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10-'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday, July 3, 1978
-

0

~~~!: ::1) , ,~;~;!~~:~;~, r-~~-A~OO_ -i;-.;;ih~---- !I ~ c~~

.
The ' ;::r~~ollce
Garrett, Torrance, Calif.; a• ·· Department investigated two

r .Md n.hera oft . i t wu ~~:'!u•~
wl~

11n1c1t from the ...,. by , ·

cluuace ol obewen

JOSEPH HINJ)Y·
F.uneral services "for !lt~ughter, Mrs. Richard
1, _ 6 ulllllllltolllelew ' Joseph (Joe ) . Hlndy, 53, (Sharon) Smith, Coolville; a
111 ud early mo....., Iowa . formerly of Mlddl~rt who . brother, .· AI~. Folla01bee,
wUl he Iaiiie • or low 'ltl.
died Saturday In Chillicothe,
Va., three grandchildren;
we~. !leld at 2 p.m. today at three step-grandchildren and
the Rawlings .- Coats Funeral seve.-.1 niece.§ and nephews.
::::::;::::::::::::::::::':::::::::::::~':::::':;:::::,;:::;::::&gt;::::,::: Home with the Rev. Dwight Precedll)g hiq~ ·tn \Ieath
. ld!!swlfhis pandren~, ;~ehhis
WEEKEND MEETING
Javitz oHlclating. Mr. ljlndy bes
wUl he a weekend was hom July 2, 1924 at 1arst .. e a
·sax. . ers
1 d Delbarton, W. Va., a son of and sisters.
~re:et.!' f ~a;~:t Rcu~u~~b the late Ollie 41Jd. l'l!ary ., Funeral services 1Vill be
st rt•~• Wed eSda With' the . Mustard llil)dy. He was alllo. · _held a( 2 p.m . .Wednesdl!y ~t
a ~P..,· En., - '1
Ut h . preceded 1n death · by two · the White FURt~"ai· Home. 111
Rev. au1 _. ,.ay1or o1 a . . .
·
..
Coolville with the Rev. Roy
ak '
Sisters. . . .
. . . ..
as spe er. .
Surviving
are
two Deeter offac1atmg: Burial will
On Sunda~ mghl the_r,..-"~ daughters · Mrs Mary Jo be In Cool~leCemetery. •
be a hymn smg featunnl! the · Pickens 'Middl~port . 'Mrs . Friends
Y call at the
PeacefUl Valley gospelgroup Sharon ' Brewer Pbrkers: funeral ho
any time after
from Columbus. Pastor .
. W V • •hr
.
noon on Tu
·.
1 .·. ·
Leland Haley invites the burg, . a:, t. ee sons,
. .
.
public'to attend the services Joey, .Cleveland, !,lay. of
.
.
'
which will start at 7, 30 each Parkersburg, and ROD!Ue of
KATHRYNP .. fOJ\D.
•
Beverly·• three ••Isler•
.Kathryn Petennan Ford,
evening ·
- -~ · ·Mrs.
·
·
Don
(Emma) · Crum, 45., ·former .· . Ml.d dleport
,
Delbarton, W.' Va . ;. ·-Mrs . resident, died · Friday at
ATHEN~ ·
Clifford (Eijzalleth) ·Stumbo, University ." Hospital In ·
UVESTOCK SALES
Middleport, · and . Mrs. Reed Columbus · after :. several
Saturday; July 1, 1978
(Dickie) Vam•" Las Vegas months illness. She was the
·'
. ' daughter of 'Mrs. Vemlce
Slaughter Steers 51-51. 25_, · Nev_., and t;wo "brothers,
,Cass
Feeder St~rs - (400-100 lbs.) of Middleport' and Kalad Petennan, Columbus, and
choice 51Hi2, good 43-55.
. (Cal ) ·of Winter Park, _Fla. the late Curtis Peterman.
Feeder Helfeys ( 400-700 Several grandchildren
In idditio11 -to her mother,
""
•
d
.
'
9
lbs.) choice 46.50-4 ·""• eOO nieces and nephews also she. is survived · by one
..
•• 75 .
.......
survive.
daughter,. wanda ; · one son,
Feeder BuDs (400-100 lbs.)
Mr. Hindy was a member Aaron, and an aunt, Mrs. Ora
choice ~. good 41.75-47.
of the Middleport First Scott, Columbus.
Slaughter BuUs ·(over 1,000 United Presbyterian Church.
Funeral services 'will be
lbs.) 48, Slaughier Cows, He served with the U.S. Navy held Thursday at the J . W.
utilities 38.75-41.85; C8Mers during World War II. He was Ross Funeral Home at I p.m.
and Cutters 32-37.35..
a 25 year member'. of · both Burial will he In Ev~rgreen
Veals (choice and prime ) Middleport Masonic Lodge Cemetery. The family may
62-70; Baby Calves (by the 363, F&amp;AM, and Feeney· be contacttd. at' 1425 IJUdreth
head) ~Bennett Post 128, American or phone 252-3216
~3.
1

. Friday. IIICb• ,.111 ruce

Inlet. ..
FOII'membersofanJillin,
m, fllllllly ·died Saturday In
cralh of a slnaiHngine
illrpta. 1n a ·cornfield near
Denl8an 1
The dead
were
B~ Steam, 43 •
!*wife Dr Anne Steam 31
and · 'tw~
daught~rs:
Ale~:a'ndrla Jane, 7,. and
Jennifer,&amp;. 'lbreepassengers
SllrVived, Including two. other.

w.

!be

of,

There

11

Steam children.

D...,,;

PLACE DESIGNATED
The GlowetteUhould meet
at ·Scott's Cleaners on the
corner ol Second and Spruce
In Gallipolis at 11 a .m .
Tueiday for the Gallipolis
Fourth of July parade.

SQUAD RUNS
The
'Middleport
Emergency Squad answered
three caDs over the weekend.
At 12:06 p. m. Saturday
Donald Annentrout, 106 N.
· Second Ave. , was _taken to
Veterans Memorial Hosnital
with a po$Sible fractured leg.
AI 12:SI p. m. Sunday the
squad re!ponded to a caU at .
the Anderson Trailers, but
the call was cancelled before
the squad completed the run.
At 9:48 p. m . Sunday the
squad w's called to the
Aleshire residence on old
ropte 7 for DeJa Braglln .who
Hogs200-230
(No. 1,lbs.)
Barrows
and
Gilts,
47-47.10;
was taken to Veterans With a
Sows :i5.85.J9.10: Boars 32,50.
.. broken ankle and injured
Feeder Lambs 51~.
shoulder.

or

Legionan
, Middleport
. lieFann
had
been
agent _.With
Bureau Jn.surance which
later became NationWide.
Burial was in · Riverview
Cemetery:

·,

•
d 111

ek

rlmoss

Aceording to ,the p!llrol, m
auto drlnn by Jeffrey p;:
BI'WIIfleld,25,G•Uipolll; wU'
ealll bound on .Wooclnllle,:
when vehicle operated by:
Stinley Mayo, 2&amp;, Jackaol!:
· Pike, went left of ~ and;.
sideswiped the Brumfield.
auto.
:
There was no report of;
· injury or Qf citation.
•
At 6 p.m ., · officers in-l . vestlgated a one-auto crub!
on SR 124, at Mineravllle 1n;
Meta• County.· ..,
.,..
•Officers repo!1 that an auto •
driven by George J . Deaver~
lost control while netlotlatbqf
a curve, went ok the ~·
sid f he ad
__
eo t ro way,.,"""",
back onto the highway;.
passed oH the left side, and
struck a e•uanlraU.
~.
.
There were no Injuries. 11Mo
Deaver vehiCle lncurre4:
mooerate damage.
( ..

By ltENNETH 1\. CLARX
razura, 18, loll both hands to
United Prao IDterutluUI
the explosion of an. "M.atl."
It wu· the nation 's 202nd Police IBid both firecracker
l!lrthday, and Americans types pack power 'ranging
marked It wllh their usual from a quarter to a third o(
recipe of plcnlci, parades, that of a Stick of dynamite .
~otechnlca and proleat. But • On the highways, jammed
the Fourt.h of July carried its Tuesday aa motorlllla headed
1111181 mark of trqedy too. home from their holidays, the '
A dynamite-caliber "block- traffic death toll topped 600,
buller" firecracker ripped · Inching toward Ute National ·
threeflngersfrom the hand of Safety Council predlcUon of
. :Kenneth McCorle, 17, of New . 650 to 750 fataJIUes .
In BUllion, soaking ralo
'Yirk when he tossed It from
the window of a. CJ~r, only to thinned lhe crowd to 20,000 find It bouncing back, and in from last year's 350,000 - as
Baymne, N.J ., Marcello Er-

..

Veter.alli"MemorlalHospltal Durham, Michael Dutcher,
Saturday Admissions - · Mary Edmonds,"Brett Elliott,
None.
{:Harles Ferguson , Zelia
NOW YOU ·KNOW
Saturday Discharges - .Fisher, Pearl FuUer, Rosa
Mike
There actually were seven . CURT.lS M. PERSINGER
Ollie Buchanan, Louise Griffith, Norma HollingsCleopatr_a s who ruled Egypt
Curtis M: Persinger, 98, Eshelman, Rhonda Gilbert, head, Anna Hughes, Karen
at one tune or another, and Coolville, died Sunday at Charlotte · Nease, Danny Jackson, Georgiana Jenkins,
149 S. Third St.
they . were Greeks, not Camden - Clark Memorial Walker, Nancy Huffman, Troy Kingerly, Mrs. Charles
Middleport, 0 .
Egyptians.
Hospital in Parkersburg Elizabeth Hysell, Myrtle Lanier and daughter, Mickey
following a brief illness.
Warner.
Manring, · Imogene Morgan,
. '"See
M i1
Mr. Persinger was hom In
Sunday Admissions Lorita Nicely, Evie Nickles,
MEETING
Ufe, bealtJa uti lwj] I AREGULAR
Burnsville, W. Va ., a son of Helen Bartels, Syracuse; Orema Smith, Mrs. Max
regular meeting of
the
late Martin L. and Susan Carl Autherson, Syracuse; Stumbo and daughter, Debra
.
·~
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
Fox Persinger. He worked at Della BragHn, Middleport. Via , · John Forys , Irene
will be held at 7:30 p. m .
Sunday Discharges - Eliza · Wellman , Teresa Whit,
· at the Temple. \he shipyards In Baltimore,
Wednesday
. ~r.j,,.. .... ,.......
Md.,
during
World
War
II
and
Foreman,
Carolyn Klein, tington, Mary Wolford,
~
All Master Ma50ns are 1o:
5pentthe rernalnderofliis life Richard Hudson, Alma Thomas Wright.
vited .
as a self-employed fanner. Frazier, Daisy Glassburn . '
(Birtba July I)
He had been a resident of
"
Mr. and Mrs. David
Coolville for 40 years.
HoberMedlcaiCenler
Hughes,
a
daughter,
Surviving are his wife,
·(JilDe!l'l
Jackson;. Mr . and Mrs .
Helena Rood Persmger; a, . Donna · Baker
Teddy Wendall Payne, a son, Bid·
'
daughter, Mrs . Bertha Barker, Randall ' BentleY. well.
William Bowling, Luther
(DiscbargeaJulyZ)
Outstanding style, quality,
Brown , Jack Carter, Denise
Kenneth Adams; Milton.
Cox, Carey Cramer, Charlene Barnhart, Florence Barrett ~
D
,
u
I"J
Bertha Batey, Debra Carll.r~ ,.• , "'"'r~, · .., J!~P.!lc.~ -nter, Edna Ellb, . Cheryl
value. In a word: Lane
Delaney
and
son,
Ira
~:..ggers,
,...
•
tlb~ervance
Jr., Helen George, Margaret Fraley,
Mr,ll.
Timothy
Gray, Bev.erly . Guinther, Harless and son, Mary
· Clean . un&lt;!l uttered lines . Lots of emphasis
The Parish of Grriee Mary Heck, Michael Jarvis, Hughes, Hazel .Jarrell, John
Church ;Episcopal) wlll Lucy Jones, Osle Juniper, Jones, Leigh . Mash, Myrtle
on the natural beauty of richly grained
eo~Jlmemorate
the an· Otie l.iru!berry, Mrs. Dwight Neal, George Newland Jr.,
woods . Scaled for modern needs : Styled
of
American.
In- Uoyd and son , Lewis Long, Vicky Pittenger , Reva
olveriBry
with a flair for understated contemporary
dependence
with
a · Robert Massie, Marion Reaves, Ghin Sprouse, Tanya
elegance. Crafted with the integrity of a
celebration of Holy Com· McGinnis. Mrs . David Sturgeon, Donald Vaughan
Company whose nanie has stood for -quality
munlon at 10: 00 a . m. Meaige and daughter, Mrs. · Jr.
furniture for more than 60 years . And priced
Tueaday, lo the church, 3%1 Frank Mooney and daughter,
realistically . This is the Lane story . One to
· E!lst Malo Street, Pomeroy. Suds Pauley, William Perlive with happily ever after .
Mrs. Roberta O'Rrlea, a singer, Timothy Powell,
member ollhe p!lrlsb vestry, Kelsie Ratliff,
will serve as Eplololer. Tlie Reitmire, Tina Riffle, Mrs.
· celebrant of lbe service, Charles Ruckel and son,
which will he accerdbag to Douglas Russell, Viola
" The Book of Common Rutherford, Marla Rutt,
Pnyer", will he the Rev .. Marjorie Salser, Pamel~
Robert B. Graves, rector of Saylor, Uoyd Sergent, Clara
MIDDlEPORT. 0.
the. parish.
Shamblin, William Sharpe,
Fern Sheets, Billie Stewart,
Mrs . Paul Stewart and
daughter, Nancy Stinson,
DO-IT-YOURSELF
Luronda Thacker, Joy
Thnton , Scottie Tripp,
Juanita Weethee, Aubrey
Young.
(Births)
For al your do-it.,ourself .
Mr. · and Mrs. Robert
daughter,
Chassin,
a
Home Improvement Supplies
Jackson; · Mr . aod Mrs.
W_Uliam Cochran, a daughter;
Cross Hardware
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Brett
\
Epling, a son, Gallipolis; Mr.
• Housewares ·
and
Mrs. John Johnson, •a
•
• WallpaPer
daughter,
New Haven; Mr.·
N
• Paints .
and Mrs. William Rollins, a
• Electrical Suppjies
A
. daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
• Plumbinq Suoolies
Mrs . Arthur Robinson, . a
doughier, Jackson.
E
(DI.sehargeo July II .
Helen Anderson, Olga
Open Mon. thru Sat.
Beckley, Jake Betz, Blllie
9: 00 to S: 00
Black, Nonna Broyles, Mrs.
•'
71 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport _
992-38
William Christian and son,

the U-year-old Art~ur
Fiedler conducted hla annual
musical specuicular, with
from
the
cannon-fire
Mauachusetts
National
Guard punctuating Tchaikovsky's "1812 Overture."
At Intermission, ·Fiedler
was presented with 24
leather-bound volumes
containing half a · million
congratullitory · signatures
from his fans.
·
, "This -Ia a: great day for

:· me," Fiedler ·said. "'I don 't
think I'll ever be able, to read
.all this. It woulrl almo st he

7_,..

·.
· Pomer.oy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 5, 1978

like
reading
· the · " Star
Wars ;"
" Close
Encyclopedia Britannica." · Encounters of a Third Kind"
For ' New Vorkers it fell .and_ "2001 Space .Odyssey."
Cold rain
dampened
more like the Fourth of
March, with temperatures in festivities in Philadelphia
the 60s and a drizzling rain too, but failed to halt the
washing' out planned disco ·traditional fireworks and the
parade from Independence
dancing In the streets.
Despite
the
gloomy Hall. Mayor Frank Rizzo
weather, they turned out in presented the City 's highest
force to .watch the · aMual· awllfd - the F~eedom Medal
Macy's fireworks display to Roman Catholic
elec)ronically synclironized Archbishop Cardinal · John
this year so that 6,640 aerial Krol.
·
shells burst on cue to the . In . Washingto n, several
Strains of theme music from thousand members of the

Youth International Party
puffed pot across the street
from tbe "White House in a
protest bid ID be arrested, but
police . de clined . Yiolence
erupted
briefly
when
mounted officers r:esponded
to a ·barrage of bottles and
cherry bombs with a charge
loto the " Yippie" ranks, but
chants of "peace - w.e .want
peace" soon quelled the
disturbance.
In J3axter Springs, Kan., a
firecracker tossed from a car
by two teen-agers blew back
into the vehicle, igniting

•

•

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

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

LANE
.

.

Independence

' '

MEN'S BtUE JEANS
.

.

•••

•·

'1 .195

.

1

t \
•

....
Leggs
Popular Mr.
Brand flare leg . true
western st'y ling.
14 ounce blue denim pre. washed . Sizes 29 tci 42
waist - lengths 30 t~ 34 .

.

Be sure to Mt ovr

fine

selection

ol

11\tn's long . sleeve

western shirts In
slros small 04-141'11,
medium
115-IS'I'al,
Iorge 116· 16•i.l, extro
lor.. (t7-t7V.l .'

USE OUR FREE
PARKING lOT

Q.OSED TUESDAY

ON SECOND ST.

JUlY 4TH
Open Wednesday
niursd;~y · Saturday
9:JOto5 P.M.
. Friday 9:30A.M. toe P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

He Does His Banking
From The Bank •

SUNDAE SALE:
\

•

FREE

'

In fact, Mr. Anthony haa more time than 1¥11' to
relax, fish and travel thanks to a spacial free
F .armer• Bank service; Each month Willis
.
Anthony's social security check Is dapoalted
-·
automatically and directly In !tis Farmers Bank
checking account. He . doesn't halll to Wait
around foe: the check to arrlw In' his mall box, or
worry about It being stolen If he's out--of-town,
or spend precious time hurrylnQ to the blink to
deposit his own check. If you're rill,.;! you c;ail
tika advanlage of the same aervloe , Vlalt
Farmer's Bank for Information about how your
aoc;lal security check can lie automatically .
deposited In your checking account.

.·•.

:-3 in One
o•

Pt()pfe ,you kno·w.... know Farmer~

I ·~

CLOSED JULY 4TH

·'

Fs

dan_y 1s e ~:J
LOcust

St.

,iddleport_.

1 ,~.-..,_...,.,

0

f

0,'

..._

Farmers
Bank
..................

POIIiiiiOY OltiO

...... ;Die .

WWKU%

..

.

FIRST PLACE in tlie now - theme division was the
float entered by Racine I;laptist Church. Their theme was

Dr. Wade joins PVH
POINT PLEASANT. John A. Wade, Jr., M.D ., an
otolaryngologist (ear, nose

8 a.m . till 1:30 p.m.
He and his wile, Sarah, and
daughter, Emily, reside at

j~:eJh;~:\t:fr"~:'~i~a!~~ ~l~a~~~~-dler Drive in 'P oint

praise given

..:!'h!'~KI. :rJ'~· ·l.aa~otJ:-~=~~ l X~JutrA"t11 ~~ -~~n~;; James'flamed

America mthe Fourth of July - sort of.
''The American peq~le's struggle for independence and
· democr•cy stands as a fine tradition that is aimed at providing
a better life and society In which the people can truly be
Masters· o1 the land," the radio Intoned .

Wants legislature involved

ment.

·Earth return readied
MOSOOW (UPI) ~ The world's first Pollah cosmonaut and

bla 1\uaaian cm~ma'*'r readied their return to jj:arth today,
.,.._ their apace ca~ule loaded _With data from a week of
aperlments aboard the Salyul 6 $Illite station.
- Soviet aplite experts predicted more SJ)I!cefllghts with
Jnternatlmal cr.e~ as part ol the jntercoounos program.

U. S. protests ap_p ointment
GENEVA, Switzerland (UPI) -The United States has .
lannaJly protested the appointment of a Soviet KGB
Jn&amp;eWaence colonel u persoMel director at the United
Natlma' European headquarters.
SWiu authorities, In an unusual public statell)ent, salct·
' tbey were "c'-IY studying" a Soviet request to •lve
·dlpklmatlc accreditation to Gell Dneproflky, ldentlfled as a
KGB colonel.
.

r

.

,llO,tJOO reward is offered

,

WAIHJNGTON ( UPI) - 'l1te FBI wtU PIIY .10,001) each for
W.awlkm ...ding to lhe arr8ll of two Cuban exllel being
lullld Ia CCIIIIICUon with lhe 1978 slaying ol tonilir OtUean
D I 21 Mbr...f Orlando IAteller.
PBJ11p JNIIBII Dave C... said Tuedlay ''Up to flO,OOI!
1
lu'betD lll1bll'llld fGr Jll)'lllellt to lndlvldull" who help find
··e~~~~~r Jo11 DIGnlllo Sulrez cr VlrgiUo Paz . The FBI consldera
1

~~ 1naed and dangerous.

.

•

, '11

..

· ~Happlness

is Freedom in ChriSt ."

State fire marshal's
offic'e to be req
" uested
•

·

., -~

office In the hospital.
to ·represent
Dr . Wade is the first ea r, B
k
nose and throat specialist to
UC eye state
come to the tri-county area of
COLUMBUS
State
Mason, Gallia, and Meigs . He Representative Ron James
Is a graduate of West Virginia (0-Proctorville) has received
Unlversi ty
.School
of special recognition by being
Medicine. He completed .a named to help represent Ohio
ClEVELAND (UPI)- U.S. District Court Judge Frank two-year general surgery at the National Conference o£
residency at Charleston Area Stale Legislatures.
J. Battisti has received a suggestion from stale attorneys that
Medical
Center
in
Jame s was tapped bY
he Involved the state legislature in the Cleveland school
Charleston, West Virginia, Speaker of the House." Vern
deeegreptlon case to get th~ $15 million needed for school
and then retu111ed to West Rille, to attend the three-day
busing In 1978.
Virginia University Medical . meeting beginning July 5, at
A melll&lt;l'andum filed with the judge by attorneys for the
Center. for a three yeaf' Denver. Colorado .
Ohio Board of Education, co-defendant With the local school
Rifle said he chose James.
residency in ENT surgery.
board In the desegregation case, said there can be no . A- native of Charleston, Dr. because of his expertise in the
desegregation without the money and the legislature controls
Wade has been published in areas of natural resources,
ihe funds.
·
·
the " Laryngoscope" a environment, energy and
national publication for e~r. state retirement.
·
nose and throat specialists.
_"T.he people of $outhern
His subject was "Clinical Ohio should be proud that
CHARLESTON, W. Va. {UPI ) - No increase has
Signi£icance
of
Vir al they have a representatative
materialized even though· U. S. Bankruptcy Court oHiclals
Latency ."
who has experienc e and
were pre~re&lt;t f&lt;r a large boost In cases at the close of the 11~
in addition to his office kn owled ge to share with
day United Mine W&lt;rkers strike.
hours, Dr. Wade will also be le gislator s from all fift y
· U. S. Bankruptcy Judge Edwin Flowers, In fact, said the
rumber of bankruptcy petitions In the past three months has dolog ear. nose and throat . states ," Riffe said.
Represent ativ e
J ame s
and facial plastic surgery at
faUen over the same three-month span last year, from 283 in
commented, " l am looking
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,1977 to mly 235 In !978.
·
James
L.
Farley. · forward to a t remendous
Executive Director
of . learning experience that will
Pleasant Valley Hospit a l, help me to continue to imBARTOW, F-la . (UPI) - Charlie Smith celebrated, hls announcing lhe appointment prove services to !he people
!38th birthday Tuesday and said he still drinks as much booze of Dr. Wade to the staff Silid, of my ~istrict , "
" We are indeed fortunat e to
as he can get and likes to smoke cigarettes, too. .
have
. a physician of Dr .
EXTENDED FORECAST.
And m special occasions a piece of cake is a nice chaJ11le of
Wade's
caliber
on
our
staff."
Friday through Sunday, .
pace f&lt;r Charlie, who !lillY reaDy he the oldest man in the
Dr. Wade Is in the process
warm
and hum!~ ..-tth
wcrld as well as the IJnited States.
of establishing his practice at
showers dally. Highs from
Pleasant Valley Hospital
85 to 90 and lows In the
now . His office hours will be
lower 70s.
. LAGOS, NtieFia ( UPI) -Relatives are moving thousands Monday through Frid~y from
of sick NlgeFian p!ltients out of Lagos hospitala, which have
been itruck by the state 's public and private doctors.
Both public and private health iervlces in the Lagos area
were paralyied f&lt;r the second day Tuesday as doctors refused to treat the ~ck because of a dispute With the military govern-

.:Relatives moving sick

Goldie

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Wo s

Celebrates 136th birthday

CROSS HARDWARfJ

JULY 4 ONLY
BUY 1 GET 1

:£,..)_r_h_e_w_._or_fd_To_'.d_a_y_

No increase materializes

R

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County and Churct)." Second' place was won by the
Aux iliary of the Racine Fire Department.

F1RST PLACE WINNER In the Independence Day
theme was the float entered by Wesleyan United
Methodl$1
Their theme was "Independence in
. Church.
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.Twice the fun for the

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_z-, .. . . . ~·~ 'l ..., r

see

Crabtree_,

Fifteen Cents
Vol. ~9. No. 56

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HARDWWARE HEADQUARTERS

Chad

$0 .60.

GULF

'BAKER FURNITURE

..-::;;;;;;:::;;:::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii=····-~

ago in a wooden crate In a
bookstOI'e - was purchased
by Dallas millionaires Ira
Corn Jr. &amp;lid Joseph Dr~oll
for $400,000.
.
For horae.raee buffs in
Lafayette ,
La .,
Mr.
Firecracker did his Fourth of
July best .
The 4-year-old gelding entered the fifth race a decided
m1derdog, but hunch bettors,
eyeing his name, ran.lhe odds
2· 1 in , ll is favor . Mr .
Firecra cker won , paying

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at y

me for car,

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more fireworks and Sl'lling
the car on- fire . The two
youths jwnped, and were .not
injured, but the lllazing car
hit another vehicle, then
rairuned a garage which also
burned .
Another , firecra ckerrelated blaze leveled most of
a city bloek in Girard, Kan.
In Dallas, a group of
wealthy' Texans marked the
Fourth .by presenting an
original second"printed copy
of the De cia ration of
Independence to the city. The
documPnt - found 10 yeo;us

MEETS WEDNESDAY ":
The Syracuse- MineravIlle
Sports .AISOCtatlon Will meet
Wednesday at 8;30 p. m. at-'
the Syracuse MuQiclpaJ ,
B u ildlng.

ELBERFELDS
.

·sPECIAL
SALE I
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_B irthday -marked by ·u sual'customs, but ca~ries · .tragedies

~~~~ ~~u:r:: ~on':: . ~~ Rd,, at the junction ol S~

According to the
an .
auto operated by Junior F. the rlllllp
,
accll;lents over the weekend Baker, 25, Crown City, had
The cb-tver loll control 011
while the emergency squad slowed to _tum left, when a · the wet ~vemerit, went off
answered three caDs.
ve'!'cle dr1ven by Richard A.. the rlghl aide of the roadway,
At 7:1:tp. m . Saturday, an Philllpo, 24, Chesapeake, was and struck theslgnsowned by
accident occurred on East unable to atop and struck tile the . Dep!lrtrnent of TransMain Street when a car Baker auto In the rear.
port~tlon.
_
driven by Carl Swartz 25
.\11 QCCup!lnt of the Phillips. The
auto
Incurred
· Mason, was maklog a' left· -.:ehicle1 Mabel .M. Phillips, moderate damage. There
tum_and a vehicle driven. by 56, clalined lojuries, but was . were 110 lnjurlea, or Citation.
.Daruel Dudding, 17, Rac10e, . not 4\lmediat~ly- tr~ted. .
At 9,04 · .in. officers were
!ltruek the Swartz.car In the . Phillips was · c1ted :'or ·'caUed to ·tl:e sCene of a twOleft rea~. Dudding was assu~ clear distance : 'lliere . car accident on SR 7 threecharged With unassured clear . was sbght domage to both 1 lhs f
·
th'
th
&lt;liotance.
.
.
.
.h. ,
. . . .
. en
o a m 11 e sou o1 e
.
..
. .
. ve lc.es.
. . . . . . . . Gallla ·County Line.
An acc1dent on West Malh ' · At·6:30 p.- m .-. on M_t. tabor: . . A 'di . .
·lh .
1
occurredat7:18 p.m. Sunday '.Rd · tlllv-tertths of ·a ·mUi•' · .ccor ng to - ~ patro •
when a vehicle operated by north of CR 3o an llllto driven· Jerry $wartz,(f, Middleport,
Debra . Beasley! . . Wes_t bY. Joe .W: Undamood, 40; .wahi rttempttedg ~o
ha
Columb1a was pulling·out of VI 1 ·
Y
t y
· 11 .• d . 'th ait ve c e opera
. Powell's' Silnoco Statii&gt;n
n on, ~o . lu.e __wl .
. ! · Sayer; 19, New Haven,
headln west . Beasley lied embankment. ...;
.
. When Swartz observed apg_ ._
. . pu .
. . Acc~rdlng _to · the patrol, . proachlng traffl~.
her
·
vehicle
across
·the
road
Undamood
was 110rth bound · swa 11z then a 1· t empted
. 1o
hi ·
·d · · b K.
·
tUng a car riven Y eMy on .Mt.. Tabor · when· -he,
h · h 1
d
Hanklson, ~ew Haven, who . became incapacitate~. at- re;:enter 1 e ng t ane, an
was travelll)g _~ast: Beasley templed to back to tum: hls st ;ck the Saye~ ar~· Sa
was charged . Wl\h ·failure. to · -uto;·!'lid-,strbck ·an etJl)lank· v . passenger m.
yer
y1eld the •nght of way. ·
men I. · Tbere was · sliglit NehlciHae,SusanlJ .. Ededwainrdj, 17 •
.
.
da mage
. to the .auto. .. ' · . .. , but
ew wasven~otc aun
ury
. th
. ere. were IIo inj unes
m
immediatelY
e1ther accident .
·Lindamood was cited for t ted
At 2:~ a. m Sunday the DWI.
· . · . r~her~ was moderate
emergency squad answered a
·AI) auto operated by Jackie da
both h.I 1
all
t
th
Thoma
'd
R.
L.
k
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d
v·
.
mage
to
ve- ces.
c
o e
. . resa !'DC~
•
uc a o, 21 ; . mton, . S rt'
d f r
on Wolfe Drive and _lit 12: 26,p.
·
·
wa z was c11 e
o
m . the squad ::irted
Mrs.
Norman . ysell,
· Pomeroy, to Hotze Medical
Center. Also, at 3:04 p. m . the
squad transported Donna
Gibbs and Chriatie Gibbs, ·
.
both involved
in
ari
automobile accident, to ·
Holzer.

'HOSP. JTAL N'EW.·.·S

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20 • assured clear dla·-·

~2~!:.·~ 1) ·~~~~:~:~::r::~ ~~~=:~ca.
~trol,

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from several cars at Racine
Tue sday evening, Meigs
Count y Sheriff Jam es _J .
Proffitt said this morning. '
Sheriff Proffitt and Deputy
"Robert Beegle had responded
to a ca ll from Thomas Kibble,
RD Pomeroy . Kibble advised
he had gone to Racine to
wa tch the fireworks display
and had parked his pickup
truck in ~e church parking
lut behind the junior high
building .
F oll owi ng . the fir ework s
.display, he discovered the
truck's battery had been
stolen .
While investigating , nearby
res id ent s furnish ed t he
sheriff with a description and
li cens~ plate number of a
couple of cars as well as the
descri pti on . of . some in·
dividuals thaf had been act.
ing suspiciously .
Patrolman Werry was
alerted by radio information
.
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regarding the matter
. A short
Unlted.Eress loternatiooal
states
patrol ' ipterstate mi:might T.uesday but reports lime later Werry spotted one
of the vehicles in downtown
A nationwide effort to highways for speeders, has from some states went . not
Pomeroy : He stopped the car
reduce speeding dur.il)g the not reduced the death count complete.
Fourth of July holiday significantly from previous A breakdown of accidental and took three suspects to the
eounty jail.
deaths :
weekend appears to have holiday weekends.
Upon questioning, deputi~s
Alaska , Washington, D.C., Traffic 634
failed to hold the traffic death
learned an IS.year-&lt;&gt;ld Rt. I
count under the minimum of South Dakota and Vermont Drownlngs 140
Reedsville . ro uth and two
650 projected by the Nati o~al had no deaths reported.
Planes 21
youths ages 16 a nd 17 from
Safety Council.
. Attempting to combat dri· . Total 795
Operation
CARE,
a vers ' fati gue, volunteer s
California led all states the Chester Area, had cashed
cooperative elfort among law served free coffee at eight wit h 68 traHic dea ths , a check at the Landmark
enforcement agencies in 44 cities along intersta te followed by Texas with 44 / Station. The check had been
highways in 'Dlinok, ~hi~~ &lt; TIJi_noii!. r~rded 29, New stolen from a car at Racin e.
had one of its highj!st" death '·York had .zs: •Florida 24, The battery Jaken from th e
tolls·for the Fourth of July in Geprgia · 22, ·Arizona 21 and truck has '&amp;en recovered
recent years ,, The Texa s lntlfana alii:I Ala)Jama 20. · ,.. _frorrra Syracuse resident .
De puties also learned that
Department of Public Safety
/ 1. - -"~:"
one
of the trio had stolen two
urged drivers to use tHeir ,.,,1- , ~~W
'
-helmets at the Southern
. headlights during the day to'' ' " . .. '
Junior High and when· he
remind fellow motorists of
Considerable cloudiness,
discovered that one of the
traffic safety, but the effort
apparently had little effect . becoming mostly sunn y face pieces had been broken
he threw the helmet against a
Clear skies an~ · excellent during the afternoon and a
swimming conditions caused little warmer. Highs today window breaking the glass.
Th e helmets were recovered
recreation !;eekers to flock to around 80. Generally clear
tonight
with
lows
in
.the
upper
beh ind the junior high
'pools and beaches, increasing
50s
to
the
low
60s.
Sunny
and
building
.
. the drowning toll. Th e
warmer
Thursday
with
highs
·
The
trio
wer e held in the
crashes of several ' light
in
the
mid
80s
.
county
jail.
pending hearings
. plahes pusned up.the airplane
Wednesday
.
The name of the
death count.
18 yea r-old is being withheld
Two Oklahoma Highway
pending.the filing of charges.
:
Patrol trooper s and a
ACTIONS · FILED
J'{lilitary policeman wer e
Two suits fo.r mQney and a
killed Monday · when a dissolution of• marriage -have
· · Department of Public Safety been filed in Meigs · Co unty
OPEN DOOR SESSION
. airplane hit a power line and Common Pleas Court .
On
july 12 a representative
The Fanners Bank and
· ·c rashed while on a traffic
from
"congressmim Clarence
control assignment near Savings Co., P omeroy, filed
E.
-Miller's
office will conduct
Madge, Okla.
suit in the amo unt of $1 ,113.44
session from 10
an
open
door
A count by United Press agaihs.t Helen K. Bol en,
. International at 7 a .m . E;DT. Dexter; and another for a.m.·l2 noon in the court·
ljlday showed at lealll 634 $1,491.75 against Ja ck Bolen, house in Pomeroy. ·
If anyone has any questions
persons had bet-n ldlled in and Helen Bolen, Dexter.
Debbie . Smith, · Portland, concerning the ' Federal
'111E BICYClE DMSION - 1n111 by Mike VanMeter; age 2 and his sister Becky . traffk deaths since the
"Yankee Doodle Dandy" wu 1IMd u their theme. They are the childr,en of Mr_. and Mrs . holiday weekend began at 6 and Cart~r Smith, Racine; Government, please stop by
Roy VanMeter, Racine. Second and 'third places respectively went ·'" Br~· an Dill, Racine,, p.m. local time Friday. The !iled for dissolution of to discuss (hem with the
representative.
eounting period ended at marriage.
and Donlta Manuel, Letart Falls..
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Me igs Count y Sheriff
Jame' J . Proffitt reports the
State ~· ir e Marshal's Office
will be called to assist in the
investigation of a fire tnat
destroyed a truck Tuesday
even ing at the parking lot at
the old King 's Arms Night
Club below Middleport .
According to the ,report, a
1971 Brockway truck owned
by Anthony Ca rdillo, Rt. 1,'
Litng~ville, wa s parked at th e
pa rklng place' a·round 7 P··l"·
Monday evening after Cor·
dillo came into the tipple at
Jay Mar Coal Company
which had -already closed .
The cab of the truck was
destroyed . Coal in it was

owned - by Jay Ma r. T.he
Middleport Fire Department
responded to the scene and
extinguished 'the . flarne s .
Fireme~ were su.mmoned
around 6:30 a.m. today when
one front tire again ignited .
Deputies are lnvestigaging
the r eport of a boat motor
· from Old Towne Cree k.
Gerald Dilf, RL I, Miners·
ville, reported the motor was
stolen sometime between 10
p.m . Monday and 4 p.m.
Tuesday .
T.homa s Gasper s , RD
Pomeroy (Flatwoods area)
re,ported sometime bet jlleen I
p.m. Friday and Tuesday his
house had been entered. Th ~

method of ent ry iS un determined. He reP&lt;&gt;rled a 19
inch TV set and a Singer
sewing machine with ca binet
had been taken .
Tuesday e veni ng, J oan ·
Milliron , Rt. 2, Racin e,
reported the windshield had
been smashed and the radio
antenna and wiper anns P.,nt
on her 1971 Opel Cade! station
wagon parked at a local night
club. Charges were expected
'to be filed later today .
The alertness of Pomeroy
Patrolman Thomas " Pee
Wee" Werry r esulted in the
apprehension of lhree in·
dividuals lo r t he theft of a
battery and other items taken

Nationwide effort to
reduce SReed fail~d
l·

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ea er

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By AUCE Z. CUNEO
W~GTON (UP!) Reversing the " Longest
Walk" when Indians were
forced · westward
by
spreading colonial
settlements, a group of
modern native Americans

are walking from Califocnla
ID a peaceful demoostratim
In the nation's capital July 15;
Leaders ol the Indian
on~ Washington
march
predicted Tuesday federal
and community cooperatlm
and their own spiritual
lntentlms, will prevent a
repeat of the destructive
occupatlm of lederal offices
by the Trail of Broken
Treaties c..avan in 1972.
"The natUre of the wallc is a
spiritual me and we hope to
be able ID continue oo that
same line ol thought," said
.1o!1e Barreiro, a spokesman
for the group. "We don't
!"'tiCipBte any difficulties. •
The earlier caravan began·
as a journey to Washingtm
f&lt;r Indian rights. Befoce it
was over, a federal building
had been ransacked, and an
illegal ·tepee was built on the
lawn in front of the Bureau of
Indian Affairs building m
Constitution Avenue.
This time, a Natimal Park
Service permit has been ob-

·.n

Miners given hulk of aid
•
By ANDREW GALLAGHER

"I think they left enough in taking ·applications June 16.
the hank account just to leave In the inillal week, 300 were
it open ," said Perry , · turned in.
president of the largest and
The funds, destined to pay
most prosperous of the bills from the period when
union 's 21 d1stncts.
there was no medica I
Funds . basically were insurance because of the
targeted foc utility bills m strike, are being· made
• arrears. Perry said there is available from a $of million
no solicitation for funds treasury donated to the UMW
interns tiona! from other
currently.
" R1ght now," he said, unions durmg the lengthly
" we ' re engaged in this winter wock stoppage.
Perry pomted out th at·
application for medi ca l
benefits durmg the time when some money already has
there w3.s rio coverage been diStributed to the
districts from the fum to help
.
(during the !!trike) ."
Perry's distnct began pay bills and mortgages and
foc food
·
"We suspect there'll be a
la te surge of people
(applymg) whO have been on
vacation ," Perry sunnised.
The deadline for submitting
bills by miners is July 15.
Persons interested in
seeking aid now should bring
ByKENNETHR.CLARK
thell' actual bill with them
Ulllted Presolotematlonal
BAUBLES, BANGLES AND BEADS: It was right out of the when applying.
After all bills are gathered,
Arabian Nights - the king enamored, and the beautiful
damsels duly awarded. But it didn't happen in Baghdad. It the UMW will either pay all of
happened in Mococco - to the disco group Tbe Ritchie Family. them or, if there are too
The trio - consisting of Jackie SmJtb Lee, Edna Holt and 1ll811Y , a percentage of each,
Dodle Dnoyer - first did their g1g for the birthday party of Perry added.
Moroccan Prince Moalay Abdallah. He liked the act and
requested an encore for his brother, King Hassan II. The king
liked it too, alld gave the girls a small token of his esteem necklaces of r;ubies, emeralds and sapphires - valued
somewhere in the nei2hborhood of $35,000 each .
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
(UP!) - Miners have been
given the bulk of $60,000 tq
$70,000 as emergency aid
collected durtng the recent
contract strike, says United
Mine Workers District 17
President Jack J;'erry.
The fund was assembled
with donatwns from the
24,000 working miners in-the
regton, area businessmen
and other unions during the
lllklay strike.
A
special
miners
commIttee handled
distribution.

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peopletalk

Discovery

PROXMIRE'S PEEVE: Sea. WUilam Proxmlre - he of the
"Golden Fleece" awards given each mmth for the silliest
waste of the taxpayers' money - wants the military to stop
pouring that money down the sand trap. Moat recent target of
Prormire 's wrath is the U.S. Air Force wllil;!l.just spent $18,7911
to fiU up ra~roded sandtraps on the goll course at Lackland
AFB, Texas. Proxmire says that's only the cost of the 1,400
tons of sand it took to do the job - transportation and other
costs ran the tally even higher. Prdxmire says he haS nothing
against golf course maintenance -if it's done with oon-public
funds.

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disruption-

MARION, Ohio (UPI) _
Discovery of the body of a
'~ai F u·t
Marl.on Correct '~·
ac 1 y
inmate was apparently
respoosible for setting off a
disturban ce
between
prisonecs in the honor donn
DANCIN' AGAIN: After a rash of injuries, Ann Relntillg - Tuesday.
star of the Broadway hit "Dancin"' -is' back on the boards,
Assistant FacU1ty Superin·
both for the show and for her own nightclub debut July 17 at tendent W.J . Whealon said
New York'sGrand Finale II . She'll do the club act every night the
offi cial
prison
foc a week, right after the Broadway stint, to the choreography . investigation would cootinue'
of Rem ForeDa, with an eye IDward eventual openings in Los today with further interviews
Angeles and Las Vegas. Promising to be on hand for. the club of more inmates.
Initially , Thoma s F.
opening are GW1!D Verdoa, Melba Moore, Cblta 'Rivera; Peter
• Gennaro, PltyDia Newmaa and husband Adolph Green, Lynn Baldwm, , serving a twe&gt;-to
I
26
r
Redgrave, Jalle lllldd and "Dancin'" costar and current 12-year sentence for theft,
grand theft and receiving
boyfriend, Charles Ward.
stolen property out of
ONE FOR THE ROAD: Charlle SmJtb turned 136 Tuesday, Warren, was believed kWed
and if he 's learned me tliing in all thoseyearsof living, it's how in a 3 a.m . scuffle.
to get hill way. When the staff at the BariDw, Fla .. convalescent · The fight left Raymond
home where he now resides balked at giving him his daily Kling of Summit County
booze ration, he went m a vitamin strike - refusing to swallow · severely bell ten and several
· the pills.without a shot of rwn ID wash them down . Smith - otl}er irunates with wounds
born in 1&amp;12 - would rather have whiskey. Says he, "I like to requiring hospital attention.
After a Tuesday morning
drink rye whiskey. I drink it 'neat and I smoke cigarettes.
Nothing wrong with that. " HiS" only. comment on his Fourth of investigation, officials said a
July birthday pBrly : "I'm still growing."
group ~f irunates found Bald·
win's '\lady and, believing
QUOTE OF niE DAY: BosiDn Pops conductor Arthur they knew
who was
Fiedler, m public enthusiasm for his 50th consecu\We Fourth respmSlble for ..the murder,
of July concert: "I don't feel like they're applauding me. planned revenge . He'd been
111ey're applauding the event. It's like a library, or museum, stabbed to death . .
or sporting event. I've given people the chance ID hear mus1c
Guards tried ID take two of
wanted inmates · mto
the
here,
free
of
charge."
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protective custody, offlcials
GLIMPSES: HeleD Forrest - whO topped the charts in the satd but were rushed by
big band era with her recording of "The Man I Love," with about1 30 of llle 170 dorm
Beany Gaodm•• - 18 a headliner this week at the "Great irunates. No guards were
•
• Women of Jazz" festival at New York's Reno Sweeney injured •
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nightclub ... JOG Riven, Nlpeey Ra11ell, Ro.bert Goulet and
Ohio Highway Patrol
Due Severtu. took over for Wayne Newtoo Tuesday when perSCilneland Marioo County
. ,
.
fiu and fever foUed him backstage at the reopening of sheriffs
deputies were called
• stomach
,' · lhe Delrort Inn at Las Vegas ... The Primate of Poland, in to help prison officers quell
Canllllal Stefa• Wya)'lllkl, has beel1 proposed as a candidate th e dl stur banee.
,.• for the Nobel Peace Prjze by the Roman Catholic University of A patrol spokesman said
•&gt; Lublin In 'WII'UW beca- ol his actlvlam for human rlghtil ... the facl.ll'.ty . was bac k •~
w
Ella J[a- will be In New York next week to promote his new normal Within an hour after
the fight broke put.
novel, " Acta of Love/' Cll NBC·TV's "Today" show ....
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By CA&amp;OL!t CORLEW·
ARLEY, Ala. (UPI)- A
doctQr once laed 83-yNr-&lt;Jid
RouFulleroowlbestayedln
uh good health. "I've kept
away · from doctors," ~
repUed.
'
Mra. Fuller lnalJta she's not
.anti-doc!« fanatic. But
throllllh the yars she has
collected and uaed home
remedies for he111elf and her
family to lrNt a variety of
ailments.
The remedies Include the
1M ol planta for burns, poisoo
oak rash and sore throats,
and tea fashioned from
boillllg red oak bark to ease
colitis. She once ~rested
heroelf for blood poisoolng by
soaking her wounded hand In
hot water and laundry soap.
"I had an aunt who !Did me
abe had never taken a doie of
doctor's medicine," Mrs.
Fuller said. "She lold me 'I
get my medicine out of the
woods."'
One of the plants Mra.
Fuller uses In her remedies is
an aloe ·plant; which also
doubles for a ho-plant.
.The jeDy-Ute fluid · ln!lde
the plant 18 apPlied to bums,
sunburn, poison oak, insect
stings and fever blisters.
Mrs. Fuller said doctors
removed an inflamed lump
lromlheendofherhusband's
ROlle twice, but the cmditlm
kept returning until she
begsn to dab the spot with an
aloe leaf tll'ee times a day.
When they returned to the
doctor, "The doctor said 'I
dog'! see anything wrong
with your nooe,'" she said. "I
told him, 'You'D laugh when
you hear what I've been
doing."' She said the Jroblem
baa not returned.
. A slice of fat meat soaked
in hot vinegar ls soothing
wben applied to a sore throat,

Judge
shocked

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

By MA1UAN E. 1\kQUIDDY

workers grew by 3 to 4 percen.t per "ar. However,
dunng th~ past 10 years
'( 1966-1976), it has slowed to
less than 2 percent as private
mdustry found it Increasingly
harder to make the necessary
mvestment to modernize its
methods and equipment. This
compares with a productivity
growth rate of close to 9
percent per year for Japan
and 6 percent for Germany
durtng the .88 me 10 year
period.
It IS not coincidental that
during this same 10 year
period America has ex·
perienced a dramatic rise in
inflation and unemployment.
Increasing productivity is an
important check on infiation
by driving down production
costs and making American
goods more competitive in
world markets.
There are many reasons
American industry has been
unable to increase its
productivity rate u fast 81 lt
did in the past .. But certainly
one of the key forces
discouraging new investment
m more modem plants and
equipment has been high
taxes, burdensome and costly
regulations, goYernment·
created inflation, . and high
interest rates caused by
massive
gover.nment
borrowing in the money
markets. As a result, all of us
suffer when s.overnment
policies limit economic
growth.
As long as total govern·
ment , at aU levels, continues
to take over 40 percent of our'
income, leaving us less to
invest and save, Ame•ican
productivity will suffer. That
is why I wW continue to fight
for an across-the-board tax
cut, a balanced budget, and a
cut in federal spending.
·-

Have you ever wondered
why American workers make
more than Chmese workers?
Or why American truck
drivers are paid better than
Mexican truck drivers? Is it
because we are more
dedicated and work harder?
Not necessarily.
In many cases foreign
laborers work fa r longer
hours at back·breakmg work.
Income and progress depend
upon the amount· of capital
(tools of production) invested
· per indiVIdual. As modern
machinery does more of our
manual labor. human energy
and resources are freed up
for more frullful tasks.
The reason we in America
enjoy a h1gh standard of
living is that we have a ~igh
amount of capital invested
per person. In the U. S. today
around $45,000 is invested in
each manufacturing job. This
$45 ,000 enables American
workers to produce far more
per man-hour of ·work than
hi s Chinese or Mexican
co unterpart. As a result ,
wages are higher.
Where d1d th1s $4:1,000 in·
vestment come from ? It
ca me primanly through
years of thrift , saviQ.gs, and
investment by milhons of our
forefathers. Without this
sacnflce
by
previous
generat10ns, we would not
have tbe ca p1tal base today
which enables us to be so
productive.
F or .example, when a
person 01es to Columbus
from Washington, it costs
around SSO and he can make
the trip in one hour. Compare
thiS w1jh the p10neer making
the sarlle trip 200 years ago.
Back then 1t cost .a larger
perce ntage of a person's
salary and look several
months.
Why ? Because the early ·
settlers only had a $500 in·
vestment backing them,
while today we utilize
hterally billions of dollars of
ca pital in our routme trans·
portation. It is almost im·
possible to calculate the total
worth of the automoblles,
roads, airplanes, airports,
fuel, oil refiner·ies, air traffic ·
control equipment, and
factories making all this
equipment, and so on.
• {
This concept of capital-' Lavern Jordan, Mary
formation is. Important ·Jordan to Buckeye Rural
because Am erica fa ces an Elec. Conp., Right of Wa
mvestmenl shortage today Columbia.
y,
whiCh could ~hrea1en future
Andrew T. Sylvia to
prosperity and economic Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop.,
growth. As C~ngress ,deals Right of Way, Scipio.
wcth the AdmUIISira_tJOn s tax
Leonar&lt;l Dailey, Helen
refo r~ pa ckage , maqy Dailey to James S. Stettler,.
mem ~s are exammmg Pamela S. Stettler 25 acre
whether our p~esent tax Lebanon.
·
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pohcle.s are causmg a slowMayme Manning formerly
down 'n· the growth of U. S. Mayme Custer, Andrew J.
productiVIty·
Manning to Junior Spaun
For roughly. 20 years after Marie SpBun Est Ra · '
World W~r II, the ave~age
Dale Barr, Pau~ Ba~n~~
productiVIty for American James M. Milliron, Rhonda
M1ll1ron, .38 acre, Oll\oe.
,..- - - - - - - - _ _ , . . , , Dorothy Bryan Ha(ley
THF.UAll.&gt;SENTJN&gt;.o.
John Frederick Harley,
""J~~~~'j'0'rE
E . Harley to James E.
ltElGS.ItASON AREA
Keesee, Linda E. Keesee
"""~~~~ ~~.~~ucn
Est., Middleport. '
- p,,u~.,., """' ''""' S.l"'""'
.s. G. Pickens, Emily
· !J_Y n~ Ohtu Vw~lt'¥ Pubhshu~
Pickens to Lawre.nce A.•
( tltllpuny -Mulurnahoa , hit'.,
111
Cour1 S1.. Pom~roy, CIJIII -tS71»
Rupe·, Betty L. Rupe, .S3
Hus mc!IJI Offlc.'t'. Phunr \192, 21::.6
acre, Rutland.
F'.(il\urlal Phvnt• 992-Zl57.
G
S«cm•d , ~.. ..,,.~, ,.;11 • 1,
uy Russell, Norma
l 'com•r~y.O hro.
Russell to Edward Anthony
~uu unal allvcrusi n~ n .'j)rtSt'll·
Russell,, Sharon R. Russell,
llill\'t' IA~ndvn AII~)UIIIc s :111ll
t.ud •dAvc .. Cicvt'la•lti,Otuu.i·UU
1.924 acres, 2.224 acres,
Salisbury. 1___suL.'!t;r1r,t1ur1 r111Ws . D.ll1vertd _Lty
l l:lillllcr w ~n· av1uhtbk' 75 Ct'lltti pt!r
Ah
"'~•. 11)' Mo~ok Route wtwr"''m"
t ens Co. Sav. C. Loan Co.
.'!C/...'Il"l' IIUl ~~~~'ltiiHhk , Orre month .
and Ronald D. 'lbomaa, etal,
S:l t.l Hy 111Hi) 111 D1 11u and W VH ,
J
I E
t)i,c ,Ytar . $:!t OO . s 1x mVI'Ilh:~,
uuma
ntry, Middleport.
1
• 11 50, 'fluct •uwnttu1 , $7.00 ;
Franklin Shlltz, · Bertha
n .. t·wllt·u· t!li Oil ylar : ~ix morlthli
Shiltz to Buckeye Rural Elec .
1t1.:.n: TtuN· ru1111111s. s; ,ao
~.~~~~~~·~·~vuou J)nn· uwimk · ·" l•wht)'
Corp., ,Rigbt of Way,

Meigs
Property

DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI)
- The judge in Iowa's. latest
• beauty pBgeant says he was
shocked ID le
the wlnne
am
r
~Y he pregnant.
That s what you get when
you oen~ a city boy out to pick
a hog, said J . Glenn~
Wa~sh, who re~resents a
Louisville, Ky., distillery.
The distillery searched the
state for the most beautiful
gilt - an immature female
hog - to be the model fer Its
new bourbm decanter. Rose,
owned by Don Jensen of
Atlantic, was the . choice
ann"'!""ed Tuesday . .
Shortly
the~eafter ,
hil)"'ev~, Walsh S81d he was
surprised to learn from
Jensen that Rose had sper.t
the l~st three weeks
~sortmg with a boar. If she
IS pregnant, she s~ould
de.Uver her plgleialn October.
"I waa very shocked to find
out Rose was pregnant. I was
lrylng to pick a gUt - and
look what I got - a mother.
What ~~d I 4o with nine
~.lets· • be said.
Thll came as a total
surprise - here I thought she
was just ~~Rother innocent."
Walsh said he ~s the
owners of ~er Pli!S be
judged won t get ma~.
However, he said Rose s
condition probably wiU not
~ h~ the title.
I wiU welcome the family.
I had ID think about it for a
little ~hUe befoc~ I decided
anythmg but I wiU welcome
however many piglets there
· may ~,'' Walsh. said. "But,
they will be born Ul Kentucky.
We mily have to build a
big~er case at the dlstWery."
He said he still plana to
have the crossbred gilt
appear at the Iowa State Fair
in August to help launch the
sale of the bourbm bottle In
Iowa liqu&lt;r stores. No price
baa been set fer- the decanter.
Walsh selected Role from
photos taken of 12 finalists be
viewed on a 11klay IDur of
Iowa Ianna last month.
Presentation of a blue
ribbon wW be made m July
11 ·to the Jenoen family In'
recogniUon of ill outstanding
bog, said Walsh.

Transfers Wolfpen

Marr

11 11 ' 1 ·:-,"i• · 1 111 1 ~d

Columbia .

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News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Johnson
and family of Dublin were
calli!!! here due to the death of 1
her mother, Mrs. Waller
Hamm. They were vi.sltors of
Mrs. Helen Johnaon.
Mrs. Geneva Shumate
returned
Mme
from
Veterans Memorial Hoapltal
and Is aomewhat Improved.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Shumate and sons of Bantytown' W. Va. are vlaitlng
Gene'vaShumateaixl Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnson and
famUy .
Mr. and.Mra.PaulMcElroy
and IIOIUI are vi.sltlng Mrs.
McElroy'l aliter and their
famUy In Florida.
Mn. Iva Johnson was
Tueaday vial!« of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith .

Mrs .
Fuller
.. ld.
"Everybociykmnvlneprll
good medicine." She adliiN
the aame -~~ ballll.
!lie uld her " - - Uled
mullen lea¥1!1 gathered,from
woods and wilted In hot Wiler
for aore b'oata.
A quick cure for a IPfabled
ankle II a pule made of red
clay and Wlegar, Mn. Fuller
said. "Uoe a wet cloth to bold
it on there and it'll draw the
fever ...hi out."
'"'
She hal cured babies lncludlntl her grandchlld- ol
colitll by bolllntl red oaklwll:
and ualntl the liquid aa an
enetna. Colllil II a palnful
inflarrunatloil ol the colm.
· Mrs. Fuller, whc1'8ald she
last went to a doctor 12 years
ago foc lreatment of an
allergy, said people are
better about taking care of
their physical ailments than
, they uoed to be.
In 1940, Mrs. Fuller cut her
leg, neglected it and the
wound becaine . infected.
When she went to a doctor, he
cleaned it with alcohol,
bandaged lt and told her ID
pour hot water and salt m the
bandage three times ' day.
''The Idea of paying e&amp; ID
learn how to uoe a tittle salty
water. I try to remember all
th011e things so I wm 't have ID
go to the doctor,"
Someone lold her caaiDr oil
appUed to age spots wW
lighten them, althougb she
ham 'I tried It, and that aloe
plant crulbed In a bleilder
and mixed with fruit juice
wUl calm ulcers.
Mrs. Fuller, born and
ralaed In the !lllllll W!Jwtm
' County community of Arley
In the Bankhead national
foreal, admitted lbe'a taking
life easier now that lbe'a 13,
although "I haven't seen
anyboc!y die from ovenrock."

TV•• .in ReView
By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Telev181011 Writer
NEW YORk ( UPI) - Jacqueline Kennedy appeared ahyly
awkward, with beetled eyetrows, an unbeccmlng hairdo and a
slightly frumpy look.
John F. Kl!llnedy oeemed Wat-anddldn't know what to
do with hia hands until be could launch himaelf mtO a serlou.a
subject about which he had dooe ·his homework.
And be made reference to the auth&lt;r who wrote, "I have a
rendezvo111 with death."
Marilyn Mmroe,waa sadly fragile- altbciUcb certainly not
in figure, which waa at beat ample compared to today'a stan
- and her hair looked like It had been beaten by a pastry chef.
n- .and ao many more were IJIICIII the subjecta tJI
Edward R. Murrow's "Penon to Persm,'' a "people" type
program that vlalted the homes of two celebrity famllle• each
week from 196S-195fln Its half-hour time slot.,It waa a·sleeper
IIUCceas In Its era, and fits right In with the current fad for
gosalp and celebrity-watching.
Now a clutch of televlsl011 stations that make up a group
within a group ln!lde PBS are reviving a oelection of the old
black and white Interviews foc IIUIIllller viewing (check local
listings). '
The grot:p II called the Eastern EWcaUonal Televlaim
Network, although Its membership ranges from WNET In New
York to KQED, the PBS atstlmln San Francllco, It's a grand
idea and more sta tiona should 1ry it.
The Murrow show dldn 't aim at hard news - lnatead
Murrow 11110ked up a storm In a CBS atudlo while vllltlng hil
guests via spilt acreen and giving the audience a chance to see
how the other half lives.
The Eutem Eduaitlonal re\j\yala begin with an October,
1953 PJ'C!tll"llll In which Murrow f:alked first ID Sen. and Mra.
John F. Kemedy, who had been married for a month.
·
The Kennedy• were a lot leas at eaae In lrmt of !hit cameraa
than they later became, although It waa faac:lnatlng ID ntch
JFK shed hl8 dlacomfort when he could get away from the
persmal miD the political.
·
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The other half of that show featured Maj. Gen. WUJiam F.
Dean, who had IIIII been releued after three yeanln a K01'11811
fliaoner of war camp. Hl8 blunt forthright answera and
demeanor were right out of a Holly,wood script - the way we
thoullht aoldlers were and ought to be.
.
In lbe second of lhe "Person ID Penon" renma MariiJn
Mmroe aeemed a lad bNuty, but the other half wai
1o
cmduct« Sir Thomas and Lady Beecham. Her chum and hla
wit were a delight aa be aplained there were only two tJUga·
he demanded ol an orcheltra - that they begin toe~ lind
that they end together.
·
Looking back at "Peram to Person" from the penpeetlve of
1978 provldell a gllmjile of recent history and its Jead!nc
players before the revlsloniata got IniAl the act. And for a-.
who weren't old enough In the 19501 to stay up unW 10:10 p.m.
(Eaotern time) ID watcb the Jli'Otlram, it'a a c11anee to learn
what the fuas over Marll.YJl Mmroe wu all about.
·

dev«ed

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1ea~e."

Rlchardstruckoutnlneand
walked mly one as the Astros
' took the second of a three

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI S,.n. l!:dllor
NEW YORK (UPi)- More than anything.else in the world,
• she wanted thlS ooe, and now that she had it there was only
· me more sensible thing left for Billie Jean
to do. ·
The time was three years ago yesterday and the place Wim~ledon, England.
IQng had just routed Evonne Goolagong Cawley, 6-0, 6-1, in
the most _one-s1ded women's fin_a! in nearly a quarter century
for her Sixth Wimbledon singles' championship and she had
, barely walked off the court when she made her momentous
, announcement.
·
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"That's it,'' she Said. "I will not play singles at Forest Hills
or Wimbledon anyniore. I may come back here for doubles, but
that'sall . When I say I'm quitfing,I mean it."
She may have meant every word of that when she said It, but
like SCi many other athletes before her, Bi!Ue Jean IQng made
the ccrnmon mistake of thinking she still had enough left to
· come back and win once more.
She found out differently Tuesday at Wimbledon where she
; was eliminated by mpseeded Chris Evert, 11-3, ~. 6-2, in their
. quarter.flnal match. Playing with a painful left heel that
required cortisone shots, King gave it everything she had, but
even had she been 100 per cent physically, it is questionable
whether she could've beaten Evert at this point in her career.
"I wanted to play well,'' she said after Tuesday's defeat. "I
know how well I can play. I feel I couldn't cut it because of my
heel. I just couldn't do what I'm used to doing . Chris knows it.
Physically, she tears your guts out. If you can just stay. with
her, you can beat her."
IQng is 34 and has been playing tennis now for 23 years. She
, ,didn't demean herself by losmg to Evert, who holds a 15-7
. margin over her in the 22 matches they have played, but she
certainly didn't increase her ' stature any, either.
Not that she really has to. She owns more titles than any
w.oman around today and unquestionably she has done more
for women's tennis Uian possibly anyone' who ever lived, so
, why, after annomcing she was quitting three years ago, is she
still going out there knocking herself out trying to prove
oomething?
'
To me, it looks like nothing more than an ego trip . She may
argue otherwise because nobody ev&lt;:r likes admitting that, but
• the fact il she spelled it aU out herself in an interview with
·• Playboy magazlile a few years ago.
" "Once you reach the IDp, there's the absolute dread of the
day lt'ull going to end," she said. "You can never win enough
titles, or money, oc awards , because people always expect you
ID do it me more time and, of course, you come to expect it of
.. yourself."
, , In common with others long accustomed ID winrung King
fmds it extremely difficultto merely hang up your racqu~t and
' quit. She still gives a decent account of herself playing World
" Team Tennis for the New York Apples and she can stiU beat
the likes of Sue Barker and Renata Tomanova at Wimbledon,
.. but. when 11 comes to someooe like Evert or Martina
NavraUlova, she .. generaUy finds herself overmakhed.
'· Foll' years ago, I remember King saying ''if I get better as a
player, I'll stay in the game. If I don't have what it takes, I'll
·
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g
., et out."
One thing for sure: she's not getting any better. Those three
ki1ee operations she has had have to be taking their effect the
lmger she keeps pushing herself trying to compete on even
tenns with much younger performers such as Evert and
NavraUlova.
",! Off the court, King sometimes pushes as hard as she does on
It, zealously safeguarding lllliny of the hard-earned rights she
has won for women players.
• In the 35 years I've been watching tennis, Billie Jean King
comes close to being the best woman player I've ever seen.
,
I've also seen her when she i.sn 't competing - competing on
• the court, I mean. One minute, she can charm you out of your
socks and the next minute she can blls!er them·right off .you.
,, She has always struck me as an individual who'D tell you
e~actly what's on her mind, one who works as hard making her
point in any discussim as she does out on the tennis court.
Lately, though, I've found her more testy, more contentious
and more impatient than in the past. Others who 'are closer ID
her tell me they get the same reaction.
It makes me sort of wmder if that past statement of hers
.. Isn't really what's gnawing at her most now .... "Once you
: reach the top, there's the absolute dread of tbe day it's all
going tc. end ... ."
SCIOTO RESULTS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Our
Rebeck ran seeond mtll the
stretch and then came oo to
defeat Quick Command by
one-hall. length in the
featured $20,000 free-for-all
pace at Scloto Downs
Tuesday.
Stitr Celtic, the leader
throughout most of the' race,
finished third .
The winner, driven in 1:57
, by SheUy Goudreau, returned
$8.20, $-1.40 and $2.110.
On the same card, the Ohio
Sires Stakes for 3-year-old
pacing cults was run in five
dlvlaims with a total puroe of
$33,800. Winners · were
Charbos Butler, Tailor Tom,
Barm Lancer, New Lew and
Baron Barnum.

'

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods .
and Reels
t Guns and
Reloading '

••

wBall Gloves
Camping
Equipment
eArchery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gi It
Certificates

.."

601 Main St .
Pl. Pleasant, W.Va . .

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Ac,.ssl,..,

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675-2911

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Co~rthouM

PHONE

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''Whall!elhe ltltovell du IDUI?"-

2 .games out of first we are
mly 2 1-2" ·
Three of the Reda' four hits
- singles by Pete Rooe, Ken
Griffey and Ge.orge Foster came in the Hrst in'ning when
they scored their only run of
the game.
Thereafter, Junior
Kennedy, who walked in the
second inning, and Johnny
Bench, who singled in the
seventh, were the only Reds
to get m base.
"J. R. was throwing as
hard at the end of the game as
he was at the beginning,"
said Rose, ~hose fifst inning
single extended hill · hitting
Streak to 20 games. "In fact,
the first strike he threw me in
the eighth inning 'was the
hardest pitch I saw aU ni~ht."
Surprisingly, the victory
was ooly the seventh against
nine losses foc the Astro
righthander.
.
1
- ' Bul," said Astro manager
Bill Vir don , " if J . R.
contln~es to throw as he did
tonight he won't have that

Klni!

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The state rl Wasl!inglun in

Mme aeries that ends tonight .
when · Paul Moskau goes
against the Astros' Joe
Niekro.
The Reds' loss, coupled
with the Dodgers' victory
over Atlanta, dropped the
Reds into third place 2 1-2
games · behind division
leading San Francisco.'
Anderson said the loss
"was nothing ID be ashamed
of," and Winted out that
" here we are with a 46-35
wm-and-lost record just like
we were at this time last
year: But it)stead of heinll!81·

Sport Parade

..

the Pacific Northwest is a ·

II•·

CINCINNATI ( UPI) - Clncl~n atl · Reds
manager
Sparky Anderson is not me to
idly
toss
out
high
compllments.
llut after 6-8, 237-pomd
~ustm Astro pitcher J .R.
chard four-hit the Reds
Tuesday night for a 3-1 ~ouston win, Anderson said,
When Richard throws the
way he did !might, he's the
most• awesome pitcher In the

..•

The EWI peeD State

leader In many ways - in
lumber, in fruit .,.cl other
lTups, and In aircraft Jruductiun; Its purls uri Pillet Sound .
are ptewaya to Alaaka and
the Far East; 1M JII'NI dalllS
oo the Colwnbla River pr,..
•'ide puwer for J!Nduc.1ion of
ahionln1um and lrrlgaUon for
rich Culumlia btrlin.

Rich~rd Stops

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SIDI Gl AMCIS

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-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, July 5, 11178

J. R.

Report from America:

tained f&lt;r the erectioo of)IJ

tepees near the Washingtm
Moownent gromds, and Bill
Wahpepah of Oakland, Calif.,
one of the leaders, says "We .
are not here to raise hell but
to raise heaven."
Barreiro said along the way
local officials and community
leaders hl!ve helped find food
and health· facilities for the
walkers. He said ihere are
"many old people and young
people on the walk ailil we
have the support of the ·
Methodist and Catholic
churches."
He said the walk from San
. Francisco eastward reverses
the "Longest Walk" - the
forced marches Indians
made westwaJ;,d as the
colonies spread.
The walkers, who have
trough! a peace pipe with
them from California, house Indian reli giOuS
currently are
near ing leaders, who will conduct
Harrisburg, Pa ., where tradillooal ceremonies and
they'll be joined by other dances July 16-20.
native American groups from
The group will march to
New York and other eastern ·eapitol Hill July 17 to present
stales.
a nati)'e Amencan marufesto
The marchers expect to to Congress. The neltt day,
arrive at campsit.;s in a Barriero said, they will walk
suburban Washington to the Supreme Court to call
national park on July 14, and attention
to
'' native
American
political
prisoners
walk. to the Washington
Monument the next day . who are in jail on behalf of
Tepees wiU Jw, erected to thelr ~ovement."

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A's back

Reds

losing record ~eiy long. He the Astros.
also pitched that game with .. "'"I koow my earned run
average was •something like
just three days rest .
"One bad inning in several 2.35 and 1 had about 10 of my
games has been his downfaU victories by the All .Star
so far this season,~~ said break last .year and still
•t
· k d
Virdon .
:~~':.rd . plc e ," said
Racking up strikeouts isn't
So,'even though stuff-wise
unusual for Richard. Hill nine
Tuesday night boosted his Richard has to be rated
league leading total to 14:&gt;. among the best pitchers in
What was unusual was the the league today, he's not
fact that Richard walked only surprised he again was
the one batter. He ' entered bypa8sed this season when
last ' night'.s game with 70 pitching selections for the AUStar te~ were made.
walks in 121 innings.
Despite a slow start this .
"It's his walks that usually
season,
Richard is stiU confi·
are responsible for those one
dent
he
can be a 201lame
bad innings he' ll occasionally
have in a game," said Virdon. winner.
" I know I'd like to see 20
George Foster said, "What
makes J . R. so tough is that behind my name at the end of
his fastball and slider are the season " he said
Tommy ' Hume t;.,k the
about the same speed. Only
Reds'
loss, his nmth straight
his fastball rises and his
slider goes down."
after winning his first two
Last
year
Richard decisions . of the season.
compiled an 18-12· record
Terry Puhl led off the first
accompanied by a 2.97 earned inning w1th a triple and
run average. The year·before scored when Dennis Wailing .
he was a W.game winner for bounced out to Kennedy at
second to give the Astros a 1.0
lead in the first innmg.
The Reds matched the run
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in
the bottom of the first, but
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the Astros went ahead 2-1 in
•• •• ••
the third when Jose Cruz
singled home Walling.
Davey Concepcion 's error

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BAsEBALL SCOI3EBOARD
Mator League Standings
By United Press International
National League

East
W. L. Ptl.
Ph 1t a
Ct11cago
P1 ttsbrgh
Montreal
New York
Sl . Louis

43 32
40 37
38 39

.573
.519
494

39

481

42

GB
4
6
7

34 47 .420 12
32 50 390 1411:1

West
·
W. L. Pel.

GB

San Fran

..,. 32

LOS Ang
.C incinat1

46 34

575

2

46 35
41 40

568
506

7'r.

San .D1ego

600
2'~"•

on Art Howe's ground ball,

Pujols' double to right center

P itt 36 ; Cedeno, Hou and
R1chards, SO 23 ; Lop es, LA
and Taveras. P111 22.
Amer1can League: Wilson ,
'19 ,
Ollone ,
Oak
27 ;
KC
LeFlore. Det and Cruz , Sea 26,
Writs. Te)( ~4 .
Pitching
Victories
Na11onat League : Blue, SF 11 4; Grimstev . Mil 11 5 ; Z&amp;chry ,
NY 10-3 1 Rogers, Mtl 10-7,
seven pit cher s tied w1th 9
victOrJ..eS
American League: . Gu1dry.
NY 13·0; Torrez. Bos and
Sorensen, M il 11 4 ; Flanagan,
Bait and Ta nana, Ca l 11 S
E•rned Run Average

and Dave Bergman's pinch

single to right gave the Astros
their third and final run in the
seventh inning.

Pearson cops
Pi.recracker
400 crown

By J. PAUL. WYATI
Ho uston
35 42 447 1W~
Atlanta
33 ' 45 423 1.4
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Tuesday's Results
PittSburgh 3, Mtl 1, lSI
(· ~:;~dn!r ~:a~:~~~lf
P~i:e~tl ( UPI) - David Pearson, the
PittSburgh 4, Mtl J , 2nd
2 07. Reuscnel , Ch1 2
o :)(on . 'wily "Si~ver Fox" of stock
New York 4, Phil a 0 , 1st
Hou 2 37 .
Blue,
s
2 38 . · car racm g1 shrugge d his
Ph i l a 3, New York 2. 2nd
Vuckovlch, St L 2 39
Ch1cago 7,51 Louis~
American League : .., Gu1dr y, shoulders when a reporter
San Diego 7, San Fran 5
NY 1 75 ; K eough , Oak 2.06 , asked whether he planned to
Houston 3, Cmc1nnatJ 1
Rozema . Oe1 2.22 , Pal mer. Balf use a sl
Los Angeles 4, Atlanta 1
2.31. Wa1ts. c tev 2 34
ower car as a
Today's Probable Pitchers
~!rokeouf5
springboard to hi~ la st-lap
CAll Times EDT)
,
Nat1onal League · ~ R !Chard , ViCtory
OVer
C l
San Diego (Ow chi nko S 7) at Hou
1.45 ; Nr ekro, Al l 110 ,
ae
San Francisco (Hal1ck1 .4 2),
Se
av
er
,
Ci
n
and
Montefusco
,
SF
Yarborough
In
Tuesday's
4 05 p .m
.
Firecracker 400 stock car
Houston
(Niekro
5 51 at 103; Bl ue . SF 97
League :J' Gu1 dr y.
Cinc innati &lt;Moskllu Q.2J, 8·05 NYAmer1can
1'14 .
Ryan.
ca l
11 3; race.
p .m
Pearson, 'who outraced
Chicago (Lamp 2 10) at 51. FtaMgan , Batt 96 , Leonard . KC
82 , Tanana, Cal 73.
LOU IS ( Fors ch 96), 8 . 35 p m.
Yarborough 's challenging
Rh1tadeJph1a {Carleton 8-71 at
Oldsmoblle on the last
New York (Koosman 2-BL 8:05
Major League Results
quarter lap to wili by less
pm
By United FJre ~i International
At lanta (Mahler 2·4) at Los
than a car length,' came up
Natlona'T
League
.
Angeles (John 9.6). 10 :30 p m
( ht v•mel.
behind Baxter Pri&lt;:e's slower
Thursday•s Ga m•s
Mil
' • 010 000 000- 1 6 0 Chevrolet on .the final turn,
Atlanta at Los Angeles
Ptsbgh
OJO 000 00)( - 3 s 1
San Diego at San Francisco
Schat zeder , Garman (8 ) and paused a few seconds and
Ch icago at New Yo rk . n1ght
Carter , Blyle\len , Teku tve (9 1 then pulled around him on the
Montreal at P'h ila. n1gh t
and Over W ~ Bt y l eve n (8'.5J L
PittSburgh al Sf . LOUIS , n 1Qhf
outside
- Schatzeder (2 1 ) H R- Mon
treat , Va lentin e ( 12 1 '
''He (Yarborough ) didn't
American "league
him until I pulled out and
see
!2nd gamel
East
200 001 000 - 3 8 0 around him, " sa id the '4J.
W. L . Pet. GB Mtl
Ptsbgh
0 13 000 OO JC - .4 8 0
Boston
53 2.4 688
Tw 1fchell . Pirtle (5 ), Knowles year·old flve·hme wmner of
Milwauke
45 3.4 .570 9
(7) and Herrmann , 0
Robin
the July 4tb event.
New Yo rk
45 34 .570 9
wn, Tek ulve (8) and Otl . W- 0
Ba1t1m r e
oil) 36
544 11
Pearson said he knew
Robinson (.S. 2l L - Twl tchell (3
Detrort
38 41 481 16
7l. HR s ~ Montr eal. Per ez 2 (71 . Price's car "was up there ".
Clevelnd
37 .42 .468 17
P r t t s b u r g h, Stargell ( f2 l. At one time, he said he saw it
To ronto
29 50 .367 25
Moreno (2 ), B Ro b1n son (oil
West
chuggmg along about a hall a
w. L · Pet . GB
Calif
42 38 .525
(1st game)
lap away. In answer to a later
Oakland
.42 39 519
"1
Phil a
000 000 000- 0 2 1
question
, he S31d jokingly, "I
Te11.as
.40 38 .513 \
' N.Y
000 000 04 X- ( 5 0
K&amp;n C1ty
40 39 .506 11 1
C h r 1 s r e n·s on and Foote ; was looking at that car for a
Chicago
37 42 .468 4 2 Zachrv and Stearn s W- Zachry couple of laps."
..
Minesota
34 .42 447
6 · (lQ.J) . L - Christenson (58 ). HR
Pearson,
who
won
$12,625
Seattle
28 54 34 1 15
- New York, Maw ll1 (7)
Tuesday 's Results
for his drive plus additional
I :lind glame)
NY .at Boston , ppd .• rai n
000 000 012- 3 5 1 money in contingency pmes,
Ph 1l a
Chicago 2, Te xas 1
101 000 000- ·2 10 1 sa1d he had no intention of
N.Y
Balt 1more 6, Cleveland .4
Lonborg, Ea stwi ck (7), Reed
Toronto 9, Detro11 2
11
Price's car fr om '
(9) and Boone, Foote (9 ); Swan " hiding
Minnesata 7. Milwaukee 2
and HodQer.W=EastW ICk (1 Ol . Yarborough's view. But that.
Kan Ci ty 4, California 3

By MIKE SHALIN
UPI Sports Writer
Charley Finley's "noname" Oakland A's are right
back in the thick of things in
the Americarr League West.
"T a r z a n" Joe Wallis
slammed a pair of two-run
homers and Tooy Annas
another, as the A's, given up
for dead just last week,
thumped
the
Seattle
Mariners, 9-4, Tuesday night
to climb to within a ha~ame
of flrst·place California.
"~ur .hitting "is finally
commg around.. Manag~r
Jack McKeon smd, after hlS
A's smacked 18 hits off three
Seattle pitchers to win their
seventh .. in the last eight
g?~es. When Y.?u p~t good
h1ttmg w1th tfie kmd of
pitching we have - I think we
have a heckuva shot at n _

•

l ·n
,J

race

bottom of the ninth and Rlcl1
Gale, 11-3, for Kansas City.
Whlte So!J&lt; Z, Rangers 1:
Eric Soderholm's lead-off'
home rm in the seventh
inning lifted Chicago over
Texas. Mike Proly, 1~ .-·
picked up his first American
League victocy in relief. .
Orioles 6, lndliUIS 4:
Baltimore parlayed five
straight singles and a pair of
throwing errors into a fiverun, sixth-inning uprising and
Minnesota
downed reliever Don Stanhouse
Milwaukee, 7-2, and Toronto picked up his 12th save as the
blasted Detroit, 9-2. New . Orioles snapped an eightYork's game at Boston was game road losing streak .
Twins 7, Brewers 2:
.
rained out.
Righ!-hander,
Gary
Serum
Ruyalso4, Angels 3:
Clint Hurdle, who had not fired a five-bitter and Dan
Ford had three hits ~iven in a run in 14 games,
smgled home Ge&lt;ll'ge Brett, mcluding a tw&lt;H'un double who had doubled, in the to pace Minnesota. Serwn, ~
3, posted his second complete
ga me.
Blue Jays 9, Tigers 2:
John Mayberry led a 17-hit
attack with four singles while
Roy Howell and' Luis Gomez
drove in two rms apiece w
pace Toronto over Detr01t.

the whole thing."
Elias Sosa, who relieved
rookie Craig Minetto, making
his maJor·league debut, in the
fourth inning, wocked 4 2-3
innings lo notch h1s fifth win
in seven decisions, while
Seattle's Rick Honeycutt fell
to 2-5. In other American League
games Tuesday, Kansas City
beat California, 4-3, Chicago
edged Texas, 2-1, Baltimore
Cleve land,
6-4,
beat

Westvaco offers
hunting permit
Westvaco's West VIrginia
Woodlands hunting , fi shing
and trapping permit program
IS being revised to cover
more land. It will cost $2 a
year.
Woodlands Manager
Kenney P. Funderburke, Jr .,
said new permits will allow
hunting , fishmg and' trapping
un about 350,000 acres of
Westvaco Timberlands in
West Virgmia; Alleghany ,
Highland, Rockbridge and
Botetourt
Counties
in
Virginia; Washington , Meigs,
Galha, Athens an&lt;h Vinton
Co unties in Ohio; anaFayette
and Bedford Counties in
Pennsylvania. Previously,
two permits were required to
mcl ude the entlre area.
Funderburke reaffirmed
Wes tva co's
policy
of
coo peration with We st

in fact , is what happened.
Pearson said Yarborough 's
mista ke was trying to pass
him on the inside instead of
the outside. Yarborough said
after the race he was
"surprised 11 to come upon
Price's ca r and ca lled
Pearson 's move "a good
tactic .''

Virginia Department of
Na tural Resources
in
allowing mel USIOn of se lected
tunberlands in ,the Springfield and Hughes R1ver
Pubilc Hunting and Fishing
areas . Permtts are not
required for those areas.
Pennit periods are bemg
changed to cuncide with the
West Virginia DNR's fiscal
year
New penn1ts Will be vaild
from July I of the year of
issue untll June 30 of the
following year. Persons who
ha ve al ready purchased
permits valid to December
31, will be given replacement
permits goud through June
30, 1979
Fee for the new permit has
been set at , $2 per year.
Proceeds- w1ll help to offset a
portion of the adrtunistrative
and w1ldl1fe mana gement.
costs, such as wildhfe food
plantmg and game animal
stocking. Permits may .be
obtamed by wntmg Westvaco
at P. 0 . Box 577, Rupert, West
V1rguna 2:1984 or P. 0 . Box
4216, Parkersbu rg, W Va
26101.

BELKNAP
BLACK
ROOF PAINT
.
'

BELKNAP
With or .
Without Fiber

_ 5 Gal. Bucket
Available at:

PICKENS
HARDWARE
.,_

Mason.
•

1

Pearson's Mercury fell a
lap off the paC€ early in the
race when he cut a tll'e on
debris on the track. But he
made up the lost ground '
quickly and ran amoog the
leaders most of the day .
He said his rar outhandled
Yarborough'!&gt;-in the corners,
but he knew that Yarborough
was running strong and that
he would need some
subterfuge to hold off
Yarborough
who
was
draftin~ close behmd him.

1

Oakland 9, Sellttle 4
Today•s Probable Ptfchen
(All Times EDT I
Toronto
(Garvin
2
and
Underwood S 7) at B timore
(P alm er 10 6 and Briles .u, ~.
5:30pm
Cleve land (W ise 6 101 at
Detrort (Svkes 3·41, 8
.
Bos ton (Lee 8 31 a Chicago
(Bar r ios 58), 8: 30p .m .
MilwauKee (Sorensen 11 ·.4 ) at
Mmne!.Ota '(Goltz S·.Sl . 8 · 30 p m
Ca t1fornia
(Ryan 3 61 at
Kansas City (Leonard 7 11 ),
8: 30 p:m .
New York &lt;Gullett .4 0) at
Texas (Matlack 6-Bl. 8: 35pm .
Oakland (Keough S ·A) at
.sea ttle ( F?arroft 1-1), 10 35 p m
Thursday•, G•mes
Toronto at Ba ltimore , night
Cleveland et Detroit . night
Boston at Chicag o, night
Cal1 f at Kanses Ci ty , n 1ghf
New York at Tex as , night
Oak•and at Seattle, night

Malar League Le•ders
By United Press Intern•tlonal
Baiting
( B•sed on 200 at battJ
Na ttonal Leaoue,
G A&amp;. H. Pet.
Burroghs Atl
7J 240 79 329
Madlock SF
59 217 69 318
Puhl Hou
70 290 92 317
· Smith CA61 224 71 317
Porker Pit
71 282 89 316
Simmons St .L
79 281 88 313
Gr iffey Cm
81 328 102 .311
Bowa Phil
12 JfM 94 .309
Clark SF
17 286 88 .308
Wh1tfietd SF
76 252 11 306
American Le•tue
G. AB H Pd.
Ca rew Min
71 245 90 .340
Lezcano MH
67 219 71 .324
Reynolds Sea
75 266 8.5 .320
Lynn 8os
70 260 83 319
Rice 8os
77 322 102 311
Jackson Cal
63 218 69 317
Sundberg Tero.:
7J 251 79 .315

Br el! K C
Bell Cle

6A 255 78 306
72 279 IS .305
Whifaker oer
66 217 66 ~ 304
Home Runs
Nl11onat League : Foster , Cin
and Luzlnsk• , Phil 18 ; King .
man , Ch ! 16 ; Winfield , SO and

Clerk, SF 15.

•

American league : Rice, Bos
23 : Baylor , Cal 19; Thomp10n.
Det 18; Murray , Batt and
Thomas , M il 17.
•.-uns aanH In
Nation•• Lee,ue : Foster . Cln
61 ; Clerk, SF 60; W infield , so
59: Cey and Garvey , LA 54.

Alllerlcen Leatue : Rice, 8os

61 ; Staub, Oer 410: Thompson,
O.t 52; Mur ra y, Batt , Hlile.
M il and Zlsk , Tu so.
Sto..n Bates .
National ltltue : · . Md'reno,

•

Ill

HR - M 1Iwaukee , Mol itor

Chi
112 02 1000- 7120
St .L
000 400 10Q- 5 11 0
Burns . Ge1se1 1-4l. M cG lothen
(6), Sutter
(9)
anct
Cox ,
Mart inez. Frazier (3). Urrea
(6). Schuth (8) and S1mmons
W- Geisel {1 OJ. L- Fraz ier (0
2). HR - Chicago. Murcer .(4) :
Sa n Dgo
500 000 002- 7 9 I
Slln Fran
200 010 002- S 11 2
- Rasm ussen . D 'Acquisto (6)
and 'sweet; Montefusco, WI!
Iiams (6 ). Cur t iS (8 ). Moff itt
f8 J,' Lavelle (9l and Sadek W Rasmussen (6 7l L - Montefus.
co
(7 .3).
HR- San
Diego,
Winf ield (IS J.
Hous
101 ooo 100- 3 9 o
Cmci
100 000 000- 1 4 2
Ri chard and Putols , Hume •
Tomlin ( 7) , Borboh (9) and
Bench, Correll (9) w - R1chard
• (7-9') L- Hume ( 2 9 )
Atta
000000001 - 1 50
LA
000 300 01x- ol 9 I
H&amp;nna , Campbell 181 and
Pocoroba ; Sutton , Welc h (9)
and Ferguson . W- Sulton ( 9 6) .
L- Hanna (6 Sl HR - Atlanta .
Matthev,:s &lt; 101

WEDNESDAY, JULY 5TH

All PlANT PICNIC

{6)

OF

fJ

Cali f
ooo" 000 012- 3 50
K .c
010 0 10 011 ~ 4 9 1
Fr ost. Hartzell 19 l. LaRoche
(91 and Down ing : Gate and
Porler . W- Ga te (8.31
L~
Harfzell (1 .6) . HRs- Cal ifor n ia,
Rudi (4 ), Baylor (191 , Ka nsas
C1ty , LaCock (3).
Oak
230 000 1JO- 9 18 1
Sea
020 010 001 - 4 7 0
M1netto, Sosa (.4 ), McCa rt y
(9) 'and. Essian ; Honeycu tt,
Todd (21 , House (]) and Stn son .
W- SOsa (5·2l. L - Honevcu tt 12
51 HRs- Oakland . Wall is 2 (.4),
Armas 121 ; Seattle. Meyer 16)

•

r

OWENS-ILliNOIS GlASS CO.
OPEN TO PUBliC AFTERS P.M.

CA-MDEN PARK
0

U. S. ROUTE 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON
Closed Every Monday Except Labor Day

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS·
...
WANTED
FOR POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE
992-2156
~

Am•rican 'League
N.Y at Boston , ppd , ra1n

Teus

Chi

010 000

ooo-

1 "' 1

100 000 10•- 2 S 0

Jenkins and Sundberg : Schue·
ter , Proly (61 and NaMrodny
W- Pt'oty i1 0 ) L - Jenk lns ( 8
ol)
HR - Chlcago, Soderholm

19)

Boll

6 9o
110 100 010- .- 11 2
D. Martinez , T Martinez (6).
Stanhouse . 18 )· and Skaggs; '
Clyde , Kern (6), Reus che l (8 ) .
and Alexander W-:- 0 . Martinez
(7 6) . L - Civde {ol ol~. HR sCie'-leland, Grubb {t), Thornton
Ct~"'e

100 005 000-

(lol ) ,

Tor

Del

000 510 o3o- 9 17 0

'010 000 lOCh- 2 10 0

Moore, Coleman
(7)
Ctrorle ; Morris, Crawford
Foucault ( 5) , Sykes (9)
ParriSh . W- Moore lol · ll .
Morr ls ( 1-ol)

and
(oiL

and
L-

MI... ,
000 001 001- 2 S 0
Mlnn
, 022 012 00)(- 1 11 0
Travers, R~Jil~le 1{3), Stein
(7), McClure ( 8) and! Moor~ ,
Strum
and Wynegar . WSerUm ·&lt;• ·3) L - Travers (4-4) .

•
•

PARK RESERVED

L - Swan (1 SJ. HRs - New
York. Mazzrllr-(81 . Ph1ladel ·
ph1a, G Maddox (7 J. Cardenat

•

W.Va.

·THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM ·and 5 PM

�..

.

4- The Daily Sentinel, MidcUeport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, ~uly,5, 1978

sYracuse :~eds . capt~re ~oumaineJIJ .

&gt;

'

• .BY GREG BAILEY
day . Teaford socked a home the Giants to just three hits, abo led his t~m at the plate
A three-run fifth inning run and Salser got a triple au singles while ·tanning With a double and single. The
allowed the Syracuse Reds and single. Riffle got the win:. eight. sw.:art got two of hard thrower famed eight
For Albany, Keith Jorllan . those hits.
_.
and walked juat three.
.
. !Hubbard's Greenhouse) to
ca pture the First "Powei):S socked a homer,. and John
Ron Bradley led .the win· . . thre~ ' Albany pitchers ..
Super Valu utile Leagu·e Farley got two ~Ingles. .
ners with a double apd single . turnedman~ve e:ne
Tournament with a ~ win .New Haven gained the while Matt Dawson had a ' b~ Ianni~ 14 A-'t~"·
~
sax-run. third louw"' was I •• •
over a tough New Haven &lt;;ub finals by downing Powell's ·double. •
tea m yesterday at Meigs Gi~nts 5-1 de&amp;pite a_ 15·
Larry Powell of Powell's the Gaants . needed. Loaer, ...
High School. That Cham· stnkecrut performance by the Su' er Valu in Pome&lt;oy Scott McLa~ led Albany at
pionship win was the 20th Giants' Dave Landak~r ~nd sp~nsored the tournament th&lt;; plate . wath t:' d::les "
victory of the season against Randy Stewart. Wannmg which was deemed a huge whale Keath Jor n Jf!'a
hurler Jay Spradling limited success.
double agd single. . n ·.,,
no losses for the Reds.
The Greenhouse team took
CONSOLATION GAME
Farl ey had the other hi ; a ,.;
a 2-0 lead in the first. and .
.In the consolation· game in sang1t..
although the Cubs tied it in
·
.
the Powell's Little League . Other Giant · hitters were" '
, G' t
Bryan Korn and Rlchard .•
the second , the Reds never
Tournament, Powe11 s aan s Davis with a double each, and ..
trailed .' Dennis Teaford got
mf fOR
easily 'downed the Albany
the win in relief as he teamed
Farmers 7-J·.on a five-hitter , Brett Korn and Dave Lan-·
wi th. Tony Riffle to fan
by Randy Stewart,. Stewart , daker each got a single.
thirteen Cubs while walking
eight. They yielded just four JENNY KELLNER ""
hits.
.,
UPI Sport~ Writer
More sports page 7
Meanwhile 1 the_Reds were
NEW YORK ( UPI )
pounding out. 10 safeties, led Forego's trainer, Frank
by Mark Salser who socked a Whiteley, always maintained
single, double, and trlple. the se&lt;ood million dollars a
Greg Nease got a double and horse earned was a lot
single while Ri[fle smacked wugher tl)an I~ fir st miUion,
two s~l es . Tony Deem got a but even.he .never thought tbe
"'
do uble, and Bobby Willis and ·last $40,000 would he this
''
Brian Allen got a single each hard.
for the winners.
Forego, a mere · $39,939
,,
New Haven got a rally in short of Kelso's all -time
the top of the sixth, plating record of ~1 ,977 ,896, Tuesday
You will •
t hr ~ runs aft er trailing 8·2, failed in his a tlempl to pass
but Teaford settled down and that mark and become the
find an
retired the side. John Rollins first racehorse ever to earn $2
led the Cub hitting as he million , as ile finished fifth
excellent
banged out tw,o doubles while behind Upper Nile . over a
John Bumgardner and Matt sloppy track .in the $106,400
selection
Dawson ,each had a single. Suburbap Handicap at
Ron Bradley took the loss, Belmoot Park.
fanning nine and walking
of qualit"y
" It is tough, " admitted
eight in going the &lt;Ustance. Whiteley. "I didn't know how
· Syracuse ga ined a berth in wugh."
. recapped
the finals by coming from
The 8-year-old gelding,
behind to dump the Albany plagued tHroughou t hi s
tires at
Farmers 4·3 ea rlier in the ca reer by gimpy a nkles,
could not find his footing on
a reasonable
ningharn tOok' t~e loss in the sloppy track and never
relief.
made his cuswmary charge
price. when
Cleland got a triple and at the leaders in the I \'•mile
Lane a double to lead the test, finishing 13% lengths
•ol ,
winners. Sixteen free passes back.
you shop
helped the winners, Mike
"He just did not run his
K loe~. David Ambergy·, and race today," said jockey
"
Cunningham each socked a Willie Shoemaker. "On the
homer for the hosts while middle of the far turn, he did
"
Do ug· 'Owens had three not make his move like he
John F. F,l llh, Mgr.
si ng les, McCoy and Cunusuallyadoes and I knew then
. 992 -210'1
700 E. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .
ningham hv~. and Ql.1
ris Baer that he was not going .to do,_ ___________________• .,
1
one.
·
·~
it."

·

Second.
"/l"
tougher

-·
CHAMPION HUBBARD'S .Greenhouse (Syracuse
Reds ). Front row, L-R, Tony Deem, Mark Salser, Bobby
Willis, Malcolm Guinther, .Tim Willis, Mike Kloes, John
Riffie, Jeremy Dill • batboy; back row, manager, Bob

$

Willis, Tony Riffie, Dennis Teaford , tourney sponsor,
Larry Powell of Powell's Super Valu, Greg Nease, Brian
Allen, arid assistant ri1anager, Virgil Dill. .

'"'" ~tl

1

,.,.,: ''"!!'H
'

~:''~ ·~-,. . , . ,

'"

_

- - - - " ' - - - - - - - - - - .,

GREAT SELECTION
GREAT T

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

HUNNE RSUP NEW HAVE N CUBS. First row, L-R.
Mike PeU1tel, Allan Pl.ant, John Bumgardner, Chris Bash,
Mike Hichardson, Norman Friend, Bobby Jewell, Chris
lhunplweys. Back row, Coach Frank Spradling, Tom

Johnson , Eric Einbleton, Jerry Spradling, Ron Bradley ,
John Rollin s, Ma tth ew Dawson, Manager Da ve
Rich.ardson, and in back , Coach Joe Bradley.

5- Tile Dally Senllnel, Middleport.Pam4iroy, 0 ., Wedneaday,

·Helen·Help

Us•••

By Helen Bottq

THAT'SSOMEKINDOF'LONELY' !
• DEAR HELEN:
My husband ·aaid he wasn't sure whether or not he wanted to
stay married, so he'd give himself a six monlhs' separation.
He look off for a mountain resort, doing swmner work .. But
yesterday I heard he's living with a girlfriend up there.
.
He's been writing about how "lonely" he is, and I really
thought I had a chance. Should I file for divorce? - .MAD AND
HURT
OEARMANDH:
·
.
• .
First~ check! Who told yot~, about the 'live-together thing ?
How can you know it's true until you see for yourself:
Su visit your husband and get the facts . If he's no longer lonely, insist on divorce now, no more waiting. . .t
This may bring him home - but doo't count on ir; - H.

Store Hours:

Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, 0;
THRU JULY 8, 1978 .,

...---

'

DEAR HELEN.
How many times have we heard, "If women were in charge,
there'd be no more war ... etc." Conditions of the world are
blamed on male l'tliership. Yet we motbers keep right on rais·
ing our sons wbe unfeeling, even ruthless . .
Boys, from birth, are conditioned to deny their basic
humanity. Even in these enlightened times, WOIT)en say, "Boys
don't cry!" Hurt, tenderness, compassion, open expression of
feelings are somehow labeled " unmanly." How.many mothers
L'Onsider their male children "cuddly"?
I don't defend homosexuality, but isn't it possible thai what
we condemn as immoral is nothing more than attempts by
practicing individuals loexpress love?
BoyS are 'taught they must compete instead of cooperate, he
tough and hard. If they like dolls, coo~nything feminine,
they're called weak and womanly. No wonder there's so'much
wile beating and murder.
When women start practicing what many of them now
preach -when they really treat their children equally, be they
male or felllale - then the world will finally change. It's up to
us mothers! -S.O.S. .
DEARS.:
... And fathers! Mothers aren't the only parenls who raise
children, you know,. - H.
DEAR HELEN.
Shame on you for siding with the man who wants divorce ·
because he "feels there's no love left:" even though he admits
his wife.is neat, good and sweet.
.
.
,
He could revive his interest if he tried. We can't gu through
life being gloriously "in love," but .we can continue caring if we
don't overpower one another with too much togetherness.
He shouldn't let himself get bored. He needs to go out more,
find hobbies, other friends, space- and so does his wile. When
they build separate lives they'll also discover they. come close
again.- A.D.
DEAR A.:
Or·they might discover "separate" is better. The worst fail·
ed marriages are those which drift endlessly but never end. 1£
they can't be revitalized (and I ,always suggest this.first) then \
still say divorc~ is better than '' nothing. "-!"·

.

i~~~~~-~-~-~...... ~ ...~-~'-~.1 09
SUPERIORS

FRANKIE
USDA CHOJCE

CHUCK --STEAK~ ••• ~ ••• ~.

RUBELLA • 3 DAY

ARM CHUCK

CHOICES
Karen Blaker PhD.
mixed hag Or folk remedies
and given some status in our
scientific world.
'oEAR DR. BLAKER - My
How does touch work to
23-year-old daughter has facilitate healing? The laying
been in traclioo in a hospital oo of hands and the resulting
for three months. She has relaxation increase the af·
multiple fractures from an flicted person's hemoglobin.
automobile accident.
, Hemoglobin, a. component
One nurse spends a lot of uf .the red blood cells, is
lime giving her skin care and responsible for delivering oxhelping with exercises. The ygen to the tissues. An in·
Slime nurse says she believes crease in oxygen promotes
touch can promote healing ,
the healing process.
:Both her attention . to my · Your daughter's
may
daughter and her philosophy . he using the theory of
of healing make me very ner· therapeutic touch. Or she
v;JUS_Perhaps she is a lesbian may merely he using touch
jUst waiting for a chance to and movement as important
ll)llke a sexual approach. And aspects of care for an lm·
ilpl'l that laying on of hands mobilized patient. Such ac·
stuff just an old religious girn- tivilies can prevent other
rruck?
health problems from
, My son·in·law says !should developi~K. while . your
.,tax. He ·is happy with the daughter ISm the hospatal. .
care my daughter is receiv·
Speaking of touch, d~ get~
. uig and doesn't want me to touch with your feelings m ·
rilck the boat. But I can 't st~· situation. Your daughter
. ~ing .
needs your support. .
•I still feell am the only per·
Write to Dr. Blaker 10 care
S:.Owhocanprotectmybaby. of this newspaper, P.O. Box
What Ia your advice?
475, Radio City Staliori · New
· DEAR READER - First, York, N.Y. l0019. ·Volwne of
f(lllow your son-in-law's ad· ·mail prohibits personal
vice. ·
· replles, but questiOil$ of
:Second, stop calling your general interesl&gt;- will he
2).year-old married daughter discussed in future C&lt;llwnns.
a baby.

.The magic touch

·.,

POLIO· TRIVAlENT ORAL POLIO

.

USDA CHOICE

MEIGS COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT
•
HAS
IMMUNizAtloNSttl ..•~
MEASLES • 7.J)A YS

'$,}19

GROUND CHUCK •••• ~~~ • . ·· .

'

DTP • DIPTHE"IA, TETANUS, PERTtiSIS

.

MUMPS ($3.50 ,Charge If child over 5 yrs. oldt

ROASI~B.

USDA·CHOICE BONELESS

$}19

CHUCK ROAST ••••••••••••
LB.

.

nurse

(

1

•

' If '

~achrywins

lOth battle
Bv M,\ltK FIIIEDMAN

!'a t ?.:1c hry shed the
prc!!Sur c nnd the guilt of

•

•

'lli iHD PLACE. Powell's Gia nts, front .row,l,R, Tim
IA'M.ister, Brian Korn, Gary. Colema n, Bobby Jeffers,
K.evin Mowery, Vicky Carter , batboy. Lonnie LeMaster ;
l&gt;w ~. ro w, Rodney Roush . Bret Korn . Richard Dav is,

u ·P I ~ l)ll rlS Writer

I

•

. Jfl, ll l~

~ -

lined an (). t pitch ir1l'o U1e left
fi eld sea ts f&lt;J!' his third
horner .
In other Nl. gai nes, Pitts-

,, . . .. ;i_{ , ... ) ~\
,.,,
.iff
r-.r/ ..

Ro~sh .

4 or More DTP

EVERY TUESDAY AT THE
•
HEALTH DEPARTMENT ·

BY GREG BA ILEY

In recent Pony I .eague

actiun, Middleport sque:Jked

Racine 18-11;. Hacinc had only

tiO ·

seven hft s com pared to

with the winning run being

for the hosts. but Syracl)«

scured 10 the last inning . Britt
Dodson got the win by tossing
just one-third o£ an inning in
re lie f of · s tarJer Dave

e1L1mmitt ed fo ur errors to just
two for H,:, . . ir~ " f' IP ia nd got
the wh~ while Sha wn Cmr-

Doug Owens

had a double and single, and
McCu.v had two singles.

J , ,J,, rrell took -\the luss.
fa nning two and w3 Jk ing si x
whllr yielding seventee n hits. ·

Eric Mil ljron got the only hit ,
a ~ i i1 g k
·

Please bring your child's immunization record with you!

In a real thriller Salurday
ni ght, host Syraeuse fell to

by visiting Pomer oy A 's 5-4

sing l~s ,

(EXCEPT HOLIDAYS)

.

Summer leagqe results

three

9 to 11 A.M. AND 1 to 3 P.M.

1 ,Measles
&gt;
1 RUBELLA

burgh swept Montreal , 3-l Demuskey . They fa nned · 12.
and 4-3, Chicago tripped St. · and walked just two. D"dso n
Louis, 7-5, San Diego downed oockc'&lt;l a trip!~ "hile Jeff
Sa
n Franci~c o, 7-5, Houston Way land had two singles to
year Tu•·sday night , hlirling
tnppt.'&lt;l
Cincitmati, 3-1, and lead lhc hosts' atta ck. Steve
his seeor)d tw.o,hit shuwut of
Fife had a si ngle.
l&lt;os
An
ge
l ~'S downed Atlanta,
Ule ~~~bon ~ nd earn ing a spot
. Hoger Kovalchik took th&lt;i
4-1.
m lh· · Nationa l League's All
loss
in reli ef uf Jerry Fie lds.
St;11· p1ldnng roster for the. Pirales 3-4, Expos 1·3 :
Th
ey
fa nne d tw elve but
fin,t time.
Bi ll Robinson, Willi e
·' J don ' j want any more Sta rgell arid Omar Morenn · w"lkcd a lik e number as they
qu 1 •stiun .~ ~bo ut Seaver slugged home runs in the gave up for hi ts . ~- ields was
th ii! alba tross ha s bee n nightcap to give the Bues a thc.big sti ck wit li a triple a nd
Nm ~'HI I ' l•n rny neck for a long
sweep of their twinbill with t wo ·s ingl es while J1Jhn
tinie'... ,;,dd Zachry last night, MoMrea l. Bert Blyleven had Bea wr h&lt;HI till' on ly otl\(:'1' 1\ 's
aft er shu tting out the a thr ee-run doubl e an d hil, a sin~-: l e .
Ph ilade l~ hia Phillies, 4-0, in
combined with Kent Teku lve
I n tWo recent Syracuse Pee
th e opener of a doubleheader. on a six-hi tter for the Pirates'
Wee
ga mes, Sy racuse ca me
'llw Pl11ls rebounded for a 3-2 .victory in the opener .
uut
even
. Syra cuse downed
vi t lo!' y in the nightcap.
Cubs 7, Cardinals 5:
host
l.cla
18-3 as Barry
t.ce M &lt;:~ zzilli ' s first career
A leadoff homer by Bobby ·McCoy amirt Shawn
Cunni ng·
grand shun in the eighth Murcer in the fifth inning
ha
m
tusscd
a
onc·hitter.
Thf'y
innin1• was more than enough broke a 4-4 tie to give Ch icago
fa
nn
ed'
seven
and
·
walked
for Z~elwy, who yielded unly its eig11th straight win over
a sevt'Jitlt ~inning single to St. Loui s this season. Bruce mn~ .
Mike Kloes lt-d lhe winners
Gara-y Maddox and a ~i nth · Sutler picked up his lith
with
a triple Hnd two s ing l e~.
Inning sin gle to Ted save, prese rving rookie Dave
D:o
vid
Deem had a dou~l e and
SitClllVI'l\
Geisel's Jirst majoc·lt•ag ul.' ·
Lwu
singles.
J uhn Riffle hod
Craig Swan lost his fifth win .

yielding a twQo&lt;lut double to sur~ing Sa n Diego over the
Bnu Boone . Handy Lerch ran falling Giants. Th e win was
for Boone and Jose Cardenal. the 12t h in the last 15 games
butting for . Bud Harre ls&lt;•n. for Pndr es.

IMMUNIZATION CLINIC

3 or More .POLIO

Randy Stewart , Bobby Foster,.Sean Doidge, Lee Powell,
David Landaker; th ird row, Coach Roger Stewart,
tourney sponsor, Larry Powell, and assista nt coach, Lee

·SUMMER CLI.NICS 197M-I I
•
;

te placi JI J:: the New . Yo rk
M et:.;' ll ~· ro Torn Seaver by
winning l1is lOth game of the

ga 111 t! in six dec~~?".s in .the Padres 7, Gia nts 5:
.
le(:ond ~ uute, ·crmsmg I~ to . Da ve Winfi eld"s , thi rd
the ninth i111ilng with a three· cmecr grand slam ignited a
hitter and a 2-1 lead before five-run first innjng and 'Jed

MINIMUM SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS:

Fealuring
• Wom e n 's .
Sandals
• Women's
· Dress Shoes
• Sport &amp; House
Slippers
• Me n's &amp; Children's
Ten nis
• Women 's
. Grasshoppers
•·.Purses
'
.

GREAT SAVINGS

.

CHAPMAN
SHOES

Time

Location

.Dale ·

CHAPMAN SHOES

SEMIANNUAL
.SALE
CONTINUES ·

No appoill!ments necessary

.

&gt;

July
July
July
July
July
July

10
10
14
17
17
21

&amp; July 31 Harrisonville Gra.de School
&amp; July 31 · Rutland Grade School
&amp; Aug. 4 Salem Center Grade School
&amp;Aug . 7 Tuppers Plains Elementary School
&amp; Aug. 7 Chester ' Elementary School
&amp; Aug. 11 Reedsville Riverview Elementary
School
July 24 &amp; Aug . 14 Racine Fire Department
July 28 ~ Aug . 18 Portland Grade School

9:30
1:00
9:30
9:30
1:00
9:30

a.m.
p.m.
a .m.
a.nn.
p.m.
a ;m .

to 11:30 a.m.
to '3:00 p.m.
to 3:.00 p.m.
to 11:30 a.nn .
to 3:00 p.m.
to 3:00 p·. m.

'
-::~
9:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.
9:30a.m. to 3:00p.m. -:

·--·.

.,

OTHER HEALTH DEPARTMENT SERVICES:
BIRTH &amp; DEATH CERTIFICATES
VITAL STATISTICS
RHEUMATIC FEVER REGISTRY

•

SEWAGE'· &amp; SANITATION
.
' V. D. CUNIC .

FOOD.SERVICE

SAF£ DRINKING WATER TESTING
1 ·•
•

'

RABIES CONTROL

.

t .Calendar

a

•I

LB.

STRAWBERRIES.

18

• Althoughyou
you seell)
must beoverly
very .,~--So_ ~.C--.-~i---~t
Worried,
co ncerned about your
daughter's recovery. Is your.
qver-proteclivenlli'S a reflec·
lion of a long-standing pal·
tern of interaction with your j
daughter? Or is it unique to
· .
tills traumatic situation?
WEDNESDAY
· If it surfaced only after the
SYRACUSE • MINER·
accident , ask · yourself SVILLE Sports Auoclation
whether you feel guilty about Wednesday
8:30
p.m.
pne aspect of the car crash. Syracuae Municipal BuUdlng.
P,eopJe who reel even slightly .
SUNDAY
responsible when something
VANMETER REUNION
bad happens to a loved one Sunday at Portland Park.
&lt;lien try to erase the guilt by Basket dinner al noon.
[Jvishllll! attentioo and affec·
lion oo the victim. ·
Ma.son ·project .
~ You also sound jealous and
competitive with your among -contracts
daughter's hua~?&amp;nd and
,..., •.oLESTON - Over 100
nurse. Ia this a tlrile you feel
...ann
You mual show how compe- , contracu totaUne . aJU
tent you are aa a mother?
· million, for hlilhway lm·
If guilt · feellnp or com· PfOVII!Ilfllll on nearly 500
petitivenesa are fanning the lnllea of roads In 48 counties,
flames of QVer~rotectlon, .do were opened for bida recently .
youraelf - and ywr daughter by the Department of lflcb' 8 favor. Talk with a profeawayS, accordlnll to Governor
~ counielor. Reaeairch Rockefeller.
.
Indicates thai tension In the . Aw-rent low blda in MasOn
ij;i room can be detrimentAl County, totalllna· aue,ota,
(o heiiUng.
Include f47 ,3'10 far reeur. • ~ch allo lhowl that faeln&amp; -of U mD• of Broad
~ can JII'IIIIIOie bfaJinll. Run Rd. on Co. I and 1-4
twr claught~h IIUJ'II' Ia nut a101,72a for clralnap. a
1 q1111ck. Therapeutic tuuch llabllllallon of ,s mllel of
'llu been snatched fmn the Crab Cnek Rd.on Co. 21.

amalllll

Also: Information . about our other Free Clinics: Pediatric,
Orthopedi(:, Plastic, Cardiac, P.O.D. lear), P.O.P. leye).

WATERMELONS!!}

·4
GRADE A EGGS ••• ~~:.~. .

TWIN PACK

~ MEDIUM .

PRINGLES ..... ~ •••••••••

CBORDEN'S ·

WELCH'S .

GRAPE .JELLY.'••••• ~.~~.
SHOWBOAT

40 Ol

2/$1

. SHERBET••••••••••••••~T~.

HEINZ

PORK &amp; BEANS
W/C

·

CIDER V.INEGAR
GAL $119
Limit I Per Customer
· Good Onty at Powell's
CHfer
I, 1978

KOOL-AID
,. 33 Ol $}29
CANNISTER

.

SUGAR
•

W/C

Lamil 1 Per Cuslomer
Good Only at Powell's . ·
Offer bpi res Ju.ly 8, 1'178

~~~

.5 LB.

W/C

. Limit 1 Per Customer
• Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 8, 1'178 ..

·V

�-·-

v

'

• - The DallvSentinel. Middleoort-P~merov. o.. Wednesdav.Jwy 5, 1978

G:;n

,

•r

Birthday
observed

Thumb

By Mn. Dwight Mllboan

POLLY·s
. POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Bette helped
his career
to scout its star, Dorian
Harewood , "ihe next Marlon

Dorian Harewood

Branda .."

But Bette Davis saw him filming ·•Foster and Laurie,"
and was unable
first .
. ' to leave the
Harewood, known to TV · coast.
And so, when the Award
viewers for his fine perform'ances in "Foster and ceremony took place in New
and
Dorian
Laurie," and "Siege" might' York.
never have even auditioned lfarewood's name was an-·"
for a straight dramatic role if nounced, the award was
accepted by none other than
not for Davis.
The two met when Dorian, his good friend, Bette Davis.
who was then pursuing a
musical career, was cast
opposite the famed actress in
WAS PROMOTED
"Miss Moffat, " the musical
The U. S. Air Force has
based &lt;&gt;n the film "The Corn promoted Howard W. Me·
Is Green.." Two days into Million, son of Mr. and Mrs.
rehearsals Davis told the Marmie McMillion of Mason,
young man: "You are a W. Va ., to the r1111k of master
· wonderful actor. You have sergea nt .
the best instincts. You must
Sergeant McMillion is
do Serious drama."
serving at Andersen AFB ;
Later on , Dorian won his Guam, as a ground radio ·
· first dramatic Broadway communications technician. ....
role, opposite Arlene Francis
The Sergeant, a 1962
in "Don't Call Back." It graduate of Wahama High
closed after one perform· · School , attended Marshall
ance, but Harewood made University, Huntington, W.
such an impression he was Va . His wife, ·E dith, is the
nominated lor the coveted dliughter.of·Mr; ·lindMr.s' Ray
Theatre World Awafd.
Pippenget: ·or ' 1236 .. Vulcan,
He.learned he'd won while Rid~ecreot, Calif.

Mr.and Mrs. B,..own
visit ·Meigs area
f '

'·'

.,

Mr. and Mrs. Leland Brown
left Friday lol)owing a two
week visit here with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leland
E . Brown and other relatives
and friends .
Mr. and Mrs. Brown will
visit friends in Nashville,
Tenn. , where they previously
lived before moving to Texas.
Leland, a grad~ate of Ohio
State University with a
Master of Science Degree in
Statistics, is employed by the
U . , S. , Department of
Agriculture as statistician
with the Texas Crop and
Livestock Reporting Service. '
·Leland
will . go
to
Washington, D. C., next week

where he has been selected to
work on the Crop Reporting
Board which, on July II, will
issue the July crop report
forecasting crop product_iorl
and certain crop acreages.

•

th~

Carter, Mondale are hopeful

contents on it. No

more opening a lot of ~on·
IHincrs to 's~c what is in lht.•tn .
W11cn buyii1g fu~MJ tu store I
tlalc ever-ything So .I usc the
uldcst things fjrst.
- When! have biL' of lcftuve1·
ve~ctables frorn.u mcal.t put
thc1·n in a large conll:tincr J

k""p in the fi·cezer . W)1en I
1M ready tu make a put of
vegetable so up all the
vegellibles are ready without
having to buy them . - DEIJA
DEAR POLLY - Anyone

who , has lroulilc renioving
deodorant stains from shirts
should try bar soap. Rub the
Hrea with a ~r' uf soap and
the stains seem tu rnll off. I
find this holds IJ·ue with
pulyester fabri cs.- M.C.K.
DEAR POLLY - My husbitnd's aching elbows are
helped when they are kept
warm. I cut the toes off uf Ius
sucks when the lop elastic is
stretched out ~he slips
these on his arms, over his
elbows, when he wbrks
outside in the cold weather or
while he sleeps at night. EVELYN '
Polly will send you one of
her signed tha,nk-y o u
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Pt.,ve, ur Problem
in her ··column . Write PO If
LV'S POINTERS in care uf
this newspaper.

SALE

there are several nieces

and

nephews in Meigs County .•
She is also survived by her
husband and a daughter. Two
sons preceded her in death.
The Andrews family resides
at 541 West 15th Ave. , No. 26,
Escondido, 92Q25.
Beach prepared
If you 're rushing off to the
beach on weekends, keep a
to te · bag packed with

necessary cosmetics, etc.,
s pecifica ll y for those oc·

casi ons .

G

Drying style
To style ha ir after washing
- and while blowing it dry use a round , boar-bristle
brush .
Schoolgirl look
Go back to school this fall
- the schoolgirl dress, belted
or not, .is de rigueur.
Tao tangle
It's safer to get your tan
frdm a dar.ker shade of
'foWldation than the real thing
this summer. unless you
protect your skin - and head
well enough · to avoid
complications.
Eye oo safety
For safety sake, never
'apply eye color on the inside
rim of the eye. Save the lining
for underneath the eye or on
top of the lid .

$11495

~~!~~~18lb.

%OFF

OF COTTON BLENDS

FABRIC SHOP
Pom~roy,

0.

dllpay you the.
.

'

·no inatter·what you're lookjpg
for in·savings -or investment ·
certificates... . .
.

Prices Effective Thru Sat., July 8th

LUNCH MEAT
FRENCH CITY

NOWI

.r. ............... 1.79
,

'

5

I-YEAR CERTIACATE

"'

2% MILK ..:.....~?~. - --~1

1-lb. BLUE BONNET

. MARGARINE
BOOTH

'l•'s

lb.

49

sge

6
.
59e
LEMONS............ -~~r

COMPOUNDED

;.

~EIII(iE ................lb:.

19"'

.

RATE

DAILY I

OR~NGE
DRINK •••••••.••••••••.••• ~ •••••••••• 89~
oz.

ARMOUR
TREET.!~~.O::....................... ~l-09
Pak
. WHITE CLOUD TISSUES ..:~~! ................ 954
4

FOLGER'S DRIP COFFEE .............. !~~ .. 53.09
BAtH SIZE

WHITE
DOVE
SOAP
...............
,
.....
~~:s.. 2/894
count CHINA FOAM
DIVIDED PLATES. .......... ."............:~~~ .... 53*

10

oz.

'

.

6' oz .'

KRAFT SALAD MUSTARD ................._
.2/59*

oz.
'
.
SUR~JEL ••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••.••••.•••••••••• 21751

Jl/4

Variety ol Colors To Ch0011e From

tllGG &amp;ZUSPAN .MAtERIAlS CO.

Mason, W. Va.

77l-5554·

----·-

ALSONEWI

\]

.6-MONTH MONEY MARKET.CERTIFICATE
.

\

Available at existing six-month
I

'

'

'

ROUND

U. S.:?Treasury Bill rates at time

STEAK .

;

of purchase. Minimum
$10,000.00
.
Federal Replations r~~quire a substantial .
penllty fqr premature withdrawal of
certificate funds.

There is .no penalty for premature
withdrawal in .the Mnt of the delth of
'

the .Certificate owner:

'

REG. JELLO••••••••••••.·•••••••••••• ~ •••••• ~·••.·2/49c:

ONLY'
S795

-'
ESIJC

12

3

5.75%

·~~
"\a

MINIMUM• 11000.

-

TILE BOARD

Meigs Co. Branch

7%

•

OCEAN PERCH FILLETS ... :........ ~~g.

Gal. RICH 'N' READY

~NNUAL

an annual yield of

165 count

NEW GREEN

Nationwide

SHEDS

%

7.7

BULK WIENERS ................ ,........ ~...... :..... ~~: .. 51.19
BROUGHTONS

\

.

Cuoo

lb.

.

Evert, Wade clash
in women's finals

sure.
serv1ce

·NL pitching staff name~

Phone 742 2100

Pepper Loaf
.
Pork &amp; Beef Loaf ....

$489~~1R

r

DEPARTMENT STORE

Honey Loaf

I

•

RUTLA ND

FRENCH CITY

j
I

·-

million Palestinian Arabs in
-By HELEN THOMAS
Truman balcony and meet lor goocj rep(rt. He had a good
Rooalynn Carter and her
the
West Bank, Gaza Strip
UPI White Roue H,eporter
40 minutes with Mondale,
trip."
•
· mother, Mrs. Allie Smith,
and
Old City of Jerusalem·
The vice president said he returned with him, but Amy,
WASHINGTON (UPl) _!, who return&lt;!~' early Tuesday
after
a five-year interim
would not characterize the. remained at the White House.
.P resident Carter 118YS he's from a 'siltt;!ssful trip to the
period
.
.
Details
of
the
Egyptian·
'.'hopeful." So does Vice Middle East.
Egyptian plan at this time,
Israel's plan calls for
President Watter Mondale. ' The two discussed the ' but said he was " quite plan were due to be disclosed
limited self-rule . for the
The
proposal
That word was the clo&amp;ellt Egyptian peace plan, which
positive" Israeli will attend today .
Palestini'ans
and
no
the London foreign ministers reportedly called for return
either man carne Tuesday to was to be transmitted lo
wit!Jdrawal for five years,
assessing the chances for Israel today, but -they conference that Mondale of the occupied west Bank to
after which it said it would
Jorda11 and the Gaza Strip to
progress toward Middle ~ declined to disclose delails or
helped set up .
negotiate the question .
"They will
probably Egypt on an interim basis for
peace at the forthcooung to say whether it eJihances
Secretary of State Cyrus
London foreign ministers' chances of Middle East
announce it after a Cabinet five years, with_negotiations
Vance
will attend the London
.,
· peace.
meetirig this week," he said. after. that.
meeting.
.
meeting
in mid-July, and at
Egyptian
newspapers
· Carter took time off from
Mobbed by reporters as
He said he .too considered
that
time
both the Egyptian
Tuesday,
how.Ver,
said
the
his JCklay yacation at Camp they emerged frmt the White
his trip succeasful, but said,
David to fly down in late House to greet family
"the difficulties there in plan called for . self- . and Israeli proposals will be
on the table.
afternoon· to watch the members and aides on the · trying to find peaee cannot be determination foc the 1.1
national fireworks from . the White House lawn; Carter · overestimated."
·
said : " Mondale gave me a
"We've got to have peace in
the Middl~ East," he told
reporters. "It's .0 important
to Israel and her neighbors.
There have been four wars :..
our nation is going to do its
centered in the desert about part to try to overcome the
PASADENA, Calif. (UPI)
lour miles north of Palm differences and the gaps and
. - An earthquake registering
Capacity
do it in such a way that it
3.8 on the open-ended Richter Desert. .
Agitator Waslller wllll
"We felt the quake for leads to greater security for
scale shook' the desert
..
about
10
or
15
seconds,"
a
Israel."
Fcrlc CYc!!l
cOmmunity of Palm Springs
He also said: "Personally, .
police spokesman said. "We
early today.
Model LA49
FOURTH PLACE Albany Farmers, first row,-L-R, Jimmy Allman, Doug Hooper, Tim
Police said they received · had prisoners yelling and I'm hopef!li, but I realize it's ·
· · Jig 18-lb. capacity
Boggesil, Mark Chapman, Joey Carter; back row, Coach Ft:ed Davis, sponsor, Larry Powell
phones ringing . It was v~:ry difficult."
about 50 telephone calls from
0 Heavy Dull Spiral Ramp
and Coach Ron Chapman.
·
After getting back to Camp
something."
residents jolted awake by the
Agitator- for big wash
There were no reports of David and being Wlable to
temblor at 3:49a.m.
loads
land ·because of the low
damages or injuries.
Seismologists at Caltech in
Knit fabric cycle
vi~ibility, the president's
Pasadena said the quake was
Three agitation/spin speed
helicopter landed on . a
selections
baseball field in nearby
Five-p'ositfon water saver
Th'urmont, Md., and he was
with '"Re-select'" sett ing
driven up the moWltain.
Five-position water
SEEN AND HEARP
SOCIAL SET
temperature controlSPECIAL
Mrs. Melvin Circle and
including 3 Permanent
The Rock Springs United
children, Marianne and
Press settings
WASHER.ORYER
Methodsit Church youth will
Mark, left today lor their
0 Bleach dispenser
have an ice cream social
home in Wichita, Kan. after
DO!Jble-Action wash~ng
Saturday beginning at 6 p.m.
visiting here several weeks
Porcelain enamel top and
RIVER DOWNS
at the Rock Springs Church
with her ·parents, Mr. aild .
lid
CINCINNATI ( UP! )
on old Route 33. All ice cream
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee.
Lint filter and recirculation
Geauga Boost led wire-towill be homemade.
system
wireandheld off a strong late
Lock 'n Spinr~ Safety Lid
rush by Jug 0 Gin to win the
Fabric softener dispenser
se~ond running of the $25,000
(optional atcessory)
~.'
Rainbow Handicap by one
Backed by Nationwide
length Tuesday at River
Sure Service
Downs.
Bold Sailing showed.
The winner covered the
' mile and on~ighth in 1:51 U
while Cawley, hampered by a
under jockey Gary Cooper
BY MORLEY MYERS
WIMBlEDON,
England twisted ankle, defeated and paid $3.40, $2.60 and $2.20.
(UP!) - For 12 months Chris ' Romania's.Virginia Ruzlci, 7The 8-6 daily doubie ·
Evert has waited for this 5, 6·3, and is receiving combination of With Dignity
specialist treatment foc her - and Amman !I :was .worth
moment.
$46.40.
Wednesday the
Fort injury.
.·
But
NavratUova
has
no
A crowd of 8,248 wagered ·
Lauderdale,
.
Fla
.,
tennis
SYRACUSE REDS won their 20th game of the season Tuesday to capture the first
intention of taking pity on the . $849,586.
machine
gets
her
longannual Powell's Super Valu Little League Tournament. The event was held on the. Me1gs
awaited chance foc revenge Austra)lan. "You feel like a
High diamond. This action shot above was taken during the final inning of the champlon!l!IP
against Britain's Virginia turkey out there. You have
game by Greg Bailey, .Sentinel sports department..
- Wade when they clash on the got to remember who she is
center court for a place in the and tbat even injured she can
women's final of the $512,1100 beat a lot of people."
The men have a rest day
Wimbledon championships.
Thla tirml: last year, Evert bef&lt;lre Thuroday'a oemillnals
· was favored to land the tltie when Sweden's Bjorn Borg,
All-Star appearance. He is for the third time, only to out to win the title three times
NEW YORK (UPI ) - Tom combined record of 77-60 and
Seaver of Cincinnati, who is dominated by right- joined in the bullpen by suffer a semifinal ,upset in
succession,
meets
pitched his first .no-hitter ·on banders - Seaver, Rogers, Fingers, an All-Star for the against local favorite Wade, unseeded Dutc;hman Tom
June 16, was selected 1o the Sutter, Fingers, Zachry. and
fourth time, who leads the who went on to capture the Okker and second favorite
N*ional League all-star Niekro. The southpaws are
league with 18 8aves and has crown for the first time after Jimmy Connors plays Vilas
squad foc the lith time as Blue, Grimsley and John .
four wins as well.
16 Wimbledons.
Gerulaitis in an all-American
Manager '!'om l,asorda
Rilgers' won .Joss mark for
Zachry has .e merged as the
Evert edged out six-time clash .
named a nine-man pitching the Expos is 1~7. He leads the . ace of the Mets' squad with a champion Billie Jean King, 6staff for the annual mid· league with an ERA of 2.10 9-4 record and a 3.14 ERA. J, J-6, 6-2 , in Tue~day's
Our Interest is
season Classic at San Diego, · and has not ~llowed mo~e
John, the 35-year-old veteran, quarterfir\als, juSt as she did
Greater
For You
July II.
than three runs m a game thts brings a 9-6 record into his in
1977,
while
Wade
· Seaver, 33, is 9-5 foc the season .
second AII..Star Game while demolished Mirna Jausovec
Sutter, the 25-year -~ld
Niekro, selected for the third of Yugoslavia, 6-0, 6-4.
season. He actually appeared
in seven previous a!'-slar relief ace f~r the .
":'1th
time, is 9-9.
Referring to the coming
g~es ahd pitched 12 innings · nine saves, IS makmg his f1rst
battle against Wade, Evert
On 90-Day
without a decision.
said, ''The de&gt;dre for revenge
&lt;
·
will be there. !'in definitely
V'd Bl 0 f San FranciSCO
Certificates
FOR BATHS
I a ue
OUR
BOARDING
HOUSE
I
h
M
I
Hoo
I
and
Montreal's
Ross
w t
a or
P•
more moUvated this year. I'll
5.75 per cent paid on
Grimsley have the most .---...,.--=._....,='-=-=::;o..--:-'-:-:-:..:-;-c=:-:-:=~-:;-:;::;--o
be hustling, trying for every
OR KITCHENS
.' Victories among the pitchers
point ."
90 day· Certificates of
selected - 11. Blue has an
Wade, who will be 33 next
$500.00
Deposit.
ERA of ·2. 14 with an 11-4
week, says she has not felt
Minimum.
Interest
4Jf8
record and owns one AJI..Star
any extra pressure in being
Payable Quarterly.
winning deNslory in two
the defending champion)lnd
A substontii\) penonv _is
games. This will be his fourth
is cmfident she can repeat
Invoked on 1 ctrtificoto
appearance . Grimsley, 11.(),
last year's victory over Evert
occounts withdrawn prioris making his first All-Star
and go on to retain her title.
to tile. d''" of maturity.
appearance .
"Oirissie is a great player,
but who knows whether she
-RoWlding out the N.L. allstar mound cocps are Steve
wUI be good one day or the
SHEET
!Wgers of Montreal, Bruce
next? I am a be~er player
Sutter of Chicago, "!I ollie
Ibis year and •have better
Fingers of San Diego, Pat
potential. I have played
Zachry of New York, Tommy
Chrissie twice in team tennis
John of Los Angeles and Phil
this year and did very well."
Tilt AlhiiiiS County
Niekro of Atlanta.
· In the other semifinal , '
Sovinas
&amp; Loon Co.
• Seaver, 9-5, pitched his first
second-seeded Martina ' Navw.
Main
St.
· no·hitter on JWJe 16 and now ·
ratllova, the Dallas-based
Pomeroy, Olllo
.. has been selected to an AllCzechoslovak, faces 1971
Star squad for the 11th time.
champion Evonne Cawley of ·
Over the years Seaver, 33,
Australia .
'
has appeared in seven games
Navratilova
outplayed
and pitched 12 innings with no
South
African
Marise
decisions.
7..S Kruger, 6-2, 6-1, Tuesday,
The nine-man staff has a

Califoima is shaken

GROUP OF KNITS lfz OFF

51.09
HOMEMADE
HAM
SALAD
.....................
~-~:
..
Death noted
MRS. LELIA ANDREWS
Mrs . Ge o rgi&lt;~ . Th oma
received word of the death of
her sister-in-law , Mrs. Walter
(Lelia ) Andrews on Sunday
at Escondido, Calif.
Mrs. Andrews, formerly
~f
Pomer oy , Route , 2,
'Will; the daughter of .the
late Mr. and Mrs. George
M. Thuma . Mrs. Wilhelmina Th oma of Chester is a sister-in-law and

)

masking llipe un the lid and

write

The 84th birthday an·
pllU iu the water, removed it
niversary of Patrick Lochary No -wax floor
and then used the water that
was . celebrated Monday is marred
ll&lt;ls the few h!Usened pa11icles
evenilfg wit)l a gathering of
iu it tv remHve the marks.
family and friends.
Sonielimes
a . ~neil eraser
DEAR POLLY - Du you
Attending were Mr. and
will
•·emuve
black heel
Mrs . Charles Lochary and know what will remove black
rnarks. The1·e is also a Spt!dal
.\)_eel
marks
left
on
my
n&lt;&gt;-wax
children, Meg and Robert, of
nuor cleaner for no-wax
near Chicago ; Mr: and Mrs. fluor ·Without hanning the
rinishcs that seen~ to rcmuvt!
will
bring
shine?
Also
what
James Lochary and Chris of
most black blemishes. There
New Jersey; Mrs. .!'Iizabeth bitck the shine to duli' spots '
is
nol much you can du lu
Chase, Miss Helen Lochary, ..SHEILA
restore
the luster i1i places
DEAR SHEILA - WhenMrs. Dorothy Downie, Mr.
that
show
wear but you might
and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and cleanlllg your flour do ~he
ask
your
flour covering
Jayne, and .Mrs ; Patrick sputs first and then clean the
dealer
abutit
a
finish that will
Lochary , .Pomeroy, and Mrs. entire flour . The marks will
tempurarily
restore
~orne
often come off with the use uf
Mildred Henry, Florida . .
luster.- POLLY
jUst
a
mild
detergent.
We
are
Ca lling earlier in the day
DEAR POLLY -When iny
were Mr. and Mrs. Harry tuld rwver to use an abrasive.
bitllpuint pens no Iunger write
Whe'n
black
matks
are
very
Henry of Amesville. The
I stick them in the .dirt in mv ·
Charles Lochary family who bitd I hllve put a steel WUI&gt;I . flower pots arid find they ate
have also been visiting Mr.
fine· iu use fur cultivating the
and Mrs . Leo Story returned
soil around .the plants. -ALTA
home Tuesday as did Mrs.
DEAR POLLY - I cover
James Lochary.
the: smaller jigsaw puzzles
with clear cuntad paper and
use them fur place ·mats . I
also put one on top· of my
freezer tu protect it from
· scratches. ·Z.G. ·
DEAR POLLY - When
storing lefl0vers in the
When "The Mighty Gents"
refrigerator I find it mll,kes
opened
on
Broadway
recently , a New York paper
reported that the audience
was liberally sprinkled with
film producers who had come

•
•
_ WOdwood Gatdea Club
HOME TREATMENTS
Few people realize the medicinal value of herbs, roots,
vegetables, salt, v!negar,lemon, kerosene, products which are
foWld in most hoW!!! holds or can be purchased by the ounce in
drug stoces without a doctor 's prescription. Upon these our
forefathers largely depended for remedies. ·
Mullein leaves wilted in hot vinegar and water and applied
to the throat relieves sore throat. mumps or inflammation of
the tonsils. This can also be used as a tea the same as one
OWlCe of horseradish root and yellow dock root grated, steep in
hot water, strain and sweeten with honey·or horehound candy .
., .
Drink freely for a day or two. .
.
For pneumonia, a poultice ~n be, rqade with large pieces
of flannel soaked with kerosene oil ·and appliecj to the chest or
throat. For facial neuralgia just bruise six leayes of the
common plantain and !lppJy over the pain, or tak~ the white of
an egg, sprinkle with' red or black pepper and bind over the
part alle.cted. ·
Many gardeners hate the common dandelion not knowing
its many beneficial parts. The ·flowers can be rolled in flour,
fried, mixed into salads, or made inlo wine that in the winter
acts as a tonic for colds, kidneys and stomach.
Fluid extract of dandelion root when taken, two
teasponsful after meals, relieves liver congestion and . is a
favorite remedy for gallstones. Three tableSpoons of olive oil
befoce retiring at niglllmay assist in the passage of stones.
For colic mix one teaspoon of groWld ginger with hot water
oc milk and let steep. Blackberry roots boiled for the brandy is
good foc diarrhea and the opium contained in the milk or juice
of lettuce tends to promote sleep and reduce spasms of couch .
Watercress is an excellent blood purifier and heart tonic, and
eaten raw it helps pimples and skin diseases.
A tea made from an ounce of p;~rsley or the roots of parsley
is good for the bladder or 'cystitis as are the teas made from
slippery ..elm, flaxseed and doggrass root.
For gravel or stones in the bladder, boil the common beet,
cruSh and boil down with a. little water into a syrup. Drink a
half teacupful three times a day ,
A slice of lemon boWld over a sore corn at night will relieve
it. Lemon juice on the skin Will whiten it or remove a tan. For
rheumatic conditions and nervous complaints, crush celery
into a tea and drink a glassful five times a day.
Asparagus, cauliflower and carrots are good for
indigestion and inflammation of the kidneys. Many of the
r.emedies listed here work on other ailments .

•

things ~aSLer to put it pit.."Ce ur

•
•

I·

~j Ohio Valley Bank
GallipOliS. Ohio

Member FDI C

Four Locations To Better Serve You

LB.

SLICED
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•
P.HEBE'S STORE·
Thursd1y, July 6 tlwu July II
Wt Gladly Accept Fed . Fooa Stomps

I I I I I I I I

$}29_.

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.

•

Kim Batey top winner
RUTLAND - Kim Batey,
.Cheater, was firpt place
winner of a. talent show
atqed in Rutland TueM&amp;y
nilht aa a part of the amual
July 4th · celebration of the
RuUand Fire Department.
Mlas Batey presented a

....

vocal number, "I'm Sorry"
prqviding, her own guitar
aCC&lt;1fllpeniment to win the
ftrst prize of $25. · ·
Winning secoqd, place
honors, a $15 prize, waa
Connie Heilman, Ripley, W.
Va., who sang, "Thank You,
Lord" ptoviding her own
piano accompaniment.
'iiQu.tD RUNS
Third place and a $10 prize
T h e M i d d 1 e p 0 r t. went to Kendra. Ward and
Emergency Squad made one . Linda Rusk, Bidwell, who
run. yellerday while the fire presented , a
dulcimer
department II'!IWered .two medley.
.
1
calls earl~ this morning.
Other contestants, each of
At n: 15 p.m. on the Fourth whom received $2, included
the squad went to Apt. 5 'over
Headquerters Bar for
' Kenneth Conio who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hoapital.
.
At 12:42 a.m. this morning
the fire department · was
called to Kings Arms ln
Cheshire where a coal truck
owned by Anthony Cardillo
RACINE LEGION POST602 float that took part in Fourth of July parade held in Racine. wu on ftre. At 6:40 a.m. the
Photo by Katie Crow.
·
· department was· called again
Do you want
for the same truck.

I Negotiations resumed
· MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP() Firemen and ~ity officials
resume contract negotiations
and authorities
today
no
unusual
reported
outbreaks of' fires since the
llremen returned to duty
Tuesday.
More than 400 fires- many
of them arson - broke out
over the weekend durinng 'the
flremen·'s three-day
walkout.
Firefighters obeyed a court
injunction ordering them
back to work Tuesday
morning. About 450 of the
1,400 members of the
International Association of
Firelighters Local 1784
returned on Independence

destrOyed several businesses
1\Jld prompied the evacuatl~
of several hundred residents
from a nearby housing
project.
Another blaze gutted an
entire block near a midtown
entertalnmi!IJt center, wiping
union .
A two-day. overnight out nine buildings. Officials
curfew was lifted by Mayor said more than 100 businesses
Wyeth . Chandler when the were destroyed or damaged
firemen returned to work.
in weekend fires, but no
"We ve had a very routine , major injuries were reportt¥1.
day . Nothing out of the
Several issues on the
ordinary," Fire Lt. Ricbard bargaining table when the
E.. Daugherty said Tuesday negotiations were abrupUy
night.
halted Friday were still to be
Officials 'reported nine settled, including a demand
majOr weekend fires. One of for extra compensation for 16
the worst was a tw&lt;H&gt;lock hours of the firefighters' 24blaze in south. Memphis that hour shifts.
day and the rest were due for
shift changes today and
Thursday.'
"The men are going back to
work reluctantly," said
Kuhron Huddleston,
president of the firefighters'

.
t-'111eDallySentlnei,Middleport-Poineroy,O., Wednesday,July5, ~ &amp;78 •

Randy 'Batey and' Becky
Pooler;"doing a dlflco dance;
Ernell Cro.ss, ~flsaviUe, a
vocal nL!ffiber, and acrobatletl
by Brtan and Don Nitz of
Middleport.
•·
Judge!&amp; were Patty Clark,
. New Haven, W. Va.; Larry
Colemah and Jane Wise both
of Rutland Following the
show emc~ed by Vernon.
Weber a fireworks dlaplay
waa f~tured.
•
Goixl crowu were on 'hand
for both the evening events
and
day activities· which'
included an ox rout, games
arid refreshment llanda. The
.Rutland Community Park
was the scene of the ob·servance.

·

Medllog

ln

walerp@~/~•~nle55 steel,

.

by5~
-.

. '

the mo•t In

Latest
cease•fire
marred

See the Spri_ng Air Ba.ck Supporter
Mattress_ w.lth the Unique 'Karr'
lnne~spnng Unit. . '
•f

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDlEPORT, 0~10

134,

By NED TEMKO
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI)
- Sporadic shooting ·and
explosions in Beirut today
marred the latest cease-fire
between warring Christian
rightist militiamen and
Syrian troops of the Arab
peace-keeping force.
A Christian Phalangist
statement, broadcast ·over
the party's radio station, said
167 peraons have died and
more than 500 wounded
during the past four days of
fighting. In the past 24 hours,.
35 peraons have been killed
and 12 w0 unded, the
broadcast said.
C&lt;mmunicaUons between ·
Belfut and the outside wor.ld
were severely curtailed by
the fighting. Power cuts
afflicted several areas of the
city and both telephone and
telex connections were
spotty.
"The security situation
deteriorated again this
morning In the eapttal and Its
subur'-" the governmentrun Beirut Radio said. "T~
s.ound of explosions and
exchanges of fire can he
~ard from time to time."
Heavy
sniping
was
reported all along the
· traditional
civil
war
demarcation lines between
the predom~ntly Olristlan
east and Moslem west of
Beirut.'
President Elias Sarlds said
he would travel to Damascus
today to consult with Syrian
leaders on ending the

IAAgency, Inc. is the con·
ditionally designated and
funded Health · Systems
Agency for eighteen eastern
and $OUtheastern · Ohio
counties . The primary
purpose of the agency is to
promote effective health
planning
and
health
resources developmen.t
within its health service area.

·Energy package
to be approved·

Vandalism
violence.

continues
WASHINGTON {UP!) Vandalism and violence
ranging from insubordination
to rape, once a p;oblerlconly ·
lr. low-income ~ minority·
populated urban schools, now
. are a daily commonplace in
American schools, says an
education magazine.
In a signed artiCle in the
current issue of American
Educator, magazine of the
American Federation of Teachers, Sen. Birch Bayh, !).
Ind., IBid a "significant and
growing number of' schools in
urban, suburban and rural
areas are confronting serious
levels of violence and
vandalism .~'~

after meeting Callaghan.
" l told the prime minister
we a:re going to appropriate
our share of the increased
annual defense . spending,"
Byrd said, "and we are
asking the Europeans to
· reciprocate with their own
share of the annual three per
cent increase agreed on in
Washingtoo."
"I did noL have to talk at
great l"''gth to the prime
minister about this," Byrd
added, "because the British
have been very s~pportive . "
"In my capacity as
majority leader," Byrd said,
"1 was also able to assure the
.prime ininister that Congress
is not blocking the president's
energy bill · as many
Europeans - and Americans
too helie~e. and that it will be
passed before the year is
out."
. Byrd said about 110 percent
of the president's proposals
have been approved in ·
conference of the two houses.
,

Hometown hit by
demonstrations

Bayh is former chairman of
the Senate subcommittee to
investigate juvenile de·
linquency.
The publication . said
teachers from · across the
United
States
report By WR.UAM COTTEREU. chers.
PLAINS; _ Q!!. -{UPI) After lhe orderly march,
insubordination, rapes,
demonstrators rallied at the
knifmgs, threats and other About 150 demonstrators forms of violence directed at most
protesting
the steps of Lebanon Baptist
ther11 on a regular basis.
conviction of a black woman Chun:h · for a series of
It said the National for murder, but others speeches on hl\ffiBn rights
Association of School )lliShing causes rangin11,from and Dessie Woods, the
Security Directors estiinates Puerto Rican independence woman whose 22-year pri"""
achool vandalism prOPerlY to homoseJual rights. sentence touched off the ~~~Bin
lOIIIeS, prevention programs, marched in
President protest .
"We want to expose the
repairs and related expenses Carter'S home town Tuesday
divert mere than f590 million · to scoff at the "hypocrisy" of .hypocrisy of Jimmy Carter's
from annual education his human rights s~J~nce .
· position on hunlan rights to
"The , human
rights the world," shouted Omawale
budgets - more than the
amount spent on school texts problem in the world today is Kefing, an Atlanta Black ,.
right hefe in the ·U.S.A.," . Muslim who organized the
in 19'12.
"When violence strikes the marchers shouted, making protest.
He said Miss Woods and a·
schools, its repercussions tile chant rhYJIIe as they
!ipllre none,'~ said Jon Ban, sweated and batted at companion, Cheryl Todd,
uaqciate professor of swarms of gnats along the 2- were hitchhiking home from
Reidsville State Prison June
education
at
Indiana mile.parade route.
Plains merchants brieDy 16, 197S, when a white
University Northwest.
'.'School .. employees closed their doors and insurance man picked them
eapecially bear the llrunt .. . tourists spilled into tbe town up. He was shot with his own
aa It coowlaes their place of . sqtiare, watching the half· gun and robbed .
Miss Woods and her
. employment, undermining hour demonstration al)d
taking
pictures
of
p~~raders
supporters
contend she was
their ai:Xlity, not to mention
with
placards
al'ld
banners.
resisting
Jl
rape
attempt.
their motivation, to do the
The
mix~bag
of
.
Miss
Wooda
is
-vlng
sent'
job;" he said.
protesters
vol
'untarily
ences
ryf
10
years
lor
man'l1le article said in some
1
segregated into I!I'Oups for slaughter and 12 for armed
~ehoolsyatems, teachers who
various causes - blAMe's first , robbery at the women's
prnB charges against an
-ellant are awarded a flllO followed by Puerto Rican prison at Hardwick . Her case
check by the federation , separatists, next. a small is on 'appeal to the U.S.
which lll8o -umes legal fees group of : homo'lexual-rights District Court in Macon .
advocates, then white mar'
·
...t court COlts.

'
Abuse it and.neglect it enaugh and it'll break down. High bloo.d
pressure. Stroke. Heart attack. What overeating and
under-exercising do to health care costs is no joke.
Your Blue Cross and 13lue Shield Plans can't pull you away from
the table before your second helping of dessert. And we can't give
you a boot to get you started exercising sensibly. We're h~lping to
hold down health care costs by doing things within our area of
influence ... like pioneering and broadeniflg ambulatory programs such
as pre-admission testing, post discharge testing, same-day surgery
and home care ... by being involved in utiliution review and peer
review ... by experimenting with second opinion surgical
consultation ... and, as active participants in the health planning
process. by advocating better use of health care resources;
· discouraging waste and preventing unnecessarY duplication of
facilities and services.
.
Ani:! as always, we're helping company groups and individual
subscribers get the greatest value out of every health care doUar
they spend.
. .
.
We'U take the responsibility for setting up effective, economical
health care programs. But the responsibility for holding down health
care costs is something we all share.
·
·
Frankly, some of the reasons·for the high cost of health care
· make us sick.
·
Please, take care of yourtelf.

·

At least 19 persons died on .
Saturday
Ohio highways during too
IT Chasetown : Loren D.
long July 4th . holiday Roush, 52, Daytori, killed in
weekend, the Ohio Highway a.n accident near the
Patrol said Wednesday. ·
inter~tibn of Ohio 131 and
Three persons died on U.S. 68. in Brown County.
Friday, six Saturday, five ' 3T Montpelier : Ameli'a
Sunday, four Mondayandone--.¥asquez, 32, r;;uay!lm a,
Tuesday. The patrol's fatality Puerto Rico; Anna Alemani,
count ran from 6 p.m. last S2, Milwaukee, ani! Wanda
Friday until midnight . Hernandez, 29, Mi~ ukee '
Tuesday.
were killed when the cafilley
One
d~owning
was were in was hit from the rear
record~d. Joyce Ward, 21, ?f by a trac1or·trailer rig in l he
Knoxville, Tenn., drowned ·m :east-bound lane of U.S. 2v~
a motel swimming pool near · IT Elyria : Lois C. Hebe·
Painesville Sunday.
b.rand, 25, Oberlin, killed
Three of the accidents were when her motorcycle went off
mutliple fatalities, including a Lorain County road.
a car-truck crash Saturday
IT Laurelville : Randall L.
that killed three persons near Hudnall 18 Columbus killed
Montoelier.
.
in a two~a~ accident ~n Ohio
Friday Night
!i6 in Hocking County near
Akron :
Reiner Laurelville.
,IT
Sallmayer, i3, : Cu.yahoga
Sunday
Falls, killed in a one-car
IT Cincinnati : Bori s
accident in Ohio 8 in Summit Murray, 23, Glendale , killed
County.
in a two.:l'ar ~ccident on a
.2T Zanesville: Jeffrey L. Hamilton 'county road.
Thomas, 22, Blue Rock, and
IT Port Clinton : Heidi
Larry D. Shuster, 26, Chand· Biebesagimer, 5 months,
lersvtlle, killed when the car Bloomfield Mich., killed in
in which ihey were riding in two-car a~cident in Otta wa
collided with another on Ohio County.

house trailers and ripping quit. "
roofs from houses ..
The Jacobson llome was not
Authorities said a number heavily
damaged
but
of residentS were trapped in adjacent
homes
were
. the debris ·of the storm- ' destroyed.
.
Other tornadoes tore
crushed rest home.
. A spokesman a.t the Ada~ through south-central North
Minn., hospital, 18 miles west · Dakota and · southeastern ·
of Gary, said iO persons had Soutli Dakota.
been hospitalized, . most . of
Thr.ee twisters touched
them
in
satisfactory down in the Byunarck, N.D.,·
condition, and at least 10 area. The twisters were
others' had been treated for reported at Mott, Carson l\lld .
minor injuries and released. Antelope, N.D., but no major
The Norman County damage · or injuries were
sheriff's office said the reported. Golfbal) sized hail
twister struc'k shorUy before pounded Glen Ullin, N.D.
3 a.m., causing heavy
Thunderstorms erupted
over Ute southeast corner of
damage.
"I heard a roar outside the South . Dakota, spa.wning
door,"
said
Sanford 'twisters in the. Sioui Falls
Jacobson, a Gary resident. area. Tornadoes )Vere sighted
" It was jus! like a freight in the Soutb Dakota towns of
train coming and we headed Renner, Mitchell, Springfield ·
for tbe basement. We sat and Lindy but there were no
down in the basement until it reports of damaee.

A fUth ~re, agreed to
Tuesday, failed to curb the
new outl!reak of fighting
today.
Syria aided . with the
milltias in intervening to end
the civil war, but has sine~!
angered Christian leaders by
·reasaertlng ties with their
Paleatinian and Lebanese
Moslem adversaries from the
war.

•.

23, Fremont, killed in a onecar crash on a. Sandusky
County road.
IT Warren :
Norma
Kukura , 35. Novelty, killed in
a three-car cr ash on a
Trumbull County road.
JD Pai nesvi ll e : , Joyce
Ward, 21, Knoxville, Tenn..
drowned in a swimming ~wl
at a hotel in Lak e County.
IT Delawa re: Madison
Hartman, 27, Murray, Ky .,
killed in tw. o-ca!&gt;.."ccident oo ·
U.S, 23 near Delaware.
·
Monday
2T Highland Heights : Sally
A. Rose, 37. and her son,
Jeffery Rose, 11 , kill..:! on 1-71
when th eir car ran under a
semi-trailer.
Audrev
lT
Lisbon :

HOLDING BICYCLES
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster ·ann ounced thi s
morning the depa rtt'nent is

holding seve ra l bicy cl es .
Anyone whu can claim or

ident ify them may p ick them
up at the police station.

.. ....

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~---

·.NOW YOU K.NOW
Although July 4 is
ce lebrated as the United
States' bi1t hda y, the colonies
offiCially declared their in·
dependence Ju'ly 2, 1776. The ·
DeClaration of Independence .
was adopted July 4, . but .
signing of the document did :
not begin until Aug. 2.
CAUTION RUN
At. 6:50 p.m. Monday the
Pomeroy flre Department
went to the Kermit Walton
residence as a precautionary ·.
measure aga inst a broken
gas meter. .

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
FIO~!I

FIOM THE MEAT DIPT.

ttl

·aanquet ·
Fded Chicken

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28 99

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Box

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

" - ~ 1tenw 11 requo1tod to be ,.,...,
lor .... irl Nell Klopt Stort, tl Ctpl: M
,.... ~ lhl ld l! - 6o ,,., out 511 ,, tdver
... ...._
choice ot , comoe•.o~t

A\TIC 'iAVINCS
O N•IIOGU.aANO
,.II O OUCT\

{UCliiiiC 11111lll)

For.

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liMIT ONI COUPON PII FAMilY
----Yil.li_M,_I.YI.Itfl
- - tt~M1Callllfll.... .

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AVONDALE CUT

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__,. YMI ....,. fO UMft' IU' lilA . . . . . 1G1D

'10-.

Green Beans

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CaiHomia

ce;:·,....,. ....._MY
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co,.....: JUlY I...C.1
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DOCIII

Charcoal

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Corn

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Can

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Sandwich or
Hot Dog · .
INOIVIDUAUV WIIAI'P~

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Food......... .

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·scotToweIs

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Kroger
Cheese

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18

Bag

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UMtT ONI COUPON M

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FAMilY

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KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

KIIOGII

DEADLINE ANNOUNCED
. ·Deadline for day camp
reglstr'atlon has been extended tb Friday, Mrs. Pat
rna, service unit director,
· annoliJK'ed today. Any girt,
and she need not be a scout, Is
vited to attend the camp
wh . will be held July 10
thro gh 14 at Camp Kiashuta
near Chester. The fee is $6.

..

Lowfat Milk

~~

Ga

Charleston
RICh!'f'Ond

52 28
d 33

7 1!~

Tidewater
Toledo

39 39
35 36

Pawtucket

Rochtsttr
Columbus
Svracuse

•

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.650
.5.0

3-t .tO ,.t59 15
33 .tO ..t52 151J2
21 50

.3.59 23

TulldiV'I RHUitl
Rlcl\monel 5, Tidewater 1

Cherltlton t, Columbus2, 1,1,
7 lnnlna•
Columbus ~. Charleston A,

29·?'·59c

Kroger ·
Yac Pak.
Semi'Bo~eless

'Can

Ctrr.

Sene
'N' Save •.•.
WIenen......Pil••

.520 101!,

.500 12
.49J 12 1f2

Pears

Plplr

International LtliiUI
United P,Nnlntenatlonal
W L Pet.

A VO ND ALE

3$

..:· ·

CoH'e ......... ;''-"'.

Smoked Ha•s

2nd, 7 Innings

So;orecuH 5. Rochester "
WHnlldly's 01m11
R lchmond at T ldeweter
Charleston at Columbus
Pewtuc.klt If ROChtater
ToiJdo at svracuae, 2
Thun411ey's0amll

Counfly Club
lctCrea•

Tldeweter .et Cherteston
Richmond at Columbul
Pawtucket at Rochester

· Tot~o at SyraCuse

All ol•llelpha e·• ota

killed in a ont&gt;&lt;:ar accident oo '
Ohio 267 in Columbiana :.
County.
,
IT Lewisburg.: Russel1 1
King, 44, New Paris, Ohio, l
killed in one-car accident on !
U.S 40 near Lewisburg in ·
Preble County,
'
..
Tuesday
IT Oxford : Irving W.
Moore, 31,' Somerville, killed
in a one·car crash on city ·:
street.

HINu 2%

BluSCross.
BlueShlald

·

.,

fi~hting.

: : :...... .. .. .. " .... . Jb.- .

CLCJIICD JULy •
WIUIUI Glbba, deputy
l'tll*llr.
- - that his
oCftct
wU1 bt ctoaed 10 day

111\lftda)'. JIll)' • .

,,
' '

.

U..led Plef•lalenatloul
.of the Jacobs Memorial
Adeadly band of tornadoes llollpital in Elgin, said he was
.:ripped ·across the Plains . on .weather waU:h when he
~sday night and early
saw "a lot of wind in the
y, klWng at least seven clouda" in the western sky. A
peraona and leaving trails of short time l~ter, · sitens
debris . where l)ouses and sounded.
·
~ ooce. stood.
· Hanson said he went h~e
One tornado bowled
spotted the fWJnel cloud a
through 'Elgin, N.D., killing and
bloc)t away . as soon as he
at .leall four peraorll and parked ·his car.
·
injuring as many as 40.
"I eould 51le it swirling," he
Another ripped Gary, Minn., said. "My wife, myself ~nd
Claiming three lives and the three sons; we went into
injuring more than 20 the soutl;twest corner" of the
per1011s.
·
basement.
All Pc&gt;wer was cut off in
"About 30 seconds later the
Elgin, a southwestern North whole house was gone," he
Dakota town of 893 where a said.
" It
was
just
twister leveled scores of unbelievable, the rumbling
homes and businesses and twisting."
Tuesday night.
The Gary twister swooped
Jim Hanson·, administrator down
on
the
tiny,
northwestern Minnesota
hamlet early todaY , leveling
a rest home, .overturning

For persons with unique medical
conditlont wth as diabetes. allergic
reactions.' epilepsy. bee stings. etc .. the .Caduceus
emblem will alert anyone . in an emergency, !hot vou
need SPeCial medical aHention.
.
·The Spe~el MedliOQ ldentffic ation Bracelet Is
embossed with a medical alert emblem and contains
a complete medical history sheet.
•

Development committee plans meeting ·

By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
LONDON {UP!) - U.S.
·Senate majority .lead'e r
Robert ·C. Byrd said today he
had assured Prime Minister
James Callaghan that
President Carter's energy
package will be approved by
Congress before the end of
·the year.
Byrd also said he had
reaffirmed to Callaghan a
U.S. pledges of continued
support for the Ncrth Atlantic
Treaty Organization.
The
West
Virginia
Democrat, stopping off in
Uindon during a tour of
several Western European
capitals on Carter's behalf,
conferred with Ca!laghan·for
one 'hour at his No. 10
Downing St. office.'
" I am visiting various
European countries as an
emissary for the preside,nt to
assure the Europeans that we
fully support NATO's long
range defense plan drawn up
at the recent Summit
meeting," Byrd told · UPI

.

·

1

The Plan Development support services . The
Committee of Area Six Committee will also review
Health Systems Agency, Inc. the National Guidelines for
{ASHSA) will meet Tuesday, Health Planning.
~uly 11, at the Lafayeite .
At the close of the meeting ·
Motor Hotel in Marietta. The · there will . be a slide
meeting will begin. at' 7:30 presentation
on
the ·
p.m. and is open to the public. development of the Health
Major agenda items in· Systems Plan and Annual
elude Committee review of Implementation Plan.
analyses of selected com·
Area Six Health Systems
ponents of the health system
including developmental
disabilities services,
emergency medical services~
enabling services, A1edical
rehabilitation, nutrition and

•

~·

durability, comfort ·a.nd support?
SHOP CLOSED
Vickie's HoUle of Beauty;
operated by Vickie Fink, will .
he closed until further notice
due to injuries she received in
a car .accident on June 30.
Mrs. Fink is in Pleasant
Valley Hospital where she ls
listed in satisfactory con·
ditloil. Her room number is

•

'

Deadly tOrnadoes bowl~,?,,_~~~~~. ~~ ~?.!m?,OO~~g~':~r!..
. .ss nort'h · u. s
aero
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Wes
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SPRING
AIR

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10-lnch

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79c

S399

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:ulyWant Ads T~;trn Unwanted ·Items lnto·-Cash

~~·~~~w~:rr~'Jv~:-~~~l,~~W:A:NTE~~: :OI~l~.n!d~ga~.~
~

•

....

I cloy
.I &lt;lor•
3daya

Ol i~tt and O ronge Townsh1p,
Meigs Co .. Ohio. Also Ca rthage
orid Troy Township, Athens
Co., Ohio. S2 per ac re a nd a lso
f rH gas for your h o m~ . Coli
1·bU·bb7·3593.

·15 Wordl or Under .
Cuh
Owrwt
....
1.1$

uo

).$0

1..

. I dly•

2.1$
3.75

3.01

EMh WOI'd oVer Lhr minilmm 1$
WOI"'dd W4 cents per word per dly.
Mil f'WUlintc other thiln LviUie(.'UUve
day• will be charced lit \be 1 day

.....

NO ITEM TOO la rge or roo small.
Will bu y 1 piece or complete
household . New . used, or anti·
q ue s . Mor fin 's Furniiure , 20 N.
:ilnd St . .' Middle port . Phone

ln memory, card- of Thanks and
ObitiW)' : I ~nts ptr word, S:UO
minimwn. Cash Ul advanct.

991-6370 .

e.~~orry ­

mw Bol NWJl.ber In Cllre of TI~t Stn·
linel.
•

The Publi•her n!!Mt'Veal Uw rit!ht
tu edit or reject any ads deemed 00..
]eetignal. The Publist!er will nul. be

·responaible (or

more lhln one mtw·

' tec.'t insel1io11.
.
Phone9.12·2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
' DEADUNES
Nooo on S.V.turdl:iy

Tuosday
lhru Friday
4P.M.

btfore public1:1li011

SunWty
tP.M.
FrKLay af'l.en11.1011

IF YOU ha ve a service to offer,
won t to buy or sel l so meth ing,
o e loolu ng for work
or
whatever ... you'll ge t re sults
foster with a Se nti ne l Wonl Ad

CARRIERS NEEDED for the Dolly
· Sentinel. Pomeroy, Middleport
C a ll 991 ~ 11 56 .
~ nd SyraCuse are&lt;~
Please
phone 992-2156 between,...!J.)) •YARD SAL E. 810 Second Street
· M1ddlepor1. Oh1o . J uly 5. 6. 7
am ond 5 00 pm .
Dishes, linens
sih1erware ,
WAITRESS . APPL V 1n penon ot the
Avon . drape s curta1ns sd'o' er·
Me1gs Inn . Must be 21 years
to ne pons, ,lur nit ure , electric
old.
appl ian ces qnd lo ts of clo!l,mg
LADY WHO needs home . To core THREE FAMILY Yard Sole. Thurs .,
for two older lod1es . In town:
F rt. ~ and
Sat. a t Koldo r
room , board plus better thon
resid ~nce ..on Rt. 33 in Burl overage woges. Rep lie• kepi
1
ingha m,
confidential. Phone 992· 2588 or
wr ite PO 8011 249, Pomeroy , lARGE YARD Sole. Anou from
Gou f's Grocery pa rking tot in
Ohio .
Ches tvr. July 7·8. Also o bake
sole on the 8th . 9·00 O.m . to
4:00p.m. 811 D ol A Lodge . Ra in
o r shine .
ONE DAY ol11 Yard Sole 1 July 8th.
IN THE COURT OF
Sot , 9 a .m. to 4 p m Chil dren's
COMMON PLEAS,
, la thing. coots summer ond
PROBATE DIVISION,
w.in te r. Wome n s clot hin g
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
10· 1'2 Rol lowoy bed . M1s c
EDISO'N
HOBSTETTER,
Rutland , Nvw L1mo Rd . 1 mile
Adminhtr•tor of the Estate
of Merlr E. Rice. CleceueCI.
on le ft .
Pl•intiff,

· YS ·

RHODELL STEFFY ,

Defendants.

et ill. ,

No . 20,909

NOTICE FOR SERVICE
BY PUBLICATION

To : Nora K1ndle , whose
address is un~nown and
cannot
w i th · reasonable
d il igence be ascerta ined ;
To . The unl\nown he irs and
dev i sees of Nora K indle , It

deceased :

TQ. : Glenn

K indle,

whose

add f' ess I s unknown and
cannot
with
reasonable
diligence be- ascertained :
To : The .unknown heirs anct
devisees of Glenn Kindle , It

deceased . ·

To · Edgar K 1ndle , whose
addre-ss is unknown . and
cannot with
reasonab le
d iligence be asce rt ained ,
To : The unknown h eirs and
dev isees of Edgar K i ndle, If

deceased ;
To : Retha

•

whose
address I S u n known lind
cannot w i fh
reasonable
diligen ce be ascerta ined ;
To : The unknown he irs and
dev isees of Aetna R upe . if
deceBsed ;
To : Glenn Knowles , whose
address is un~nown and
cannot• w it h reasonab le
di,igence be ascertll ined ;
To : The un k nown heirs and
dev isees Ot GJen KnoWles , if
deceased ;
To The unknown he irs and
dev isees of Leo r a Zw ill ing,
de c eased ,
To , The unknown heir S and
1
,:.;· ~ de vi sees of
Frances V .
2~.-.
·srvan . deceased ;
T o · The u nknown he ir S' and
· · ~·
devisees
of Edith R ic e ,
•&lt;&gt;· ~
deceased ;
'
To : Th·e unknown he ir s and
-.. dev isees of Mae Pr ic e ,
dec eased ;
01
"1 ' '
To : The unknown he irs and
- - ·- dev isees of Mer le E . R ic.e .
' ..,. .., ' de c eased , and
..::.~
To · The unk nown h e irs and
dev iS ees of J . Q . R ic e ,
deceased ;
,
. ,.. ;,'
You are hereby not ified
1'!.r•T.
that you have been nam ed
..,, ,..
detend&amp;nts in a legal act 1on
~~j'
ent i tl~ d
Ed ison HOIJStetter ,
Adm inistrator of the Estllte
loO I. • •
of Merle E . R ice , Pla in ti ff ,
J;~
vs . Rhodel l Steffy , et at. ,
Defendants . Th is a c t io n ha s
,,,,
~
been ass igned case No . 20.909
... , ~
in th e Co u rt of Comm on
.... ~
Pleas , Probat e D i\li Sion ,
Meigs County , Ohio , A5769 .
The object of the Co(l'l plaint

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::.
,.' .

•

''

R upe ,

in its ent iret y. and to pa y fhe
de b ts of t he de ceden t ; tha t
the ri g hts , interests. and lien s
of all par ti es m ay b e fu l! y
deter mi ned ; t ha t the Pia in t iff
be a.uthor ized ant:! ord er ed to
sell sa id r ea l estale, and fo r
su ch further rel ief as he ma y
be e nt it led ,, the Sll id real
estate is s itua t ed a t 391 Nor th
Fourt.h Avenue, Middlepor t. ,
Oh io , a n d de.s c r ib ed as
follows :
The fo ll o w ing described
rea l eState sit uated in the
Village ot Middleport , Co unty
of Me igs , Sta te of O.tlio :
Be ing 125 ' fe et off the east
end of Lot No 88
Deed Reference : Vo lume
148. Page 436. a nd Vo lume
155 , Page 399 , Me igs C\)u nty
Deed Records
You are requ ired to answ e r
the Comp lllint with in 28 days
after the l ast publ ic at ion of
th is no ti ce, wh ich w ill be
published once ea ch week for
s i ll: consecutive wee-ks . The .
last publication will be made
on July 12 , 1978 , and the 28
days fo r' answer will com .
mence on that date .
i n case of your fa il ure to
answer or ·otherwise resporid
,asrequlredbytheOhloRules
of Civil Procedure, ludgment
by default w ill bl! render ed
agains t
you for
r e li e f
demanded- in--the Complll ~n1.
JanetMorr ls ,
C l~tr11; of the Cov r t
of Common Pleas .
PrObllte Divis ion ,
MeigS County , Oh iO
Dated : June 5, 1971
16i 7, 14, 21 , 11 171 5, 12 , 61c

-

WATER WELL dril l1 ng Will1om T.
Gr ant . 7A'l-2879 .

-- -·------

--

Any U.S. m•do c~·;d::.=l
if needed.
front-whHI ~dri¥e c•rs.

Call Now For
·Appointment

SALESANOSE~VICE

.--...----

-·

1

1971 CAD ilLAC ELDORADO . Full
power. Good cond ition. Price
$ 17 50 . Ow'ner Ho rry Osborne .
phone 992· 7.. 62.
r--;;~ft,;wp;;:;r,;;--1
197b PONTIAC ASTRE Ex&lt;e llent
condition . Good gos mileoge .
·
991
3
~· &gt;102._~ ~03 ---

HOBSIEIIER
REALTY

SEN IO R CITIZENS: Our new
re nters a ssis tanCe , you ma y be
abl e to li ve m our apar tment
lor less than $50 o month . For
more 1nfor ma l1 on, contod
Village · Ma nor Apartme nts .
992· 7787 .
THREE

ROOMS an d bolh in
P om~y
Colt 992.5621 or
991- 1205.

ONE BEDROOM furnis hed hou§ e .
99U 59B
--~~~--

.......--

---

WOMEN'S AN D c h i ld re n ~ shoe
sole . 20°~ oil . July 3 · July 15
-~Ba i l eys M iddlepo~ - _ . -.
1975 SUZUKI 2SO dir t bi ke . Phone
991·31&gt;40
P167 BSA 650 Mdrk 4 . Cu~ t om
p0 1nl excellen t shape onlr
2800 ac tua l mil es . $600
741·1753.

-

-----

~-

~~n_d ne_w _747 _2'7J9___

__

F· l OO 11170 Ford Trud o; A-1
mec han ica l condillon radio!
tir e s, perfect work tru ck . Coli
992· 2738.
.
ST AN S BARGAINlANO , We bu11 ·
se ll ond trade . Open 7 da y~ o
wee k . Ma in Street . Rut la nd .
Oh10 Our prices con not ~
bea t. Ph~:~ne 742 ·2063 .

.

--~

GARD EN FRES H vege loble5
Delbe rt Patte rson. G1 eo 1 Bend

,.

.
.
REGIS T~RED - H MA L E

---

beegle,
mo le beegl e . One se t of 17 gal
__!~l, o r r QC!~s . 992·5983.
TV¥0 SNOW 11res A 78 1J . 'l
regular t ires A·7B·13 . Low
mi leage.. $4 5 oil ol them
992·b309.

.

~

HOOF HOLLOW Hor$es . Buy, sell APPALA CHIAN STO VE summer
disco unt s . Wood or cool
trade or train . New and used
heate rs , G rand Opening . July
sadd les , Rut h Reeve5 , Albany
(bl4) 698·3290.
' lb . 12·3 p.m. bl4·690·7191.
_ ·
.
.
RISING STAR Kennel , Boordin
Indoor and ou tdoor run .i .
Groomin~ oil bre lifds . Clean
sonitor(. ta ci lities Ches hire .
)367 0292
Pnone u 14 ~- :.... ....:..........-~
ut Pomeroy L•ftclmork
AK C REGISTERED Pektngnese
soften &amp; · eonditlon your
pupp 1 es
fo ,
s o le ,
1w1ter With Co.op w1ter
_
.
.~
.
1
304
882
683
saftener, Model UC.SVI ,
--~·~ _ - - - COONPUPfor sal e . Aiso, dogsto . Now OI)IY
. g tve aw o 11 , 9A9-20 io . Raci ne ,
~
~-__
Let us test your w1ter Fret
AK C REG ISTERED Dober man. I ' 1
ld p•
9913750
_ yeo
_ r_s£. .:... ~~~--·-~- _., __
•Jack
Clrsay, Mgr .
AK C R E GI S TE~ED Ir ish Setter with
papers . 4 1, years o ld. $40.
. . . PhOntffl -2111 ,
b 14 ·690 -8233.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

..

'219,95

Pomeioy Landmark

9 ..

-·

w.

t

GeorgeS. Hobstelfer Jr.
Broker
101112 Sycamore St .
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
Phone 992·6333
Office Hrs.: ·
9a .nt .·5 p.m.
Closed Thurodays &amp;
SllurdiY at noon

Your Full Time

Real Estate Broker
NE.W
LISTING ~
3
bedroom total electric;;
.home,
loCated
in
Hutchinson Sub-Division ,
Rutland , Ohio. Home has
full basement and garage .
Situated on lot 95'x 115' .
Selling price, $31 ,000.00.'
NEW
LISTING 4
bedroom home , modern
kitchen, rec. room . full
bath w ith Sh ower, total
electr ic, low taxes, low
heating bil ls. situated in
the Arba u gh Addition ,
Tuppers Plains. Ohio. on
large d!f lo t . Se ! I ing for
$A2 , 000 ~00 .

NEW LISTING - 7 rooms
and bath , 4 bedrooms, nice
siZe kitchen and living
room . sit uated on 11h acres
on l:lappy Hollow Road .
Ask fnQ Price S3,.~000 . 00 .

The reason this 11d is small
is because we are selling
our listl'-9' fa1t. For •

quick sale of y:our property.
see us for fast service.
Cheryi Lemley, Assoc.
Home Phone 742-2003
Hi llan Wolfe, Assoc.
Home 949·2589
GeorgeS . Hobstelfer Jr .
Broker
Home Phone 991·5739

TE,~~~~~H
.I:16
E . Second Street ·
Pomeroy 1 Ohio

NEW LISTING - J . l acres
overlook ing the Oh io River
on Rl . 12A . Dr illed well, 3
bedroom Fleetwood mob ile
home with air cond ition ing ,
nice k it che n , 1Yi baths, sun
deck and lots· of flowers .
HOUSING
HEADQUARTERS
COUNTRY HOME 6
room home with ce ntra l
heat and dr ill ed well. Has a
woodbur ning fireplace and
Partia l basement . Owners
will help fi nance or trade ·
tor mob i l ~:! home . 10 ac res
m ore or less . S33.500.
LIVE
FREE
2
aparlmen·ls and room for
m ore. Want to tr y. an easier
way
then
payments .
Oppor t unity is right here.
Onl y 59.600 ~
GAR D(N - 1 and one·
th ird a cr es w ith 3 bedroom
older home and 3 car
garage .
Lo t s
of
ou t bu il d ing s a nd c ellar .
Na t ural ga s "and T . P .
water. Just $16,000.
HOUSE lNG
HEADQUARTERS
HOME SITE- 21!7 ac:res of
r\earl y level land . Watef"
and ele c tr ic available ,
1.000 tool · ott hard road .
Ju sl S5. 000.
ALL BRICK - 10 r ooms, 1
apa rt men l , modern ins ide,
3 ba t hs, 5 b e drooms ,
fur na ce · he a t.
Full
basemen t. good
brick
ou t bu ild ing . . and
n ice
garden . 1v,. acres ot land on
Rt . 7 a nd '2 rental incomes . NEW LISTING - Large 8
room fa rm home. Has 4
bedrooms . 1 balhs, T. P .
waler :: dr illed well. Fully
equ ipped k ll c hen and
laundr y r opm . All . floors
carpeted . Also large' barn
with 3 lofts and corn crib.
This you must see .f or only
539,000.
•
QON'T ·. WAIT
ANY
LONGER , BUY BEFORE
IT GETS HIGHER, HERE
AT THE REAL ESTATE
CENTER .
' HELEN l . TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY

AssociitfP. Re11tton

--

story

older home, 3
b~drooms') family · room
with fireplace , living room ,
dining room , carpeted
throughout.
kitchen
c ompletely equipped ,
laundry room with washer
and dryer , 2 baths.
ou t bu)lding with electric
for storage. alum . siding,
storm windows, new roof.
on double lot . Asking
$35,000.
Middleport- House, large
lol , complelely remodeled,
g a rage,
c ~ L L_,.r ,
outbui ldings, ' gra~af-bor .
No. 216 . 517 ,500 ..
804W. Mlin·
Pomeroy
992 ·2298
After Hours

~~~'+~~w

lois Pauley
Branch Manager

.... . . ......
.. . .
Service
,,..
..,...

R.es!denllal
and
commercial . Call for
estim1te, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985·3106
Ia ck Ginter 915-311141

c-o.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS,JNC.

&amp;:'=

Box l•

I'll. HZ.Z 174

...:nesrer, Qhio
'f'). JQ. t"

-

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE .
'~~•

mite off Rt. 7 bY-Pill on
51. ~t. 114 toword Ruli1nd;

0.

Aute &amp; Truck ·
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

I

For The Best
Price In Town
See·

I

Denver Kapple
At

I'

'

'

-

-

Service
Pomeroy, D.
3· 1S.tfc

Ph. ffl-2141

b

us

capture

I YOHBB
r•..,..,.J.....,........_
1 ......... -

'

FW SI10f

'

'10U bAVF; Mf3,
~ . BAsseTT. ..

'
Let

moments forever Weddings
Silver 'and
Family Reunions

Phatogrophy
is
aur
business, not 1 side line

KEN GROVER .
PHOTOGRAPHY
985·4155
Chester, Ohio 4S720

I DRIVETj

MODERN
SUPPLY
onglnt
mo&amp;

Small

strvlce, MasMy Fervuson

[BRAJEB

&amp; Gilson Tlllen, Ulwn Boy

I KJ

Mo,..r Salt• &amp; Servlct.

399 W,

MAIN
POMEROY,

0.

NEW LISTING - Lovely
newer home , 3 bedrooms,
bath , 'H . W. floors with
carpeting , nice ~itchen ,
N .G . F . A.
heat ,
pari
basement ,
garage
&amp;
worksflop ,
porches .
515,500.00 .
NEW LISTING - Ki t chen
has rang~nd ovens, ref. &amp;
freezer ,
dishwasher.
disposal , ce iling hunt, Wall
hung and central base
unih ,
fireplace ,
5
bedrooms. 2 baths , hot
wa1er heat, double lot.
$ 15,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Lovely
location, 3 bedroom s : 2
balhs , equ ipped kitchen,
central ~ i r cond., patio, red
wood ·fencing, le'w'el lot,
newer home. $32 ,500.00.
6 ACRES - With very "nice
home, 3 bedrooms, bath,
large dine . in kitchen ,
firepla ce .
ba s ement.
N . G F . A ~ heal , 2 car
garage , lu ll '-"i dlh porch
overlooks ri ver , $32.000.00.
LOOK MOM ! - He re is a
~~: tTc nen l nat you will li ke.
al so 3 .bedrooms, bath,
N.G . F .A. heal. carpeting ,
new siding, basemen!, just
re ce ntly
remodeled ..

HOM,ESITES for so le 1 ·acre and
up . M1ddle port, near Rutla nd ,
Call 991 ~ 748 1.

--

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

NEW 3 bedroom hou-s·e , 'l boths .
oil e lec .. 1 acre . Mtddleport ,
close to Rutland ,, Phone 992748 1.
VA· FHA , 30 yr. fina ncing. also'
ref inan cing Ireland Mortgage ,
77 E. State, Athens . pho ne (6) 4)
592-3051 .
HOUSE FO R SALE . 2 stor 11 vin yl
· siding . 3 bed rpam down5 1airs ,
2 ups ta irs , li vm g roam , dining
roo m, both , kitch•n without or
w ith appliances, comf)lf.Jtely
carpe ted downslo1rs , ho t water
heat, a ir condit1oned water
sot lener, ca rport and bock
patio (l ats ot concrete), '1 oufbu it~ m g s, (1 vinyl . siding).
Located on side stree l ' in
Ru tland , · Ohio . Call day
742-2'111 or evening 742·295A .
Ask for Herb .
=----~1HREE BEDROOM house in Ra cine
a rea . Near river . Comple te ly
re modeled . 949 ·25A5.

Lo&lt;:aled

on I acre, ranch type home,

3 bedrooms, bath, utility,
lovely k itchen , all ,.e lectri c,
carpeled, garage . JUST
526,000.00 .
MANY
OTHER
PROPERTIES
TO
CHOOSE FROM- WANT
TO SELL? JUST TRY OUR
PHOTO LISTING SER ~
VICE .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-22S9- 992~6191

Portraits
Weddings·
Passports
Anniversaries
Special Occasions

ThelfhOlO Place
( Bob Hoeflich)
109 High St.

PoiJIIrGY
5·31 ·1 mo.

Main St .

Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

ELWOOD BOWERS Rti/'AIR · SweePers. toasters, irons, al l
small oppl•o nces. Lawri mower ,
ne kt to Slate H1ghwo11 Garage
on Rout e 7. Phone (blA ) 985·
3B25 .
SEW ING MACHINE Repairs .' ser ·
vice , o il makes, 992·228.. . The
Fa bri c Shop . Pomeroy .
Author ized Si nger Soles ond
Servie~:t . We sharpen Scissors .

·----..
EXCAVATING. dozer ,

~--

backhoe
a nd ditcher. Char les R. Hal ·
field , Back Hoe Ser vi ce .
Rut la nd , Ohio . Phone 7A2 ·2008.

WILL do roofing , cons tru ct ion ,
' pl umb ing and heating No iob
too Iorge or too smal l. Phon e
741·23&lt;8 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN
cova t ing , s e ptic syste ms ,
do ier , backhoe . dump tru ck ,
limestone , gro vel, blacktop
poving , Rt . UJ: Phone 1 {bU )
992·5119

fls.Jm

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

,j

TWO ACRES A beautiful~ year old, 3 bedroom home
wllh large eat · in k itchen, 3 bedrooms, ··all nicely
~ carpeted , 2 baths, full basement with TV room . Many
more e)(tras, low heat bill with nat. gas fof"ced a ir
furnace . All th is and two nice acres of land in a good
location . Will go q u ick for SJS,OOO.
57 ACRES - With a nice 1'1• story house with 3 bedrms.
and 1'h boths. Mostly carpeted . Big central flreplac~
with heatolater . Small barn and outbulldmgs, '10 acres
fenced. Nice countf"y setting off blacktop road just 6
minutes north of Racine . Asking $42,000.
10 ACRES - Vacanl land on blacktop road . .Beautlfur
hOme site:""About 5 minutes from 5 Point. Price $13,800 .
6 ACRES - Nlcol'h slory •h ome mostly carpeted with 3
or 4 bedrms ., living rm ., family rm .. with fireplace,
basement , fuel oil fumace, garage and outbuildings.
Some fencing, plenly of rood frontage· and garden
space. Clty . water and drilled well . Loc. close to
hospflal and sphool at laurel Cliff. Asking $42,500.
40 ACRES -~~Southern Local with a. small batn and
dug well : About 11 acres t illable. Some woods and
minera ls . Asking S21.500.
A BEAUTY AT FIVE POINTS - Here Is an excellent 3
bedrm . house w ith 1111 · baths, kitchen and built-In
appliances, · fam il y rm . w llh fireplace, all nicely
carpeted . Full basement with wood ~burnlng stove.
Attached (1 carl garage . Chrysler Alr ·l;emp . central
heating and cooling . Very low elec. bills . All this end
appro)( . one acre land. Have a look . Only $47,900.
S11,700 will buy' good 1 bodrm . houu and gorage,
storage buildlng l and garden space on St. Rt. 11• In
Svracuse .
·
·
.VACANT LAND ~ 10 acres of land Of\ Rl . 33·4 la~e,
aboul one mile north of 7·33 bypass. Alklng S12,100,
S10,900 - 1 acre level land with a 6Aii12, 3 bedroom
mobile home wllh natural gas heat, city water &amp; Mptic.
S15,ooo .- WIII buy a good 5 bedrm . hquM with largo
living room and kitchen . 2 bolhl, b l l - t , F .A. nat .
vas heat In Chester.
We - d Listings t Mlddtoportl
Wt havo bvytrS tor m-.y type I el 111 IP lrTt
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Al-ilfe,Nf.2*

698~ 7331 '

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
Servi c&amp; . Phone 992· 2._&lt;_7_
8 ·~--;
PUDDLE POOLS. All sires and
shapes . Swim p¢o ls , 2 years
ekperience , fr!te es tt motes . 1
anyth ing )IOU need
for
unde rground sw im pools . New
chemical ond suppl)l s tore .
Alba n y , Oh io . Ph o ne
6 14-b98·b5SS. ( Alte, b pm
614-1&gt;99 ·5251 John Jeffers or
, 689·5265 Bill Gillette. l We o re
NOT o il wet on PRICES.
NEI GLER BUILDING Supply fo r
build in g houses. repolr work \
a nd cabin ets. Call Guy H
Neigler . 949-2508 aft e r 5 pm .
,_

(

tJ

Now arTaOge tile circled leners to
form the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by tl'le abOve cartoon.

r I I J( I I 1 I ]
(Answers .tomorrow)

NO us~
'I'ELLIN' ... 100

FAR AWA'f "· WH"''
WOl'L D THEY WAMl
TO HURl' HER ?

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

. , .Jumbles . AXIOM HEI\II\IA ARCADE PURPLE
Yesterd ay s
Answer· What you have to say to the men when you
·
just want your eQgs plain - JUST " EX - PLAIN''

.I

The latest JUMBLES are here 1n JUMBLE BOOK 1110 and JUMBLE
BOOK f11. A11al lable for $1.35 EACH, postpaid tram Jumble, qlo INs

newspaper, P 0 Box 3A, Norwood, N.J. 076"8. Make checks p1yable to
Newspaperbooks.
·

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

I

~tAAMt~er
by THOMAS JOSEPH

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

AlJ.EYOOP

44' twixt

ACROSS

I Ultimate

DOWN

6 Initiated
1 Engage in
11 Turkish city
agronomy
1% Soap plant 2 Perfect

3 "Fame Is
14 Retinue
the - "
15 Marsh or
4 Black
Clarke
cuckoo
Yesterday's Anlwer
18 Yale
5 Most
bulldog
modern
20 Mediocre 29 A verse ·
18 Cain's
8 Premise
23 Sandarac
to bribes
refuge
7 N onflying
tree
31 Greek Island
19 Casualties
bird
:U Italian
32 Screening
21 Sanskrit
8 Confer
city
device
sdlool
9 Pennsyl2S " Brown - 3i Elysiwn
22 Snapshot,
vania city
Ale"
38 Inunovable
- , . . . - - for short
10 Prodded
. 28 Shinto
tO Then's
23 First-rate 17 MGM's lion
temple
partner
24 QUsine
,.....,.,.....,.....,.,.__
,.._,.,_,;....,,....,~
13 Forgive

C~:~ll9'12 · bl90 ,

WHITE ENGLISH Setter. Will give
away to good ho me . Phone
991 ~ 369 • .
IRISH SETTER Gentle . 742 ·3059

SAVE ON
CAIPOING
·· URIVE ALimE

GASOUNE ALLEY

Had4ou
qiven him
mohe4?

&amp;
.SAVE ALOT
All c1rpet ln•ta!led with ,
p1dd! ng 1t no charge.
Expt'rt lnc.tall•tlon.

__.,---

-

mere pittance
considerinq the
extreme value utensils
of his car! 2e Dut~h
.,..__

NORTH
+A K .1
•A !i 4:1 2
+AI0 9 6

Marie

33~ Gear tooih b-+---+-11--

+

34 Wau can-

didate
35Sine -

ley wnert you c•n earn• 1n
1nd ' " whlit you're v"lllng
- Good solectloni - Fully1
stocked.

WIN£ and . SPIRITS

37 Humble

\NHA'I" Do You

-----HAve

~~ wa~
ft.NJfe .,.~~uG.H
'rHe ~U.III AND

Cali/42·2211
T&amp;LK Tn
Wendell or Htrb Grete .
or .Gtnt Smith

RUTLAND

t.ET Rao.H,.

FURNITURE .

To

,..!

MEANING OF
LIFe
'

L:...-----------,;.1
Rut .. nd,

39 Wowtd up ·

•"•

41 Convened
anew

b-+-+-

42 Unravel
43 Mountain

,.

crest

l

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work
•
AiYDLBAAX .R
It LONGFELLOW

It:

One le tte r samp)y stands for another. In this sam ple A Is
used for the •three I.'s, X for ttie two O's, e~c . Si ~Jgl c le tt e rs.
apottrophes,' the len gth ~nd formation of the words are all
hinu .. E ar h day the r ode.letters are different.
C~YPTOQUQTES

..

, A~&amp; YOU SURE IT'S SAFE
"'R ME ID I?.ETURN WITH
THE FILM "t I ... I WON'T
~E: RUN OFF THE ROAD...
ATTACKED •. _TAKEN
HO!;TAGEO'

YEUSTZA
SEE YOU MADE
IT OKAY, JUST
LIKE I SAID.

AU .

MKA

UP Hl::l SLf:!:.VE ..I

SKA

SKWZFM

tXJN T TRUST

HIM.'

FWCA

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~ FUAHS

MANNM

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MKA,

OAXAWC -

CAUR

OAHU

MAALM

CWZXAZS

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CEWSTUA

Yesterday'1CrypiAHplale:ANTS ARE GOOD CITIZENS: THEY
PLACE GROUP INTEREST FIRST.-Cl.ARENCE DAY
© 1V78 Kblr Feat.,.. S,ndK:•te, Inc.

NEY

Lana est St tectl011 In The ~ lley

WM

YEAH 1 BUT CA-1-rLE.MAN MAY 5TIL!... .
HAVE &amp;OMETI1iNG

But East was not finished .
His double of two spades was
brash and unwarranted.
How did he expect to defut

such a contract ? West, ·

knowing his partner's pen·
chant for doubling opponents into game, ran to three
hearts. North bid ·three
• K 10 5
.spades and the irrepressible
•• 4 3 2
K Q8 7
East doubled again.
After West won the openSOUTH
ing heart lead, he switched
• 98 75 4
to a trump which was won by
•J9 7 32 ·
dummy's king. Declarer
• 8
cashed the ace of diamonds
• J 5
and ruffed a diamond. He
Vulnerable : Both
led a small club to duinmy
Dealer : West
and West had to split his
honors. The ace took the
West North East Soulh
trick
.
Obi
Pass 1+
Declarer
ruffed a diamond
2+
a
2•
2+
in
his
hand
and led the jack
Pass Pass O bi.
Pass
of clubs which West won
3+
3•
Obi.
Pass
with the king ·. West returned
Pass Pas.•;;
a heart and declarer ·~ruffed
with the jack. '
' ,,
Declarer . now • had ' six
Opening lead : • .K·
• tricks. He cashed the 10 of
clubs ;· the · seventh · tnl:k,
By Oswald Jacob~
ruffed another dialll9A)d~ '!he
and Alan Sontag
eighth tMc'k, and tlle re' In
The firs t round of bidding
dummy was that beautiful
was routine : the second borace of trumps .
dered on the Insane. East
East had paid well for his
bad . no cause to bid two
irrepressibility .
h e arts ( his length and
'
strength - such a s it was 'J t.NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE: ASSN. I
was in the opponents' s uits)
and South , ins tead of being
(For a copy of JA COBY MOOdelighted at the prospect of
ERN. send S1 to:. 'Win at
d e fending against two
Bridge ." care of this newspa·
hearts. c harg ed ahe ad into
per. P.O. Box 489, Radio City
two spadt~s
Star/on. New York. N.Y. 10019.)
WF.'iT
.. . 6
•t.K1 0 8 5

31 "A -'
111\ li llllllm..

7-5-A

• 6

30 S.ult -

Floor Coverin11 In Stock·

1S IN~ITOCK

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

head

and 12' V'IIIJI

IF YOU NEED '
A SOFA Tfoi~T ­
MAKES A
lEO: ff)R
YOU :

BRIDGE

28 Iranian

...... :~:d.

,741-2211

Wednesda y • .Jul y 5

. 27 Reverberate

"'Low As

~·

THURSDAY, JULY 6,1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5 :50- PTL Club 13 .
6· oo-PTL Club 15; Summer Semester 10.
•
6~ 30-0octors, OI)
News 6; Summer Semester 8;
For You ... Biack Woman 10.
6 :45-Mornlng Report 3 ; 6 :50-Good Morning, West
VIrginia 13; 6 :55-News 13.
7 :{)1)--Today J, 4, 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
· News 8; Porky P1g 10: 7 :15-Chuck White Reports
10.
" .
.
.
7: 30--Schoolles 10 ; 8 : QO-Capi. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
St. 33 ~
5
9 : 00- Merv Grilfln 3 ; Phil Donahue 4 , 13 ,1 ;
Emergency ·one 6; rady Bunch 8.
9 · 3o-Andy Griffith B: Family Affa ir 10.
10 · oo-card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge of Night 6; Tic Tac
'
Dough B; Joker '~ Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
· 011er Easy 33.
.
•
· 10: 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,A,15 ; H&lt;gh Hopes 6,
Magazine 8,1 0; S20,000 Pyramid 13; Paint Along
With Nan c y Kominsky 33.
11 :QO-High ' Rol/ers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13 .
11 :3Q-Wheel o Fortune 3,15; _. Fam ily Feud 6,13;
Partridge Family 4; Love oi. Life 8,10; 11 : ss-&lt;;BS
News 8; Loving rree 10,
12 : 0o-Newsc~nter 3; News 4,6,10; Sanford &amp; Son 15;
Gambil8; Midday Magaz ine13 ; Walch Your Mouth
33.
12·3Q-Ryan·s Hope 6. 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
. Search fof" Tomor row 8,10; Romagnolis' Table 33 .
1 :oo--For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13; .
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15; Soundstage 33 .
1:3o---'-Oays of Our Lives· 3,A,15; As The World Turns
8, 10.
2 :0G--0ne Life to Live 6, 13; New Orlean! Concerto 33.
1 · 3o-Doctors 3,4,15; Gu iding Light 8,10.
3 :oo-Anolher Wo rld 3, 41, 5; General Hospital 6,13:
L iii as Yoga &amp; You 20,33 .
3 :3Q-AIIIn The Family 8, 10; You Bel Your Lie 20 : Old
Friends ... New Friends 33 .i
4 .QO--Mister Cartoon 3 ; Superman .4 ; For Richer, For
Poorer 15: Merv Grittln 6; Addams. Family 8;
Sesame Sl . 1D.33; Match Game 10; Dmah 13.
4:3Q-My Three sons 3; Gilligan ' s Is. 4,8 ; .Batman 10;
lillie Rascals 15.
s :oo-Monroes 3; My Three Sons . 4 ; Gunsmoke 8;
Misler Rogers 20,33 ; Voyage to the Bottom of the
Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat Junction 1.5 ..
5 :30-0dd ,Couple 4; News 6 ; Elec Co ~ 20,33 ;
. Hogan' s Heroes 15; 5 :55
6 :1l0-News 3,4,8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33.
6 : Jo-NBC News 3,A,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 10; Antiques 33 .
7 : 0Q- Cross~Wits 3; . ~ ; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Gong
Show 8; News 10: G illl.an's Is . 15 ; Hocking Valley
Bluegf"ass 20; Consumer Survival Kit 33 .
7 :3Q-H ollywood Squares 3.4 ; Match Game PM 6;
Tattletales 8; '
MacNeil -Lehrer RepOrt 20,33;
Thai's Hollywood 10; Nashville On The Road 13;
Marly Robbins' Spotlighl 15 ~
8 : 00- Chlps 3,4,15; Welcome Back , Kotter 6,13 :
·, Wal tons 8.10 , Once UpOn A Classic 20,33.
8 :30--What' s Happening 6,13, In Seaf"vh of the Real
Amer ica 20; 1978 Junior Olympic Boys Basketball
33.
.
9 :QO-Movle " Jam"s a 15" 3,4,15 ; Barney Miller 6, 13;
Hawaii Five·O 8,10; Advocates 20.
9 : 3~Movie " Ash Weanesdayn 6,1 J .
10 :QO-Barnaby Jonest#, 10; Pol dark II 33; News ~0 .
10 : 3o-Loc k, Stock &amp; Barrel 20~
- 11 : llO-News 3.A,6,8, 10, 13.15; Dick Cavell 20 ; Llllas
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11:3Q-Wimbled&lt;tn Tennis 3,4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
MaSh 8; ABC ews 33 ; Movie " Northwest Passage"
10.
11 :45-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15 ; 11 :()1)-Janakl 33.
12 . 05- BanacekS ; 12 :.4D-Toma6,13 ; 1:15-Tomorrow
3, 4.
LSO,Ne~s 13.

Doublemania afflicts east

uaembly

RUbber Back Carpet

o

1- =--

I . ~E.
I!IECSIINNIN6.

l!!E51NS. IN

Print answer here:

BRADFO RD , Auc tio neer , Com · COLLIE SHEPHARD . puppy . q
plet e Service. Phone 949-2,.87
weeks o ld 992 ·3630.
or 949·2000 . Ra cine, Ohio , Crill
. 8 WEEKS OLD beagle puP,pies .
Bradford .

EXCA VATING, dozer, loade r and
backhoe work ; dump tru ck!!.
and lo· boys for h1re: will houl
fill dirt , to soil , limestone ond
gra . . el. Coli Bob or Roger Jef .
f er~ , day ph one 9q2·7089, night
phone 99'1 ·3525 or 'N2· 5732.

$11,100.00 .
2 YEARS OLD -

nme··
·---=-~~t--]

firllt

grad•

I I I

•nd

. Specill &lt;kclsions

SUNDAY
SCHOOL

TUILB

preserve those precious

Golde!;" Anniversary

by.HenriA(noldandBoblee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one r.tter to each square, tO form
lour ordinary wo,rds.

MOORE'S
- Brakes .- Tires

Muffler
Shocks
Battery ,

l llnst~llation

I

'

'

:Ill:

cau.-;

1J'J}~M fii}~ .~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAM~

~ ~ ~~ *

4.Jo.ttc

_

12 Room , spl 1t. le ve t
Colonial
thai
has
everything , located in
Rlggscr e st Manor, on
cof"ner lot . Selling for
$65,000 but well worth it.

SEPTIC ·TANK
CLEANING

.'

.2

1976 PONTIAC su NBIRO. 4 cV I.. 5·
speed . 'L ow m ileage . 61 9 Page
·S1 . 992 3943 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park .
Rout e 33. north of Pome ro y.
Lo rge lots . Coll992·7479.

o

Soffit, Room Addition•
&amp; A· Frlmt Homft. ·
f .For FrH E1tlm•t••
CALL
9924323 or 992-6011
6-19 ~ 1 mo. pd.

:~News

3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett ·
Lilias
· Yoga &amp; You 33. •
.
11 ·3o-Johnny Carson M . 15: Pol lee Slory 6, 13; l:taw~ l
· Five~O 8; BC News 33 ; Movie " Take Me Out to e
Ball Game" 10.
. • . ~&amp;
t2 :oo-J onakl 33.
.
11 :AQ-Mystery of lhe Week 6, 13; Ko11k 8o
1 :oo-Tomorrow 3,4; 2: to-News 1 3.

5:oo-Monroes J ; My Three Sons 4; Gun s moke 8;
Mi ste r Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Voyage lo lhe
Bollom ol lhe Sea10; Emergency One 13 ; Pett icoat
J u nction IS .
5 :3o-Odd Couple 4; New s 6; Elec . Co. 20.33; Hogan's ·
He roe s 15.
·
6 :oo-News 3 , ~ , 8 , 10,13,15; Zoom 10' Making Th ing s
Grow 33.
6 :3Q- NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Andy Grllfllh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
· 7:oo-Cross.Wits 3,;4; Newlywed Game b.13; News 10;
Gilligan' s I s~ 15; 01ck Cavett 20;.,Snacks 33 .
~
7 :3Q-AII·Siar Anything Goes3 ; Sha ·~ ~ NH; Between
The Wars 6; Family Feud 8': MacNeli ~ Lehrer
Reporl10,33; The Judge 10; In Search 01 13; Wi ld
Kingdom 15.
8.:QO-Grlzz ly Adams 3,A', 15; Eight Is Eno119h 6.13;
James Paul McCartney 8; Nova 20,33 ; Caro l
Burne tt 10. ..
9 : oo-Davi d Frost 3,4;15; Charl ie ' s Angels 6,13; P ilot •
" Tom &amp; Joann" 8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Poldark II 20.
..
10:0o-Pollce Woman 3.~ . 15 ; Slar sky &amp; Hutc h 6, 13 ;

VINYL :SIDING

11 ~9 - lfc

1970 TORINO . $275. Can be seen
a t b5 5 Sycamore Street. Mid·
dl~,t p or l , Ohio

36 GAS RANGE Good .,condi tion
992-323b.

..

.AWM. &amp;..

1973 CHE XROLET IMPALA. &lt;,Jioo'
hardtop . Auto., P.S., P.B. , A. C.
992-7644 .

-- -

---

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.
30o Mlln St.
Pomeroy, Olllo
PomoroY 992·6212
orffl42U
1 A.M. Io 4 :·30 P.M.

CAL VI: S. 3 weeks to 3 months old
Coli 843-2353 otte r 6 pm .

L_

CARTER

MASH BROlHERS.

1974 PINTO. Must sell. Will sell
low . New !I res , new shocks,
low mi leage , good condit ion.
Call 991· 71 8 ~ .

--- -- -- - - ·-·
MURRAY THRE E whee l b1cyCie

extr~

•~

_

-

---- -- ..... - --·........

For m. l'etort Fall-s 247 ·2623 .

SPECIAL

11

WEDNESDAY , JULY 5,1978

----- -

---- - - - - - - -

-- EN
~· ---;----BEANS.
pit: k your
own . Dr · _
•iii'~~3~73;·;60;;5~7~.~R~on~Zait~t~m~o~nii.iiii!iiij( GRE
1ng container . Ar nold Hupp

ALIGNMENT

Business Services

----

Chlmne11 Swept by a professtono l ' PIGS , 8 ~ eeks old . Phone
w ith modern dustleu cleaning
8"3·2491 . Tom Soy re . Por tl ond,
- o ldtime workmanship Colt
Ohio .

WHEEL

' -

.

1973 MONTi CARL O landa u. P.S.,
~
'
P.B., A.C. , AM 8· track stereo. BEAU TY SHOP eq uipmen t. Mov8\. 3 • ' ACRH O N Peacock A'o'enue
Pomeroy
.
Wd
l
financ8
to sma ller budd,ng , need to
hcellent condition. $1700
~ 99 1 . 5786 .
sell. 3 Helene Curlis dryers 2
_!.:'3·1622._ _ ~--.....
we t stat ipns with hydrau lic
1'
• ac re. wi th 2 bedroom mobilt
1968 VW BUG. S&lt;OO. 99 1 ~ 58S8 .
choirs . 985·3577.
home . Excel len t Condition and
-~,J9f,q LTD FORD ond 1970 Fo rd 1976
attractively set up with under
Y AM~A
R0400. Adul t
LTD. Also ports ond body parts .
pifming , sidewalks , pat io.
ow ner. l ow mileage. l ike new .
Ph one 992-3640.
·
porch awnings and otta ~ hed
~~
~
sou
~.1
~7066
.
•"
storage room. Five Points oreo .
1973 PLYMOUTH "Cuda 340 . P.S.. YAUGSTOWN SINf( b6 '. Hardw ick
$11- ,900. 9q2-2679.
P.B., auto . 60.000 miles . Ask mg
...
, _.__
gos coo king s tove , 992-7'JfiA ,
$ 1000. Phone 8A3-2061.
~
'
THREE
8EOR00.M
hou
se
,
all
elec·
tm . lot s of gro~ n d . Rea sonable ·
1972 DODGE CHARGER Spec i ~:~l
offer Owne r, New Hoven . W
Edition Oomag4td left front
Vo. 304·882·8219.
fe nder and door . Handyman
~~·---·---spe cial. $400 firm , 985·41 75.

NGE RSOl RAM otr co mpr esso r
t or sole . Co11 '992.Jb40.

9 .. J1ck. W. Coney, Mgr.
IAiiil. Phoneffl~2111

TELEVISION
VIEWING .

:..:

8 &amp; S MOBIL E HOMES. Pl . Plea·
son! . W. Vo . bes tde Hec k's .
1973 Broadmore 14 • 64 '2
bedroom
,
1973 Dorion I" x,bO ") bedroom
1972 Vic lorton 14 x 613 bedr oom.
1 both
' 1972 Cove ntr y 1'2 k 65 3 bedr oo m
1969 Statesma n 12 x bO 2
bedroo m.
·--~·
--·--- · - - YARD SALE. Fr,do v. Saturday , 9 tH COAL. LIMESTON E. sand, gra vel .
"' ? Furntl ure . Hoo ve r washe r·
calcium chl orid e . fe rt d1ze r. dog
d r,yer . refr igerator , , tr uc k .
food , and all typ es of salt . Ex .
~l.o rm windows and screens ,
cel$ior S~:~lt Wor ks. Inc E Mom
m1sc. items. Ne.11 t to Jr. High 1n
Sl ~, Pomeroy.'...991.·38_91..:.__ -~
Racin e Phone 9A9·2286.
BEST SELECTIO N o f lhe b~s t wood
GARAGE SALE . Thur s . and Fri. 9
stove s in Sou1heo stern Ohio
to b . 'I• mile south of Tup r5
Jo tul. M or~o . Ete l, Tirolio ,
Pla ins on Townsh ip Rood 2
Te mpwood . a nd Nofhu o . Zion
Heat Co ., B Putna m Or . (off Mill
SUMMER CL EARANCE Sole . M ny.
St. ). Alhens . ·bl4 ·59'J..b()79 or
items S ond 10 cents. Thurs .,
Fri . Sot. Meigs Humane Society
b' 4-b%· 1_1_::8"7 .' --,---=--=Thirh Shop oppos ite Pos t 0 1· BURROUGHS S EN S I ~ MATI C o c ~
fice .
·
co unl tng mo &lt;hine . Pho ne ,
99'2 ·2156. The Daily Sent1nel .
WE ARE moving and ho ve d
I l l CoUrt' St reet , Pome roy,
ro tohlle r ond foh ol itemS to
se ll , Frido)l , July 7. F1rst house ~~10.
. -·abo ve , Methodi51 Churc hm USW TRACTORS.
Che$ter . Ohio . In case of ro m, MFI 35 Diesel · MF230 D•esel · w tll be in basemen
t. _ _
==-::__
MFISO Diese l · MF')JS D ~s e l
MFi bS Diesel · MF285 D•esel ·
MF 1135 Diesel. Ca b, o1r &amp;
heoter
NEW &amp; USED I M PL EM E NI ~
WILL CARE lor the elderly in ou r MF9 Boler . MFl O Bole• · MF 120
home . Phone992·7314 .
Boler · Moll heiNs Rotarr Scythe
. 'MF880 Semi· moun ted 6 bot·
MF520 12 Disc .
tom Plow
MF200 '2 Row Choppe1 MF39 2
Ro.... Plo nte 1s · Mec ha nic al
Tronsplonler .
SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES
Phone 458· 1630
l eon . W Vo

Pomeroy undmark

c BS Reports 8, 10; News 20:
10 : 3Q-WII IIamson D l~a'S ter J3; Amer lcln, Enterprise

'

-mo M.

OLD COINS, pocke t wat ches ,
class rings, weddm g bonds,
diamonds . Go ld or s1lver. Coli
Ro ger W0 "',1_!.1.!y:.l_!__2· 23}~:__ _
BIJ"'I" : SIX roo ms good condifion .
basement, gi ve size rooms ,
heat . to keS , co ndition roof.
s •ze-loco f1 on lot, price , etc.
Write c·o Do ily Se-ntt nel. 8ok
729-R, Pomeroy , OH 457b9.

M~y

0~ U.y

1

CHIP WOOD . Po le s
d •ameter 10' on larges t•end, $8
per ton. Bundled slab. $b pe r
ton. O.livered to Ohio ' Pollet
Co .. Rt. 2. Pomeroy. 992·2689 .
GOOD USED tr actor w1 lh
hydrau lic. 3 pt . hitch . 741·301C .
TIMBER. POMEROY ForM! Pro·
ducts. Top pnce for stand ing
so w limbe r. Coil 992-5965 or
t-ient Hanb y, 1·4Ab-8570 .
OI,J) FURNIT URE . 1ce boxes , bra ss
beds, iron beds . desks. etc ..
complete households Wr ite
M .D .' Miller. Rt. 4 . Pomer oy or
caii 99'1 ·7761J.

IM.'--epled unly-with l'tuih with

order. 25 cent charge for llcb

.

-~--

Mvbi.le Huuae . . . and Y11rd ules
tlR!

----

-~---·----

'.

ll-Tile Dilly Sentinel,~, 0., Wednelday, ;July 5, 1978
DICK TRACY

..

.

EAST
+oQIO :I 2
• Q4
• QJ 76

�-·

.

By. PATRICIA KOZA
forecast in January," ihe several administration
"U the rates of inflation in·
WASHINGTON (UPII
White House budget office offlciala in recent weeks.
the 6 percent to 7 percent
The adminlltratlon today ssid in 111 &amp;Mual midyear
"Much of the worsening in range were to continue, the
revlaed
Its
economic review of the economy.
the price outlook for 1978 prospects for maintaining
forecasts · downward,
TheadmlnlstraUonsaldthe · reaultafromlargerfoodprlce stable economic growth
predicting a 7 percent aruma! rate of inflation li expected to . lncreall!t1 tll8n previoualy an- would be very slim," it
btlatlm rate - I percent be about 7 J!'!l"cerii thla year tidjlated, and from the effect Warned.
lqher than January budget and 6.5 percent next year. on domestic price levels of ·a
The na.tion 's predicted
_,mpUona - and a slightly · The fi&amp;Ures were above the decline In the value of the growth rate for 1978 ·was
lower growth . rate for the · Janlj8ry budget 8118umptlms dollar abroad - largely down by about one-baH of a
111tlon.
by about a percentage point higher prices of imPorts.'' the percentage point for both
"The economic ouUook for . for 1978and a baH percentage report said.
.,
1976, to U percent, and 1979,
c:aJenclar years 1978 and 1979 .~ for 1919. .
·
The. midyear review said to U percent: Economists
··,OOn higher lnfllltion, lower
The 1 perC\'nt ra~ for 1978 the ftfecaats emphasize the say It takes about a 4 pertent
real 1rowth, and less · h d b
dl t d b
need ttffihd ways to cootrol increase rft the Gross
· unemployment than was •· a
een pre c e
y inflation .

..

"'.,
·'.
'
.,'
::t.,
,.,
'¥

~

.•••

..

......'

.'"''

r-

·· i'o.

too.k part in the Fourth of July parade held in Racine.

·-·.........

BIKES GALORE loOk part. in the Fourth of July parade held in Racine.

HOSPITAL NEWS

GULF

taken by the Auxiliary of the Racine Fire Department.
IN THE

Orientation held for
health team programs
Thirt y
health team in a joint project to place
members rece ived the ir ' teams 1uf healt h discipline
introduction to team life a.nd
st udc nl s i n community
their host communi ties projects during the summer.
during Orientation on J une 17-.
The group attending the
19 at Lake Hope State Park. orienta tion consisted of an
On the ageiida were eff ecti.ve equa l number of me n and
team building and plann ing. women . They r epresent l3
develop in g realis ti c ex- discipli nes ~ med icine (101 ,
pectations, ·backgrounding of health edu cation 14), nursi ng
the community project and 14). speech pa thol ogy (2) ,
t he. a r ea , administra tiv e social work 12), public health,
work a nd even some fun .
hea lth policy, diet eti cs,
The Consort ium for Health denti s tr y , o pto met r y,
Ed ucation in Appa lachia podtatry, phys ica l therapy ,
Ohio 1CHEAO 1 is work ing and erlle rge ncy medical
with sout hern Oh io com- technol ogy. The schoo ls they
muniti es for the second }·ear attend are located -in ten.

-..

{•

'

.

COMMON PL.EAS COURT ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

RONALD JONES ...
PLAINTIFF
IJ s.

AL.

diffe rent sta tes an d the
Dbtrict of Columbia; Ohio
·1151, Callfornla (3), Missouri
131, District of Columbia 121.
Michiga n, North Carolina,
Ne w York, P enn sy lva nia,
Wisc orisin , Vermont and

ConneCticut .
The st udents will remain
with their host communities
as meniber of fi ve-person
teams for eight weeks. They
will regroup at Lake Hope on
August 14-15 for debriefing.
The six projects are : Scioto
County t Portsmouth 1 ~ a
camp fo r hand icapped
child ren : Meigs Co unty
1 Pomeroy I
- a di abetic
scree ning a nd foll ow- up
prog ram: Pike Co unty
(Waverl y) - CPR or cardwpulmonary resuscita\ion
cl asse s: Hi ghl and Co un ty
( G r e enfie ld )
ep id em iolog ica l study of
community hea lth problems;
Monroe County (Woodsfield )
- screening program for preschool children: and Morgan
County (McConnelsville ) physica l exami nation s for

home hea lth cli ents and
student athletes.

- . ..A. ~ ~~

·o ot A Problem? ·
Let's so lve it togeth er. We'l l be on
· hand to answ~r you r qu estions and
advi se you on financial matters '
WALK - UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.

"

MILO~ED McCARTHY , ET

NEW YORK I UPI) - The
New York Mets Tuesday sold
relief pitcher Butch Metzger
to the Philadelphia Phillies,
wh o as signed the righthander to their Oklahoma
City affiliate in the American
Association .
Metzger, 26, had appeared
in 25 ·games for tile Mets,
posting a 1-3 record and
failing to record a save . His
earned mn average was 6.57.

DEFENDANTS .
NO . 16, 8 14
LEGAL NOTICE

TO :. VIRG IN I A

BLIVIN S .

whose II"S l known address is

J02J Ocean P ark Blvd ., San ta
Mon ic a , Ca . ~OAOS . w h du
pr es en 1 addr ess is unk nown &gt;

MARGY CAR TEfit.. whos e
last known ad dr ess 1S 20 6 E

Dat e St .• Q)(na r d . Ca . 93030.
whose presen t a ddre ss is
unkrio.wn 1
.,
G AI L KEN N EDY . :NhOSC
la s! k nown addres s is 206 E .
Da te 5 1., Q)(na rd , C a . 930 30 ,
w ho.,e p r ese nt, t~dd re ss iS
unkno w n .

You are her eby no t if ied
thdt you have been named
def en dants in a l egal a cti on
ent i tl ed Ronald Jones Vs .
M ildred M cCar t h.,. , et al. Th is
a ct ion h as b ee n ass i g ned
Cas e No , 16,814 in t he Coril ·
mon· Pleas Co u r t , M ei gs
Count.,. , P omer o y , Ohio 457 69 .
Th e obiec: t of the c:om pla int
i s ro partition ana q Uiet t i tle
to th e r eal es tat e situl'fed in
· the Tow n shi p of Salisburv ,
County o f M eigs and Stat e of
Oh io . Bei ng 8.65 ac r es, more
or tess in Lot 255 Subdiv isi on
5 . as desc r i b ed i n the
Auditors Du p l ic ate s of Meig s
County , Oh io .
Re f er en ce is m ade to
Vo lu me 98 pa ge 567 M ei gs
Co u ntv D eed R ec ord s .
You ar e re qu ir ed to clnswe r
the com pl aint w i ltlin 28 da ys •
after t ne. tas t publ icat ion of
th i s not 1ce , wh ic h w ill be
publi shed on ce each week. f or
s i.: cons ecuti ve weeks . Th ft
last pu b lica tio n wil l be ma de
on Aug 9, 1978 and t h e 28 da ys
for answ er w i ll sta r t o n t hat
dat e .
I n case of you r f a i lure to
answe r or othe rw i se respond
as re qu ired by the Ohio Rules
ol Ci v il Proce dur e iu dgm ent ,
by de f aul! w i ll b e r end er ed
aga i n st
you
for
r elie f
demano eo 10 your c omp la in t.

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges July 3)
Sharon Bums, Mrs. Robert
Chaffin . and daughter,
Elizabeth Cheney, Valroy
Close, Mrs. William Cochran
and daughter, Clarice
Co rriga n, Jimmy Farley,
Donna Greer, Jeffrey Holtz,
Lori Howell. Lulu McGhee,
Dennis Parsons, ·Pamela
Perkins, Donald Price, Mrs.
Arthur
Robinson · and
daughter, Sharon Roseberry, ,
Roy Russell, Kenn eth Smith,
Mabel Van Meter, Scott
Vires, • Ina ·Webster, Zelia
Whit e.
1Births July 3)
Mr. and Mrs. John Manley,
a daughter , Bidwell.
( Dlsrharges July 4)
James Bell, Edna But-'
terfield, John Coughenour.
Mrs. Brett Epling and son,
Npah Friend , Sieve Goody,
Ernest Harless. Roy Kent.

Alphadine Lemley, lillian
Martin, Sandra McFann,
Wilham Meek Sr., Jerry
Morgan.. Robert ' Roush, ·
Martha Skidmore, Penny
Tackett, Shirley Wallace,
Ada· Weston, Brian Wilbur,
Opal Woolum.
(Birtl11July4)
Mr. and \'drs. Gary Noe, a
daughter, Rodney;· Mr. and
Mrs. Dean . Pittenger, a
daughter, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Simpkins, a son,
Gallipolis·; Mr . and Mrs.
Larry Turley, a son, Racine.

BEND

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11833-1834l

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•vs ~ome

ti=M~ "bda
1 (. . V'
TheFrilntyO..s 0

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POMEROY CEMENT

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i~~~~~i~T_h_e_W_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_

BLOCK COM PAN·v

~egotiations

WAVERLY
PANEL .

CASCADE; Colo. (UPI ) Err ol Kobilan of Elbert
Colo., roared up Pikes Peak
Tuesday in 11 ::;5.53 to win the
open-wheel division of the
56th annual Hill Climb.

..

reswning

- ATHENS (UPI) -Negotiations to end a five day old strike
by maintenance workers in Athens are expected to resume
11met1me this week.
.
.
The41employeea &lt;ithestreet, water, garbage and sewage
departments walked off their jobs midnight Friday.
&amp;lporviaora have been manning those ~ents altbough
there has been no garbage collection since the strike began.

,2' X 4'

s, 17 , 19. 16 ! a J 2, 9. 6 tc

·Two sergeants suspended
'

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FORT JACKS)N, S.C. (UPIJ- The Army has ~uapended
temporArUy two'drill sergeants from !raining responsibilities
wlile an invest~tion is conducted Into the deaths of two
tN111ge recJ'\1111 mider their supervlalon. Army tqJOkeaman
Bruce Andt• aald Wednesday night two 17-year"'ld recruits,
both members ollhe same cm~bat training c&lt;mpany, died last
Wllllk 111 their first day of bulc trlllning from compllcatiMS of

beat stroke.

'.

Refuses to dismiss charges
MADISON, 'It'Ll. !UPI) - A judge haa refuaed to dlimlas

Cllllllplracy c:flar8ea BCainlt 8 W&lt;mall accuaed ol plotting to kill

her """""" '11'1111 llllke venom. Attorney Larry Hllukom had
lriUIII the charg• against Mn. Durfee should be dilmlased
bec:allle Lauren M.-e, accused co~atcr and aclleduled

FOR MEN:

to 'be 1 key ·wltnea Ill' the llate, tatlfled at a preliminary
bearlq hi ne\'el' lh0118ht she would go through with the plan.

Florsheim, Jarman and Hush Puppies.

, PRICED s10 TO s2411

(;nards refuse to work

SUMMER HANDBAGS. .......... .... 'lz PRICE

DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000

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Joyce, Hush Puppies. Easy Street, ~n~
Cover Girl. Priced

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
"Middle of Upper Block in Pomeroy"

V1.5o4'

Meigs County, Sherfif Racine ; storm glass and
James J . . Proffitt reports trailer window, Jarrell's,
charges haye been filed from Dorcas; storm and regular
. numberoils acts of vand8llsm bouse window, John Fisher,
occurring in the area since Jr., Sycamore Grove ;
April.
. camper trailer window,
Three youths have been David Parsons, Sycamore
charged with vandalism. At · Grove; rocks thrown at house
the time of the acts, all three twice, Charles Baker ,
were juvenUes, but since Sycamore Grove, and two
then, one has turned 18 years trailer . windows broken,
of age.
piano damaged, Tony
The break In the case came Milhone, SR 248. June 16 Tuesday . evening when Stonn window and regular
deputies were Investigating window broken, Laura Circle,
the tbeft of a battery .and the Dorcas; windshield of ,auto
brel!kliig Of .a window at tlle parked on CR 30 and SR 7
junlorhlghschoolbuildingat owned by Sara Wells, Long
Racine.
.
.
Bottom; window brokeq,
· When nearby residents Summerfield Restaur.jlnt ,
gave tbe description and Chester, and wlnd'ows
Jlcense number of tb• vehicle broken, Chester Township
· d ow ·grader ·
in vo Ive d In .' th e wm
breaking, It rr. •..tched a
The youths were released
description obtained on some from jail Wednesday pending
· dow later hearm
· gs ·
oI th e recen t WID
breaking cases.
Sheriff Proffitt advises it is
Pomeroy Patrolman possible additional charges
Thomas "Pee Wee" Werry will be filed pending inhearing a radio description, vestigation of .the, March 16
later locllted the auto in rock throwing on CR 25.
'downtown . Pomen~y , He
1n other activity a 29-(eartranaported 'the suspects t&lt;&gt; · old Del&lt;ler Rt.1 man has been
ihe sheriff's office..
. cited for hit-skip following an
Upon questioning, deputies. accident Sunday evening at
obtained ·statements that Dyesvllle.
·Iiidlcated the 18-year-old
' ahd.
Accordl ug t o th e repo rt ,
the 17-year-old were the Robert B. 1\a'debaugh, 29, Rt.
drivers of !he auto and that a I, Dexter, was traveling east
16-year·oid threw rocks .on CR 27 In his 1978 GMC
(most of the time) from the pickup truck and lost controf
moving auto.
alter crossing the railroad
~- H.IS ve h.1c Ie wen t off·
I nc ld ent 8 c Iea re d were : I rae..,..
· to
April 8 - Blocking oI CR ~ the road on·the 1eft • went m
-with 2 barrels and logs, th e dlt ch. s t rue k an d
.._~
. a woven Wire
· fence
.....en window at Raymond damag ed
.. Elbetfeldresldenceon CR25, owned by Donald Wooten, Rt.
' p omeroy.
broken windows at Mrs. ,,
·
Rad eba ugh has been
VdnMeter residence OR 25,
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ch
and broken windows at F. H.
arg ed Wit· h hit -sk.1p in t hat
h
GIUand resldence, CR 25.
e faued to notilY the ·owner
Offi
d
d
· forma t·ton
Aprll ..
"" ce win ow an · or Sheriff of th e tn
auto rear window broken at required witl!in the time limit
·
fo11owmg
·
Used Car Lot, ,..,
~.,ester; auto
an acc1·den t
da
.
Ultlng
1
d
I
hi
ld
k
R
h
b
wn 8 e
ro en,
ut
res
. n m age torealty ·
· ct•ted for · h.earmg
·
He IS
Snod grass, Rac Ine ; PI ate
·day
m
m1
·
g
t
.
Met
·gs
F
I
I
d
k
b
g ass w n ow
ro en,
r'
o .n n
p ennzot·1• County
Court ·
Rose b erry •s

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IN

ON MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S
SUMME.R SHOES
WOME~:

&lt;

WHISTLING TEA

Environmental I!Qard of Rev.lew last week ruled the village
had to proceed to build the $2 million pjant 111ey say they can't
afford ..
·

f a·.m.-5 p.m.
Mon . lhru Thurs. &amp; S.t.
h .m.-1 p.m. Frt.
ClosoctSunuy

NA81IVILIE, 'hnn. (UPI) - .Moll nf the guards at the
111 ,_..._.,. nluaed to report lot worllln a
pay dltpM . Wldlllldly IIICI 11J118I'YIIont. teacben and
couiwaln .took -I8CUI'it)' du(J at thi ..,-. Warden
Vlnclal '111CtmpaGIIItlld tbl 2,100 Inmate population remained
tP~t Uti aome ewn olr.-.1 to help battle four firel lh8t
(Colltlnued on PIC• 12) · ·

1*111'11 Tau

POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK·COMPAN·Y.
The Department Store ·of Building Since 1915
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THUR_SOAY, JULy 6, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
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T.RIG~~.

Trigger-operated
spout
'
Veterans Memorial Hoaplla
Admissions
Harry
Decorative
Surface, Middleport . and
Mary Harbrecht, Pomeroy.
fade and
Discharges - Maywood
Johnston·, Gladys Chaney,
stain . .. ·
and Della Braglin.
resist-.nt
exterior
Residents mark
~~-'1 Durable; "·
fast-heating alu.•minum
DUNKIRK, Ohio ( UPI) - Residents of this H.a'rdin Coonty
· village of 1,000 marked their own form o( Independence
Tuesday just as they have since 1972. That's how long the
Goldenrod Yellow
.villagers in this northwestern Ohio town have refuSed to build
a state..,..dered .-age treatmtnt plant.
or Coffee Brown
They are even more determined to hold out since the

4.5 percent.
")VIth_the real GNP gro'f(h
assumed,
a succeaful
·of
federa
tar.geting
employment and tralnint
programs will be ....-ry
to achieve this optimiatlc ·
goal," the report said :
The report emphasized
these were not forecasts, but
''projection r ·tli~t asswne
progress in moving ,toward a
more · fully
.employed
economy .and greater · price
sta bility."

Vandalism
Heavy
razns,
tornadoes
.
...
-·
- 'is charged have grip on Midwest

(2.3 liters)

.. where craii Smen ·s till c·are ®

nues was $401.2 billion , with
expendit~res estimated at
$4~2. 3 ·billion.• For 1979, the
estimates were $448.2 .. for
re v~nues and $496.6 for
·
expenditures.
1n iis long..-ange economic·
projections, the report said it
w..-a8Slnned t~J.e ecooomy
would grqw in real terms by
an average of about 4 perctnt
for the 19IJO.&amp;'l period, with i"
assumed drop In tile
unemployment rate lo 4
percent by the end of 19&amp;3 and
a drop in the inOation rate to

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2Y20t.

'.' THE FR / EN/Jl, Y RANK"

. · MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

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ELBERFELD$

CONTINUED CLEARANCE
FOR

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 57

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.
National Product to generate point below the January
enough new jobs to keep forecasts.
tmemployment from rising;
The new estimates of tr,e
"The lower growth Is, in national defh;it. were 151.1
part, a result of the effects of billion in 1978 and S'3.5 billion
higher inflation on cmsumer in 1979, a •reduction of more
purchasing power and than $10 billion compared to
spending," tile report said. the Jaliuary estimates.
The administration
The teduction was abriost
predicted the unemployment entirely due to lower
rate would fall only slightly .to projected ·spending - $4~2 . 3
$.9 percent In the fourth ·· billion,
compared
to
quarter of this year and to 5.6 January's estimate of $463.1
percent in .the same period in · billion, the report said.
1979. The figures were about
The 1978 estimate for reveooe-foW'th of . • t"'~cenl&gt;l ge

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length coauhls fall to go With
all the varying lengths skirts,
dresses an&lt;l suits cominli ln.

La r r"' E , So en ce r
Clerk o t Cou rt
of Com m on Pleu
Me1gs County, Ohio

P l

VOL. XXIX

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Tate no quarter
Look for a three - quinter

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SECOND PLACE WINNER in the theme division was

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Seven percent ·rate se~n by administratio:ri.

12 - The Daily Sent~l. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., WO!dnellday, July~. 1978

THE YOUNGER-SET on motorcycles and go-ca rts

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United Preulnteroatlonal w~ reported.
Heavy rain and tornadoes
''They've been sighted in
· held their grip on the Geat pairs, hitting mostly in open
Plains today, for~ing the fields," a policeman · said.
evacuation of 3,000 residents "Some of them were
of low-lying areas · of funneling· from the ground
southeastern Minnesota.
up."
·
One w&lt;m~n was swept
Heavy rain flooded yards in
away by the Zumbro River as Portales
and
began
it overflowed in the swamping h&lt;mes.
Rochester, Minn., area. A Strong winds ripppd a roof ·
record 7 Inches of rain was off a building at liberal,
recorded at the Rochester Kan., and pushed a truck
Airport early today.
several feet.
Low-lying homes
in
Thunderstorms also hit NeRochester, Hayfield and
Southport were evacuated
Wednesday night . Sever al
highways were washed out.
Boat.s evacuated residents of
, J.t
Southpor.t and ' carried 15 ~ By a 2_1 vote Wednesday,
~rsons stranded on the roof Meigs County's Budget
of the B'-v
Commission refused to make
""' Truck s•~
~., .
The Zumbro was expected requested fund transfers
to crest at siX feet above flood within the appropriations for
level shortly bef-e
noon •
w
the county health departAt least I~ funnel clouds
whirledovernorthwestiowa
Wednesday night, Oattening
. some cttles
.
buil";""
-.,;s m
while
torrential rains flooded other
Formulating plans to
areas.
· provide members for pollf:
A fannstead near Sioux duty highlighted the ·July . 4
Center was destroyed but no meeting of Drew Webster
one was liljured. Severai Post 39, American Legion.
other farms in the area were · The police duty will be
da maged. Torna do da mage provt·ded · Aug. 15-19 at ·th e
was also reported in Maurice, Meigs County Fair. Paul
Brunsville, Strubel and Casci or Charles Swatzel
Qrijnge City.
should be contacted by
At ·least 15 tornadoes also legionaires willing to work at
)Vere 'sighted in the Portales, the fair. A duty roster and
·N.M., area but !•ttl
1 e da mage scheduIe WI·11 be ma de.

braska and South Dakota.
They were spared tornadoes
but wind damage was
reported.
Most other sections of the
nation .. had partly cloudy
skies ; A few showers feU on
western Montana; southern
Georgia and the eastern Gulf
Coast.
At Elgin, N.D., and Gary,
Minn ., searchers have found
. no more dead from the towns'
tornadoes. Four persons died
in Elgin Tuesday night and

three others were killed by
.. tornadoes
at
Gary
Wednesday· morning. More
than 90persons were injured.
Authorities had feared more
bodies.might be found in the
rubble.
.
One twister plowed through
several blocks of Gary,
Oattening businesses, h&lt;mes
and house trailers. Damage
was estimated at $2 million .
Scores ·of homes and businesses in Elgin were leveled
by its tornado.
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Trans£er· request
refused
.
.
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ment. The action was taken
during special session.
The department's board
had requested the fund
tr ansfe~s which included
$1087 64 from the sanitarian
·

a

Police.duty plans m.ade

In other business it was
announced the final decislim
on tl)e projlosed new post
home will be made at the July
15 meeting. l!fembers, . who
wish to express their opinions
· · th·ts rna tt er,
concernmg
·should ca ll Leonard Jewell.
The member ship application of Robert Scarberry .
was accepted.
Refreshments were served
by El za G.l
1 more.

R egatta h uge· SUCC
· -ess
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The 1978 Big Bend Regatta
wa.s. a very· successful event
according to Fred Crow,
president of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Speaking· at Wednesday's
luncheon meeting at Meigs
Inn, Crow reported the frQ· g
jump and derby, the only one
of its kind in the United
States, was a highly suecessful event.
.
It was also his opinioo that
the parade ' was outstanding
and the entire regatta · a ·
financial success In all
respects.
Crow ob!Ierved that a golf
tournament for members was
being .planned as well as a
picnic.
Kyle Allen, chairman of the
P. A. Dermy, reported a $92
profit f~ the boat.
Paui"S!Inon, vice president,
said additional money is
needed to continue with the
river hanf. cleanup project
that Is progressing very well.
Guest speaker, Introduced

by Joe Young; was his long please call toll free the
time friend, Jim Diehl of the following number 1-800-282Office
of
Economic 1085.
Development.
&lt;
Crow commented that in
Diehl explained he was in · order to bring industry to
Meigs County . to see what Meigs County a new highway
industrial sites are available is needed from .U.S.. Rt.. 33 to
here. He commented he has the eastern end of the county
toured the Tuppers Plains and to the new bridge at
area for industrial purposes. Ravenswood. " If we had
He "'!id industria[ sites • highways industry would
must ~ave existing buildings, follow ," Crow said.
three to five acres, water,
Crow suggested the
sewage, rail .service, energy chamber may meet in the
and gas.
Riverboat Room at Athens
He· stated in o.rder to County Savings and Loan
develop ground, it must start with dinner to be cate&lt;ed by
here in Pomeroy.
Crow~s Family Restaurant.
Diehl also suggested that
Attehding were Crow,
Columbia Gas Company and Simon, Enunogene Holstein,
Columbus and Southern Ohio secretary, Dave Jenkins, Bill
Electric Companies work · Mayer, John Anderson, Hank
with thQ Community lm- Cleland, Leo Vaughan,
provement Corporation in Wesley Buehl, Pat O'Brien,
obtaining industry for the Joe Young, C. E. Blakeslee,
county.
Stan Houdashelt, Kyle Allen,
Diehl stated he wants to.see Bill Grueser, John Koebel,
something done in south- Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Teaford,
eastern Ohio. If anyone Diehl, Beulah Jones and
kno\":S of any industrial sites Katie Cro w.

fund to the assistant administrator's salary and
$1,098 from the sanitarian's
fund to the nursing clerk's
salary.
.
It was reported th.e money
sought from transfers was set
upfortheyearly salary of the
sanitarian,
sanitarian
was paid but
bythethe
CE TA
program for the first half of
the year so county· funds
appropriated were not
needed for his salary. The
request was filed for the
transfer of montes from the
sanitariants fund to t h~ funds
for . salaries of t)le other
1

em:Ot~~~!gainst, th;transfer

were Auditor Howard Frank
and Treasurer George Collins
while Prosecutor Rick Crow
voted in favor. .
Commenting on his
negative vote, Frank said the
••Iary of one employe was
,..
· being
m
· creased about $2100
annually by the process and
he was against such a perrentage of increase since it
would be impossible to increase salaries of courthouse
employ· es to that extent.
Salarie• of co urthouse
employees• have always been
"kept in line" with health
department .emplo yee
salaries, Frank stated.

T WO persons h U rt.
z"n au*o accz"de'. nt

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Tl\e Gallia-Mei gs Post, scene of a passing accident on
Highway.Patrol, investigated SR 160, at old 160, at 4:10p.m.
four accidents Wednesdav' Wednesday.
eve nin g and Thu rsday
According to the pat•ol,
morning.
vehicles operated by Arthur
Two persons were inJ·ured E. Clark, 23, Binnin•ham,
0
in an ea rly morning accident Ala. , and Caroline J . Roberts,
on SR 7, on e mile south of 39, Ga llipolis. were north
· U.S. 35.
•
bound on 160.
According to the patrol, an
Clark started to pau as
auto driven by Betty Lu Roberts started to tum left.
Saunders, 38, Gallipolis;
The collision ca111ed
traveled east a cross A moderated damage to ihe
parking lot. and pulled onto Clark auto, minor damage to
Rt. 7 into the path of a north the Roberts vehicle.
bound vehicle operat&lt;:l] by
Clark was cited for passing
Homer C. McCo rmi·ck. at .an intersection. There
Catlettsburg , Ky .
were no injuries.
The Saunders vehicle was
At 10:55 a.m. Wednesday,
demolished m the crash .
officers investigated a two
Saunders, and a passenger car mishap on SR 7, at CR 2.
in the Saunders a uto,
Officers report that autos
Elizabeth Watk ins, t4 , operated by Horton C.
Gallipoli s, were ta ken to Powell , 53, Orland·o, Fla., and
·Holzer Medi ca l Center by the Da vid G. Carpenter, 23,
Gallia Volunteer Snuad.
Patriot, were involved in a
....Saunders was treated and passing mishap.
released for minor bruises.
'There were no injuries:
Watkins was treated and
Both
vehicl es incurred
d
·
released from Holzer for mo erate damage. No
minor bruises, ~ a nd an ' c.itation was issued.
abrasion of the left bee. .
At 12: 15 a.m. Thursday, a
McConniek was uninjured. vehicle operated ~y CarolS.
The McC ormi ck veht"' le Gee, 19, Bidwell, was south
incurred slight dama ge.
bound on SR 160, when the
Saunders was cited for auto
f struck a deer, two-tenths
failure to '•ield the right of o a mile north of milepost 3.
way.
· The Gee vehicle incurred
Officers were called to the moderate damage. Gee was
uninj ured .

II killed, 30 injured
•
m sleeping car· fire

TAUNTON, England (UPI )
- Fire raged through two
cars of a crowded overnight
express train , killin g 11
sleeping passengers and
injuring 30 trapped in their
compartments by flames and
smoke.
.
" Residents of the town say
they heard aq explosion," one
policeman said . Railway
officials said bottled gas
·
stored aboard th~ Penzance- .
·
to-London train may 'have
explnded, but. stressed the
cause of the lire 'l'as not
COLUMBUS - Glenn A.
Athens - US 33, St. Rts . 78 S200A ,ooo.d .
known.
Smith , Director of Ohio and 271 (Nelsonville) an&lt;l :;so ·
ccor mg to Director
Police said 10 bodies were
Department of Trans- will be ser\led at an estimated Weir,
this ls.the largest state pulled from the .gutted first
portation, (OOOT&gt; District cost of $26~.400 for · ap- resurfacing project on record coach and a hospital spokes10, estimated 105 mUes of two proximately 8.4 miles . .
terms of the miles of · man In Taunton said an 11th
lane highway in District 10 . GaUla - By August 1~ . in
roadway serviced. This is due victim died later. Th irty
are scheduled for resurfacing construction should be in part to the Severity of the people were treated for
this summer as a part of completed on State Routes 7,
burns, smoke Inhalation
Governor Rhodes' program 141, and 325 (Vinton ). past two winters.
andshock.
to repair ·the wont of the Estimated cost is $413,000 for
"I think we've got au · the
winter damages.
9.53 miles.
bodies
out now," a police
Approximately $2.7 miWon
Meigs ...:.. · Construction o.n
spokesman
said. "If there are
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
will be spend on urban and US 33 (Pomeroy ) is
more
deaths
It wm. be from
rural roadways in Athena, scheduled for completion
Sa tarday
through
qallla,. ·Hocking, Meigs, \ Augua 1~ while 681 should be Monday, •llite wirm and someone dying in the
Monroe, Morgan, Noble, finlahed two. weeks later. humid . with acattered hospital."
One survivor, · .Brian
Vlntcn and Waahlngton Construction length is 9 mile&amp; Cblllldenbowen, mabdy Ill
Nightingale, 11ald he awoke to
counties.
the
altenlooa
and
II
DiehL
at approximately $163,300.
the cries of fellow pauengers
A breakdown of Individual
Vinton - Construction HIP. w,ID be betweea A5
in his compartmeot.
county projects, ca~ulated llhould be complete by August IIIII II with tile o..ralpt
"I heard people lcr~aming
costa, total miles and . 1&amp; on 7.91 miles of St. ·Rts. 56 low betweea A5 aad 75. ·
ou1
side, I couldn •t see
estimated completion dates and 124. Estimated cost Is
anything,"
lie sal~ from his
·::;:;:;:;:;:;:·:,.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
are aa follon:

105 miles will be resurfaced

GALIJA COUNTRY OPENS TONIGHT - Jean
Henry, Jackson , will participate. in the 1978 presen(!ltion
of "GaUia Country," scheduled to open its sixth· seaiOil
tonight. Curtain time is 8:30p.m. in the amphitheabc on
Bob Evans Farms, Rio · Grande. The outdoor musical
.drama will be presented the rea mining weekends in July .

hospital bed. He first tried to
open the com partment's
window, but couldn't.
"As soon as I opened
the door the names burst in.
Then I heard someone shout,
'Crawl on the noor !' and I
did.
··Halfway thro ugh th e
corrider, I passed out and 1·
came to on the track. I must
have fall en out of th.e
carriage ." Nightingal e
suffered hand burns and
bruises to his knees.

Keith Jaco bs, 33, of
Taunton said, "The train
stopped and I could see fire in
the coaches. The train was in
flames and they were really
high. '
"Flames and smoke were'
coming from the rear end of
the first coach and it seemed
that they had caught ·onto the
second coJch. There were ·a
lot of peopie shouting ,
cushing about in different
directions."
Residents of the area said
many· survivors escaped
dr~ed only in nightclothing
or underwear.
"A man came to my lront
door, dressed in pajafll\IS and
covered· in dirt and blood,"
said Sandra Horne.
A police spokesman said 15

passengers were sleeping in
the first car, which was
gutted by the blaze ..
"Ten of them died, four
were in jured and one
ma naged to esca pe unScithed," he sa id.
He said about 15 people also
w~re

in the second car, which

was badly damaged by the
fire .
"Firemen, ambulances and
police sped to the scene and
the blaze was confined to the
first two cars," a police"'
spokesman said. In aU, the
train carried more than 300
passengers.

A hospital spokesman IIBid
Inj ured brought in for
treatment were "suffering
from bums, shock and the
effects of smoke, but none Is
in a serious condition ·or
giving cause for alarm. Only
one patient could be
described as seriously IU and
it appears ' she suffend a
stroke. 11 ·
'
The overnight Penzance-toLondon express Is a popular
train With vacatlonen British and foreign touriiU
alike. It covers the 30ti mila
from the resort•town lllbe Up
of Cornwall near Lantl'l Bnd
to London's Paddlnlton
Station in· about ellbt llalan.

.•

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