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~-

'

rhe Sunday Tunes-Sent mel, Suuday. J uly 9. 19i8

7,000 employees idled

.O ld Ewington Academy being restored
.
ll utherford B~ Hayes' wrote
Wil~~am M_"cKinley f(Ot ·drunk
EWINt;ToN ~· rauk lltll 's
artidc ' i11 Ut~·
Tllu•.,sdH)' ,,,.,,u,,.,,1,.. ,,,., , ,

United Pre.. lnterllatlonal
Kentucky.
The Brotherhood of Airline
"We have somewhere In
and Railway Clerb Uxlay the neighborhood of 1.000 emstruck the Norfolk &amp; Western ployees in &lt;lllo and molt of
Railroad and idled nearly them are out," B.ill Martin, a
7,000 employees in Ohio. spokesman for the N&amp;W In
Drivers of coal carrying Roanoke, Va ., told UPI.
trucb. at ' non United Mine " Most seem to be hooorlng
Workers operations in the clerk's picket lines.
F;astefh Ohio aloo went on
"The situation so far is that
strike.
the trains that were runriing
The N&amp;W strike was called. · at the time of the strike are
in a dispute over jurisdictloo still going," said Martin.
and jobs · threatened by "Then there is another group
technological innovation. ,
of trains that supervisors are
The N&amp;W is one. of the operating and In the third
largest 'coal carriers in ti)O cal.t:gory there are the trains
nation and does exteilsive that are not ruMing because
hauling in southeastern Ohio, engine crews will not .cross
West Virginia and easfem

aJiuslr&lt;tll•tl

/'nlmm• .Junt• tl ilppcH iing fn.l'
pn.•scrvaliun uf tlu.• old Ewington Academy IJui!Jing is
pa yinJ.: uff: HgnlUfl II( d tiZCIIS
is res toring it fur usc a~ a
t't ll liiHUni ty lmihlir1g .

Huwew r.

t he

job ta kes

llltll"~ than lal&gt;ur. They want
j.JC1 1p h• to Sl'lld donations tu

Pead Twyman . pnstnmstcr ,
Ewiugt tJI1 4562i.
Fret• labor was duna tcd 'un
the fuurtli qf July lty Cl iff
aud Opal Callihatl , Gratlv iind
J'ca rl Twymau . Bob · McLlaskcy, Pea rl a11&lt;l Virginia '

McC las key.
Cii:i ~ k t•y ,

Ga r y

Mc -

Hcat riec ( 'rclllccns,

a11d Hazel Amos, &lt;.:lair ami

Am1 McCarley.
Vinton Posl Hil. Alll -ril"all
Lcg iHII , has a 9!):.ycw·lcast.• on
the i:i llei cnl st rudurc. wllkh

wao, ert:clcd in 1840. The.
Leg ionnaires hctVl' the rcase
JX1 id up fur 25 y~ ar s tiS 11 f I wo
yearsHgtl .

F. wington AL~ adumy ll:..t s iJ
relati ve ly new rouf on it, L&gt;ut
unt il. tht• F \•Urth uf. July littl e
or no 111ailllerum cc work ha d
CITI ZENS At WORK on Ewi ngtun Academy un the Fourth of July included, left to
Ut.•cn d l lll L' un the big edifil'e
right. Hazel Amus. Am_r McCarlt•y, Rt'l-1 Crt•mct•ns, Clai r McCl:lrlcy. Pci:i rl Twymc:111 1at the
Lt•gu ~rmi:Jiru:i savs lhat tilt·
duor ). C:l nd Cliff Callihan . There wer t• cigl1t l•r 10 ul l1cr~ who worked .
siB under it is . .. b~U " mHI in
moisture could cause some ll t.'\,'d uf I' L'IJi:i i r .
harvest problems.
. Bd;.idcs csta l&gt;lishing it ~1s e~
The team visited an area &lt;·umm uni l y ~ lmilding , these
representing one fourth of the eivic: leaders hope , l t1 make
tile lawn i:H"'IUIHI it int n a
wheat a r ea and a tiny portion
pla yground.
of th e corn area .

Predict another good
wheat crop this year

WASHINGTON I UP I I - ,,. larger than last yea r.• but a
sma lle r crop yie ld will
Agriculture Department to ba la nl'e the size of the
three-man tea m sent by the

survey Soviet winter ' Wheat

predicted Friday the 1918
crop will be about the same
as last year's good crop.
By con trast. pr ospects
seemed signif icantly less
promising for bot h corn for
grain and for sunflowers.
used lo produce feed and oiL
The tot;JI wheat area to be
harvested is expected to lte

harves t. th e team pred ided.

Gus

Page,

Coo p e rative

of

the

Bill permits EMT-As to
admi~Jister IVs_·in Ohio
COLUMBUS ~ A bill to
a llo w ('m cr gency medic al
t eehnic: ia n - ambul cw res

Extensio n

Service at Oklahoma SUlte
Universit.y, predicted at a
br iefin g tha t the crop will be
"more to the top side" of the
Depa r tment's .
Ju ne 12 prediction which was
that t he tot a l gra in crop
would range between 185 to

CORA MILL
· NOW OPEN
COLLECTIBLES
AND

HANDCRAFTS
CORA, OHIO

••
•
•'

.

1 ·•.

-nl

:
e

Tq~ay

:

Willis T. Leadingham

•

•

: When
Tax Tios
When You B~v R;I"'Estate :
you buy re a l Am01i g these are lawyers' e
• estate , your ta x benef its fe e- s , pro perly surveys ,
• s tarl imm e d iat e ly For t itle search an d tit le
• exa mple, propert y tax es rnsu ra.n ce, transfer taxes
e paid a t the settl e ment a r e ar1d ·· points ."
11 s hould be note d that .
• de ductible . Usua lly these
~ ta xe.)L are pro rated b~:: what the IR S calls " ba sis"
• tween the bu •(er and sel ler IS q u ite important to
so th at ea ch pays h 1s establ ish . tt is th e pur.c ha se
e r espec t i ve shar e In so me pr ice of th e r eal estate
e ldcali1ies
w here
the whic h incl ud es your down
e prope rt y ta)(es a re pa id pa yment .' mortgages. a nd
.• dur ing
th e follow tn g th o s e
no n dedu c t i b le
e calendar yea r lh e buy er 's. s.e ltl em ent costs . The ba sis
~· decl uction rs te~ e n d u nng de t e rm 1nes wha t your
e the year the ta xes a re oro f1t or loss w1 lt be when
e actuall y pa •d
'J flll se ll
e the o t her sett! em ent
If t here is anyth in g we
e expen ses ge ner a ll y are no t ci!n do to help you in the
e decl uctible , however . m os t fi e ld of red! est ate please
• of them can be added to the p hon e or dr o p i n at
e costotth er ea !esta lewhen LEAD IN GHA M
REAL
• you sell it. The ef fec t wil l ESTATE , S12 Second Ave .,
be to r~duce the profit Gal,lipolis. Phone o144 -7699 .
,• su b iect to in corn,e Ia ;.c . We r e here tn h~.'J&gt;·

e

•
•
•
•

Doc

Smith's
• 301 V-8 Engine
• Automatic Trans.

•Power Steering
•Power 8fakes
• Ttnted Glass

pa ssa~c

of Am .

•

•
•

•
•
•

e
e
e
e
•
•
•

Hw Friendship

~-H

JUI._Y SALE

00JGillJ~ITl ~OJITJ~OITUIIJ~
.

in thi s bi ll , E MT-As who have

on ham ste r a nd David
Garber on mark et hog s.

n,mp leted accred it ed IV
tre~i nin g co ur ses will· be

ce rtified to perform this duty
under the sa me condit ions a s

paramedics. Senator Collins
sa id ··This legislation will
help
alleviate the serious
problem ca used by the great

IO

de mand for e merf.(en cy
m ed ical care and the . short a~ c of pa r&lt;:~medi es permitt ed
to a dmi nister s uch ca re.'' He

furth er added. "Thts bill wi ll
provide the oppop unity fo r
all EMT-As to improve thei r
abilit ie s .t o

r e nder high

\l,llality emer gency heallh
ca re to the cit ize ns of this
st.a tr.'"
The prob le m ca me abou t t:~ s
a result of a recent Att orne y
Gen eral' s opi n io n that

prohi bited all E MT-As from

.

'

,._._,_S.AVE 20%

met Ju ne 15 etl G&lt;Jrbe•·'s

Motth e w

With ee

presided . A demonstration

was given by Diane Garber
Mr s.

Garbe r

visor.

Members

is

•LLOYD SPRING
BASE CHAIRS
High back or low

ad-

presen,t

is advi sor . Mem bers present
were Matt hew and Kevin

Withee, Tim Merry, Diane
and David Garber. Jenny,
Amy, Will Louden and Je ff
Wet herh olt . ~ Report er

back style - Choose

Kci.'in Wit hee.

Hio Friendship 4-H Club

from white, bittersweet,

m et J une 22 ett Oliver 's home .

Matt hew Wit hee presided.
Mark and Bn an Oliver had
demonstrat ions on

Allen Green was

yellow, green or brown.

fishing.
pro ~ ram

chainnan. Advisor is Mrs.
G arbe r . Members presen t
wer e Da vi d an d Dian e

for the West were being
sprayed with pesticides. ,

Merry. Kevin a nd Matthew

'5797

p·

lncl~

.
The Follow11g
E11uipment

j

•Air Conditioning

..Whitewal
R1clials
•Sport Minors

•Deluxe Wheel
•

cu.'S

•Ridio Accom. Pq.

'lbi! Meigs County Fair Board has booked The
Challengers and the Fowtdation Band as the grandstand
attraction for the final evening of the BMual Meigs County
Fair, 8 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 19.
· The groupe present music which takes their audiences
througlt many moods ranging from hits of the 50s, COWl try
ballads and music from UxlaY:

They have performed from coast Ill coast and from
Canada to Mexico with stars Including Freddy Fender,
Loretta Lynn, Donna Fargo, Myron Floren and Grandpa
Jones. This year the groups will he playing at over 325
locations in 500 performances. The grandstand attractions
at the Meigs Fair are free of charge

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Oh.
Moo day, July 10, 1978

•

died at 3:45 a.m. Sunday in
Holzer Medical Center a(&gt;"
parently from injuries suffered in a diving accident at
6:30 p.m. Friday at Pine
Acres lake on Clark Chapel
Rd . in Springfield Twp.
Sheriff James Montgomery's deputies quoted

at.Y

witnesses as saying that Paul
Francis Livingston •nd his
brother, Perry, dived Into the
lake from a bank 30 feet
above the water , which is six

or seven feet deep at that
point.
Perry dived first and
swam toward the marked
swimming area . Paul
followed , surfaced, and

started swimming after him.
About halfway to the
swimming area, Paul yelled
for help and also . yelled, " I
don't think I can make it. "
Perry started swimming
toward his brother.
At that moment the life
guard - Debbie Bailey, 17,
482 Cathy Dr., Point Pleasa·nt
- went into the water to help ,

en tine

When she reached Paul, he pulled her under the ·water
twice , she told sheriff's
deputies, but she managed to
break away from him and he
went down .

By this time, Dennis Aspin,
Rt. I, Washington, W. Va ., a
co-owner of Pihe Acres -

went into the lake, found the
(Continued on page 10)

Fifteen Cents ·
Vol. 29, No. 59

•SOLID OAK .PORCH SWINGln. 4 or 5 foot width
ceiling hooks incl[lded.

Chains and

landing gear ,
Ualted Presalalerualloaal
Plane crashes In four stales
The
Indiana
crash
· &amp;today killed five persons interrupted the national
parachuting ch~mplonships,
and \Jijured 19 others.
A dozen of the Injured were injuring 12 participants. One
l!l&lt;perieoced skydivers who of them, identified -as
had no chance to use their · Raymond Catlette, 32, of
paracbuies as their DC-3 Oakland,
Calif.,
·was
slammed Into the gr()_Wid on critically hurt.
takeoff at Richmond, Ind.
Catlette was among 40
In Jlilllngs, Monl., Dr , skydivers who planned to hall
Roc~neJ. r;~~ ~·] \!1 J'lll1. QJlL of a DC.J.-' the 7.~oot
Angeles; W8sh., 8feo lri lhe level, to form a star· in free
criiJh ol his light plane as he faD . Witnesses said the plane
tried to aet a long distance faltered on lakeoll and came
endurance record.
down in a nat field parallel to
Four peraons, who w~e not the rmway.
Identified, were killed In
Twelve of the parachutists
Westerly, R.I., when their were taken to Reid Memorial
singl~ngine · plane plowed
Hospital, but only Catlette,
nose down Into a field in another man and a woman
heavy lot~ .
were admitted - all with
In Rochester, N.Y.. seven broken bones. 1'~ nine other
passengers aboar·d an victims were treated and
Alleshen~ Airlines jet were
released , but a hospital
injUred Sunday evening when spokesman said Catlette
surgery
for
the plane veered out of required
control on Iandin~ and lost its " multiple trauma."

T_h_e_w_o_r_ld__,;,_To_cl......a_y_

HOLLYWOOD (UP!) - "Go west, young man," the
saylrig was, and Derek Stillwell took the advice.
, What bothi!rs pollee - and surely Derek's parents - was
that he'l a little younger than John Soule and Horace Greeley
ttad in mind. Derek, U,'of Jamaica, N.Y ., came West the euy
way.
walked mto an airliner at Kennedy Airport in New
York on Saturday. He had no money and no ticket, but no one
~ him, he said . .

He

Prime Minister murdered
LONDON (UPI) - Fonner Iraqi Prime Minister Abdul
RazzakNayef, shot In the back ofthe head at close range by an
Arab guruiian, died early Uxlay; Westminster Hospital officials
said.
'
Nayef, 44, was shot as he was entering a laxlln front of the
lnterCUitinental Hotel near Hyde !'ark corner late $1nday
morning and waa rushed to the hospital for emergency
lreatment.

• JOHN HANCOCK GENUINE ·
CALIFORNIA REDWOOD
FURNITUREPicnic tables with
benches, Rockers,
Straight Chairs.
Loveseats.
Gi~

.

Military junta seizes power
PARIS (uPi) - A military Junia seized power in strifetorn Mauritania from French-backed Prealdent Molar Ould

•WEBER
BMB!QUE
KETlUS-

Rummy

Heavy steel

•TElESCOPE
FOlDING
FURNITUREH~ve

aluminum frames,
standard webbing or·
plastic tuping. Chairs,
Rockers,.Chaise Lounges.

ELBERFELDS IN

constwction

. Roast or ,baht..
Save chiledal - •
·'

Lasts for rears.

Five persons injured
in two-car collision

Five die, 19 are hurt

11-year-old went west

Howard. A guest present wa s

BONANZA

Paul

Uvingston , Rt . 1, Bidwell,

)...__·
11111

Withee, Guest s present were
Mr. ond Mrs. Oliver. Report er Kev in Withee.

Mr s , Merle Howard.
Reporter Kev in Withee.

Eighteen-year-o ld

.0£

Ga rber, Allen Green, Andy
Howard, Chris Howell Amv
Will. J enny Louden,' 1'1n1

Ri o Friendship 4-H Club
Philadelphia
Internat ional met .June 29 . Matthew Withee
Airport . rx1sing a threa t to pres ided , Chris Howard ga ve
west ern s ta tes whose crops a demonstration o n ·sheep.
could be destroyed if infested Advi so r is Mrs. Ga rb er .
pla nes land there.
Members present were Tim
·A spokesman for the U. S. Merry, Matthew and Kevin
Department of Agricu l!Aire, Withee, David and Diane
which Friday declared th e Garber. Chris Howa rd , Jeff
airport "haza rdous," said the Weth erho lt
a nd
Andy
interi ors of a ircraft destined

'

Paul Livingston, 18, dies
from apparent diving i~jury

'{

Cl ub

home.

houma!, It waa hla men who
blocked Morcan's way at
Pomeroy caualng Morgan to
continue north . Hayes' m~
pai1.icipated In the capture of
10p1e ol Morgan's men - . ·
"We got over 200 prJsoners.
EverybOdy got some. No fight :
. in them: The most successful
and jolly little campaign we
ever had."
_
On a couple of occasions
Hayes' 23rd was moved from
Charleston to the eastern
theater. To ·accomplish this
they would take the steamer
to Gallipollis and north to '
Parkersburg and then go by
rail. On one occasion thf
army got orr the steamer
near Pomeroy and march~d
overland through MeiRs
County. Hayes observed :
"ln this way .we have
marched through some
villages and fine Ianning
neighborhoods In Meigs .
County. The men, women, ·
and child= turned out with
apples, peaches, pies,
melons, pickles in the
greatest . profusion. The
drwns and files and hand all
played their best. Wasn 't I
proud of them! How happy
they were! They would say
that this Is God's country!"
Jameil Sands' address Is
Box 3, Barlow 45712.

WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STilET

4-H News

et dmini st e r JV;s in a n
emergency sit uati on. With
the new pro visio ns provided

•
• ·
•
BEETLE PROBLEM
•
PHILADE LPHIA (UP! ) • La rge number s of Japanese ,
• beetles ho ve developed at

•·~-------~················
-"'t

un der the

were tht' onl v em ergency
personne l a~th orizc d to

•

CY;'st.at~··

••

Pri(Jf to

been en id " nd wet. Soil

•

JOn.

several occa~ions Lucy
Hayes, wife of RBH, . was a
frequent guest In Gallipolis
during the war. She would
travel to Gallipolis ani! wait
lor Hayes to come from
Charleston to take the Hayes
family back. It was on one
such occaslllli as this thAt ihe
Haves' ·11-month-old . son
Joseph died. .
Tbere Is 1 ;. inlereallq eatry Ia 11, 1,
''Serceaat McKIDiey wao
drunk
1 doubled - him
some~ut, bat 1 tltoiiPt u
tn1$1ed wilb aa ernW be
would keep otntlght utillt
was doae. A good oolcller Ia •
camp _ somewhat obtruaive aDd lalkative, ltut
alwaya ooldler-llke He lOt
IDto tile pard-ho~H for
ralslag Ned 11 GaWpooll."
· i.ucy wrote back tbat
"this 'MeKialey It 1
curi08lly." Tbll Serr;eaat
MeKialey was aoae elller
lbaa the future Presldeal,
WOllam McKIDiey.
·
Hayes also In his jolirnal
has several entries concerning Jenkins' raid on
Point Plellll8llt in March
1863, and Morgan's raid U:
. July, 11163. Hayes did not
participate directly In the
former but did in. the latter.
In fact, according to his

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Sub. JUl. 1092, pararnc,li cs

· ;_md wt•athcr conditions this
sprin g and surm:ner have

·. . ela.!J

age nry res pon sible for t he
acr reditalion of a ny IV
t r a ining courses .

t ra.iued EMT - As.

1&gt;-.July 5 !rip. U1e team said
the win ter wheat c rop was
"nff to a goo d start" last fa ll

ea

Board ' of Hcgents as the

Substitut e

Am ended

Huuse Bi ll

In &lt;J report fol lowing a J une

• • t • • .• • • • • • • • • • • a •

H.B . 1092 also sets up the

the Senate una ninl,ously June
spun.sur ship of Oak~ey C.
Co l li nS ( R- Jron lon I, will
exte nd rurt h er med ica l
respon s ibilities to specially

Officia ls said ihe Jun e 12
repor t . will be update d
Monday .

nwi sture was heavy in the
Ukraine , while in Vo\vog rad
cmd Voronr7ll, it wa s dry
enou g h to dimimsh yields .
The tea m sa id the cxeess

in t ravenous flu ids und e r
22 .

225 million tons.

intravenous

cm c rgc nq : L'Onditions passed

terestmg because of Hayes ·
insight into the war as well as
hi ~ reporting some humorous
thmgs that happened. For
instance In order to supply
Oie~ beyond Charleston
the Union had to use steep
mountain pass~s . Hayes
remarked tha~ the army
managed to gel ll ' ,.,.gon
stuck in a tree top some 90
feet off the ground.
Hayes also mentioned that
thetr regiment had adopted a
pet roos t~r that followed
them on their raids. On one
occasion .Hayes ' regiment
stop~ at a !ann house near
Raletgh , W. Va., and the
doctor, who was a great hand
around k_ids, struck up a
conversation wtth a threeyear-old boy. The bo,Y muttered somethtng and the
docto~ asked that he repeat it.
The httle ktd yelled hack at
the doctor, "~?. io Hell, you
damn Yankee .
"How the blood lea~ and
thrtlls through the vems as
we race over the htlls !
Phystcal enjoyments of thts
sort are worth a war. How the
manly generous brave side of
our people .is growing! With
all tis evtls war . has, tts
glorious compensations. So
wrote Hayes tn Ul61.
.We also nnttce that on

'

Ouids, even when the EMT-A
had completed a cou rse (lll
th e a dm ini str a ti on of i ntr avenous fluids. Am . Sub.

t E MT-AsJ to administer

Ag ri c ul t ure

admi1,1lstering

HV JAMES SANDS
(;ALI.IPOI.IS - r.r Gallians
ha,•e .a rtght to clatm any .of
the PreSidents as a favonte
"'" · ll would be Rutherford B.
HHyes . . who wa.s a frequent
v t st t~ r , to Galhpolis during
the .Ctvt[ War and afterwards
~s go vernor of Ohio.
• Ha y'~s served ~sa colonel
and la ter brtgadter-general
wtththe 23rd0Vl. Exeept for
a bnef_time tn 1862, the 23rd
~V I " as responstble for the
Kanawha Rtver valley with
ca mps at Pomt Pleasant,
Cha rl eston , and Gauley
Bn.dge: .
,
. Co al~ tpolt s se rv ed as a
s u pp l~ post and hospttal for
the ~rd as well as . for a
number of other regtments
serv ing in W~~~ Virginia .
In Hay es journal and
l et ~e rs or the wa~ years, there
we mentioned a number of
t ~ IPS that Hayes made to
Coalh~lts for the purpose of
transportmg the wounded.
, For.·IIJStance the entry for
F e ~; 3. 1862, reads :
Leave this morning for
Galllpohs. A drizzly cold
da y, snow on the hills. mud,
'."""' and. slush at
Galhpohs. Wtth Avery and
Btll Brown over town -ate
n_yster~. eggs, and ale."
fhe journal , ttself is in-

stale's largest .strip mining
that picket .""e.
''However, we have had operations but details of the
some instances of other union · dispute were not ilillnediately
.
membership crossinR the determined.
The UMW returned Ill work
picket lines," said Martin.
· James Yoffie , general Uxlay following itS traditional
chairman of the union in two-week summer vacation.
John Guzek, president of
Roanoke, said he l!l&lt;pected all
other. craft Wlions to honor District 6 of the ' UMW
headquartered in Dilles
the picket lines.
Ohio,
and
Majoc points on the N&amp;W Bottom,
line, which receive~ about 40 representing 16,000 miners in
percent of its ·revenues loom eastern Ohio and the northern
the transportation of coal, are Panl\andle of West Virginia,
Cleveland, Buffalo, St. Louuis said the strike had not: yet
Kansas City, Omaha, Detroit, affected coal prodllction.
" All the mines are
Chicago and Cleveland.
The coal haulers in eastern operating right now," said
Ohio struck same of the Guzek . " It hasn't l!one
anything to us''

Dadda, Radio Nouakchott snoounced today.
.
Aller the apparently blQ9dle11 coup, the counlry was
placed under the coinma!li of a "National Rehabllltatloo
Committee," the ~dcast said.,'lbi! Mauritanian embassy In
Parlll and the French f&lt;J'elgn mlnlatry confirmed lhe report.

'

· 24 .officerS suspended
' CLEVEI..ANb

(UPI) - Twenty-tour '' Cleveland police

olfma ttave been ~~~~pe~~ded without pay beCause they
rtfUiecl to walll beats In 14 Cleveland public hlllllln8 projects.
Plwldenl WDilam J. McNei ol the cieveland Pollee
l'lttrolmal'a ~lion llid today the men nfuaed to walk
the patroll Sunday within the Cuyahop Metropolitan Houalng
Authorll)"a projects "becau.e the projec:ll are too
danllroua." ·
·

Neither the pilot, the cO'
pilot, nor any of the other
chutists was injured.
Nixon, who set a record
more than a · year ago for
straightline endurance flying
in a small plane by winging
2, 796 miles non-skip from
Port Angeles to Homestead,
F1a., died trying to better his
own mark.
He was,,wlnUng for 3,050
miles when his plane crashed ·
west of the Billings airport.
All four of the victims in the
Westerly, R.I ., crash were
killed instantly. Edward Sullivan, assistant chief of the
city's radar unit, said the
pilot had filed a night plan
indicating Poughkeepsie,
N.Y,, as his destination .
Witnesses said the the
single-engine plane noseddived into a farm field about
200 yards from the Westerly
airport, killing the two men
and two women aboard.

Common grave
yields bodies
WINNIE, Te&gt;:as (UP!) ..., A
former mental patient
l1u.nday night led authorities
ic a shallow grave containing
the bodies of five people
abducted from ·a nearby
farmhouse last !l'eek.
After almost four hours of
interrogation Sunday·, Ovide
.Joseph Dug&amp;ii Jr. , arrested
Friday on kidnapping
charges
after
the
disappearance of five
members of the Bishop
Phillips family, led law
enforcement officers and a
justice of the peace to the
bodies.
The bodies of,Phllllps; his
wife; their -son, Elmer ;
Elmer's wife, ~artha, and
their 4-year-old son, Jason,
were found in a common
grave 4 feet deep, abouf 1S
mj!es from the ·PhllUps'
farmhouse . A justice of the
peace made graveside
identification of the dead.
Chambers County Sh~
Doil Pounds said additional
charges may be filed against
Dugas, who ·once was
inarrled to the elder Phillips'
!laughter. Pounds said a
female a"'"lmplice still Ia
being sougltt.
Poullda said Dugas at first

reflued to cooperate, but
alter further questioning he
~ deputies to the srave.
went ~~ about 1
OOLUMBUS (UPIJ - Molt motorcycllsta lri Ohio will not o clock (p.m, )• Poullda said.
_ , helmell bellinnbrl todlly .A modlflcallon at the llate'a "He was pretty emotional to
t.lmet lawWent Into eftect todlly. The only motorcyclllllstiil a point - real nervoua and
. rwqulntllo - r helm~ are t~ wider 18 and lhtltl!! licensed upilet,
Pounda said the bodies bad
ror - than me year.
mllll wear helmets II their drivers are been taken to a patholotlia
ni!Julrtd 10 _ , them. Frank Paro, Colwnbua, an avid who woqld conduct an
~. iald he IIIlo! worried about Ohio IUghway Patrol auloply today to delarmlne
the ca1111e.ol death.
precktlon at Increued cycling fall!lities.

Helmet law now effective

'!f•

II

..._,11'11

"The plane is a pile of
twisted wreckage and the
bodies
are
beyond
recognition, " said Bob Perry,
a reporter for Radio Station
WERI. "It must have made a
direct landing. There's a lot
of fog ."
Seven passengers sljffered
minor injuries in the abortive
landing of the Allegheny
twin·engine BAC-111 that
skidded orr the runway at
Rochester, N.Y., and sheared
Its landing gear Sunday
evening.
Federal
Avaition
Administration agent Stan
Bartlett said the flight, which
originated in Boston,' carried
73 passengers and a crew of
fdur.
"The pilot did an excellent
job
maneuvering
the
aircraft," Bartlett "'id. "He
was able to avoid hltlilg the
airport's large navigational
antenna just off the runway ."

.

·'

Tina Rae Smith, 16,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Smith, Rt . I, Mid·
dlepol1, has heen mlsslag
irom her home since July 4.
She Is 5-4, . weighs 120
pounds, and has long hload
hair and blue eyes. Anyoae
having kaowledge of her
whereabouts Is asked to
call 992·2182 or 992-3145.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wed·nesday through
. Friday, fair and mild
Wednesday, wltb bigba
near 80 and lows aear 80.
Becoming warm and more
humid Thursday aad
Friday, with scattered
tbundersbowel'l alld hllht
In the lies or near 90 and
tows Ia lbe 6h or near 70.

Five people were injured in
a two-car collision Sunday at
9:05 a.m., on TR 34, ninetenths of a mile north of SR
32:&gt; in Meigs County.
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, reports that
an auto driven by Ernest
Wright, W, LangsviUe, was
north bound on TR 34, when it
met a vehicle operated by
Kathleen Caton, 49, Vinton,
on a hillcrest.
The collision caused severe
damage to both autos .
Caton,
and
three
passengers in the Caton
veh icle, disphiyed visible
signs of injury and were
taken 'to the Holzer Medical
Center by a relative. Caton was treated and
released for lacerations of the
head , and contusions of the
ribs and thumb.
Franklin D. Jarvis , 10,
Vinton , was treated and
rel eased
for
minor
lacerations of the right side of
the head , ·and contusions of

the right side. of the body.
Tisha Jarvis,-9, Vinton. was
treated and released for
laceration of the scalp, and
contusions of the right leg.
Peggy Jarvis, 8, Vinton,
was treated and released for
contusions of the forehead.
Wright claimed injuries,
but was not · immediatel y
treated.
Officers were called to the
scene of a backing accident
on Broad St. in Thurman
Sunti#IY at ~ : 45 p.in.
According to the patrol. an
auto operated by Darla
Perry, 24, Oak Hill, hacked
from a driveway into a
parked car owned by James
Kuhn, 33, Thunnan.
Both vehicles incurred
slight damage. There was no
report of citation.
At 7:40 p.m ., Sunday, officers were called to the
scene of a two-auto collision
on 554, three-tenths of a mile
east of CR 24.
According to the patrol,

15 highway

United Press lateruatlonal
A car-truck accident thai
Authoriti es had been
killed four Erie County resisearching a 31l-square mile
dents boosted Ohio's weekend
area of swamps , woods and
trarric death toll to at least 15,
grassland for the graveslte
the Ohio Highway Patrol
since receiving information
reported today.
from a relative of Dugas'.
Driver Charles Chur¢ill,
According to the complaint
~3. and his wile Mary, 47,
filed against Dugas, who
along with two other
remained jailed at Anahuac
passengers In their car,
in $500,000 bond on the five
Kathryn Birsall, 'tl, and her
kidnapping charges, the man
daughter, Wendy, 3, all 1of
klld a relative and a friend
Castalia, died saturday when
the Phillipses were killed
their Vehicle was struck by a
July 1.
·
, pickup
truck at
an
About W orricers on foot,
illtersection 10 mUes east of
horseback and In four-wheelFremont.
A narrow· road, heavy
drive vehicles had been
The driver of the truck,
searching an area leading ,.ainfaU and heavy brush Christy Sberna, 17, Bellevue,
from the Phillip$ home Ill the along a . roadway were was Injured in lhe mishap.
site where their burnetk&gt;ut blamed in a two-car accident She · was listed in fair ·
car was found last Thursday. that occ·u rred Saturday condition at Bellevue City
George Phillips, son of evening on Townshlo Road Hospital early today.
Biohop Phillips, discovered T411 in Lebanon Township.
Authorities sa id
the
the lamlly missing when he Meigs County Sheriff's Churchill auto failed to yield
returned laat Sunday from a deputies said Michael the right. of way at the
trip \o Houston. Elmer Warner, 20, Columbus, was · intersection of Ohio 412 and
Philllpa of Woodward, Okla., travelins. west anJI collided Sandusky County Road 294
. and his family were visiting headon with an eastbound and was struck by the
their parenfs · when they auto driven by Kenneth Rose, · ont:mJing lruck.
·
Rt. I, Portland. The accident
diaappear~ arollild July I ,
That
accident
was
one
of
11
occurred during · a heavy fattil mishaps on Ohio
officials said.
rainstorm.
roadways
during
the
Rose's vehicle was left ol weekend, according to the
center due to heavy brush patrol, which counts traffic
Partly cloudy and cooler extending out onto the fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday
i
1
·
'd roadway. There were no in· Wltil midnight Sunday each
. ton ght, w th lows in the mt
juries reported . However,
or upper iiOa. SUMy and less heavy damage r111ulted. No non-holiday weekend .
humid Tuesday, with highs In .
'
Friday
Nl1bt
the mid or upper 70s . citattoos were tsaued.
Alliance : Frederick Young,
Deputies
also
investigated
ProhabiUty of precipitation Is
26, Alliance, In a two-car
. w percent today; 10 percent a hit:sklp accident ' ap- accident m a Stark County
proximately
12
:20
a
.
m
.
tonight and near zero percent
Sunday at Beaver's Comer road, n..r Alliance.
Tuesday
. West Aleu!ldrla : Ernest
outside Racine.
·
Mrs , Naomi. Neville, Spence, 40, W11t Alexandria ,
Racine, reported a pickup In a two-car crash oo Ohio ii03
MEET nJESDAY
. The Clieiter Township truck had come down the old in Preble County.
Daykin: BID !llythe, 47,
. Truatees will meet July lllor section of SR 124 and ran into
Tlpp City, In 1 one-&lt;:ar
lhtlr reaular meeting at the
(Continued on Jllllt 10)
mishap on a Dayton street.
loWII hAll at 7 r. m.

Deputies
check two

accidents·

Weather

autos operated by Stephen
Hill, 16, GaHipolis, and David
Magneson , 43 , Rio GrMde,
coliided at a railroad crossing
on ~54.
Magneson wifs cited for left
of center.

·

Both vehi cles incurred
slight damage. There were no
injuries.

Offi ce rs investigated an
accident on U.S. 35, at the
junction of 588, Sunday at 8:45
p.m.
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Jeffrey
Simms, 19, Rio Grande, was
east bound on 35 attempting
to turn right onto 588.
The vehicle went out of
control, and sideswiped an
auto operated by Larry
Sturgill, 34, Portsmouth. Both
vehicl es incurred slight
damage. There were no injuries . Simms was cited for
excessive speed for conditions .

~atalities r~corded

Y~ungstown : John W. Fre- Williams, 17, Mount Vernoo ,
drick, 59, Akron , when struck In a one&lt;ar accident on a
by a car as he walked along a township ro~d in Knox
COunty.
Mahoning County road.
Delaware:
Adam B,
Saturday
Fremont :
Charles Kunkel, 16, Delaware, in a
Churchill, 53, Mary Churchill, two-car collision on a city
Kathryn Birdsall, '1:/, and street.
. Sunday
Wendy Birdsall, 3, aU of
Jefferson:
Joseph N . wara,
Castalia, in a two-vehicie
accident at the intersection ot 20, Ashtabula, when his
Ohio 412 and Sandusky motorcycle was struck by .a
car on Ohio 46 about two
COunty Road 294.
Steubenville : RoSemary miles from Jefferson.
wooster : Lewis s. Knox, 61,
Billingsly, 18, Ray131Jd, in a
two-car crash on Ohio 7 in Warsaw, and Joanne Patton,
31, Doylestown, in a two-car
Jerrers.on County.
Chardon : Wayne G. Klein, accident on Ohio 83 In Wayne
32, Windsor, in a two-&lt;:ar County.
mishap on Ohio 87 in Geauga
COunty.
Mount Vernon : Gar·y A.

Cool spell
beginning

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad made two runs ov.sr
the weekend.
At 9:17 p m. Saturday the
squad went to Bailey's Run
for Bill Morris who was taken
to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 1:31 p. m. Sunday Victor
Bahr wail transpOrted from
his residence beyond Chester
to Holzer Medical Center.
REMINDER GIVEN

Meigs C&lt;lunty Ianners are
reminded that Monday , July
17 is the final date to certify
NCA cro~ planted. Farmers
who . are !signed into the
voluntary diversion program
must be certified by this date
to earn payment. All otber
fanners are urged to certify
to insure eligibility to participate in the· future .

United Preollatemallonal
Missouri, Kansas and
Te&lt;as had a heat wav· -lay
but a cool' spell began .•• the
northern Plains and the
Great Lakes. Other sections
had sea90nal reedings.
Wichita, kan., reported a
106 degree reading &amp;mday,
breaking the old record at 104
set in 1933. It was 103 in
Springfield, Mo., breaking
the 1986 mark of 98. Wichita
Falls, TeiW, reported lUll tying a rec&lt;J'd set in 1925. ·
The cool temperature• In
the _north-central sections
accompanied generally clear
skies:
,
Heavy thunderstorms lit
Missouri, llild Colorado, with
guilty winds in Missouri and ·
large hail at Colorado
Springs . - Scattutd
thundend!oweril in nor1bem
Idaho made mountalll
streams rise.
(

�,•

j

' --

....

"

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 10.1978

Sup~rters

3.0.The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday July 10, 1978

And by tJJ,e way!

E'T1"A fOIII'-.:rll ,.,..,..~GI'AM
1-tOl.ME:
ri.E.A. : ~, ' f

'

FlwooroRT' Ky. (UPI)
_: Ii wu·jult btl luck. Natty
Bumppo figures, that be
~time
hla b1r GilD at the
amtber lawyer
named John Dean· was
a-ttinl dllbarred.
At the time, the 3f-ye81'4d

meet today

~-BroWIWYOle, Ky ·• a .......,

•

fnlm Nortll'ftllem

....

~= ~. 1.,.,
•~--' I would "et
I now.·
..,.__
"
·-r.
):

llame."

;ciNCINNATI (UPI) nte ~se stepped into the
liiitter's lm, poiDided hla bat
on the plate and turned to San
Francisco Giant catcher
Marc Hill.
·''I don •t· know wby aU our
gllya e&lt;me up here and awing
at · the first pitch," he
muttered, shaking his head
while feigning diaguat.
"' 'I guess Hill figured I'd be
tllklng that first pitch 9o he
hll.d (Ed) Halicki do just whst
l"wanled him to do," said
Rolle. "He gave me a nice fat
~· Those are the ·easiest

..

. Aetuai!Y' Bumppo ltldn't.
A8d Cooper befcn """""'•
the-Mrne.Heplc:kedltup

a&amp;d_,,._ "

.__

Willi' ''N.lml..

had the name u Dean mow _,
.
nt ..,.w---, a lllllrlcal book,.
one
of
Iarmer
Prellde
DETROIT, Mich. (UPI) Nyquist and others credited
Rld1anl NIIIDn's chief aides. 111 the lormel' prelident'a.
WearytuthqJefulsupJ)(rters much of the campaign's
As he bspn hla legal career, po~:~~ rele!'e!D ;,;·
of a :;o pe~n~~t property tax success to Howard Jarvis, the
cutin Mlchigllil say they will .flamboyant co-author of
~.,!~ It r~ a lew me ol Prc!lddint Kennedy'!;
meet loday's filing deadline California's
lax-cutting
''I'd go Into court and aides having 'Natty Bumpjlo~
with · barely
enough Propositlm 13, who stumped
he aaid. "I bldt
announce,
'John Dean I~ the ••
signatures to assur.e the throughout Michigan last
defenae,
•
mllhe
judge
would
neheard
of
Natty Rumppo ,
proposal a pl!lce m the week
promoting
the
iay,
•1
tho\18ht
you
were
In bef~e. Since then, thoUBb, ,
amendment.
November ballol.
jaU,"' Bwnppo said In a I've heard that there'• a
• "This Is one heU of a fight,
The campaign to cut
telephone
Interview. "So I Natty Bumppo rock grD\lP In
and we're sweating it," property taxes in hslf alao
figured
if
1 had to have a . Dayton ml there'• a CblcaiO
Robert :rtsch, a gangly, received an unel~J)e&lt;;ted plug
dupUca,te
name,
I mi8ht as neWIJ)Iperman-who has a dQ(I
rough-talking · Shiawassee : during the weekend from
well
go
back
to James nained Natty BuiJiilpo.
Co11nty poUtlclan
who former: President Gerald R.
FealmoreCoopertogetme."
"You can't ftnd • nanle Ill
spearheaded the campaign, Ford, a Michigan native now
So
John
Dean
became
have
aU on your own 1111)'·
said SUnday. "Alllcansay is, living in Californls.
-Natty
Bwnppo,
a
character
more,"
he llgbed.
·
I think we hsve a damn good
"A national ·groundsweU Is
from
Cooper's
LeaBumppo
went
to
co_
urt
,
chance."
in the making," F&lt;rd said
therstocklng
Tales,
In
llllorlly
after
hla
lllllft'Wge
In
;
Just 24 hours before the 4 Saturday in Denver. "The
1974.
Since
then,
he's
been
1974
to
ma...e
hla
name.
His;
·
p.m. !Wng deadUne, Tisch Proposition 13 vote in
named
Edmonson
County
Wile,
·
Doroth)',
altencl
her,.
· annoWICed his smaU anny of California may be a dramatic
attorney and has 811110U11Cel!, first 11111111! to Natalie.
'
campaign workers . had signal, perhaps a catalyst ."
.
his
candidacy
for
the
state
"It
wu
only
fait,"
Bumppo
,
coUected 296,000 signatures
Ford said that although he
legislature.
said. "'lbere's alwaya com::
- more than the 266,000 would have voted for
"My
whole
life
waa
plalnlngtbatwhen
two people,.
minimum needed to qualify Proposition 13; ·it hsd' some
changing
then,'·'
said
get
married,
the
. woman,
l&lt;r the statewide baUot, but flaws and he hoped Michigan
Blimppo
who
worked
m
change~!
her
name
bat thi
short of · a 1% percent would "draft a better
.
'
newspapers
In
Chicago,
·
111111
doesn't.
We
didn't
think;
"cushion" he had hoped vehicle."
Detroit
and
San
Francisco
that
was
fair,
so
we
both
did~
FIJber has kept hla divers
· would provide a silfficienl
Nyquist said Ford's
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. one heU of a story. We wuf · Fisher then filed • ,suit In
it."
..
remarks "made everybody (UPI) - U.S ..marshals will make the stale account lor federal cow'! to recover the 'WOI'ilq throughout the court
margin of error.
"If we had another two very happy," but he gave take custody of $2.3 million every single .thing," he said. share ~ld by the state. He hearings, but unill' recenUy
,,
"If anything is gme, the said the , court battles, has not been allowed to seU
weeks, there would be no Jarvis the credit for hawking worth of Spanish treasure
sweat, but I'm sweating it the petition drive throughout unW the federal courts decide state will be liable for it and Including several pleas from much of the fl8 million in
- By Mre. Herbert Roasb
spent Tuesday with Mrs._
the stale officials will have to Florida to the 5th u.s. Orcult treasure he hss found.
now." Tisch said.
·· ·the stale.
who actuaUy owns it.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Roush
·Kathryn
Hunt and Mrs. Erma
Court
of
Appeab
in
New
Now
Fisher
baa
a
package
An aide said Tisch planned
"Jarvis gave us the shot in
David Paul · Horan, a explain to the court how it
.':
Orleans, have been . more ol gold and silver lngol8, a of Aurora, Ill. spent Friday Wilson.
to carry the bundles of the arm," NyqUist said. "He lawyer f&lt;r Treasure Salvors happens to be missing."
till
Wednesday
with
his
Cora
Bigler
of
Colwnbuf.
hunting
for
solid
gold
bo's'n's
whistle
and
taxing
than
petitions, coUected from field gave us the push to stand up Inc., said he
Mel Fisher and his · firm,
would
captains during the night, to and charge. He was worth accompany the marshals Treasure Salv~s Inc., of Key treasure on the ocean floor. a rare gold poilon cup he Is mother, Mrs. Mary Roush, spent the weekend with bet;;
A lull hearing on who owns olferlng to aeU for fll mUIIon. and with Mr. and Mrs. sister, Mrs. Edna Parsons
Lansing and file them 1bout 80,000 signatures."
today and help take inventory West, Fla., located the
Still acattered aa-ou the Marsh aU Roush and .family. m1 Mark. On Sunday the)' '
personaUy just before the 4
r
of the treasure - which SIDiken treasure from the the treaaw'e is set for July 'tl
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ours of dined at the Kin Foltl(
bef&lt;re U.S. DlstriC\ Judge bottom under · tons of
p.m. cutoff.
'
includes gold, silver and rare Nuestra Sen&lt;ra de Atocha New
Brighton, Pa., spent a restaurant in Point Pl-m:·
0
0
drifting sand IOIIle ~ miles
He said Tisch may decide
navigational artifacts - as ·it Our Lady of Atochs - In 1974, W.0. Mehrtens In ~weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Bryan. Creameans
of
"This Is what lhe state has olf Key West Is the rtllll of the
to "camp out" at the
aJ.rVIeW
is removed from the vaults of but the stale claimed a share
Roy
Donohew,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Galllpolll
also
joined
them.
secretary of state's office
the Florida Stale Museum. of the treasure that dales been trying to avoid.'' Horan haul from Our La~y of
';·'
said. "In this case, I have . Atocha, which Fisher claims Lewis Ours, Mr. and Mrs. for dinner on StDiday.
H&lt;ran claims to have infor- back to 1622.
until the petitions are
Wiley
Ours
and
attended
the
Mrs.
Florence
Smith
at&lt;;:
certified, "because he doesn't
A later decision by the U.S. never lost a dedslon never could be wortll betwee~~ "fiOO
mation showing the state has
Ours reunion on Saturday. tended the Methodllt Con-•
trust the bureaucrats ."
not been too careful with the Supreme Court ruled the lost a court batUe and never million and fiiOO mUIIon."
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Durst terence at Lakeside, J.ine It
FIJber said he plans to ·
Certification could take
sunken vessel was outside the lost an appeal- and here we
collection.
and
famUy·of Springfield are thru IS.
:;
By
Mri.
Herbert
Roush
several weeks as officials
" There's a good poSSibility terrlt~ial limits Of both the are stiU in ligltatlm after aU search for the lulk of the
spending
a
three
weeks
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
Russell
Mr.
and
Mr•
.
George:
these
years.''
treasure
Jhis
ifummer.
· check the vaUdity of each
of finding some things United Stales and · Florida.
vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Morrl. of Medway lpelll a :
· Roush visited Mrs. Edna missing and that wUI make
petition and signature.
Ralph Durst and famUy.
. lew days with Mr. and MJ:o.·.
Roush
at
Racine
Tuesday.
Tisch said many of the
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush Ralph Ours, Roger and Rick.':
A cookout was held at the
petitions "are loaded with
took Mrs. Don Riffle and
Ralph Ours of New ,
errors" and likely will be home of Mr. and Mrs. Sid
children to their home In Brighton, Pa., called on Mr.;·
tissed out. However, he said Manuel at Long Bottom
Wheelersburg. Mrs. Rlffie and Mrs. ·Herbert Roush·
he has "a · last-minute Sunday. Attending were Mr.
.
and
children had spent two Sunday.
and
Mrs.
Joe
Manuel,
son
emergency plan" if the
Tim,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dan
weeks
with
the
Roushes.
· Mr. and Mrs. Clyde l&gt;un.t,
petitions fall short, and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The lack of same in the death four-year old law was tum It over· the
lull
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gary
Roush
of Tamps, Fla. have pdrl
pledged to "puU every dlimn Talbott and Dave, Mrs. Betty chairman of an Ohio House J)enalty. ·
unconstitutional, freeing 95 coounittee f~ hearings In
and
children
are
moving
le&gt;
McGuire
a.nd
Recka
and
chased the Everette ConnoUy
legai nnariuever out of the
subcommittee assigned to re"Our job is just to correct men and four women from A\1gult and presenl it f&lt;r a
the former Harold Roush residence at Letart Falla and
bag" to get' them approved. friend Steve, Bob, Jeannie write the state's capital . the draft without getting into "death row."
vote of the I\IU House when residence at Letart.
plan to move there aoon.
Kenneth Nyqliisl, a chief and Lynn Anns and Paul punishment law to cmform to a debate on the concept of
.
The
subcommittee
e.pecta
the General Alaembly
Laurence
Balser
of
TupShain.
Carl Wolle Jr. na tat.n by '
Tisch aide, said a frantic
U.S.
Supreme · Court , capital punlahment," aaid to work with the Georgia end ..neon..,.. in September.
Mrs.
Edith
Manuel,
Mrs.
pers
Plains
spent
Monday
emergency
squad to Holler.
weekend of circulating
.guidelines says he hopes Leopard, pointing out that the Florida sta,tutes m capital
Perhapllln the belief that a
Denise
Manuel
visited
with
his
mother,
Mrs.
Alice
Medical
Center
Tueoday ml·
petitions by hundreds of
work will~ined to.just fuU Judiciary Conunlttee and punislunent, both of which majority of Ohloana support
Sunday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Balser.
wu
admitted.
Vllltlng
bini'
volunteers boosted the
that.
the House floor will be have been held constitutional capital punishment for
Lewis
Hudson,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
BiU
Wheeler
there
were
Mrs.
DoUy
Wolfe,
signature total past the
Rep. Paul R. Leonard, D- adequate stages for any
Harry Roush and Edith's Dayton, chairman of .the emotional debate orr the by the nation's highest court . .murder, Rifle Is taking the of Freemon! spent July 4th Mr. and Mrs. Dallu Hill and
2116,000 minimum.
"We are going to go over initiative before anyme beats
He said workers Sunday brother, Mr. and Mrs. otho special seven-member philosophy
of
capital the court decislm and lind him to the pWICh, and ia weekend with his mother, Mrs. Suzanne Wolfe.
Mrs. Anna Wheeler.
gave it one last shot, blitzing Young of Wooster and Gotha Judiciary subcommittee punishment.
out exactly why Ohio's law hoping to deal with the. death
Arthur Wiloon of Marietta
shopping centers, church Repp also of Wooster.
named last week, said he
Subcommittee hearings
Mrs .
Dorothy
Hit· doe&gt;! not want any emotional wiU begin July 18. The court was held a&amp;tconstltutimal,'' penalty matter before
parking lots and other places
said Leonard. "Then we're . electimeering starta lhia faU.
weekend crowds gathered, to tingbottom of Florida is outbursts on lhe morality or ruled a week ago that Ohio's going to go over th'e laws of
Senate President Pro Temscrounge a few extra sig- spending the summer with
Texaa,
Ge&lt;rgia
and
'
F
lorida,
pore
Oliver OCasek; D-Northher children at Mansfield.
natures.
1.
to
find
out
what
makes
them
field,
ia not likely to be in
· Tisch, a Shiawasse County She visited her sister, Mr.
coostitut!onal.
We
will
lllao
nearly
so much of a hurry.
drain commissioner. started and Mrs. Charles Lawson
look
at
lhe
court
decialona
in
For
years
before bec.unlng
the drive AprU 29, but it recently. Mrs. Gary MiUer,
thoee cases to find out the Democratic leader, Ocasek
remained largely unnoticed Amy and Jason, of BeUevue
POMEROY - The Sun- club discuSsed a trip to ratimale of !he justices for perennially introduced'
until the pust month. Tisch, also visited her parents, the beams 4-H.Club met June 29 Colwnbus. The project lesson holding them constitutima!'." legislation to abolish the
lawrence E.lamb,M.D:
Lawsons, recently.
At first glance, said death penalty In Ohio.
at the Sharon Boyles was on 4-H Poultry. Refresh.And
his
Judiciary
residence
with
seven ments were served by !;'at Leonard, it appears the high
using coffee or tea.
~
members and two advisors in Thomas. The next . meeting court felt that Ohio's sectlm Conunlttee chalnnan, . Sen. Start of rosacea'!
Often
the
enlarged
.
,
nose
·
attendance. Dates of judging will be held July II at the on
"mitigating
clr- Marigene Valiquette, D·
and members' projects were Mark Rice residence . ·cumsl.ances" was not broad Toledo, Is not a fan of capital DEAR DR. LAMB - I have problem from the overactive
glands can be stopped or ·
discussed. Members taking Kevin Fick, reporter.
enough.
punishment.
been noticing smaU red veins
Quick Meals made a chef
The Ohio law allowed the
Although aenators will sit in on the side of my nose. Now prevented by taking '
salad ·and other members
The Mixed-up Hoishots 4-H death penalty f9r seven types on the House subconunittee they are starting to appear oo tetracycline. This Is a
made apple crisp, bread Club met June 20 at the Tony of peculiarly aggravating w&lt;rk, It is doubtful they will my chin and cheeks. Please prescriptioo antibiotic and
By KENNETH R. CLARK
sticks, and a drink. The next and Tim Woodyard residence murder, such' as · mass spend \lme m any House- tell me JOhat is causino this it's necessary to take
Uolted PnsaiDteruatloual
.
meeting wiU be held on July 6 with seven members and murder or murder.for hire. It passed leglllatlon this laD. .conditioo and whall can do reasonably large dOleS for a
period of four to sii mooths,
contained
three
· about it.
BLUES BONUS : Late-night pUb-crawlers who went to hear at the Joyc.e' Ritchie three advisors in attendance. also
alter which a person may
Tilt Almaaac
Muddy Walen and his.band pily the blues on Chicago's north . residence. Plans lor the next Project books were handed "mitigating" cmditlons to ·
Recently I visited an uncle take smaUer doses m a cmside got the bonus of tbe season Saturday night. Mlct Jauer meeting are ma.king an out, king and queen a!)' preclude the death penalty,
who I hsd not seen for a few tinual basis. For uneq~lalned ·
and the RoUlng Stones - leaving 90,000 tans screaming for omelet. - . Connie Stout, plications, and the auction for even in especially heinous _ Untied Preu1Dte111111eul years. I was shocked to see
reasons the antibiotic,
more at Soldier Field - dropped in at the Quiet Knight tavern reporter.
Canters Cave Fund Raising crimea.
Today is Monday, July 10
how large his nose hsd
tetracycline,
seems to stop ·
The three were:
lhe 19\st day of 19711 with 114 become and how ~ it waa.
where Waters was playing a tribute to bluesman WUUe Dbioo .
were discussed. Refreshthe
process.
The Tuppers Plains Girls 4- ments were served by Terry
-That lhe victim of the to follow.
Jagger, with Stones guitarists Keith Rlcbard and R• Wood,
He is not a drinking man. I
Of course once the nose has
"Induced
or
The moon II approaching am worried that I may be getjoined In the gig, trading vocals with Waiers while about 700 in H Club met June 29 at the and Kay Woodyard. The next murder
become
very large and enor· ·
its first quarter.
·
the crowd sang along. It wasn't an unusual event. The Stones Rose Carr residence with six meeting wUI be held at the facilitated lt."
ting the same thing. I have
mously
misshapen then '
-That the offender aeted
The morning ' star ·is Started taking vitamins daily
make a habit of surprise appearances after their major members and two advisors in Norma and June Harvey
surgical procedures may be .
coocerta.
·
attendance.
The
club residence. The date is un· . ;'under duress, coercion, or Jupiter.
fOC' the past three months. required
to produce a
The evenlnglltara are Mer- Could this be the cause?
EVEN SPIJT : Never let it be said that V•lerle Harper members discussed the 4-H decided . For the next strong provocatim."
satisfactory
looking nose
picnic
and
all
members
That
·
although
Insanity
cury,
Venus,
Mars
and
doesn •t practice what she preaches. The star of the TV series.
meeting club members wiU
DEAR READER - You again. Tetracycline doesn't "
was
not
established,
the
Saturn.
practiced
modeling
for
the
"Rhoda" -in SeatUe to visit her sister, Leah WIDdward -led
have a wiener ro'ast. may well hsve the beginning
offense was •'chiefly the
Those born m thll date are features of rosacea. One type do much to stop the 111111U
about 1,500 marchers Saturday on behalf of the EQual IW!h!A Style Revue. Sonia Carr gave Richard Brooks, reporter.
demonstration
on
product of the olfender'a under the sign of Cancer.
Amendment. She's in the Jr9cess of divorcing Richard a
of fllll8cea Is asaociated with veins thst hsve already
.
or
American palriter James _the large bulbous 0011e that developed.
Sebaal, her husband ol13 years, but even though she's been the refinished furniture .
The Country Kids 4-H club mental deficiency
You shwld go see a der·
Whistler wu born July 10, you may be describing in
main breadwinner In the marriage, she told the crowd she Refreshments were served met July I at the Rita Maust psychollll."
wm 't go for m&lt;re than hsl! the community property - says by Rose and Sonia Carr. The residence with nine meinbers . ' - r d said the court may 1834.
your uncle. The 111111U dilated malologtst and let him ex· .
Oil this day In hiltOry;that's "the reverse of what I am fighting for with the ERA." next meeting will be held July and three advisors in at- leellhtle eiCape hstchea are
veins thst you're describing amine the apots m your chin
In 1890, Wyoming was over the ROle and chin alone and noee and ten him your '
And where does ERA stand? Says Ms. Harper, It's now a battle 6 at the Cecelia. Murphy tendance. The club Is plan· not broad eno!1gh to lit aU
residence. Members are to ning a trip to Lake Alma on
ca-; lhat the .aection may admitted to the Union as the will not cause the big enlarg- family hlatory. He might wen ·
of "cold cash and hard politics."
1
11IE GROOM SQUAD : The Army calls them "Courtesy bring finished projects to the July 16. Refreshments were hsve to be written to allow 44th stale.
ed lldie but If .there is an want to put you m sonie
judges to consider other
Iri
19:18,
Americ:.n • associated overgrowth and tetracycline whlcb could be .
Patrols," but to Wisconsin Congressman Lei Atpln, they're next meeting. - Angie served by Lynn · and Kay
Smith . The next meeting wiU special circumatancea. lndUitrialllt Howard~ overactivity of the glands in very helpful IOC' you In the '
"groomtroopers" - and they 're not worth s:;o,ooo a year. Collins, reporter.
surroiiiiCIIng the olfender.
and a crew of folll' ...,...
Aspin says the jilltrols prowl aroUnd Fort Polk, La., with
be held July 8 at the Rita
the skin 'over the nose then long run. Meanwhile· avoid
Leonard
said
the
Supreme
llfOini
the
world
In
tl
hourt.
authorization to dcket soldiers caught in such off-base mopery
The Country Chicks 4-H Maust residence. - L)'nn
you •u hsve this cumpllcatioo. the hot foods, spicy foods and
Court
will
ultimately
hs'll!
to
•
as hitchhiking, failure to salule,litterlng, walking with hands Club met June 28 at the Rock Smith, reporter.
At one time these large red coffee and If you like ·your.,
rule on capital puni.ll!ment u
in pockets and helng untidy in uniform. To Aspin, it's a waste_ . Springs church w!th 10
noses were thought to be COC'ktaUs, forget them ..
DEAR DR. LAMB - II the'
s
of the tup,ayers• money and he wanll 11 stopped. Says he, members and two advisors 111
concept
and
not
keep
On June 27 the Five Point
8810Ciated with drlnlilng. Acamount
of caffeine 1n ~ .
Individual states up in Ule air
"Whoever dreamed Ibis up ought to be ticketed for his own , attendance. A,club swlrnlilll1g · B~cks held a meeting at the
tually that's no4 the case. We
dldrintl
hlch?
;
poor per11011al appearance - workl!lg without his head party was planned for July home ol Tommy PuUins. • with their lawa.
really don't tnow what
screwed on."
·
19. C~ttlng out a pattern was There were two advisors and
DEAR
READER
The
. "The &amp;lpreme Court owea
cause8 the COndition anyway
" 111E REAL 1111NG: When .1o1m and Harriet Ortoa pledged dembnstrated by Barbara eight club members in nat•• the American public a final
Sollll1lloyl
and frequenUy the Individual cola 11f0UP CGIIain allout oneu much Cllffelne u a'
'"til death do us part" In their wedding vows , they meant it. .Chappelear. Refreshments tendance. A skating party
who has it dC811'1 dr!IJI&lt; at an fourth
C!1p of ordinary bmred coffee•
decisionII for capital
II there .
riot a place
0111o tl781.1
Orton, 102,and Harriet, 100, celebrated a wedding anniveraary were served by Dll&lt;ie Eblin, was discussed and set lor
just u you said in yow: unpunlabment In Olll' ll}'llem of
..,. 1111.
Sunday in Great Gldding, England. It was their 71th.
Brenda Chappelear, and July 12. Demonstrations were
cle's cue. It Is true, however, and about half u much u an
GLIMPSEs: Batterfly McQaoeu - best remembered f&lt;r lltr Valorie Jeffers. The next given by Tommy lluUlna and
criminal juatice In the ·
oil that anything which ca. . ordinary C!1p of brewed tea."
role as the aqueak)IYolced Uttle girl who didn't know anything meeting w1U be·held July 5 at Danny Leonard on Wood•
F~ more lnfllftlllllilla •
19701?"
said. Virna! G. ~~~~~~~:::
: Rushing of the n01e In thst lelne 1!1 ~~eve...,. I'm 11111-;
,. about "blrthln' babies" In "Gone with the Wind"- debullthe the Rock Springs church working and Bicycles.
HOWle heSpeaker
area of the face .-na to confirst nightclub act of her career next month at New York's when everyone is to bring res~tively . ~baU was
you The 11111111 Letter .
Riffe Jr., D-New BoiKon,
tribute to the problem. Thus ding
number
1-1, Coate, ,..,
Reno Sweeney's ... When ."Amie" opens In Los Angeles Oct. their sewing project. - Kim , played lor recreation and
wants leglalatlm paued by
alcohol will contribute to the
Cola,
c-..
otbn who want
15, !here will be a new girl in the liUe role to chsrm Daddy Eblin. reporter.
tbe
HoUle
in
September,
but
refreahments of Kool·Aid,
development
of
it
If a pe...un thll 111ue can lllld • ctnll'
there
II
no
lndlcatim
the
Warbucks and (Arf! ) Sandy - Plllrl~ill ADD 1'11111 of Altadena,
potato cllipt, peanuts, Cookies
Js going to have it anyny. with a lone ...., 1111 1111•.
The Chester Champa 4-H and sandw[cheg were served
Senate will deal wllll the
Calif.... Gl- Ford ill in New York this week to promote
One of the aspecll of treat- ' ~ .;..... ~ It to"
MCA's "Evening in Byzantium"- a mlni-~~eries based on the Club met June 29 at the by Mrs. Pullins. The next
cootroverlll.. luUe tbll Y-·
ment II to avoJd alcohol, 1111)' 1111 In care of U. ow
IrwiD 8liaw novel ... RudGif Nareyev opens With the Lor,don Jimmy. Thomas residence meeting was set for July II at .. Riffe lui - k dlnc:(ed the
spiL-y
ml hot fooda that caute P.O.IIIII 1I61, Rdo
subcommittee to draft a new
FesUval BaUet July II at New York 's MetropoUtan Opera with six members and one the home of John Riebel. advisor in attendance. The Tommy Pullins. Reporter.
~::...the~
lion, Nn York, NY 10011. ..
death penalty In tb~ month,
Ho\~Ae .. ,

...a....e"*"•·"'

:

SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The ·
National League will be
lacing
the
American
League's hottest hitter after
aU.
.Larry Hisle, lhe Milwaukee
Br.,..ers' ~ugging outfielder
~~:ho is earhing every penny of
his high free agent salary
With 19 home runs, 58 RBI
and .3.03 average while
ll\flding his team into second
place in the Eastern Divlllm,
will join the American
League for Uie 49th All Star
game,
)iisle was selected neither
1\8.a starter by lhe fall!l .nor as
a substitute by New York
'lankee Manager Billy
1\W'tin, but he was named to
tjJ~ squad Sunday by league
wesident Lee MacPhsU alter
Y..kee third baseman Graig
Nettles puUed out with an

Apple Grove News Notes

F
News Notes

Work ·should be on one

--tbl

-Meigs 4·- H Club News

HEALTH

peopletalk

there~

l~~;~~~ ~~

cal'':

..

'

au::

...

\l

,

&lt;it C:.•
•

to biDit."

The Clnclmati Reds went
And lhe bunt Rose dropped m to sc~e live more runa"In
down the thlnt bue line ·wu the aeventh inning that added
perhct u · he wound !1P with !1P to an &amp;-2 victory In the
me of his three hill Of the finale of !he four118111e set
game Sunday to touch off a and left them thrse gamea out
fthree-nut lllxtb Inning rally of lint in lhe National League
ll,hat wiped out a U lekd the West at the All-8tar game
Giants hsd taken... In the ll'eak.
.·
fourth.
Rose's three singles I~ the
" I went to the plate with the day extended his hitting
idea Of bunting," said Rose. ~k to 25 game~, tying the
"When you beat one out like · lmgest of his 18 year eareer
that It turna on lhe fans. And · with the Reda, And boosted
when the fans get turned m his batting average to .303.
so t1o the g\lYS on the team."
"Yeah, it's nice to go Into

the AII-Siaf game hitting over ·
said Ro., "'but lt's
nicer to win. That's what I
think about - winning the
dlvillon tiUe, the IJOiliW!It and
the world chsmplonJblP.
Ro~e's current hitting
streak leavee him 1% shy of
the Natlmlll League record
held by one-time Boaton
Brave ouifielder Tommy
Holmel.
"I'm not really thinking
about Holmes• record," said
Rose. "There's a lot of luck
connected with hitting. Take
today. The best baU I"hit was

.a:·

Hisle joins AL st~s

Marshals take custody

•Issue

Twins make it
eight in row

Rose gets 3 hits in 8;.2 vi.c tory

hillalnw1~~I·

before a-llinC

.

injured toe.
Hisle is coming off lhe p10S1
'prod~ctive week of th~
season, hitting two home runa
in two coruiecutlve games as
Mil waukee swept three
straight games from the
Yankees. Two of Hisle's
home runs came pi! Rm
Guidry, helping the Brewers
send the Yankees' star lefthsnder to hilllrst 1088 of tbe
aeaaon alter 13 victories.
Besides Nettles, two. other
prominent
American
Leaguers hsve pulled out of
the game. Carl Yastnemslti,
enjoying a marvelous saaon
for the Eastern Division
leading Red Sox, •nd .
Thurman Munson, whose
back problems are one
reason why the Yalilrees are
II \lo games out of the lead,
wUI both be on the sidelines.

Johnny Bench, the Nitimal Bench.
"There are just so many
League's perennial All Star,
was selected as a stsrter but guys from our team who &lt;;an
will pass up the game be picked," said Evans,
because of problems with bls referring to hlllate selectlm.
hsck.
· "I'm a prlv~ type ol guy.
But for the American The respect my teanunates
·League, which has lost 14 of and other pia rs around the
the last 15 games and six in a league meana more to me
row, a hot hitter is almost a . than fan attention."
Vida Blue of San Francisco
necessity. And 8fler the way
Hisle manhandled · the or Tom Seaver of ClnCllnnat\
Yank- In their weekend and either Jim Palmer of
series with Milwaukee, there · Baltimore or Frank Tanana
was reaUy mly one choice lor• of Calif~rnla are the likely
the squad.
starting pitchers.
"It's always pleasing to
In keeping with All.Star
make an AII.Star team,'' he tradition, neither manager Is
said.."Last year was my first expected to name his starter
and deep down I hoped that I until today, but NL skipper
could tepeat. I found out late TOOl Laaorila o( Los Angeles
last night and no• one was has indicated he would
mcire surprised tluin I was." probably eh9ose between
Hisle joins fellow Brewers Blue and Seaver because
Don Money and Lary each last pitched Friday and
,.,
Sorensen - and he is thrilled would hsve had three days
rest.
about II.
· · "If you look around the · Blue would seem to be the
league, tbere are three or IQ(Iical choice since he Is an
lour players who are even ex-American League Ali-star
· more worthy thsn I am," he and has had plenty of
said. "But I worked hsrd in experience pitching against
the winter and this makes It the current crop of AL stars.
an worthwhile."
If Blue Ia selected, he would
Dwi gh I
E v a n s , become lhe first pitcher in
Yastrzemski's teammate basebaU blstory·ever to start
whom many felt should hsve an AII.Star game for each
been picked for the original league. Blue, f&lt;rmel'ly of the
25-rnan squad, will replace Oakland A's, was the starter.
Yaz, and DarreU P&lt;rter, the and· the winner f&lt;r the AL in
NEW YORK (UPI) -Tony Conigliaro Is going to give it Kansas City Royals' catcher, 1971 - the last time the AL
will fiU in lor Munson. Blff beat the NL - and started
another try.
·He wants to make another eomeback,No. 31or bini, and asks Pocoroba of the Atlanta · again in 1975.
Braves is the replacement for
you to give him me good reason why he can 'I do it.
If Muhammad Ali thinks he can become the llrsl man in
boxing hiatory to win the world heavyweight title llree times,
tany Conigliaro lhlnb be' has an even better chance of
, beroning the first man In buebaU tUtory to win a designated
l)ltter's job with scme American League club on his third
c;rack.
, Why not? He's three years yotmger than All. And he's in
Malor L119UI Standlftll
Amtrlcen LIIIUt
beller pbyllcalshape. Ali you have to do is look at him.
·
By United Preu lnttrnltional
NatiOMI LIIIUI
• W. L. Pet. GB
This ian 't one of thoae impulaive decillons on hla part,
International
Boston
57 26 .687
something thst suddenly popped Into bls mind willie he wu av United Pren
E11t
Mllwauke
4 JS :-578 9
lying in bed one night or sitting In a barber's chair having his
w. L· Pel. Iii New Vork
46 38 .5... 111/:r
Ph ita
41 34 .510
&lt;5 ;w .529 13
Balt imre
'hair sty I~.
Chicago
43 ,39 . S2A 41J,
Detroit
42 42 · .500 151fa
·The former Ilollton outfielder bas given the matter a lot rl Pittsbrgh
Clev&amp;lnd
39 "' . ~59 19
40
...
·"'"
1
41
&lt;IS
.477
8lh
Toronto
32 SJ .374 26
thought and Is thoroughly confident he can help some club with Montreal
New Vork
36 so .419 1Jih
West
his bat. He's sure he can.
St . l-ouis .
3~ 53 .391 16
W. L. Pel. GB
We1t
Calif
44 ..a .535
"Everytlme I see Carl Yaatnemald hit a hclme run,
W. L. Pet. GB Ken Citv
.u
..a .52A 1
everytime I see Rm Fairly &lt;r WUile McCovey get a big base . San Fran
S2 34 .605
Ttxn
.f2 41 ',506
2'12
SO 36 .Sil
2
hit, I say to myself, 'Hey, ConiCIIaro, you Cln lltlll do the same LOS Ang
Oak.tend
&lt;43 4-4 . ~94 J 't2
Cinclnetl
49 37 .570 3
Mlnesota
39 .t2 .All Alh
thing. Youmayhsvelour more good years left," says Tony C. San
Diego
~2 &lt;5 .43 10'1•
Chicago
38 46 .A52 7
37 A7 ,U() 14.
Yaz will be 39 next month; Fairly and McCovey botb are 40. AtlantB
Seattle
30 se .JA1 17
36 ·•• .439 14
S.lurda~·, Results
Conigliaro Is younger than all of them at 33. He generaUy Houstonhturday•s
R11ults
Toronto 3, Chicago 0
phiyed at 190wllh the RedSOJ:. Rlghtnow,h~ weighlll7 and he
New York 7, Chicago 0
Minnesota 9, Oakl.and 8. 11
Philadelphia 6, Montreal 3, lnnlnljJI
~t only looks fit, but Is fit becauae he w&lt;rkt at lt.
Ill
Boston 12, Cleveland S, l~t
For the put two years and .10 monlha, Conigliaro has been a
Monlrtal I, Phllodolphlo 1,
Boston J, Clevetand 2, 2nd
CalifOrn ia 10, Seattle 5, 1st
sportacaster as weU as a partner with his younger brother, 2ndLos Angeles 7, Houston l, 1st
CalifOrnia s, Seattle 0, 2nd
BIUy, in a banquet wedding ~cility and golf course in N!I'Junl,
Los Angtles 7, Houston 5, 2nct
Mllwluk"·6, New York 5

Today's

.Sport Parade

I

....

Mass.

.

. !fe's now working lor KGO-TV in San Francisco, owned and
Ol!'l'ated by ABC, and It has been three years since he last
w&lt;re a Red Sox unlfonn.
.
Today, he's going to wear one again.
.
·
He'D be at Fenway Park "ln Boston where a TV crew will be
recreating the near ll:agedy which forced Conigliaro out of
basebaU f&lt;r more than a year m Aug. II, 11187. That was the
day he n8arly lost hla left eye after being hit by a pitch thrown
by Jack Hamilton, and the eplaode is part rl a new TV series
caUed "Comeback" that allo will focua on the caJ'Mrl ci Frank
Sinatra and Freddie Fender, the noted country ftllle!TI singer,
among others.
'. When you talk to Tmy Conigliaro about the "coincidence" of
his own planned comeback and the UUe ci the new TV series
he •a doing, and ralae the question the whole thing may be
nothing morethsna publicity stunt to plug the llhow, he doesn't
.
over-ceact one 'bil.
.."All I can say II at this DIIIIJI8IIt, In all 18riouaaeu, I'm
contemplating a lblrd C(llllebacll In bueball," be saYt.
"People can~ whst they like, bat'I know the feeling l hsve
in my heart.
.
"Ina doing some Interviews in COIIIIIICtion with my job at
the Meta'·Oid 'nmers' Day celebration Saturday ml I talked
with WUile Mays, Don Larsen, Pete RuoneJa ml Rm Hunt
811101111 othera. Most of them were playlna that a.matnc 1111!11
they have for fun and a chance to be recognized u atbletes
agaiD. But when I walked out on tbe field, my lnlnd wu telllnc
me, 'Tony, get bact In baseball .again, that '• where you

belonl-'"

'

'

'

,Coni&amp;Jiaro wu voted Ccmobacll Player of tbe Y- In 11118
lo!lowtltcl IU return from his fftl injury and - year later he

had JU beat ..... evtr with the Red Soli driving In 118 runs
and hiUini 38 htmers.
.Aif4r moving to the Ancela and being rdeaaed by them, he
wu out of bueba11 tbree-end+balf ywa and then tried
No. 2wlththe Red Sox in 1m.
·
Ht llld a IP'Nt IJII'inlthat year, hitlq .310 In Flcrlda, but
. pulled a halllllrlntl and tore a ....... PPil"h' In ..., and
511biiqueltl)' wu ........ .
.
"I flat out beat Jim RICe for tbe dellpated hltter'a In the
~ of1r75.'' he saya, "I wu b1mmeriJ111 tbe ,ballbaU and
he...UO't. There ,_•t lllflblnl lllllNf9 It tban that. But I
tried to beat out I bwit on a cold, damp day in New York in
May wben f t lihouhkl't haft- Ji1111d. [ ripped mpelf \1P
and tliat W.. tbaL
·•
. ' ·
"I'Gr 111Jont who doubta I'm .._.. ..._ I 11J I wmJt to
CGiilll IJ.,:k ap1n now, I can say I -llllred tbe IIGnn. Not
aoca, lilt twke. I think l C8ii do It qlin t. n• I haft the
~lllralabillty plus the capacll)' to plllb lllf bolb' 10111rd lblt l
can mallilllli for the lillll't tban two ytiDII've beala~. My
v111C1D II u good u It - In 1t'IO. lht ftll' l had 111J IIIII
- · AlidanYQIII can • for ta.lf wbat kind of lllwpe I'm.

"'*1•bldl

ln.''

I

san Francisco A, Clnclnnetl 2
St . Louis 4, P ittsburgh 0
Atlanta 6, San OltQO 4, 1st
San Diego 7, Atlanta 0, 2nd
SunciiY'I Rftults
Philadelphia a, Montre11 7
Chicaoo •· New York 1
Plttlburgh 6, Sf . LOUIS 1
.Atlanta s, Sen Dltvo 2
Clnclnnetl I. Sen Francisco 2
Houston s, Los Angeles 1

MorHiay'l

01m11

(No games IChfdultd)

TutSCIIY'I Glmts

(NO glmH schedUIICI)
(N .L. vs . A .L. . Ati ·Star Game

ot Son Diego)

Molor LtltUt Lltdtrl
By Unl lei Prtll lnltrutionll

··"'"'

( lllod on 210 II His)
Nltkmll LHGUI

(i, A&amp;. H.

Burrogl'ls Atl
Parker Pit

Madlock SF
Simmons St .L
Clork SF
Valentin• Mtl
Puhl Hou
Griffey Cln
ROM Cin

Pet.

7t 259 U .32•
71 212 19 .316

61 226 11 .31~
14 296 f2 .311
13 314 97 .309
12 309 95 .307

75 310 95 .306
86 311106 .305
15 360 109 .303

Kanus City 11, Baltimore l

Detroit 5.

Texas 1
Sund.ay' s Results
Cl,veland 7, Boston 1
ChiC:Igo S, TorQntO 3

Milwaukee 8, New York A
Kansas City 10, Baltimore A
Seattle \1, C1llfornla 1
Mlnnesot• 7, Oakland 0
Tens A, Detroit J, 13 Innings
Monelly's Gamts
(No QlmH SChldulecJI
TutldiY'I G•mes
·(No gamn achlduled)
(A .L. VI. N.l.. . All -Star Game
at S•n Diego)

an out. That was the drive to
deep left center in the first
Inning that (Jim) Dwyer
hsuied down.
",And remember When I
was In a slump earlier Ibis
&amp;eaiKil

and went Mor-56,'' he

continued. "I think I mly
struck out once during that
stretch so I must have been
swinging the bat pretty
good."
'
Halicki, who blanked the
Reds in San Francisco the
· last time he faced them, tiad
a ~. onH!it shutout going
when Rose led off the sixth·
with his bunt single. Keil
Griffey, alter singling Rose to
third, stole second. And, with
Joe Morgan at the plate,
Halicki balked home Rose
with the first run of the
Inning.
After the 6-7 Giant righthander walked Morgan and
George Foster to load the
bases, he was replaced by
lefthsnder John Curtis, who
was greeted by Danny
Driessen's twC&gt;&lt;'UJI single and
the Reds led, 3-2.
The Reds sent 10 batters to
the plate in the. seventh as
they added five runs to wrap
!1P the victory.
.
"A lousy bunt turned the
Inning into a dream," said a
grinning Vic Correll, the

Reds' catcher.

After Davey Concepcion
led off the Inning with a
single, C&lt;rrell, attempting to
sacrifice. popped a bunt into
the air. Giants• third
baseman Darrell Evans
could have caught the baU on
the fly but didn't.
"Evans had a good idea in
mind," said Rose, Slniling,
"but he forgot the crazy spins
hslls can take when they land
on this Astro-Turf."
And- when the baU did
bounce crazily, Evans wound
up with an error, Concepcion
on secmd and CorreU on first .
Wiping lhe faster flllllling
Concepcion off base and
maybe even winding up with
a double play is what Evans
had visualized . A walk to
cesar Geronimo' loaped the
hsses and Rose followed with
a sacrifice fly that sent home
the first run of the inning.
A walk · to Griffey,
Morgan's bases-loaded
single, Fosler's sacrifice fly,
an intentional walk to
Driessen and pitcher Dave
Tomlin's single off Evan's
glove accounted for the
remainder of the damage
before Concepcion, batting
lor the second time in the
Inning lined out to end the
inning.

Summer league results
IIi recent Pony League
action, Racine won two
games.
The first victory came at
the expense of the host
Rutland team. 13-7. Dale
Teaford got credit for the
win, as he and Kent Wolfe
teamed for seven strikeouts
and four walks. Rutland out
hit the victors, 12-9.
Kent Wolle led the winners
with a home run and single
while Terry McNickles had a '
triple ·and sklgle. Paul
Cardone had two singles
while Bryan Wolfe, Teaford,
and Zane Beegle each had a
single.
·Leroy Brooks got the loss
as he and John VanMeter
fanned seven and walked
nine. Todd Snowden socked a
triple and two singles and
Mike Edwards had a double.
John VanMeter and Mike
WIIUord each had two singles
and Edwards, John Jacobs,
Rick Williamson and Marty
Spangler each had a single.
The other Racine victory
was a 5-I win over visiting
Syracuse as Kent Wolfe
tossed a three hitter. He
fanned eight and walked four.
He allo led the hitting with
two doubles. McNlckles had a
double as did Robin Fortune,
and Paul Cardone hsd two
singles.
Dave Nance took the loss,
fanning eleven and walking
just live. The hurler had two
singles while John WUliams
had the other hit, also a
single.
In other Pony League
action, league leaders MasOn
and Middleport, hsnged it out
wjth host Middleport in·
meting the . first loss on
Mason, 7~. in a real thr!Uer.
Mason is now 7-1 while the

winners went to 7-2.
J~ff Wayland got the win
with relief held from Britt
Dodson . They fanned six and
walked just three while
tossing a five-hitter.
Steve Fife led all hitters
with \hree singles while
Dodson had two singles lor
Middleport alSo. Mike Miller,
Chris Judge and Bill Powell
each had a single.
Shawn Fields took the loss,
fallning 10 and walking no one
in a fine performance, but he
gave up eight hits.
Rick McKirgain had the
only extra base hit in the
game, a double. other hitters
for the losers were Grant
Hysell with two singles and
David Burton and Todd
Kitchen a single each.
The Pomeroy A's came

from behind for a 16-14 win in
a slugfest over the visiting
Pomeroy Royals.
Roger Kovalchik got the
win in relief of Jerry Fields
as they fanned eighteetn and
walked seven. Fields. socked
a homer and triple and
Kovlachik slammed a triple
and daouble to lead the hit·
ters. Mark Friends had I wo
singles and Frank Martin

one.

By MIKE TUlLY
UPI Sports Writer
Dave Goltz nearly put a
neat ·cap on the firSt hall of
the major-league ·baseball
season.
"Sure I knew about the nohitler," the Minnesota Twins'
right-hander said after
flirting with one Sunday. " I
was more concerned with
pitching a good game."
Goltz carried t he bid into
the eighth inning, gave !1P a
one-out single to Mike
Edwards and settled for a
thretH1itter in a 7-0 conquest
of the Oakland A's. It was the
Twins' eighth straight victory
and the eighth of the season
for Goltz, which is not bad
considering he only won his
first game of the year May 16.
"I'm a slow starter," he
said. "! don 't know why. If I
did , I'd be a 30-game
winner .''
In 1977 Goltz dido 'I win

until May 8 and still won 20•
This year the same pattern is
emerging.
In other games Sunday the
New Yoek Yankees may bave
said goodbye to the East title .
by 'losing lhe last of three
straight games to the surprising Milwaukee Brewers.
" In order for things to
change around here, you
have to have a happy
atmosphere," said New
York's Lou Piniella after the
Yankees lost 8·1. "There are
people who don't want to play
here. Send them elsewhere
and get people who do want to
play here. I'm not singling
anybody
ou t.
That's
everybody.
Robin Yount stroked a tworun double, helping the
Brewers continue their
mastery over the Yankees.
The victory left Milwaukee in
second place, nine games
behind first-place Boston and
2'h games In front of New
York. ·
In other games, Seattle
topped California 11-7,
Kansas City 'thrashed
Baltimore 10-4, Cleveland
dumped Bpston 7-1, Chicago
tripped Toronto 5-3, and
Texas defeated Detroit t-3 in
13 innings.
Mariners 11, Angels 7
Torn Pacoriek drove in two
runs and scored two others
while running his hitting
streak to 10 games. Dan
Meyer, BIU Plummer and
Leon 'Roberts also had two
RBI apiece . 'Nolan Ryan,
making his ~cond start since
coming off the disabled list,'
fell to 3-11. ReUever Enrique
Homo, 6-2, . was the winner.

Royals 10, Orioles 4
Darrell Porter's UJree-run

Brian Swann, Rick Smith, homer highlighted a sevenBrian .Whaley and Steve run third inning . Dennis
Ohlinger shared the mound Leonard allowed seven hits in
chores for the Roya.ls with upping his record to 9-11 with
Smith taking the loss. They his lOth complete game. Doug
fanned eleven and walked DeCinces hit a twC&gt;&lt;'UJI homer
twenty-two for the decisive for the Orioles, who dropped
their fourth stra~gnt game
factor.
Steve Ohlinger had two and lost for the ninth straight
doubles and John Smith one,
and Randy Murray and Tony
Jewell each had two singles
for the Royals' hitting. The
A's are now 5-3 while the
losers dropped to 1.0.
Royals
270 302 0--14 7
A's
151 720 x- 16 8

time in Kansas City. Mike
Flanagan, 12-6, took lhe loss.
Indlaaa 7, Red Sox 1
Buddy BeU, who waa ().for-6
in bases-loaded situtations
this sea110n. belted his fourth
major-league grand alam. -.
Boston shortstop Rick
Burleson left the game in the
first after brUising an ankle
but was not expected to be
idle lor the All Star 'game.
White Sox 5, Blue Jays 3
Bob Molinaro's two-run
single highUghted a four-1'1111
seventh. Sieve Stone, 7-', was
the winner and JimWilloughby picked up his lith
save. Tom Underwood, 5-8,
was the loser.

Mike Swiger
.m·7153
149 5. Third 51.
MiddlliP.rt, o-:-

"Sec me fot Car, bolie.
life, health aDd busiJess ·
'""

i~

.....

A

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.•

Prevention is the.'
best policy••••
fOR ~CURBING

CRIME
LOSSES
You can help cut down on
crime losses ... losses that
directly . affect
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wheth.er they happen to you

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Take the crime of arson .
YoU ' re
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through your Insurance

premiums.
Insurance

costs

are

adversely aflecled by
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providing stiffer penalties

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Our

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DALE C. WARNER
INS.
99HI43

102 W. Main

Pomeroy

Cust001 full
hi ooe"'" too dags

Ou r'" sta ff of dentists 3nd
techni cians will make your
custom dentures quiCkly and
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One or two day fu ll

Pllcftlnt

VlctoriH

Httlonal LlltUI: Blue, SF 12. ; Grimsley, Mtl
ROQers,
Mtl 11-7; Zachrv . NY 10-oi ;
Knepper, SF 10.5; JOhn , LA 106.
American L..tut: . Guidry,
NY 13-l; Flanagen. Efalt 12-6;
Tan1na. Cal l2-5; Torrez. 8os
11 -4: Sorensen, Mil 11·5 .

.Dr: Ronald ERiviere

n.,;

•Dr. A.J . Staehli•Dr. C.W . Beai•Dr. G.J . Stombaugh

•Dr. W.O. Kimbaii•Dr. J .C. Murphy•Dr.). Ochman

••rnH Run Avtrat•
t a.1111 en 11 inn1n11 pltchtdJ
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~

949 E. Livinpt on Ave. Co lumbus'

....

2.13: Rouachel. Chi 2.27:
Vuckovlch, St.L 2...0 ; Btue, SF
Foster Clo
15 33~ 101 .301 2.42;
lhrr, SF 2.52.
Americen
.
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.
(i. A • H. Pel.

L••a••

Carew .Min

Lynn Boa
Cubbaile Min
Rico Bos
ll&lt;tll KC
L.ezceno Mil
Wlllllktr Dot
Sundberg Ttx
Jackson Cel
Plnltila NY

76 2U ".:wt

75 271 92 .331
65 201 66 .321
13 3~7 112 .323
69 276 H .319
11 232 7• .319
71 2&lt;0 16 .317
71 270 ...311

61 2JI 74 .311

60 213 66 .310

Home lltu'ns
N•tlonal L•••ut: . Luzlnskl,

·Phil

21:

Foster. 'Cin 11:
Kingman, Ct'li and Wlnfltld, ·SD

16; Clark, SF 15.
AriMI'klln LNIUI: Rlct, lol
23 : lleylor, Col 21: Thompoon,
Del end Hisle, Mil It; Murre~,
Belt, AltKinder, Cliv 1ncl

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

Thomas. Mil 17.

- .....

1•: s1_,., Ott .. , ThO!npoon.
"Isle, Mil 5I: ... ylor,
ca1 53: -r•v,.
ond
Yo~rzomskl, loo ol.
,
Nol-l

"'I'

LHIHI . Moreno,

Pill 3t: · Rlcllora. ' ID
l.apn, LA 2$: c-... Hou
Tovoroa. pitt 12.

H:
13:

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2. 16;

Palmer , Bait 2.2-t; Goltz . Mlnn
US: Motlock, Tu 2 . ~9.

ltrltleouts
LIIIUI: · Richerd,
Hou 157; Nltkro, · Atl 122 ;
·Seaver , Cln !10 ; Montefusco,
SF lO.J llue, SF 100.
Amtrlun LtiiUt : . Guidry,

National

NY

121;

"J

Ryon,

Cil

119:

Jltentgan, lilt 101; Leonard,

KC

WIICOlC ,

Det 78.

··-,

• ..,.., TrenHctlons
ly Unltetl ,,.... lnternatlonel

..........11
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•
vttlt"an
Cllftler Kim HUQhM and rooklt
ctnttr J_.f Crompton to ont·

yeer contrettl .

' Nlt....l LH... z Foster, Cln
63; Wlnfltld, SD 62; Cllrk, SF
61; Garvtv, LA ff; Cty, L• St.
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NY

NEWPORT, RJ. (UPI) FGI'JIIII' Wimbledon winner
Al1lllr Albe Ia the lllp aeed in
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lleedtd .U,tctly behind
Asbt It deftndq champlan
Tim Gullllllon of Daytm,
Ohio. Snlltd tbll'll II Hank
Pflstlr, allo • linalllt In ...

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�4- The Dai!Y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 10. 1978

._The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 10,1978

'

Meigs earns split with 24-3 ·romp ·
By Greg BaDey
The Meigs American
Legion team pounded out a
total of 'EI hits in a double
header at Syracuse Sundav
afternoon while limiting
visiting Glouster to only eight
safeties, but the best the
Meigs County crew could do
was salvage a split, losing the
first ·game +-2 then romping
to a 24-3 rout in the nightcap~
In the first game, Meigs
outhit Glouster !H, but a
three-run third inning was all
Glouster needed. Glouster
picked up one run in the first
on a walk, stolen base, and a
single by Holbert, Then in the
third, Meigs committed aU
three of their errors to rost
them the game. Penrod
reached on an error, followed
by two walks to ioad the
bases. Two wild ·pitches
allowed two runs to cross the
plate as the Meigs pitcher
dropped the ball on the attempted putouts at the plate.
Holbert then Singled for the .
final run . Reliever John
Sayre blanked the winners on
two hits the rest olthe way.
Glouster played errorless
ball.
Meigs got two runs in the
fifth, both crossing the plate
on the same play. Tinl Hood
cracked a double and Kelly
Wineb~enner sil)gled him
home. A throw at second to
get Winebrenner went into
centerfield with Winebrenner

Linesco~

Malar LeiiUI l11u1ta

By U"l ed lllrHt l•r•atlonal
NatleNI LUtue

' .
commg
all the way in to

Winebrenner, Young, Greg
score.
Becker, Cliff Kennedy, Mark
Ken Kovach got the win, Forbes and Hood.
fanning five and walking two.
Hood led the hitting ~th
Tom Owens was tagged with three singles and a double
the loss, walking five and while Young, Kennedy,
fanning three.
Owens and Forbes each had
Winebrenner led the Meigs two singles. Other hitters not
hitting with a double and two mentioned were Sayre,
singles, while Hood had a Chuck Kennedy and Roger
double and single and Mike Carson.
Wayland two singles. Roger
Ebersbach got the win on a
Carson and Sayre eac)t had
one hit.·
Glouster
103 OO&lt;f ~ 4 0
Meigs
000 020 11-2 9 3
. Kovach and Jordan .
By MARK Fl\IEDMAN
Owens (LP), Fogelstrom UPI Sports Writer
(3) , Sayre ·(3) and D. KenA. mediocre record all(j, a
nedy .
nonsupportive team can 't
In the second game, hide the· fact that James
Glouster committed 10 Rodney Richard is ooe gf the
errors, but Meigs exploded finest pitchers in the majors.
for 18 bas.e hits for that lopAmountain of a man with a
sided· 24-3 win. In recent dilly qf a fastball, the Moot .a
games Meigs has hit well but Richard picked up his eighth
seldom in the clutch victory in 17 decisions Sunday
situations. They broke the ice when he fired a four-hitter
in this-game.
and struck out )2 in pitching
Meigs scored five runs in the Houston Astros to a !;.!
the first, seven in the second, victory over the Los Angeles
one in the fourth , eight in the Dodgers.
fifth , and three in the sixth . "Most of the strikeouts
while committing just one came on my fastball," said
error.
Richard, who has now fanned
Meigs gat all they needed in 157 men to easily lead both
the first inning on three -4leagues. "My rhythm has
errors, two walks, and singles heen better in my last two
by Kenny Young and winning starts and my changeup is
pitcher TJm Ehersbach. They much better than it's been."
put the game out of reach
The triumph snapped a ,
with those seven in the second fourgame losing streak for
on three walks and singles by the Astros and ended a four-

Mil
210 000 o.o- 7 14 1
loW' hitter ws,he famed seven Philo
0:10 003 002- 1 14 o
and walked eight to raise his
Schotzodar,J'IrUe (3), Bahns•1 J rda
. en (5), Garm'\n (6), Knowln
record t o .- · o . n was 111 and Cal'lar ; carlton. Easttagged with the lo8B. Meigs wick (II, McGraw (91 and
,_ I B I
w-..1.--..1- McCarver , Boone (I). wt rave..
o e pre .,..,_..,y McGraw (1-31. L-Knowles (2for a ~le JIIIOJe,
2). HRs- Montreal, carter 2
Glous,
Oll 010 11- 3 4 10 llD I. Cnh 121, VOII!fltlno . I w,
MelgJ
570.183 x-24 18 I ~=~n':r"2
Philodoll)llla,
Jordan (LP), Daugherty
Dgc
'100
0101100- 2 • o
( 2), Brown (5), Spalding (6), .San
Atla
200 020 Olx- 59 1
Penrod (6) and Brooker.
Shlrl•y· O'Acquisto Iii, Fin·
Ebersbach and Forbes.
gen (1 and Tenace; . Hanna,

&lt;W''

Richard stops LA nine, 5-l

\. .

~

game winning streak for the
Dodgers, The complete game
was Richard's ninth in 19
starts and resulted in his
third straight victory over
Los Angeles this year.
Doo Suttoo, ~7. in quest of
his 200th major-league
victory, gave up seven hits
and five runs in six innings
before departing.
In other Natiooal League .
games, it was Philadelphia 8,
Mootreal 7; Chicago 4, New
York I; Pittsburgh 6, St.
Louis I; Atlanta 5, San Diego
2, and Cincimati 8, San
Francisco 2,
In the American League, lt
was CleVeland 7, Boston 1;
Chicago 5, Toronto 3; Milwaukee a, New York f;
Kansas City 10, Baltimore f ;
Minnesota 7, Oakland 0;
'Seattle 11, California 7, and
Texas edged Detroit 4-3 in 13
inninga,
Phlllles I, Expos 7
Richie Hebner hit a pair of
two-run h&lt;mers and singled
in the winning nin in the
bottom of the ninth to give
Tug McGraw, &amp;-;!, the win.
Darold Knowles, 2-2, took the
loss. ·
Cubs 4, Meta 1
Mike Krukow and Bruce
Sutter combined on a sevenhitter and Bobby Murcer
bel ted a two-run homer.

Krukow, 3-0, scattered four
hits unW the seventh when
Sutter relieved 'l!'ith two oo
I!Jid one out.
Plntea I, Cardblals 1
Willie Stargell and Ed Ott
ignited a slx.run II!Venth
inning wlth back-to-ba'ck
singles and PittSburgh
capitalized on errors by
Garry Templeton and.George
Hendrick. Bert Blyleven, 9-5,
went six innings for · the
victory;
·
Brave• 5, Plldrel 2
Jeff Burroughs drilled a
tworun homer 10d drove in
three rult8 to pace Atlailta,
Preston Hanna, with ·rare
relief help from Phil Niekro,
uppe4 hill record to 7-6,

DEADLINE niESDAY
A remlader wu luaed
today lhilt Tuesday Is the
flaal day lor teama to eater
the replace!lleDt toaraey
for the 1-er Kyger Creek
Little Leape TOIII'IIII!IIeDt
wblcb wW be played at
Sync- Mlllllelpal Park
begllmllla July 14.
laterdted mua1ers
should caD lft.%8fl or 1ft.
5381. All partlclpallag
leama are asked to hlnalsb
two game biiU..

Atlanta catcher
SAVE &amp; SHAVE
SPECIALS

!I

A Pu h llc Se rv1ce o f Ttus Ncwsp~ per &amp;. T he

replaces Bench
SAN DIEG() (UP!)
Atlanta
catcher
Biff
Pocoroba wW play instead of
Johnny Bench II! the National
League All-star squad
Tuesday.
.
The Cincinnati Red star's
request to be removed from
the team wu granted Sunday
by NL President Chub
Feeney.
The ~yearo&lt;Jid Bench baa
seen limited action over the
last six weeks because of a
back injury. He had been
elected to the starting team in
the voting by fans.
The Natiooal League has
two other catchers on the
squad frr Tuesday's game,
Ted Simmoos o( St. Louis and
Bob Boone of ·Philadelphia.
Feeney said a replacement
wW be announced as soon as
pqssilile.

Council

International League

· United Prtulnttrnetlonal

ATTENTION

Charleston
R ichmond

W L Pet. GB
SA 31 . 635
AS 35 .563 61!2

Pawtucket

0

Tidewater
Columbus

41 42 .494 12
36 42 462 U1t2

Toledo · ·

38 .531

9

39 38 .506 1I

Rochester
36 .u .450 15 1h
Syracuse
30 54 351 23 112
S.turday•s Results

OHIO POWER COMPANY CUSTOMERS

Richmond 3 Charleston 1

Columbus 2 Tidewater 1

. Toledo 12 Roch,ster 8

On Monday, July 10, Ohio Power Company will reopen their
..· office at 110 Mulberry Street in Pomeroy.

AU payments of electric bills and requests for service will be
made~

Nlllero 161, l!lrber 191 ond
Pocoro.ba. W-4janno 17-51 . L-

Pawtucket 7 Syracuse 3
Sunday's Results
Richmond 6 Charleston 2
T idewater 11 ColumbuS I
Toledo i Roche-ster 7
PawtUcket 7 Syracuse 3
Monday's Gamn
Richmond at Charleston
Tidewater at Columbus
Toledo at Rqchester
Pawtucket at SyracuSe
Tuesday's Games

No

ge~heduled

Property
10 1
0
Moffitt
annotinced Transfers
and

Shlrler (5-10). HRa-Atlente,
Burroughs ( 10) .

Sin Fran
000 2IJO D00- Z
'Cine I
000 003 50!&lt;- I 1
Halicki, Curtis (6),
{7),

Knep,.r

(I)

Meigs

Eastem

schedules

~

:This nar for the first time

l'lelgJ County.giriiiCOUts will

'

have the oppurtunlty to earn
ft':Uesums and ribbons in 100
·for exhibits at the
I\lelp County Fair, Aug. lf&gt;-19
1)1) the R.ock Springs

and ... Litr·

ltiOhn ; Ntoskau, Hume
Borbon (71, Tomlin (7)
Corrl'll . W-Hume (3-t).
HIIIckl (4-3) .

(6),

L-

Chi
N.Y.

002 001 OUI- • 11 0
0000001_.1 71
krukow, Sutt..(7)
and
Gordon ; Zachry, Siebert (6),

Swan (7), Koo1m1n (I) and
Stearns. W- Krukow U-OL LZichry (10-4). HAs-Chicago,
Murcer (5) .

Ptsbgh
000 000 @-- 6 8 1
St . L.
000 100 DOD- 1 6 2
Blyleven, Tekulve f1) and
Ott ; ForKh, Thomes
(7) ,
Schultz (7l.. Littell (9) end
Simmons. W- S,yleven (9-5). L
- Forsch (9 -8) . ~Rs - st . LOuis,

The Ealllern High ' .SchOol
footballec~edule lor the fall
has been revised and Ia
llightlY different from the
one publl1hed earlier.
FoUowin&amp; are the schedules
of the Vanity, .Junior Varsity, and the Junior Hlgh :

Yarlllty
Aug. 19, Aug. 19 - Ollk
Hill Scrimmage
Aug . 23 - Coal Grove
Hendrick (9).
Scrimmage
Sept. 1 - Waterford
LA
000 001 1100- 1 • 2
Sept. 8 - Caldwell
Hou•
101 00~ aox- 5 7 2 Sept.
15 - Open
Sutton, Hough (7) and F.,. .
Sept. 22 - At Ale•ander
guson; Richard and Putols . wSept. 29 - At Federal
Richard (8-91. L- Sutton (9-71 .
HocklnQ
Oct. 6 - Kyger Creek
AmtriCin LtiiUI
Oct. 13 ~ AI Soulhwntern
Bos
000 000 01~ t 10 •
Cleve
; 020 •oo lOx- 7 11 o Oct. 20 - Hannan Trace
fllpll'y, Stanley &lt;•&gt; en~ Fisk;
Wise, Spilln8 (-8J-.nd Alexan - (oomKOmlng)
Oct, 27 - At North. YAUIA
der . W-WISO (7.11) , L- Riplov
(2 -l l. HRl-Ciovolond, Bell (51. Nov. 3-AtSymmn Valley
Nov. n - Southern
·
Tor
001 000 002- 3 6 2
'Juntor vanity ..
Chi
000 001 M))C- s 1 1
Sept. 5 - At Wahama
Moore, Und.rwood (6}, Cole·
man (7), V.Cruz (7) and
Sept . 25 - AielCllnder
Ashbr ;
Stone,. Proly
CtJ,
Oct. 2 - Federal Hocking
Willoughby (9) and Nahorodn)' .
Oct. 9 - At Southern
W- Stone (7 -6) . L- Underwood
Oct. 1'- At Kyger Creek
(5-8) ,
Oct. 23 - At Hannan Trace
N.Y.
002 001 1DO- "0 1 Oct. JO - North Gallla
Milw
oiOO 010 30&gt;&lt;- I 9 0
JuniOr Htgn
Gullett, Kammeyer (1) end
Sept. 2~ -At Wahama
M~n.son; Travers, .STein (6) and
.Sept. 21 - Waterford
Milrtlnez. W-Travers {5-.C). L
Sept. 2~ - Open
- Gullett f.C -2) . HRs - New
Oct. 5 - North Gallla
York, Rivers (5).
Oct. 12 - Southern
Belt
000 300 001- • 1 o Od. 19 - At Federal
K.C,
027 100 OOx-10 15 2 Hocking ,
Fla!'agan. Flinn (3), McGreOct. 26- Open

(5),. Kerrigan (9) · and
Skaggs; Leonard and Porter . W
- Leonara (9-11). L...:....FI8na an

oor

t..

Howard M. Swindell, Clan
Mae Swindell to Emllll Ned
Swindell, Parcell, Bedford.
Arnold E. Snowden,
Marcella Snowden to llouglu
W. Little, Connie L. Little, 19
A., SaUsbury.
tene Blocker to Lynn J,
Holmes, Parcell, Columbia.
William A. McKelvey,
Trus., BrtiCI! E. McKelvey,
Trus., .Donald F, JohniQn,
Trus. to Portland 'Jethodilt
Church, Inc., Lot •· Glblls
Add., Lebanon.
Robert E. Rominel, Joyce
A. Romines to Robtrt E.
Romines, Joyce A. Romina,
39.50 acres, .50 acre, Bedford.
Ernest E. Bolin, Geraldine
E. Bolin to Frank E. Footer,
Anita Foster, Lot, Mid·
dleport.
Richard . M. Reuter to
: Wanda June Lambert, 21.157
acrei, SalllbUry.
Edna Clark to General
Telephone Co., . ~.. Jled.
.ford.

~r(lrU!Inds.

,,

- J lllljpng will be completed
prior to the opening of the fair
lind wU1 be based on the
iq!owledge and • experience
qlned by the girl or the troop
~ evidence of a good troup
program u set forth m the
Girl Sco11t handbook .
Qriglnality,
creativity,
J!Prkman.llhip, attractive app,arance, honesty of
1118lerial, and ronstruc!ion
cfiirability for the designed
~lie are the points on which
.f!ldging will be made. ·
• -In addition to·the individual
awards, $2 for a blue ribbon,
$1:75 for a !'ed ribbon,and
#.50 for a white ribbon a
tcy~~hy will be presented at
fair .to ''the. outstanding
tmopln the county.
·
:;For· the Brownies, ages six
tl!fough ei!Cht, there are

..

tJ!e

class~s

for liquid em- nature collections and probroidery, string art, drawi11g jects, and crafts made from
and painting, · clay and nature in the uul-&lt;~f.:ctuor divit'eratnics, puppets, toys and sion; and doll clothes,
games, holiday crafts, home ·dresses, separates jn
det'Oration crafts, and per- clothing, creative stitchery,
sonal use Cf'!lfts, in. the arts needlepoint and hooked rugs,
division. In the home &lt;livlsion cake decorating, food preserthere are classes for &lt;;Jothing, vation, baked good, .... ndies,
sewmg other than clothing, jams and jellies, knitting,
embrotdery, weaving and crocheting, and weaving.
crew~!, creative stitchery,
For the cadettes, the arts
knlltmg, cake decorating as and the out-of-doors classes
well as cakes and t'OOkies. are the same as fur the junior
There are also two classes for scouts, but in the home
out-of-door projeds, crafts category, there are classes
made from nallll'e and nature for suits, coats, basic dresses,
collections and projects.
fancy dresses, and cakes
For the junior scouts, nine from "scratch" in addition to
through II, there are classes those classes listed for the
in the arts for printing, slen- junior scouts.
·
ciling, liquid embroidery, strThere are also several
ing art, sketching, painting clllsses for.senior, scouts and
with bil or watercolors, these include fine art and apbasketry, braiding and weav- plied design, miscellaneous
ing, pottery, ceramics, crafts from salvage and new
sculpturing, puppetry, toys ,materials, macrame, sewing,
and games, holiday and home · knitting, weaving, emdecoration . crafts, and broidery and crocheting,
macrame.
nature projects, collections
The schedule for juniors and ecology studies, and
also includes ecology studies, handmade camp equipment.

We wish to take this opportunity to thank the officers and
\

employees of the Farmers' Bank and Savings Company for
temporarily acting as coiJection agent while our office was being
repaired, due to the fire on Jan.uary 31, 1978.
Your, understanding and ·patience during our rebuilding petiod
••

,is·.greatly appreCiated.

,.

Ohio Power
Working together is the only way.

...,
•

CHOICES

INVENTORY ~·
CLEARANCE /
Quasar. TV/

became the first American In
orbit on Feb. 2, 1962, when he
circled the earth three times
in the Mercury cap.!lule
Friendship 7.

·

0.

~

Mrs. Glenn Harms and two
daughters of Wisconsin.
CaUers In the aftemoon were
Mr. and Mrs. Zlha Midklfl of
Hemlock Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hart,
Brice and Beth, Troy Manuel
and Becky Jolmaon spent · a
weekend camping at I.ake
Hope. JolnJng them to Yillt
were Mr. and Mn. AWt
Cunningham and Olivia, Mr,
and Mrs. Dennis Manuel and
Denise of Racine and Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce Hart ol Collllllbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Blythe Thelll
and Mr. and Mrs. Francia
Morris vWted Mr. and Mn.
Charley Sharp at Galllpolla
Wednesday afternoon.
Gueat. of Mr·, and ftfn,
Robert Hart July «b - Mr. and Mrs. Alan Cwlllnl·
ham, Olivia and Zac:bart,
Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
Keith, Susie and Ed~.
· Tracy Riffle and '!'her-.
Hlll, au of Racine; Barbie
Jewell of Letart, W. Va.,
Shari and Brian Hayman of
Laurel, Md.; Klm, Terri and
Eddy Hayman of Westerville; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Hart of ColunibuJ.

Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Hart,
Debbie and Sarah, and a
_friend of Eliot, Maine 81111
Mrs. Patsy WWII and 1011,
Jack, ol Columbus are
visiting relatives and frlendi.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Turley hollled mok~ut on
the lawn at their home Jl!IY
fth. Those enjoying the
delicious meal were Mri.
Gladys Turley, Eddie Turley,
Kenny · and Kevin Turley,
Unda GUbrldge, Riehle and
Timmy, Mr. and Mn.
Sheridan Ruuell, Jr., Mr.
and Mn. Charles Cleland,
Charley, .)udl and Holly,
Danny BLuell, Mr. and Mn.
Francia Morris and Rev.
Steve WUson.
Mr. and Mn. Linley Hart,
Mrs. Paula Laird, Don 81111
Paul, camped at Little
Hocklua River over tlie
holiday weekend.

LARRY'S

WAYSIDE FURNITURE

*
**
:* ~~~(" ==·1·.;;
~
_.,.
*

ModltlfrO...., Styling

NMurlll cofors locked ln _8UtOm8tiC•IIy • "Cuslomlzed Picture'' with
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with Super Modut. • U181 only 120 watta of energy (lypicll) •
tera • Rico Pecan rinl1h on Pecan venura and hardwood soltdl
with ~mulatld wQOd marer~t' • Model .WLI. .IPP.

c...

I

QUASAR 25"
DYNACOLOR CONSOLE TV
d•agona l
Natural cOlors locked in automatically • " Custom ized Picture " with
Person al Touch Control •100% Solid State " Service Miser" Chassis
wltn ~u~r Mo du~e • ~ses on ly 120 walls of energy (typical) • Casters
F1res1de Pme fmish on Pine 11eneers and solids • Modt1
WU84e5PO.

'79r

THE DAILY SENTINEL

ST., POMEROY.

.

.

--------------------------·
(I#M~

TodaySHome

COMPA~

.BLOCK

.

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DYIACOUR COISOLE TV
diqonal
NMur• COlora locked In lutomallcallr • " Customized Picture" with
Ptrtonal Touch Contr~ • 10001'. Solid Slate ,, Service Miser'' Cha .
With Super Modult • Utes only 120 Witt&amp; of enetgv (typical) •
ltrs • M~pleflnit h on Birch venetrsand hardwood solids w'th ·,
llftd WOOd matarlal • Model WU14MPS.
. I a mu.

..........

1503 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Jackson Ave . &amp; 24th St ., ~.Pleasant , W. Va .
69aWestMaint.,Pomeroy. Ohio _

POMEROY CEM Er

•

E1rly Amtrlcln Styling

14111'1 WHIM YOU'LL nMDTHI FUN!

,-

I

The Friendy Or'es •

a

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE
992-2156 .
IITWUN ·
8AM .... IPM

Colonial Styling

WAS

** gr "1E!'!'ifc:
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I~------------------------,
.. N. W. COMPTON, 0.0.
OPTOMETRIST
.
1
II1 OFFICE
HOURS: '1:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE 1
A·T NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I

· IIUAIAII 25"
DYIACOUiR TV wltll Audio
S,ectnlm IDIIIIII
di19Jnal
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c'!:

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2' X 4'
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PANEL

QIIAIAII 25" DYIACIIUIII TV wH11 Aldlo S,.ctntm .......

WAS

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New sound from thrM speakat system for a new dimension In f\1
enjoyment • lnttant, direct channel change Of automatic channel
INking 11 the louch of 1 finger • Natural colors locked In auto mallcater • " Cultomlzed PICture " with Personal Toucn Control • 100%
~id State " Service Miser'' Chauiswilh Super Module • Uses only
130 wttts of energy ~lypicall • Casters • Birch veneers and
hardWood tollds with simulated wood material in Brush Glaze
Ma~e tinllh • Model WLNI4PI.
·

S78f6

the Mulberry Street office- not at the Farmers' Bank and

Savings Company or the Power Company service building on
'
Spring Avenue.

POLLY'S -POINTERS

Scout leaders will be advis- work of · the exllillltur and
ed of the.,judging schedule must not have been entered in
Polly Cramer
The rules specify ·that eac-h · a previous fair .
exhibitor will be J)ennitted tu
Questions regarding the exenter as many classes as she panded girl scout program at.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
This saves a lot of hard
may desire, but no more than the Meigs County Fair should
DEAR POLLY - I have scrubbing. - STACIA
one entry can be made by any be directed .!u · Mrs. Pat been letting down hems in my
DEAR POLLY An
one exhibitor in any one Thoma, s~rvice uhit di~ector, knitted dresses and am left ironing
bQard
.makes
an
class. All exhibits must be the Pomeroy .
with heavy creases where the excellent cutting board when
shorter hems were. Since the cutting out garments to be
dresses are in several colors I made. It is adjustable to suit
hesitate to use even water your height. - MARY
becau~e I do not want to be
DEAR POLLY - I felt I
left with stains, What do you jlfsl had to answer Mrs.
think is the hest way of R.D.M. who wrote about
pressing them out 1 - ANNE being peeved with heavy
DEAR ANNE - The best people who park.their cars in
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
way I know of is to squeeze a wheelchair parking areas.
pressing cloth out of a She said that it would do them
solution
of half white vinegar good to walk_ from farther
By Karea Blaker, Ph.D.
That makes me wonder
and
half
water, place over ·away.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I whether money is really the
First of all, the wheelchair
hems
and
then
use a hot iron.
would like to change my reason for my parents'
on
the sign .does not mean
When
lines
are
particularly
·
name from Lee to Lisa disapproval. Why would they
JUST wheel chairs. It is a
stubborn
I
use
straight
white
because it sounds more be against a name change?
Do test always, symbol for handicapped
feminine. But my parents · DEAR READER - They vinegar.
on
the underside of a people who may or may not
perhaps
don'tllke the idea.
are probably attached to the
hem,
to
see
on color lise a wheel chair.
newspaper.
They say it would cost a lot name because they chose it and fabric. - effect
POLLY
of money. · My friends, for you. But why not ask
DEAR POLLY - I have a
however, say lt is a simple them?
solution
Gloria who has
matter of filling out some
Your friends are partir . darkenedforalumnimum
pans
legal papers.
right about the name-change from cooking eggs in them. I
procedure. Though in Europe put about a tablespoon of
a government d~cree is
required for a name change, white vinegar in the pan when
I boil two ,eggs in cold water
the process is fairly simple in and
this keeps the pan from
the United States.
turning dark . Add extra
In fact, so many Americans tablespoons of vinegar when
change their names that it there
are more eggs to cook.
has been called one of our
national pastimes.
But changing one's name Remember, It's all in the eye
does cost money. unless you of the beholder. Are you
dec,ide to assume your new really witnessing the loving
· ,j,M .11
name merely by starting IQ glances of a happily married
use it. If you prefer to make couple- or the seductlon of a
the cliange official through foreign spy by an FBI agent'
).
the cour!s, the procedure
If you are lonely and
costs about $200.
depressed, you will tend to
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I see other people's worlds
· am 62 years old and very through rose-colored glasses
lQOely. I go to the same park unless you watch yourself
and coffee shop every day, and control that impulse.
where I watch people living
By aU means, continue to
happy lives.
go out. It provides you with
It hurts. I watch and wish I exercise and some social
could be one of them.
contact.
As I write this letter, f am
Instead of withdrawing, try
sitting three booths away talking with people more
' from a young, newly marril~d often. A short exchange with
"IIGfUN"
couple, exchanging loving the grocer, for instance, may
glances over ice -cream eventually lead to enjoyable
sundaes. 1: makes me so conversations on each outing.
a...
upset maybe I shouldn't go
I think you will find reality
more satisfying - and less
out at aU.
depressing - than fantasy .
DEAR
~EADER

'"'')

Lt. Col. John H. Glenn Jr.

R acme SoCl"a} Events

(126). HRS- BIIIImore.
(10) ;
Kansas
City,
· Porler 171. Wafhan (1).
...
By Mn. Fraacll Morrll
Minn
011 012 tOt- 7 "q
Mr. 11nd Mrs. Robert
Oak
000 000 ooo- o J J
Goltz and Borgmann ; Bro. Stemple of the Air Force at
berg, Lacoy (l) , McCatty (91
and Newman . W- Goltz {t -5) . L San Bernardino, California
- Broberg
(9-7) .
HAs-Min · returned to their home after
nesota, Powell (2) .
spending a •month with her
Sea
022 005 2oo-11 12 1 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Celli
020 210 011 - 7 13 2 Slmpaon and family aild his
Honeycutt, Romo (.t), Parrott
(9) and Plummet", Stinson (9); parents in Parkersburg, W.
Ryan, O . Mill~ (6). Brett (7), Va. They 'lfere accompanied
Hartzell (91 and Downing . WRomo (6-21. L - AVan (3·11 . back by her sisters, Lori and
HAs- California, Baylor (21 l .
Diana, who wW visit with
them
for a month.
{13 innlnliiS_)
Mr. Edward Powell of
01
000 200 100 000 o- 3 1: 0
T
0012000000001-4 60 Flusblng spent an afternoon
Bakl'r , Slaton c•&gt;. Hiller .(13),
Foucault &lt;1~ 1 and May ; Jen- with his sisters, Gretta
kins,
Um~U~rger - (11)
and Slmpaon and Mae Cleland.
Sundberg . W-Umbarger, • -6. L
Mrs. Pearl Wllils and Mrs.
- Slaton , t -6.
HRs- Detrolt,
Kemp (7), Mey Ill .
Helen Slack of Letart Falls
were dinner guests of Mra.
Addle Petrel Wednesday.
SCIOTO RESULTS
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Sayre
and Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Quick C&lt;mmand brob the
Sayre
returned home from
naUonal aeason's rltCIII'd lor
twelve
day8 trip to Niagara
qed leldinp Ill winDing the
Falls,
Ft.
Ticonderoga and
$10,000 Invitational Pa~ by
visited
Mr.
and Mrs. Eldred
threequartera · ol a length
·
Hart
at
Eliot,
Maine and Mr.
over Star Celtic at Scioto
and
.
Mra.
Dean
Sayre at
Downs Saturday night.
Harrisbur3,
Pa.
Gleadon Qoeek lhOWed.
Recent weekend guests ol
Driven by Bea Sarber ·in
Rev
. Steve Wilson were hill
I: 57 2-6, the winner returned
parents,
Mr. and Mrs.
$4.40, · $2.40 and $2.11. Quick
WaiTen
L.
Wilson 8nd hla
Conunand started fnm the
brother,
Andy
and sister,
No. 4 post positloo and did not
Nancy
of
Alton,
Ill.
A church
assume the lead wtW the
picnic
was
held
at
the parfinish.
sonage
on
Sunday
afternoon
The lOth-race trlfecta of 1with a surprise birthday
&amp;.6 was wrrth ,1,3i3.50.
celebration
honorinl Rev .
· Attendance was 8,595 and
Wilson's
father.
the handle $1104,245.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brace
and
family of Crown City and
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Mr.
and Mrs. Dille Hart and
The Eastern Basbtball Ar.Leglna,
local, were dinner
sociation voted unanimoully
guests
of
their parents, Mr.
Sunday to accept · the
and
Mrs.
Edison
Brace July
Rochester Zeniths Into the
4th.
league for the 19'11-79 aeason.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adama
The team last year wu a
enjoyed
dinner Fourth of July
member ol the All-America
with
their
son, Bobby Joe
BaaketbaU Alllarice, which
Adams
and
all his family.
folded alter me 11100th rl
.
Herman
A.
Carson ~ted
play. The Zeniths were the
strongeat team In that league his relatives July fth.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison
at the gate, averaging more
Mrs. Kathryn Hart
Brace,
than 2,500 in atle!ldance for
and
Leglna
visited Mrs.
seven home games,
Raymond
Johnston
at Bar·
Offlctala of the EBA; woo
bersvllle,
W.
Va.
held a weekend meeting In
Mrs. Margaret Houdalbelt
Philadelphia, ..kl Rocheater
apent
Fourth of July at the
wW ccmpete In a divl8ioo
home
of Mr. and Mra. Otto
with the Maine Lumberjllckl,
Lohn
in Pomeroy. Others
~cy (Mus.) Chlefll and
there
were
Mr, and Mrs. Dale
the Jerasy Shore Balleta.
Smith, Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Cinces

.~irl Scouts to earn premiums_ and ribbons

Secondly, I would suggest
that Mrs. R.D.M. not be so
fast in judging other peonle.
It is impossible to judge a
person 's condition from their
outward appearan ce . For
example, I am heavy and
look very healthy but I have
broken my back twi ce and
am. f)OW recovering from a
leg broken in two places.
Through exercise and effort I
have o~ercome the outward
appearances of my afflictions
and though I am never
without pain one would not
know it to look at me. I use
the
handicapped parking
places and do not feel I have
to apol6gize for it. I would
suggest that Mrs. R.D.M.
mind her own business and
not judge ot her people until
she has walked in their shoes.
- M.S.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you newspaper coupon dippers if she
uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her
col umn . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
.-

L

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IWI • Rico Pecan flnilh on '-can veneera and OtlltiOIIdt with t imu·
llted wood m111rlal • ...... WVII•Pft

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WAS ,
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FOR SUSPENDED CEILINGS

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Easily iostalled inany S&lt;r.5J&gt;ended
grid ceili~ with 2' ' 4' openinos
· • 11eel bodv
• (luminous panel and bulbs not
4,

included )

'

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, I?OMEROY CEMENT BLOCK,COMPANY
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

&amp; Olive

Gallipolis. Ohio
'

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I

1-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday, July 10, !978

1.40 attend press party

Bee Gees: tr)Jin ' hard and stayjn 'alive
Us.

••

By Helen Bottel

.i

SEX .HAS NO AGE LIMIT
Dear Helen :
I'm 62 and haven't had thls problem before, but since .!
developed high blood pressure, my sex life has gone down hill.
My wife seems understanding but how long will she put up with
a man wh,o can't keep an erection?
I got up nerve to, ask tlie doc and he said, "What do you
expect at62 ~ you' re not a young buck' anymore!"
.
What, if, anything, would you suggest• - WORRIED
LOSER

"THINGS TO DO NOW"
By M.-s. W. 0 . Bamltz
Bend of the River Garden Club
Now that the early blooming season ls gone and the
surruner blossoms are with u~, it is time to remove the dead
. Dear W•.. L. :
Dowers from such perennials as iris and peonies. Also remove
... A more under~anding doctor, one who doesn't imply
any dead foliage or debris but do not cut the entire plant down
you're
sexually finished at 62!
until the foliage is brown.
Perhaps high blood pressure pills have lessened your
111e first pinch on garden chrysanthemums should have
drive.
'They'reinfamous for that, unfortUI}Iltely. But if you and
been lll8de by now. The growing tips should be removed from
your
wife
know the cause of the problem yo~ can find ways to
shoots six inches long or more. Just take the thumb and
compensate
for it.
forefmger and snap them out. This will encourage more side
too,
_you may have psyched yourself into near
Then,
shoots to develop and the plant will not develop those leggy ,
.
impotency
.
Strange
how a man who thrives on challenges in
long ~earns . Continue this until about the middle of July and
the
business
world
will
let a few sexual mishapa tum him into a
you will have a beautiful bushy compact plant.
''worried loser. ''
Also if you haven 't dooe so begin to fertilize the plants
My Rx• Stop hassling the big finale and enjoy mutual
mmthly. Continue this until blossom ume. use a ary compJ~te
closeness.
Don't think "failure,' ' and you'll discover it happens
fertilizer with an analysis similar to :i-1~ or &amp;-111-4. To obtain
Experiment,. talk together, remain loving and
less
often.
the best results this should be done regularly . Be sure to water
responsive
.
the fertilizer into the soil completely after applying .
And if you still need help, visit a marriage-and-sex
· If not already dooe, now is a good time to apply a "weed
counselor
who will give you specific instructions.- H.
and feed" product to get rid of dandelions and other weeds in
your lawn. It is warm enough now for it to do a good job. The
DEAR HELEN:
. .
dry form which is a most common one should be applied in the
Many
of
your
correspondents
have
written
• ahout
early morning when the foliage is still moist and also at a tirrle
·
seemingly
Dagrant
abuses
of
health
in~uranee (government
when there is no prediction of rain for 24 hours. This wiU
promote such a new growth you'd better have your lawn and private ). Unfortunately, most people don't press for
investigations when payment doesn't come out of their own
mower in good shape.
pockets.
Fraud exists, and should be reported, when biDing is made
for services not rendered (i.e., charges for drugs not
administered, or machines not used 'in l:'ealment of the
A program on patriotism · the Bee;tutiful" and t here were patient). Abuse may exist in a number of forms including
was presented by the visiting int e r e!-;tin g fet c r~ on "hello" hospital visits by the doctor- at $25 eacn.
Should your readers suspect fraud or abuse in the
Athens County Grange at the pt::tlr iulism _by the lecturer.
Medicaid or Medicare programs, they can communicate their
,friday night meeting Of the
Nonnan Will presided at
Meigs County Pomona the meeting with Mrs. Men- suspicions to the OffiCe of Progr~m lntegri~ .in the HEW
Grange beld at the Rock dal J urd(jn Ctnnuund nK that regional office in their areas. They should 'alert their health
insurance companies (if thev're not on government
Springs Grange Hall.
twu dresses from Meigs
Among those attending County were judged at the insurance). - A HEALTii CARE ADMINISTRATOR
from Athens were Mr. and state level. She thanked all
Mrs. Waldo Pustun, deputy thu~ whu went to the hospital Dear Administrator :
Thanks for writing! .
master and matron. and their in regard tu the stuffed toy
If
enough people beC001e alert to overcharges and start
lecturer, Marie Williams. euntc.•·;t.
making
waves, perhaps ever-escalating health care COllis will
who presented the ~o·ogram ,
Meigs County Pomona
lessen
and our insurance premiums may even stabilize.
·· [..el v,mrPatriolisrnShuw.' ' Grange ·will visi t Athens
It
's
to
hope ... - H.
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan had County in September. A
"A Patriotism" and "Salute put luL:k dinne r wa s . st~f\'Cd
Dear Helen :

Patriotism program presenmd

to Patri Otism" , there was

group singing of " My Coulltry

ftJUuwin~

tile meeting .

'Tis of Thee." Other presen-

tations were "I Am Your
Flag" · by Mrs. Frances
&amp;haeffer, "It's Just a Piece
of Cloth " by Willia m
Grueser, "The Gettysburg
Address " by Robert Reed.
"Like The Flag We Be " by
Ziba Midkiff , "Our Count ry "
by
Earl
St arkey;
"Independence Bell" by Mae
Smith, patriotic poems by
Alice Stockton and Barbara
Fry, ·'Give Me a Sign" by
Pauline Atkins, " It 's Fun at
the County Fair" by Sylvia.
Midkiff, " The Fuurth of J u·
ly" by Ruby Lambert.
The group sang ·· America

SEEN.AND HEARD
Mr. and Mrs . Aaron Kelton

spent the July 4 weekend in
Cincinnati as guests uf her
sis ter. Mr. and Mrs . George

Slli veler, Jr . and daughter.
.Jayne. On Saturday eve ning
they went to Daytun to see

Paul Lynde in " The Impossible Years." Tuesday they had
a pknie dinner in celebration
of Geurge Shiveler's birth·
day. They were joined by Mr.
and Mrs. Geurge Shiveler,
Sr .. Mrs. Raymuml Frankie
· and Philip Griffin .

These people who complain ahout the high cost of hsopital
care overlook the fact that we now have equipment and
machines unheard of in former days - and they cost milllons
of dollars .
My dad's hospital bill 30 years ago was one-tenth that of
ll)Y husband's in 1m. The difference• . My father died; my
husband lived , and they had the same kind of heart coodition.
- NURSE

INTHEHOSPITAL '
Glenn A. Grueser, sun of

In the nine years since
subterranean 'fin&amp;ncial
pressures helped break up
the original . band, the Bee
Gees have bounced back,
coJlapSed; recover·ed and
!inally, on the wings of
Saturday Night Fever, nave
soared to unimaginable
heights. In the August issue of
Crawdaddy, Greg Mitchell
interviews the Bee Gees and
observes how celebrityhood
is affecting the brothers in
different ways:
''Despite staggering good
fortune , '' writes Mitchell;
"Barry Gibb claims he hasn't
the faintest idea what to do
with his riches ( 'l 'm not -·a
gambler'). Wary of public ·

access to success. 'We'reS&lt;:ared of the next album,'
Barry admits. 'We're scared
of whatever we do. We're the
s8me desperate, worried,
insecure songwriters we've
always been.' "
The article also notes
several small curiosities
concerning the Gibb boys.
" Robin (Gibb) has what
Barry terms an 'idlosvri·
crasy' - he · takes lots of
baths. Whenever something
good happens to the group,
Robin jumps in the tub to
soak in the significance. At
one poinflast spring, the Bee
Gees were No. I in Billboard,
Andy Gibb (baby brother )
ruled Record World and
scrutiny, he surrounds Samantha Sang topped Cash·
himself with family, friends box. 'That week,' Barry
and electric protection in a recalls, ' Robin was as clean
Gibb enclave on Miami's as a whistle.' ''
These days Robin must be a
Biscayne Bay.
" And in spite of overdue little grey around the edges critical approval, he remains Saturday Night Fever just
unconvinced of t})e Bee-Gees' dropped to No. 2 in Billboard.

with"The
Rev . Meaning
Thomas sj)eaking
on
of Com· .
munion", Luke 22: 14·21.
Comm union was given to. 25
of the 21 people present, atter
the sermon.
The Daily Bible School held
here June 26·30 was considered quite a success, with
Janice Pullins, ' director .
There was an average daily
attendance of 40, including
helpers. The theme was
"Jesus, God' s Wonderful
Gift." Arts and crafts were
made and displayed. All
er~joyed ·refreshments daily
and a picniC "'dinner

was

served on Friday and the
program given on Friday
evening was interesting .
Daily offerings added up to
$39 .24 and other at the
program added up to $71
total. An extra note of in:

l
'

BEE GEEs - coping with success.
Mrs. Ella Yost of Sugar
Grove, 0., is reported holding
her own after recently suf·
fering a stroke.

In 1962, the 'Telstar satelllte
relayed televisim pictures
from the United · States to
Europe, while Americans
received clear pictures back
from Britain and France.

i"""'---•----~::::::;;:;;;:::::::----:--1

PICK A SIZE" • • • PICK A PRICE"
11

18,.000 BTU

Model 218·35PW

•

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•

For all your do-it10UJSelf

H.
A

Home Improvement Supplies
· .see Cross Hardware

R
D

•
•,

CROSS HARDWARE
,,

•

w
A
R
E

71 N. 2nd Ave.

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9: OO.Io 5:00
Middleport

Automatic controls, set the desired temperature a nd just use the
on · off switch. Large cooling capacity .and 2 speed fan for
maximum comfort.

'

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992-38

AT or BEEF

.t

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•
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0

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$·

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•

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10 LBS:

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$}59

3 LB. BAG

ggt

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PICNIC HAMS ....~.~~:.s4.19
CUBE STEAK ........~~: ..sl.79

-..•
....

11 ,

C

ICED IAISII IAIS ..................~~":' 69
7sc
TUC ClACKERS ....................... •::
KEIIt.lfl

H~MIURGIIIIorHOTOOO

SNOWDRIFT

C

'SHORTENING

IKI,V CIIIEAMY Of CRUNCHY

PEAIUT IUml .................... ·~~~·

99•
311891
CUT GIEEI BEAlS ............. c;:::
3 sI"
TOMATOES........................... ~::

' AOOO

3 LB.

•

MONAfiC..

HI

RIO . THIN 01ILIOW MACARONI

ll

PIIIC. SPAGHml ............... . ~~· 39
.
laiiUI;ACIC1 .LI. ,RIU I
P.UIIIA CAT CHOW 5 ~i
KONlOATION

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$, ..

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$

SALE DATES
JULY- 10 :-15; 1978

ITO

15-oz.
~ Cans

••••
•

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•
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'•
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••
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MONARCH

K &amp; BEANS
~:~ 2'1'

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59'

•

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MONARCH BARTLETI

PEARS

·~

HALVES

,,.,'••

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$

OO

HOT DOG CHILl............3 ~,;;::· 1

CiiU~H.IMS ........................ .':;•:

MONARCH

NABISCO

SALTilES ........................... ',;~:

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791
9
1
49 WAFFLE CREAMS ........... '~;:· 8 c

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CHEER

••

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LIQUID

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A· I LIQUID

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.,

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•

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NOW

HUNTS

~

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"

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CHIPS REG....1.69 $129

C.UmeERRY

.•

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SAUCE

$}59

CAN

~

than other electric heating systems.
This more·for·your·money, energysaving feature has made the heat pump·
very popular with a lot of people. ·
. lncluding the federal government,
whose energy agencies recommend it over
other types of electric heat .
Actually, we don't sell heat pumps.
But, the way we figure it, every bit of
electric energy that can be saved these
days helps all of us.

Umil one with 110.00 purchaM

"

QUANTITy RIGHTS
RESERVED

..·,

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2

99

Lb.
Can

16 oz. bag

10

'·

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MONARCH

SNIDERs,POTATO

'•.

COFFEE

Bottle

CARDIIAL lUIS ................2 :t~!· 79

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FOLGERS

PINK SALMON ~~~~··s 1

KUILlfll

and-&lt;Jr guests . Each me er tu
take a covered dish , a place
s.tting and a drink. ·
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
Garden Tractor Pullers
Wednesday 8 p.m. at home of
Dale Kautz. Plan.!! will he
made for Fair pulls. Anyone
Interested invited to attend.

••'

·•

48-oz.

~

members and lhcir families

''

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MONARCH

w

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Umit three

COOKIII'&amp;
OIL

26-oz.
Bottle

•

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46-pz.
Can

FLORIDA ORANGES 5 lb. •1.19

CUCUMBERS 4 for 79~ CARROTS lb. 39~

.

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I FARM FRESH PRODUC,E1----POrAToES AP"PtEs
YE~~B~~ ~~~IONS

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CORNISH 'HENS .... :...... ;.~.~~· 1.59

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

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1-Lb.
Pkg.

1

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32 oz. btl.

PEPSI COLA...

8

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,,...

·II·••· $119

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Bonl..

r1u1 d..,oti1
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'•

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.,.,.;.~ .......:. ,,•::ttc

Ohio Power

Working together is the o

CHARLESTON, W.Va .
(UP!) - Attorneys .bave
decided to drop many o! some
500 pending lawsuits against
the United Mine .Workers
unioo for cootract violations
due to wildcat strikes, after
meeting with U.S. District
Judge Dennis Knapp.
Knapp said he wouldn't
"try to coerce anyone into
dropping these claims," .but
advised the la&gt;Nyers "it would
be in the interest of better
labor relations to let the suits ·
drop ."
Injunctions and dalllllges
for produclion and overhead
losses were sought in the
suits, which were inspired by
a se ries of illegal work.
stoppages dating back to the
early 1970's.
Knapp reassured attorneys
that dismissing the suits
wouldn't mean the coal firms
are acknowledging they
weren 't entitled to bring them
in the first place.
However, the judge said
labor relations seem to be
improving.

";,

TURBOT FIUETS .............. !-:~; ..s1.49

,,

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 6: 30 p.m .
Wednesday at the Mason
Cmrununity Park. Pitnic for

Tl1c slall• inseel of Penn·
:;yl\';mi(j i~ tlu· firt'ny . ·

.$ J9

T &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

LE LECHE League of
Gallipolis meeting at home of
Patty Coddington, 7:30 p.m.
Monday. Topic of discussion ,
" Nutrition and Warning .'.'
For more information ca ll
Bev Splete 446-4010 or Betsy '~""
Crank, 675·2776. ·

A thougnt tor the day :
Famous painter James
Whistler said, "Industry in
art is a necessity - not a
virtue - and any evidefl!!e of
the same, ip the producttoo,
is a blemish, not a quaUty .... "

1-Lb.
Pkg.

FRillS

•

MONDAY

lid d .

•

•

•

The heat pump is a device that heats
11nd cools your horne.
Wh r n it cools, it works like any
~r conditioner.
But when it heats, it works more
efficiently than any other electric heating
system around. · ·
·
I't captures the heat th·a i wcists in
outside air, even on cold day~. 1
As a result, you can heat your home
using up to one-third less electricity

•
actions
dropped

~~~~~............. ~.~·. . ~! ~9

HYGRADE
BALL PARK

VAUGHAN'S

• Housewares
• Wallpaper .
• Paints
• Electrical Supplies
• Plumbinq Supplies

·

THUHSDAY
HO CK
SPR INGS
GRANGE, Thursday , 8 I!Jn ..
at the hHII . lnsp&lt;!ctiun will be

BIGGEST SAVINGS 'IN

~

Cl

POMEROY ·
MIDDLEPORT
LIONS
CLUB, noun Wednesday al
the Meigs Inn. All Lions urged to attend.

EXTENDS WELCOME - Vic Mullins, president of
the Gallia Dramatic Arts Society extends a welcome to
media persons at the press party hosted at Bob Evans to
kick off the first weekend of "Gallla Country".

Pending

••

TIJESDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Junior
Grange Tuesday 6:45 p.m. at
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
AGLOW BIBLE STUDY
and Praise service Tuesday
9:30a.m. at the home of Mrs.
Dale (Shirley ) Priddy, Hysell
Run . Road, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Barbara Sheridan will he
'teach in g: For additional
information call 992-7281.
WINDING TRAIL Ga rden
Club, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday ,
potluck picnic at the home uf
Mrs. Cura Beegle, Racine.
There will be a plant auction
and a program on the Meigs
County Fair flower shows.
POMEROY CHAPTER I~ .
Order of the Eastern Star,
Tuesday; 7:4:i p.m. at the
Mijsunic Temple.

11

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, July 71
Olga Beckley , Gloria
Bryant, Linda Call, Lizzie
Carr, Chester Cochra n,
· Caroline Davos, Chester Autumn Reasor. Minnie
Detty, J oa n Dixon, John Riffle, Linda Robert s,
BIRTiiDAY TUESDAY
Exline, Lew Frisbee, Crystal Patricia Sandman, Opal
Mrs . Edna . Sc haefer,
liordon, Cozette Halstead, Saunders, Vance Spellman, Laura! Cliff, Rt . 2, Pomeroy,
Megan Hartley, Roscoe William Staten, Charlie- will celebrate her birthday
Houck, Melis sa Jayjohn, Vaughan, Charles Williams. Tuesday, July 11 .
Sandra Jenkins, Linda Jett,
Birth
She will be honored with a
Ellsworth Lusk, Mrs. John
Mr. and Mrs. Da vid dinner by her daughter and
Manley and daughter, Mercer, a son, Wellston .
. son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Martin , George
(Discharges, July 9)
Vern Story . Also attending
Mayes, Hazel McCoy, Donald
Avice Bailey , Pauline will be Mr. and Mrs. William
McLead, Jr., Blane Miller, ·Brewer, Mrs. Earlin Costilow Perry of Athens.

.

DO-IT-YOURSELf
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS

1
Mrs. Thelma Grueser and · t
.
DHvid 'T. Grueser. is a I Cale
· ndar I1
medical patient at University i
Hospital. Colwnbus, in the
curunary care unit. Cards
may be sent liJ him at Meads
Hall, Ruum 610, University
Hospital , Colwnbus .

'

•

r------,
I So "al I

Velerau Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Lena Gibbs, Mason; Janice
Leffel, Racine;
Hollie
Buchanan, Tuppers Plains;
Wllliam Morris, Pomeroy ;
Bryant Young, Racine, and
John Young, Racine.
Saturday Discharges Steven Dill, Melissa Tyree,
Mary Slisher, Barbara
James, Harold Circle and
Carl .Autherson .
Sunday Admissions Dorothy Wright, Rutland ;
Belva Fisher, Racine ; Teresa
Collins, Long Botlom; Mary
Nichols, Rutland; Rita
Whitllltch, Middleport, and
Angela Hubbard, Racine .
Sunday Discharges - John
Young and Bryant Young.

'

Woody Hayes was. 'there the ·Sausage Shop. at Rio
and seemed to get a kick out Grande, found it too crowded, ·
of the scene Lee Durteux has went back to Rio Grande's
introduced for the first time Jumbo eatery, and ate by ·
this year depicting the Toledo himself.
War between Michigan and
Ohio in 1835.
Then he went to. "Gallia ·
It was the third night of the
first week of "Gallia Coun~ Country," sat with Atty. BiU
try'' in lhe natural am- Eachus - another of his
phjtheater out there around former players - and Still·
the shelter on Bob Evans. wagen and Dave Diles,
Fanns, and 200 people were Middleport native arid ABC
present in spite of the rain TV sports announcer who got
which drenched the. grounds his start on t'he Gallipolis
just before the show started. Dally Tribune.
On the stage, Woody Hayes
This dean of Big l'en grid
with the cast and with .
chatted
coaches arrived unanVice-President Dene
Society
nounced for "Galli&amp; Country"
in his new scarlet-and-gray Wagner, who conducts a talk
four-wheeler which member's show on WJEH and WYPC.
of his I~ pigskin team gave He asked Mrs. Wagner where
all . the good talent came
him earlier this spring.
Vic Mullins, president of from .
the Gallia Dramatic Acts
He also told her that he is
Society, had told the 140
guests at Bob Evans' p,re,ss ~riting a book, "History,
party on the lawn at " Bo'll..J'' ootball, and Woody." .
Evans' home that Woody had . Bob Ev.ans addressed the
Intended to come, but had guests at his party,
sent Jim Stillwagon, an OSU disclaiming any credit for
All·American, in his place. "Gallia Country" except to
So Hayes stopped to eat al furnish the 'place to have it.

\

Alfred Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on July 2 was 40, the offering
was $27.45 . Worship services
were held at II o'clock a.m.

.

'I

visiting here attended the
school.
Mrs. Ellen Newland ' s,
mother of Lucille Carr,
funeral was held at Hu·ghes
Funeral Home in Athens on
Friday. Several from here
visited at the funeral home
and atten~ed the funeral.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
teres! was the fact that two Swartz visited their cousins,
children, one fro'm Mexico· Mr. and Mrs. Avery Goeglein
. and one from · Florida, of Pomeroy Rd. recently.

HOSPITAL NEWS

OSU Football Coach Woody Hayes
special 'Gallia ·country' guest~

.... '

and daughter, Mrs. Earl
Dulaney and daughter ,
· Timothy Gillilan, Pansy
Jones, Ruth Kirkendall ,
Mrs. Gary Noe and daughter, . Martha Martin , Franklin
Mrs. Dean Pittenger a nd Not! , David Shaw, Floyd '
daughter, Myrl Roberts, Taylor, Ralph Thompson,
Everett Saunders , Mollie Alberta Tribble, Vernon
Saunders, Robert Searles, Vanover , Edward White,
Lawrence Shamblin, Forster Rodney White.
Sikox, Mrs. Donald Simpkins
Blrfhs
and son, Roy Sowers, Lillie
Mr . and Mrs. John Kasee,
Thompson , Mary Walker , son, GaUipolis. Rev . and Mrs.
Lannes Williamson II, Carl Edward Keeler , a son,
Wolfe, Ronna Wood·.
Gallipolis. Mr . and Mrs.
· Blrtb
William Lewis, a daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. William G~llipolis . Mr . and Mrs.
Maynard, a · daughter, Pt. Edward Pott, a daughter,
Pleasant.
Jackson . Mr . and Mrs.
1Discharges, July 8)
Mi ~hael
Thompson,
a
Shirley Adkins, Luc ille daught~r. Ewington.
Bonecutter, Cora Bryan ,
Darren
Billy Holland,
Dawley, Jasper Houck , Sarah
Jarrell, Dave Jenkins,SWIMMING HOURS
Georgia Johnson , Walter
The Royal Oak Park
Jones, Freddie Killen , Lester Swimming Area will be open
King, Mary Knicely , Mrs. from 12 noon lo 8:30 p. m.
Wilbur Lewis and daughter, da ily and from 10 a. m. to 8:30
Mary Lippincott, Janet p. m. weekends and holidays,
Matthews, Shirley McCarty, weather permitting.
Mrs. Herbert McFann and
daughter, William Owens,

'

,,

'

.

'•
••
••
.,'•

.........
1 ·lb .

-...·

..,.•

•

'

·'

�;}~~~uw;~!~L::~rt-Pcm;:;:y.JwylO.m~'ant
rece~ve
CIIARGES
w•
District dUires to
seal I'd bldl tor the follow ing :

1. Tlrtt end Tubes
2. Guoline , Oil, and An .

,...,

tlfreezt

l . Fuel Oil
•·
Coal!

Cuh

l.DO

JU.y'

"'"·
In

u:;

l.n

w

YMI"lllill.le::l
cash with
on.lt:r ..-15 l't!lll dw.rge for Md.!i t'MO'y·
iiJK BoK Number In C.re of Tl ~ Sen•
U.nel.

Jane Wagner'

Clerk . Treasurer

Meigs Local School
District

whot· nots.

THREE FAMt(Y Y--;d Sol~ Tu;sda~.

YARD - SALE . Mo~~ Tuttsdo,y
and Wednesday . 829 S. 3rd
Ave .. Middlepor1 . Ohio.

w

jet'liuruil. T£-e Publlsher will nut be
lnDre tlwm utle incurred 1t1sel'lion.
.
PhoneWZ-2156
n!.Yp0115lble IM

Pll08ATE .COURT OF
MltGS COUNTY,

OHIO ESTATE OF ShirllyM.
Shepard, DECEASED

' NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES , Pt. Plea·
sant. W. Vo . beside Heck's.
1q73 Broodmore 14 • ~

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING..
' DEADUNES

On June 14, 1971, in the
Meigs county Probate Court,
Case No . 22~11. Ronald G .
Shepard , eox 28A. Rutlend,
Ohio was aPpo·i nted Executor
of the esta te of Shirley M .
Shepa r d , deceased, tat_e of
Rutland , Oh io .
Manning. o . Webster
Prob_
a te Judge.
""
Clerk

2 both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1%9 Statesman 12 x 60 2
bedroom .

Mondily
Noon On&amp;itllrility

Tuesdtiy
thruFridHy

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

4P.M.
U1e day be fort publiclll1ion

t P.M.

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF Addie Louise
Mills aka Mrs. T . H . MillS,

Docket

Frl!Wty allemwn

Ltfustwslyourwolor Frn
AFTER SE.RVI~G the public for 30
years , lightning Boyd is retiring
due to ill health . . Boyd's.
Sanitary Collection Service will
:r:.ack W. C.rsey, Mgr.
be tak en on b11 Robert Hoy"'an.
Boyd extend' his thanks and
. . _ . Phone 992-2111
appreciation to h i~ many . +. - - - - - -- - - - - '

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF F.IDUCIARY
On June - 28, 1978, in th e
Meigs County P roba te Court .
Case No . 22417 , B la n che
Edwards, Rt . 1, Box 435,
Storys RUt:'! Road , Cheshire.
OhiO 45620 was appOinted
Administl"t!1«"iM of the estate
ot
Pearl
P.
Ed-wards.
deceased, late ot 38500 Storys
Run 'ROad , Route I , Box .us,
Cheshire, Ohio,
Manning D . Webster
Pr oba te Judge

{614 )698·3290.

Phone {6U) 367·0:192.

Bernice Bede Osol

AYJI~QJV

h:Cttllent · condition .

$1700.

1976 PONTIAC SUNBIRD . "cyl. , 5·
speed. Low mileage. 619 Page

would

tent c hance to do just that th is
co ming year . mostly because
you approach life I rom a differ-

ent angle.

Z1-July Z2j

The re is a poss 1biti ty that if you
shdted your budget around a
btl you might find a little surplus . Stash it away in a savi ngs
account. Find out more about

yo urself by · sending lor your
co py of Astro-Graph l etter .
Mail 50 cents tor eact1 and a
long , sell-addressed , s tamp ed
envelope 10 Ast ro-G raph , P.O.
B o~o. 489. Radi o Ci ty Station ,

.. ,, , N.Y. 10019. Be sure to speCify

~ ., tod ay . You won "t be accused Of

,___, • say ing one thmg and meaning
ano th e r.

.,., VIRGO {Aug. 23-S.pt. 221 When

so. , 992 ,3943.
1971 CADillAC ElDORADO. Full
power. Good condition. Price
$1750. Owner Harry Osborne .
Phone 992· 7462 .
1972 Pl VMOUTH Sport Suburban
station wagon . 1975 VW Rabbit .

992·:1987 .

1972 DODGE POLARA . P.S.. P.B..
A .C .. EJ(c•llent condition. $895 .

Coli 742-3092.
1970 OL6S , • ·door, good motor
and transmission . Body needs

wo,k . $200. Coli 949·2813 .

electric,
Grant . 7~2 · 2879 .

Chimne11 Swept by a profesalonof
with modern du s-t less cleaning
- oldtim e workmanship. Coli
1-373·b057 Ron Zortman .

APPLIANCE

1971 MERCURY MARQUIS. E•cellent con dition . 992 -5523.
TWO 1967
se d on ,
949·2301

tl gets down to the ntlty-gnUy
1
'
you ma~· ltnd to eveJ yone ' s
•• ,, su rpr •se how exceptionally
... • . shrewd you are bUsinesswise
:.o_" today .

' • LI BRA {Sept. Z3·0ct. 23) Your
bark IS much worse lhan your
., •· b•te today . Your grult exteri or
:: ~~~ houses a co mpassionate heart ,
'1:\ . eager to aid lhe less tor tunat e .

. :·: · SCORPIO (Oct. 24· Nov. 22) An

Chevy ~fs . 2·door
4 · door. wagon .

GRAN TORINO Station
Wogan . $950. 9'92 -5786.

CH IP
WOOD .
Poles
moM .
diameter 10" on largest end, $8
per ton . Bundled' slob, $6· per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pallet
Co ., Rt . 2, Pomeroy . 992·2689.
TIMBER . POMER0Y Forest Pro·
duc ts . Top price for standing
saw timber , Colt 992· 5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1 - ~~6 - 8570 .

OlD ·-tOINS . pocket wotches ,
doss rings . wedding bo nds.
diomon d5 . Gold or silver . Coli
Roger Woms i_!Y.:..~'---

· fresh approach is much better .

"

PISCES {Feb. ZQ.IIarch ZO)
". Lend a helping hand to sameonq who's struck today. Since
. .. it's] not your problem you ' ll be ·
able to see the solu tion . Your
eHorts won ' t soon be forgotten .

ARIES (llorch 21·AP&lt;il 19) Oth·
ers will respond to you r advice
today if it doesn't soun d like
criti cism, Get your points
across in humorously , avoiding
serious tones.

TloURUS (Aprii20-May 20) Work
w ill
you
and
you

not be drudgery today it
utilize your imagination
creat ivity . You· u fin~ what
thought to be arduous
tasks reasonable pleasurable .
GEMINI ~Mty. 21-June ZO) This
is 1 good day to wine and dine

so"'eone you ' re obligated 19
socially. Put her on lh' agenda
lodav.

RESPONSIBLE

good .

NEW POTATOES . cobbage , arld
beon• (pick ~ our own) for so le
now. Sweet corn ovoiloble JulY
11th. C. W. Proffitt Form ,
Portland. Ohio.

1977 STARCRAFT FOLD down
camper . New spore tire . Stove
and refri gerator , like new .
Phone 7•2·2750.
REFRIGERATOR . Excellent condi·
tion . a. st offer . 992-269-t .

JOHNSON MESSENGER I 32 bose
CB r adio. Phone rece iver type .
Excellent condition . Antenna
induded. Coli 992· 7630.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
FLEET INSURANCE
STUDENT ACCIDENT
INSU·RANCE

wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confe c tion vend ing
ro u te . Meigs County and
sv rround !ng area . Pleasan t
bu5iness . High profit Items .
can start part time . Age or
experience not Important .
Requires car and $1495 to
~995 c:ash - investment. For
details write end include
yr--•,.,- phone nu rnber :
'

The Board of Educa tion of
t he Meigs Loc:s l Sch oo l
Distri ct des ir es to rece iv e
seede d b i ds t or fleet in ·
surance and student accident
Insurance .
•
In ord er to be con si dered .
all sea led b ids sh&amp;ll be
received In the atf ice of tt'le
su per intendent , Sou th Third
Avenue . M iddleport, Ohio, on
or before 12 :00 noon on JUly
13, 1978 .
All bids submlHed $h•ll be
valid for a per iod of at least
SIKf y ( 60 ) days fro m the date
of bid openings . The only
alterations wh ic h shall be
allowed in a bid after the bid
opening s are ch&amp; nQes m ade
in the publlshe~ rates after
the bids are opened .
T he BOar d of Educ•tion
reserves t.he right to accept
or reject any or all bids .

E11l• lndustriu
3931 Mudowbr.ook Rd .
Minnupolis , Minn . 5542_6

'"·3325
2U E. Second Street
MIDDlEPORT
4
apartments In the heart of
I own . 2 two ·bedroom mes.
1 one bedroom, and a studio

Jane Wagntr
Clerk . Treasurer
Mei gs .Loca l Sc hool

Dls , t
(61 27 (71 3, 1.0. :l!c

IF YOU have o service to offer.
wont lo buy or sell something,
oe looking for work . . . or
who•ever , .. you ' ll get results
fo !iter wi th a Sentinel Wont Ad.

Coli 992-2156 .

·

YARD SALE , 453 Gran t St ., Mid·
dleport . Monday and Tue!idoy .
July 10&amp; 11 . 9-5.

--.,.----..------

---

_______..

YA RD SALE-, Monday and Tues.
day.
912 Sou..th Jrd . Middleport .
.
~-.

_

THREE FAMil V Vord Sole Juesdoy ,
July II . at Den ni e
Hill
residence . Ro cinQ . Located jiJSI
post ~he Souther_n High School.

..- SAlE Monday ,

-~--

Tuesday

YARD
and Wednesday. 829 S. 3rd
-. ~:.:...M iddle~rt . Ohio .
fOUND : FEMALE . Port beagle ,
bossel . About I year old .
_ Owne'.;__Piese~otify . 7~ ~3...:.._

LOST IN Pomeroy: tmoll coUie
type dog, longholred, wh ite, FREE TO , good home: Mole Pek ingnese . Prefe r- older couple
brown and hlock . Wos wearing_
with no children . qq2. 7185 .
co llar. . Belongs to grand
children from Virglr\ia . Rewor d lWO PUf'PIE!!r. 1 mole ·and 1
for lnformption or return .
femal e. 9'92·2•28 .
Phone 992-2S88.
·~

---------and

LOST: Bl'ACK
white female
cot . I
ago . 3rd ond Elm in
Racine. 9-49-209
:..:.:7_:.._ _

w.-.:

BLACtc' ANO ton femal e fovrid
northwest of Ch..ter. 985·3%3.
LOST· SWISHER &amp;· Lohse park ing
lot . brown env•lope tontaining
monrt , lnt.,stote utility bill
with the nome Mrs . L.O .
Tucker . 3().(.773·5661 ,

taxes, hlw

304-8lj2-32 t9.

-----

REDUCE SAFE and fast with
GoBese Tablets &amp; E· Vap "water
pills ... Nelson Orug.

low

THREE BEDROOM house, oil elec ·
tr k , lots of ground . Reasonable
offer. Owner , New ·Ha ven, WV.

YARD SALE , 3 fam ily . Off Rt . 7 at
M emor.,. Gardens . Ex actly S
5 SQUARES {SOO oq. ft .) of J·M
mi tes . Eagle Ridge. CR 32 .
tlbergloss roofino S;hingles ,
Through Ju ly 9. 9 o .m. to 8 p .m .
dark brawn , still in originql
949-23S8 .
pock ages. $60. fvenings after 6
--:---,--,
PORCH
SA LE.
At MoJ(ine
and weekends . coll985· .t3A~ .
M ichael's . laurel Cliff . First one
197A YAMAHA MX . N-ever been
ol this summer . July 10 and I I.
raced .
hcellent condition.
Lots Ot nice lh• n g~ . One lomp,
$550. R~r Korr . 98.5·390'9.
SIS. 2 cho irs . $10 each.
Bedspreads. cloth ing, lots of
SEVEN STEEL coaert*'lt windows
whot -nots .
and 6 olyminum awnings for
$Oie .992·5400.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum .
Siding

healing bills, situated In
the Arbaugh Addition ,
Tuppers Plains. Ohio, on
large lot . Se lling lor
S.2 ,000.00.
12 Room, _split level
Colonial
that
has
everything. located In
R lggscres1 Manor, on
corner lot. S~lllng ror
565,000 but well wo~th It
NEW LISTING - 7 rooms
and bath, 4 bedrooms. nice
sl ze kitchen and llv\1111
·room, situated on n~ acres
on Happy Hollow Road.
Asking Price $3.1,000.00.
NEW LISTING
3
bedroom home, bath ,
kitchen and dlnln_q arN
located on Main Street In
Rutland Vil lage. A little

PERSON

12 FOOT BOAT and trailer , $2 50.
1966 GMC •t, tor pickup truck ,
$500. Call m .5193 after 4 pm .

your message across today to
o ne who has set ways of
lh tnktng, because you see oath
• " .. Sides o f the com .
CAPRI C0 8,N iDee. 22-Jon. It)
~ • •· A co mm itment for another. will
~ ~ , be uppermost in you r mind

lhought wa s long since settled .
You 'll lind to your delight th e

Rum;

1975 HONDA CB 200T with mot·
ching helmet. 3.000 miles . h ·
cellent condition . Mu11 see to
appreciate. $550. 985·3341 .

_ coli 992 -7760
_.-,..-,---.,---

~ ~~· ~~ciu~re~~~~~h~~~e r~~; m;~~

tires .

742·2850.

roof , P .R.. P.S.. A .C. , ~ new
radial
tires . ~5 . 000 actual
miles. AM ·FM tope. $2895.
742 -2201 after 5.

21) You should be able 10 gel

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Ftb . 19) Be

New

full

Storm WindoWs
Call Professional
Builders

Bissell Siding Co.

···

17.r60 New MoOn 2 bedrOom
trailer with e•lro bedroom built
on . 5' , . acres . l eadi ng Creek
~ ~t~ r - !~_2-J~)J . _

TWO BEDROOM Dorion trailer ,
12xb0. !)olem Cen te• on CN I ,
7~"1- 2089 or 614 66Y t-~41

apartment

on

a

large

corner lot. Asklll!l just
$23,000 lor a quick sole.
LAND - 5 to 25 acres of
land In the ·. country.
Electric available. Located .
on good gravel road. $750.
per acre.
REAL NICE .'- 1975 Holly
park with .80 of an acre of
level land. Has 3 bedrooms
with central a ir and heel.
Reel nice built-In kitchen,
pallo, and motel utility
buildl!lll . $17,SOO.
OPPORTUNITY - 4 room
business buildlll!l that will
house, and give a small

family a slarl . Wanl.lo try
your luCie Only $13,000.
NEW
LISTING
Renovated 3 bedroom
frame
home.
New
carpeting all through, now
furnace and out ol . high
water. Walk to work or
st... eCsl7,500.
IN TOWN - 3 .bedrooms,
bath, family room, electric
baseboard heeling, Ohio
Power, city water, and nice
view. 117,500.
•
OUTSKIRTS - Nice 2
bedroom home. lnsldt
flnilh Is like new·. Cleon,
neal, and handy on s..te
Route. Bath, notur•l got
hell, city water, 2 car
garaeg, and over 9 aer•.
117,500.
.
BUT INFLATION! IUY
NOW, SELL . LATEII.
COME IN AND WE WILL
SHOW YOU HOW, '
' Q , BructTNionl
Htlen L. Tilford
Sue P. Murplty
Aa-IMe

of Communism 20 .
9·,~~ arter Country 6, 13; One DayAl A Time 8, 10.
10:00--20·20 6,13; Lou Grant 8,10; News 20; ' 10 :3(}-..0ve~Eas
20.
'
'ft\1~
II '\t ~ THATSCRAIIBLEDWORDGAIIE

ll!J l..!!J

I~

Lei

NEw Ll) fiNG - 19 acres,
ranch type home with 3
Bdrms., bath, carpellll!l,
paneling, Garage. several
buildings plus 2 older
homes that are rented al
P"tsenl, plus FREE GAS SELL
FAST
WILL
$24.000.00 .
SECLUDED - But. dose to
Pomeroy, 2 acres, 2 story
home In good condition,
several buildings, garden
space. only $25,000.00.
· SYRACUSE - 3 acres,
secluded, fencing, garden,
like new 3 Bdrm . home,
ranch type with 2 baths, 2
- t-vrs. old . ONL '( $28,000.00.
..,,.,,,w - 2·3 Bdrms., 1'1•
, baMment, 'equipped
kitchen. In good repelr
reedy lo move lnlo. CALL
TODAY .
AT .
IU
BDAMS. ,
Basement,
new
F .A.
furnace.
lois
of
remodellniJ. on a level ·iot .
A STEAL AT $16,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Excellent
neighborhood,
cult lillie 2 Bdr'm. homo
ntee1t owner. Basoment,
good condition . ONLY
$11,000.00.
HOME WITH 4 LOTS Hat much poltnlla L ONLY
$9,000.00.
COUNTRY - Nlctly
remodeled 1'" story home
with 3 Bdrms ., 11ath,
kitchen, living , dining,
largo ulll\ly , encloud
silting -ch, barn &amp; other
bulldlll!lt· ONLY $1S,OOO.OO .
WE HAVE MANY NICE
PROPERTIES
AND
MANY
QUALIFIED
iUYE AS . ·FOR BEST
RESULTS CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR .

:~~:'i:a

coplurt

Q;CAIJ~~'{

a n.d

\.IINIIMJ

precl ous

moments forever Weddings
Silver ond .
Golden Anniversary
, F•mily Reunion•
Speciol Occoslons
Phologrophy
is
our
· buslnest, not 1 tldt line

1\lli ~WAll!~,_,

Now arrange tl"'e circl~ letters to
form the surprise ans~er, as sug gested by the above cartoon .

PHOTOGRAPHY
915·41SS
Chesler, Ohio 45720

UM'LE ORPHAN ANN~E

•-30.tic

Print answer here:

Ll'i'Tu

Saturday's

Radiator~

CLEANING

Service,

A.esidtnlllf
ond
commtrclol. Coli fltr

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

--

SOMEONE

COULD

SEE IMTO THAT
WINOOW GOOD
~ROM THOSE'
EVEf&lt;GREEN S·--

HIDIN I IN THOSE
JREfS NO~ "'

estlm•te, 2c hour •rviee.

..-fer, 0..1o
ln-JO.c r

NEIGLER . BUILDING Supply for
buJiding houus. repair work
and cabinets . Call Gu11 H.
Neigler . '949·2S08 after 5 J!f:!!:_ _

'AI Tromm
CoiiStluction

614-698-6555._( .Ahor 6 pm,
61•·68'9·5251 John Jeffen or
689·5265 Bill Gillette . ) We. ore

NOT oil wet an PRICES.

$AVE ALOT
Ail cerpel IMIIIItd with
podding , ot no chorge.
Expe'r t IMIIIIIIIen.

Rubber Rick Caroet

-

At Low At

Swe.pers, toasters , irons, all

t4.11 :~:··

small oppl lonc", lawn mower.
#

nelrlt to State Highway G,orage
on Route 7. Phone {61-4} 985·

3825.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs. service , oil makes, 992-228-4 . The
Fobri 'c
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorl1ed Singer Sales and
Service. We sharpen Scissors -.

EXCAVATING. dom. loodo' ond
bock~ft

work; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt , to toil , lirne•tone ond
gravel. Coil Bob Or Roger Jef.

I"'' · doy phone 992-7089. night
phone 992·3525 or 992· 5232.

EXCAVATING. doz.,, bo&lt;khoe
Or'!d ditcher. Charles R. Hot·
field , Back Hoe Service.
Rutlond , Ohio . Phone?-42· 2008 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
38 Englis!t
1 Gullet
river
5 Less
39 Paid up
hazardous
40 - up
10 Kind of
(refresh)
881ldwich
DOWN
11 Uranus or
1 Karpov's

·

Movie Chlnnel'4 5 &amp;9 P.M. - DayollheAn\mals (PG) 7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Last Remake of Beau Geste (PGJ

Z Stage presentation
3 Stadium

_ __..___.___,

It doesn't

run on

l

Yesterday's Au,wer ·

18 Smooth

4 Prevailed

s Vawted

source

I Winged
7 Kismet
8 Take'lhe
Metrollner
9 Of that ilk

II Olurch of .
the pope
17 Water
route
L~r:::J~:.._.Lil..nt!!!!l!z!;~~!:!!.~Ju Devoured

ZO Work uplt
IZ.Princlple
,--,.,-----:-:'::---:-v Zl Kind of soda 16 Beloved ol

r--

!Z Ship oll492i --i:!!;~::­
:u Transmit r.

r-r_ _.,__.

water?

%5 Billiard

conaonant
Zl Legal
docwnent
ZZ literary
,work
%3 Teheran
native
%4 Some
are
mortal

shot

a Stood
aghast
Zll View
Z9 Oil source
30 Prefer
31 Diarist

herein

the
rumble
seat,
Pert!

33 Work on copy
38 Drop the ball

nate that clul&gt; loser if he

NORTH
1·10
• 9 8 72
'I' KQJ9 7

• J
+A 9 2

party
river

Flood:Mring In StoC11 ·

~'ve

G«''' TO If:
M~! a.RePul.,
-Nat ••• YOU'VE :SA...veD

rr

OfF T"~c:e
l'f'S S'f'ILL

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Will do .roofing, construction.
plumbing ond heatir,g. No job
too Iorge or toa 1mall. Phl;)ne L.....;..
7112-2211
742·2348.
_ _ _ __Rutle
__
_ lid,

ANI)

.. 8 3
t A K 10 9 6
• Q J 10 8

• 3 54

+ K 76

One leiter timply stands lor another. In this umple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for Ihe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apottrophea, the length and lormalion of the words are all
hiall. Each day the code le11ers are dllerenl.
CRYPTOQJ]OTES

K G.M"' 0
·N8 V

'I' A 6 54

.. 10 2

38BuebaU
pltc:b
31 Prima
donna
31 Artburlan
Ius '
'DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here•a how to .work It:
AXYDLBAAXa
Ia LONGFELLOW

·If YOU NIID
A $0PA THAT ,
~AKIS A

EAST
t A6

• Q7 3 2
• 54 3
SOUTH
+ K Q J 10 4

and fJilb
34Malay
gibbon

Boy wile,. you con com• In

WEST

• s3

lake,

C.II702·DJ1
, TALKTO
Wondtll or Herb Grote
or GeM Smitll

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

--------=----------'~--

Zll Fare"eU

9' and 12' VinYl

slocktd.

·BRIDGE
South eliminates losers

u Indians,

11ld'" whit you're ....11111
- Good ttltcl'-- Fully '

11 :QO-News 3,4.8, 10,15; Dick Cavell 20; Over Easy 33.
11 :30--Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; McMillan &amp; Wile 8; ABC
News 33; Movie "Marriage on the Rocks" 10.
11 :45--News 6,13; 12 :oo-Janakl 33; 12: 1s-Movle
"The Giant Spider Invasion" 6,13.
1: QO-Tomorrow 3,4; 1:15--Ko(ak 8; 1:S5--News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Islands orthe Stream lPG !
7 &amp; II P .M. - Hollywoood Oldie (G)
C.ble Chlnnel 5 7:00 P .M. - Paul Gaudino Family· Fitness Show
10 :00 - 700 Club.

Anne

Z5 Additional 1:'::--t--t--t~ Partner of .
foh and
fum
,1:7 Ancient
Bunna
capital

qasoline

TUESDAY, JULY 11,1971
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5 : ~PTL Club 13.
6:QO-PTL Club 15; Summer Semester 10; 6:30-6:30-Focus on Columbus 4; News 6; Summer
Semester 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:&lt;15-Mornlng Report 3; 6 : ~ood Morning, West
Virginia 13; 6:55--News 13.
/ ·
7:oo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morr l"l America 6,13: CBS
huck While Reports
News 8 ; Underdog 10; 7:2
10.
7:3&lt;&gt;-Schoolles 10; s :oo-capteln Kangaroo 8,10:
Sesame St. 33.
9oOO-Merv Griffin 3; Phil D'o nahue A,l3,1S;
Emergency One 6; Tic Tac Dough 10.
9:30-Famlly Affair 10; Andy Griffith a.
t
10 :()()-Card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge ol Night 6; Tl&lt; Tac
Dough 8; Joker 's Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Over Easy 33.
10 :3(}-..-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 1S; High Hopes~ ~ Prlc:e
Is Right 8,1 0; $20,000 pyramid 13; Paint Along With
Nancy Komlnskit 33.
ll :QO-High Rollers 3,A,1S: Happy Days 6,13,
11: 3(}-..-Wheel of Fortune 3,1 S; Family Feud 6, 13;
Partridge Family 4; Love of Llfe8,10; 11 :55-CBS
News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:00'-Newscenter 3; News 4,6,101 Sanford &amp; Son IS:
Young a. the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13:
Walch Your Mouth 33.
12 :30--Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Shaw 15;
Seer&lt;h lor Tomorrow 8,10: French Chef 33.
1:oo-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Chlldrl!fl6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 1S : Auslln City Limits 33.
3&lt;&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,A, 1S; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2 :oo-one Life to Live 6, 13; Meeting of Minds
33.
2:3(}-..-Doctors 3,A, 15: Guiding Light 8,10; 3:110Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
'(oga &amp; You 20,33 .
·
3:3()-Ail ·In The family 8,10; Consumer Survival Kit
20, 33.
A:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer, For
Poorer 1S; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 20, 33; Match Game 10; Dine!&gt; 13.
4:3&lt;&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is. 4,8; Batman 10;
Little Rascals 1S.
5:QO-Monroes 3; My Three Sons 4; G""srno~ I;
Mister Rogers' Nelghbortf~ 20,33; Voyage lo the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Pottlcoel
Junction 15.
5:3()-()dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33: Hogan'•
Heroes 15.
6:QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20:
Making Things Grow 33.
6 : 3&lt;&gt;-N BC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Andy Gr llfllh 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7:()()-Cross·Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13: Pop Gaas
The Country 8; Gilligan's Is. 15; News 10; French
' Chel 20; How To Buy A l'iome 33.
___ .
7:3&lt;&gt;-Ho\\ywood Squares 3,4; Let's Go To The Aecn 8;
Candid Camera 6; Mac Neil-Lehrer Report 20,33;
Price Is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13: Cllllwaad
Avenue Kids 1S.
'
B:oo-Man From Atlantis 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13;
Movie " West Side. Story" a, 10; Nallonol
Geographic 20 ; Movie "The Eagle" 33.
..
8:3&lt;&gt;--Baseball All. Star Game 6, 13; 9:oo-Movle " The
Death ol Riehle" 3,A,15; Wlllllamson Disaster 20.
9;30--Bi x Belderbecke Memorial Jazz Fesllvel 20;
Evening al Pops 33.
10:QO-News 20; 10:30-Biack Perspective on the
News 20.

· game

Neptune

SAVE ON

CAIFiriNG
DRIVE A LimE
&amp;

NEW - J.UST OFF PFIESSI JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110 puzzles Ia avail·
able lor S1 .35 postpaid !rom Jumble , cJo this newspaper, P.O. Boll 34,
Norwooct. N.J. 07648. Include you r nam,, address, zip code and make
ct'lecks payable to NewspaperbOoks.

Level
Baby's
piltything
'$¢".&amp;'!!lin Energy

HOWERY AND MARTIN E•·
cavating . · s•pt ic sy\t erns :
do1.er , bockhoe, duiT\p truck
limestone. gravel, blaCktop
paying, Rt , 1.. 3. Phone 1 (614 )
698·733 1.

PUDDLE POOLS . Ail si1•s and
shapes. Swim pools , 2 years
elllperienc•. fr.. tt~limotes ,
anything
yo.u
need
lor
underground swtm pools . New
c~micol ond supply store.
Albany ,
Ohio .
Phqne

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

:';)~:a·

REEVES
TR--.OING
Post . .,.
• Groceries. dry goods . hard·
wore , feed , tack- sho'p. Special
25 lb. ol dog food, U.!'!':___ .

Roofing, Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Sor1y Painting '

this -COWERED

~.14JW~t~

.riM-51Nl:e

box3

DICED THWART CLOUDY

Answer : Bec•use of hil 1imidity. the cowerd did .

BAD MEN ARE

Jack's .UC

MOTORS, INC.

I Jumbles : ~LON

OH -H·H --- AND
lOOt&lt; ... THOSE

Any!lly, onyllme. ·
Phone MS·MM
Jock Ginter 915·3106

SMITH NELSOH

I I I XJ

(

(Ans~t~ntNY )

ORPHAM ANNIE-THE LIGHT IN THE WDIDOW

SEPTIC TANK

EXPERIENaD

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete
Service . Phone'992·U78 .

0.

)

&lt;KEN GROVER

742·2321
Fru E:illmoles
Work G.,.ronloe&lt;l
7·10·1 mo.
MAJN

us

preserve those

Au1e 11. Truck
·
Repair
·
Also Transmissioo
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Collm · 7~81 .

'

You'll have to stand

lHIIJIC. ~ 160 IT N:tJ

11-9-tfc

GARAGE

HOMESITES for a.c:ile. 1 acre ond
up. Middl•port, _near Rutland.

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

one letter 1o each square, to form
four ordinary word ~.

:v. milt oH AI. 7 by.pass·on
St. AI. 1241oword Rullond, .
o.

.....

~®

b

Unscramble those lour Jumbles.-

BRADFORD. Auctioneer , Complete Service . Phone 9~9 - 2~87
or 949·2000. Raci ne . Ohio . Critt
Br adford.

POME~OY.

.

.

.ROGER..HYSEU.

Genorol Conlroclort
Phone f49·2101
or949-2NO '
FREE bTtMATES
No Sundoy .Colli PIHM
H -I mo.

Cheryl Lomlty, Asioc.
Home Phone 742·2001
Hillan Wolle, Assoc.
Homo 949·25tt
. Gecwge S. Hobsleller Jr.
Broker
Home Phoni 992·5719

o~ner . low mileage. Perfe&lt;t
condition . Coli 992 -7066.

FOR SALE: FiVft cemetery lots .
Ra ci ne
Cemeter.,. .
C all
Gallipolis , Ohio C 14 ·446· 2507 .

room,

POI!S THAT.

ANSW!R 'fOUR.
CW!STIQNl

SALES AND SERVICE

mo.

see us fw f11st sarvice.

RC400. Adult

197.( CUTLASS S ·2·door . londov

OlD FURNITUME. iu boxas , bran
beds , iron beds. d esks, etc ..
complete households. Write
M.O. Miller, Rt. • . Pomeroy or

IOday Th e capable way you
. handle it will br ing you une,.: • : . pec'ted acclaim .

YAMAHA

rec.

nice home. Asking pt'iC!_
$1A,OOO.OO.
For • .
quick solo of your property,

SHOP ~uipmenl . Moved Tll.E INSh,llEO . Ceram ic til e,
slate and quarry . 9~2 - 3085 . 15
to smaller building, need to
11eors e x ~r ience .
sell . 3 Helene Curtis dryers. 2
wet st ations with hydraul ic WILL MOW LAWNS IN Middleport .
choirs .' ~$5 · 3577 .
Coli 9'92·2917 .

\976

Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

work c"o vld make this a real

B~AUTY

HAY FOR SALE. Lorge round
bales , SIO«h. 7•2·2.155.

tdea yo u have been mulling
ove r but co uldn ' t qui te ge t a
"' handle on mtght now be come
,, , crystal clear . You ' ll use tl Yery
• . advantageously .
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ee.
~

Phone1&gt;'12·lll1

• 3J FERGUSON 1roctor ond mower .

. ,

'

Pomero.,. .

399 W. Mlin St.

bath with shower, total

WOMEN'S AND children's shoe
sole. 20•1. otl . July' 3·· _Ju ly 15 .
Ba iley's, Middleport .

Z3-Aug . Z2) Associ- 1973

•. :,• ates will have no difficulty in
··' determtning where you stand

.

kitchen.

SoHit, Room AddiHons
&amp; A·Fromt Homes. '
For Frtt Etlimllts
CALL
992·U23 or 992..011
6-19-1
mo. pd.
.

300 Mlln St.
Pomfty, Ohio
Pomeror 992-t212
or99242U
I A.M. lo~ : 30 I!',M.

MOORE'S

Phane ~!)8 . 1630
Leon, W . Vo .

P.B., auto. 60,000miles . Ask ing
SHOO . Phone 843·2061 .

never change ha'lle an elC:cel-

f' ....

Street,

HEAnNG

GeGrge S. Hobsltller Jr.
•
Broker
For The Best
107'1:1 Sycomore St.
Pomeroy, Ollio
Price In Town
Phane 992-6333
See
Olflce !Irs. :
Denver Kapple
u .m.·5 p.m.
Closed Thursdoys &amp;
At
Sllur!lly 11 noon
Your Full Time
RNI Eslllt Broker
Muffler
Brakes
. NEW . LISTING
3
bedroom total electric,' ( Shocks
Tiref
home, .
located
In
Battery.
~
Hutchln50n Sub-Division ,
Installation Service
.Rutland ; Ohio. Home has
lull basemen! and garage.
Ph.m-2141 Pam•roy, 0.
Situated on lot 9S' x11S'.
3· 1Hfc
Selling pt'ice, $32,000.00.
NEW LISTING 4
bedroom home, modern

WILL CARE for the elderly in our
home . Phone·992·7314 .

.

PWMBING &amp;

...VIce, , .... Y Ftrvuton
&amp; Gllton Tlllen, Lawn Boy
Mower Sllet &amp; Ser~lce.

.a-1

Vlrtn SIDING ..

'

CARTER

MODERN SUPPLY
Smoll engine &amp; mower

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Pomeroy "2·2111

SHINN'S TRACTOR SALES

1973 Pl VMOUTH "Cudo 3-40. P.S..

July 11, t978

;

w. car.y, Mgr.

Pemoroy
5-31· 1 mo.

6:QO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15i Zoom 20; Making Things
.
.
.
Grow 33.
6:30--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
.
7:QO-Cross.WIIs 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13; Marty
Robbins' Spoll lghl 8; News 10: Gilligan's Is . IS;
Daniel Fosler, M.D. 20; Shepherd's P ie 33.
7:3(\-That Nashville Music 3; In Search 01 4; Muppet
Show 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeii .Lehrer
·· Report 20,33; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera
13; Nashville On The Road 1S. .
8:QO-Little House On Tlie Prairie 3.4. IS; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Jeffer50ns 8, 10; Consumer Sur~\ val
Kit 20,33
8 :30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Good Times 8,10; Turnabout 20,33.
9:QO-Movle "In The Gliiter Palace" 3.4.15; Three's
Company 6, 13; Mash 8,10; Opera Thealer 33; Faces

ALUM. &amp; ·

Free Estim•tes
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
7-7·1 mo.

~-

$15 ,000 . 742-3150.

NEW &amp; USED IMPLEMENTS,
MF9 8ai•r · MFIO Boler · MFI20
Boler . Motthews Rotary Sc.,.the
- MF880 Semi·movnted 6 bot·
enlarged our
tom Plow · MF520 12· Disc · lsorviico department and
MF200 2 Row Chopper · MF;)q 2 ~
urvice Halpaint .1nd
Row Planters . Mechonitol
br.~tnds.
Tron1pl onter .

P.B., A .C. , AM B•track stereo.

~ GJtllNw~wiJ

1

I l l Court
Ohio .

109 High 51.

i7ACRES IN Rutland Village._ 4
bedroom hoUse . 2 c;af garage,
other 'o utbuildings. Asking

· Pomerov Landmark

New or Repair
GuttetS and
Downspouts

I Bob Hoeflich)

. '!'17-5845.
. call now lor oppolnlment.

News 13.

MONDAY. JULY 10, 1971

MASH BROlHERS

ROOFING

The .Photo Place

Tt1R EE BEDROOM frame with
aluminum si ding , bath , born .
work!hop. shecl. 5 acres . Near
Forest Acres Park . S15;()00.

SERVICE

8A3·2622.
1968 VW BUG. S•oo. 992-SSSS .

~July

Phone

MF230 Diesel
MFISO Ditnel · MF235 Diesel ·
MF165 OiMel . MF285 D ie~e l ·
MF1135 Diesel , Cab, a ir .&amp;
heater .

614-698·8233.

ASTRO·GRAPH

c · . LEO

machin e .

MFI35 Diesel

AKC REGISTERED Irish SOtter with
popers . 4 '! 1 years old. $.40.

1973 MONTE CARLO landau . P.S.,

tmth sign .

coun tin g

992· 2156. The Doil y Sent inel,

USED TRACTORS

For Tuesday, July 11

CANCER (June

SPECIAL
PRICE
Expires
July 15, 1978

BURROUGHS SENSI·MA TIC oc· • WATER WELL drilling., William T.

RISING $TAR Kennel. Boarding .
Indoor
and outdoor runs .
Grooming oil breeds. Cleon
sanitary facilities . Chfthire.

3, fO, 17, Jic

thought

OFF

H. L WRITESEL

Portraits
Weddings
P1ssports
Annivers1ries ' '
· Speci1l Occ1sions

CARRIERS NEEDED for the Daily
Sen tinttl. Pomeroy , Middleport
and Syracu'te _area. Please
phone 992·2 156 between 8 :30
om and S:OO pm .

customers .
COAL. LIM ESTONE , .sand, grave!.
NOTICE · DOG Worden. Due to
calcium chloridtt , fertilizer , "dpg
... ocation of lhe Meigs Co. Dog
tood, and oil types of sol! . ~x ·
Worden From July II to August
celsior Salt Works , Inc., E. Main
1. the temporory number to coli
St ., Pomeroy. 992·3891 .
4
is 7 2·2825 .
BEST SELECTION of the bttst wood
stOves in Sou tlieostern Ohio.
Jotul. Mono. Efel. Tirolio ,
Tempwood , and Naf huo. Zion
Heat Co., 8 Put nom Dr . (off M ill
HOOF HOLLOW Hors•s . Bu.,.. sell
St .). Athens. 614 ·592·6079 Or
trade or train. New and used
614·696· 1187.
-saddles . Ruth Reeves , Albany .

(61 26 171 3, 10, 3tc

~~J

.

992 · ~~8 :._ ____· - ; - - --

COUPON

..

Heroes 15.

BRING IN.

$ZXJ

TELEVISION
VIEWING
5:30-0dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogan 's

ONE BEDROOM furniSh~ house.

Pomeroy' Landmark ·

OF FIDUCIARY
O n June 15, 1978, in tM
Me igs Co unty ProbMe Court ,
case No . 224 12, Paul in e JMe
Russell. 238 Lincoln Stree t ,
M iddleport. Ohio was ap.
pointe-d Executrix of the
estate of Addie Louise M ills
aks Mrs . T . H . M i lls ,
deceased , la te of 242 Rutland
St .', M iddleport. OhiO .
Manni ng 0 . Webs ter
Probate Judge.
Clerk

you

992-7787.

t219.95

12

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

Things

$}2'5

lronf.whnl drive cors.

Lei Pomtnly Londmork
soften &amp; · wndlllon your
1woler with CCHip woltr
softener, Model uc.svl ,
' Now Only

Swulay

PROBATE COURT OF

2

bedroom
1q73 Dorion i,. x 60 2 bedroom
JqJ2 Vic tor ian J~ • 67 3 b&amp;droom ,

~o ·

(61 l6 (7) 3, 10, 3tc :

SENIOR CITIZENS: Our new
r•nters assistance, you moy be
able to live in our apartment
for less· thon $So o month. For
more in format ion , contact
Village Manor Aport~nt1 .

AND RECEIVE

NOTICE

Case No . 224)1 Docket 12 q,age

Business Services

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 , nofth of Pomeroy
lo_rge lots. ~o~~'!9~.rf_47_9 ._:_ ---

ALIGNMENT

.11 :(1(1-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Covell 20; ABC
News 33.
11 :~Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Soep . 6, 13; MOvie
· "Ralntree Cqunty" I ; Movie "The King and I" 10;
Janak\ 33.
12:05--Pollce Story 6.13; 1~oo-Tomorrow 3,4; I : 15--

'

r

i/\1 HE E'l

SPECIAL

t-The DaUy Sentlnel, Middleport-Pumeroy, 0., Monday, Jwy 10, 1978

•••

'

.

July.
11 , ot Dennie Hill
residence , Racine. Located just
post t,h e South•rr1·High School.

n~ Publisher ri!Rrvt!ti tht' riKht
l'dlt ~ n:Jet't llR)' ads dt-e•ned olr

(61 26 (71 3, 10. 3tc

-

Michael's. laurel Cliff , First one
of th is summer . July 10ond II . '
Lo ts of nice things . _One lamp.
Any U.S. "'ldt cor - r t s
$15.
2 chain , $10 eoch.
Bedspreads, clothing. lots of
oxtro If neodod. ~xcludes

Mubi~ Hunlr ~~-and
1111' ¥t."t.'q)ti!d unlf' with

or relect any .or ·ell bids .

have o service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell •om•thing ,
oe looking for work . . . or
whatev•r , , . you 'll get results
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
Co11992 ~2156 .

minbnwn. CMih inlld\'ant.'f.

reserves the right to accept

You

----------... -PORCH
SALE .
At Mo• ine

II'WUliJry' Can! ul n ..
&lt;~nd
Obituar)l : 6 l'fiiLII per word, $3.00

Middleport , Ohio on or before
12 ~ 00 noon on July 13, 1971.
The Board at Education

en

IF

F.!Ki1 word uvt!f' lhe minilnlln 15
WCJI'tb i.s 4 L'ellb per word per' day.
~ rww1ing utilt'f' Ulllrl l'tlft!feL'tltivr
c.la.)'S Will 1M! dlllrKed Mt ll~or I d.vi)l

all seated bids shall be
received In the office of the
Cl«k, South Third Avenue,

DECEASED

uo

J.oo

Ads Turn Unwanted Items .lnto.·Cash

~ur~~--~ ,~ ~-J; 2t~~~,;t

Cl11rgr
1.2$

1.50
t.ICI

....,..

In order to be considered ,

Ciise No . 22412
Page 65

•

Wot"d\1 tt Under

2dMya

Analysis

Required
s. Milk and Dairy Products
6 . Bread and Bakery
Products
1. Meet
a. Produce and Dry Good~

..

I~

•

K B 0 L
C0

...

T G CM U F I

L A. G L ·

C0

A R

Vulnerable : East· West
Dealer: East
Wesl North Eaot South
_
It
I+
2t
••
Pass Pass
Pass

GMN

, Opening lead :

••o •••

AGYYP

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

Alan : '' How about some
articles on planning our
T G Y G • play1"
Oswald : " Good idea . Ou~
E B L A rule ol ' ARCH ' with empha·

CMUCMCLRO- and losers and H for How

TROCM

.

Y. . . .y'1 C!IFIIlflll&amp;e:AN HONEST HEART BEING THE
FIRSTBLESSING, A KNOWING HEAD IS mE ~"~ND.­
TIIOMAS JEFr'ERSON

Y:.OU

Alan : " Here is a good
example. East's king wins
the diamond lead and shifts
to the queen of clubs. South
sees one potential loser in
each suit He wants to elimi·

Alan : " West ducks one

. heart, wins the second and
leads a club to knock out
dummy's ace. South lea.U a
high heart. If both Opponents
followed he wowd be home
free, but East ruffs."
Oswald : " This doean 't upset South's apple cart. He
overruffs, enlers dummy by
ruffing a diamond and leada
another high heart."
Alan: " East hu a
Hobson's choice. He can ruff
with the ace or dlacard.
Either way South 11ets rid of

A Kentucky reeder wants
to know if there ·ever wu a
time when five down dou·
bled vulnerable co.t 2.000
points.
In the early Thirties there
was a sliding scale of penal·
ties. The first trick COtlt 200,
the second 300 etc. Five
down came ·to 2,000, alllllo!m
to 2,700 etc.
·•.
!NEWsPAPER ENTERPRlSE AIIN . I

(For a copy of JACOBY MOO.
ERN, send $1 to: " Win •r
Bridge," care of this ,......,.
per, P.O. Box 4811, R•dfo City
Station , New York, N. Y. 10018.1

HE SAlt'S TH' COTTON CANDY
WUl
POLV51 tR

HOW DID VE LIKE
TH' COUNTY FAIR, .
TAtER?

15 IN.ITOCK

heart."

+2

can I maW.e my contract?'"

CKGI.-

Oswald : " lfhehadUmeto
pull the trumps he could get
rid of it on a heart. He hasn't
time so must go after hearts
right away . He lea.U a

his club loser."

sis on C for Count winners
CMUCMCLR

can·."

LArt1"t Stlectlen In 11tt Yalllf ·
NEW 3 bttdroom nause. 2 baths ,
all elec ., I a&lt;re, Middl•pbrt.
dose to Rutland. Phone 992·

~41_.__ ---L -------VA-FHA . 30 yr. flnanting . al1o

THRH BED.ROQM h""&amp;t In Rodno
oriMl Neo1 ri..,•r. Cornpletely
remodPied . «149-2545.

relinonclng . lrelond Mortgage,

7JE. Sloto , Athens, phone (61A)
5'12· ~1.

••

.

'

l

.,

\

�"·
10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 10,1978

Jewish holocaust predicted
ClUCAGO ( UPI)- A small

g~ing

to finish the jol)."
Twenty-three Nazis ; with ·
Sunday predicte&lt;l a Jewish swastikll armbands sllowed
holocaust in America , but up f.or the rally ·under. a
-their diatribes left a crowd of swastikaemblazoned banner
several ihousand people . of "white victory .'' They
feeling fiat.
shuffled nervously before
Frank Collin, Chicago' s "television cameras until
· Nazi leader who denies the Collin began his highpitched
Jewishness of his own father, tirade .
strutted on the top of a white
There were scuffles and
van and shouted to the police ~ 1,500 strong reported~ arrests. At least
crowd :
"I can't believe there was a four injuries were reported .
Holocaust. But if there was, The sweaty crowd in
·· they (Jews) deserved it. Just Marquette Park appeared to
as they're going to deserve it have .expected a great deal
this lime."
more action than that.
Michael Allen, the leader of
The Nazis had fought for
the National SOcialist Party the right to demonstrate in
of America in St. Louis, the
racially
tense
spelled it out. Of the Nazi neighborhood lor two years,
massacre of Jews in -Europe, carrying their case to the
he said, "This time we're Supreme Court and winning it

barn:!' of· brown-shirted Nazis

To Our Loving Daughter, Tina Rae · Smith .
.. Tina. this is just a message to say hello .
v/e hope that you are fine, and can
~nderstand this message. We love you deep
tn our hearts, and care for yctu very muc.h .
We sit and wonder where you are, and hope
to God you are okay. Please let us know if
you are okay. I know in life it's hard to do
some things, but Dad and Mom still love you
and always will . I hope you will take just
five seconds and call us , to let us knt&gt;w you
are okay.
love ,. Dad and Mom

last week)
Yet the Marquette Park
.affair might have caused
little fuss had Collin's Nazis
oot attracted the ·w orld's
attention
earlier
by
threatening to march in the
Chicago suburb of Skokie ,
which is 35 percent J~ish.
Protesters from arotind the
country had vowed to block
that march and some were in
Marquette Park Sunday,
though most of them were
barred by police.
About 2,000 people were in
the park and 3,000 others mos tIy c ou nt e r ·
demonstrators
were
reported by police ill the
area. Most of those listening
to Collin apeared to be on his
side, but there was a strident
group t hat attempted to
drown out the Nazi speeches.
Wben •it was over, barechested youths in the park
seemed to want more and
milled about fer alinost an

Mrs. · Manford Smith, and
Carrol, spent a week here
with her son and daughter-in·
law, Mr . and Mrs. Lewis
Smith.
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Starkey
joined other fa mil y members
for a reunion of the Caster
family at Lake Hope Sta te
Patk near Zaleski. Others ·
present included A. R. Caster
and Mr. a nd Mrs. Chester
Spencer. Cha rleston, W. Va. ;
Mr . and Mrs . Eugene
Hallida y, Dexter; Mr . and
Mr s.
Roy
Wi seman.
Hariisonville ; Mrs . E ima
Vernon and family , New
Lexing'ton and Columbus and
Mr . and Mrs. Forrest Harper
and family from Chill icothe
and Columbus.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Waiter
· Jordan, Joshua and J erem y,
joined members of the Appalachian CB Club for an
outing at Lake Snowden on
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Rawlings, Albany, called on
Mr . aod Mrs. William
Cheadle on Sunday altemoon.
The Busy B~e meeting of
the Carpenter Baptist Church
Society was held at the
church . Devotions were given
by Freda Smith. A sbort
business session was held.

HEADQUARTERS

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POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC

·'

hour in the muggy, !Mkl~ree
heat. A group of people
wearing Jewish skull caps
was chased until police came
to their rescue. One of the few
black youths venturing into
the psrk was beaten. His
clothes we~" torn from him
before police could reach
him.

Trading insults largely
made up 1..- breaking heads.
. Youthsshooktheir(istsinthe
laces of Jewish death camp
survivors who gathered in the
park . The y.o uths cried,
" White Power!" Counterdem011strators were just as
vocal, chanting "Death 1o the
Nazis" and "Go to bell
Frank....
'
But! il ~me in the crowd
wanted violence, they had to
settle f..- throwing a few
rocks at about 150 Jews and
sympathizers who watched
the Nazi rally from outside
the park.

, l:arpenter ·Pe-r sonals

YOUR

'

•

Those present included Metta
Fisher, Emma Whittington,
Freda Smith, Mrs. Manford
Smith, Bonnie Chea dl e ,
Vivian
Gaslon,
Mollie
Brooks, Kathy Frank and Ida
Cheadle.
Dale Stanabury is confined
to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospita l, Athens, where he
reportedly is improving.

a-u-la fnlll 32.'19 to SU21i0
LONOON (UPI) - The in London at Sl•.
franca,
in '
American dollu opened
Paria dealers uld the Belgian
One of them, Faye
lower on aU majcr money dollar rate went down on a Amsterdam from 2.22 to
Waldman, was the only
markets
today
with spate of AmeriCan repcrll 1.11110 gWidera, In Milan lrom
survivor of a family of nine. . European hlonkera and warninl about an early 1150.11 to MI.15 lire and in
The rat died in the death
dealers voicing new concern ~downturn. They laid Tokyo tram JOUO to IOUO
camp of Auachwiu.
about the U.S . . ecGII&lt;rny. In the marltet allo wu affected yen at the end of tile liiOI'IIina
.
"! can never forget," she
ZUrich the dollar fell 1.2 by lalt weell'a dedllon at the ..aon.
said. "! owe I~ to my dead
percent below Friday's ra\2 European Nlllnit meUnc in
The IIDal cla.inC rate wu
parents tn make sure that
in the fint !Jour of trading. Bremen to aeet 1reater down 111 301.16 yen, jtllt 0\'111' a
never again the Nazis wUl
. Gold wu up Sl.75 in Zurich European monetary liability yen away from Jut - t · s
march.''
to S11U'75 and 11.1171 higher - a move seen by French post World War II low .
dealers· as a c;ieilr European .DeUn aald tradlne wu
~----------------~---------. seif-defenae move against the moderate.. .
.
There
W1lll
no
illdlcatlon
ol
~Dar.
Bank
of
Japan~
lor
the
I
I • A Chase.Manhattan dealer dollar' but Japaneee . trading
.
I in' London said the dollar's companies were active ·in the
fall oo Europeali marketl
Church.
Funeral
services
will
CHESTER D. REED
followed '"weakness· on Far market wttb, lllzeable buying
be
held
at
1
p.m.
Wednesday
Cheste r D. Reed, 77,
orilers to settle import billa,
Adamsville, formerly of at lhe Ewing funeral home. Eastern marketa ,"
banking 10urces said.
A
dealer
for
Barclay's
bank
Pomeroy and Middleport , Burial will be in Meigs
said
the
appara~t
bait
to
the
died Sunday at the Good Memory Gardens. Friends
Samarilan Hospital in may call at the funeral home rise in American lritereol
from 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 rates was one factor affecting
·Zanesville.
the. dollar." He said another
'
'
Mr. Reed was a carpenter p.m . Tuesday.
was
that
"operators
eeem
to
and was .employed in the
(Continued flun )1111 1)
be taldng a beariah view of
GILBERT MEES
'construction business for
victim on the bottom, took
Gilbert Mees, well known the ccming ·BoM suminlt,
many years before his
him to. the shore and brought
r etirement. He was a Pomeroy resident, · died expecting 11\Ue or nothing to him out at the dam. There he
me mber or the United Monday morning after a ease .concern about. the U.S. ' started reauscitation, though
Brotherhood of Carpenters, lingering illness. balance of payments and he said that the body wu
Local 7.16, Zanes~. He was Arrangements are being inflation."
Chancellor Helmut limP' and there were no life
a member of t he Sonora made at the Ewing funeral
Sclunldt
of west Germany signs, no pulse;
home.
Methodist Church . ·
However, Paul responded
said in a televilioo interview
Preceding him in death
to
the life-saving procedure,
Sunday he was still cautious
were ·his parents, Mr. and
and
a pulle wu noted. The
0
about expecting too much
Mrs. Herbert Reed; his first
Gallia
County Volunteer
fr..-n the July 16-17 meeting.
wife, Angeline, who died 19
Emergency
oquad arrived,
Zurich dealers said trading
years ago; a brother, Gerald,
and
squadrnen
worked on
was·heavy and !be dollar fell
and a sister, Clara.
..
until
the
pulle was
Paul
at
from 1.11411 Swlas
Surviving are his second
wu
taken by
stronger.
He
the opening to . 1.7980
wife, Naomi; three children,
ambulance
to
Hol&amp;er
Medical
compared with Friday 's
Mrs. Jean Mayle, Beverly ;
BELFAST,
Northern
Center
emergency
room,
closing rate of 1.82 francs.
Dwight Reed of Lakeland, Ireland (UPI) '"- Police
he
was
.treated
and
where
The dollar fell in Frankfurt
Fla :, and Mrs. John (Mary recovered a body from an
placed
in
the
IntenSive
then
from 2.0605 lo 2.0445 Weot
Lou) lhle, Racine ; a brother, abandooed farmhouse they
German marks and in Paris care unit
Cassell Reed, Adamsville ; were directed to by the
The sheriff's department is
from
4.4625 to 4.48 Fra~ch
six grandchildren, four great- Provisional lrilill Republican
continuing' the investigation .
francs.
It
opened
in
London
et
. grandchildren and several Arrny and confirmed today it
The other CCM~wner is Fred
11.8885 to
the pound
nieces and nephews. . .
was that of an Ulster
Block, Rt. I, Evans, W. Va .
compar.ed
with
Friday's
Funeral services will be policeman kidnapped three
Paul wu . bom AprU II,
Sl.ll'/35.
held at 10 :30 a. m . Wed- weeks ago.
1960,
in Point Pleasant to
Sterling fell in Zurich from
nesday at the Shirer and S&lt;in
Perry
and Juanita Dunlap
Police found the body late
3.4114 to Ui8800 Swiss francs
Funeral Home in Adamsville.
Sunday but - fearful of
Livingston,
Bi\lweli, who
and gained marginally in
Burial will be in Zanesville boobytraps - dhloot move it
Alao
survivinll are
survive.
Memorial Park. Friends may until the area: was declared · Frankfurt from 3.8525 to three brothers, all at home in
3.8560 German Olllrlta.
call at the funer.a i home from safe early today. A relative
Elsewhere, the dollar fell in Bidwell; Perry II, Ronald, .
this evening until time or identified the body, stU!
and Ray ; two sialera, Mrs.
services.
dressed in a green Royal
Brenda stumbo, Rt. 1, Bid-

:

Area· Deaths

Evacuation. underway

'

(,!·, .
. I j·

•'

I I

I

:

Paul, ••

Body IS

·rr.ncs

recovered

Mr . a nd Mrs . Dwaine
Jordan and Sarah Fay e,
along with ~is par~ nt s, Mr.
and Mrs. Mendal Jordan,
have returned from a 2,860
mile motor home trip through
the southern states. Points of
int erest included, The Grand
Ole Opry and Opry Land, .
Wax Museum and Ryman
Auditorium in Nashville,
Tenn; visiting Mrs. Dwaine
Jordan's brother-in-law and
sistei, Mr . a nd Mrs. Alfred
Rice, Perry, Ga ., and to uring
ROBERT L WHITE
the Briggs-Stratton Loc k
Robert L. White, 77, Route
Plant there; calling un Mr. I, Long Bottom, died Sunday ,
and Mrs. J ohn L. Rawlings evening allhe Holzer Medical
I1[!11Jler residents here 1, in Center.
Ja cksonville , Fla. , an d
Mr . White was hom Oct. IS,
spending the remainder of 1900, a son of the late Edward
the tinne with Mrs. Dwaine a nd Lillian Short White.
Jordan's parents, Mr. and Besides his parents, he was
Mr s . William Culw ell at preceded in death by a
Pomona Park, Fla:, who daughter, Iris Carr; a son-in·
accompanied
them
to law, Henry Penn; .a great·
Gainesville. Meibrose, t o grandson; two sisters and
· the beach at Crescent City on ·lhree brothers.
the Atlantic Ocean, where
Surviving are his wife,
they spent a ®y. Then they Hilda Smi\h White ; a son,
went to Disney World and on Thomas, Long Bottom ; three
to Pembroke Pine\ ( just daughters, Mrs . William
north of Miami, Fla. ). to visit (Donna ) Ohlinger, P omeroy;
wi.t h Lucy Thomas and her Mrs. Lillian Penn, Pomeroy, ·
daughter, Nancy Arnson and and Mrs . Clair (Carolyn Sue)
daughters 1former residents Wood.e, Dayton; six sisters,
here 1 before ret urning home Mrs. Lucy Newell, Mrs. Fred
through the Carolinas and Bearhs, Mrs. Della Monroe,
West Virginia.
all or Chillicothe; Mrs. Ethel
Goldie Gillogly s pent Wilbur, Hindsdale, N. Y,;
Sunday with her son-in-law Mrs. Ollie Christopher,
and daught er , Mr . and Mrs. Fleming, and Mrs. Dorothy
'Arthur Crabtree . Mrs . · Christopher, Belpre ; a
Gillogly is somewhat im- brother, Romie, Chillicothe.
proved in eondUion at this Mr. White was a member of
. Iinne.
the
Clendenin
Baptist
Mr . a nd Mrs . Arthur
Crabtree visiled his brotherin-law, Dale Scott, a t
O'Bleliess Memorial Hospita l
on Tuesday . Mr . Scott is
recover ing from pneumonia
but has other complications.
Mrs. Scott is the form er
Marguerite Crabtree from
this community .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Jorda n
and Katie, Orlando, Fia .,
ha ve r eturn ed to their home
alter spending more than two
weeks in Ohio with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clifton
Fraley. Sr. and Mr.. and Mrs.
Clay J ordan, along with other
relat ives. Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Cassiil (Barbar·a J orda n ),
Ada, Ohio, also spe n~ some
ttme here to be with her
brother and family during the
past two weeks .
A gr oup from Columbia
Grange No. 2435 visited with
Ohio Valley Gra ngers of
Letart Falls on· Friday
evonmg and presented a
program on " Independence
Day and What it Means" ,
under the direction or the
lecturer , Art hur Crabtree.

DQllar falling again

Deputies

well, and Cindy, at horne.
Constabulary uniform, as the
kidnapped
policeman ,
.Also surviving are the
Wllllam Turbitt, 46.
maternal grandparents, Mr.
The Provisional IRA issued
and Mra. J.WeU Dunlap,
(Conllllutd fnlm pace 1)
a statement Sunday saying ·.
her yard "hile turning Point Pleaiant, and the
Turbitt's body could be found
around. A small loot bridge great-grandmother, Mra .
at. the farrnhouie · in South
Gamet Carr, Point Pleuant.
was damaged.
Paul was graduated this
Armagh, 200 yards inside the
The pickup truck was
spring from Buckeye Hills
northern border .
described as dark in color
Police W.re reluctant to with clearance lights. The Career Center and North
move into the area despite
incjdent is stut· under in· GaiDa High School.
Lut rites wW be held at 2
provisional IRA aBSUrllllcea
vestigation .
Wednelday
afternoon at the
that neither the farm nor
Deputlea alao took a repQI'I
body was boobytrapped.
Crow-H1111ell
Funeral Home
that two subjects had stood on
in
Point
Pleuent,
the Rev.
Turbitt was wounded in an
the hood ·of a truck and tore
James
L.
Bunn
and
tba Rev.
IRA "'"bush three weeks ago
down the awning at the Five
Jamea
Patteraon
officiaUng,
in South Annagh and then
Points Grill. They were
and
burial
wW
be
in
Klrltland
abducted . Anot~r policeman
located
and
. ·made
wu shot · to death in the
arrangements with the owner Memorial Gardena.
Frienda may can alter 7
attack-.
for repairs.
tonight at the funeral home.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Hoover Aoor &amp;Rug Conditioners
1411

•

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester
ca lled at the home of Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Lee and family
on Sunday.
Mrs : Helen Perry of
Hoiland, Ohio spent from
Friday until Tuesday with
her mother, Mary Circle.
Others calling at the Circle
home were Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Pierce of Athens , Mr.
.and Mrs. James Circle, Mr.
and Mrs. George Circle of
New Haven.
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur
Johnson, Sheryl Leann and
Patrick, spent Monday
evening with Mr. and Mrs .
Douglas Johnson of Racine.'
William Carleton of Racine
called at the Arthur Johnson
home on Monday.

D•lux•
ShlftiPOO · POIIIfiOr
Convenl•nt dlspenstr trigger
conti"'is big 94 ounce tank . Extra
capacity lett you hindi• mort
flOOr 1r11 before ttfllllno . Mas
everything vou'll ;.:eed for
profenlonllly buutlful floors·.

~~~-

· DELUXE
SHAMPOO POLISHER

49.95

1

••

I

ANOTiiER TRAIN DERAiLs - A Chessie system
train carrying loxic chemic~:~Is near Letart in Mason
County derailed this morning . The chemical spillage
, forced sheriff's deputies in both Mason afli!.Meigs County

Ru•

and Floor Conditioner

tod•r·•

Oes l or'!ed for
wey of lltilng . .. for 11 of
todl v'•
new
floor
coverln;a . . Takes u
Whtrt '(our ve
cle•n•r leaves

Income tax~
discussed
•

Pomeroy Council Monday township roads throughout
. night discusse&lt;! at limglh the the State of Ohio ; and
WHEREAS, said roads are
possibility or enacting a one
percent deductible city tax , If in a deplorable condition
approved, It would affect only b eyond
the
financial
peraons filing a federal tax capabilities or villa ges,
return.
'
townships, counties and local
Dr. Harold Brown , council governments to maintain;
THEREFORE, BE IT
president, who presided in
the absence of May or RESOLVED,
that
t he
Clarence Andrews, appointed Pomeroy Village Council of
a committee composed of Meigs County, Ohio, direct a
Jim Neutzling and Larry request to Governor James
. Rhodes,
State
Wehrung to study th e A.
propoaal. They will submit a Representative Ron James,
report at the July 17 council Congressman Clare nce
meeting.
Miller and State Senator
In other business council Oakley C. Collins, that, out of
temporarily accepted a bid the reported $14Q million
from the Pomeroy National dollar . s urplus the State of
Bank . at lour and .one-half Ohio has in its ,funds, an
percent interest for the sale emergency grant of $1,000 per
of 130,000 in notes. That was mile be awarded to ail local
thc.IIIIIJ...bld r~ved .
governwents in the State of
' ' N'fiiiineyliltobhsedfor·'·Ot\tb: Yol' ~ · of toad
the resurfacing of village conditions that have resulted
streets. A total of $00,000 will from the severe winters of the
be spent with $20,000 to come last two years; and
IT
FURTHER
from the revenue sharing
BE
lund.
RESOLVED,
that
the
In other matters, co uncil Pomeroy Village Council of
agreed lo advertise lor bids Meigs Count.y, Ohio, urge
. lor a truck chassis for the lire member s ' of the Ohio
department (o replace the old Legislature and other State
tanker truck ; purchase new officials to act promptly upon
lires for Ihe cruiser ; enforced this request, in order that
the law on the use of loud and these funds may be used
illegal mufflers and approved during the present year to
correct the damages done to
the tax budget lor 1979.
On motion by Larry Powell the various roads .
and seconded by James
The meeting was opened by
Neutziing the follo.wing prayer by Lou Osborne .
res(liution was adopted :
Att endin g we re · Brown ,
WHEREAS, the severe Osborne. Neutzling, Wehrung
winter weather, experienced and Larry P owell , council
in Ohio the last two years, ha s members and Jane Walton,
resulted in the deterioration clerk . ·
of Village streets, co unty and

VOL. XXIX

NO. 50

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ROOR-A-MATIC

RUG MD FlOOR aHIDITIOWER

'84.95
HOUSEWARES D£PT. - 1ST JR.OOR

.Eiberfelds
l

.

In Pomeroy

Although the $24,000 needed
to purchase a back\Ioe loader · see ms ' evasive,
Middleport ViUage Council
Monday night voted to advertise for such a piece of
equipment .
Mayor Fred Hoffman
reported the present backhoe
is some 15 years old and is
costly to the village lor repatr
work needed to keep it
operating. So!Re $400 was
recently spent un repairing
the equipment. It Is now
broken a&amp;ain and the repair
cost wiU rllll a.bout $\,QOO the
mayor said .
While it was agreed that a
new backhoe is needed,
councilmen stressed the town
is pressed lor equipment
purchase funds:
Mayor Hoffman suggested
three village department s
whi ch will use the equipment
- watei, st..reet and sew~ge
departments - share equally
in the cost. The sewage
depa rtment ·ha s $6,000 in its
equ ipment fund and the

Clerk · Treasurer Ge ne
Grate suggested a letter be
secured from the Board or
Public Affairs to the eflect
that part of the costs in such a
purchase will be paid by the
sewage and water department s.
A delegation of seven
residents t•f the Oliver St.
area met with council lodging
complaints on ·the conditions
of an abandoned home there.
They stated .that the house,
abandoned for some 14 years,
is snake infested, that a tree
growing in the property is a
danger, ·and thar growth of
bushes and grass is a
nuisance . They also stated
the street is dark and that
a nother st reet light sho uld be
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::· installed.
Mayor Hollman explained
EXTENDED FORECAST
the village ca n notify the
Thursday
through
property owrler who is in
Saturday, a chance of
that the problems
Dayton
showers or thundershowers
sh
ould
be
resolved. and if the
through the period, with
refuses
the village can
owner
highs in the 80s and lows In
done and bill
hire
the
work
the tiOs.
the
property
owner.
:·:·:·~·:;:·:·:;:·:·:::::}:·: ·.·.;.;.;.;.;.;. ;.;. ;.;.:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:·::; .;

water department has $3,000.
Mayor Hoffman said the
equipment probably could be
secured on a rental basis costi~g about $1 ,000 a month
- and the rent could be applied to the pur~hase if the
village decides to purchase
the equipment.
Mayor Hoffman also stated
he ' believes the equipment
co uld 'be purchased with
payments to be made over a
period of one _year with no
interest charge.
Following the discussion,
, counc.il vo.t_e d ')!l!'.nimousiy to
advertise fo fll bids with
specifications to be prepared
by Councilman Charl es
Mullen .

However, no action was
taken last night because it
was decided all members or
co unci l will look a t the
properly and the alleged
problem s befor e the next
meet in g whe n they will .
decide what at~ion to fo llow .
Sewage r unoff on Oliver St.
wa s also a complaint made
by the group.
Clerk -T reas ur e r Grate
read a letter from Colul)lbia
Gas of .Ohio r egarding
procedures in billing for the .
fuel mst adjustments. The
report of Mayor Hoffman for
· June showing r eceipts or
$2,053.25 in lines and lees and
$102. in me r c ha nt police
· collections, a total uf $2,155 .25
lor the month was approved.
Grate also read a letter
fr om HUD stating the village
must approve flood plain
rrianagem ent measures by

'

This represents the second
derailment in Mason County
in less than a week. Last
Wednesday , a B&amp;O train
derailed in front of the Philip
Sporn Plant.
This is also the second
evacuation of the year in this

county . In JanUary, an
evacuation was ordered in
Polnt Pleasant, when a car
carrying a toxic chemical on
a train that derailed, did
r upture.
People were forced from
their home for several days.

Weather
Clear a nd cool tonight, with
lows in the mid 50s . Sunny
and a little warmer Wednesday " with h&gt;ghs in the low
or mid 80s.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

'

Sept. 29, 1978, if the village is
to continue participation in
the national flood insurance
program . Mayor Hoffman
dlStribut ~ d copi es of the
measures advising there aremany restrictions and he
wants t hem to be fully
prepared before the matter is
taken up aga in at the next
meeting.
Council approved a n ap.
phcation for a taxi Hcense
from Marvin L. Tom ill\.d
a pproved a tentative budge\
fur 1979 including $476,877.59
in income a nd funds Of). hand
and anticipated ex-p enditures
of $436,498. The budget will
now be presented to the
cuunly budget commission.
Mayor Hoffm a n rev iewed
the $775,000 HUD block grant
which has been applied •for
joi ntl y by Pomeroy and
Midllleport Vi llages . It was

Fund raising
. b .
e ffOrt eglns
The first major effort to
ra ise Meigs County's share of
funds needed lor the im·
provement of the Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson
Count y will be held Saturday.
The first effort will be a
public auction with members
or over 30 Meigs 4-H Clubs
contributing to the sale as
well as the public.
L 0 . McCoy. well known
auctioneer in the area. will
conduct the auciion which
will get underway at !0 :.30
a.m. Saturday a t the junior
fair building on the Rock
Springs Fa irgrounds .
So far, a variety or mer·
chandise is being offered and
the public is asked to contribute items lor Saturday's

" IN THE GOOD old sununer time." Seventy youngsters are taking swinuning lessons
at London Pool in Syracuse under the supervision of Connie Yoder of Point Pleasant. There
are two classes a day one frQm ~to 10 a.m. and one from 10 to II a.m. Assisting in the
instructions are II mothers and one father . Yoder explained that if she did not have the help
of the parents she would have been unable to give lessons this season . Yoder instructed the
parents in a six hour course . Theparents teach only beginners, she added . Herman London,
WASffiNGTON (UPI) - HEW Secretary Joeeph Califano
· pool manager, has indicated that more classes will be offered when the present classes are
has crdered federal and state officials to chop S1 billloo a year .
concluded .
in welfare waste caused by cheating and plain old
bureaucratic bungling.
' · · · ' · ""
.
Califano said Monday hill agericy ·will demand financial
\
penalUea from states that do not redtlce' overpayments to 4
percent in two ol the larsest welfare progfllll8 - Medicaid
and Aid To Familia with Dependenl Children .
According .to the report,
The ,Incident is under In·
l
Meigs County Sheriff
Wiili•m
B. Downie, Jr ., RD
IOD
James J. Proffitt reports . vestigalion. Sheriff Proffitt
was
traveling east on
Raclrie,
ATLANTA (UPI)- Union Officials coMirrned loday 'that
deputies are investigating requests that anyone having
CR
~
pulling
a horse trailer
memben of Local S2SO of the c.nmuntcatilllll Worken of vandalism at the Pearl information that could assist
when
it
suddenly
came
America were picketinl American Telephone and Telegraph Chapel Church, 'RFD, in the identificaiion uf the
unhooked.
Seeing
an
ap·
vandals please ca ll the
Co. offices in Atlanta.
Albany .
•
proaching
auto,
-Downie
,
Dick Burton, departmental repr.entatlve, said about 900
According to the repol'l , sherilf.'s office.
The sheriff's department stopped hls 1976 pickup to
VWA members were protesttna suapelllion ol aeverai Nash· , ~ubmitted by Rev . Wendell C.
ville worllera, who rtlued to crou 1 picket line.
Combs: pastor , som eli m~. has recov_.ered a J . C. Penney prevent the trailer from
since · Sunday, July 2, an bicyrle . II you have a lJicycle possibly going left into the
18
unknown person (ired five ( J . C. Penney brand) approaching auto. The trailer
,
.
shots throu&amp;h one of church's mjssing please contact the struck the p~ckup on the right
KHARTOUM, SUdan (UP!) -The Ualted Natioo'a top · front doors.
office and · lqrnish the rear and went on into ditch on
the ri~ht.
•lkJIIftheld cilrlclal baa 8c:clllltd tba Carter adminlatretlon
Tj&gt;o oi the aiuga lodged in neceaaary deacription.
N 11 horses
were Peing
Munday evening, deputies
of ~ prolanl racial dlacrlmlnadon in Soulh Africa.
the ceiling, one slug · went
t'ranspurted
at
the lime .
- The dlarp wu leveled by Leaiit II, Harriman, Nlaerla's through and lodged in the investigated a truck-horse
Tlwro:
was
sli~hl
damage to
timbc•nclcr to the United Nellanund the chalnna~ al the U. rear waD . The other slugs tr&amp;iler at-cidenl un CR 26 in
lhl'
u·w·k.
"·'"derat
e damage
lruut .,f the Meigs HiKh
N. Special Cclmmlllee Alainlt Apartheid, whiiHIIIe South lodged in the door.
tu
th
e
I
railer
.
·
Sehoul.
Afrlea'a pol~ of radal IIPIU'IIion.
·

sale . Those wishing to c
tri bute should ra il the Me
County Extension Serv
992 .3895,
a nd
Office ,
a rrangements will be made
-for the sa ie building to be
open lor the arrival or the
cont ributions . Merchandise
will be picked up if those
giving them are unable to get
their items to the location.
Furniture. stoves, dishes,
quilt s. bicycles , ' toys and
other items are being sought .
The clubs will operate a
refreshment stand during the
sa le. Six counties have a·
quota · of $250,000 to raise in
order to make th e im·
proveme nt project successful.

. .~. ·t

"

f

.

· WOrk ers, piC
• ke

· , ,
used
Administration ace

)

evacuation.

enttne

vandals·damage church

James P. Conde, D.O. ·announces the
change of his office from Mulberry
tfeights, Pomeroy, Ohio to 306 North
Second Avenue, Middleport, Ohio
effective Ju)y 17th, 1978.

from th e Mason County
Sherifl's Department and the
Mason Pulic.e Department.
Ali were assisting in the

Bids will be ·secured for backhoe

WARREN, Ohio (UP I) - A two-day strike at the Republic
!Steel Co. w&lt;rks in Warren ended Monday when employees
returned to their jobs on the second shift following an
injunctioo issued by U. S. Distric t Court in Akron .
About 4,000 members of Local 1375 ·ot the United Stee l
W&lt;rkers (inion struck the plant Saturday in a dispute over
complaints in the transportation department of the mills.

• t'
Commumca

also on the scene .were units

TUESDAY, JULY 11. 1978

,i,..J_r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a._y_

Nazis rally cost $175,000

tracks ripped apart .
Besides the state police,

•

$1 billion chop ordered

NOTICE

•

e

•

' CHICAGO (UPI) L Sunday's rally by 23 Nazis cost
Chicago tupayers Sl75,000, the Police Department said
Monday.
·
· The mOney was for overtime pay, equipment and lranllportaUoo of between 1,300 and 1,400 policemen who provided
security for the Nazis, a police official said. Police kept the
Nazis and about 5,000 backers and opponents apart in
Marquette Park.

NOW YOU KNOW
A prima ~y ingredient of
bubble gum is rubber,
without which the &lt;;.hewer
co uld not blow bubbles.

Monday: 9: 00-12:00 - i:00-4:00 - 6:30.1:30
.
Tuesday: 9:00-12:00-1:00-4:00
·
Wednesday: Out
Thursday : 9: 00-12 :00 - 1:00-4:00
Friday: 9:00-12 :00- 1:00-4:00
Satutday : 9:00.12:00

area across from the river of the derailmenl were
evacuated. F . L. McGaha, .train master, checks one of the
derailed cars.

Two-day steel strike ends

U14
' floOr · A· MitiC'

. '

to begin evacuation procedures . In Meigs
residents in a three-quarter mile radius ol the Leta~t

water , the train derailed at
Peuplc
We re
being across the- river.
evacuated frum their hnmes
Six other cars that derailed approximately 4:10a.m .
No injuries were reJ)!!rted
this morning as the result &lt;Jf are hauling vinyl chloride.
eight cars. derailing un a . However, none are beh.eved but the scene around the
t:hessie System
train , to have ruptured. The eighth derailment was one of cars
carrying t oxic chemicalS, . car is carrymg a cheml&lt;:al toppled over a nd laying in
along the Ohio River near described by state Police Cpi several directions: wheels
Letart .
J.L. Fitzwater .as nun- jerked off their cars ; and
At least one uf the cars has harmfuL
ruptured an!f is. spilling · The train, called the Ohiu :·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:-: ·:-:·;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:
caustic soda a long the track. Valley 33, · was. travelMIAMI t UP II - Two
from
ParkersApparently, fumes from the ing
trains
collided !ale Monday
spilled chemical have spread burg ·
tn · Huntington ,
near
the
border ol Cuba 's
out from the site and caused · accordi ng to F' .L. McGaha ,
and Camaguey
Las
Villas
officia ls to begin the trammaster-road foreman or
provinces,
killing 23 per·
t;!Vacua tion.
engines. "e said there are 29
sons
and
seriously
injur·ing
The evacuation area in- loaded Cars and 28 emp~y ·
others,
Havana
radio
7
eludes a radius around the .c ars. ~
-~
reported
today
In
a
derailment uf a half mile to
Another spokesman at the
broadrast
monitored
in
three-quarters or a mile. As scene said chemists from l~e
Miami.
of this morning it has not Environmental
Protection
The broadcast gave no
been determined how long the Agency, and the companies
details
of tbe accident. II
evacuation wHI take place . where the chemi ca ls were
said
one
was a paSsenger
Residents were told to tum going, were expected to be on
train
and
implied !bat the
the scene today-.
off all pOwer.
was
a freight train.
othfr
' An evacuation also took
Meanwhile, Route 33 in the ·
The scene of the accident
place across the river in Ohio area where the derailment
at Letart Falls. Officials were occurred is expected to be was placed behnen
Taguaseol in Las Villas
evacuating a three-quarter closed to traffic sometime
province and Jadibonico in
mile radiu s . Apparently, today to allow workers the
.
Cama
guey, some 225 miles
officials decided to evacuate opp ort unity t o clear the
east
southeast
c)l ·Havana.
in Ohio as a result of the wind wreckage .
change which took the fumes
Accor di ng to Cpl. Fitz·

'

AUCTION ITEM - Pansy Jcrdon, left, 4-H Ptogram
Aasistant for Meigs County, and Jean Spencer, right.
Assistant 4-H Allen(, display a pool table to be aucliooed
off at the upc..-ning Junior 4-H Auction . The pool table 'is
just ooe of many items being offered.
&lt;

...

discussed last week with a
represe nta t ive fr om the
Buckeye
Hill s- Hoc kin g
Valley Regional Development District.
also
Mayor Hoffman
reported the State Controlling
Board has announced it has
$2,500,000 for distr ibution lo
dep ressed c ities. He has
applied lor Middleport,
primarily on the basis of
costs involved in the village
in last winter's weather.
Mayor Hollman also
reported the town has $8,6011
set aside lor street resurfacing. He asked the stree\
com mittee
to
make
recommendations for ex·
penditure of the money at the
next meeting.
mayor
f urther
The
reported the Middleport Fire
Depa rtment has put its new
a larm system &gt;nto effect . The
system is on an individual
contat1 basis and no siren is
required .
Th e department spe nt
$9,000 for the a lert system
and is spending $2,200 lor 500
feet or new fo ur inch hose the
money having been allocated
to t he departme nt fr om
venue sharing funds'. It is
paying from its own funds lor
ew type fittings lor the hose
the amount of $2,000.
Co uncilm a n Allen King
s uggested a garden club be
contacted to ~e if it will
provide a replacement for the
pla nter which was used on the '
" T" lor a couple of years
before being torn down. He
was Mvised one club is
(Continued on page 10)

38 p~ople
stricken
CHILLI COTHE , Ohio
( UPl) - A line on a chlorine
gas tank ruptured Monday at
the Mea d Paper Co. plant
here, spewing a cloud of
chlorine gas over the area .
Thirty-eig ht pe r sons were
' stricken .
" We've had 38 persons
brought in here, " said Wayne
Foster, president of the Ross
County Medical Cen te~ .
" We've admitted 15 of the 38,
seven of them to intensive
care. However , the condition
of all but one of them is good
and that one is fair.''
Several firemen .. w.er~ ,,. .
among those injured .
" · · ·
A spokesman for the Chi!- ·
licothe Fire Department said
the gas was in liquid form
·when it ruptured under about
250 pounds Of pressure while
being pumped into another
tank at the plant.
" When' it came out it came
.out as gas ," said . a
spokesman lor the Fire
Department. " When it hit lhe
air it turned into a greenish
yellow cloud."
The spokesman said Mead
Co. personnel evacuated the
plant.
" We had Ill go in there and
search for possible victiml
but everybody was accounted
for ," said the spokesman.

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