Church basement.
Well. worthy patron , presided
Mrs. Ella Smith was
al the rnwling which opened chairperson of the show with
with the pledge and a
the quilts being judged by
pa triotic sung . Pro-tem of· nul-of-town judges. Gift cer·
ficc rs were Doug Bishop, lificales for $10 were giVen to
ma rshall ; Avanel Gcurge,
each of the first place win·
1\ da h ; Mr s. Huffman ,
ners with the second and
lrea~u re r , and Will . sentinel.
third place winners in each
category receivmg ribbons .
A special lllue ribbon
award went to Mrs. Goldie
Colmer, 97, of Pomeroy, who
displayed a quilt which she
made this past winter. Mrs.
Culmer has only partial vi·
sion.
The winners were :
Painted : Mr s. Hilda
Quickel, Route I, Cheshire,
both fi rst and sccUIId.
Used Pieced : Mrs. Thora
Blackwood, Pumeruy , first ;
and Mrs. Margaret Scheltinc.
Cleveland, second.
Appliqued: Mrs. Peggy
Harris, Pomeroy, first; Mrs·.
Quickie , Cheshire, second ,
and Mrs . Ali ce Nease.

·:·:

~~ ,
'

&lt;v

Prizes awarded in frog art contest

*
**
* ~ .,._ · ..
* :1 .(' ::: ·1·" *
** au
Oi1er"~~"
f
**
*
. =~ 7fc*
*
------ *
** * *
*
**
TUUpAY NIGHT IPICIAU
"IIGPUN"

ICIAL

MOIIIIAL-MO- . . IC1AI

NUl'S WHDE YOU'U FIND THI f'UNI
ISOJ Ea stern Ave , Gallipoli s, Oh io

Jackson Av e. &amp; 14th St .. ~'Pl easant , W. Va.
;;t';in.P;•r;o; W

Ca.s h prizes were et wa nJed
lo the firs! , seeond anu tlurd
plaee w1nners in the frog art
cunlcst staged as a part of
Hegatta Weekend activities.
Mrs. Pal flutter and Bill
Mayer were co-&lt;:hairpersun
fur the con test. Prizes uf $10
for first , $5 fu r second, and $3
for th ird were presented Sunday al the Pomeroy Public
Ubrary where the art was on
display .
The winners Wt!re :
T~dpu les !ages une lhruugh
sevent: Muny Wuud, Lung
Bollom. first; Kevin Peters.
Chflon. W. Va .. Sl'Cond; Patti
Wood. Long Bull om, third ;
OHwn .Johnson, Pmneruy ,
fou1·th ; and Willi e Bill ,
Chester, fi fth .
Tad pules 1ages eig ht
through lO J: Brian Den ny.
Middleport, f1rsl ; Sue Ellen
f ry . Pomeroy . second .
f'rugs Ill and 12 year u ld~ J:
Terre Wuud, Lung Bullum.
fu·st; Hulh An n f'ry.
Pumcroy, seeu nd ; Suzan
Thuma , Pomeroy, third ; and
Scull fl yse ll , Pomeryy,
fourth .
Frugs 113 to 21r: Jayne
fl ueflich, first; L1sa Peters,
Chflon . W. Va ., second ; and
Ste ph ie fl uuchins, Mid·
dleport. third .
Croa kers 122 to 35~: Jane
Da vJS, Pomeroy. fir st; Lori
faulk , Pomeroy , ~econd ; and
Cathie Wood , Long Bollum ,

The evening stars are Mer·
cury Venus, Mars, Saturn
and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Cancer.
American novelist Pearl
Buck was born June 26, 11192.

FIRST PLACE WINNERS inlhe Regatta Weekend frug art contest were Mony Wood
and Terre Wood of Lung Bullom. front ; and lcfl to nghl , Pal Thoma, Jayne Hoeflich, and
Jane Davis, all uf Pomeroy .
tlu rd.

Croa k er~ 136 and up 1: Pal
Tl1oma, Pomeroy , f1rsl .
Grand Croakers 1di inen·
~ wna l display 1: Mrs. Vilma
P1kkoja. Gal lipuhs. f1r~l ;

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Flora Blackwood. Pomeroy. Pomeroy, third ; and Pat
Sl'con d ; J ay ne Hoefill'h. Thuma, Pumeruy,fuurth.

CHOICES

GAUl

Has won Chrysler Corporation's highest award for service:
Yo ur dealer, competing against thou sand s of
others, ha s met and exceeded some of the
indu stry's toughest requiremen t s for service
and customer satisfaction. He hc;ls ea rn ed the
excl usive right to di splay the Fi ve-Star Quality
Servi ce Award . See him for star-quality
performance for your present ca r - and for
out standing satisfaction with your nex t
new car.

NOBODY DOES IT BETTER THAN YOUR FIVE-STAR QUALITY DEALER.
ttii11'1C£

,,

a

J~AJHS Dt\IIStO H ~~CHRYSLER
.,.
...... CQ RPQ fi .. T t0f'lo

And 22 percent said they had
wken an Item without paying
as adulls.
fl alf noted lhal the
shoplifted
items were valued
DF:A H DH . Bl.AKEH Last month my Ill-year-old at less than $5. The grea t madaughter was ca ught slwpli f· jority sa id they never did it
tlllg a fi:!W t1cms uf junk ugatn .
Stop trying to extract con·
JCWCiry.
I was shocked becau~e 11 fesswns abuut the past and
wa ~
L' lllnpl cte ly 11 01 uf prumi~es about the future. In·
cha r(ltlcr . I cuuld und crstcmd stead, try to find out more
all th1s much beller 1f we abuul the present. What
wen.· puur ur· tf ~ he had a furces helped unglue yullr
lustor. ur en me. Bulneithcr da uglller's normal inhibi·
1s the ca,;&lt;· . I just don 't knuw ilons ? flavc u.ld problems
grown more intense'!
,
whallu llunk .
Or cu e new slr~ sses lu
I keel&gt;askmg her 1f she IS
Jyrng when she .s&lt;t)'S she ncVl'r blame '! AS you llegin your
d1d II btdurc and Will never do cun vcrsali~t ns with your
11 agam. That only mak es her daughter. remember that her .
&lt;TY harder. Thi ~ whole thi ng llldi!W lion to be open wilh
has been su cmbarrassmg fur you will depend on the trust
everyone. flow can 1 ilclp her you have buill up over the
1hrough !Ius difficult penud '' v~o:ars .
DF:A k HEADEH - Relieve - If you and she have never
her wht! ll shl' says, ·· Never lwd a hearl·t()-heart Lalk ,
beful·e and never again ." A don't expect lu gel very far .
rtc~i1t .. Ms" magaz11w Under those circwnstances,
surVt'l uf 20.000 women 's at· ll tmghl be a good ide~ to sug~,·~1 that she talk with
l ltUtlt!.S tuwetrd mont•) s huwcd
that mon• than half had another adult of her choice.
shoplifted al least '"'"" 11.1 If, however, she t huoses to
d 11 ldllfJt Ill ttl' ai.Ju l c!-!t"l'Jlt·~o: . upt'il up IU yuu, lislell fur the

Never before
or again

MARY COLMER before
ber new pieced quUt which
won lor her a blue ribbon
and sUO gUI certUicale.

PIT STOP - Mike Combs prepares to enter the water for the final race Sunday
afternoon.

Sentinel newsphotos .by
Bob Hoeflich, Charlene Hoeflich,

Pomeroy, Route 3, third.
New Pieced : Mary Coimer,
Pomeroy , bulh first and se·
cund, and Rose Ginther.
Pomeroy third .

PAT PHILSON, Racine, was a part of the Her itage
Sunday observance of the Meigs County Pi oneer and
flistorical Society at th e Meigs Museum Sunday. Pal is
shown making yam with an authentic old-fashioned
spinning wheel. A· Victorian era room was another
hi ghlight of the Sunday observance.

APOPUI.AR SPOT at the Meigs Museum Sunday afternoon when Heritage Sunda y was
observed by the Meigs County Pioneer and flistorical Society. as a part of the B1g Bend
Hegalla, was this machine, a selector wtuch shows large colored pictures of Meigs Cow11y
communities when a button is pushed. TI1 e ma chine fit well into a display of photos which
sho wed Meigs County sites as they look today compared with photos tak en of ll1e sarne
loca tions many years ago .

Katie Crow and Judy Owen.

,-----~

1

Social

1 Calendar

BIBLE SCHOOL Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
Monday through Friday 9 to
theme which is su prevalent 11 :30 a.m. dally . Closing
in first-time · adolescent program July 2. 7:30p.m.
shop lifters. You may hear
l!er talk about the pressures
BEND 0 ' THE RIV EH
of independence superimpos- Garden Club , 7:30 Monday
c'&lt;i on strong dependency night all he home of Mrs. Ber·
nc&gt;eds. You may also hear her nice Carpenter. Members to
anger at authority' figures- take thei r fa vorite ar·
teachers. parents and su on - rangements and the program
who seem lo encourage in· will include a discussion of
dependence.
the arrangements.
Shoplifting can 1x&gt; une BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
outlet for expressing hostility through Friday at St. Paul
toward those who no longer United Methodist Church,
offer sa fe , dependent rela· · Tuppers Plains, 10 until noon
tionships . II can also be an ef· daUy. Closing program July
furl lu once again get ~. 7:30 p.m.
something fur nothing as in
BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
the good old days of infancy from 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. daUy
and childhood.
at Chester Grade School.
The const'([Uences of getBIBLE
SCHOOL
at
ling caught shoplifting usual· Gallipolis Christian Church
ly help the adolescent decide Monday through Friday 6:30
un alternate ways of express· to 8:30 p.m. each evening.
ing anger. If anti-social acts
BIBLE SCHOOL at Laurel
eonlinue, however, the teen· Cliff Free Methodist Church
ager can find herself living a Monday through Friday 9 lo
more dependent existence - 11 :30 a.m. daily . Program on
in jaiL
Sunday, July 2, at 7 p.m.
If your daughter is strugglTUESDAY
ing wi lh the pressures of in·
SPECIAL MEETING ,
dependence, let her know that
everybody has difficulties Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
growing up. Share with her a Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Work In
time in your adolescence the EA Degree. All Ma!IOns
when you were experiencing welcome.
AGWW BIBLE STUDY
the trawna of looking responsibility square in the face. and praile service Tuesday
You may •lw want tu uffer 9:30a .m. at the home of Mrs.
her exira support at this Dale (Shirley ) Priddy, Hysell
Run Road, Pomeroy. Mrs.
time.
Teaching your daughter to Barbara Sheridan will be the
see her u ut-of~haracter ac· speaker. All ladles welcome.
tiuns as signs uf trouble will For additional lnfonnaUon
help her in the future. If call 992-7281. ·
something like this happens
PAST MATRONS OF
again, she will be more likely Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.
to seek out someone who.can will meet allhe home ol Mrs.
ilelp her understand her Thelma McMurray, Mason,
behavior. Write lo Dr. Blaker Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
111 care of this newspaper,
P.O Box 489, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Volwne of mail pruhibilll perThe moon Is appr011C~8
\I'Jilal replies, but questions of lls laal quarter.
gcnerHI interest will lle
There are no morning
discussed in future colwnns.
81ars.
i

.,

'·

'
?.

1JUNIOH DNISION WINNERS - Winners in the
Junior Division of the Frog Jump were Scott Meeks,
Athens, first place, whose frog "Cowboy" jumped 12 feet ;
Dav id Bryant, Portland , second place, whose frog
"Jumper" jumped 11 feel , 11 inches; Mandy Hubbard ,

Middleport, third place. whose frog "Kong-Cha" ju111ped
10 feet. 11 inches. Shown a1·e. left to right, Bill Young,
Meig s County Jaycee, who along with oth er Jaycees,
l'Dndurted U1e jum[l'! , Sl'Dll, Da vid and Mandy. Seoll won
$100, David $50, and M:1ndy $25.

SPECIAL TEAM EVENT WINNERS - Show left to
right, David Bryant, first place overall ; John Alkire,
Guysville, first place for Jaycees; Bill Brookover, second
place, Jaycees, Lillie Hocking ; Frog Wa yla nd, Gra nd
Croaker; Jack Carsey, fourth · place representing
Lundmark, and Oakley Collins, Slale Senator.

I

,,

....

,

SENIOR OMSION - One of many who jumped a
frog at lhe annual "Frog Jwnp " held at Marauder
Slodlwn in Pomeroy Saturday evening.

/*1
'

YOUNGER PARTICIPANT - One of many
youngsters who took pari in the junior division frog jwnp
Saturday during Big Bend Regalia is shown here.

HUNDREDS OF persons were on hand Saturday
big evenlll of the weekend .

night w watch th e frog jun1ps and frog derby, one of the

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday , June 26,1978

Chester gardeners meet

BEGINS PROGRAM
Ohio University ROTC
Cadet Steve Powell wilf spend
the next three weeks at the
Eglin Air Force Base in ·
Florida lor training m the
· Third Lieutenant Program.
While there he willlle assigned .lu active duty flying unit
and will asswne duties of a
junil&gt;r officer fur part of the
program. He will have in·
strudion in briefing for ac·
live duly, administration,
and will 1le flying with an of·
ficer. Cadel Powell, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Powell,
Uncoln Hill, Pomeroy, is
married to the former Sheila
Fulmer of Pomeroy. Mrs.
Powell, daughter, Misti, and
Mrs. Betty · Dill and son,
Todd are at Heartland, New
Bru~wlck, Canada visiting
relatives.

Fishing derby has
40 competitors

Huw lu build a mi~l bux and Forest Al'res Park on June
techniques for gJ·uwln ~ ruses 211,
were the tupics uf a program
Mrs. Murphy WdS named
presented by Mrs. Bulmy sw"hine gifl chai nnan for
Kuhl uf the Chesler Ga rden the dub. Members diScussed
Club when she mel Thursday chO&lt;JSJng a dub fl ower. For
"It 's not as easy as 11
with the r' cmwoud Ga rden • l'llll ca ll members displayed look~" was one youngster's
Club.
items fur a ~ilenl auction . comment as he tried to cast
field al the hurr lt' uf Mrs. Nexl meeting will be held at through a hoop in the fishing
Ida Murphy , m ember~ open· the home uf Mrs. Suzanne derby ~laged un the Pomeroy
ed the mwlt ng w1th Lord 's Warner. This will be an all· tennis court Saturday .
Prayer and the cl ub rolled. day meeting with polluck din- · The fishing derby was cunOff1cers' reports Wt"f"l' g!Vt:! ll ner. The Jay will indude a dueled by the Division pf
and $2 · was cullcded from hike from the Warn er Forestry and Wild life as a
ea ch merul)cr fur ttH.' Hor- reSJucrll·e to the hume uf feature uf Regatta weekend.
ticulture Sehukirsh1p Funcl Helen Ju lm ~un ga thering Tins year nearly 40 buys and
""d the Wn ght State Fund . wildflower ~pec1 m e ns along girl~ in lwu age categories
Mrs. Thelma Gtlt•s read a lhe wav . Fur rull call tha t en lcl'ed the cumpeliliun.
poem, .. Fm·ml:ihtp Flt•wers" &lt;kiy. in~mbers will talk abuul First. ~econd and third prizes
fur devotions. A eunununit'a- thm use fur the fl owers. Pru- were awal'ded in each of the
tiorl wa~ reod fl·t•lll the Otuu gram Will lJe on Wild flower calegunes. r' irsl place WillA.;sudatwn of !;arden Club~ cl(iS.Sifi caliUil
m~ rs were presented ruds and
regardin g tlw August eon v t~ n­
Mrs . Murp hy ~e rv e d reels. and the second and
llull to lx&gt; held 111 Dayton. refreshments lu those named third place winners got their
Me1nbers Wt!rt' 111\'lted to joi n and Mr~ . F:velyn Thuma, selection uf either a reel ur a
th e Rullanu Friendly Kathryn Johnson. Peggy and tackle box .
GClrdcllt:'l'::i fu r a PIL'Ili l' al the Barbara Murphy.
But everyone went away a
winner. Packets uf fishing

supplies and literature were
pr·csented tu each uf the par·
tid pants.
In the under 10 age
category. the winners were
Tum Perry, Route 3. Pumery,

firs!; Terry Newsum, Route
3, Pomeroy. secund ; and
Tunv Shoemak er. Mld dlep;,.l,lhird .
In the over 10 age category.
tht! winners were Bi ll Powe ll ,
Middlepurl, firs t ; Greg
Thomas, Pomeruy, sccund .
ami Allen Arnott, Middlepurl ,
third .
Handli ng !he casting derby
were Andy Lyles, Meigs
County game protector; Ted
Dea n, Di~trict4 education offil-er ; Jim Splete. wildlife
agent, and Brian Simpson.
education offieer.

UNDER 10 WINNERS in the casting derby Saturday murnfng were, left to right, Tom
Perry, first ; Terry Newsom, second; and Tony Shoemaker, third , pictured with Jim Splete,
wildlife agent from the Athens office, left, and Brian Simpson, an educallonal orflcer from
the C&lt;~ lwnbus offke.

OES honors matrons and patrons
Pasf

matruns

and

past

pal runs of Harrisonville
Chapter 2!&gt;5, Order of the
Eastern Star, were hon ored
at a meeting of lhe chapter
Tuesday night at tile Masonic
Temple.
The prog ram cunsisleU us
rt!adings, sungs, cmd a game
w1lh prizes going tu the Will·
ncrs uf thl! gcmtt.'. Each Ulll'
wos presented with H gift
from Mrs. Stdla Al kill&gt;, wor·
thy matron. Thusc honored
were Mrs. Atk ins, Gracrt:
Wilson, Belly Bishop . Berrllec

Hoff rnan.

George,

OVEH 10 WINNERS .
were, center front ,
Bill Powell. f1rsl . w1th Greg Thomas, left, second, and
Allen Arnon. third. Andy Lyles, Meigs County game pru-

lector,
,
offll'er.
worked wiU1the over 40 youngsters taking pari 111 the derby.

Ava nt!

Vranccs

Yuun~.

Pcwlin r At kin s, Sha ron
Jewell , Marjorie Hice, Luis
Pa uley, Pearle Canaday .

7- The DaUY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,'O., Monday, June 26, 1978

Here's scenes of the 1978 Big Bend Regatta
t J,

VBS BEGINS
Daily vacation Bible school
willllegin tonight at the Mid·
dleport First Baptist Church
and'children of the community are invited to attend. The
Bible school will be held each
evening through Friday from
7 to 8:45p.m. There will be a
picnic on Saturday and a pr()gram on Sunday evening.
Mrs. Martha Klem is the Bi·
ble sehoul director.

NECK AND NECK - Gordon Downard in boat No . 4
and Mike Combs in Number II, race down the stretch in
U1e final heat of Sunday's Regatta Power Boat Races. In

this, the ten lap race for boats In all classes, Combs was
later disqualified for jumping the gun. Downard took the
money for placing first in the Mod·U, Mod-UlO, and Mod-50
divisions.

CRUISIN ' DOWN THE RIVER- The P.A. Denny
sternwheeler was one of the lllllny attractions fea lured al
this year's Big Bend Regatta . Friday afternoon the
excursion boat hosted Regatta queens, candidates, and

visiting festival royalty. and Friday evening two disco
dances were held on board. On Satu1·day , three cruises
were offered throughout the day and an excursion dance
was held Saturday night featurin g Orlando Columbo and
the Tophatter Orchestra .

: :.:::::;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;: ;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:; :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::;:; :: :: :: : : ::::::::::::::: ;::::::::·~·

Allegra Will, Elsie Housh,
Juan Kaldur, Doug Bishop,
Larry Well, Paul Pauley,
Norman Will, Stanley Kaldor,
Dana Hoffman, and Harold
~~
Rice.
Announcement uf Grand InG1fl ce rtificates and ribspection at Athens on June 2.1
buns were pre~enled lu the
· and of the annual banquet uf
winners m the four categories
Howard's St&lt;m; un July 29
of
the quilt show held over
was rne~d e .
galla weekend in the Trinity
Mrs. Atkins ~ n d La rry
Church basement.
Well. worthy patron , presided
Mrs. Ella Smith was
al the rnwling which opened chairperson of the show with
with the pledge and a
the quilts being judged by
pa triotic sung . Pro-tem of· nul-of-town judges. Gift cer·
ficc rs were Doug Bishop, lificales for $10 were giVen to
ma rshall ; Avanel Gcurge,
each of the first place win·
1\ da h ; Mr s. Huffman ,
ners with the second and
lrea~u re r , and Will . sentinel.
third place winners in each
category receivmg ribbons .
A special lllue ribbon
award went to Mrs. Goldie
Colmer, 97, of Pomeroy, who
displayed a quilt which she
made this past winter. Mrs.
Culmer has only partial vi·
sion.
The winners were :
Painted : Mr s. Hilda
Quickel, Route I, Cheshire,
both fi rst and sccUIId.
Used Pieced : Mrs. Thora
Blackwood, Pumeruy , first ;
and Mrs. Margaret Scheltinc.
Cleveland, second.
Appliqued: Mrs. Peggy
Harris, Pomeroy, first; Mrs·.
Quickie , Cheshire, second ,
and Mrs . Ali ce Nease.

·:·:

~~ ,
'

&lt;v

Prizes awarded in frog art contest

*
**
* ~ .,._ · ..
* :1 .(' ::: ·1·" *
** au
Oi1er"~~"
f
**
*
. =~ 7fc*
*
------ *
** * *
*
**
TUUpAY NIGHT IPICIAU
"IIGPUN"

ICIAL

MOIIIIAL-MO- . . IC1AI

NUl'S WHDE YOU'U FIND THI f'UNI
ISOJ Ea stern Ave , Gallipoli s, Oh io

Jackson Av e. &amp; 14th St .. ~'Pl easant , W. Va.
;;t';in.P;•r;o; W

Ca.s h prizes were et wa nJed
lo the firs! , seeond anu tlurd
plaee w1nners in the frog art
cunlcst staged as a part of
Hegatta Weekend activities.
Mrs. Pal flutter and Bill
Mayer were co-&lt;:hairpersun
fur the con test. Prizes uf $10
for first , $5 fu r second, and $3
for th ird were presented Sunday al the Pomeroy Public
Ubrary where the art was on
display .
The winners Wt!re :
T~dpu les !ages une lhruugh
sevent: Muny Wuud, Lung
Bollom. first; Kevin Peters.
Chflon. W. Va .. Sl'Cond; Patti
Wood. Long Bull om, third ;
OHwn .Johnson, Pmneruy ,
fou1·th ; and Willi e Bill ,
Chester, fi fth .
Tad pules 1ages eig ht
through lO J: Brian Den ny.
Middleport, f1rsl ; Sue Ellen
f ry . Pomeroy . second .
f'rugs Ill and 12 year u ld~ J:
Terre Wuud, Lung Bullum.
fu·st; Hulh An n f'ry.
Pumcroy, seeu nd ; Suzan
Thuma , Pomeroy, third ; and
Scull fl yse ll , Pomeryy,
fourth .
Frugs 113 to 21r: Jayne
fl ueflich, first; L1sa Peters,
Chflon . W. Va ., second ; and
Ste ph ie fl uuchins, Mid·
dleport. third .
Croa kers 122 to 35~: Jane
Da vJS, Pomeroy. fir st; Lori
faulk , Pomeroy , ~econd ; and
Cathie Wood , Long Bollum ,

The evening stars are Mer·
cury Venus, Mars, Saturn
and Jupiter.
Those born on this dale are
under the sign of Cancer.
American novelist Pearl
Buck was born June 26, 11192.

FIRST PLACE WINNERS inlhe Regatta Weekend frug art contest were Mony Wood
and Terre Wood of Lung Bullom. front ; and lcfl to nghl , Pal Thoma, Jayne Hoeflich, and
Jane Davis, all uf Pomeroy .
tlu rd.

Croa k er~ 136 and up 1: Pal
Tl1oma, Pomeroy , f1rsl .
Grand Croakers 1di inen·
~ wna l display 1: Mrs. Vilma
P1kkoja. Gal lipuhs. f1r~l ;

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE

Flora Blackwood. Pomeroy. Pomeroy, third ; and Pat
Sl'con d ; J ay ne Hoefill'h. Thuma, Pumeruy,fuurth.

CHOICES

GAUl

Has won Chrysler Corporation's highest award for service:
Yo ur dealer, competing against thou sand s of
others, ha s met and exceeded some of the
indu stry's toughest requiremen t s for service
and customer satisfaction. He hc;ls ea rn ed the
excl usive right to di splay the Fi ve-Star Quality
Servi ce Award . See him for star-quality
performance for your present ca r - and for
out standing satisfaction with your nex t
new car.

NOBODY DOES IT BETTER THAN YOUR FIVE-STAR QUALITY DEALER.
ttii11'1C£

,,

a

J~AJHS Dt\IIStO H ~~CHRYSLER
.,.
...... CQ RPQ fi .. T t0f'lo

And 22 percent said they had
wken an Item without paying
as adulls.
fl alf noted lhal the
shoplifted
items were valued
DF:A H DH . Bl.AKEH Last month my Ill-year-old at less than $5. The grea t madaughter was ca ught slwpli f· jority sa id they never did it
tlllg a fi:!W t1cms uf junk ugatn .
Stop trying to extract con·
JCWCiry.
I was shocked becau~e 11 fesswns abuut the past and
wa ~
L' lllnpl cte ly 11 01 uf prumi~es about the future. In·
cha r(ltlcr . I cuuld und crstcmd stead, try to find out more
all th1s much beller 1f we abuul the present. What
wen.· puur ur· tf ~ he had a furces helped unglue yullr
lustor. ur en me. Bulneithcr da uglller's normal inhibi·
1s the ca,;&lt;· . I just don 't knuw ilons ? flavc u.ld problems
grown more intense'!
,
whallu llunk .
Or cu e new slr~ sses lu
I keel&gt;askmg her 1f she IS
Jyrng when she .s&lt;t)'S she ncVl'r blame '! AS you llegin your
d1d II btdurc and Will never do cun vcrsali~t ns with your
11 agam. That only mak es her daughter. remember that her .
&lt;TY harder. Thi ~ whole thi ng llldi!W lion to be open wilh
has been su cmbarrassmg fur you will depend on the trust
everyone. flow can 1 ilclp her you have buill up over the
1hrough !Ius difficult penud '' v~o:ars .
DF:A k HEADEH - Relieve - If you and she have never
her wht! ll shl' says, ·· Never lwd a hearl·t()-heart Lalk ,
beful·e and never again ." A don't expect lu gel very far .
rtc~i1t .. Ms" magaz11w Under those circwnstances,
surVt'l uf 20.000 women 's at· ll tmghl be a good ide~ to sug~,·~1 that she talk with
l ltUtlt!.S tuwetrd mont•) s huwcd
that mon• than half had another adult of her choice.
shoplifted al least '"'"" 11.1 If, however, she t huoses to
d 11 ldllfJt Ill ttl' ai.Ju l c!-!t"l'Jlt·~o: . upt'il up IU yuu, lislell fur the

Never before
or again

MARY COLMER before
ber new pieced quUt which
won lor her a blue ribbon
and sUO gUI certUicale.

PIT STOP - Mike Combs prepares to enter the water for the final race Sunday
afternoon.

Sentinel newsphotos .by
Bob Hoeflich, Charlene Hoeflich,

Pomeroy, Route 3, third.
New Pieced : Mary Coimer,
Pomeroy , bulh first and se·
cund, and Rose Ginther.
Pomeroy third .

PAT PHILSON, Racine, was a part of the Her itage
Sunday observance of the Meigs County Pi oneer and
flistorical Society at th e Meigs Museum Sunday. Pal is
shown making yam with an authentic old-fashioned
spinning wheel. A· Victorian era room was another
hi ghlight of the Sunday observance.

APOPUI.AR SPOT at the Meigs Museum Sunday afternoon when Heritage Sunda y was
observed by the Meigs County Pioneer and flistorical Society. as a part of the B1g Bend
Hegalla, was this machine, a selector wtuch shows large colored pictures of Meigs Cow11y
communities when a button is pushed. TI1 e ma chine fit well into a display of photos which
sho wed Meigs County sites as they look today compared with photos tak en of ll1e sarne
loca tions many years ago .

Katie Crow and Judy Owen.

,-----~

1

Social

1 Calendar

BIBLE SCHOOL Carleton
Church, Kingsbury Road,
Monday through Friday 9 to
theme which is su prevalent 11 :30 a.m. dally . Closing
in first-time · adolescent program July 2. 7:30p.m.
shop lifters. You may hear
l!er talk about the pressures
BEND 0 ' THE RIV EH
of independence superimpos- Garden Club , 7:30 Monday
c'&lt;i on strong dependency night all he home of Mrs. Ber·
nc&gt;eds. You may also hear her nice Carpenter. Members to
anger at authority' figures- take thei r fa vorite ar·
teachers. parents and su on - rangements and the program
who seem lo encourage in· will include a discussion of
dependence.
the arrangements.
Shoplifting can 1x&gt; une BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
outlet for expressing hostility through Friday at St. Paul
toward those who no longer United Methodist Church,
offer sa fe , dependent rela· · Tuppers Plains, 10 until noon
tionships . II can also be an ef· daUy. Closing program July
furl lu once again get ~. 7:30 p.m.
something fur nothing as in
BIBLE SCHOOL Monday
the good old days of infancy from 9:30 to 11 :30 a.m. daUy
and childhood.
at Chester Grade School.
The const'([Uences of getBIBLE
SCHOOL
at
ling caught shoplifting usual· Gallipolis Christian Church
ly help the adolescent decide Monday through Friday 6:30
un alternate ways of express· to 8:30 p.m. each evening.
ing anger. If anti-social acts
BIBLE SCHOOL at Laurel
eonlinue, however, the teen· Cliff Free Methodist Church
ager can find herself living a Monday through Friday 9 lo
more dependent existence - 11 :30 a.m. daily . Program on
in jaiL
Sunday, July 2, at 7 p.m.
If your daughter is strugglTUESDAY
ing wi lh the pressures of in·
SPECIAL MEETING ,
dependence, let her know that
everybody has difficulties Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM,
growing up. Share with her a Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Work In
time in your adolescence the EA Degree. All Ma!IOns
when you were experiencing welcome.
AGWW BIBLE STUDY
the trawna of looking responsibility square in the face. and praile service Tuesday
You may •lw want tu uffer 9:30a .m. at the home of Mrs.
her exira support at this Dale (Shirley ) Priddy, Hysell
Run Road, Pomeroy. Mrs.
time.
Teaching your daughter to Barbara Sheridan will be the
see her u ut-of~haracter ac· speaker. All ladles welcome.
tiuns as signs uf trouble will For additional lnfonnaUon
help her in the future. If call 992-7281. ·
something like this happens
PAST MATRONS OF
again, she will be more likely Pomeroy Chapter 186, O.E.S.
to seek out someone who.can will meet allhe home ol Mrs.
ilelp her understand her Thelma McMurray, Mason,
behavior. Write lo Dr. Blaker Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
111 care of this newspaper,
P.O Box 489, Radio City Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.
Volwne of mail pruhibilll perThe moon Is appr011C~8
\I'Jilal replies, but questions of lls laal quarter.
gcnerHI interest will lle
There are no morning
discussed in future colwnns.
81ars.
i

.,

'·

'
?.

1JUNIOH DNISION WINNERS - Winners in the
Junior Division of the Frog Jump were Scott Meeks,
Athens, first place, whose frog "Cowboy" jumped 12 feet ;
Dav id Bryant, Portland , second place, whose frog
"Jumper" jumped 11 feel , 11 inches; Mandy Hubbard ,

Middleport, third place. whose frog "Kong-Cha" ju111ped
10 feet. 11 inches. Shown a1·e. left to right, Bill Young,
Meig s County Jaycee, who along with oth er Jaycees,
l'Dndurted U1e jum[l'! , Sl'Dll, Da vid and Mandy. Seoll won
$100, David $50, and M:1ndy $25.

SPECIAL TEAM EVENT WINNERS - Show left to
right, David Bryant, first place overall ; John Alkire,
Guysville, first place for Jaycees; Bill Brookover, second
place, Jaycees, Lillie Hocking ; Frog Wa yla nd, Gra nd
Croaker; Jack Carsey, fourth · place representing
Lundmark, and Oakley Collins, Slale Senator.

I

,,

....

,

SENIOR OMSION - One of many who jumped a
frog at lhe annual "Frog Jwnp " held at Marauder
Slodlwn in Pomeroy Saturday evening.

/*1
'

YOUNGER PARTICIPANT - One of many
youngsters who took pari in the junior division frog jwnp
Saturday during Big Bend Regalia is shown here.

HUNDREDS OF persons were on hand Saturday
big evenlll of the weekend .

night w watch th e frog jun1ps and frog derby, one of the

�w.ant Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

•

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, JWJe 26, 197P
IN THE

NOTICE TO BIDD ERS .

COMMON PLEAS COURT

'

MEIGSCOUNTY . OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND

TA XES

CASES NO 780LT7

18
DL T I
YBOLT
9
78 D L T 10
780LT11
71 OL T 12

78 DLT 13

NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT
OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES

Whereas j udgmen t has
been rendered aga ins t cer
tain parcels of real estate for
taxes , assessments, costs and
ch arges as follows
CASE
NO
78 DLT
7
PARCEL NO OUT 01 T itled
1n the name of William S
Reed . J . H Prvor , J
R
Hawley, Trustees of Long
Bo flo m D 1V1S10n of C1112ens
Telephone Co , addresses

The Board of Education of
the Me tgs Local School
o 1· s~r 1· c 1 destres to receive
.
•
•
sealed bidS tor the follow.ng .
1. Tires ~nd Tubes
. 2 Gasolme , 011 , ana An

AnalyStS
Requtred
5. Mtlk and Da ir y Products
Bread and
Bakery
6
Products
2 den· ~
Jdai•:.
6da;·l!

Jane Wagner
Clerk Treasurer
Me1gs Local School
Oislr1C I

Olutuar)'

CASE NO

76

DLT 6

¢1ARCEL NO CBT 0\ T illed
1n name of Curt1s Mates .
address unknown
Situated
1n c arpenter
Vil lage . Columbia Township ,
Meigs County , Oh10 . Bemg
Lot No 6 and the North hall of
LOI NO . 5 adi01n1ng IOI No 6.
Fr ac t ion 4, Town ship 9,
Range IS Ohio Company's
Purchase
Reference Vol 147 page 358
Meigs County Deed Records
Judgment S41 94 plus ac .
cr ued taxes , assessments and
pen a tt ies and co sts of a c t ion
CASE
NO
78 DL T
9
PARCEL NO CBT 02 T1tled
1n name or A tva M11ter , ad
dress unknown
S1tu ated
in
Columbia
Township , Me 1gs County,
Oh10 , Sec 7, Lol 560 S Pari ot
8 acre mill lo t in S W 1 ~ 1 50
a cres .
Referen ce 162 page 673
Meigs County Deed Re cords
Judg ment S17 49 plus ac
cr ued taxes , assessments &lt;"nd
penatt,es and costs of act1on .

CASE

NO

78 DL T

10

PARCEL N O CBT ·03 Titled
in J H Martm and Wi llie
Mart 1n
Situated
in
Columb 1a
Townsh i p , Me igs County ,
Ohio Be ing N half of N E
quarter of S W quarter , Sec
35, Town 9, Range 15 Oh10
Company 's Purc h ase con
ta1n1 ng 13' '1 a cres , more or
less
Referen ce vol 15b page '275
Meigs County Deed Re cords
Judgment S310 .80 plus
accrued taxes , assessment
and pena 111es ana cos ts of
action
CASE NO . 78
DLT 11
PARCEL N O. CHT 02 T1tled
'" name of C C Lew is. ad
dress unknown
Situated
in
(hes ter
TownSh i P , Me 1gs county ,
Oh10 4.62 acres 1n Fraction 35
Sec 28 , Town J , Range 11
Ohio Companv 's Purchase .
wh ich 11es west on the h1Qh

woy

Referen ce vol 141 page 95
Me igs County Deed Records
Ju dgment \ 11 15 plus ac
crued taxes . assessmenh and
pena1t 1es and costs of ac t ion
CASE NO 78
DL T 11
PARCEL N O CHT 01 T itled
' "name ot aashan D 1V1S10n of
Cllize ns
Telep hone
Co ,
Add r ess unknown
S1tuated
1n
Chester
TownShip , Me 1gs County ,
Ohio part of S E quarter of
Secti on 3, Town J . Range 12
Ohio Company 's Purchase,
being one acre mor e or less
Reference Vol. 127 page 483
Me igs County Deed Records
Judgment $149 .07 plus
accrue-d taxes . assessment~
and pena11 1es and cos ts of
o3CIIOn
CASE N O . 78
OL T 1J
PAR CE L NO LTT 01 T1tled
1n name ot Oscar L Badg ley
addres!. unknown
Situated in Letart Tow n
ship, Me igs County , Oh10 In
Lot 251 . Sec . S. Range 1? ,
Town 1. Oh io Company's
Purcnase , c onta 1nmg one
acre more or less .
Reference Vol 171 page 52
Me1os County Dee d Recoras .
Judgment S128 85 olus
ac crued taxes. assess ments
and pena1t 1es and costs ol
act 1on .
Whereas , such ju dgm en ts
or der sa1 d real propert y to be
sold by the unders igned to
sat 1sfy the total amount ot
such ju dgment
Now
tnerefore . public
noi1Ce is hereby g i ~&gt;~en that I,
James J Proff i tt , Sheri tt ot
Me1os County , Oh10, will sell
such real property a t publ 1c
auction , far cash to the
hi ghest b idder of an amount
su ff ic1ent to sat1s f y the
ju dgment against each Pl!r Cel
beginnmg at 9 00 am . at the
fr ont door of the Me i gs
county Cou rt House , in
Pomeroy , Ol'l10 on the 15th
day ot July , 1978 and con
t inuing therealler , from day
to aa y, 11 any parcel does not
re ce1ve a su ffi cient bid , II
shall be offered tor sate ,
under the same terms and
cond1 110ns of the f irst sale and
at the same t1me of cay at the
same place on the 17n d day of
July 1978 tor an amount
sufficient to satis fy the
tudgmenf aga 1nst the parcel

Me igs Cou nty , Ohio

161 11. 26, 171 3, 31e

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
FLEET INSURANCE
STUDENT ACCIDENT
INSURANCE

The Board of Educ.alion of
the Me i gs Lo c al Schoo l
Oistr l CI des ires to receive
sealed b 1ds for fleet i n
su ra nce and student acc ident
msurance
In order to be cons idered ,
all sea led b 1ds shall oe
re ce i ved in the office of the
super inten dent , South T]l i rd
A11enue , M iddleport , Oh1o , on
or before 11 · 00 noon on July

13. I 978

All bids subm itted shal l t:Je
va lid for a period ol at least
six ty ( 60 ) days from the date
ot b1d open 1ngs . The ontv
alteral 1ons wh ich shall be
allowed In a bid atter the Old
open ings are cha nges made
in the published rates after
the bids are opened
The Board of Ed ucation
re$erves the right to bccept
or reject anv or a ll bias
Jane wagner
Clerk Treasurer
Me igs Loc al School
District

161 27 171 3. 10. l1c

SPECIAL

1911
:!.25

10&gt;

E&lt;~t'h word 0\'t'f lhc lllliiUI1W11 1~
14·urds L,!; ~ t'tmU ~r word pt!r WI)

Ad'S
dca~l!

·Any U.S. made cor-parts
e•tra If needed. E•cludes
front-whHI drive cars.

rum1u1g o!lw1· tllltll l'i.II\.St'l'UII vc
wtll l&gt;t' chart:l!l.l at till' 1 d~t y

l'tltt•

l\l oiJI11:! Honlt' ~ \es 11.1Kl Yat•tJ !Wiles

161 26 171 3. 10, 31c

onlcr 25 ce llt clWQW fur atl.s l'ii iTY·
Ul ~ Bv~t Num~·r In Carc of The St:n·

W.. ~ck W. Carsey, Mgr.
lliil ' Phone "2-2T81

OHIO ESTATE OF Sh ir ley M
Shepard . DECEASED
Case No . 22411 Oo c~et12 qage

--

Tilt' PuiJ1~£111..' r lt-St•rvcs the rigl1t
to t'{ht or I'C}l't t au}' adlj tlt·cmctl ubJl'l'lUJIIal Tilt' PuiJIL'illt!r \l' lll11ut bto

!'l'SI'lJrllilhlt!

lol !11111'1' t!Will.lllt'

Ull'Ur·

rt'tilll~rtlull

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

WATER WEll drilling . W1ll1om T
Gro nl . 741 ·2879 .

lilt' day Ut-fun•puUht·at lt.»l
Sum~ \

+PM .
Fddi&lt;~ ttflt

~ltjlJJU

IIIUIIII

~ U~ll' J~~~ ~ ~y
June 27, 1978
Tnrough assocta t1 ons .;ou w1 11
make 1111 5 co m1nQ vear to ft y
new amb11t o ns w1ll be aroused
You ' ll do .veil but 1all.e ca re not
to be pu shed 1rrto Slluat,ons
that are ove r your head

CANCER !June 21-July 22) To-

LEO !July 23-Aug . 221 For a

per son wh o IS essen tratly opt1
m1s t1C you may be tean1ng
more toward se lf -doub ts t o da~·
Fo rtu nately , pr aiS€ Wtll ldt your
sp1nts

VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sep1 . 22) Fr-

nanc1at condr 110ns are a m1);ed
oag tod ay II you re not car eful
your outlay s wr ll ex ce vd what
you take 1n
ll BRA !Se pl. 23-0cl. 23) Ae
over ly asser11ve dS SOCiate may
try to fo rce opm1on s on yo u
today Stand up 101 that wh1ch
you kn ow 111 yo ur healf 1S r1ght

SCO RPIO !Oct 2•-Nov 22) You
can be o f grea ter hel p 10 a
f11end ~o~dh a problem today by
sho w1 ng t11m how to solve 11
h1msel f If you res olve 11 he II
learn nol h1ng

NO ITEM TOO large or too smal l.
Wdl bvy 1 p1ece or complete

household New. usf.td , or anri -'
ques Morfin s Furnd ure , 20 N .
7nd St . M1ddleport Phone

992 b370
CHIP WOOD
Pole ~
mo)( ,
diame ter 10 on larges t end , sa
per ton . Bundled slob , SO per
Ton Oeli~o~ered To Oh1 o Pollet
Co Rl 7 Pomeroy 992.7689

--

--

Let

Pomeroy Landmark
&amp; ·condition

your

Ho ven Pool Appl y at the pool
betwee n the h o ur~ of I to 5pm
304 882 · 2634

L•t' us test your w1ter

ROOFING

-llliil

Pl'o&gt;ne "2-liBI

BURROUGHS

or

992 5304.
TWO BEDROOM un fu rn1shed opt

Co11991-126B

rather
prema· SMAll BACHElOR opor tment
l urn1~he d . 1n M1ddlepor t Colt
even ts
99/3173 or 9'/1 5013
the y' ll

20-May 20)

SENSI MAliC

oc·

=

bustness purposes o r other
per sonal reas ons you may be
obhged to c ater to people
you re not overly lo nd of today
Do n 'llay 1! on loo hea111ly

In 1977 42 persons died in a
I · '·1 f'
· "•l b"
~o umy j!ll tre tn ""urn ta ,

~

Auto SalEs

wee kends toll949 1878

co unting moch1ne
Phone
qrn 7156, lhe Doily Senhnel .
I I 1 Court Stree t Pomeroy
OhiO .

HV~

ROOM hou~e w1th bath 19
acres of ground on CR 18 bet
ween Racine and Apple Grove
f-or more mlo•mo11011 call

147 3164

300 Coli 9'12 7539.

1q7b F. JSO FORD pickup Power
5teering brokes . auto. trons ..
AM FM stereo 11111th tope
player 37 000 m1le!o EMcellenf
&lt;ond11ion $3750. Call days ,
99') 55~5 or evemng~ 9&lt;19 nl b

247 1b78 .

12 FOOT SEA l oot olum1num boot
5 ' 1 h.p. Johnson motor w 1lh b
gal. tonk . Also 2 cyl Man
1gomerv Word small motor end
Shake,p.are I') vall mol or
good condit1011. AU l o1 S35{)
109 Kerr St ., Pomeroy . Phone

991-3407.
CROSBY CRUIS!RETT( 17 bool.

1974 PINTO w1!h rod1ol l11es and
new shock~ In good condil1on .
qn 7285 after 4 pm
1976 2 DOOR PINTO Good 111es.
rod1o heoter C.ood mileage
4 cyl
!.!d sh1f1 1973 Olds 88
Ro)'Oie lull v1n'(l llltenor AM
FM rod1o A C lilt stee11ng
wheel
1111ted glo ss 55 ,000
m1le~
(onlmt Joe Strubl• ,
99') 3A24 alter 5 30 p10

Ior the day :
Buck said, " I 1972 10Y01 A COROllA lbOO 7for any ot her · door ~lotion wagon Motor
recen tly rebu1 lt ~orne 1us l on
faith in human
body 992 3574
1971 DODG! CHARGER ouro
AC 5995 Al so
auto
529 5

1965 Dodge ,
~ ... en1ng~

304 773 -5679
1970 CHE VEllE au!OmOIIC !fans ,
b cy l $350 Coli 992 1316

llelp Wanted
LPN NEEDED Coli Arcod1o
1ng Home 614·b673fl16

N ur~

CARRIERS NEEDED fo 1 the Doily·
Sentmel PomeJO'f . M1ddlepor!
ond Syracuse oreo
Pleas-e
phone 992·1156 between 8 30
om and 5·00 pm

MUST hove ex
per1en ce m mochme shop
o pero1 1ons
Foreman 9)1 ·
peri91")CO p1eferred bul w1l l
Tram r~ ght applican t Appi1CO·
11o n5 01 re5ume~ will be oc
r epled Ju ne '16 through June
:W tmpP.IIOl l::.fectn t Co , 311!5
~y ( 01110re
M1ddleport Oh1o
45.lb0
HOM f

1973 PIN 10 SOUIRi:. ~tat1on
wagon w1th OH new !Ires mag
whee ls h t etlenl tondit1on .

Phone 991- 205a
t9b7 BUICK GS 400 Runs good .
new po1nl
rally
wheals
985-4726 olter b $400,

FOREMAN

1974 ESCAPADE 25 It motor
home 1wth extras . SbOO miles .
Pr~ce $111! ,000 614 9Cf1·2438 or

l1re s and wheels

5100. 614-593 7390
All WOOD 9 p1ece bedr oom
su11e bed. double dreHer and
m1rror chest hu tch boch elo1
ches t, (Orner che5t . desk ond
c ho~r
Ingels. Furn1!U1e S&lt;I9Cf
comple te 99'} 2b35 Alt er 5 r oll

304 861-20~
HAY TIMOTHY &amp; orchard grass.
F!egulor
sq uore
bales
Atvolloble now on wagons . Any
amount. Get hoy before
s101oge ot souif1 ce Pau l So yre
Great Bend Road R:t 338
Portland , 8&lt;43 459 1
ISH 1RUIMPH500tc 5700 IOmo
ol d washer ond dryer !.300
74'1 ·'1047
REOun SAH and lost W1 lh
Go8ese Tablets 4 ~ Vop water
pdls Nelson D11.19

lib._' ~~ =- -JCJrun.(ll'"
HOO~

-----

-::::

HOllOW Horses. 8uy sell
!rode or tro1n . New and used
saddles , Ruth Ree.,es , Albany

IOU [ b98-3l'l0.
RISING SlAR Kennel, Boord1ng
Indoor ond outdoor run-:.
Groomll'lg al l brHds. Clean '
sonltory fac ilities . Cheshire

Phono l614 ) 367-0191

304 773 5707
1977 ST ARCf&lt;AF l FOlO down
romper
stove re fr1gerator
Opens to /I tt Sleep s fl flerll!ct
cond1110n / 42 7"/SO

19/:J MONa CARLO londou P S ,
~ 8 . A .C. . AM fS.Ifock stereo.
t:kcellent co ndlllon. $1700
84~

1b72

r1 I

BORNLOSEH

Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

UK!,=. lHEO CA~"?

0
O'

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

EXPERIEN4:ED
Radiator,_..._
Service

"

Pomeroy
5-31 -1 mo.

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

MASH BROTHERS

IJTTLEOR PHAN ANN II-:

Print answer here :

J.rr-

r.

St. Rt. 124 toward

Rutland~

VINYL SIDING
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY , 0.
NEW LISTING - 3 years

"lid, 3 bdrm ranch in ex
:c lient co nd1fion . Level tot
n Rufland, equipped kit
:hen and many fca lures .

127,700.00.
iEW LISTING -- 2 slory

CALL
992-6323 or 992-6011
6· T9-1 mo . pd .

lt~al &amp;!lite tur safe
HOMESITE S l or ~ole I acre and
up. M1ddleporl near Rutland
Cotl991·7481 .

~~!~L~~~ Iou
~ t A- t l

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ollio

home , approk . 2
Jeres of ground , garden
,pace, f&gt;torage bu il ding, Up
10 l our bedrms. CLOSE TO
·r ame

POMEROY $15,000 00
NEW LISTING

In

Pome r oy,
rem odeled
"1ome , part basem en t ,
·ange &amp; ref. 1 or 3
.Jed rooms . II 1 baths . ON

LY \8,500 00 .
MINI FARM -

About 75

acres In Chester township,
fencing, garden space,

odrms ., 2 stories ASKING

110.000.00.
REDUCED TO Sl,900 , in
Pomeroy , 3 oorm s., bath ,

garage, cellar .

SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
Could be your m ott o
Your own busrness. Tra1n
,ng prov1dcd. move 1n and

lake over C,ALL FOR IN
FO .
3 BORM . Ranch ;n
Pomeroy ,

nice

Kitchen,

healolater fireplace and
nice v iew of the woodland
,through 4 large glass doors .

Has loog sun deck In back
and l•rge lronl porch . If
you like the county this will
please you .

If It's

room you want this has it
with all c ity con'Venle nces .

This has 3 or &lt; bedrooms.
dining room . equipped
ki t chen, furnace , large
yard, 2 car garage wllh 2
rooms tor storage and 2
attached rooms lor small
business .

APTS .

&lt;

aparlments, aU rented . In
town where you can walk to

work or shop. Nice size lot
in excellent location .

4 BEDROOMS - Wood
lrame house wllh la rge eatIn kitchen. den or study,
basement.

3

porches,

garage and two-lh lrds of an
acre.

OLDER HOME - 7 room s,
balh. gas floor fu rnace,

w ith

central

heat ~

5

bedrooms, 1 baths, clly
water Plus sma ll business

building wllh 7 baths. Also

a 4 room

apartment over a

3 car Qarage. All th is for
Sl8,000.
HOW LONG HAVE YOU
BEEN TRYING TO SELL
CALL US TO GET THE
SELLING JOB -DONE . WE
ARE
THE
HOUSE
SELLING CENTER .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
Associate Realtors

ASSOCIATES
992·7219-992-6191
997-2168

VA.FHA , 30 yr fmondng, olso
re financing . Ireland Mortgage.
77 E. State . Athens. phone (614}

f

.&amp;tTQW

FOH SAU . 1 story v1n vl
S1d111g. J bedroom downuoi,.,
'J upsto ir - . living room , dining
100m, both, kitchen wlthou! or
with oppl1onces. completelv
corpo ted downs ta irs , hot woter
h(tOI olr cor'd1 t10ned, wo!er
solten er COl po11 ond bQ(k
pot10 {lots ol concr ete) 2 out
bu1 l dmg~
jI
~o~1nyl·
\1d1ng)
l oca ted on s1de stree t 1n
Hutlond
Oh1o
Coli day
1 ~') 2711 01 even1ng / 11!'1295•
As~ l or Herb,

HOU ~ t:

Sweeper&lt;; . toosters irons all
!&gt;mall oppl1on ces . lawn mower
next to Sta te H1ghwoy Garage
or1 Route 7 Ph one (014 ) 985·

NO, ANNIE ... WH~N

JUST 50
'IOU'RE RfAlLV GOOD, YOU'RE ON
MY SIDE
YOU DDN'1 HAVE TO
SHOW GOODS! BOT I GYPSY SELLE ..
,CAN DELIVER ...

PUDDLE POO l S All s1res ond
shope5. Sw1m pools. 2 yeors
eKper~en ce
free es t1mates ,
onyth1n9
you
need
f or
undergr ound 5Wirn pool !&gt; N•w
r hem1cOI ond supp ly store
Albany .
Oh1o .
Phone
614 .698·b555 ( Alter b pm ,
614689 . 57~1 John Jolters or
689.5765 8dl Gdlette ) W&amp; or•
NOT oil we t on PRICES

DRIVE ALimE

747 -1348
HOWERY AND

MARTIN h cove ting , septic
svstem5
doler, bo ckhoe dump truc k
limes!one. grovel
blocktop
paving , Rt . 143. Phone I (6U )

b98 ·7331 .
PULLIN S fXCAVATING Comp lete
Se r vice . Phone ~2 · 2478 .

IF YOU hove o $8Ptice to oiler .
wont to buy or sell someth ing,
oe took1ng lor work ... or
whatever . you 'll get result'!i
loshu with o Sent ine l Wont Ad.

Coll99l-2156

ON US, OOOLA! Yi;OTTA
RIJN F'ASTSR!

And

here is $10,

All carpet installed wltli
podding at no chorge .

yd.

&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl
FRANK &amp;ERNIE

wf

Boy where you c1n come k1
ond see w~t you're alttting
- Good selections - Fully ·
stocked.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

NEV!~

HAVE To GHANt.E

,.,..e

Mt:NU ---

NOBoDY

eveR

icide
32 Lunch time
33 Type of
steak
40 Expect
41 Main artery
42 Settle up
43 Old
DOWN
!Medil.
island:
abbr.
2 Taro root
3 Cap
4 Actress
Merkel

credit
3.1 Forty winks
36 Brown kiwi
37 Table scrap
38 Suffix with
vulcan
39 Stripling

Mooday, June 26

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Non-king play beats south

L

TWIC.!.

Rutland,

!=-+---+--+......+,

WEST

EAST

• 8 52
¥ AQ854
• 10 9 6

•K10 63
• 10 9 7
t K J4

• &amp;2

• 96 5
SOUTH

• AJ 9
¥ K3

• 875
+AKQ104

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South
West Nortb East

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

~~~~COMES HER(:

&amp;-&lt;6-A

• J 62
• ~ Q3 2
• J 73

!1

r\JIVDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One leUer simply stands for 3nolher. In this sample A 11
used for 1he lh ree L's, X for 1he lw o o·s. elr Single letters.
apos trop hes, the lengt h and formation of lhe words are all
hints Ea ch day the code letters are dUrerent

Pass
Pass
Pass

lt
3 NT

South

I+

Pass

2 NT

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • 5

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alao Sontag
Oswald : "Some years ago
C A
TAD
HJVDVWA
M P D A , lhe late Walter Wyman of
Boston wrote a series of ·
RTEV
TD
SPJAL
C F P N A articles on high-card plays.
Some were examples of correel declarer play, but many
ALTJAX
MVWAD
PW
A L V more showed def~nders find·
ing ways to mislead declar·
p
Z P R. R C J
L V J P R Z er."
Alan : " Here is t! good
Yeal'lerday'• CryptoquoCe: TAKE TIME TO DElJBERATE; example of a king play or
BUT WHEN THE TIME FOR ACTION ARRIVES, STOP should I say a non-kino
9
TIUNKING AND GO ON.-ANDREW JACKSON
play."
Oswald: "Declarer won
BARNEY

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT
MAKES A
BED FOR

rou

RUSS MILLER 15 A I TRIEI? ro
GENIUS AT FILM- IN\KEA DEAL
IN\K ING ~UT HE
WITI-1 HIM ...
DOE5N f HAVE
eUT HE SEEMED
A HEAD FOR
70 BE HOLDING~U51NES5.
OUT.

CLAIMED HE'D

IJE.S TROYEP
Tl1E WITERIAL
l WAS INTER·
ESTED IN! 1
KNEW BETTE'Z!

AND VOU WERE RIGHT,
MR. 0\TILEMAN, ClE ·
0\USE I'vE GOT A
SAMPLE OF iT

RIGHT 1-ffRE IN
MY !JRIEFCA5E

z w

houu . 0
rooms and bot}), cellar , out·
buildings , • acres land, ot edge
of Rutlond . Comp lete trailer
hook · up also. 2 bonks apprais·
ad p,operty ot $15 ,500. Phone

SHE WENT OFF VISITIN'
AN' DIDN'T
FETCH IN
ENNY LOGS ' -"-- '

FIYt: ACHES of lond land on Hysell
Hun kood . for de to lls . coli
b ,. _99'}. 2354.

gibbon
34 Get on

• Q 74

DURN MAW'S LAZV HIDE!!

house In Hor·
with paneling .
co1 peling ond cl ly water , Coli
ah•r 5 p•n 747·2256

33 Malay

the heart lead w1th his kin g
and s tudied th e hand. He
could count eighj tri cks and
could choose a diamond or
spade fines se for th e ninth .
Which should he tak e'' He
finally decided to go to dum·
m y, lead "the queen of
spades, rise with the ace and
work on the club if East's
king did not appear."
Alan : '· Thi s gave East a
chance to do som e think1 ng
on h1s own. At tri ck two
South led a club to dummy' s
jack West played the eight.
Then came that queen of
spades lead. East ducked
quickly . Declarer rose with
lh e ace. cashed his cl ubs and
finall y tried the diamond
finesse to go down two
tr1cks."
Oswald : " Easl had fig.
ured out declarer' s plan and
co unlered it by a brilliant
non-king play ."

~~rmw.u}j

CKVPTOQUOTES

- TWO STORY frame

r1son~o~1lle

Answer

NORTH

591 3051.

9'12 7C114 .
rwO BEDROOM

8:30-LaYerne &amp; Shi rley 6; Ba seball (Reds) 4.
9:oo-Movoe " Big Bob Johnson &amp; hts Fantastic Speed
Circ us" 3, 15; Three 's Compony6.13; Movie " In The
Heat of the Night " 8, 10; Prrceless Treasures of
Dresden 33; Youth Unemployment : A Question of
Survlya l 70.
9:30-Carler Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
IO :oo-20-206.13; College Can Be Killing 33; News 20 ..
10·30-Biack Perspective On The News 10.
11:oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, TS; Dick Cavett 10 : Over
Easy 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,&lt;,15; Soap 6,1 3; It's Your
Turn : Letters to CBS News 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
" Polranha , Piranha" 10 .
12:oo-McCloud B; Janak! 33 : 11 :05---Movle " Hav ing
Babies" 6, 13.
I :oo-Tomorrow 4; 1· 40-Koiak 8; 2:05---News 13 .

29 Insect•

A• Low As

Call7•2·2211
TAtK TO
Wendell or Herb Grato
or Gene Smltli

9 JC&gt;-Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair 10
10 oo-Card Sharks 3,4, 15. Edge ol Night 6; Pass The
Buck 8; Joker 's Wild 10 ; To Tell The Trul h 13; Over
Easy 33 .
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,10; S20,ooo Pyramid 13; Painl Along With
Nancy Kominsky 33.
11 oo-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6.13.
11 30-Wheel ol Fortune 3,15; Pa rtridge Family 4,
Love ol Life 8,10; 11 :55---CBS News 8; Lov ing Free
10.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15 ;
Gambif8; Midday Magaz ine 13; Watch Your Mouth
33.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8.10. Frenc~ Chef 33.
1 oo-For Richer , For Poorer 3: All My Children 6, 13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; AI The Top 33.
1:30-Days of Our L1ves 3,4, IS ; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2:oo-one Lite to Live 6, 13; Meeting of Minds 33; 1· 300octors 3,4, 15; Guiding Light a, 10. 3.00-Anolher
World 34,1 5; General Hospllal6,13 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20,33
3:30-All In The Fam ily 8,10, Consumer Survival Kit
20; Consumer Survival K1l 33.
4 00-Mister Carloon 3; Superman 4: For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6, Addams Family 8,
Sesame 51. 10,33; Malch Game 10; Dinah 13.
4 Jr&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan 's Is. 4,8; Batmnan 10;
Little Rascals 15.
s :oo-Here Come T~e Brides 3: My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke B; Mister Rogers 10.33; Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat
Juncllon 15.
5 31)-()dd Couple 4, News 6 ; Elec Co 70,33; Hogan's
Heroes IS.
6:oo-News 3,&lt;,8,10 ,1 3,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Th1ngs Grow 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS New s 8,10; Over Easy~~; Antiques 33
7· 00-Cross-Wits 3,4. New lywed Game 6, 13; News 10;
Gilligan's Is . 15; French CHel 20; Driving 3J.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Candid Camera 6;
MacNei l-Lehrer Repor1 20,33; Pr ice 1s Right 10;
That's Hollywood 13; Cliffwood Ave . Kids 15
8:oo-Man FromAIIantis 3, 15; Happy Days 6; Redscene '78 4; Movie 11 Wt'lere the lilies Bloom" 8,10;
Nallonal Geographic 70,33. Oral Ro berls 13; 8:30Laverne &amp; Shirley 6 .

Mr.
Blinltt!

Rubber Back Carpet

Floor Covering In Stock

NEW-JUST OFF PRESSI JUMBLE BOOK 111 wi!h 110puules IS avai l·
able lor $135 postpaid from Jumble. c/o 1hls newspaper. PO Box :w,
NorwoOd. N.J 076.W. Include your name, address. liP code ,and make
checks payab le to Newspaperbooks.

walls
6 Violently
7 Begin afresh
8 Ancient
times
9 Lon 10 Ass: Fr.
14 Malay dagger
Yesterday's
16 _ hand
enemy
(help )
21 Director,
17 Box-score
David Noted
%Z Med. center
barrier
entry
Medal of
18 Female deer Z5 Spoil
Honor
19 "Got :!6 Noun suffix
wearers
With an
:l8 Greek
==="---"===-&gt;.-'--~----'----· ""Fawn 's
Angel"
contest
mother
211 "Two Women" 30 " Passage
24
Used
a scull
Oscar
to - "
the
don't make 25 Diadem
winner
31 Dingy
t'irties .. er, 27 Impresario '!i r:-"r,"'"'r."..,.......,.car is
thirt'1es. favorite
sign
28 Novelist
Jane

Exper1 installation.

SQ.

GET INTO A "STEW"

II receive
remaininq t2o.ooo
Glfiler the
InS

SAVE ALOT

4 •88

Best to stay " cool " when captured by
cannibals. so as not t o do thiS -

l Arrange
6 Coliseum
II Turkish
city
12 Stockholders '
"fruit "
Part of the
fireworks
Iroquois

AI.LEYOOP

&amp;

1

I Answer:

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Uke some

SPHDV DRilli NG Woler well
d1d l 11lQ
c: ommerc1ol and
domest1c; Pump :;ales and ser ·
v1c e W2 6295 or 304 895 3802 .

SAVE ON
CAIPniNG

Saturday's

Jumbles· ENACT JOINT THRUSH WISDOM

~• ..,tr:l

"'WKT 11-11'-G IS GAIN ING

EXCAVATING dor er . bo ck hoe
and di!cher (hade~ R Hot
he ld , Back Hoe Ser~o~ice
Rutland , Oh1o . Phone 742·2008 .
Will do 'oofmg. cons truction
plumbing ond hea1mg No tob
too Iorge or too srnolf Phone

our

line

985-4151
Ohio 457?"

SEWING MACHINE R:epo 1n ser
v1te . oil make~ qq2.2784 The
Fobr 1c
Shop . Pomeroy
Author i1ed S1nger Soles and
Servtce We sharpen Sc,uors .
EXCAVATING do1or loader ond
backhoe work, dump !rucks
and lo· boys for h1re, w1l l houl
f ill d~rt , lo ~o 1 l , l1mestone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roge r Jel ·
t er~ . day phone 992 7089 . mgh!
phone 99') 3515 or 992 · 5232 ,

side

Chester,

' REMODELING , Plumb1ng , healing
and all types of gene1ol 1epo11
Work guoronteed 70 years er ·
perience . Phone 992 ·211!09

3 PROPERTIES IN 1 Large 9 room older home

NEW 3 bed,oom house , ') baths,
all elec ., 1 acre, M iddleport,
dose to Rutland Phone 992·
740 I.

II

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

washer · drrer and n ice
terraced lo 70'x100' .

p.r l basemen l. OTHER
FEA 1 URE S. SIB ,OOO.OO.
MANY OTHER PROPER ·
TIES TO CHOOSE FROM .
WE HAV E QUALIFIED
BUYERS FOR MEIGS
COUNTY PROPERTIES.
LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLEL AND
REA LT OR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEO_NA

lB

BRADFOR D Auctioneer
Com
plete Serv1Ce Phone 949 · 7487
or 949.7000 ~o ci ne . Oh1o (nil
81adf ord

3815.

step . saver kftchen with
large dining area Lar ge
family
ro om
with

BRICK

bui ld1ng houses 1epo1 r work
and cobme ts. Coli Guy H.
Ne1gler Q49 '1508 after 5 prn

not a

r I .I XXXI X]
(Answer s tomorrow)

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

&amp; A. Frame Homes .
For Free Estimates

N! IGlER BUilDING Supply lor

OLD BUT NICE -

business,

Soffit, Room Additions

4-lO-ttc

992-332S

Weddings

Now .arrange the ctrcled letters to
form the surprtse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

"""''""N ANfiiiE-GTPSY SWEETHEART

RIOE A BllODI'&lt;ISTICK...
BUT I CAN CAll
TH' TURH ON PtfN1Y
o· PfOPlE'"'

W ITH

SOM E'THING
SHOCKING!

~ U:t:::~::::-.::::::::llll::: . t: J I [ I I

Let
us
capture . and
preserve those precious
moments forever -

Golden Anniveroary
Fa mlly Reunions
Speci1l Occasions
Photography
is

CHA~6ED

IERRTAYI

Silver and

.

J

I K

. I I [!J

l

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-ttc

"" - 992-2841

by Henri Arnold and Sob Lee

0

51 1PlUXED~

.

MOORE'S

SMITH NELSON ·
MOTORS, INC.

0.

... BUT I'M AFI&lt;AID
IT STIL-L. f1f6 SOME
BU(o&lt;; IIJ IT .

IT'S MY OIJIJ
l?a.fPE AIJD I'M

HOO DO YOU

E~f'E;gl Ma.m f-)0...

ALUM. &amp;

W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

LOVEC

&amp; Gilson Tillers, Lawn Boy
Mower Sale• &amp; Service.

Witltor to the

NEW LISTING - New 3
bedroom brick home . Nice

Jus! the thing for o sho11 over·
n11e or sk1ing wllh the 6!&gt;0 Mer
cu1 y motor . Moke us on off er
Phone 992·2304 May be seen
01Doug s Manne , Pomeroy
lug !luck

service, Massey Ferguson

399 W. Main St.

B.

Unsctamble these fou r Jumbles,
one letter to each square , to form
lout ordinal)' words

Small engine &amp; mower

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

¥• mite off Rt. 7 by-pus on

barn. nicely remodeled
home with basement,
porches. carpeting. THIS
19b6 VW BUG ~41)0 992 5B58
YOU
MU ST
SEE
130,851.00.
1977
VOLARE
ROAD
Runner
.
318
.
oil
HOME - In M;d
block w1lh Super Po ck A C..
GEMINI !May 21·J une 20) For
TRUCK TOPPER 5150 f,e lo B OLDER
otcport , 11 1 baths. 3 4
stereo Aller 5 30 or onyt1me

You 11 entOY be1ng netptul 10 ·
day as tong as you don 1 fee l
11 s demanded at you In tho se
Instances you re apt to ba c ~

MODERN SUPPLY

'c.._

ROGER HYSEll.
GARAGE

Ileal &amp;tale for Sale

~

99'1 2238

';1'jJjj'iMf )i;)'i1'

'COORS€ 1DON'T

Phone 992-118T

TO
MUR I&gt;Ell HER
UNCLE!

P~OTTING

tn

,.._the ........

The Photo Place

9a':!_ack W. Cor•y, Mgr .

cases a s tra1 ghttme 1S
COUNTR Y MOBILE Hom e Pork
sho rt est d1stance be·
Route 33 north ol Pomeroy . 1978 RM 250 Suzuki Will trade for
tw o p otnts
Wo rk
large lots . Coli 99'1· 7-479
car or sell $ 1700 94q·23H7
1nlenned1ar1es to da y
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Fob. 19) SI:NIOR CITIZENS Ow new GE REFRIGERATOR Gas cook1ng
ren ter s OS SI~t on c:e you rnoy be
stove . Kit chen cabineh Double
Don ' t turn a deal ear to sound
oble to l1vc m ou1 aparl men t
smk . 992·7194
adv1ce loday tust be ca use ' '
lor less than SSO o month . For
co me s fr om a person wh o 1S
HAY
FOR rn01e 1nlormollon coli
more mlormo110n
ton to c: t
not one at you1 favo r1te people
949-2812.
vdlo ge Manor Apartmenh
PISCES !Feb. 20-March 20) In
991 77B7
1q70 HONDA Cl 350 mot01 t ycle
bus1ness matters today you 'd
Good
con dli1 0n
S300
be WISP 10 wa r+-; with the re · CORNlR LOI fo1 11ode1 lopoc e on
r1 ... erlront

Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

( Bob Hoeflich l

Pomeroy Landmark ·

BROKE·· WHEN I
ACCUSE HER OF

6:00-News 3,4,B, 10, 13. 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33 .
6:30-NBC News3 ,4, 15; ABC News T3 ; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8, TO , Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7 .oo-Cross.WIIs 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; Marty
Robbins ' Spotlight 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15;
Daniel Foster, M.D. 20; Shepherd's r;e 33.
7·30-That Nashville Music 3: In Search of 4, Muppet
Show 6: Match Game PM 9; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report10.33; Wild Kingdom tO; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville On the Road 15.
8:(}()-Litfle House on The Prairie 3,4,1S; Baseball6, 13;
J effersons 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 70,33.
9 30-Good Times 8,10 ; Turnaooul 10,33.
9:00-Movie "The Girl from Pelrovka" 3,4, 15; Mash
8,10; Canal Zone 10,33; 9:31)-()ne Day AI A Time
a. TO.
~ ~ ~~~ ®

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

.A ~

109 High St.

AND THEN 50 FO!t

AND UNl.OAO

Free

HONDA 1J5 on.oft rood moiOICY·
cl e fo, sole Excellent cond1
t'1on. Phone 9&lt;49·22lq ,

In some
not th e
twee n
through

ARIES !March 21-April 19) Pro-

brands.

, water with Co-op . water
soHener. Model UC-SVI.
Now Only •289,95

~I

Coii304 ·86J OOBB afte r Spm

CA PRI CO RN IDee . 22-Jan . 19)

sources of o th ers tnstead a t
yours atone Be su re everyone
ante s up equ ally

have enlarged our
service department and
Wtll serviu Hotpoint and

complete hou)eholds
Wn te USED IRACTOR S
BUSINt: SS FOR ~ole Beer Wme
MD Miller. HI -4 , Pomero y or MF 135 D1esel · MF.130 D1esel
Corry Our 997.5786 berween
MF150 D 1 e ~el . MF235 D1esel
col1 992 ·77t:IJ.
10 8 5 Do1ly
MFI65 0 1esel · MF285 01esel
WANT TO buy 5 or 6 II tractor
Will
MAINTAIN Coh forn 1o Red
MF1135 D1 e5el Cob, 011 &amp;
blade
Nathan Von omon
wood Ranch
1sl floor
3
hea ter.
742 2761
bedroo&lt;T1 both l1v1ng roam
N!W &amp; USED IMPlEMENTS
lo1ge k1IChen dm1ng room
WAN! 10 buy Small bl ock Chevy Mfq Boler . MF 10 Bol er · Mf 110
den
Full sile bo!.emenl wllh
Baler
·
Mot1hew5
Rotary
Scyrhe
moTor 985·4133
lo1ge carpeted recreat ion room
MF8BO Semi mounted 6 bol
ond both l oca ted near schools ,
tom Plow · MF520 12 D1sc
churche s, shoppmg and recreo·
MF200 2 Row Chopper · MF39 '1
11011 . Gas heot 11ew tentrof an
Row Plante r'&gt; · Mecharll(al
cond1 110n 111g Lor ge lot Pnvote
Transplanter
WAITRESS
No
exper1en ce
p0!10 lots ol uees Over~1zed
SHINN"S TRACT DR SAlES
necessary . Apply 1n person of
double gOroge 1&lt;~ • 30 Custom
Phon
e
458·
1630
Blue lorton M1ddleport
d 1ope ~
and othe1
extras
Leon W Vo.
Owne1 be1ng tron 51erred . Sell
MA 1URE RESPONSIBLE woman 05
f 01 rtHd b() S 304 273 1617,
bobys11ter housekeeper. l 1..,e in
pos1 t1 on
separate house1ng 1971 DATSUN '1 ton pickup 4 .
speed. new clutch , muff ler
and excellent benefits No
brakes and pomt . 25 m p g
smo k1ng
Mu!.l
d11ve

21) Somet 1mes dorng bus1ness SWIMMING INSTRUCTOR o1 New
w1th frt ends we don 1 atway s
get tne bes t deal This co uld
nappen to you today because
you don I want to hur t a pal s
1ee11ngs

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?
soften

SAGITTARIUS !Nov . 23-Dec .

•

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
300f&gt;Uin St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992-6263
8A.M. to4 :30P.M.

bl4-b96 -IIB7.

day you r p11me mo t1ves may be COINS . CURR ENCY tokens , old
pocket wo !r he~ ond c:hOIIl5 ,
u11 t1a lly a bit s~?ll·cen t ('red
51 l.,er and gold We need 1904
You II fare bet h?r d you th1nk o t
and older s1lver co1ns Buy sell
other s as we ll as No I Fmd
or !rode Coil Roge r Womslev .
out more ahout yot~ r s ell tly
742·2331 .
send1ng tor yo1n co py 0 f Asil o·
Graph Letter M all 50 cen t s l o r fiMBER POMEROY Fore~t Pro·
sel l ea c h and a long
ducts . Top pr1ce f or slondmg
addre ssed stamped envelope
sow t1mber Coli 9«n59b5 or
lo Aslr o-G raph P 0 Bo&gt; 4H9
Kent Ho nb~ .1·446_.:,8570
Rad1 0 C11y S ta!I OI\ N Y 10019
OLD FURNIT URE ICe bo xes , bross
Be swe 10 spe edy 011th s1gn
bed'&gt; 1ron beds desk!. . etc

11

H. L WRITESEL

.,.,

NOW'G M.Y
CHANCE TO
FINO Hf.R SUN

.L-.--------..1

COAl . LIME STONE . sond grovel,
colc1um chloride. fel ld 1zer dog
food . ond all types of soil E)( ·
cels 1or Sol! Works. Inc E Mom
SALES AND SERVICE
St . Pomeroy 99733q1
Ch1 mney Swept by a professional i . . . - - - - - - -1c;1c;
·9_·c;lf..;c...:.J.
---w1th modern dustless cleaning -BEST SELECTION of the best wood
5toves in Southeastern Oh1o
old lime Ron
wor~monsh1p
I 37J.f&gt;050
Zortm an . call fihrir~:::;~~S~
~ •
Jotul , Morse , Efel, T110IIO
Tempwood. ond Nofh uo . Z1on
IU..AV)-......
Heal Co ., 8 Putnam Or (oil M1ll
St ). Athe n~ 614.592·6079

tl1ru FntJ11~
4P M.

MUST A LEFr IT IN THE CABIN
SOMEWHERE ... H CU~E ME WHI LE
I GO TAI&lt;S' A ~OOK!

Co II Aller 5:00 or
Anytime Saturday
992-7119 or "2,5041
4-27-tfc

CARTER

1q72 Coven try 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 )( 60 2
bedroom

MuruJuv
Noon Ull Sat ill Jay

Bernice Bede Osol

beings

rank ~ce
·
Chester, Ohio j

Box 3

10-30-c .

2 borh

Tucsda)'

ASTRO•GRAPH

A thought
Author Pearl
feel no need
faith than my

Jack's Septic .

Wil l CARE fo1 th e elderlv 1n our
home Phone 99'1 731 4

son t. W. Vo bes1de Heck ' ~
1973 Broodmore )4 I( b4 2
bedroo m
1973 Oor10n 14 K 00 2 bedroom
1972 V1ctorion 14 x 1;,7 3 bedroom ,

NOTICE.

Fof Tuesday . June 27

TAU RUS !April

Anyday, anytime.
Pl'o&gt;ne 981-31106
Jack Ginter 985·3806

TUESDAY, JUNE27, 1978
5:&lt;5---Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 6 oo-PTL
Club 15; Summer' Semester 10.
6:30-Focus on Columbus &lt;; New s 6; Summer
Sefl1esler B; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:&lt;5---Mornlng Reporl 3; 6:50-GOOd Morning , Wesl
Virginia 13; 6:55---News 13.
7:00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8, Porky Pig 10.
7:25---Chuck Wh ile Reports 10; 7.30-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:00- Merv Grltfrn 3; P~ il Donahue 4.13.15;
Emergency One6: Pass The Buck 10: Brady Bunch

Heroes 15.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

estimate, :Z4 hour service.

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOM ES. Pt Plea·

On June 14 , 1978 . in the
Meigs County Pr obate Court ,
Case No 22411, Ronald G
Shepard , Box 28A . Rutland .
OhiO was appo1nted Executor
of the estate of Sh 1rley M
Shepard , deceased , tare of
Rutland , Ohio .
Manning D Webster
Probate Judge
Clerk
( 6 ) 16 (71 3, 10. Jtc

s:oo-Here Come The Brides 3; My Th ree Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Nelqhborhood 20.33;
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One
I3; PeiHcoat Jun ction T5.
5 3,1)-()dd Couple&lt; ; News 6; E lee. Co. 10,33; Hogan's

-DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;

R.esidential
and
commercial. Call for

Ph011t&gt; 992-2156

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

ce ed wtth yo ur plan s
than deba:1ng th ern
lurety .,..1th an o ther A s
unwmd lhem sch•es
prove you r1ght

both

1''

Senices Offered

Pomeroy Landmark

llllt'l.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,

"

BEOHOOM
992-7453

cut· an·t'ptt'd onlY w1l11 l'a!lh w1 U1

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Mobile u-om~ ~ -sale
T H~!f

Call Now For
Apliointment

In nwmuq', Card of TI1tt11ks ami
6 Li! IIL~ jk't' Wort.! , SJ.OIJ

FHH 8 acres ol hoy for cleaning
l 1eld 742·2754

1.DO--· Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 15---News 13 .

MONDAY, JUNE 76,1978

FRH KlfTENS Very lome. Used to
children . Don Nelson. 992-7313

3.75

3.00

11\IIIUllWll Ca~h Ill adVitlllt' .

James J Proff it!

Sheri If of

l.~

1.00
ISO

Business Services

FHH 10 good home block female
pup . Will be me-dnJm to Iorge 1n
s11e
Good
home only .
843 '2797

ChHI'j.tt'

( '&lt;~~II

s. Produce and Dry Goods
In order to be considered ,
all seated DtdS shaH b e
received in the office o f the
Clerk , South Th ird Avenue .
Middlepor 1, Oh io on or .before
12 : 00 noon on J uly l J, 1978.
The Board ot Educat ion
reserves the right to ac cept
or retect any or all bids .

GiveAway

WHEEl
ALIGNMENT

15 Wunl\ol U111h'r
Ida}

u n~nown

Sit uated in Olive Township .
Me ,gs County, Oh 10, Part of
L ot 1'12 Section 24 , Town 3,
Range 11 Ohio Company ' s
Purchase . bemg tot 8, 9, 10
and 1) ot tot 11 of the Sub
d ivision of sa1d tot t:Jy A W
Swan .
Reference vot 110 page 53 1
Meigs County Deed Records
Judgmen t S99.35 plus ac
crued taxes . assessments and
penatt 1es and costs of acti on

WANT AD
CHARGES

10:00-Lou Grant 8, 10 ; 11 :oo-News 3.4,6,8, 10.13.15.
It :30-Johnny Ca rson 3,4, 15; Soap 6, 13; Movie
" SpellbOund" O; Movie " The Five Penn ies" 19.
Tt :40-To Be Announ ced 33; 12;(}()-ABC News 33.
12 :05---Pollce Slory 6,13 ; 12 :3C&gt;-Janakl 33;

"TELEVISION
VIEWING

ARE YOU SURE YOU CAN
SPARE IT, 6 .0.?

,

,3· Fuceol •01q

Meat

DICK TRACY

.

_

ltfreeze

J.

9-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 26, 1978

15 INSTOCK
Largest Selection In

Tht Vallt)

FER TH'
FIRE

I RECKON
I'LL HA'JE
TO DO IT

M'/SELF

A Pennsylvania reader
wanls lo know what is meant
by a lead of a "sneak ".
Beca use a singleto n is
so m e tim es ca lled a

"s neak",

the expression

means tha t you have led a
singleton .
rNEWSI'Af&gt; ..: K ~: NTEH.PR I SE ASSN 1

!FOr a copy ol JACOBY MOO·
ERN. send S1 /o: 'Win a/
Bridge. " care of tftiS newspa ·
per. P. 0. Box 489 Radro City
Stat10n. New York. N. Y 100T9 1

�w.ant Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

•

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, JWJe 26, 197P
IN THE

NOTICE TO BIDD ERS .

COMMON PLEAS COURT

'

MEIGSCOUNTY . OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND

TA XES

CASES NO 780LT7

18
DL T I
YBOLT
9
78 D L T 10
780LT11
71 OL T 12

78 DLT 13

NOTICE OF SALE UNDER
JUDGMENT
OF
FORECLOSURE OF LIENS
FOR DELINQUENT LAND
TAXES

Whereas j udgmen t has
been rendered aga ins t cer
tain parcels of real estate for
taxes , assessments, costs and
ch arges as follows
CASE
NO
78 DLT
7
PARCEL NO OUT 01 T itled
1n the name of William S
Reed . J . H Prvor , J
R
Hawley, Trustees of Long
Bo flo m D 1V1S10n of C1112ens
Telephone Co , addresses

The Board of Education of
the Me tgs Local School
o 1· s~r 1· c 1 destres to receive
.
•
•
sealed bidS tor the follow.ng .
1. Tires ~nd Tubes
. 2 Gasolme , 011 , ana An

AnalyStS
Requtred
5. Mtlk and Da ir y Products
Bread and
Bakery
6
Products
2 den· ~
Jdai•:.
6da;·l!

Jane Wagner
Clerk Treasurer
Me1gs Local School
Oislr1C I

Olutuar)'

CASE NO

76

DLT 6

¢1ARCEL NO CBT 0\ T illed
1n name of Curt1s Mates .
address unknown
Situated
1n c arpenter
Vil lage . Columbia Township ,
Meigs County , Oh10 . Bemg
Lot No 6 and the North hall of
LOI NO . 5 adi01n1ng IOI No 6.
Fr ac t ion 4, Town ship 9,
Range IS Ohio Company's
Purchase
Reference Vol 147 page 358
Meigs County Deed Records
Judgment S41 94 plus ac .
cr ued taxes , assessments and
pen a tt ies and co sts of a c t ion
CASE
NO
78 DL T
9
PARCEL NO CBT 02 T1tled
1n name or A tva M11ter , ad
dress unknown
S1tu ated
in
Columbia
Township , Me 1gs County,
Oh10 , Sec 7, Lol 560 S Pari ot
8 acre mill lo t in S W 1 ~ 1 50
a cres .
Referen ce 162 page 673
Meigs County Deed Re cords
Judg ment S17 49 plus ac
cr ued taxes , assessments &lt;"nd
penatt,es and costs of act1on .

CASE

NO

78 DL T

10

PARCEL N O CBT ·03 Titled
in J H Martm and Wi llie
Mart 1n
Situated
in
Columb 1a
Townsh i p , Me igs County ,
Ohio Be ing N half of N E
quarter of S W quarter , Sec
35, Town 9, Range 15 Oh10
Company 's Purc h ase con
ta1n1 ng 13' '1 a cres , more or
less
Referen ce vol 15b page '275
Meigs County Deed Re cords
Judgment S310 .80 plus
accrued taxes , assessment
and pena 111es ana cos ts of
action
CASE NO . 78
DLT 11
PARCEL N O. CHT 02 T1tled
'" name of C C Lew is. ad
dress unknown
Situated
in
(hes ter
TownSh i P , Me 1gs county ,
Oh10 4.62 acres 1n Fraction 35
Sec 28 , Town J , Range 11
Ohio Companv 's Purchase .
wh ich 11es west on the h1Qh

woy

Referen ce vol 141 page 95
Me igs County Deed Records
Ju dgment \ 11 15 plus ac
crued taxes . assessmenh and
pena1t 1es and costs of ac t ion
CASE NO 78
DL T 11
PARCEL N O CHT 01 T itled
' "name ot aashan D 1V1S10n of
Cllize ns
Telep hone
Co ,
Add r ess unknown
S1tuated
1n
Chester
TownShip , Me 1gs County ,
Ohio part of S E quarter of
Secti on 3, Town J . Range 12
Ohio Company 's Purchase,
being one acre mor e or less
Reference Vol. 127 page 483
Me igs County Deed Records
Judgment $149 .07 plus
accrue-d taxes . assessment~
and pena11 1es and cos ts of
o3CIIOn
CASE N O . 78
OL T 1J
PAR CE L NO LTT 01 T1tled
1n name ot Oscar L Badg ley
addres!. unknown
Situated in Letart Tow n
ship, Me igs County , Oh10 In
Lot 251 . Sec . S. Range 1? ,
Town 1. Oh io Company's
Purcnase , c onta 1nmg one
acre more or less .
Reference Vol 171 page 52
Me1os County Dee d Recoras .
Judgment S128 85 olus
ac crued taxes. assess ments
and pena1t 1es and costs ol
act 1on .
Whereas , such ju dgm en ts
or der sa1 d real propert y to be
sold by the unders igned to
sat 1sfy the total amount ot
such ju dgment
Now
tnerefore . public
noi1Ce is hereby g i ~&gt;~en that I,
James J Proff i tt , Sheri tt ot
Me1os County , Oh10, will sell
such real property a t publ 1c
auction , far cash to the
hi ghest b idder of an amount
su ff ic1ent to sat1s f y the
ju dgment against each Pl!r Cel
beginnmg at 9 00 am . at the
fr ont door of the Me i gs
county Cou rt House , in
Pomeroy , Ol'l10 on the 15th
day ot July , 1978 and con
t inuing therealler , from day
to aa y, 11 any parcel does not
re ce1ve a su ffi cient bid , II
shall be offered tor sate ,
under the same terms and
cond1 110ns of the f irst sale and
at the same t1me of cay at the
same place on the 17n d day of
July 1978 tor an amount
sufficient to satis fy the
tudgmenf aga 1nst the parcel

Me igs Cou nty , Ohio

161 11. 26, 171 3, 31e

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
FLEET INSURANCE
STUDENT ACCIDENT
INSURANCE

The Board of Educ.alion of
the Me i gs Lo c al Schoo l
Oistr l CI des ires to receive
sealed b 1ds for fleet i n
su ra nce and student acc ident
msurance
In order to be cons idered ,
all sea led b 1ds shall oe
re ce i ved in the office of the
super inten dent , South T]l i rd
A11enue , M iddleport , Oh1o , on
or before 11 · 00 noon on July

13. I 978

All bids subm itted shal l t:Je
va lid for a period ol at least
six ty ( 60 ) days from the date
ot b1d open 1ngs . The ontv
alteral 1ons wh ich shall be
allowed In a bid atter the Old
open ings are cha nges made
in the published rates after
the bids are opened
The Board of Ed ucation
re$erves the right to bccept
or reject anv or a ll bias
Jane wagner
Clerk Treasurer
Me igs Loc al School
District

161 27 171 3. 10. l1c

SPECIAL

1911
:!.25

10&gt;

E&lt;~t'h word 0\'t'f lhc lllliiUI1W11 1~
14·urds L,!; ~ t'tmU ~r word pt!r WI)

Ad'S
dca~l!

·Any U.S. made cor-parts
e•tra If needed. E•cludes
front-whHI drive cars.

rum1u1g o!lw1· tllltll l'i.II\.St'l'UII vc
wtll l&gt;t' chart:l!l.l at till' 1 d~t y

l'tltt•

l\l oiJI11:! Honlt' ~ \es 11.1Kl Yat•tJ !Wiles

161 26 171 3. 10, 31c

onlcr 25 ce llt clWQW fur atl.s l'ii iTY·
Ul ~ Bv~t Num~·r In Carc of The St:n·

W.. ~ck W. Carsey, Mgr.
lliil ' Phone "2-2T81

OHIO ESTATE OF Sh ir ley M
Shepard . DECEASED
Case No . 22411 Oo c~et12 qage

--

Tilt' PuiJ1~£111..' r lt-St•rvcs the rigl1t
to t'{ht or I'C}l't t au}' adlj tlt·cmctl ubJl'l'lUJIIal Tilt' PuiJIL'illt!r \l' lll11ut bto

!'l'SI'lJrllilhlt!

lol !11111'1' t!Will.lllt'

Ull'Ur·

rt'tilll~rtlull

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

WATER WEll drilling . W1ll1om T
Gro nl . 741 ·2879 .

lilt' day Ut-fun•puUht·at lt.»l
Sum~ \

+PM .
Fddi&lt;~ ttflt

~ltjlJJU

IIIUIIII

~ U~ll' J~~~ ~ ~y
June 27, 1978
Tnrough assocta t1 ons .;ou w1 11
make 1111 5 co m1nQ vear to ft y
new amb11t o ns w1ll be aroused
You ' ll do .veil but 1all.e ca re not
to be pu shed 1rrto Slluat,ons
that are ove r your head

CANCER !June 21-July 22) To-

LEO !July 23-Aug . 221 For a

per son wh o IS essen tratly opt1
m1s t1C you may be tean1ng
more toward se lf -doub ts t o da~·
Fo rtu nately , pr aiS€ Wtll ldt your
sp1nts

VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sep1 . 22) Fr-

nanc1at condr 110ns are a m1);ed
oag tod ay II you re not car eful
your outlay s wr ll ex ce vd what
you take 1n
ll BRA !Se pl. 23-0cl. 23) Ae
over ly asser11ve dS SOCiate may
try to fo rce opm1on s on yo u
today Stand up 101 that wh1ch
you kn ow 111 yo ur healf 1S r1ght

SCO RPIO !Oct 2•-Nov 22) You
can be o f grea ter hel p 10 a
f11end ~o~dh a problem today by
sho w1 ng t11m how to solve 11
h1msel f If you res olve 11 he II
learn nol h1ng

NO ITEM TOO large or too smal l.
Wdl bvy 1 p1ece or complete

household New. usf.td , or anri -'
ques Morfin s Furnd ure , 20 N .
7nd St . M1ddleport Phone

992 b370
CHIP WOOD
Pole ~
mo)( ,
diame ter 10 on larges t end , sa
per ton . Bundled slob , SO per
Ton Oeli~o~ered To Oh1 o Pollet
Co Rl 7 Pomeroy 992.7689

--

--

Let

Pomeroy Landmark
&amp; ·condition

your

Ho ven Pool Appl y at the pool
betwee n the h o ur~ of I to 5pm
304 882 · 2634

L•t' us test your w1ter

ROOFING

-llliil

Pl'o&gt;ne "2-liBI

BURROUGHS

or

992 5304.
TWO BEDROOM un fu rn1shed opt

Co11991-126B

rather
prema· SMAll BACHElOR opor tment
l urn1~he d . 1n M1ddlepor t Colt
even ts
99/3173 or 9'/1 5013
the y' ll

20-May 20)

SENSI MAliC

oc·

=

bustness purposes o r other
per sonal reas ons you may be
obhged to c ater to people
you re not overly lo nd of today
Do n 'llay 1! on loo hea111ly

In 1977 42 persons died in a
I · '·1 f'
· "•l b"
~o umy j!ll tre tn ""urn ta ,

~

Auto SalEs

wee kends toll949 1878

co unting moch1ne
Phone
qrn 7156, lhe Doily Senhnel .
I I 1 Court Stree t Pomeroy
OhiO .

HV~

ROOM hou~e w1th bath 19
acres of ground on CR 18 bet
ween Racine and Apple Grove
f-or more mlo•mo11011 call

147 3164

300 Coli 9'12 7539.

1q7b F. JSO FORD pickup Power
5teering brokes . auto. trons ..
AM FM stereo 11111th tope
player 37 000 m1le!o EMcellenf
&lt;ond11ion $3750. Call days ,
99') 55~5 or evemng~ 9&lt;19 nl b

247 1b78 .

12 FOOT SEA l oot olum1num boot
5 ' 1 h.p. Johnson motor w 1lh b
gal. tonk . Also 2 cyl Man
1gomerv Word small motor end
Shake,p.are I') vall mol or
good condit1011. AU l o1 S35{)
109 Kerr St ., Pomeroy . Phone

991-3407.
CROSBY CRUIS!RETT( 17 bool.

1974 PINTO w1!h rod1ol l11es and
new shock~ In good condil1on .
qn 7285 after 4 pm
1976 2 DOOR PINTO Good 111es.
rod1o heoter C.ood mileage
4 cyl
!.!d sh1f1 1973 Olds 88
Ro)'Oie lull v1n'(l llltenor AM
FM rod1o A C lilt stee11ng
wheel
1111ted glo ss 55 ,000
m1le~
(onlmt Joe Strubl• ,
99') 3A24 alter 5 30 p10

Ior the day :
Buck said, " I 1972 10Y01 A COROllA lbOO 7for any ot her · door ~lotion wagon Motor
recen tly rebu1 lt ~orne 1us l on
faith in human
body 992 3574
1971 DODG! CHARGER ouro
AC 5995 Al so
auto
529 5

1965 Dodge ,
~ ... en1ng~

304 773 -5679
1970 CHE VEllE au!OmOIIC !fans ,
b cy l $350 Coli 992 1316

llelp Wanted
LPN NEEDED Coli Arcod1o
1ng Home 614·b673fl16

N ur~

CARRIERS NEEDED fo 1 the Doily·
Sentmel PomeJO'f . M1ddlepor!
ond Syracuse oreo
Pleas-e
phone 992·1156 between 8 30
om and 5·00 pm

MUST hove ex
per1en ce m mochme shop
o pero1 1ons
Foreman 9)1 ·
peri91")CO p1eferred bul w1l l
Tram r~ ght applican t Appi1CO·
11o n5 01 re5ume~ will be oc
r epled Ju ne '16 through June
:W tmpP.IIOl l::.fectn t Co , 311!5
~y ( 01110re
M1ddleport Oh1o
45.lb0
HOM f

1973 PIN 10 SOUIRi:. ~tat1on
wagon w1th OH new !Ires mag
whee ls h t etlenl tondit1on .

Phone 991- 205a
t9b7 BUICK GS 400 Runs good .
new po1nl
rally
wheals
985-4726 olter b $400,

FOREMAN

1974 ESCAPADE 25 It motor
home 1wth extras . SbOO miles .
Pr~ce $111! ,000 614 9Cf1·2438 or

l1re s and wheels

5100. 614-593 7390
All WOOD 9 p1ece bedr oom
su11e bed. double dreHer and
m1rror chest hu tch boch elo1
ches t, (Orner che5t . desk ond
c ho~r
Ingels. Furn1!U1e S&lt;I9Cf
comple te 99'} 2b35 Alt er 5 r oll

304 861-20~
HAY TIMOTHY &amp; orchard grass.
F!egulor
sq uore
bales
Atvolloble now on wagons . Any
amount. Get hoy before
s101oge ot souif1 ce Pau l So yre
Great Bend Road R:t 338
Portland , 8&lt;43 459 1
ISH 1RUIMPH500tc 5700 IOmo
ol d washer ond dryer !.300
74'1 ·'1047
REOun SAH and lost W1 lh
Go8ese Tablets 4 ~ Vop water
pdls Nelson D11.19

lib._' ~~ =- -JCJrun.(ll'"
HOO~

-----

-::::

HOllOW Horses. 8uy sell
!rode or tro1n . New and used
saddles , Ruth Ree.,es , Albany

IOU [ b98-3l'l0.
RISING SlAR Kennel, Boord1ng
Indoor ond outdoor run-:.
Groomll'lg al l brHds. Clean '
sonltory fac ilities . Cheshire

Phono l614 ) 367-0191

304 773 5707
1977 ST ARCf&lt;AF l FOlO down
romper
stove re fr1gerator
Opens to /I tt Sleep s fl flerll!ct
cond1110n / 42 7"/SO

19/:J MONa CARLO londou P S ,
~ 8 . A .C. . AM fS.Ifock stereo.
t:kcellent co ndlllon. $1700
84~

1b72

r1 I

BORNLOSEH

Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

UK!,=. lHEO CA~"?

0
O'

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

EXPERIEN4:ED
Radiator,_..._
Service

"

Pomeroy
5-31 -1 mo.

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

MASH BROTHERS

IJTTLEOR PHAN ANN II-:

Print answer here :

J.rr-

r.

St. Rt. 124 toward

Rutland~

VINYL SIDING
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

608 E.
MAIN
POMEROY , 0.
NEW LISTING - 3 years

"lid, 3 bdrm ranch in ex
:c lient co nd1fion . Level tot
n Rufland, equipped kit
:hen and many fca lures .

127,700.00.
iEW LISTING -- 2 slory

CALL
992-6323 or 992-6011
6· T9-1 mo . pd .

lt~al &amp;!lite tur safe
HOMESITE S l or ~ole I acre and
up. M1ddleporl near Rutland
Cotl991·7481 .

~~!~L~~~ Iou
~ t A- t l

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ollio

home , approk . 2
Jeres of ground , garden
,pace, f&gt;torage bu il ding, Up
10 l our bedrms. CLOSE TO
·r ame

POMEROY $15,000 00
NEW LISTING

In

Pome r oy,
rem odeled
"1ome , part basem en t ,
·ange &amp; ref. 1 or 3
.Jed rooms . II 1 baths . ON

LY \8,500 00 .
MINI FARM -

About 75

acres In Chester township,
fencing, garden space,

odrms ., 2 stories ASKING

110.000.00.
REDUCED TO Sl,900 , in
Pomeroy , 3 oorm s., bath ,

garage, cellar .

SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
Could be your m ott o
Your own busrness. Tra1n
,ng prov1dcd. move 1n and

lake over C,ALL FOR IN
FO .
3 BORM . Ranch ;n
Pomeroy ,

nice

Kitchen,

healolater fireplace and
nice v iew of the woodland
,through 4 large glass doors .

Has loog sun deck In back
and l•rge lronl porch . If
you like the county this will
please you .

If It's

room you want this has it
with all c ity con'Venle nces .

This has 3 or &lt; bedrooms.
dining room . equipped
ki t chen, furnace , large
yard, 2 car garage wllh 2
rooms tor storage and 2
attached rooms lor small
business .

APTS .

&lt;

aparlments, aU rented . In
town where you can walk to

work or shop. Nice size lot
in excellent location .

4 BEDROOMS - Wood
lrame house wllh la rge eatIn kitchen. den or study,
basement.

3

porches,

garage and two-lh lrds of an
acre.

OLDER HOME - 7 room s,
balh. gas floor fu rnace,

w ith

central

heat ~

5

bedrooms, 1 baths, clly
water Plus sma ll business

building wllh 7 baths. Also

a 4 room

apartment over a

3 car Qarage. All th is for
Sl8,000.
HOW LONG HAVE YOU
BEEN TRYING TO SELL
CALL US TO GET THE
SELLING JOB -DONE . WE
ARE
THE
HOUSE
SELLING CENTER .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY
Associate Realtors

ASSOCIATES
992·7219-992-6191
997-2168

VA.FHA , 30 yr fmondng, olso
re financing . Ireland Mortgage.
77 E. State . Athens. phone (614}

f

.&amp;tTQW

FOH SAU . 1 story v1n vl
S1d111g. J bedroom downuoi,.,
'J upsto ir - . living room , dining
100m, both, kitchen wlthou! or
with oppl1onces. completelv
corpo ted downs ta irs , hot woter
h(tOI olr cor'd1 t10ned, wo!er
solten er COl po11 ond bQ(k
pot10 {lots ol concr ete) 2 out
bu1 l dmg~
jI
~o~1nyl·
\1d1ng)
l oca ted on s1de stree t 1n
Hutlond
Oh1o
Coli day
1 ~') 2711 01 even1ng / 11!'1295•
As~ l or Herb,

HOU ~ t:

Sweeper&lt;; . toosters irons all
!&gt;mall oppl1on ces . lawn mower
next to Sta te H1ghwoy Garage
or1 Route 7 Ph one (014 ) 985·

NO, ANNIE ... WH~N

JUST 50
'IOU'RE RfAlLV GOOD, YOU'RE ON
MY SIDE
YOU DDN'1 HAVE TO
SHOW GOODS! BOT I GYPSY SELLE ..
,CAN DELIVER ...

PUDDLE POO l S All s1res ond
shope5. Sw1m pools. 2 yeors
eKper~en ce
free es t1mates ,
onyth1n9
you
need
f or
undergr ound 5Wirn pool !&gt; N•w
r hem1cOI ond supp ly store
Albany .
Oh1o .
Phone
614 .698·b555 ( Alter b pm ,
614689 . 57~1 John Jolters or
689.5765 8dl Gdlette ) W&amp; or•
NOT oil we t on PRICES

DRIVE ALimE

747 -1348
HOWERY AND

MARTIN h cove ting , septic
svstem5
doler, bo ckhoe dump truc k
limes!one. grovel
blocktop
paving , Rt . 143. Phone I (6U )

b98 ·7331 .
PULLIN S fXCAVATING Comp lete
Se r vice . Phone ~2 · 2478 .

IF YOU hove o $8Ptice to oiler .
wont to buy or sell someth ing,
oe took1ng lor work ... or
whatever . you 'll get result'!i
loshu with o Sent ine l Wont Ad.

Coll99l-2156

ON US, OOOLA! Yi;OTTA
RIJN F'ASTSR!

And

here is $10,

All carpet installed wltli
podding at no chorge .

yd.

&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl
FRANK &amp;ERNIE

wf

Boy where you c1n come k1
ond see w~t you're alttting
- Good selections - Fully ·
stocked.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

NEV!~

HAVE To GHANt.E

,.,..e

Mt:NU ---

NOBoDY

eveR

icide
32 Lunch time
33 Type of
steak
40 Expect
41 Main artery
42 Settle up
43 Old
DOWN
!Medil.
island:
abbr.
2 Taro root
3 Cap
4 Actress
Merkel

credit
3.1 Forty winks
36 Brown kiwi
37 Table scrap
38 Suffix with
vulcan
39 Stripling

Mooday, June 26

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Non-king play beats south

L

TWIC.!.

Rutland,

!=-+---+--+......+,

WEST

EAST

• 8 52
¥ AQ854
• 10 9 6

•K10 63
• 10 9 7
t K J4

• &amp;2

• 96 5
SOUTH

• AJ 9
¥ K3

• 875
+AKQ104

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South
West Nortb East

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

~~~~COMES HER(:

&amp;-&lt;6-A

• J 62
• ~ Q3 2
• J 73

!1

r\JIVDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

One leUer simply stands for 3nolher. In this sample A 11
used for 1he lh ree L's, X for 1he lw o o·s. elr Single letters.
apos trop hes, the lengt h and formation of lhe words are all
hints Ea ch day the code letters are dUrerent

Pass
Pass
Pass

lt
3 NT

South

I+

Pass

2 NT

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • 5

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alao Sontag
Oswald : "Some years ago
C A
TAD
HJVDVWA
M P D A , lhe late Walter Wyman of
Boston wrote a series of ·
RTEV
TD
SPJAL
C F P N A articles on high-card plays.
Some were examples of correel declarer play, but many
ALTJAX
MVWAD
PW
A L V more showed def~nders find·
ing ways to mislead declar·
p
Z P R. R C J
L V J P R Z er."
Alan : " Here is t! good
Yeal'lerday'• CryptoquoCe: TAKE TIME TO DElJBERATE; example of a king play or
BUT WHEN THE TIME FOR ACTION ARRIVES, STOP should I say a non-kino
9
TIUNKING AND GO ON.-ANDREW JACKSON
play."
Oswald: "Declarer won
BARNEY

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT
MAKES A
BED FOR

rou

RUSS MILLER 15 A I TRIEI? ro
GENIUS AT FILM- IN\KEA DEAL
IN\K ING ~UT HE
WITI-1 HIM ...
DOE5N f HAVE
eUT HE SEEMED
A HEAD FOR
70 BE HOLDING~U51NES5.
OUT.

CLAIMED HE'D

IJE.S TROYEP
Tl1E WITERIAL
l WAS INTER·
ESTED IN! 1
KNEW BETTE'Z!

AND VOU WERE RIGHT,
MR. 0\TILEMAN, ClE ·
0\USE I'vE GOT A
SAMPLE OF iT

RIGHT 1-ffRE IN
MY !JRIEFCA5E

z w

houu . 0
rooms and bot}), cellar , out·
buildings , • acres land, ot edge
of Rutlond . Comp lete trailer
hook · up also. 2 bonks apprais·
ad p,operty ot $15 ,500. Phone

SHE WENT OFF VISITIN'
AN' DIDN'T
FETCH IN
ENNY LOGS ' -"-- '

FIYt: ACHES of lond land on Hysell
Hun kood . for de to lls . coli
b ,. _99'}. 2354.

gibbon
34 Get on

• Q 74

DURN MAW'S LAZV HIDE!!

house In Hor·
with paneling .
co1 peling ond cl ly water , Coli
ah•r 5 p•n 747·2256

33 Malay

the heart lead w1th his kin g
and s tudied th e hand. He
could count eighj tri cks and
could choose a diamond or
spade fines se for th e ninth .
Which should he tak e'' He
finally decided to go to dum·
m y, lead "the queen of
spades, rise with the ace and
work on the club if East's
king did not appear."
Alan : '· Thi s gave East a
chance to do som e think1 ng
on h1s own. At tri ck two
South led a club to dummy' s
jack West played the eight.
Then came that queen of
spades lead. East ducked
quickly . Declarer rose with
lh e ace. cashed his cl ubs and
finall y tried the diamond
finesse to go down two
tr1cks."
Oswald : " Easl had fig.
ured out declarer' s plan and
co unlered it by a brilliant
non-king play ."

~~rmw.u}j

CKVPTOQUOTES

- TWO STORY frame

r1son~o~1lle

Answer

NORTH

591 3051.

9'12 7C114 .
rwO BEDROOM

8:30-LaYerne &amp; Shi rley 6; Ba seball (Reds) 4.
9:oo-Movoe " Big Bob Johnson &amp; hts Fantastic Speed
Circ us" 3, 15; Three 's Compony6.13; Movie " In The
Heat of the Night " 8, 10; Prrceless Treasures of
Dresden 33; Youth Unemployment : A Question of
Survlya l 70.
9:30-Carler Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
IO :oo-20-206.13; College Can Be Killing 33; News 20 ..
10·30-Biack Perspective On The News 10.
11:oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, TS; Dick Cavett 10 : Over
Easy 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,&lt;,15; Soap 6,1 3; It's Your
Turn : Letters to CBS News 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
" Polranha , Piranha" 10 .
12:oo-McCloud B; Janak! 33 : 11 :05---Movle " Hav ing
Babies" 6, 13.
I :oo-Tomorrow 4; 1· 40-Koiak 8; 2:05---News 13 .

29 Insect•

A• Low As

Call7•2·2211
TAtK TO
Wendell or Herb Grato
or Gene Smltli

9 JC&gt;-Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair 10
10 oo-Card Sharks 3,4, 15. Edge ol Night 6; Pass The
Buck 8; Joker 's Wild 10 ; To Tell The Trul h 13; Over
Easy 33 .
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,10; S20,ooo Pyramid 13; Painl Along With
Nancy Kominsky 33.
11 oo-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6.13.
11 30-Wheel ol Fortune 3,15; Pa rtridge Family 4,
Love ol Life 8,10; 11 :55---CBS News 8; Lov ing Free
10.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15 ;
Gambif8; Midday Magaz ine 13; Watch Your Mouth
33.
12:30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
Search for Tomorrow 8.10. Frenc~ Chef 33.
1 oo-For Richer , For Poorer 3: All My Children 6, 13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; lhe Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; AI The Top 33.
1:30-Days of Our L1ves 3,4, IS ; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2:oo-one Lite to Live 6, 13; Meeting of Minds 33; 1· 300octors 3,4, 15; Guiding Light a, 10. 3.00-Anolher
World 34,1 5; General Hospllal6,13 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20,33
3:30-All In The Fam ily 8,10, Consumer Survival Kit
20; Consumer Survival K1l 33.
4 00-Mister Carloon 3; Superman 4: For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6, Addams Family 8,
Sesame 51. 10,33; Malch Game 10; Dinah 13.
4 Jr&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan 's Is. 4,8; Batmnan 10;
Little Rascals 15.
s :oo-Here Come T~e Brides 3: My Three Sons 4;
Gunsmoke B; Mister Rogers 10.33; Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat
Juncllon 15.
5 31)-()dd Couple 4, News 6 ; Elec Co 70,33; Hogan's
Heroes IS.
6:oo-News 3,&lt;,8,10 ,1 3,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Th1ngs Grow 33.
6:30-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6 ;
CBS New s 8,10; Over Easy~~; Antiques 33
7· 00-Cross-Wits 3,4. New lywed Game 6, 13; News 10;
Gilligan's Is . 15; French CHel 20; Driving 3J.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4, Candid Camera 6;
MacNei l-Lehrer Repor1 20,33; Pr ice 1s Right 10;
That's Hollywood 13; Cliffwood Ave . Kids 15
8:oo-Man FromAIIantis 3, 15; Happy Days 6; Redscene '78 4; Movie 11 Wt'lere the lilies Bloom" 8,10;
Nallonal Geographic 70,33. Oral Ro berls 13; 8:30Laverne &amp; Shirley 6 .

Mr.
Blinltt!

Rubber Back Carpet

Floor Covering In Stock

NEW-JUST OFF PRESSI JUMBLE BOOK 111 wi!h 110puules IS avai l·
able lor $135 postpaid from Jumble. c/o 1hls newspaper. PO Box :w,
NorwoOd. N.J 076.W. Include your name, address. liP code ,and make
checks payab le to Newspaperbooks.

walls
6 Violently
7 Begin afresh
8 Ancient
times
9 Lon 10 Ass: Fr.
14 Malay dagger
Yesterday's
16 _ hand
enemy
(help )
21 Director,
17 Box-score
David Noted
%Z Med. center
barrier
entry
Medal of
18 Female deer Z5 Spoil
Honor
19 "Got :!6 Noun suffix
wearers
With an
:l8 Greek
==="---"===-&gt;.-'--~----'----· ""Fawn 's
Angel"
contest
mother
211 "Two Women" 30 " Passage
24
Used
a scull
Oscar
to - "
the
don't make 25 Diadem
winner
31 Dingy
t'irties .. er, 27 Impresario '!i r:-"r,"'"'r."..,.......,.car is
thirt'1es. favorite
sign
28 Novelist
Jane

Exper1 installation.

SQ.

GET INTO A "STEW"

II receive
remaininq t2o.ooo
Glfiler the
InS

SAVE ALOT

4 •88

Best to stay " cool " when captured by
cannibals. so as not t o do thiS -

l Arrange
6 Coliseum
II Turkish
city
12 Stockholders '
"fruit "
Part of the
fireworks
Iroquois

AI.LEYOOP

&amp;

1

I Answer:

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Uke some

SPHDV DRilli NG Woler well
d1d l 11lQ
c: ommerc1ol and
domest1c; Pump :;ales and ser ·
v1c e W2 6295 or 304 895 3802 .

SAVE ON
CAIPniNG

Saturday's

Jumbles· ENACT JOINT THRUSH WISDOM

~• ..,tr:l

"'WKT 11-11'-G IS GAIN ING

EXCAVATING dor er . bo ck hoe
and di!cher (hade~ R Hot
he ld , Back Hoe Ser~o~ice
Rutland , Oh1o . Phone 742·2008 .
Will do 'oofmg. cons truction
plumbing ond hea1mg No tob
too Iorge or too srnolf Phone

our

line

985-4151
Ohio 457?"

SEWING MACHINE R:epo 1n ser
v1te . oil make~ qq2.2784 The
Fobr 1c
Shop . Pomeroy
Author i1ed S1nger Soles and
Servtce We sharpen Sc,uors .
EXCAVATING do1or loader ond
backhoe work, dump !rucks
and lo· boys for h1re, w1l l houl
f ill d~rt , lo ~o 1 l , l1mestone and
grovel Coli Bob or Roge r Jel ·
t er~ . day phone 992 7089 . mgh!
phone 99') 3515 or 992 · 5232 ,

side

Chester,

' REMODELING , Plumb1ng , healing
and all types of gene1ol 1epo11
Work guoronteed 70 years er ·
perience . Phone 992 ·211!09

3 PROPERTIES IN 1 Large 9 room older home

NEW 3 bed,oom house , ') baths,
all elec ., 1 acre, M iddleport,
dose to Rutland Phone 992·
740 I.

II

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

washer · drrer and n ice
terraced lo 70'x100' .

p.r l basemen l. OTHER
FEA 1 URE S. SIB ,OOO.OO.
MANY OTHER PROPER ·
TIES TO CHOOSE FROM .
WE HAV E QUALIFIED
BUYERS FOR MEIGS
COUNTY PROPERTIES.
LIST WITH US.
HENRY E. CLEL AND
REA LT OR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEO_NA

lB

BRADFOR D Auctioneer
Com
plete Serv1Ce Phone 949 · 7487
or 949.7000 ~o ci ne . Oh1o (nil
81adf ord

3815.

step . saver kftchen with
large dining area Lar ge
family
ro om
with

BRICK

bui ld1ng houses 1epo1 r work
and cobme ts. Coli Guy H.
Ne1gler Q49 '1508 after 5 prn

not a

r I .I XXXI X]
(Answer s tomorrow)

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

&amp; A. Frame Homes .
For Free Estimates

N! IGlER BUilDING Supply lor

OLD BUT NICE -

business,

Soffit, Room Additions

4-lO-ttc

992-332S

Weddings

Now .arrange the ctrcled letters to
form the surprtse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

"""''""N ANfiiiE-GTPSY SWEETHEART

RIOE A BllODI'&lt;ISTICK...
BUT I CAN CAll
TH' TURH ON PtfN1Y
o· PfOPlE'"'

W ITH

SOM E'THING
SHOCKING!

~ U:t:::~::::-.::::::::llll::: . t: J I [ I I

Let
us
capture . and
preserve those precious
moments forever -

Golden Anniveroary
Fa mlly Reunions
Speci1l Occasions
Photography
is

CHA~6ED

IERRTAYI

Silver and

.

J

I K

. I I [!J

l

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-ttc

"" - 992-2841

by Henri Arnold and Sob Lee

0

51 1PlUXED~

.

MOORE'S

SMITH NELSON ·
MOTORS, INC.

0.

... BUT I'M AFI&lt;AID
IT STIL-L. f1f6 SOME
BU(o&lt;; IIJ IT .

IT'S MY OIJIJ
l?a.fPE AIJD I'M

HOO DO YOU

E~f'E;gl Ma.m f-)0...

ALUM. &amp;

W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

LOVEC

&amp; Gilson Tillers, Lawn Boy
Mower Sale• &amp; Service.

Witltor to the

NEW LISTING - New 3
bedroom brick home . Nice

Jus! the thing for o sho11 over·
n11e or sk1ing wllh the 6!&gt;0 Mer
cu1 y motor . Moke us on off er
Phone 992·2304 May be seen
01Doug s Manne , Pomeroy
lug !luck

service, Massey Ferguson

399 W. Main St.

B.

Unsctamble these fou r Jumbles,
one letter to each square , to form
lout ordinal)' words

Small engine &amp; mower

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

¥• mite off Rt. 7 by-pus on

barn. nicely remodeled
home with basement,
porches. carpeting. THIS
19b6 VW BUG ~41)0 992 5B58
YOU
MU ST
SEE
130,851.00.
1977
VOLARE
ROAD
Runner
.
318
.
oil
HOME - In M;d
block w1lh Super Po ck A C..
GEMINI !May 21·J une 20) For
TRUCK TOPPER 5150 f,e lo B OLDER
otcport , 11 1 baths. 3 4
stereo Aller 5 30 or onyt1me

You 11 entOY be1ng netptul 10 ·
day as tong as you don 1 fee l
11 s demanded at you In tho se
Instances you re apt to ba c ~

MODERN SUPPLY

'c.._

ROGER HYSEll.
GARAGE

Ileal &amp;tale for Sale

~

99'1 2238

';1'jJjj'iMf )i;)'i1'

'COORS€ 1DON'T

Phone 992-118T

TO
MUR I&gt;Ell HER
UNCLE!

P~OTTING

tn

,.._the ........

The Photo Place

9a':!_ack W. Cor•y, Mgr .

cases a s tra1 ghttme 1S
COUNTR Y MOBILE Hom e Pork
sho rt est d1stance be·
Route 33 north ol Pomeroy . 1978 RM 250 Suzuki Will trade for
tw o p otnts
Wo rk
large lots . Coli 99'1· 7-479
car or sell $ 1700 94q·23H7
1nlenned1ar1es to da y
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Fob. 19) SI:NIOR CITIZENS Ow new GE REFRIGERATOR Gas cook1ng
ren ter s OS SI~t on c:e you rnoy be
stove . Kit chen cabineh Double
Don ' t turn a deal ear to sound
oble to l1vc m ou1 aparl men t
smk . 992·7194
adv1ce loday tust be ca use ' '
lor less than SSO o month . For
co me s fr om a person wh o 1S
HAY
FOR rn01e 1nlormollon coli
more mlormo110n
ton to c: t
not one at you1 favo r1te people
949-2812.
vdlo ge Manor Apartmenh
PISCES !Feb. 20-March 20) In
991 77B7
1q70 HONDA Cl 350 mot01 t ycle
bus1ness matters today you 'd
Good
con dli1 0n
S300
be WISP 10 wa r+-; with the re · CORNlR LOI fo1 11ode1 lopoc e on
r1 ... erlront

Portraits
Weddings
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

( Bob Hoeflich l

Pomeroy Landmark ·

BROKE·· WHEN I
ACCUSE HER OF

6:00-News 3,4,B, 10, 13. 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33 .
6:30-NBC News3 ,4, 15; ABC News T3 ; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CBS News 8, TO , Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7 .oo-Cross.WIIs 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; Marty
Robbins ' Spotlight 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15;
Daniel Foster, M.D. 20; Shepherd's r;e 33.
7·30-That Nashville Music 3: In Search of 4, Muppet
Show 6: Match Game PM 9; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report10.33; Wild Kingdom tO; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville On the Road 15.
8:(}()-Litfle House on The Prairie 3,4,1S; Baseball6, 13;
J effersons 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 70,33.
9 30-Good Times 8,10 ; Turnaooul 10,33.
9:00-Movie "The Girl from Pelrovka" 3,4, 15; Mash
8,10; Canal Zone 10,33; 9:31)-()ne Day AI A Time
a. TO.
~ ~ ~~~ ®

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

.A ~

109 High St.

AND THEN 50 FO!t

AND UNl.OAO

Free

HONDA 1J5 on.oft rood moiOICY·
cl e fo, sole Excellent cond1
t'1on. Phone 9&lt;49·22lq ,

In some
not th e
twee n
through

ARIES !March 21-April 19) Pro-

brands.

, water with Co-op . water
soHener. Model UC-SVI.
Now Only •289,95

~I

Coii304 ·86J OOBB afte r Spm

CA PRI CO RN IDee . 22-Jan . 19)

sources of o th ers tnstead a t
yours atone Be su re everyone
ante s up equ ally

have enlarged our
service department and
Wtll serviu Hotpoint and

complete hou)eholds
Wn te USED IRACTOR S
BUSINt: SS FOR ~ole Beer Wme
MD Miller. HI -4 , Pomero y or MF 135 D1esel · MF.130 D1esel
Corry Our 997.5786 berween
MF150 D 1 e ~el . MF235 D1esel
col1 992 ·77t:IJ.
10 8 5 Do1ly
MFI65 0 1esel · MF285 01esel
WANT TO buy 5 or 6 II tractor
Will
MAINTAIN Coh forn 1o Red
MF1135 D1 e5el Cob, 011 &amp;
blade
Nathan Von omon
wood Ranch
1sl floor
3
hea ter.
742 2761
bedroo&lt;T1 both l1v1ng roam
N!W &amp; USED IMPlEMENTS
lo1ge k1IChen dm1ng room
WAN! 10 buy Small bl ock Chevy Mfq Boler . MF 10 Bol er · Mf 110
den
Full sile bo!.emenl wllh
Baler
·
Mot1hew5
Rotary
Scyrhe
moTor 985·4133
lo1ge carpeted recreat ion room
MF8BO Semi mounted 6 bol
ond both l oca ted near schools ,
tom Plow · MF520 12 D1sc
churche s, shoppmg and recreo·
MF200 2 Row Chopper · MF39 '1
11011 . Gas heot 11ew tentrof an
Row Plante r'&gt; · Mecharll(al
cond1 110n 111g Lor ge lot Pnvote
Transplanter
WAITRESS
No
exper1en ce
p0!10 lots ol uees Over~1zed
SHINN"S TRACT DR SAlES
necessary . Apply 1n person of
double gOroge 1&lt;~ • 30 Custom
Phon
e
458·
1630
Blue lorton M1ddleport
d 1ope ~
and othe1
extras
Leon W Vo.
Owne1 be1ng tron 51erred . Sell
MA 1URE RESPONSIBLE woman 05
f 01 rtHd b() S 304 273 1617,
bobys11ter housekeeper. l 1..,e in
pos1 t1 on
separate house1ng 1971 DATSUN '1 ton pickup 4 .
speed. new clutch , muff ler
and excellent benefits No
brakes and pomt . 25 m p g
smo k1ng
Mu!.l
d11ve

21) Somet 1mes dorng bus1ness SWIMMING INSTRUCTOR o1 New
w1th frt ends we don 1 atway s
get tne bes t deal This co uld
nappen to you today because
you don I want to hur t a pal s
1ee11ngs

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?
soften

SAGITTARIUS !Nov . 23-Dec .

•

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
300f&gt;Uin St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992-6263
8A.M. to4 :30P.M.

bl4-b96 -IIB7.

day you r p11me mo t1ves may be COINS . CURR ENCY tokens , old
pocket wo !r he~ ond c:hOIIl5 ,
u11 t1a lly a bit s~?ll·cen t ('red
51 l.,er and gold We need 1904
You II fare bet h?r d you th1nk o t
and older s1lver co1ns Buy sell
other s as we ll as No I Fmd
or !rode Coil Roge r Womslev .
out more ahout yot~ r s ell tly
742·2331 .
send1ng tor yo1n co py 0 f Asil o·
Graph Letter M all 50 cen t s l o r fiMBER POMEROY Fore~t Pro·
sel l ea c h and a long
ducts . Top pr1ce f or slondmg
addre ssed stamped envelope
sow t1mber Coli 9«n59b5 or
lo Aslr o-G raph P 0 Bo&gt; 4H9
Kent Ho nb~ .1·446_.:,8570
Rad1 0 C11y S ta!I OI\ N Y 10019
OLD FURNIT URE ICe bo xes , bross
Be swe 10 spe edy 011th s1gn
bed'&gt; 1ron beds desk!. . etc

11

H. L WRITESEL

.,.,

NOW'G M.Y
CHANCE TO
FINO Hf.R SUN

.L-.--------..1

COAl . LIME STONE . sond grovel,
colc1um chloride. fel ld 1zer dog
food . ond all types of soil E)( ·
cels 1or Sol! Works. Inc E Mom
SALES AND SERVICE
St . Pomeroy 99733q1
Ch1 mney Swept by a professional i . . . - - - - - - -1c;1c;
·9_·c;lf..;c...:.J.
---w1th modern dustless cleaning -BEST SELECTION of the best wood
5toves in Southeastern Oh1o
old lime Ron
wor~monsh1p
I 37J.f&gt;050
Zortm an . call fihrir~:::;~~S~
~ •
Jotul , Morse , Efel, T110IIO
Tempwood. ond Nofh uo . Z1on
IU..AV)-......
Heal Co ., 8 Putnam Or (oil M1ll
St ). Athe n~ 614.592·6079

tl1ru FntJ11~
4P M.

MUST A LEFr IT IN THE CABIN
SOMEWHERE ... H CU~E ME WHI LE
I GO TAI&lt;S' A ~OOK!

Co II Aller 5:00 or
Anytime Saturday
992-7119 or "2,5041
4-27-tfc

CARTER

1q72 Coven try 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 )( 60 2
bedroom

MuruJuv
Noon Ull Sat ill Jay

Bernice Bede Osol

beings

rank ~ce
·
Chester, Ohio j

Box 3

10-30-c .

2 borh

Tucsda)'

ASTRO•GRAPH

A thought
Author Pearl
feel no need
faith than my

Jack's Septic .

Wil l CARE fo1 th e elderlv 1n our
home Phone 99'1 731 4

son t. W. Vo bes1de Heck ' ~
1973 Broodmore )4 I( b4 2
bedroo m
1973 Oor10n 14 K 00 2 bedroom
1972 V1ctorion 14 x 1;,7 3 bedroom ,

NOTICE.

Fof Tuesday . June 27

TAU RUS !April

Anyday, anytime.
Pl'o&gt;ne 981-31106
Jack Ginter 985·3806

TUESDAY, JUNE27, 1978
5:&lt;5---Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 6 oo-PTL
Club 15; Summer' Semester 10.
6:30-Focus on Columbus &lt;; New s 6; Summer
Sefl1esler B; Concerns &amp; Comments 10.
6:&lt;5---Mornlng Reporl 3; 6:50-GOOd Morning , Wesl
Virginia 13; 6:55---News 13.
7:00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8, Porky Pig 10.
7:25---Chuck Wh ile Reports 10; 7.30-Schoolles 10.
8:00-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33.
9:00- Merv Grltfrn 3; P~ il Donahue 4.13.15;
Emergency One6: Pass The Buck 10: Brady Bunch

Heroes 15.

DUMP TRUCK
SERVICE

estimate, :Z4 hour service.

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOM ES. Pt Plea·

On June 14 , 1978 . in the
Meigs County Pr obate Court ,
Case No 22411, Ronald G
Shepard , Box 28A . Rutland .
OhiO was appo1nted Executor
of the estate of Sh 1rley M
Shepard , deceased , tare of
Rutland , Ohio .
Manning D Webster
Probate Judge
Clerk
( 6 ) 16 (71 3, 10. Jtc

s:oo-Here Come The Brides 3; My Th ree Sons 4;
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Nelqhborhood 20.33;
Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One
I3; PeiHcoat Jun ction T5.
5 3,1)-()dd Couple&lt; ; News 6; E lee. Co. 10,33; Hogan's

-DAVE'S BACKHOE
&amp;

R.esidential
and
commercial. Call for

Ph011t&gt; 992-2156

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

ce ed wtth yo ur plan s
than deba:1ng th ern
lurety .,..1th an o ther A s
unwmd lhem sch•es
prove you r1ght

both

1''

Senices Offered

Pomeroy Landmark

llllt'l.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,

"

BEOHOOM
992-7453

cut· an·t'ptt'd onlY w1l11 l'a!lh w1 U1

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Mobile u-om~ ~ -sale
T H~!f

Call Now For
Apliointment

In nwmuq', Card of TI1tt11ks ami
6 Li! IIL~ jk't' Wort.! , SJ.OIJ

FHH 8 acres ol hoy for cleaning
l 1eld 742·2754

1.DO--· Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 15---News 13 .

MONDAY, JUNE 76,1978

FRH KlfTENS Very lome. Used to
children . Don Nelson. 992-7313

3.75

3.00

11\IIIUllWll Ca~h Ill adVitlllt' .

James J Proff it!

Sheri If of

l.~

1.00
ISO

Business Services

FHH 10 good home block female
pup . Will be me-dnJm to Iorge 1n
s11e
Good
home only .
843 '2797

ChHI'j.tt'

( '&lt;~~II

s. Produce and Dry Goods
In order to be considered ,
all seated DtdS shaH b e
received in the office o f the
Clerk , South Th ird Avenue .
Middlepor 1, Oh io on or .before
12 : 00 noon on J uly l J, 1978.
The Board ot Educat ion
reserves the right to ac cept
or retect any or all bids .

GiveAway

WHEEl
ALIGNMENT

15 Wunl\ol U111h'r
Ida}

u n~nown

Sit uated in Olive Township .
Me ,gs County, Oh 10, Part of
L ot 1'12 Section 24 , Town 3,
Range 11 Ohio Company ' s
Purchase . bemg tot 8, 9, 10
and 1) ot tot 11 of the Sub
d ivision of sa1d tot t:Jy A W
Swan .
Reference vot 110 page 53 1
Meigs County Deed Records
Judgmen t S99.35 plus ac
crued taxes . assessments and
penatt 1es and costs of acti on

WANT AD
CHARGES

10:00-Lou Grant 8, 10 ; 11 :oo-News 3.4,6,8, 10.13.15.
It :30-Johnny Ca rson 3,4, 15; Soap 6, 13; Movie
" SpellbOund" O; Movie " The Five Penn ies" 19.
Tt :40-To Be Announ ced 33; 12;(}()-ABC News 33.
12 :05---Pollce Slory 6,13 ; 12 :3C&gt;-Janakl 33;

"TELEVISION
VIEWING

ARE YOU SURE YOU CAN
SPARE IT, 6 .0.?

,

,3· Fuceol •01q

Meat

DICK TRACY

.

_

ltfreeze

J.

9-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, June 26, 1978

15 INSTOCK
Largest Selection In

Tht Vallt)

FER TH'
FIRE

I RECKON
I'LL HA'JE
TO DO IT

M'/SELF

A Pennsylvania reader
wanls lo know what is meant
by a lead of a "sneak ".
Beca use a singleto n is
so m e tim es ca lled a

"s neak",

the expression

means tha t you have led a
singleton .
rNEWSI'Af&gt; ..: K ~: NTEH.PR I SE ASSN 1

!FOr a copy ol JACOBY MOO·
ERN. send S1 /o: 'Win a/
Bridge. " care of tftiS newspa ·
per. P. 0. Box 489 Radro City
Stat10n. New York. N. Y 100T9 1

�1

'
l'lw ll,!i l\ ~~ ·11\\I H I,

]I I

( ) \&lt;11 tlni(t\ ,
\ l Jthll\:l)!i l'l · l 'ull lt' lt '\

UM"&lt;i

\lll&lt;t~t'' lill ll u-.

f.,, l 't •liHIHIII It ' i-II IPII

. itJJit'

'. 1'1
:.h.
• -I H

-------------------.- -------I

•

,, lrt·t· al lhl' co rn er uf

1\AIIIO' \\ EI\F Ill .,

,\ 1hl1tlt'l)i111

.

~~· n·

111ruwn 11 ut ,, f 1·ull llll iS.•H •IIl b;.
~ lif'H'rt· thumkrstuf'lll wlu('h
hll 1•url .\ ~1 11n dr1~

.

Ar·ea Deaths

:

Hus'&lt;'li and MHple Stret•b.
I
I
'I I
V.t'l'l' ft'lll'd b~ I H' s 111'111 ' I

I
I

·•lht·r datua~ws \q'rt' n ·pu11t•d
.,
~~~ Mi\k-1\t'port 1.11 1&lt; 1 nom• Wt' l ~
rt•p11rt l'&lt;i 111 Pvn wn,~· ·

,

JODY ROUSH
ti r a ves ide se rvites for

Judy ,Ryan Roush. stillborn
infant son of Kenneth M. and
Sharon K. Rollgen Roush,
will be held Tuesday , 6 p. m.
m the Rock Springs Cemetery
with the Rev . Dickie Tennant
officia ting.
In addition to his parents,
he 1s survived by one brother,
Dustin M.' Roush ; paternal
grandparents, Robert E. and
Leola M. Roush, New Haven ;
maternal grandparents
Ralph M. and Erma L.
Rottgen, New Haven :
maternal great-grandfather,
Earl Rotlgen , Pomeroy.;
great -grandparents, Rufus H.
and Margaret E. Hill, Letart.
The Foglesong Funeral
Home is in charge of
arrangements.

ARMSTRONG
FLOOR COVERINGS
Design.ed and created by people for
people - Floors that bring your
indoor world more variety, vitality
and originality than ever before.
Flo.ors for today's living.

BAKER FURNITURE

lENAHAMM
Lena Hamm, 69 , 325
Wetzga ll
St ree t.
died

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

AT

Crow's Family
Restaurant
Pontt'rtl~ ,

:
I
I

Sa turday at
Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
She was preceded in death
by her parents, Charles ~nd
Ida Hines, apd her husband,
Walter T. Hamm, in 1971.
She is survived by seven
children : Dr. Charles HQmm,
Indianapolis; Larry Hamm,
Hamillon, Ohio; Allan Hamm
and Mike Hamm, both of
Pomeroy : Mrs. Caro le
Crujeiras, Brooklyn, N. Y.;
Mrs. Betty Johnson, Dublin ,
Ohio, and Nancy Hamm,
Columbus.
Two step-sons. Robert
Hamm, Chillicothe, and
Howard Hamm , Kenton .
Ohio, and 10 grandchildren,
also surviv,e.
Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 3 p. m. at'
Ewing Chapel with the Rev .
Wilbur Perrin officiating .
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery , Friends may call
at the funeral home any lime.
BLANCIIE M. PAINTER
Blanche M. Painter, 80, Rt.
I, Minersville, died Sunday
at Licking Memorial Hospital
in Newark.
She was the daughter of the
lat e Archibald and Iva
Williams Cramer. She was
also preceded in death by her
husband . Russell Painter.
Surviving are the following
children, Mrs . Howard
tMary ) Rauch, Newark;
Mrs . Harry (Dorothy I
Brown, Minersville; Robert
Painter, Rt. 3, Pomeroy;
Hussell Painter, Jr., South
Shore, Ky ., and Ralph
·Painter, 111. I, Middleport, 16
grand children and eig ht
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday al 1 p. m. at
Ewmg Chapel with the Rev.
James Corbett officiating.
Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll
at the funeral home afler 3 p.
m. Tuesday .

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY

Ohio

A 64 oz. bottle of RC and a
Frlabee with the p~rchaae of

MEET TUESDAY
Concerned citizens of Long
Bottom and surrounding area
are asked to meet at Leona
Hensley 's Store Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. to discuss the
purchase of the old switch·
board house for use as a
communit y building .

any bucket, barrel or family
valu pak

SQUAD RUNS
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
two calls on the weekend.
At 7: 40 p. m. Saturday. Mae
Hoover, 456 Broadway. was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospiial.
AI 7:14 p. m. Sunday the
squad went to Bailey Run
Road for Mary Archer who
declined to be transported to
a hospital.

He Does His Banking
Fishing From The Bank • • •

In fact . Mr . Anthony has more time than ever to
rela x, fish and travel thanks to a special free
Farmers Bank service: Each month Willis
Anthony 's socia l securi ty c heck is deposited
automatica ll y and direclly in his Farmers Bank
che ck ing account. He doesn 't have to walt
around for the check lo arrive in his mail box, or
worry about it being stolen if he's out-of- town ,
or spend precious lime hurrying lo the bank lo
deposi t h is own check . If yo u're retired you can
lake advantage of the same service . Visit
Farmer's Bank for information about how your
socia l securily check can be automatically
deposited In your c hecking account.
'

People you lcnow .... lcnow farmers

Fs
'

.........

......_

.......

•~nw

(

Farmers
Bank

POMEROY , OHIO
Membe• FDI C

'
u;. e t _
· ~~

~~~:v

-·-

t~

0

· :··

School finances on legislative agenda today

-

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
CX&gt;LUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio General Assembly was
.to meet today in hopes of
disposing of the last major
item standing in the way of a
SWillller adjournment - the
supplemental appropriations
and school financing bill. .
IIOUBe Democratic leaders
were to try to rally their
troops for a vote on a Senatepassed bill !l'OVidlng Income
tax credits for home
improvements befor e
bargaining resljllled on the
$202 milllon appropriation .
The tax credit bill 1Senate

-

Blll 68), insisted upon by week.
Senate Democrats last week,
''We are going to pass that
fueled a minor intraparty bill," said Richard Pfeiffer,
war which ieft members an aide tD Riffe . "The votes
stewing over the prospect of are there.''
Last week 's stalemate
interrupting their summer
vacations to return tD the forced the lawmakers to go
Statehouse.
home without acting on the
The Democratic caucus supplemental appropriations
could not furnish enough bill, which ' co nta ins $115
votes for the tax credit bill million to help · keep schools
last week, but House Speaker open in the fall .
Vernal G. Riffe Jr .. D-New
Senate Democrats resented
Boston, may have called in the fact that President Pro
some JOUs or applied some Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D·
heat over the weekend. He Northfield, was. cast in the
may also benefit from .role of the villain for holding
improved attendance this up the appropriations bili
over a seemingly ulreloted

...
DON WEESE took first and third place and John
Young took second in the senior division. Left to right are

Weese, Frog Wayland and Yowtg. First place carred a
prize of $200, second place $100 and third place $50.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio.
Tuesday, June 27, 1978

e

bill.
"It 's no more unrelated
than some of that other stuff
in the (appropriations ) bill,"
said Robert McDavitt, an
aide tD Ocasek. He pointed
out special appropriations for
a natatorium at Bowling
Green Slate University and a
clinical teaching facility in
Youngstown.
"Vern (Riffe) made a commitment to Oliver two weeks
ago that he would pass that
bill (Senate Bill ~) . Then
they corne over here and ask
us (or all Ulis other stuff."
Pfeiffer conceded an

•

agreement was made. "The
speaker
made
a
commitment, and he intends
to keep it," said the aide.
He said the caucus was
unable to furnish enough
votes la st week because
"apparently some people
didn1 understand that the
speaker had made a
commitment to the senate."
Pfeiffer said that message
may have gotten across to
them over the weekend.
The maximum $65 tax
credit
for
home
improvements - $85 if they
save energy - is opposed by
some House nemocrats

at y

because it could cost the state
up to $11 million during a

tight budget period.
The stale Taxation Department
is
preparing
amendments to simplify
admini stratio n of the
proposal, but most House
Republicans are still opposed
to the bill.
Once Senate Bill 68 is
passed, attention can be
returned to the appro·
priations bill, whi ch includes $35 million for a stale
employees' pay raise already
enacted, $20 million to raise
aid to families with

•

dependent children by 9 on the $40 million state school
percent, and $10 million for loan program.
industrial development.
"Even if thai provision i:
A conference committee U!ken out, we still have hope
report on that bill was all but 'there will be enough money~
signed last Thw-sda y when keep the schools open /' sait
co mplicati ons developed . Thomas J . Moyer, executiv1
Indications die an agreement assistant to the governor.
could easily be pui together
But removal of the private
aga in.
loan provision would not keep
Senate conferees have Rh odes from signi ng th e
insisted on striking House· appropriations bill, Moyer
added language expanding added .
the private borrowing powers
"I thin~ the bill would have
of school districts in financial to be changed quite a bit for
difficulty .
the governor not to sign it,"
Gov . James A. Rhodes said Moyer. " But I don't s""
prefers that the language be that happening. "
kepi to help preven t o drain

enttne

Fifteen Cents
Vol. Z!l, .' lo. 51

Hospital News

Big Wheel

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Tracy Wh aley, Pom eroy :
Raymond Hudson, Mason;
Charl ene Barton , Mid·
dleport : Dorothy Greathouse,
Racine; Louise Eshleman,
Pomeroy ; Dorothy Littl e,
Cheshire.
Saturday Discharges Betty Hammons, Geor~e
Oiler, Johnny Kriger, George
1\)ort irner, Raymond Hudson.
Su nday Admiss ions Elizabeth Hysell. Pom eroy:
Charles Klein, Sr , Pomeroy;
Edith Betzing, Coolville :
Myrtle Warner. Syracuse ;
Joseph Hillar y, Pomeroy;
Juanita Chapman, Clifton ;
Nonnan Lehew , Portland.
Sunday Discharges Helen Kimes, Ca rolyn King,
William Morri s, Robert
Morehead.

Two
killed,
100
wmners
announced hurt in crash
•

-

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges June 231
MARCHING MARAUDERS - The Meigs' High School Marauder Band moves through
Harold Auston, Elmer
Middleport during Friday evening's Big Bend Regatta Parade.
Barnhart, Maude Butcher,
Garland Caldwe ll. Glad ys
Ca rdwell, Thad Cla rk ,
GUEST SPEAKER
Marilyn DaviS, Ruda Durst.
The Middleport United
Oscar Dyer, Sharon Fair·
Pentecostal Church will have
child , Freda Ferguson, Mrs.
(Ccntlnued from pqe I)
as guest speaker, for their
Dennis Fraley and daughter ,
(Continued from page I)
Killed in that accident were Wedne sday Missionary
David Hutchinson, Gl en Pomeroy. He reported he had
James , John J ohnso n. parked his 18 wheeler and Maryann Hess, 33, and Toni serv ice, the Rev . Harold
Caffee, outgoing missionary
Keturah
Jolley,
Troy when he relw-ned at 7 p.m. he Stone, 16.
All other accidents claimed to the Philippine Islands. The
Kingrey, Alma McDougal. discovered his Robyn 23
pbuUc is invited to attend.
Cha rl es Mit chell. Lola Channel CB radio had been one life each.
Nelson, Hazel Olson, Lena stnlen.
Friday Night
GET LICENSES
Ord, Linda Patterson. Rita
Napoleon : Helen P.
Marriage
licenses were
Payne, Charles Peck, David
Palmer, 54, Liberty Center, issued to Gregory Allen
Radcliffe, Allan Riegel , Carl
when the bicycle she was McKinney , 20, Pomeroy, and
Riegel. Lillian Rotzenberg,
riding was struck by a car on Debby Sue Johnson , 20,
Warren Skidmore, Fred
a
Henry County road .
Morning and aftern oon
Mason ; William Eugene
Sm ith, Warren Stewart,
:;aturday
kindergarten classes at
King,
19, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
Pearl Swart, Clinton Tucker . Middl eport Eleme ntary
Georgetown : Nelson D. Brenda Kay Smith. 17,
Tammy Waugh.
celebrated the end of their Young, 16, West Union, in a Rutland.
tBirthsl
school year with picnics and three-&lt;:ar crash on Ohio 125 in
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bar· field day . activities at the Adams County.
SQUAD CAIJ..ED
cus, a daughter , Gallipolis; Middleport Park.
Fairview Park : J.D. Bern·
The Pomeroy Emergency
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Fisher, a
Children feasted on hot stein, 22, Westlake , in a Squad was called to the David
daughter , Bidwell ; Mr. and
provided by the Mid· motorcycle crash on a Goodwin residence at 4: 16 p.
Mrs. Damon Hill, a daughter, dogs
m. Sunday for Mary Bartels
dleport PTA and potato chips, Fairview Park street.
Wellston.
Fayette : David Ammond, who was taken to Veterans
Koo i-Aid and watermelon
1Discharges June 24 1
furnished by kindergarten 21, Grand Rapids, when two Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Thomas Albert and
motorcycles collided at the
son, Ossie Auxier, Esther parents.
intersection
of Ohio 127 and a
NAMEOMITrED
Helping with the morning
Bacon, William Baker, Mary picnic were Mrs. Adeline Fulton County road, near
The name of Brenda
Beaver, Frankie Brammer,
Fayette.
Hawkins of Salem, Ohio, was
Snowden,
teacher's
aide;
and
Reta Bryan, William Bush,
Norwalk: Paul B. Smith, unintentionally omitted from
Mrs. Wilma Gilkey, Mrs. Sue
Mrs. Paul Cox and daughter,
64,
Mooroeville, killed In a the list of relatives attending
Minnie Davis, William Ed- Smith, Mrs. Ruth Durst, Mrs. one-&lt;:ar accident on private funeral services and visiting
wards. Cuma Elkins, Donna Judy Crooks. and Mrs. Nancy property north of Norwalk. the relatives of Roy Pearson.
Gilkey, Alii Golji , Crystal Manle y, kindergarten
Toledo : Terry Lee Pitzen,
Graham. Sh irley Hunt, parent s. Aiding with the 3!, Toledo, when she was
Wlian Martin, Lila Merola, afternoon picni c were Mrs. struck by an auto as she Countv .
Jessie Mullen , Edna Niegler, Snowden and parents, Mrs. walked along a Toledo street.
Suoday
Joyce Phillips, Darla Rainey, Donna Geen, Mrs. Diane
Cinclnna
tl: MaryaM Hess,
Co lumbus : Mark D.
Gertrude Reed , Arn old Caruthers, and Mrs. Gail Huston, 20, Uniontown, Pa., 33, and Toni Stone, 16, both of
Riffle, Edna Salyer, Tracy Hovatter. Mrs. Mary Rose is when two motorcycles Cincinnati, when their car
Smith, Mrs. Alvin Spencer the teacher for both classes. co!Uded at an Intersection on crashed on 1-74 west of
All students participated in
and daughter. George Stif·
field
day activities which the Ohio State Fairgrounds. Cincinnati.
fl er, Thomas Vanco, Charlsie
Columbus:
Charles
Co lumbu s : Quincy
included a basketball kick, a
Vaughn , Ray Wence.
Westenberger,
23,
Columbus,
backwards run, and three- Cancels! lor, 26, and Maggie
1Births
Hulbert, 66, both of when his motorcycle colllded
Mr . and Mrs. Vencil legged and sack races.
Cleveland, when their van with an auto on 1·71 in
Adkins, a son, Oak Hill ; Mr.
went out of control and Columbus.
ELECT OFFICERS
and Mrs. Roger Hughes, a
Maplewood: Larry E. Lett,
nipped over on 1-270, north of
Oflicers will be elected
daughter , Oak Hill ; Mr. and
12,
Maplewood , when the
Columbus.
Mrs. Forrest Hutchins, a when Ohio Valley Com·
mini
bike he was riding failed
Harrisburg : Robert E.
daughter, Patriot ; Mr. and mandery 24, Knights Tem- Kinker , 42, Bexley, In a one- to yield and was struck by an
Mr s. Norman Person. a plar, meets in regular session car accident on U.S. 62 near automobile on a Maplewood
daughter, Oak Hill ; Mr. and at 7: ~ p. m. Wednesday.
Harrisburg In Plckaway street.
Mrs . Ro bin Ph a Iin, a ';!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!Ill
daughter, Middleport ; Mr. IIi
and Mrs. Tommy Sluss, a
daughter, Jackson.
1Discharges June 25)
Ray Barker, Mary Bennett,
Tabitha Ga rdn er, James
Harp er, Marion Hoover,
Raymond Hudson. William
Hu ghes , Nancy James ,
illretta Lambert, Mrs. Eddie
Mayes and daughter, Callie
Metheney , Alice 'Parker.
Mrs. Tennyson Shepard and
daughter, Patricia Skidmore,
Mabel Snyder, Elizabeth
00
Vance, Charles Waugh lll,
Mrs . Timothy William so n
and daughter.
!Births I
Mr , ad Mrs. James Shafer,.
Large selection of styles and wood finishes.
a son, Crown City: Mr. and
Mrs. Gary Tilley, a daughter,
Excellent service after the sale.
Jaeksun.

Deputies •.• 14 die

End of school
is celebrated

ROll

XL-100

ColorTrak

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'I'• &gt;&lt;lay tS M&lt;W1duy. June :!6,
the J77th &lt;lay nf 197ti Will• IIIII
1u IHII nw

ELBE FELDS IN POMEROY
t

0

An added attraction to this
year's Regatta Weekend
much to the delight of fou r
and five-ye aH id youngsters
was a "big wheel" race
sponsored by the Ga llia ·
Meigs Fraternal Order of
Police.
Assisting with the event
held Saturday morning on the
Pomeroy tennis courts were
Ray Man ley, Steve Har·
tenbach, Larry Hudson and
Ed Ball.
In the first heat, four-yea r·
old group, first, second, third
and fourth pla ce respectively, were, Kevin Barton,
Jeremy Phalin , Jennie
Werry,
and
Jacinda
Ferguson: second hea t,
Teresa
Phalin , Brian
Coleman, Salley Saunders
and Rodney Newsome ; third
heat. only three contestants.
GRAND CHAMPION AND RUNNER UP of the "Big
Meigs Fraternal Order of Police who sponsored the event,
Kelly Smith, Miranda
Wheel" race held Saturday during Regatta was Jason
Jason and Jeremy. The event was a first for Regatta and
Nicholson and Tracy Eblin.
Wright, first place, and Jeremy Phalin, second place.
from all indications will be held again next year.
In
the
fiv e-yea r-old
Shown are Ray Manley. secretary • treasurer of Galliadivision , first hea l, fir st ,
second, third and fourth pla ce
winners respectively were,
Ja son Wright, Mi cha el
Barton, Stacy Shank and
Bobby Rupe ; second heat ,
with only three contesta nts,
Robbie Williams, Lori Crow
and Chase Cleland.
Overall winner of all heats
Th
e
Ga
llla-Meigs
Post,
Officers
report
that
Eagle
was
Jason Wright, age 5, and
WASiflNGTON (UP! ) - The United States has released
ex
hibited
visible
signs
of
Highwa
y
Patrol.
investigated
second
place ~ overall winner ,
two Russians accused of trying to buy anti-submarine warfare
inj
five
accidents
Monday
.
ury,
but
was
not
treated.
was
Jeremy
Phalin, age 4.
secrets from aU . S. Navy officer in exchange for the release of
There
was
severe
damage
At
6:25a.
m
..
officers
were
an American businessman arrested in Moscow.
State Department offi cials in Washington disclosed called to the scene ol a to both vehicles. There was
Mooday Ule Soviet Union agreed to release F . Jay Crawford , mishap involving two autos in no report of citation.
the International Harvester Corp. representative in Moscow , a head-&lt;&gt;n collisi on, and an Officers report thai at 5:30
who has been imprisoned for 15 days on illegal currency unknown vehicle , in Meigs a. m. on SR 7, th ree-tenths of
amite so uth of TR 25, an auto
County.
charges.
The accident occDrred on dri ven by R&lt;Jndy K. Taylor ,
SR 681 , at the junction ol 20, South Point. struck a large
rock 111 the roadway .
TH265.
There was slight damage to
According to the patrol, an
CX&gt;LUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio has nearly $29 million it wants
Federal revenue sharing
the
vehicle. 111ere was no
auto
driven
by
William
F'
.
to return to the rightful owners fr ee of charge.
funds
totaling $15,415, money
report of inJury or of ci tation.
The money represents IUICiaimed funds turned over to the Lovering, 27, Buchtel, was
to
be
received
the remainder
AI 3:15 p. m. on Tyn Rhos
Ohio Department of Camnerce by insurance companies, wes\bo und on 681 , foll owing Road , one and one-tenth of a of· this year and during 1979,
banks and utilities after people failed to collect the money an unidentified vehicle.
were allocated Monday night
The report states that as mile so uth of U. S. 35, an auto
from five to 10 years. The department's job is to find tbe people
when Midd le port Village
the unknown auto turned left driven by Sandra L. Smith, Co un ci l mel in regular
90 the money can be paid.
at the intersection, Lovering 38, Rio Grande, was nor· session.
swerved left of center to th bound on Tyn Rhos when
After a lengthy discussion
avoid a rearend collision, and the vehicle passed off the on village financing ·and the
OSLO, Norway (UP! ) - Two Americans were among 16 ran head-&lt;&gt;n inlo a vehicle right side of the roadwa y, effects of inflation upon the
perms kUled or missing in the crash of a U. S.-made Sikorsky operated by Thelma S. Eagle, went over an embankment. work which the town can gel
and turned on its side.
:le, Reedsville.
Sl6 helicopter delivering a work crew to a North Sea oil rig .
There were no injuries. done for the money it has to
l&lt;Jvering
claimed
injuries,
. Mooday's crash was the third involving Sikorsky
spend , co un cil voted to
helicopters since the firm began operating in the Norwegian but was not immediatel y Officers report moderat e allocate $9,100 for a Blue
aectoc of the North Sea five years ago. A total of 29 people, treated.
(Continued on page 12)
Cross Insurance plan for
including two Americans, died In the first two crashes.
employes and $6,345 for .street
mamt enan ce . The tota l
amount 'involved is $15 ,445
which includes $14,006.97 to
DENVER (UP! )- Pastor Tim Hoehn, saying his family
he received in 1979 and
had been threatened over his stand on gay rights, brought a
$1 ,438.03 to be received
loaded pistol to cburch with him Sunday.
during the rest of the current
Hoehn , pastor of the Gethsemane Baptist Church, said he ,
year.
his family and the church have been threatened ever since the
During discussion it was
Greg Miller, director of Florida , havmg been selected
church began running newspaper advertisements "Gallia Co untry ", announced
brought
out that the village
by the Ohio Distri ct Key Club
condemning homosexuality.
today the addition of two staff in recent competition . Dan last year spent $9,1100 in tax
pian ists for this yea r' s arranges the music. which he levy funds for street resur·
production , Greg Bane and and his brother use in their fa cing as well as $1,200 from
Da n Rowa n.
performan ces throughout the cemetery lund for im·
CHICAGO (UPI) - Three men were charged with robbing
Dan is a 1978 graduate of Southea&amp;tern Ohio. In ad- prov emenls to roadways
a McDooald's restaurant in suburban Westchester and Ga llia Academy and has dition, he has arranged and there and $3,700 in federal
kidnapping a teen-age girl employee.
studied piano for 10 years, the written the musk which he revenue sharing funds for
Pollee said the kidnapers led pollee on a high-speed chase last three having been spent
street improvements.
(Continued on page 12)
beftre they were captured on the Eisenhower Expressway late under the tutelage of Mrs.
During the meeting, Mayor
Sunday night. The hostage , a 17-year-&lt;Jid girl, was unhanned Louis Ford, of Gallipolis.
Fred Hoffman reported no
rut hysterical.
further word ha s been
Previously he studied jazz
received fr om Heck' s
piano and theory with At•
Di sco u nt Stores .
Brown of Cambridge. The
Representatives of the stores
last four years, Dan has
attended
the
Fred
Waring
Mosa&gt;W (UP!) - A huaky yowtg Soviet ll)Bn wle Iding an
workshop at Shawnee-&lt;&gt;n·the·
u attaclted thr~ . elderly SWedish tourists today outside Delaware,
Pa., two of which
Moecow's Intourl.st Hotel, killing two of them and seriously
were on scholarship. He was
Meigs Cou nt y Sherif(
Injuring the third, wltnesseti said.
selected
to
perform
In
the
James
J . Proffitt reports
The wltneues said ooe of the victims, a man, apparently
talent
show
by
the
Fred
deputies
have returned
wu decapitated. They said a woman was killed and a second
Waring staff.
Rubert
L.
Molihan,
38, Rt. 2,
man wu very ~~erlqully Injured.
Upon graduation from
Ray, from the Wellston jail to
Gallla Academy this spring,
answer a bench warrant
Dan presented h.is senior
issued by Meigs County Court
recital, playing classical
Judge . Molihan failed to
comply with the tenns of the
CX&gt;LUMBUS (UP!) '- Gov. James A. Rhodes has signed selections from the romantic,
letllllalkll reclaullylng facUlties fa- overnight trailers and barJque and modern periods.
co urt . He was given a 90 day
The weekend of July lsi,
l'eCI'tltlooll vehicles and changing the Inspection and
jail term .
Ul.'ellltng requlrementa !or travel parks.
Dan and his brother, Mike,
Sheriff Proffitt advises that
The -law, e!fectln next Sept. 25, was signed Monday will be representing Ohio at
since all the schools are
dismlssed for the summer
by lbe IOVet'llll". It wiD make trailer park licensing and the 1978 International Key
vacation area motorists
lnJpectlon requirements apply to facilities which Cl ub Convention talen t
DANRD\6N
contest in Miami Beach,
aibmmoda~ motor hoo!ea and truck campers.
should exercise caution when

O£_.,)_r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_r_od_a_y_ Five ·mishaps
probed Monday
Two Russian spies released

Americans among victims

Two staff pianists

added for production

Trio charged with robbery

Husky Soviet

kflls pair

had indi cated a new store
might be constructed in lower
Middleport.
Co uncil gave two readings
to an ordinance to change the
zoning of the area in question
from residential to a business
status and had been wailing
for Heck's to indicate it
wishes to proceed with the
project before the third and
final reading to the change
was given.
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene
Grate read a letter on the
eme r genc y edu ca ti on
program of Columbia Gas ol
Ohio. Council approved the
fire department report of
May showing a total of 44
calls during the month. 33 of
which are emergency runs.
Mayor Hoffman announced
that Kim Shields of the
Buc keye Hill s-Hock ing
Valle y Regional Develop·
ment District will meet with
representativ es of both
Middleport and Pomeroy
Village Councils at 7:30p.m.
Wednesd ay to disc uss a
combined application which
the Iwo villages have made
for HUD fun ds.
Att ending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Grate
and co un cilm en, Marvin
Kell y, Allen King, Carl
Horky, William Walters and
Dewey Horton.

good shape."
" It was the most organi1.
and calm disaster I've seen 1
20 years, " sai d Claren c
Nolan an ambulance drive
who a ~ong the fir st to arriv•
at the scene.
" People just walked out &lt;
the plane , helping other
passengers. There were
obvious signs of pain, but no
one .vas screaming."
Stewart' s quick reflexes
pr obab ly avoi ded a worse
disaster. Before reaching the
end ol the runway , he veered
the twinengine jetliner
sharply to the Jell, missing a
senes of hightension pylons
bv less Ulan 20 feet .
-" If it had hit those pylons
there probab ly would ha ve
been

fJ

f1re ." a spokesman

sa1 d.
Tulloc h, married and the
fat her of th ree small
children, said he saw fue l
leaking !rom the lorn wings
and became frightened for
the first time.
"That was my greatest
concern. I'd survived the
crash, 1 didn 't want to die in
an explosion ."

U . Gen. James V. Hartinger

New assignment

BERGSTFlOM AF'B , Texas graduate of West Point.
- Lieu tenant General James
He earned an M.R.A. at the
V. Hartinger, son of Mid· George
Was hingt o n
dleport resident Mrs. Violet University, Washi ngton , U.
Hartin ge r , has assu med C., and graduated from the
command of Tactical Air In dustrial College of th e
Comman d's Twelfth Air Arme&lt;l Forces, fort McN ail.
Force headquart ered here . Washington. D. C.
He wa s pr ev iou sly th e
Ge neral Hartinger wa s
Commander of Ninth Air married to the former Susan
Force at Shaw Air Force Allensworth rdeceased 1 of
Base, S. C.
Middleport. He has three
Twelfth Air Force exer· chi ldren. Jimmer. Kris. and
cises control over Tactical Mike.
Air Command's fighter units
west of the Mississippi, which :.:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:.:·:.:·:.:.:·:·:·:·: :·:·:·:·:.:-:.::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;::.
seeing children walking or Includes 10 active duty wings,
The Ga llla·Melgs Post, ·
playing near the streets and 40 Air National Guard and Air Highway Patrol , an ·
Force Reserve units, and a nounced today that U. S. 35,
road .
total of 58,000 people.
between Ja ckson and
:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::.;:;:;:;:;.:·:·:·:·
Born in Middleport, Chillicothe, Is open to oneGeneral Hartinger entered lane traff . Road repair
EXTENDED FORECAST
the military service in July of has , In recent days, ca used
Thursday through
1943 and rose to the grade of traffic to be detoured . A
Saturday: A chance of
sergeant. After World War II, spokesman for the patrol,
afternoon or evening he attended and graduated
stated that Rt. 35 may be
thundershowers Thursday
from pilot training in June open to two-lane traffic by
and Friday and fai r
1949. Since earn ing his Air this weekend. Travelers
Saturday. Hlgbs will he In
Force wings, he has served are advised to contact the
the 8ts and the lows wm be
primarily in tactical units patrol for further detaUs .
In the 1011.
with combat tours in Korea ·
:·:·:·:::.:·:&lt;·:·:::·:-A.:-:·&gt;:·:::::.:::::::::::.:::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:· and Vietnam. l'le Is also a ·&lt;:·&lt;::&lt;:::::::::::::~.:::::::::::::::::·:::·:·:·::::"'~:;::::;;;;

Jackson man gets 90 days

Legislation is signed

Two passengers among the
107 people aboard died , 100
others were in;ured.
Early reports said one of
the jet's two e n ~in es failed as
Vancouver-bound Flight 189
took off . 'Officials, however.
reserved judgment pending
the out come of their
invest igalion.
"Everybody was scared
when we came down ," said
Sharon Mohamed, 21.
"People were crying , and
passengers were help ing
each other . Some people had
blood on the sides of their
heads. It was ghastly."
Tulloch sa id he crawled
from the aircraft through a
huge gash in the fuselage
behind the cockpit without
realizing he had been hurt ,
then fe ll to the ground .
"When we stopped, my fir st
reacti on wa s to head for the
open sp ace. !looked ba ck and
people were crunch ed
toge ther in the openi ng.
Another chap came out after
me, he had blood all over his
face and apparently a broken
arm . Others came through
the emerge ncy exi ts, and
they looked to be in pretty

Revenue sharing
funds allocated

$29 mil1\on seeks owners

Pastor brings gun to church

By RICHARD van ABBE
TORONTO (UP! I - As the
l)C.9 hurtled down the 10,500
feel of Runway 23 Left, Capt.
Reginald Stewart sudden ly
realized the twin-engine jet
might not get off the growtd .
"The pilot had a splitsecond decision to make," an
Air Canada spokesman later
explained - try to coax the
plane into the air , or abort the
takeoff . " In his judgment, he
decided to try to bring the
plane to a halt. "
"We were halfway down
the runway," passenger AI
Tulloch said, "when there
was a thumping sound as if a
tire had blown. Then the pilot
reversed his eng ines to slow
us down ; thai's what I
imagine he did , anyway.
But the DC-9 already had
barreled past the " point of
commitment" :.... the point at
which a takeoff can'l"t be
stopped safely. In his contest
with the laws of motion ,
Stewart lost.
"The next thing , we went
over the cliff," Tulloch said
from his Toronto hospital
hed. " It felt lik e going down .
... in the elevator, only
faster ."
The DC-9 had plunged off
the end of the runway into a
OO.foot ravine, breaking into
three pieces.

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