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1}8-

The SWJday Tilnes.Sentinel. Sunday. July 16, 1978

~.

Dr. McNeill new member of PVH staff
building.
.
Dr. McNeill is a graduate of
West Virginia University and
the West Virginia University
School of Medicine. He also
completed his internship and

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va. - Samuel P. McNeill,
M.D.. a specialist in Family
Practice, has joined the staff
at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
and is now accepting patients
at his office in the hospital

his two y.ear residency in

Family Practice at the West
Virginia University Medical
Center in Morgantown .
A native of Point Pleasant,
Dr. McNeill received the
Meade Johnson Award for
Gra du ate Education in
-F a mily Practice by the

HELP WANTED
High

Sludent

School

n~edtd

for babysitting .
Exce llent .sala ry . Call 446·
4030 after 5 ~ . rn .

Ameri can

Academy

of

••••••••••••••••••

~al.!

CBstate!•

Today ••
..•
••
LOOKING? KEEP ARECORD
••
•e
By
Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

Bu ying a home is a b1g

e inves t ment a nd

involves

• m a jor

de ci sions . So, i t ' s
.. under standabl e wl'1y so
• much lime and care is
e taken when loo king tor a
• home that' s ri ght for you
No one knows this better
• than your loca l Realtor .
•
On ce the Realtor takes
e on the assignm en t of f in • ding ....you · a.. --home, he ' ll
·• probably show you sever a !.
e Therefore, it's i mportant to
• ta ke notes On what you
• have seen or you may
for get whjch home is
• whe re , how big i t is, what
• ~hape i t 's in, and how much

. e ;t costs .·
•

Your Rea ltor can prov ide
w i th a check li st to

• -wou

_

•

maKe l his im portanl task

easier . This way, you can e
rate each home as you see e·
It and inst antl y rec all t l'1e e
loca tio n, pr ice,
con-

Family Physicians. This
award was based primarily
on leadership in the field of
health care education and
training.
A U. S. Army veteran, Dr.
McNeill spent three years in
the service, and was an in·
fantry platooQ leader in
Vietnam in 1969-70. In addition to his internship and
residency, Dr. McNeill was
associated with the United
States Hospital Center in
Clarksburg, West Virginia as
an
emergency
room
physician from 197&amp;-77 .
James
L.
Farley,
Exec utive Director ofPleasant VaHey Hospital ,
announcing the appointment
of Dr. McNeill to the staff
said, "We are happy to have a
physician of Dr. McNeill's
ability on our staff. It is
eSpecially good to have a
home-town native return to
establish his professional life
with us in Point Pleasant.
Pleasant Valley Hospital and
the city of Point Pleasant are
both very fortunate as Dr.
McNeill was highly sought
after and recruited by many
other communities in West
Virginia . The professional
recommendations received
from his Medical School and

str uc t ion ,
numbe r
of •
rooms , heal , fue·l,. taxes, • his colleagues are exceptional. ''
a n d
f i n a n c i a I
requiremen ts. It you hal.'e
a Polaroi d pic t ure of the
house to go with the not es
Eadweard J . Muybridge
- so mu ch the 'better when
took the first "moving" picdescrib 1ng it to your ot he r • tures in -t878. His subject was
ha lf .
·
e a race horse in action . He
• took consecutive pictures

e
e
e

e
e

If there is anything we
can do to help you in the e
field of real estate please e
phone or drop in at e
LEADINGHAM
REAL e·'
ESTATE, 512 Second Ave., e
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699. •
We're here to help.
•

···························~

I
. II
with a series of e ectrtca Y
operatec.l cameras placed in a
row.

.

By the time all systems are
" go, " Ihe lighl 111 the dial
lJ.'::iUi:illy burns oul.

,,

George has s·lashed
skateboard prices!

GALUPOLiS - Ceniury 21
GAWPO!JS- Mary Botkin, Omaha, Neb. , wrote to
"Words, Wit [ Wisdom" in· the t :../umbu.
trh of July 10 of Southern Ohio, Inc., anthat me had seen something on the "w.eekend TV network:' riounced Saturday that
about the International Chicken Flying Meet at Rio Grande. Century ~I - Southern Hills
She said that the network newscasters pronowtcedit "REE- }teal Estate, 23 Locust,
ob-Grand.
Gallipolis, has joined 152
· The Morrises gave the correct pronWJCiation, "RY-oh- other regional omces as an
Grand." The Morrises· are William and Mary, and their ex- affiliated member of the
planation was that "we have that oq the best possible' authori- Century 21 international sales
·
ty, for Mary's father, J. Boyd Davis, was for many years organization.
'century 21 - Southern
chairman or the board or trustees of Rio.Grande College,"
· The column continues : "When the town was 'incorporated in Hills Real Estate becomes
1848, townspeople wrote to the Post Orrice Department, mak- part of a network of more
ing several suggestions for the name of the town/' Note the than 6,ooo· affiliated, in·
dependently owned Century
year,1848.
In connection with that. John Merrill Weed, 1674 Andover 21 oUlces throughout the
United States and canada.
Rd., Columbus 43212, says:
The
60,000-plus sales people
"Obviously, Mr. Morris erred in speaking of Rio Grande's
affiliated
~with Century 21
being 'incorporated' in 1848. He must have meant the
were
responsible
(or more
establlshrnent of a post office at that little settlement. Inthan
$15
bi!Uon
in
gross
sales
corporation must have come much later, perhaps a century
in
1977
and
currently
sell
one
later. That would be an interesting point to make in some artiout of every 12 used homes
cle you may write."
Weed came pretty close to the truth when he said that in- sold in the country.
The franchised offices of
corporation was ''perhaps a century later." By telephone,
Ernest N. Wiseman said that he was the first .mayor or Rio Century 21 retain their in·
dependence and their inGrande and that incorporation was 1935.
The 3-W column on July 10 said that all suggestions were re- dividuatity, including their
jected "because they would duplicate names of post offices firm rtame. Each omce is
already in ertistence." The late Mary Lewis told and retold this better able to serve the public
story, that the original location was Adamsville and the through the·. advantage or the
Adamsville name was the first rejected. She told of the Mex- Century 21 name and image
ican War "on or below the Rio Grande," and how that name identification, recruitment,
management . and sales
won acceptance.
associate training, a built-in
Later the post office was moved physically to Rio Grande.
·
nationwide referral system,
collective multi-million
dollar advertising, and a
tested, proven sales development program.
Tom Elsass, Regional
Director of the 152 offic,es
By
starts school and because of headquartered in Worthing;
John A. Malacos_,Pb. D.
rising inflation in the United
, Ohio, o suburb of
Director ol
·
States, more and more ton
Columbus,
said, "We are
Rio Grande Community
women are working to supexcited
about
the high caliber
Educational Counseling
port themselves or their of
estate
our
rea I
Center
families.
professionals; and we are
(First of a twe&gt;-part series
While the number of
on Women and Work)
women in the work force has happy to welcome Southern
RIO. GRANDE - Over the increased, the gap between Hiils Real Estate inlo our
unexcelled program. This
past twenty-five years our their earnings and the earn- office
will now have exClusive
society has experienced ings of men has actually use of ail the real ·estate tools,
considerable change in the increased./ In 1955, Jully
labor force. Today, more employed women earned 64
than half of the. women a_ged ....p£~:cent of what men earned,
18 and over in the Unrted whereas in 1972, they earned
States are working and nine only 58 percent. In 1973 the
out of ten women will work median income for men was
outSide their home at some $11 ,186 and lor women $6,335.
time in lheir lives.
Fully employed female high
The typical
working school graduates earn less on

m.,..

II

is

described

as

follows (Women 's Bureau of
the Department of Labor,
1973) :
_
- She is one of 35 million
working women in the U. S.
(about 39 percent of the total
labor· force I
- Her median age is 36 (61
percent of all women between
ages 20 and 24 are workil)g;
43 percent between 35 and 44 ;
54 percent between 4:i and 54)
- She is likely to be
married (58 percent of
women workers are married ;
23 percent are single; 19
percent are ·· widoa;ed ,
divorced or separated) ·
- She usually does not
have children under 18 years
of age (although 39 percent or
working women do)
- The working woman has
at least a high school
education (70 percent do ),
and the more education. she
has, the more likety she ili to
be in the tabor force (27
percent of all women with
g rad~school education work ;
69 percent with five years of
roilege work)
- If married , she is more
apt to be working if her

Unbelievablel
master charge
~.....

Bl J. -~.4/ltl ll:'/. I'H£PS

woman

24" COYOTE Reg. s18.34....... NOW '11"
20%" SPOILER II Reg. sl2.57•. NOW '7"
All G. T. ACCESSORIES .........lh PRICE
...

...

husband's income is between

$7,000 and $9,999 (49 percent
of such women work ); she is

less apt to work if her
husband's income is below
$5,000 (37 percentl or is
$10.000 or more ·.(41 percent)
In 1900, women spent an
average of 6.3 years working,
whereas today it .is 25 years.

529 JACKSON PiKE
HOURS
MON-SAT. 9 am - 8 PM

Doc
Smith's

••

Since the average woman

who is married has about 35
years of active life ahead of
her after her youngest child

ROUNDUP

'5797 ln~~~~~s
•

•Air Cond.

the Following
Equipment

•Custom Seat
Belts

• Tinted Glass

· •Whitewall
Radials
•Deluxe Wheel
CotetS
•Radio Accom.
Pllg.
•Floor Mats

• Power Steering

•Power Brakes
•Vinyl Side
Moulding

have not even finished
elementary school. Part of
thee!planotion for this is that
over half of all women
workers were employed In 21
occupations (65 for men ) and
a fourth were employed in
fiv e ·traditionally female
oc cupations .,... secretary,
domestic worker, bookkeeper, elementary school
teacher and
waitress.
Although more women are
working, many are finding
jobs that typically do not pay .,.
very well. ·
'
In my next column, I will
discuss what avenues are
open to women to find jobs
that are suitable and reward·
ing.

..

'

systems and progrllltll to ' recOrd When It printed eight
91!rve the public that has million business cards a
made. It the · largest real month, more than twice the
estate sales organization In nuni!Jer printed by the' second
the world." During 1977 the largest corporateuaer, Sears.
Southern Ohio Region did
Arthur Nibert, broker, and
$464 m!Uion in business; and Merrill Carter, ~ general
its goal for this year is S650 manager, are well-known
million.
local busineslmen. They
Nationally, the Century 21 were born and railed · In
Real Estate Corporatiqp, Gallia Countyand opened the
headquarlered 'In Irvine, Southern Hilla Real Eltate
Calif., is spending $10 mllllon . omce In Oc!ober 1977. Merrill
on advertising this year, up Carter says of their new .
from $7 million in 1977. This is affiliation, "We are pleased
in addition to the mllllons of to join Century 21 in order to .
dollars spent by the in- more
effectively
and
dividual offices in their own· . profesalonaUy meet the many
marketing area.
real estate needs of the
Recently the national people of our area."
organization ·achieved a

'

•'

PROBING ACCIDENT ..,. Mason County SheriCC's·
Department Sgt. Detner Roush m and Deputy Frank
Crump are shown investigating the occipent earlySunday

7\. T

A yotWg Ripley man was
killed and two others injured
when the pickup they were
riding In wrec'ked at 4:43a.m.
's unday on Route 2 at
Flatrock.
·
. The dead man, Jeffrey A.
Steele, 18, \vas a passenger 'In
a truck driven by Ronald E.
Shields, 22, Ripley Route I.
Steele, who became the
county's fourth traffic
fatality or the year, apparently was ejected from
the vehicle as it overturned
and was thrown over a 45-foot
embankment into o shallow
pond, according to infonnotion released by Mason
County Sheriff's Deputy E.F.
Crump.
Assisting Crump in the
investigation were deputies
Sgt. Delner Roush Ill, G.S.
Rodgers and P.E. Watterson.
Injured in the mishap were
'Shields, and o second
passenger, Archie Alien
Boggess, 20, Route I, Kenny,
W.Va. The two, along with the
victim, were transported by
the Point Pleasant Rescue
Squad to Pleasant Valley

~

.

CENnJRY 21 Southem Hills Real Estate, 23 Locust
St., Gallipolis, baa joined 152 other reglooal offices as an
affiliated member or Century 21 lnternaUonal sales
organization.

'

A Gift of Love for all
Get Something Beautiful Goihg for Yourself with
a Lane®Love Chest The Gift ·that Starts the Home.

0
()

The love che~t . It's fhe most personal, cherished piece~~ furn iture she'll
ever own . A gilr steeped in ce nturies of romance and legend·. a traditioh
th ar grows in its charm every year. We have an impressive assortment
of beautiful sryles , all finished in fine cabinetwoods and fined wit'h Ira ·
grant rer:J ce dar. Can you th ink of a more imaginative way to say " !love

()

you ?" ·

Your Choice:
upholstered top chests

OJ

-·
.0
V&gt;

'9900 ~

7\. T

1 leWS 1 lOtes
Mrs. Iva Johnson has been
visiting with Miss Julie
Stevens and Barbara Steadman of ·Fairfax, Virginia the
past several days.
Mr. and Mrs: Jed Russell of
Oregon are visiting his
mother, Bertha Russell and
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Thompson and daughter of
Bunker Hill were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Darnell and son.
Mr. and Mrs. James
Reeves and Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Tuckerman were in
Chillicothe recently to visit
Mrs. Elsie Bratton who is in
bospital there for an eye
operation.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Haggy
and family were Fourtlr of
July visitors of her sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Summerfield
and daughters· of ntinois.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Worley and Stacy of Beckley,
W, Va, were weekend visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.
Swtday visitors o( Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith were Mr.
and Mrs. Daniel Worley and
Stacy, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp, Kail, Kevin and
Charles, Mrs. Dale Randall
and Keiley of Columbus and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith,
Mrs. Carl Russell, Melissa
and Kenneth of North
Carolina.
Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Russell, Bertha Russell,
local, Mr. and Mrs. Jed
Russell of Oregon enjoyed a
cookout at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell and
family of Racine.

where a Ripley teenager, Jeffrey A. Steele, 18, was killed.
Two other persons were injured. - Photo by John Wjlson.

Teenager killed, -two hu11
in Mason County truck crash

Wolfpen .

Brussels sprouts, a clnse
relative of cabbage, have
been sold in Belgium since
th•· 12th century . The
vegetable take~ its name
from Bru~ls , !lelgium ..
.

•
Carter pledges furth~r reduction · zn
U.S. dependenc~ on foreign oil

ELBERFELD$ IN
POMEROY

the average than males wh~­

,.

I

Person to person

You Just Won't Believe
It! • •

·~·

Peeps.

....... _ ___

Economic Summit-----.

Gallipo-lis firm ·now part
of international network

A Gallipolis Diary

-

.,. :r

Hospital. Steele's body has
since been taken to the Vale
Funeral Home in Ripley.
Shields was admitted and is
suffering from a head injury,
cuts and abrasions and was ..
listed in stable condition·this
morning . Boggess was
treated and released.
Steele, who was dead on
arrival at the hospital, was
examined by Mason County
Coroner John Grubb, who
determined that the man had
died of a broken neck and not
drowning.
Officers reported that the
truck left lhe roadway near
the junction of Long Hollow
Rood, roiling over in mid-air
and narrowly missing a huge
tree. Once on the ground, the
,vehicle overturned .at least
two more times. It was
estimated that the vehicle,
which was demolished, had
-traveled some 525 feet before
reaching its final resting
point on the Junior Wedge
property on Route 2.
Shields and Boggess also
were thrown from the
vehicle.

~nergy,

abortion .
battles on tap

WASffiNGTON (UPII New 'llllttles In old wars abortion and energy - are
anticipated in the House this
week, and the Senate
leadership seeks to get action
on its full calendar of biDs
despite
two
one-man
filibusters.
Freshman Sen. Harrison
Schmitt, R·N.M., is delaying
Senate debate because of his
opposition to a conference
committee report on a bill
which would force industries
to switch from oil to coal.
Senate leaders had hoped
for quick action on the bill,
ihe first portion of President
Carter's five-part energy
package, which has been
stalled (or 15 months, in Ume
for the economic surrunlt in
Bonn. ,
Schmitt held the floor to
prevent that, but agreed to
allow a vote Tuesday in

Second tax

MON. THRU THURS. 913cJ-5sOO
FRIDAY ~ laOO
SATURDAY 9130-5100

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'"'

officers

in

recovery · of

Steele' s body from the pond.
The body-was pulled from the
vvater at 6:13 a.nn.

•

e
VOL. XXIX

NO. 64

enttne
r•'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, JULY 17, 1978

HONOLULU ( UPf) - Hurricane Fico, packing winds of 50
miles an ~our, roared across the Padfic loday, and the
National Weather Service said it could' hit Hawari sometime
Wednesday if it continues on its present course.

Opinions are offered
·

NEW YORK (UP!) - Sixty-&lt;&gt;ne percent of 515 people
sampled in a Callpp Poll said a nuclear arms agreement is
more Important than Preloident Carter's human rights policy,
and nearly half said what goes on Inside the S&lt;lvlet \J!!Ion-.,._.
none or Washington's business.
The poll, commissioned by Newsweek magazine, aWl
showed :;a percent of those offering an opinjon felt American
pressure on Moscow has littlejmpact on Soviet policies, a.nd 65
per cent endorsed Carter's decision to continue nuclear arms
talks despite trials of .several Russian dissidents.

Mountain summit conquered

•
OPEN HOUSE HELD .:... Shown above are members
of the Board of Directors and doctors of lhe Bend Area
Medical Center at an Open House held Sunday at the
Cen~r in New Haven . Front row, left lo right, Dr. Jim

Teenager cited
after accident
An 18-year-old Letart man
was cited to Meigs County
Court foiiowing a motorcycle
- auto accident on the
Cemetery Road Saturday
afternoon .
According lo the report at
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Office, Stephen W. Seiiers, 18,
Rt. 2, Racine. was cited to
Meigs Co unty Court for no
motorcycle endorsement.
Sellers was traveling west
on the Township road on his
(Continued on page 10)

Thefts probed
A series of five !hefts were
investigated by Meigs County
Sheriff Jam es Proffitt's
department
over
lhe
weekend.
They• were:
·- Nancy Bartimus, Rt . I,
Reedsviiie, reported - that
Saturday evening around 9:30
p.rri.. the rear glass and
windshield of her 1968 Dodge
auto was smashed out and
battery was stolen . The
vehicle was parked · at her
residence on SR 681 between

Alfred and Tuppers Plains.
- James A. Will, 42815
Pomero y Pik e (CR 25 ),
reported Sunday that bed
rails were •'loien from his
1977 Ford pickup truck . Value
of the rails is est imated
around $87.
- Clarence Atherton, Long
Bottom, Ohio, and George
Albert · Hiil, Letart Fails,
repllrted that · Saturday
evening after 10:30 p.m. their
(Continued on page 10)

pave Spencer of Racine
is another of those lucky
golfers . On July 7 he

carded a hole-in-one at
Riverside Golf Course In
Mason.

Playing with Tom Wolfe,
also of Racine, Dave hit a

pitching wedge on the
Number 7 tee and saw his
bail travel the 130 yards
and bounce into the cup.
Dave said he couldn't .
believe it reaily happened
to him until he actually
picked his ball out of the
cup.

Gallia-Meigs Post
probes 8 accidents
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
Highway Patrol, investigated
eight weekend accidents.
A passenger was injured in
a one-car accident Sunday at
12:20 a.m., on SR 141 , -one
mile south of Centenary.
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Steven
Calvert , 18, Gallipolis, was
west boWld on 141 when the
vehicle went out of control,
passed off the right side of the
roadway , and ""struck a
guardrail.
A passenger in the auto,
Donna Bailey, 19, Gallipolis,
displayed visible signs of
injury, and was taken to
Holzer Medical Center tn a
private car.
Bailey was treated and
released for contusions and
abrasions, and ce rvical
muscle strain.
The Calvert vehicle in·
curred severe damag e.
Calvert was cited for ex·
. s_pee·d.
eess1ve
Officers investigated a two

'b:ILUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A new battery was placed in
the heart pacemaker o( Ca.med actor Pat O'Brien in a one-hour
operation by ' Riverside Hospital surgeons SWlday . O'Brien,
star of ItO motion pictures, dozens of stage plays and television
dramatic shows, became ill soon after the opening of a
performance Saturday evening at the CoWltry Dinner
Playbouse.
·
The actor is starring with his wife Eloise in "Second Time
AroiD!d" and is expected to be back on stage Wednesday or
Thursday.

CQoling b&gt;wer builder claims
concrete not mixed properly
'

Scbork said the blame for
the collapse of the sea Holding
arowtd tile Willow Island,
W.Va., cooling tower falls on
the Criss Concrete o(
Parkersburg,
W. Va .,
suppUen ol the concrete and ·
the Pittsburgh Testing
Laboratories ol Pittsburgh,
which tested the concrete
ll.led in the tower.
Researh-Cottrell was lined
•105,100 by · the U.S.
Department of Labor's
Occupational Salety and
Health Adminiatratiori in
June, which cited the
company lor 10 11rety
violations: OSHA did not
place the blame lor tbe

Lockhart, Elizabeth 'Reichert, Ron Robinson, Dr. Zinna
Dayo, Dr. M. P. Dayo. Back row, lefl lo right, Charles
Smith, New Haven Mayor ; Randy Love, R. G. Qreen,
!,lev. John Campbell and Mel Clark .
:::;:::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::

O'Brien gets new battery

BOUND BROOK, N.J .
(UPI) - ReleM'ch.COttrell
Inc., the firm that was
buildinR the scallolcling on a
West VIrgilia coolinC tower
where 51 men died, lncltldlng
' lix from Ohio, says concrete
lllled in the tower was not
mixed proptrly'
John E." Schork, the finn's
chiel executive ofrtcer, said
his c&lt;mpany had no control
over the proce• u..d to mix
the concrete.
The men were killed 'When
the ~e~~lfoldlng on which ,they
. were ~ tore out ol tbe
cmcrete and tent the!Jl plummeting to their deatll C11 April
%7. .
~ '

growth:
But as one official put it: The figures themselves are
~ot so important. The key lhing about this conference
rs the understanding it establishes between Carler and
Schmidl. When you consrder everything that has
happened in the past year, this trust is vital."

Hurricane may hit Hawaii

Mother charged in deaths

Clear tonight with a low
about 60. Mostly sunny and
warmer Tuesday with high
temperatu~s in the mid 8os.
Probability of precipitation
near · zero percenl today
through Tue~day.

oHer ~me "specific flgures' 1 on energy and economic

jl)fll.•_r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_

11 killed, 200 injured

Weather

The first day of the summit Sunday took up energy
problems and the world monetary crisis - both topics
that put Carter on the defensive.
West Germa'ny and Japan in particular have
criticized growing U.S. energy consumption and the
lack of a specific energy policy to curtail it as among
the chief causes for the world 's economic plight.
Carter ,spent most of Sunday explaining the U.S.
fl)ergy situation for the other six summit leaders and
Treasury Secretary W. Michael Blumenthal said
afterwards the reaction was "genei'ltlly positive ...
there was no specific criticism."
"The president went inlo considerable detail,"
Blumenthal said. "it seemed to satisfy the others."
Later, Carter said he was "pleased, very pleased"
with the opening day.
Carter said he told his colleagues four parts of his
energy package have been agreed to by Congress and
he would continue lo press for passage of the rest.
The president .said he pointed out that oil imports
,already were down since th~ beginning of lhe year and
he pledged the United States would cut its dependence
on foreign oil by 2million barrels a day by 1985.
Summit sources said the final communique would

•

at ·.y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

return Cor Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd's
promise not to keep the
Senate in session all
MEXICO CITY (UP!) - A tank truck loaded with
weekend.
pressurized gas swerved out of control, overturned· and
But Sen. Mike Gravel, J). exploded Sunday in a sheet of flame that engulfed 10 other
Alaska, threatened other vehicles, killed II people and injured more than 200 others.
pending legiSlation through
The blast blew off the roofs oi nearby houses and burned
use of the Senate's unlimited off a half'lllile or cornfields and forests along the highway 53·
debate rules to prevent miles north of Mexico City.
·
consideration or a bill that
would set aside 124 million
acres in his siate for national .
parks, wildlife refuges and
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP! )- Police today charged a mother
wilderness areas.
with murder for the stabbing deaths of her four children,
If he can be persuaded or ·who'!f bloody bodies were fowtd at their East Side home.
forced to allow normal Senate
Police said Gail Trait, 26, was charged with lour counts of
procedures, Byrd scheduled · second-degree murder. Detectives said no one else appeared lo
action this week on amend· be involved in the slayings . The bodies of a boy and three girts,
menta to the Endangered identified as Demario Trait, 2, and his sisters Iniz, 4, Amina , 6,
~.!es Act that would set up and Kyllo, 8, were fowtd shortly after midnight ~~?&lt;~ay.
a mechanism lor resolving
disputes such as the current
one between the snail darter
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (UPf) - A Czechoslovakian
and o Tennessee Valley
expedition
has become the first to conquer the 25,792-foot
Authority dam, and on a
northern
summit
of Nanga Parbat mountain in northern .
foreign military aid biD that
includes a proposal to lift the Pakistan, a spokesman annowtced SWJday .
.The 11-member team led by Ma('tian Sajnoha reached the
controversial arms embargo
peak July 4, the Czech Embassy said.
against Turkey. ·

sale held
The second tax sale was
held at the Meigs Cowtty
Courthouse stepa Saturday
morning. The Long Bottom
Division
of
Citizens
Telephone Company property
was redeemed prior tO the
sale.
The Curtis Males pr.operty,
located In Carpenter, did not
sell. Prosecuting Attorney
Rick Crow said the Males
property will be offered for
sale nut Saturday, July 22,
at 9 a .m., the minimum being
approximately S330.
Homer and Palma L.
Goodwin, 39340 Oak Road,
Pomeroy, purchaled the Alva
Miller property for $290, and
J . H. M!Uer property lor
$1,200. John Wellll, Rt. I, Long
Bottom, purchased the. (:; c..
Lewla property in Chester
Townahlp lor $800.
'C harlll ·and Margaret
BIMeU purchued the Balhan
Dlvl1ion
ol
Citi&amp;ena
Telephone Company property
in Che1ter Town•hlp lor
$1,000: Bernard Fultz,
Mlddhp m, purdiUid the
a-rr L. Bac~PY property in
Letart Townlhlp for t411.

Point• Pleasant firemen
-aided squad members and

BONN, West Germany (UP!) - President Carter,
promising his economic sununit critics " there will be
energy legislation" in the United States, gets his twn
to go on the offensive loday.
The only item left on the agenda at the seven-nation
summit was the question of internatl'onal trade and it
: gives Carter a chance to make a few points ·or his own
on what is wrong with the world's economy:
On the iastday of his lourday visit loWest Germany,
Carter squeezed in a Big Four breakfast meeting with
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt, British Prime Minister
James Callaghan and French President Valery'
Giscard d'Estaing lo discuss the Berlin situation.
During Carter's emotional visit to Berlin Saturday,
East Germany ordered a slowdown of traffic traveling
Ill the divided city reminiscent or Communist
harasament during the Cold War days, East Germany
also protested Schmidt's accompanying Carter to
Berlin.
The third session of the economic summit follows the
· breakfast meeting. West German President Walter
Scheel hosts a lunch for the seven heads or government
before the fourth and final summit session. The
.president will take part in a joinl news conference at
the end of the summit before flying home.
With the summit turning lo the subject of
international trade, Carter was able io put forward
some criticism of his own.
The United States repeatedly has called on Germany
and Japan lo expand domestic demand in order to
provide bigger export markets. But Schmidt' has
refused, citing the danger of inflation.

accident on any of the
companies involved.
A spokesman fer the Pills- ••
AN AU.TOMATIC CHAIR UFT was ll.led for the first
burgh Testing Laboratory
time 'sunday at the Syracuse Asbury United Methodist
Saturday said "We ore not
Church. The choir, paid for by the variouS classes of the .
anyway at fault. AU of the
church, was installed Saturday, Shown taken advantage
charges (lying around is of the new addition is long time member Marcia Karr. The
somebody lookin g for a
church ~1110 has recently Installed a personal public '
scapegoat."
address system.
'
Crila Concrete could not be
reached (or comment.
Pomeroy emergency squadsmen answer three calls
Schork said the test
laboratory should have foWld
I
The Pomeroy Emergency Memorial Hospital.
AI 6:30 p.m. Sunday the
"improper inJ!redients" in
At 12 :31 p.m. Swtday, Sean squad went to Elberfeld's
the concrete used Cor the Squad answered thfee calls
over the wet'kend .
· Wahqn, 5, Ponieroy, was warehouse on Mechanlc
cooling tower.
At
4:44
p.m.
Saturday,
the
transported from Veterans Street for Brenda Petrie who
"The lab foiled to do this,
and this permitted bad squad transporl~d Bertha Memorial Hospital to Holzer had fallen . She was taken to
. cmcrete to be used in the Reibel. Pleasant Ridge, Medical Center in Gallipolis. Veterans where she was
Po meroy , 11,
Vc!erans H~ was a medical patient.
treated and released.
lower," Schork said.
1\1-

(.f

· auto mishap on Bulavilie ·
Porter Rd., one-tent h of a
mile north 'of SR 160, at II : IS
a.m .. Saturday.
According to the patrol, an
a ut o driven by Theod dre
Langh orn e, 69 , Galiipolis,
was traveling north , when a
vehicle operated by Kevin
Jackson, 18, Gallipolis, pulled
ont.o lhe roadway from a
parking space into the path of
the Langhorne auto.
Langhorne swerved to
avoid coliision. went off the
right side of the road, and
struck a utility pole.
Langhorne was uninjured.
The Langhorne vehicle in·
curred moderate damage.
Jack son was cited on
charges of improper passing.
Ai 3:30a.m., a deer ran into
lhe path of a vehicle operated
by Mark Siill•. 26, Middleport,
on SR 7, two-tenths of • mile
north of SR 143.
The deer was killed. The
Still aulo Incurred moderate
damage.
· Officers were called to the
scene of a two-car backing
mishap at 6'20 p.m., on SR
588 200 feel west of the
Gahipolis Corporation Limit:
According to the patrol,
autos driven by John McCarty, 22, Vinton , and Vivian
Richards, 64, Gallipolis, were
(Continued on page 10)
~

, ,~ .

�3--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P omer&lt;:y, 0 ., Monday J uly 17, 1978

Bf!ston
hikes
-

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 17, 1978

Young Oeveland inayor must face reatity
.
CLEVELAND ( UPI) Amid the settling political
dust of a 19-hour strike by
Cleve land
pollee ,
an
embattled and exhausted
Mayor Oemis Kucinich must
fa ce this reality : he has less
than a mooth before the first
mayoral recall electioo in the
city's history.
The 31-year-old Kucinich is
in a dogfight for political
survival . Much of the city's
corporate, labor and political
power has lined up against
him - angered bY his " go-it·
alone " policies and annoyed
bY his maverick stvle .
In that kind o! atmosphere ,
it was not surpr~ ing that the

city 's 2,GOO-meniber police
force staged a strike that left
Cleveland unpro\l!cted.
Police union leaders called
the strike to demand
reinstatement of 13 fired
officers who had refwled
orders to patrol Cleveland's
crime-ridden public housing
projects alone and Cll foot.
The 13 were fired Thursday
by
kucinic h 's
Safety
Director, James Barrett. The
strike concluded when a
C&lt;mmon Pleas Court judge
delayed the firings and
threatened heavy fines
a gainst the unions and
officer s for the illegal
walkout.
·

But the
relationship
between the upcm~ing recall
vote and the strike became
clearer with the disclosure
that
William
McNea ,
.president of the Cleveland
Police Patrolmen ' s Association , met with Cit y
Council P r esident George
Forbes shortly before McNea
called the walkout • late
Thursday.
Forbes is a bitter foe of
Kucinich and actually cut off
the mayor's microphooe last
week during a City Council
meeting, prompting Kucinich
and his cabinet to st&lt;mp out
of the session.
Kucinich declined to com·

men\ oo how he thought the
s trike would affect his
-chances in the · Aug . 13
citywide r ecall balloting. " I
can tell you this. The only
recall I've been interested in
is Ill recall the pollee to duty. ·
That's the only recall .I want
to talk about."
But Councilman William
Sullivan, a leader of the
recall drive, said he believed
the strike would boost efforts
to 0ust the mayor , "lt will
definitely help us. It just
demonstrates his inability Ill

govern."
Kucinich, the youngest big
city mayor in the nation,
maintained a mugh posture

through the walkout's 19
frantic hours, calling aorne
rowdy pollee ''hoodlums'' .
and repeatedly pointing out
the irony of those who are
supposed to enf&lt;rce the law
staging an illegal strike.
"The police have destroyed
many city admlnistritions
across this country, but
they're not going to do it in
Cleveland," Kucinich vowed.
Clearly, the tired-looking
mayor had little love for his
police force, some of whom
threw firecrackers and
directed one-finger gestures
and obscenities at him when
he drove to police stations

peopletalk

N.E,.._ ,8

WOODSTOCK REMEMBERED : Bob Dyllm surveyed his
"I 've never seen so many people. "
There his fans were - a quarter-million strong - dancing·
singing along with him, waving lllrches in the dusk at
Blackbushe Aerodrome, a rural airfield in England . It was the
climax of Dylan's month-iong European tour and Sunday he
gave it everything he had. Backed by such topname ···support"
acts a s Eric Claptun and Jou Armatradlq, he belted out a
solid three.!Jour concert. At nearby Waterloo station, chaos
reigned. Only 100,000 had been expected, but 250,000 showed
up. It was Woodstock all over again.
audi~p ce with awe . Said he,

GUMPSES : Cellist Nathaulel Rosen - winner of the
Tchaikovsky Gold Medal in Moscow - did his first American
performance since his return Sunday, playing· to a packed
house with the Pittsburgh Symphony at Temple University in
Ambler , Pa . ... Author Taylor Caldwell, 78, whose books
" Captains and Kings" and "Testimony of Two Men" were
made inlll television mini,.;eries, was married July 7 to her
manager , Robert Prestie, it was aMounced this weekend in
Los Angeles ... Former Boston Celtic basketball star Bill
Russell will be a sports and news connmentator with televisioo
station KABC in Los Angeles ,... Basketball great Wilt
Chamberlliin and former Dl'o 2rid star Rosey Grier were
auctioneer s Sunday at a fud-raiser in Los Angeles for the
Junior Olympics program of the Southern Pacific Association
AAU w&lt;mens ' track and field ....

"It's very imposing, but you know it's hol.low inside.';

Business today

By LeROY POPE
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Some
1,180 Americans ea'ch day
join the ranks of the 23 million
already retired and bY the
end of the century ooe out of
eight Americans may be a
retiree.
And, warns the Bowery
Savings Bank, those who quit
w..-k 20 years or so from now
are not likely to be able to get
bY oo Social Security or
pensions unle ss they are
upper echelon exec utives,
civil servants or military'
officers .
In a booklet designed to
teach persons how to prepare
for retirement , the Bowery
says the average minimum
inc ome needed for a retired
American couple has climbed
to $6,776 a year from $3,860
ten years ago and may reach

retirement or even to ask
exactly what their pensioo
benefits under the c&lt;mpany
or union plan will be and Ill
make a decision on the
options in the plan .
The Bowery has collected a
lot rof general informa\loo
..about retirement and the
booklet
contains
this

;:

;r~1~;fe~~ ~*!

although perhaps in a smaller
house or apartment.
The Bowery says the costs
of living on a boat or in a
motor home compare very
favorably with the cost of a
fixed retirement home base,
and retirement in some

I

foreign countries can Iring
lower costs although the
recent malaise of the dollar
on world currency markets
raises a red flag oo that.
Before any drastic ·-chsnge
in lifestyle, however, the
bank recommends a trial

,

•

I

career
of
Cleveland's
maverick mayor could come
Ill a screeching ball Aug. 13.

H~.e..l;.e
.... n_
.,._
.,.,.,..,H
.,.,.,.;-:.:·;1,..

uS

so

~

assurance that d&lt;mestlc oil
supplies

will

increase .
decontrol
advocates are perfectly ,
\,·
willing to support an excess
profits tax to ensure that U.S.
oil producers will channel the
addltiooal revenues ln\0 in·
creased exploration and
production .
·
''Oil import fees are simply
a signal to OPE~ natioos that
Americans are reacly to pay
more for the sime amount of
oil. I Cllllllot coocelve of a
signal that is more falee ."
The Urbana Republlcan
said he may ofter a Hollie
motion to instruct conferees
to
accept
the
Dole
amendment to the Treasury
appropriatims bill preventing President Carter from
Congression~l

;!~£~:f~:~st:~~-~t e~·r:··--·,·--·-1
will cost U.S. cooswnen $3
billion per year, or th~ee­
tenths percent in lnflatioo
increaae for every $1 of
import fee ."
" Uke the President's crude
oil equallzatioo tu propoul,
import fees would mean
high« ccmuner co.ta and
more government revenues
with no addltiooal suppllet of
domestic oil," Brown added.

period : vacations to possible
new locations, narrowing the
choices and then a looger look
before pulling up stakes :
renting a motor home or boat
before matting a final choice.
For some folks retirement
can be a time of adventure

and. change: for others
familiar places and faces are
best. The pre-retireme nt
years are the time to decide
what's best for you - and
plan f..- it.

p . . . ..~

-~~~":&gt;.m&gt;;('"'il'~~···r' " '" ' " '" " ' ::.-==·~--

1

~

in mind - the-best intenD
of the people I# Cleveland.
If city residents don't
believe that, the political

Plan for retirement today;
no mauer what your age
.,~

·

states with the biggest retired ,.
population,
HawaH
is ~:::
::
disclosed to be most :;:;
expensive w Uve in with a :;}
Helen Hottel
couple requiring $10,000 a . :~;~
•
• · •
,,
year there . New Mexico at
$5,800 is the cheapest and
BOTfEL NO MORE FREEBIES?
Arizona at $6,900 next.
DEAR HELEN.
· Polly Cramer
1resented it when gas stations locked their bathrooms. When
Most people know by now
that the maximum a couple they put in map dispensing machines and started charging us
(one
working , . one
cents for what had always been free, I squawked abnost as
nonworking
spouse
)
can
loudly
as I had when many removed their water fountains In
Tag leaves mark
collect from Social Security is favor o! soft drink machines.
$690 a month and the
But now I read that service stations of the future may not
DEAR POLLY - I bought a hanging a picture on the wall $24,416 by 1999.
minimum
may
be
as
little
as
even
offer free air! If your tire5 are low, you'll put your
plastic ladle for my punch it is often difficult to find the
The
Bowery doesn 't
fl72.
,
quarter
in the slot first before the air hose will work.
bowl a nd the pri ce ta g was on exact spot the na ll is to go so 1 pretend to be able to read the
Most
people
also
know
When
we' re paying near 80 cents a gallon for gas, must they
the bottom part. I could not dust my index finger with col- future accurately but the
about
Medicare
benefits
.
.
'
put
a
price
tag on air? Mter all, the Arabs don't have a comer
remove 1t with water so used ored c halk dust, press on the book cootends that those still
Some
people
have
good
on
that!
-WHEREHAVETHEFREEBIESGONE?
pure spir its of gwn of turpen· wall a t the right place and some way from retirement experiences with Medicare
DEAR WHTFG :
tine tha t removed the label then put the nail in the center young. people especially actually
collecting
7S
percent
WH-e·l~ attendants still wash windshields, unless you
but left a slam wher e· it was of the . marking that cor- must not leave the matter of
or
more
of
their
health
costs
choose
the self-service aisles. And some stations still offer free
a pplied . Everywhere the responds with the wire on the r e tirement up to Social
from
Medicare
.
But
maps.
turpentine r an 1\ left a print back of the picture. _ Security Of· C&lt;mpany Or union
1 can 't believe slot-machine air will catch on, but I could be
so could you tell me how to AOELLA .
pension plan. They must do statistically, the Bowery
says,
Medicare
benefits
\vrong.
I'm the person who figured we'd never be paying IS
remedy t h1s as 1 have tried
DE AR POLLY .- I do a lot something important for
cover
only
38
percent
of
the
cenis
for
two-eent stamps ! -H.
bleach a nd baking soda a nd of sewing, mending and themselves. ·
average
retiree's
total
th ey d1d not help . .. remodeling and have round
The book goes into the
DEAR HELEN :
that eyebrow tweezers are a basics of Keogh plans , medical and hospital bills,
E LAYNE .
especially
when
you
count
in
My husband spends all his time with Boy Scouts. He leads a
DEAR E LAYNE - There very handy tool to keep near - individual retirement
necessary
drugs
not
paid
for
troop
and helps with others, so that he's away from home most
are som e problems that have the sewmg machine. They accounts and other r elevant
by Medicare.
of
the
time. We have three girls whO hardly ever see him. I
no good ~olution a nd this may are great to use for pulling programs a bank or a good
But.
the
Bowery
says
these
think
he
re!!fnts an all-femafe house, as he prefers males.
he one "of them. 1 have been out threads too short for investment counselor can set
.consideratloos
are
dwarfed
He
pays
me no attention. All he thinks about Is " his boys,"
able to get no definite s ugges- crooked fingers. Also it is dlf. · up f..- the years after the
bY
the
problem
of
where
to
and
I'm
getting
worried. Could there be something sexual gotions and can only recom- · ficult for me to get my fingers paychecks stop .
.
retire.
Many
people
want
to
ing
on
here?
He
seems to always have one s~ial kid as a
The hooklet says there lS a
mend that you might try us- bet ween the needle and
go
to
a
warm
climate
but
the
"favorite,
"
and
coaches
him alone a lot. So far he's had three
ing WET 400 or iOO gnt sand- presser foot on machines that psychologiCal harrier to be
bank
warns
that·
terrible
favorites
.
SUSPICIOUS
paper-s uch as one might use thread from the front but the . overcome in workers' r elucDEAR SUS:
on glass fiber products. Any tweezers fit in very nicely.
lance to think about financial and social miatakes
can be made by putting too
Perhaps this is only your jealousy t.alking. On the other
One morning while eating
suggestions, readers' - POLmuch emphasis on this
hand, your husband may be headed for big trouble.
LY
grapefruit I noticed a ball
TH E DAII.V SENTINEl.
. consideration. It may be
It won't be easy, but you'd better confront him with your
. DEAR POLLY - My Pet point ink mark on my dress
DEVO'fEDTOnl F.
better
to
stay
right
where
you
worries- before others notice the " favoritism" too. ·H.
INTERE1lTOF
P e ev e is Wit h t h os e and t hr ough curiosity I tried ·
are in your retirement years
MEIGS.MASON AR EA
drugstores who put ,the price a bit of the salty juice on the
ROB ~RT HOEFLICH
DEAR HELEN :
City Edlt..r
la bel over the list of ingre- spot and it came out clean. I
TRUCKER JCU1.ED
PullliJht'd dct1ly except SatUrday
" Olive" downed " househusbands" u wunanly people living
· dients in a bottle. I like to. doubt that this would work on · l.ly The Ohiu Vallt&gt;y Pub!ishlll jl!
GROVE CITY, Pa . ( UPI)
off
their wtvea' good salaries. You said it's theSOUPie'a choice,
know what I am givin g my all materials but it did for me Corn p~~u y-Mu lth rwdia , lnt· . 11 1'
- Joaeph M. Hall, 43, of. and I agree. (Business Week reports the number ol
Cuurt
St , Pumeruy, Oluu 45769,
family. · LYNDA .
and might be worth a try Busme!iS Orfll't' Phone 99"~ 2 1 ~ .
Elyria, Ohio, was killed early
househusbands hall increued 70 percent in the put nine
DEAR POLLY- My thumb when all else fails . - E DITII.
F.c.h tur1al P hont:~ 99'J-:li 57 .
Sunday morning when he 1011
years .) ·
·
St:cund
clus
pu.~
Ut
M
t'
pwnl
ttl
nail always tea rs t he t humb
control of his tracw-trailer
Pumeruy. Ohio
My
brother-in-law
chofle
this
route.
Wllile
his
wife pursued a
in rubber gloves I buy to wear
Na lln ual ad verU!i UI~ tepr i..'St!ll·
oo Interstate 80 near Grove
Polly Wlil send you one of
rewarding
career.
she
enjoyed,
he
took
charge
of
the houae and
l.l:iliVl' . iAI Il liC.tll 1\SS&lt;K.'Iatcs, :1101
while washing dis hes, walls , he r s ig ned thank-you
City, Mercer County.
F:ucUd Ave .. Clt•Vtllll nd,Ohio H J J;i.
family
,
kept
things
repaired,
the
work
well~.
He'd go into
etc. but I fina lly found a wa y newspaper coupon clippers if
Police said Hall was dead
Subscrir,tton l'il tes . Oc hvcrt•d by·
the
country,
bargain
for
bushels
of
produce,
the
best meat,
l '&lt;U'UN w •ere Hva i l~ bl l' 75 ce nt :-~ ptr
to stop it. I put a piece of s he uses your favorite
on arrival at the HJDcrest
then
cook,
can
and
freeze
.
His
duties
were
just
u
easentlalu
Wt'l' k . Hy Mntur Houle wllc re t•am er
transparent gummed tape Pointer' Peeve or Problem in serv~ ~ nut HVl:lll~thlt' , One mutlth,
Unit of United Cuiununity
hers, and both felt right ln.the work they were doing.
over my thumb nail from the her column . Write POI.LY 'S J;.l .t:; . By mallm Oh1o and W, Va.,
Hospital, Grove Clty, after
Why should men be stereotyped as "breadwiMers"? -EU
One
Y
~·
a
r
,
$2'
2
.00.
Six
ll
)utllh~.
hack to the front of the finger POINTERS in care of this
his rig careened into a
Sll 50 , Th ree munthll , $7.00:
DEAREU
:
.
and then put on my rubber newspaper . .
El'it•wiHm• $26.00 Yt'lU ; S IX morlthH
l!llardrail and roDed over on
Why
indeed
I
(Somearebetterbreadmakers.
)
.
$1 .1.50 ; 'Ch re~ months. SO,;.(1 '
gloves. No more tears. the median lllrtp. He wu
Snll!~t:npti u n prier nu IUtli•:- ~ tmd Hy
As
I
say,
to
each
his
or
her
own
so
long
sa the other is
MRS. B.
. thrown from the cab and
'l' n l ,t 'S ..."it·ntu u•l
satisfied . - H. ·
,
DEAR POLLY - When
Ll----- -~--...-.1 pinned under tho, truck.

POLLY"S POINTERS

Community
tentlment
toward Kuclnlc:h'• bandllilg
of the cri11J WUI 't really be
known unW the Aug. 13 reeall
vole. But 111rouih aD hll .
meetings with reporters
during the atrike, the uucyor
coostantly portrayed MmeH
as a man wtlh mly me thing

WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep. Clarence J. Brown, R·
Ohio, today urged increased
productioo of d&lt;mestic oil as
"the best answer to the · oil
import problem" threatening
to cause OPEC nationals to
raise prices.
"The best answer Ill our oll
import problem is Ill lncreue
production of d&lt;mestlc oil,"
Brown said.
"U President Carter is
willing Ill have Americans
paying more for oil , he should
tell our allies in Bonn that he
will ask Congress to remove
federal controls oo domestic
oil prices so that we may
displace foreign oll imp&lt;rts
with increased domestic
production .
· "Certainly, Americans do
not want to pay more for oil.
But If they are going to do so,
let's give th~m some

because 1 do."

HAVE COFFIN , Wn.L TRAVEL: The advantage to David
Brannen's trailer is that it's small enough to fit in light places.
The disadvantage is, it sleeps only one. The Department of
Momr Vehicles registration lists its body type as " 1973 model
coffin ." The 23-year-&lt;&gt;ld West Covina, Calif., mechanic says he
originally bought the coffin to make a stereo , but decided it
would make a better traile r and portable bed. So he hooked it
up to his motorcycle, put it oo wheels and now he 'sready Ill roll
~ or Ill rest when the rolling grows wearisome.

Fred Lynn sparked the
second game vicmry with a
run-&lt;~Corlng single in the first
inning and a two-run hm~er ,
his 16th, in Ute sixth. -·
Elsewhere in the AL, Milwaukee rou~ Chicago, 11)-1,
Kansas City downed New
York, 3-1, Baltimore nipped
Texas, 2-1, in 12 innings,
Oakland defeated Toronto, 8S, Detroit blanked Calif&lt;rnia,
· 4-0, and Cleveland lllppled
Seattle, 8-4.
Brewers 10, White Sux 1:
Paul Molitor and Don
Money drove in three runs
eac h and Bill Travers
scattered 10 hits in leading
the Brewers Ill viclllry.
Royal 3, Yankees 1:
Amos Otis hit his 14th
homer, a two-run shot in the
first inning off Jim Beattie,
and AI Hrahosky earned his
13th save as the Royals
handed the Yankees their
sixth loss in their last seven
games.
Orioles %, Rangers 1:
Pinch-hitter Te r ry
Crowley's two-&lt;&gt;ut single
sc ored pinchrunner Kiko
Garcia from se~nd base with
the run that gave the Orioles
their viclllry .
A's 8, Blue Jays 5:
Joe. wailis ' three-run
eighthinning homer snapped
a !Hi tie and gave the A's their
victory. John Mayberry hit
overacting."
his l~th homer for Toronto.
Jack Brohamer and Carl Tigers 4, Angels 0:
Yastrzemski were the heroes.
Jack Billingham scattered
for the Red Sox in the opener. 10 hits in posting his first AL
Brohamer · scored three runs shutout and Rusty Staub
and Yastrzemski had three cracked a three-run homer in
hits, including a run«oring the third inning to power the
single in the seventh which Tigers to victory.
snapped a 3.J tie . Uennls Indians 8, Mailners 4:
Eckersley earned his lith
Gary Alexander's two-run
victory in 13 decisions with homer capped a three-run
relief help from Bill third inning and helped David
Campbell, who notched his Clyde , !Hi, end a personal
fourth save.
five-game losing streak .

'

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Pressblteraatlooal
RESPECT ABU: SPECS : Miami Dolphin quarterback Bob ·
Griese says he has Ill wear glasses now because, in a fit of
childhood vanity, he once cheated on a grade school eye test .
The result was ampblyopia - blurring of vision and headaches
- and the necessity now of wearing the specs he once dreaded
oo the gridiron . But some at least will profit from his mistake :
He' s now Flor ida chairman of the Society for the Prevention of
Blindness and direclllr of vision education with the American
Optical Olrp. Says he , " I've gotten a lot of letters from parents
who say how nice it is their own kids wear their glasses

SECRET PUNCH-LINE : The honor of delivering the !mal
joke at Ye Little Club in Beverly Hills, Calif., fell Sunday to
Joan Rivers, but 11 won't ~o down in history. Club owner
Marshall Edson says the 22-year lease on the long-popular
comedy showcase is up and he doesn't plan to renew lt. ou•
Edson wouldn 't say what Miss Rivers' parting comic shot was,
and there weren't many to hear it. Ye Little Club , living up to
its name, ooly seats 75 oeoole.

By ' FREP McMANE
UPI Sporta Writer
The Red Sox ended their
mlni-elurnp at three games
and boosted their lead in the
American League East to 8~
games over second-pla ce
Milwaukee · bY sweeping a
doubleheader from the
Mllmesota Twins, 5-3 and 3-2.
However, Twins' Manager
Gene Mauch stole the
spoilight briefly In the fourth
inning of the secood game
with ~ temper tantrum. He
came Ill the aid of his thir d
baseman , Mike Cubbage ,
who was ejected by first-base
IDllpire Bill Kunkel alter
throwing his helmet to the
ground In anger when he was
called out on a pickoff play
from
catcher
Bob
Mootg&lt;mery to first baseman
carl Yastrzemski .
Mauch
argued
so
vehemently that he, too, was
thrown out of the game . But,
before departing he took the
bats out of the Twins' bat
rack and flung them onto the
playing field . He is subject Ill
a stiff fine and can expect to
hear from the bas eball
commissioner's office Wday .
" U I do, I'll just tell them I
was taking my bats home and
they just slipped right out of
my hands," quipped Mauch.
Not to be out4one, Kunkel
said, "I threw him out for

Increased oil
production ..
being _urged

ETTA."""'"~ 9'1111t·Tfl£6~

HULII'\E

c..--:·

By

CHOICES ·
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I saving for a large purchaSe.
don't know ,what to do about It will also discourage him
my
9-year-old
son's from asking you for enra
allowance.
'!laney.
I was fairly confident about ·· 2. When should a child ·
the way I was handling the begin
receiving ·
an
situation until I talked to allowance? And when should
some other mothers In the it stop? A child's aense of
neighborhood . Each said responsibility Is sufficiently
something different and they developed by the tbne he
ali made aense.
enters school to handle small ·
I give my son $5 a week. amounts of money. Stop the
Other than buying his school allowance when he II a
lunch, he can . spend it on teenager and II earning his
anything he wants. In order own money.
to earn the money, he clears
3. How muCh allowance
the table after dinner, feeds should a child receive? ·
the cat and cleans his room Although this is an indlvldual
every Saturday.
family matter, the general
One neighbor says I . rule of thumb II sa follows : 7
shouldn't give him any years or younger, a quarter:
allowance because it only Band 9,110cents: IOand 12, tl,
makes for a very artlflclal and 13 or older, several
arrangement. Another thinks dollars. Of course, the
I should have a list of specific amount also depends on
chores he can do when be _whether the allowance Ia
wants to earn money.
expected to cover such ex·
And my • closest friend penaea as school lunchea, .
believes it would be belt to clothing and birtbday glfta.
give him a smaller allowance
4. Should a child have to
and let him make extra eam his allowance or should
money by doing weekly It be given with no 11tr1nga
.chores.
attached? Earning hla
Their advice is based on the allowance will help your child
way they handle tbe understand that it tall:ea
allowance problem In their responsible effort to make
homes. Ia there a lilt of money. This means, of
factors my husband and J coune, that he lhlu1d not
should consider as we receive hla allowance If be
develop • philoaopby that wiD doea not do his cbonl.
work for ua?
Cbecll:lna your allowance
DEAR READER - Yea. syl\em aplnlt
prinHere are aome queatlonl and ciples may belp you make
answers that mtgbt be uaeful
m-1110111. But. aD 111
in developing a sylllematlc I think your curnnt plan
philoaophy about children's aounda VW'J llllllble.
aUowances :
Write to Dr. lllall:.. ta eare
I. Should your child have a ofthitnew~pw,P. O. Boa
specific amount of IIIOney 47$, Radio City llallnn, New
every week to lpllld u he York, N. Y. 10111. Val111111 ol
desires? Yea. Glvlac him a mall prohibita penonal
replar allowuce wiD help· repUeal but qu•tlou of
him learn about planned
.lllltrtlt wiD be
apendlnc, maktnc cboleel, dlacuNd Ill fut11n CDI-.
living within an income and

u-

aome

an,

•-r•

;

.

•

m

•.•.•

•

United Preos Intoraational
Butch Alberts belted a tworun ho!Jier a nd Tom Sandt
added a solo shot Sunday to
give the Syracuse Chiefs a 6-5
victory over the Charleston
Charll es in I nternation al
League play.
Alberts' homer, his fifth ,
led a four-run sixth inning
and Sandt's blow, his second,
snapped a !Hi t ie in the eighth
to give reliever Tom Bus key
his sixth win in 12 decisions.
In other IL games, Toledo
defeated Richmond 6-3 and
Pawtucket downed Rochester
7-4. Columbus and Tidewater
were postponed by rain .
Stan Perzanowski picked
up his fourth win against one
loss for the Mud Hens, who
mana ged t o defeat the
Braves despite homers by
Hank Small and Mike Macha.

division lead

dlfferenl lltu'y. We'-ve get
him In a
said one
coUncllman.

urging them back to Wll"k.
Along with the pollee, other
maj..- unions rep..-ttlng
city employees lllo called
walkouts Friday. Most
significant were strikes by
the city's garbage haulers,
street cleaners and street
repair workers.
Further llnking the strike
Ill the recall wu the fact that
many council members knew
hours before the police strike
that two important city
w..-ker unions - Teamsters
and Laborers - would honor
police picket lines. "Kucinlch
doesn't care If the cops strike,
but the garbagemen Is

Rose extends streak, Reds
pull closer to SF Giants

Charleston
loses, 6-5

hits and all nine of their runs
CIN CINNATI (UPI ) Pete Rose, who had just before departing after four
broken a major 1ea1111e r ecord innings .
" It wa ~ to ugh on the kid,"
for s witchfiitters by running
his hitting streak to 29 games sa1d a sympathetic Sparky
was surrounded by reporters Anderson , " but since · the
as he stood in front of his Mets ha ve thre e do uble
headers coming up this week
locker stall.
Completely ignored was I can understand why (J oe)
Davey Concepcion who had Torre went with him so long.
sha ttered the New York He had no other choice. "
The first of two errors in
Mets' pitching by pounding
the
g~ me by Met third
out a single, a pair of doubles,
his third homer and driving baseman Lenny Randle, two
hom e four runs as the Reds walks , one ipte ntio nal ,
rolled to a 9-2 victory behind doubles by J oe Mor gan and
the six.!Jit pitching of Tommy Concepcion and a single by
Ken Henderson accounted lor
Hume.
11
That's all right," said the Reds ' five- run splurge in
Coocepclon , forcing a smile. the first mrung.
1
Hende'rson 's single was one
'Tomorrow everyone can
write about me after I get of h1s three hits for the day.
~~we know Henderson can
three more hiis .
hit
," said Ander son. ~~ l 'm
Concepcion's comment
just
hoping Ut e toe tha t has
carried a little sting, but not
been
bothering him will heal
as much as that of the bat he
had used in t.aUooing the Met enough so he can play off and
on and 1 can sit (Cesar )
pitching.
The first of Concecpion 's Geronimo out occasionally ,"
"1 was glad a left-bander
two doubles came in the
botlllm of the first when the was pitc hin g m the seventh ,"
Reds staked Hume Ill a five- said Rose, "becauSe my left
knee has beyn bothering me
run lead.
"U Davey 's hit in that first when I 'm swin ging leftinning hadn 'I bounced low handed. I hurt it going to my
and then out of the right field left for a ground ball during
stands for a· ground-rule the series with th e Giants just
double, I think he could have befor e the Ail.Star game. The
had a triple," said Reds' third last couple of days I've been
~
base coach Ale• Granunas. icing it down."
Rose's streak lea ves hun
" And a triple was all he
needed to complete the cycle. eight games shy of tying the
" I've seen guys hit for the National league record of 37,
cycle (single, double, tnple held by form er Boston
and homer) before but not too Braves outfield e r Tom my
often ," added Grammas . Holmes, now direc tor of
" And I c 1fn' t - remember community relations for th
. anyooe doing it since I 've New York Mets .
Is Rose getting excited,
been with the club."
Met r ookie Kevin Kobel fee ling any pressure now that
ne ari ng
Holm es '
yielded eight of the Reds' 12 he's

RIVER DOWNS
CIN CINNATI (UPI )
Gusting Wind beat Southwood
Champ by five lengths
Sunday to win the featured
$20 ,000-added Big Red
!&gt;lachine Handicap at River

Downs.
James Bailey piloted the
wiMer over the mile and
sixteen.
Gusting Wind
returned $20.60, $5.60 and
$4.20, Blaze Lightning came
In third.
An 11-4 daily double
combination of Personalit y
Rose and Fevero was worth
$184.80.
The 8,007 fans bet $900,649.

CAPTURES TITLE
CLEVELAND (UP!)
John Sadri, of Raleigh, N. C.,
beat Tony Graham of
Riverside , Calif., 6·1 , 6·4
Sunday to take the men's
sin gle title at the U. S.
National Amateur Hard·
court Championships.

Jl~c~~~.~ ~?:!.W-s,_ Mid~~~_port _Braves, Gallipolis

record?
" U I extend 1\ to 34 or 3!i I
might," he replied.
Holmes' record isn 'I the
only one Rose is after .
" I'm interested in leadi ng
Ute league in hits," he sa id .

Gerulaitis
overpowers
Natase
-

FOREST HI LLS, N.Y .
( UPI ) - Per haps 1t was
fitt ing th at the final match of
th e $300,000 For es t Hill s
Invitationa l was a ver y one sided event.
It was hoped that a showdown between murname nt
fa vor ite Vitas Gerula itis a nd
the
unpr ed ic table
!lie
Nastase would off er all the
exc1tement befitting a cente rcourt fina l at t he West S1de
Tennis Club . But in the end ,
with Gerulaitis overpowering
Nastase , 6-2, 6-0, to take the
$100,000 fir st pnze in an hour .
the disa ppoint mg fim sh
mirrored most of the week 'S
play .
Early in the week ail 12
pla yer s Inv olv ed 1n th e

round-robm t ournament many of them just back fr om
the rainsoake d grass courts
of Wimble don
ha d
difficulty ad justin g to the
heat, the cla y and the light
hails. The r esult, with few
excepti ons.
tennis

wa s sub -par

seventh inning tha t lif ted the
Pira tes to a swee p of their
dou bl e-hea d er with the
Padres . In the opener, John
Milner 's single with one out in
the lOth inning scored Ed Ott
with the winning
E 1C(los 6, Ast ros 1:
Rookie Dan Sc hatzeder 's
seven-hit p1tc h[ng, two hits,
one RBI and one run scored
keyed the Expos to t heir win
over Ute Ast ros.
Ca rdina ls 9-{1 , Giants H :
Mike Sa dek a nd Jack Clark
punched two-r un doubles to
re cord of 56 consecuti ve hack tbe Six-hit pitchmg of Ed
Halicki, 5-3, a nd give the
games," said Rose,
Giants
a split w1th Ute Cards .
" It'll probably be broken
Jerr
y
Mumphr
ey had th r ee
some day," DiMaggi o had
RBI
in
Ute
opener
a nd Garry
replied . " And if anyone does,
Te
mp
let
on
and
J er r y
I hope it's yo u."
Mnr aies each had two RBI.
Elsewhere in the Na twna l Phillies 4, Braves 2:
League, Chi ca go spli t a
Dick Ruth ven , &amp;-8, and Roo
doub le header w1th . Los Reed combined for a sevenAngeles , takmg the opener , 3- hitte r and J ose Cardena l
2, a nd losing the nightcap, 5-3, smashed his fourth homer to
P,i tts burgh swept t he &gt;r
give t!l e P hillies thei r
doubleheader with San Diego, tr iumph over the Braves.
3-2, in 10 innings, in the fir st
Preston Hanna , 7~ . too k t he
gam e a nd 10-6 in th e
loss .
nightca p, Montrea l downed
Houston , 6-1. St. Louis split a
doubl e-hea de r w1th t he
IS
Gia nt s, wwn in g the h r st
game, 9-4 , a nd losmg the
mgh t.c ap ,
6-0,
a nd
Philadelph ia beat Atlanta . 42.

''I've dOne it six tunes now
and no one has done it
seven .''
And if Rose does lead t he
leag ue , he 'll und oubted ly
wind up with 200 or more hits
lor the lOth time in his ca reer ,
breaking a m ajor league
tet-ord he now shares with Ty
Cobb.
Rose smiled as he remember ed a ta lk wit h Joe
DiMaggiO when he was in San
D1ego for the All-Star gam e.
" ! was teasing hun abo ut
me breaking his all-time

Cobs 3-3, Dodge rs 2-5:
Dusty Bake r 's two RBI m
the mghtcap gave the
Dodgers a d ouble -he ad e r
split - wit h the Cubs after
Chicago took Ute opener on
Dave Rader 's three RBI.
Pirates 3-10, Padres ~ :
Ke n

Mac ha 's

tw o-r un

After falling behind, 2-1, in single highlighted a flve-run
the !irs\ set, Gerulaitis won
the last 11 gam es as he f&lt;irced
the play and broke Nastase 's

morale.
" I got the lead and was

SAVE &amp; SHAVE
confident," sa id the 31-yearold Roma nian . " But then the
SPECIALS
balls got heavy and I was
playing shorter and shorter . 1'-~-----~------j
Once he started to get ahead I
wasn't confident at a il ."
ha d
br oke n
Nastase
Gerulaitis in the third game,
team.
SU R FORM "
T. Bush picked up the wm but Gerula itis broke ba ck in
FILE
lor the Tigers. Dave Talbott the fourth whe n Nastase
"1 0 29 ~
was the starter lor Porlianq. comm1tted thr ee s tra
Hitter s for the Ga llipolis volley errors . From
tea m were R. Polcyn , single ; point on , the match belonged
T. Bush , singl e; A. Polcyn, to Gerulaius .
" 1 atta cked mor e tha n he
pair of smgles.
The lone Portland hitS off did ," said Ge ruia ltls. " I 'm
Bush were Singles by Kevin almost 10 yea rs younger and
Teaford and Dave Bryant. I'm a little quicker . He wa s a
little tired and - 1 just
SURFO RM ,.
happened Ill be a little more
PLAN E
aggressive uxlay ."
Gerulai t is and Na stase
The induction ceremonies . ha ve now faced each other
.
at Lee Stadium we re nine tLmes in tournament
attended by a. record 800 play, with Gerulaitis com mg
persons, including s uch other out ahead in seven of those
·
baseball notables Wa lly Post , meetings.
Red Ruffing, Roy Hug hes and
Nastase , perhaps a s the
John Bednick.
result of his recent $5 ,000 fine ...._______..
Some 70 persons a ttended a and three-mont h suspension
mayor 's luncheon prior Ill a from Grand Prix play, was
town parade and the e xtr e m e ly s ubdu e d
induction . The m a in · talk at throughout the tournament.
the noo n lunch was given by He was part icularly, 'quiet
Thomas E akins , a Hall of aga in st Ge rulai ti s , bu t
Fame
founde r ,
who insisted that he has not
introduced the ba ll players. necessarily mended his ways .

Tigers, Bidwell gain LL....tournament victories
i

The Racine Royals , Mid·
dleport Braves, Ga llipoli s
Tigers and Bidwell advanced
Saturday evening In the
Syracuse Tourl&gt;flment for
Uttle Leaguers.
Bidwell, scheduled to play
Harrisonville, won on a
forfeit, the Gallipolis Tigers
knocked off Portland, 11·7;
Racine's Royals defeated the
Pomeroy Tigers tB-7, and the
Middleport Braves ousted the
Gallipolis Senators with a 9-2
victory.
In action this evening, the
Gallipolis Yankees vs. Letart
and the Point Pleasant Steelworkers go up against Athens
Hair Happening in 6 p.m.
g•mes, the Athens Medics
take on Glouster Burr Oak at
7:30 and Mason County In·
surance plays Glouste r
American Legion at 9 p.m.

Major Leagu1 Standings
By United Press International ·

National League
East

W. L. Pel.
48

Ph ita
Chicago
PiHsbrgh
Mo.,treal
New Yor k
St. Louis

36 .57 1

45 42

GB

5 17

41fJ

43 43 500
44 47 .484

6
7112

37 SJ .411 14
37 SS .402 lS

Wet.t

San Fran
Clnc lnati

W. L. Pt:t.
55 36 .604

GB

52 39 .S7l

3

52 38 .578

Los Ang

Siln Dleoo
Atlanta
Houston

2112

44 48 .478 1 Ph
j9 48 .448 14
38 49 .437 15

Saturdev'i Resulh
Chicago 3, San Oiego 1
S.F , 6, P lttsbgtJ ,5, 11 in ns .
Los Ange les 2, St . LOU IS 1
Atl anta 3, Ph llaaelph la 2
Cinc innati 7, New Vor k 5
Montreal 8, Houston 0

· Sundey 's Results

Pttsbgh 3. S .O . 2, lsi , 10 Ins.
Pittsburgh 10, Sen Oiegp 6,
~d
.
Chicago 3,.s 16z eneles 2, ls i
• Los Angeles .5, Chicago 3, 2nd
St. Louis 9, San Fran 4, 1st
san Fran 6, St. Louis o, 2nd
Montreal 6, Houston 1
Ph iladelph i a 4, Atlanta 2
Cincinnau 9, New York 2
Todev•s Prob1blt Pitchers

I All Tlme• EDT!

Los Angeles ( John 10·7J at
Chi cago (Reuschel 8·61 . 2:30

The Racine Royals opened
up with eight runs in the first
inning and then scored In
each of the other J rames to
oust the Pomeroy Tigers.
Chris Bostick handled the
mound chores for the Royals
and gained the victory while
Ron Denny absorbed the loss
for the Tigers .
Racine hillers wer e N1ck
Bostick, double and single;
Jay Bostick, double : Chris
Bostick , single ; Steve Fisher,
single : Rusty Cummins ,
double and Richard Hill and
Wendell Clark, singles .
Bostick had a no-hitter
going until the fourth when
Jack Welk er and Kelly
Wisecup got doubles for the
Tigers.
The Middleport Braves
scored two markers in each
of the second, third and o

Bob Southern, triple ; Tim
Wamsley, triple, double and
single ; Jamie Acree , triple
and three singles.
AllisOn took the loss for the
Sena tors.
The Gallipolis Tiger s cam e
up with five runs in the fifth
mnmg to assure their 11·7 wm
over an aggr essive Portland

fourth innings and then three
inl he fifth enroute to their 9-2
victory over the Gallipolis
Senators.
Chns Burdette went the
distance on the hlll ' for the
Braves and lim1ted Gallipolis
to only two hits, both singles
by Mackenzie . .
Hitters for the Braves were

NEWCOMERTOWN , Ohio
(UP! ) - Twelve persons
L eague Lead ers
By United Preu International
Batttng
MJ~jor

j

Based on 225 at bats)

were inducted into the Ohio
Ba seball Hall of Fa m e
Saturday, raising to 32 · the
number of . all-time greats
named
since
it
was
established four years ago.
The new inductees were
Earl Averill , Lefty Grove,
Stanley A. Covelski , Bob
Lemon , Na poleon Lajoie,
E ddie Ons low, Al Lopez ,
Satc he l Paig e,
Bran ch
Rickey , George Sisler, Frank
Robinson and Bucky Walters .
Lopez, Onslow and Walter s
attend ed
the
annua l
ce r e monies and
s pok e
briefly, while lem on and
Robinson sent m essages
thanking the Hall of Fame
· committee
for
their
selections .

5 lCl p.m.

San Ole-go

Pittsburgh
p.m .

( Pe-try 10-4 ) at
( Kison 1-1), ~ : 35

Montreal CGrlml lt Y 12-6) at

~-~ ~· (Splltto,rff 10 .81
at New Yor k ! Hunter 'J.J), 8
p.m.
Milwou kee

IColdwe ll

10-SI,

8: 30p .m . Detroit {Baker 1·2l
li t

California

!Bre tt

2-A or

Gritl in , o 31. 10 :30 p.m .
•ul..)U
or~n';o" !Garv in 2-91 ot
Ookland IJohn110n 6-51 . 10 .30
p.m.
Philadelphia IChrlsten10n 6-Bl P·'C'Ioveland !Clyde 0 1 at
at Houston (Niekro S.J), 8' 35 seattle !ColbOrn l·ll. lO oJl p.m.
TUtldiV'I Gemts .
p.m.
Ttxasat Baltlmorw, n ight
Cincinnati

( Borbon

S-1

or

Sarm iento 6-Sl. 1:05 p.m . ·
. Sin Francisco (Knepper 11 ·51
at St. Louis {Denny 8·6), 8:35

Tuesday•• 01m11

San Frenclt co at Chicago
,
1.00 Ang at Pltt•burgh, nigh!
San Dl-oo at St. Louis, niQht ·
New ·York •t Atl•nta , night

1

r~:r!!: s~~~~~fsley ,

Cust~m

I ••"'" on 11 Innings pllchedl
Notloool L..'"" Roger&gt;. Mil

2.12; V uckovl ch . St.L 2,21 ;
Knepper . SF 2.41 : Reuschel.

Chi 2.•5 : Blue , SF 2.61 .
AmtrlcenMatlack,
Ltaiue :Tex
Gu ldr
v. .
2 31;

NY 2 23 ;

POi mer . Ban 7.&lt;5 : JohnSon ,
2 53
°K'k
GOie. KC and ·
eough .' o a' k 2.54.
StrlkH.ul• .

Chicago at Mit waukH, night

Cleve at Colltornla , n ight

SF 1118 :

MonlrHI •t Clnclnnltl , night
Phllldtlpflll It H o u Ito n,

Blyleven , Pill and

Rluft . SF 10?
Anierle•n

•

Lti••• : Guidry ,

NY 137 ;
Ryan, Cal 132:
Flanagon; .Ball lOl : Loonord ,

KC 97 , Matla c k, Tex 13.

nlgM

d i r ect l y
a ff ect
you ,
w heth er they happe n i o y o u
or not .
Ta ke t he cn me of arson .
Yo u ' re
payi ng
an
1ncreas mgi y hevy subs1d y
for deli ber a t ly set fires
th rough your 1nsu r a n ce
prem 1ums .
I n s u r an ce
c ost s
a dverse l y affe ct ed
bur g lar1es . r ob b ~ r 1 es
ca r the ft s
p lus
cou ntl ess CB rad 1os
bicyc l es that tu rn
rn i'Ssin,g

On e th ing you can d o is t o
sup p o r t
pro gra m s
pr o vi d in g sti f fer pena l ties
for
w r ongdoe r s
an d
propo sal s for str engt hen ed
cri m e i nvest igati on e1f QJ ts,

You can also m ake it
tou gher' to r cr ooks. Use
good . strong loc k s . Mar k
p osse ss ron s w rt h you r
soc ia l secu r it y nu mber .

Our
agen cy
provi d e s
f i nan cra l p r ot ect ron a nd
ser vr ce w he n cn m e losses
occu r ... bu t many c a n be
preve nt ed That 's wily we
sa y preven t ro n Is the
best po l icv

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992-2143
102 W. Main

full

Our &lt;,talf ol denrr "h .tnd
techniCliln -; "dl make VlHlf

... 1."U:')tom dt"ntu rt"&gt; i.lllil' ~h - and

eco no mn:al ly

Om: or two day full

ANAHE IM, Calif. ( UP!) Pit che r
Ch ri s
Knapp,
unhapp y with hi s $40 ,000
sala ry , r efused Sunday to
r eturn to the Ca lifornia
Angels and was place d on the
disqualified list. He ha d
refus ed
to pi tc h last
Thursday and sat at home
whil e his a gent Alan
Hendricks W:ied to negotiate
an increasl in salary to
$70,0j)O a The Angels called up
rig hthander John Ca neira
from t heir Salt Lake City
farm club and said he would
start against Detroit Monday
night. Canelra was 8-1 with
the Pacific Coast League club
and had an e arned run
average of 3.73.

Ya rborou gh Satu r da y
entered the field for the
•106 000 W ld Class' Ra
•
I
or
lC
ce
of Champions to be run at
Birmingham International
Raceway July' 23.
Yarborough broke into the
lead on the NASCAR Grand
National c ircuit Saturday
1
with a win over Darrel
Waltrip, of Franklin, Tenn.,
in the Nashville 420 Waltrip
:
.
fell from a tu~ w1th
Yarborough to second in the
Grand NaU~al standings ·
Ull

are
by
a nd
the
a nd
up

-in ooe \Y.too dags

Natlonal champion Cale

Bos 11 ·2;

ElrnectRunA\'trl9e

Nl'lon•l L
Hou 167;
N~=~~o~ : RAJfh•,ie ~
Seaver , Cl n 118; Montefusco .

Detroit at Oakland , n ight
Toronto at Seattle, nl~ht

You c an help cut d ow n on

cn me losses .. losses tha t

SAYRE

Bo•lon (T; onl 7-2l , 7o30 -p.m.
Amerlcon Lt .. ue ; Gu idry ,
BIRMINGHAM ,
Ala
Tex as (Com er J. l or Umb arg . NY 13 -1; Tanana , cal 13,5;
·
p.m.
•
Defending Grand
New York (Espinosa 7-7 and e&lt; • -61 at Balllmore !Flanagan FIOnagon , Ball 13-6; Sorensen. (UPI) 1 2 :!·n ~~~O

the
best policy...
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

12 inducted into Ohio's Hall-of-Fame .

Na tion a l Le ague
GAB. H. Pet.
Burrog hs Atl
82 269 86 .320
Clark SF
88 334 l OS .314
73 287 90 .314
Pa rker P it
Madl ock SF
65 246 11 313
Va lnt ine Mtl
87 331 103 .311
Simmons Sf.L
91 312 97 .311
Rose Cin
89 377 115 .305
Whitf ield SF
97 283 86 304
Gr iff ey Cin
90 364 11 0 302
Puhl Hou
80 332 100 .301
American League
GAB H Pet .
• Carew M in
81 304 l OB .JSS
Lynn Bo s
80291 97 .333
Lez cano M it
74 241 79 .328
·' ···Ri ce 8os
88 366 11 7 320
Am&amp;rican League
Sundber g Tex
82 286 89 311
·Eut
Jac kson Cal
12 252 78 310
w. L · Pet. GB BrMt I&lt; C
73 293 90 .307
Boston
60 28 ..68 2
Yaz, eos
84 304 93 .306'
1
M llwau ke
51 36 .586 8 / 1 Reynolds Sea
85 307 93 .303
Baltimre
Bell Cle
82 325 98 302
49 4 1 .544 12
'N ew Y ork
47 41 534 ll
Home Runs
Detroit
.u 44 .500 16
Netlonal League : . L uzinskl,
Clev e lnd
-4 1 48 461 20
Ph il
21;
F oster , Cin
19 ;
Toron to
32 57 .360 2B 1h K ingman, Ch i , Win f ield , SO and
West
Clark , SF 16.
w. L . Pet. GB American League : Ri ce, Bos
Calif
49 41 .544
23 ; Baylor . Cal 21 ; Hisle, Mil
Kan City
47 4\ .53-4 1
20 ; A 1 ex and e r , Cle v ana
Te•a s
45 AJ .511
J
Thompson , Oet 19.
Oakl and
46 .45 505 J l/1
Runs Batted In
M i neso'a
39 47 .453 8
National League : Fost er . Cln
Chicago
39 49 . 443 9
66 ; Clark , SF 65 ; Winf i el d . s o
Seattl e
32 60 . 348 18
62 ; Gar \l ey , LA 60 ; Ce y , LA 59.
S•turday'l Results
Ameriun League : Rice, Bos
Balt jmore B, Tex as 7, 1st
75 ; Stllub , D ef 71 ; Thompson,
Tex as 11. Baltimore 1, 2nd
Det
and.
Hisle,
M il
61;
Boston 5, M innesota 4
Yastrzem"-i. 8 os s...
Oakland 3, Toronto 2
Stoteri Basei
Kan sa s Cit y 8, New Yor k 2
N•tlon•l Le•gue : M o reno ,
MilwaukeeJ, Ctl lcag o I
P itt 41; R ichards. SD 21 1
Sea tt le 7, Cl ev eland 6
Lopes. LA 26 : Ta11eras, Pitt 2" :
California 2, Detr oit 0
Ced eno, Hou 23.
Sunday's Resulls
Amerlun Leavue : Le Flor e,
Boston s. Minnesota 3, 1st
Det 32. WiLson , KC 29 ; Oilone,
Boston 3, Minnesot a 2, 2nd
Oak 28 ; CTuz, Sea end Will s.
Kansas City 3, New York 1
Tex 27.
..
Bait 2, T exas 1, (12 inns.
Pitching
Milwaukee 10, Ch icago 1
Vlctorlu
Detroit 4, Callfornia 0
National Le•gue : Blve, SF 12.
Oakland 8, Toronto 5
4 ; Gr i msley, Mtl 12-6 ; Knt- pper.
Clev eland 8. Seattl e A
S F 11 -S; Rogers, Mtl-: 11 -7 ; Rau.
Todey's Probabll PltchRn
LA and Perry , so 10-4; Zachry,
CAll Tlmtl EDT)
. NY 10-S, John , L A 10-1 , Niekro,
M innesota {Golt z 8 6) at A t I 10-9.

Hausmen
0·21
at
Atll!lnta
(Devine S-4 and Mahler 3,4) 2,

run.

Dr. Ronald ERiviere
•Dr. A.J. Siachh • Dr C W. BC;;rl • Di . G ..l Stoml1;1ugh
• Dr. W .IJ. Krm baii • Dr .I .C

\·1U! p h~

• IJr. .1. (khrnan

Th~ Rivitn Ce n t~ r
949 E. L r\lingswn Ave. Columbus

• PARTICLE BOARD
Visit our lumber deportment where
• PLYWOOD
you 're sure to find the quality material I
you need for oil your building require·
e STUDS
ments · fro o child 's sondbo&gt;&lt; too
new or emode ed room . Whatever
• MILLWCJRK
roject , look to The Friendly One

SHOP THE FRIENDLY ONE

for the right supplies and ins tructions.
Shop now ond sove .

P()MEROY CEMENT BLOCK COMPANY
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

•

••

'

•

'

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 1"1, W'IH
::;;: ::;:; :;:; :::;::: ::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: ::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ; :;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:~:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:: :::;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:; : ;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;: ;: ;:;:::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:; :; :·:; : :~~:

\J::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::c::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:,:,: :,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::l!i!·

46 Browns complete
.
first weekend drills·

Spo"('ts
Brzefs
t

\,l!

.

sets chari!y mark

!:!:

I
I

KENT, Ohio 1UP! ) - The
Cleveland Browns have
completed
their
first
weekend of training camp
under new Coach Sam
Rutigliano, who has brought
with him a philo~hy much
closer to the one Cleveland
players knew in their glory
years.
Rutigliano cut out the hated
"grass drill " regimen

Linescores

N. W. COMPTON, 0.0.

:

_______________

t
I

,4-,,.,. 25

,4,,,.,, 22

a

Travers and
Moor e. W- Travers (6-4l. L Ston e (7 -71 . t;IR - M ilwaukee,
Mon e v (6 1.
N

h o ro d n y ;

Det
003 000 010- ~ 9 0
Ca l i!
000 000 000- 0 10 I
Bi lli ngham and May ; Frost ,
Hart zell (8 1 and Down ing . W Billinqham 18-5) L - Frost ( 2

SoCl"a} I
t
I CaJ
dar
I

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT BUSINESS
and Professional Women 's
Club, 7:30p.m ..at the CQlumbia Gas Co. office, Middleport. Monday.

WEt;JNESDAY
FREE CERVICAL cancer
clinic Wednesday, at Heath
United Methodist Church,
Middleport , beginning at · I
p.m. Women wishing apModel
SA·2SW
pointment call 992-7 531
Madel S~· 1tw
I .
Mo de l SR-l2W
•
Cleve
101 300 021 - 8 18 0 daytim e or 992-5832 in
sea
000 002 020- 4 7 I
Clyde , Sp illner (6J. Monge (8) evenings or on weekend.
and Alel(ander ; M itchell , Pole
THURSDAY
w it h a 9 .29 c u . f l freeze r.
w tt h an 8 1 2 cu
ft .
(3 ),
Todd ( 4 ).
House
( 6 ),
w i1h an 8 . 12 c u II
BAKE
SALE and rummage
Montague ( 9 ) a nd Plum mer .
freezer
freezer On ly 32" wtde 1
Stinson . w - Ciyde . 5·5. L - sale by the Irish Leprechauns
Mitchell , 5-9. HR - Cieveland , 4-H Club Thursday, 10 a.m. to
Alex ander (19 )."
4 p.m. at Minnie Riggs
No matter what size o f an A,QIIII, you get these exclusive features :
residence located on Route
124, two miles west of LangsCHESTER, Pa . (UPI ) - ville; proceeds to Canters
h u mo d •h
--- - - • John Jackson, a first-year Cave fund .
mod
1
~ ... ~ .t -1:: LUif
defensive . lineman fr om
te&gt; R] t.,
Southern University, left the
~: ~'--!-~ ~~
l NII(C.Y
o Philadelphia Eagles' training
SA
camp voluntarily Sunday,
reducing the club's roster to
"DD-ONIM .......
E•clutlvel HI Humidity
ElcTuelve l ..
bthltiweT A.dju•t•bM
btlut hte. l ,.oel·
96 players.
cornplrtmlnt lfltllleeps apticNI . You CIA"-,, .. ,
Uon Energy Suer
eretor·•tthln· l ·
To r
0 10 004 000- 5 9 2
Oak
ooo 111 23-.: - 8 130
Clancy , Moor e ( 7l, W ill is (7 1,
Colema n
(81
and
Cerone;
Broberg , La cey (6 ), Sosa · ( t~ l,
Heaver lo ( 9 ) and Essi an . W -·
Sosa (7 21 . L.-Willis ( 1-51 . HRs
- 1oronto, Mayberry t 15) ; O ~ k ­
land . Wallis (5 ).

19.2 cu. ft. ' 22.1 cu. ft. 25.2cu.ft.

VI ~

-

---- f

i;;;;=--""""

,_,, ,~

~flttlever

Conlft)l .

It

nu

th ree se111n gs to

hetp ~ ou s.ve
e~tr i C: I ty

You tel
•T to deter mme th e
..vm gt IICCOfd• ng
to l ht h11 mid•ty
co n&lt;hUOI'It

retrtgetiiOI' '" IOf lresh
meet! A fre sh meet
IIpper th" •eeps •
meet lo l'lger l ht n an
ord•n ery m11t PI A His
tit o w n com rol

shel¥es you cen put 11
en~ n e u~nt you wel'lt l n
the rel rtgt!lrl tor
Reocen 8d o" n•dt\811
ledde r l or one htl'ld
l djUStrng

· wege ttblet 11 lo.ng ..
"'"ee weellt. l&lt;t~t~p s
vegetables cr1sp and
lre sh

H i!~

con trol.

liS Ol'rO·

t utom ttlc tot ~lng
now or ~ 'fOI,I

"''" ' Tne .t.mtna It
, ..oy lor YCM.I to Mel li
an yourM!f Anytl.,..
No wiring 01 COMplic tt41d hook uPt.

International league
United Press International
W. L. Pel. GB

Cha rl eston

56 34 .622

Richmond

Pawtucket

46 39 .5.4 1 /'n
47 41 .534 8

T idewater

~4

44 .500 11

Toledo

41 42 .494 11 11,

Col umbus
Rochester

.aO 43 .482 12tJ:;o
40 47 .460 14 112

Syracuse
33 57 .36) 23
Saturday's Results
Ti dewa ter 4, Co lu m bus 3

Ric hmond 4, Toledo 2.

Automatic
Ice Maker
Only sl995

inni ng s

1st. 6

.

Richmond at Toledo. 2nd ,

- Veteran New Orleans
Saints' quarterbacks Archie
Manning and Bobby Scot fare
among 17 veterans in training
camp, ·but the bulk of the
veteran squad is scheduled to
report Tuesday.
Among those due in this
week are runn ing backs
Chuck Muncie and Tony
Galbreath, defensive end
Elois Grooms, guard· Conrad
Dobler and wide receiver Ike
Harris.

first
baseman
Carl
Yastrzernski. Olbbage also
was ejected.

NEWPORT, R.I. (UPI) .:...
Bernie Mit too of South Africa
Sunday survived a double
match point and .went on to
defeat John James of
Adelaide, Australia 1&gt;-1, ~. 76 to ·win the $75,000 Newport
Hall of Fame Tennis
Championships.
Mitton earned $12,750, his
biggest single paycheck while
. VERO BEACH , Fla. (UPI ) James, Tl, earned $6,375, also
- The New Orlean Saints his largest single check.
Sunday acquired defensive
GREENVILLE, S.C. (UPI)
tackle Keith Simons from tl!e
With the National Football
Kansas City Chiefs for an
League
-exhibition schedule
undisclosed draft choice.
cut
by
one
third - and two
Simons started every game
last year for the Chiefs and games added to the regular
broke into the starting lineup season - the Atlan\8 Falcons
for six games the previous opened accelerated pre - .
season workouts Sunday.
year as a rookie.
Fifteen draft choices, 23
free agents and 22 veterans
CAMBRIDGE JUNCTION , worked out for nearly two
Mic h. (UP!) - Johnny hours in intermittent rain
Rutherford _outlasted a late Sunday and were to begin
charge by Danny Ongais to twice•-(l· day practices
capture the championship
Monday.\
.
car end of Sunday's Norton
Twin 200 at Michigan
LATROBE, Pa. (UPI)
International Speedway, with The Pittsburgh Steelers have
an ~verage speed of 159,941 acquired quarterback Larry
mph in a McLaren for his Lawrence, who has played in
first win of the 1978 season . the Natiooal Football League
- Bobby Allison wheeled a
and the Canadian Football
Matador to victory in the League .
stock car half of th e twin bill,
Lawrence, 29, was cut last
covering
th e
200-mile week by Montreal before the
distance at an average speed CFL season got under way.
of 138.72 mph, for his second
USAC win. in a row . He also
OGDEN, Utah '(UPI J won the USAC event last
·Jesse Trujillo, 26,
Boxer
Sunday at Milwaukee.
Denver, staggered by a stiff
GREENVIIJ..E, S.C. (UPI I right during a bout with
- The Atlanta Falcons, Cookie. Valencia of Ogden
seeking to Improve last Friday night, died. of
season's best ~ver 7-7 record , apparent head injuries,
began pre-season trainin g authorities said Sunday .
The state Medical ExSunday with 15 draft choices,
aminer
's office said an
23 free agents and 22 veterans
autopsy
would be performed
working out in inte rmi ttent
Menday
on
Trujillo, who died
rain .
in
a
hospital
shortly before
He ad Coach Leeman
midnight
Saturday
following
Bennett said be was pleased
boa
in
s
urgery
.
with the brief session.
BOSTON
I UPI I
Minnesota Twins' Manager
Gene Mauch was ejected
from the second game of a
double,header with the
Boston Red Sox Sunday then threw the team's bats
ooto the field in protest.
Mauch argued a ca ll by
first base umpire Bill Kunkel,
who called Mike Cubbage out
on a pickoff throw from
REUNION SET
Friends and relatives of the
lat e Charles Wesley and
Florent'f Elsie Bu ckley· are
invited to uttcnd the annual
reunion at Fo&lt;ked Run State
Park Sunday, July 30. A
potluck dinner will be served
at 12:30 p.m.

7 inn ings
Rocheste r

7,

2nd , 7 Inning s

Pawtucket
'

l,

Sunday's Results
Columbus at T.idewater. ppd .,

GSTAAD,
Switzerland
(UP! ) - Guillermo Vilas of
Argentina won the Swiss
Tennis . Open
Sunday,
defeating his countryman
Jose Luis Clerc; &amp;-3, 7~. 6-4,
in the final.

A
'R

A
R
E

1\ N. 2nd Ave.

Open Mon. thru Sat.
9:00toS:OO
Middleport

SyracuSe at Tidewater ·

Rochester at ' Richmond
Columbus at Toledo
Charleston at Pawtucket
tuesday's Games
Syracuse at Tidewater
Rochester at R: ichmond

Columbus at ToledO

Charleston at Pa w tu cket

CUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORTt OHIO

Pound

89~

FRYER THIGHS ....... Pound

694

CABBAGE •••••• • •1 ~·.25~

Pound
ALL MEAT &amp; BEEF

KAHNS
WIENERS

1-LB. PKG.

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

1-lb.
Pkg .

s1-n

lnn ol un e w uh ooupon

LIBBYS- YELLOW CLING

PEACHES I\~

li)Rf ) . C4RDINAlf 0lJDSIOAlS

CARNATION

$

·

COFFEE MATE ................................ ;......... ·~~~·

16-oz.

1

Cans

X3·lllilt•l:l

HEINZ CIDER

SLICED or HALVES

VINEGAR

$

$189 ~

lomll o"• ... uh D~K~t~On

one co upon p•l hrt~lt,

Gallon

~

~···~;iiiiS DIIIKS ................. ..~~~~ .. 2 for 7f

VECiETABL

ES

3
""'

18-or$

1

• CARDINA l HJOOSTOAFS

SALE DATES JULY 17 - 22, 1978

Con• ·'

WHOUPOTATOES ............. .3 ·~;~:

VINEGAR

c
&amp; CHEESE
MA .

L•m•! on• ,...u, COUfJOn
""" cou pon ~ ltm!I Y

TUNA FISH ........ .......... ~:~ 59c

89c

otLMONTl

..
00

IESTEA

19

2

~~~·

ti:UIUR IONUI PACK

TOW"'HOUSE CRACKERS .:............... .':~".'

79c

COR DI NO I 1\'S

16-oz .

$ 19

Box

SNO Bot

Plus deposit

PAMPERS ~ ................................... ·~~· 52"

. I HEFTY VALUES

29c

2

~I

TUSI CAl UIIIS ................. 2:.',;~~ s1"

COAN
01

·

13-ot.

-PIZZAS ..................................... ,..,.

'C

.5

-"bo
~

1/ALLEY.BELL

1

$139

COTTAGE atEESE ................... .~~:: ••
\/ALLEY BEI,L
.
ggc
REG. ·POPS ......................................
.

,

MIIKin LOIIGHOII COLBY ......, ......•:;.,;

1

'

Sllllft ..~ .............................. S1
BORDIN
tt-et. S1"
HoH

.0 .......

00 lfi 0~

•••au. . . . .:. . . .:. . . . . . .._.

&amp;

COR OI NAI I~

-

t!WPO'I "'"

SIORES

""'
""'u
•
0

STO RE S

BATH .TISSUE

3

fltelil::Z·l~l
- - - · - ·--

SOFTWEVE

Umit thrw wlrh e....,._
one eCMI,en ..-. ,,...,

1

l ·Ct.
Pkgo,

s1_oo

S10R£S .. C&gt;\ AOINAlt"OOD S10A! S

WISK

l1m11 on• ..,,,, c ~
one coupon p.. ,_...

32 -ot.
Iotti I '-~

....... r/12/11
leN • .,.,.._. ftoyel II~ l tott•

. , ••

....... ,/U/7 1
Qoocl 1M ~ ft or• l l tue ltortt

00-21 ott

oq.:ro Oli

ULUA8L£ COUPON CARO INA I

SHBIDID CHEDDAI CHRSI .......... :.0:.· 11".
BORDEN

....,... ,...............................o-79c 'r
'
."""
CIIIAL MILI ......................................2d!:.99c
BLUE BONNET

E2

1-Lb.

Cartons

~I

s.

CA AOlNA I FOOOSIORES
WINOOWCLEANEII

WINDEX

X3•l*lU:•l:l

LAUNDRY DETERGENT

X'ltlii:O:·':· n~--:IORf S .
~

59c.

~

CAROI NAl \~

ICRAn

Cl. $ 1t

.

71UI7 1!

Oo1111 It C•nttfl• l Mll'l• t ll lul !itm ••

~

KRAFT -

CHUIE. IAUII'Ol ., I'Erl'lRDNI

PIE s•LLS.......................... ...

•

~o•
E~

§ll"'''-""'ttl

DAIRY VALUES
MIKED VEOETAILEI.
VECIETAILEI lot STEW

12 ·0l

WASTE BAGS_............................. 3:.',;~.· 79c

itE S e

viGitABLES z~:~· 59c

l•~ly

TALL KITCHEl BAGS .............. 3~~~· 51"

IFROZEN FOOD VALUES I
Lb.
Box

CAKE DONUTS •;k~· 59c

ABIO,.IANT

PRE WASH SHOUT ............................... .'~~:· 891

0 11~1'&lt;""

lom•t &amp;&gt;11 01 w •l ll

on• Cou p un p.,,

:AROINAL

10' OFF LAIEL

BORDEN

00 1!&gt;06 _ ~

Jar

Bottles

ZEST IAR SOAP ...............................) •••

.

Blue S•o•••

R. C. ·COLA

Ct.

,.roOTi

C~t a o~ • •

DIET RIET OR

69c
PLOCHMAN
SQUEEZE MUSTARD ...................~~;~·~ 49c

tIt OFF LAIEL

CHIF -IOY· Afll ·OII

Good at

,RED DRill MIX .. .. .. ...... .. ................... .'~~": s159

APPLE BUnER ............................

49-oz.

,.,. ••• 7/U/7 /l

3 -oz.

H"WAIIAN PUNCH

MUIILIMANI

10' OFF LAIIEL

Ga llo n

INSTANT

PASTE .................................... ·~~:· SSe

. . . ... .. ...:S
4 1

i+j•lJ.Jifte]:J

HEINZ WHITE

Whale Kernel Corn. French Style
Green Beene or sweet Pall

COMET.CUA.SER ................................ .':~:·

THE DAILY SENTINEL

POTATOES ••• 10 lb. s1.59
LEMONS···· 10 tor 99~

l&gt;rl. CQU[)Ofl ~ f•m 1 1 ~

TIDE

·PHONE
992-2156

FARM FRESH PRODUCE

HEAD LETTUCE ~:a~ .49¢

BACON •••••••••

limit one 110.00 purch•••

·FOR
MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT

MIXED

FRYER LEGS """"""

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

DETERGENT

NEWSPAPER
.
CARRIERS
WANTED

BAKER
FURNITURE
'

sse _
~- 69' FR
79'P

CRISP &amp; SERVE

Bo•"

992-38 '

$13900

Pound

2'0fFLAIEL

BETWEEN

WjiOLE

FRYER

1 · 0l ·

CROSS HARDWARE

capa ci ty .

Pound

.DIIIIER

• Housewares
• Wallpaper
• Paints
• Electrical Supplies
• Plumbin!l Supplies

Takes th e dampness out of
yo ur basem ent or other high
m ois tur e a rea s fo r ·.' o i11 y ·
penn ieS a day in o Perat ing
cost. Sh ut s off aut omat ica l ly .
Hu mi dis te el control s . 15 p int

RTERED BREASTS ..
QUARTERED LEGS·-· 69(
FRYER BREASTS .. """"d S} 29

Home Improvement Supplies
see Cross Hardware

p
·W

ADMIRAL
DEHUMIDIFIERS

SPLIT FIIYEIS ....

For all your do-it.yourself
'If

RETURNS HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Lee of
Pomeroy a nd Mrs. Betty
Reed a nd Judy Ha il of
Middl eport ha ve return ed
home after vacationing at
Myrtle Beach, S. C. this past
week.

JAMES E. MIDDLESWART

FRYERS.~~;.I

KRAfT

DO-IT-YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS

Sandy Ma rriner, Gallipolis ;
and Penny Wamsley, Letart ,
W. Va .

Mr . Jack Miller, Joseph and
Thomas, Logan ; Mrs. Gladys
Hood, Minersville : Mr. ·and'
Mrs. Franklin Imboden a nd
Debbie, J eremy, Kim , Tim
and Robin and Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Simpson, ,aU of Racine;
Mr . Lawrence Roush , Millwood, W. Va. : Mary
Ridgway, Pomeroy; Wendy
and Bill Wel ch,Marion:

.NOTICE

· RYAN EVANS
TURNS SEVEN - Ryan
Michael Evans celebrated
his seventh birthday on
July I with a party at the
home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Michael E•aos,
Portland. Ice cream and

and Ice cream were served
to Mrs . ·VanMeter, v. J.
and · Alveoa; his gnlndpareots, VIctor and Wilma
Bahr; and his parents,
Roger and Jane Coates.

The reunion of Lynn and Duffy, Sr., and Jack, Jr.,
Susan Roush was held· Brian and David, Mrs. Icy
recently at Union Camp Miller, Mrs . Nettie Moore,
Ground near New Haven, W. and Mrs. Jeff Hubbard and
Va .
Scott, a ll of Syracuse; Mrs ,
Attending were Mr. and · Norm a. Baker and Rick,
Mrs. Donald E. Roush and Angie and Nancy , Mr. and
Darin, Mr . and Mrs. Jack Mrs. Curtis Roush, and Mr.
· and· Mrs . Kenneth Lee, aU of
- - - - - - - - - - - Pomeroy ; and Mr. and Mrs.
cake were served to Mr. ll&lt;Jbert E. Roush, Sr., Robert
and Mrs. Charles Warth, Jr ., James, and Daniel,
Darrin, Dave and Amy,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Phillip Obllager and
Laura, Pomeroy ; Mn.
Marvlne Beegle and Sherry
T.here is a rumor going around, that 1, Jim
and Jimmie, · J. J.
Middleswart, signed a petit ion to heip
Lawrence, Leota Birch,
Freda Middleswart Proffitt out of her
Ryan's grandmother, Ada
situation.
Which I completely deny. It i.s my
Van Meter and Alicia,
belief
that
anyone who believes in justice
Cindy and Matthew Evans.
will
not
sign
the petition.
Sending gills were Mrs.
Bernice Evans, .Pomeroy,
Artie Runnel, Pomeroy,
and Owen DaOey, Portland.

BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!

DELMONTE .

rain

'toledo 6, Richmond J
Syracuse 6. Charleston 5
Pawtucket 7, Rochesle1 4
Todoy's Games

VICTOR COATES
TURNS TWO- A famDy
get-together honoring
Vlclor " Joey " Coates on
bls ·aecood birthday was
held recently at hla home.
A clown cake, baked by
his AIIDt Lila VanMeter,

PITTSBURGH I UP!) Pittsburgh Pirates
ri ghtfielder Dave Parker
came off the IS-day disabled
list Sunday, forcing the team
to option catcher Steve
Nicosia back to their
Columbus, Ohio farm team.
Parker went on the
disabled 1i8t when he cracked
his left cheekbone In a
collision with New York
Mets' catcher John Stearns at
home 'plate .

ppd ., rain
Syracuse 9, Charleston 6
Roches ter 3, Pawtucket, 1st,

'l'l

Alexandria , Va.
Also, Mrs. Marlene Lawson
and Charlie, Mr. and Mrs .
James C. Roush and Kimberly, all of Letart, W. Va. ;
Mrs. Mary .Roush, J eff and
Ricky, and Mr. and Mrs.
Detner Roush , Jr.. and
Donald, all of New Haven, W.
Va.; Mr. Thomas E. R&lt;Jush,
Hartford, W. Va .; Mr. Detn er
Roush III, Point Pleasant , W.
Va .; .Mr. Billy H. Roush, Mrs.
Mable Oliver and Todd
Donahue, all of Kanauga ;

Roush reunion enjoyed

RETURNS HOME
Cmdr. and Mrs. Gene
Crooks and sons, Mark and
John, who have spent the past
two years in Spain, are in
Middleport with his parents,
Mr .. and Mrs. Walter Crooks,
U.S. Navy. Cmdr. Crooks is
being transferred to th e
Annapolis Naval Academy
and the family will Jive in
Rockville, Md. Cmdr. and
Mrs. Crooks are spending
several days there this week
completing arrangements for
their move. Next Sunday the
Crooks family will attend a
gathering to celebrate the
birthda y nf Mrs. H. E. Fruth
of ·Point' Pleasant, W. Va.,
who will be 81 on July 25.

~
catcher
Bob
Montgomery
to
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)

instituted by former coach the outside or go elsewhere in
Forest Gregg, a product of a trade i! Jackson proves he
the Vince Lcmbardi school of still has the physical ability to
hard-nosed football, an~ go with the super-aggressive
instituted a more cerebral attitude he brought to
approach.
training camp last year.
" All drills should have a
Rutigliano is philosophical
goa l and some kind of about his chances fCI' success
teaching value/' said •with the Browns, who are
RACEWAY PARK
Rutigliano,
"There is no way caught ina rebuilding proceS!I
TOLEDO·, Ohio (UPI )
you
can
make practice while competing in perhaps
Never fart her back thilll in
pleasant,
but
you can make it the toughest division in the
. second place, Chicago Bound
interesting
and
Natiooal Football League.
more
took the lead . for good at the
"!know there will be' peaks
challenging . .
three-quarter pole and went
The Browns reported that and valleys, and a lot of
on to pos t a ha lf -length
Maior Leag ue Res.ults
( 2nd game)
moments when I'll have to
victory in the featured $2,400
By United Pr ess Inte rnationa l LA
201 001 l OG- 5 10 1 all 46 scheduled players
bite the bullet, but I'm
Na fional Lea gu e
Ch i
100 100 00 1- 3 9 1 reported to camp and that
preferred pace at Raceway
I ht gam e. 10 in nings)
Hooton , Rautzhan (9) and two additiOI!al free agents,
ready,'
he said. "Coaches are
Park Sunday night. · ·
San Og
100 100 000 0- 2 5 1 Ferguson ; Burr is, McGlothen
always
optimistic in the
02 0 000 000 1- 3 9 2 111. Moore &lt;S l. Hernandez ( 7) both running backs, were
. Rusty Rock placed, and Pt sbg
Ow c h in k o , -Fi ng er s (1 0) and and Rad'e r . W- Hooton C9 :7,l. L signed on: Reuben . Gibson,
gate."
starting
Little Delightful showed.
Sw ee t ,
Te na ce
19) ;
B i bb y , - Burr is (5 -71": H R- LOS An ·
Memphis State, a &amp;.1 195The winner, ariven in 2:03 Ham il ton (8 ). Wh i tso n ( 10) and geles., Baker (7) .
D y er . w - W h ifson (33 ) . L pounder,
and Billy Coleman·
1-5 by J im Mayes, returned Finger s { .4 -9 }. HR - P i ttsburgh , Cht gil mel
of
the
University
of ·MassaSpor-ts Tranuctions
$25.20, S6 and $4.20.
St a rgel l ( 14 &gt;.
San F ra n
200 020 000- 4 a 2
By United Press lnterniltional
chusetts,
a
S-10
192-pounder.
St
.L
01
2
310
ll
x9
1.4
1
The 6-7 nightly double
Sunday
I 2nd game)
Barr , Curtis (6) i'l nd Hill ;
" We ' ll work and teach
Pro Football
co mbi nati on of Billy B San Dgo
010 400 100- 6 14 l Marti nez,
Schu ltz
(7)
and
Kansas City
Tr~ded
102 0 11 50)( - 10 1 I 0 Simmons . W- Martinez ( 4-3 ). L extremely hard, but certain
Geddes and Olte Mover was Ptsbgh
defensive tackle K ei th Simons
- Barr (4 . 7) . HR s- San F ran - times of the day will be set
Sh
i
r
ley
.
K
inney
01.•
Le
e
worth $30.
to New Orleans Sa ints for a
i sto ( B J and Roberts , cisco, Clark (16 ). Her ndon {ll .
aside for privacy and the fut ure draft choi ce .
Attendance .wa s 3,769 and Aqu
R eu ss, Wh i t son ( 4 ), Ja c kson
Pillsburgh - Signed quar ter chance to get away from it." back
on~ game)
the handle $319,818.
(7), Tekutv e ( 9 ) and 0 11. W Larry Lawrence, who has
020 200 002 ~ 6 7 0
J ackso n ( 4 -3) L .-- K1nney ( Q. San Fran
Rutigliano has put players played in both the NFL and the
000·000 000- 0 6' 1
11 HR s - San D iego , T en ace2 SI ..L
Cana di an Football League.
Ha l ic ki and Sadek ; Urrea , on their own from the 10: IS
110) , P ilt sb urgt:l , 8 . Rob in s on
Baseball
ThOmas
15l.
Fa
lcone
(9)
and
a
.m.
close
of
inorning
~---------~--------------, ( 6 ) .
Pitt sburg h Dave Parker
Sw isher , Tama rgo i7 l. Wpractice until the start of 'came off th e 15 -day dis abled
Halicki ( 5-3l. L - Urr ea (3-9) .
l ist Sunday , forcing Pi r ates to
(1st gam e)
afternoon drills at 3:30.
optio n catch er St eve Nicosia
LA
00 0 0 11 000- 1 6 1 Hous
000 100 000- 1 7 0
.I
OPTOMETRIST
I Chi
There is no way you can run ba ck to their Co iumbus., Ohio
o1o 100 oo)l - 3 a o M ll
010 0 14 OOx - 6 17 0
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
1 Rhoden . Hough (5 ), Welch 171 Bannister , zamora (6) , W il - a
completely
liberal farm team .
and
Oa
tes
.
Fe
r
g
uso
n
( 7 ) ; l i ams (6 ). Mclaughl in (7 ) and
1 AT NOON ON THURS . ) - EAST COURT I Kru k&lt;J w . Su it er (6 ) and Rader
program, but I also don't
Pujols ; Schatleder and Carter .
!_!~.!2~!.!!2.!.;
~ W- Kru kow ( d OJ. L- Rhoden W- Scha tzeder {3-1). L- Ban - want a camp in which the
17 51
n ister (J . S ) .
men are always listening to a
TAKE TOUR
P hi l~t
020 000 110- 4 6 0 bell ringing," the coach said.
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Riffle
At Ia
000 000 01 1- 2 7 0 "Leaving the players alone in
and daughter,
Greta,
Ruthven,
Reed
(8)
and
Boone ;
Hanna .
Sk ok.
( 8 ). the gut part of the day will
Pomeroy
,
and
Mrs.
Mary
Cam pbell (9 ) and Poco roba . W help us all ."
Kathryn
Holter,
Bashan
,
- Ruthven (6 -8&gt;. L- HMna (7 .
A major question this
6 ). HRs- Philadelphia , Ca rde a
fow
days
recently
at
spent
summer is whether Bob
nal ( 4) ; Atlanta, Murph y (121 .
Jackson, Cleveland's firs t Norlh Myrtle Beach, S. C.
N .Y .
0000100 10- 2 63
While there they toured the
Cinc i
510 300 OOx- 9 12 2 draft pick in 19'77, can come
Presidential
Yacht, Sequoia,
Kobel , Bernard ( 5J, Siebert back from the massive knee
which is located ' in Vereen's
(7 1 and Stearns ; Hu me and injury that kept him out of
Bench , Correll (7 ) _ W- Hume
Marina . They also visited The
action last year.
( 4-9 ) . L - Kobel
( 1-2 ) . HRS·
Cotlon
Exchange and th~
Cincinnati , Fos ter ( 19 ). Concep .
There was talk that
cion ( 3 ) .
U
.S.S.
North
Carolina BatJackson, who has worked
tleship
Memorial
at
Amer iciln League
daily to bring his knee back
Wilmington,
N.
C.
11st game l
sin ce having extensive
M inn
002 000 100- 3 13 1
Bos
20100011x - 5110 surgery last swruner, might
Serum , Harrison ( 5 ). Holly be switched from his middle
( 81 and Wynegar ; E ckersley ,
linebacker position to outside
HOMECOMING SET
Cam pbell 18 1 and· Fisk . WSc hm s on
((11 -2) .
L.
linebacker.
POMEROY - The 57th
Harr i son
"We don't want to take annual homecoming of the
&lt;2nd game)
Ja ckson out· Q.f his natural Forest Run Baptist Church
M inn
000 010 100- · '1 12 0
will be held July 30. Sunday
Bos
100 002 oox- 3 7 o position where he has
E r i c k son and Wynegar ; excelled and has the chance
school will begin at 9: 30 with
Wright. Stanl ey ( 81 and Mont - to be a
great rn.iddle Mrs. Cornelius Bunch,
gomer-; . W- Wright (5 -l l. L linebacker,"
Rutigliano superintendent. There will be
Er ic kson (9-0 l . HR s Min n eso t a , Norwood ( 4 }; BOSTOn , ruled. ''He'll also have the
devotions at 10:45 a.m. and a
Lynn ( 10 ) .
opportunity to work with a miss ionary talk by Mrs.
K .c.
201 opo ooo- 3 6 o guy who already is a good
Florence Richards at 11 a.m.
N. Y
000100000- 170
man
at
the
position."
Mrs. Richards is secretary of
Gura . Mingor i (7 ), Bird (7 ).
He was ref erring to Dick the Women's Auxlllary of the
Hrabosk.y
( 8)
and
Porter ;
Bellttie , Tldrow (J J, Ly le (8) Ambrose , who handled the
P rov iden.ce
Baptist
a nd Heath . f/- Gura ( 7-2) . L Association. A luncheon is
Bean ie ( 2-4) . HRs- N ew York , position much of last season .
Nettles ( 16 ) ; Kansas City , OT is The other man at the pOsition,
scheduled for noon and at 3
( 14) .
Bob Babich, might move to p.m. guest speaker - will be
( 11 innings)
·
Rev . Douglas Carter of the
Te
000
100 000
Balx
001 ·000
000 000001 - '11 6
8 21 ..,. _ _ ...,. _ _ _ ._ _
First Baptist Church, WorMatlack.., Cl eveland (11) and
J thington . He will be acSu ndberg ; Kerrigan, St anhouse
companied to Pomeroy by lhe
(8 )
.ind Dempsey . W- Sta n junior 9hoir of his church .
hOu se &lt;3 51. L- Cieve land ( 2 Sl.
~
The Rev. Mr . Carter is vice
cn 1
ooo 001 ooo- 1 10 2
moderator of the Providence
M ilw
120 200 05x - 10 14 0
e~n
Association.
Slone ,
LaG 1ow
181 and j
YOUR CHOICE OF SIZES!
about 62,000 times during the
.period. But the Kent State
Univeristy g'raduate, who
shot continuously for Sl'very
hor , admitted to being tired
after his 24-hour stint at the
free throw line.
"The record is there for
anvone to ~et." he said, " but
it probably won 't be me
again ."

High School, when he sunk his
12,875th basket before an
enthusiastic crowd.
He said he trained for seven
weeks for his effort, and shot

SHELBY, Ohio (UP! ) · Tcm Diringer, 'll, may or
may not be the world record
holder after completing
13,2081fee thows out of 14,500
attempts this weekend .
The . Monroeville. High
School teacher did indeed
surpass the previous record
of 12,874 out of 13,116
attempts set by Fred L.
Newman of San Jose, Calif.
May 31-June ,l, 1975.
But the Guinness World
llopk of Records may not
name Diringer as the ·official
record holder because he
made only 91.09 percent of his
shots, while Newman was
good for 98 percent,. of his
baskets.
Separate division of the
record
might
be
established.
Diringer, a former Monroeville High School basketball
coach, broke the previous
record at 10 :44 a.m. Shelby

~The Daily Sentinel, MiddlejJOrt-Pom~roy , 0 ., Monday , July 17, 1978

CAR DINA i fO ODSID RIS
LIQUID

.:' DOVE
limit
-

on•

w•fll

.....-n

COUIM&gt;fl ,..,

famlto,

22 ·ot.

aonte

�'
6-The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 17,1978
NOTICE
Not ice Is hereby given tha t
on the 19th day of July 1978 a t
7: 00 p .m ., a · public hearing
will be held on the budget and
Revenue · Sherlng F unds o_
f

Lebanon Townsh i p Trustees

15 Words ur Under

of Meigs County , Ohio , tor the

fiscal year ending Dec . 31 ,
1979.
Hear ing w il l be held at the
Lebanon Township garage .

Lebanon Townsh ip
Tru!itees
Clarence lawrence ,
Clerk

(7 ) 11, He
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIAR;Y
On June 29, 1978 , in the ,
Me igs Coun t y Probate Court ,
case No . 22417 , Blanche
Edwards , R:l. 1, Box 43.5 ,
Storys R"un Roed ,
Oh io 45620 wa s
Adm inistratr ix Of
of
Pearl
P.

Cf"leshire .
ap pointed
the estate
Edwards ,

deceased , latt of 39500 StOrys
R un Road , Route L Bolt 435.
Cheshire , Oh io.
Mann ing D. Webster

Probate Judge
11l 3, 10, 11. Jtc
'

For Tueadoy, July 11

ASTROeGRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

er~~

Want .Ads Turn Unwanted Ite.;,s Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
Cash
1.00 .

I clay
2days
3days
6d.ys

1.50

l11ar.11e
1.2S
1.90"
2.2&gt;
J.iS

W H EEL

TO GOOD home : female puppv, 8 HOMESITE$ for sole . I ocr• and
weeks old. Very cute . 992·2-i28 .
up. Middleport , near Rutland.
Cl31 1992-7481 .
SEVERAL LO~G hair colicQ kit·
Eadt word over UM! minimwn I~
tehs. 2 motiths old. Phon, NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
words is 4 c.~nts per word .prr dill y .
992-7132.
all elec .. 1 acre , Middleport,
Ads nmnlnM olher ll~.~t.n t'Uil.St!CUlive
days will be dt.. rKed 1d the I day
close to Rutland . Phontt 9927481 .
FH.-A-. - 30
- -y-r .- 1
:i-n_a_n_ci:n- g-. -o,-lsa
In n"temury , Can.! or Ttumks Mnd I
Any U.S. made cor- ports
(X)ihu•ry : 6 cent:~ per word. 13.00
ref inancing. Ireland Mortgage,
WILL CARE for the elderlv in our
minimwn. Cash in advYrll'e.
extro If neadad. Excludn
77 E. Stat e. Athens . phone (bioi)
home. Phone qq2·7314 .
592-3051.
front-wheel dri ve cars.
WATER WHL'drilling . William T.
Mubilt! Home SM.~ and Yard ~ le!l
art: at't.'epl~d onlY: with eash with
THR EE BEDROOM house in Racine
Grant . 7~1 · :?879
1
order.tMS toent charl!le fur ailii l'l:UTf·
' oreo . Neor river. COmpletely
Chimney - ~wep t ,by a profession al
ing Box Number if! c..rt&gt; uf The Sen·
remodeled . 949 · 25~5 .
with modern du stless c.leoning
tine I.
oldtime
workmanship.
Call
3.
7
ACREdi IN Rutland Village. ~
I
The Publ~her rest!M'e~ ll!t! Ml!llll
bedroo m houSe 2 c, or garage,
1·373 -6057 _Ron Zor tman.
to edit or reject lua y wds dt!tmed obt:&gt;th£.r outbui ldings . Asking
TILE INSTALLED . Ceramic tile.
jtocliur~o~~ l . Tfte Publistlt:r wi tt not !)It'
$15,000. 742-3150.
respon.sibl~ £or I TlOI"e l!W:In 01\t' lncor·
slate and quarry. 992·3685. 15
re&lt;.1. in~l1ion . ......~.
TWO LO TS near Meigs Mine No. 1
years experience .
~ck W. C.rMy, Mgr.
Phone w.t-2156
wirh rural water available.
742·2746 .
Phonem.mt
IN RUTLAND. 6 rooms, portio!
both , \carport , utility bui lding.
On big l9t. City water , gas.
7&lt;2·2881.
FIVE ACRES ond Sc hultz mobile
B &amp; 5 .MO~IlE HOMES . Pl . Plea·
home , land has additional
sent : W. Va. beside Heck 's.
tra iler hookup. Need for quick
1973 Broodmore 1-i • 6-4 1
bedroom
sa le. 614 ·067-3305.
1973 Doria n 14 1160 2 bedroom
rHREE BEDROOM lrome home in
1971 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom ,
Mur1atty
Middleport. Coll992-3457..
2
bath
Noon on Saturtltiy
rwo NICE lot5 in Racine with Hol197·2 co,enlry 12, os J bedroom
Tue.sdtiy
ly Pprk trailer and 18 x 42 ce19b9 Statesm an 12 If 60 2
U1ru Fridll y
ment block b"uilding, has. Io rge
bedroom.
J.ae'k
carsey , Mtr.
4 P.M.
gard"en space or;~d se ... eral fruit
U1e day before publicu tiiJn
COAL . liMESTONE, sand. gra ... el.
Phone992-ll81
trees . Phone 9.49.2-i18.
calcium chloride . fertililer . dog •L - - - - - - - - - - - '
Swuiay
food . and all types of salt . f. .
+ P.M.
celsior Salt Works, Inc. , E. Main
WILL DO bobysilling !n the hom...•
FrW.y afkrlllk.Nl
St. , Pom eroy . 992·389 1.
weekdays . 7 to 5. 992 - 39~
•

1.110
3.1111

11 :JO--J ohnhy Carson 3,4, T5; soap 6,13; Movie " Titole
Wilder Years" I ; ABC News 33; Movie "TIIJ
Bridges at TOkO-RI" 10.
T2:0G-Janakl 33; 12 :05--Pollte Story 6,13; I :OGTomorr'ow 3,A.
1: 15--News 13; .
MovJPChonnel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M . -Scarlett SlrHt (G)
1 &amp; 11 P.M . - lslanmlnTheStream lPG)

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Busines:S Services
.,. .

ALIGNMENT

TUESDAY, JULY 11,1971
5:45--Farm R'I)Ort T3; 5:50--PTL Club 13.
6 :0G-PTLCiub 15; Summer Semester 10.
6:30--Focus ·On Columbus • ; News 6; Summer
Semes"'r 8; Concerns &amp; Comments · 10; 6 : Mornlng oport 3.
6:50--Good Morning, West Vlrgl_n la 13;, 6:55-;-Nows 13.
13.
7:00--. Today 3.~.15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Underdog 10.
7 : 2~huck White Reports 10; 1: 30--Schoolles 10.
8:1l0-Capt. K~ngaroo 8,10; Sesame st . 33.
9 : 00-Merv Griffin J; Phil Donohue A,13,15;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8; Tic lac Dough
10.
.
9:30--Andy Gri ffith 8; Family Affair 10, .
JO : oo-c~d Sharks 3.~.15; Ed!ie of Night 6; Tic lac
Dough 8; Joker' s Wild 10; To Tell The Truftl 13;
Over Easy 33 .
10: »-Hollywood Squares 3,. , 15; High Hopes 6; Price
Is Right 8, 10; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Paint Al0119 With
Nanty Komlnsky Jl.
II :OG-High Rollers 3,.,15; Happy Days 6,13.
II : 3o--Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13;
Partridge Family •: Love· of Life 8.10.
11 : 5~BS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :0G-Newscenter 3; News ~.6, 10; Young &amp; tlte
Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13; Watch You
Mouth 33.
12:3o--Ryon's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun A; Gong
15;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; French Chef 33.
I :OG-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6.13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless ·10; Not For Women
Only 15; Austin City Limits 33,
1:31&gt;--Days of Our Lives 3ol,l5; As The World Turns
8,10.
2:00--Qne Life to Live 6,13 ; Meeting of Minds 33.
2:30--\)octors 3••• 15; Guiding Light 8, 10.
3:0G-Another World 3,~.15; G4T!(ral Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
3' 31&gt;--AII In The Family 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit

SPECI.AL

.....

VA.

Call Now For
Appointment

_

S.rvlce
........
...............

c-.

Pomeroy landmark

9 ...
IAill

NOTICE

-·

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
' DEADUNES

Pomeroy Landmark

9 ..

!!Iii.

w.

July 18, 1971
This coming year ~hould be a
series o f social ly stimulating
experiences for vou . Take
care, however , not tp neglect
BEST SELECTION of the best wood BOYS WILUNC. to mow lawns . .
old standbys in order to woo
stoves in Southeastern Ohio .
trim , rake. Middleport area .
new pals .
Jotul , Mono , Efel, Tirolio ,
Caii992·S514 .
CANCER (June 21-Juty 2Z) Be
Tempwood, and Nafhuo . Zion
careful today not to force peo- I WAN T to e•tend my thanks to
Heat Co .. 8 Putnam Dr . {off Mill
the doctors and nurses 01
P.Ie you 're fond of on your mate
St. ). Athens . bU-592·b079 or
tf he or she doesn 't take to
Holzer Hos pital for thei r kind·
biH%-1187.
these people as enthusiasti c·
ness and thougttltfu lness dur ing
ally as you do. Find out more
my stay . Also . a special th a11;ks
about you rse tr by sending for
to those who wrote l ~? il en . fer
you r cop y of Astro-Graph Let·
the cards and !lowers sent to
ter. Mail 50 cents for each and a
me . To Rev. Boss , who visited
long, self-addressed . stamped
m"e and tO the churches 'fo'hO
~nvelope to Astro·Graph , P .0 .
prayed
for
me .
Your , Let Pomeroy Londmork
.Box 489. Radi o City Station ,
th oughhilness and pryoers
soften &amp; ·condition your
'N.Y . 10019. Be sure to specify
meant so much . God Bless ~ou
water with Co-op w1ter
birth sign .
and be with you , is my prayer.
softener, Model UC-SVI ,
LED (July 23-Aug. 22) II isn'.l Mrs . Cora Grindley .
like you to lry to skim the
Now Only
cream from a collec tive effort.
Today , however , you may look
Let us test your water fret
to fatte n you r coffer while
ANNOUNCING the opening of
denying helpers .
""Hair by Lila·· Beauty Solan . 3
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22)
~ack W. tarMy, Mgr.
Today ·s fun "happening could
miles east of Chester. Rt. 248.
Mrs . Keith Ridenour. owner.
turn somewhat sou r il thos e
Phone !'92-2181
you're sharing the good limes
Tuesday thro ugh Saturday by
appoinlm@nt .
with fail to pi ck up their ~hare
TUPPERS PlAINS. 3 bedroom . 11,
of lhe lab . Avoid l ighl-listed
BURROUGHS SENSI·MATIC acboth , rorol electric , air condi·
types .
co unting machine . Phone
tioning , fu ll basement , Iorge
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-0ct. 23) Don' I
992·2 156, The Doi ly Senli n~ l .
lot . 992 ·3585 .
spoil what shou ld be a pleasant
111 Court Street, Pomeroy.
FIVE ROOM house , bo th and lot ,
day by insisting that thos e with LOST: RED Ir ish seller in Racine
Ohio .
newly poi nted. 964 S. 3rd Sr ., ·
area. White spot in ches t. Mar - U5E D :T:=:R
you must marc h to the tune you
:-cA-:C::1c:
Oc:
R:S, -__.:.
Middleport. 992-5q89 .
vin Hill949.22 16.
toot. Let their melod•es and
--·MFIJS Diesel . MF130 Diesel
yours blend .
LOST : GOLD German Shephoer .
MF150 Diesel · MF:?35 Diesel · 18 ACRES lOCATED 1n Pomeroy ,
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22)
Ohio with city wo!er and
Mole
Naylor 's Ru n Hill .
Mflb5 Diesel . "MF285 Diesel Your lnQenulty and e ff iciency
sewo'ge O'o'oiloble. 992 -6333 or
992.3778 .
MF1135
Diesel,
Cab.
air
&amp;
today w111 not be fu lly appreci·
7.&amp;2·2003 .
hea ter .
ated by all . Someone who is lOST: MALE small long haired ton
THREE BEDROOM total electric
jealous of you wil l try to
dog , pa rt pood lv and terrier . In NEW &amp; USED IMP,LEMENTS.
MP~ Boler . MFI O Boler · MF120
house in Ru stic Hi lls. Syracuse .
Middleport area . 99'2·5696.
demean )lOUr achievements
Boler . Matthews Rotary Scv the
O hio . Do ub le concre te
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec .
. MF880 Semi -mounted 6 bot·
driveway , pa tio with brick bar ·
21) Financiai cond it ions are
tom Plow . MF520 I :r Disc
b·que , storage building, stove ,
likely 10 be a mixed bag l oday .
MF 200 2 Row Chopper · MFJ9 2
relrig...-otor and carpeting.
You 're equally as adept at
Row Planters . Mechanical
992 ·2b56 .
spending as yo u are at making 1q77 CHEVROLET CAPRI CE Clossic
1ransplonter .
a profit.
2·door. 350 Abbl. Power win18 ACRES LOCATED in Pomeroy ,
.SHINN S TRACTOR SALES
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19)
dows , vinyl top , cru ise con trol ,
Ohio with city water and·
Phone
458
'
1630
Socially you 'll be a big hit
till wheel. AM -FM 8·trock tope.
sewage available . 992·6333 or
l
eon.
W.
Va
.
today , but persons importa;ntto
power door lock~ . $5000 . After
742 · 2033 .·-~-----·
yoU r career are not apt to view
5 call q49-:2754
you in th e same l tght . Strtve to 19bb BUICK LESABRE . Phone FOR SALE · Fi._.e cemetery lots .
tmpress them, too .
Racine
Cemetery
Cal l
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) It . _:9..:.
9::_
2·.:.
S8b
= Sc..
. -----,-Gallipolis , Ohio 614 .446·2507 .'
you adhere to your automatic 1972 CHEVROLET BelAir . SIOOO.
FIREWOOD FOR sole ,. Green or
responseS you 're capable of
q92 7308.
. ~eos o ne d . Phone 9BS·3567 or
surpr ising acco mplishments
949·2358 .
today . Too much so ul-sea rch· 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA . Good
cond ition . Good work cor.
ing evokes a nega tive altitude .
FI VE PIECE dinette set Very good
99T397b .
PISCES (Feb. 2D-March 20)
condition 199 Mu lberry Ave.
Friends appreciate you for 1975 CHE VROlET CAMARO .
992.3530.
what you are, but you may have
qe5-3S6.f .
difficulty in be lievtn g th is today -1-97-'6"-P"'o--N"T-IA-C
::A"sT:::Rc:E-. :G:ood tires . 1972 FORD PICKUP ' • tqn, std
shi ft with camper , sleeps 2,
and try to buy thei r good
graces with ma terial favors .
Exl:ellent condilion. $2300 .
srove , sink , refrigerator . inter·
NEW LISTING - Duplex
992·7033 or 992·5098 .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 For
_
co_~.':"o t~r_!_o_
n k_. ~'2 · 5-:50
.:.:.:
1 · __
in Pom er oy . Could have 2
bes l result s financially and
apts .. total of 5 bedrooms, 2
RIDING LAWN mower , 8 h.p ., Spr ·
careerwi se today , keep noinglie ld 36" cut , el ec tric start .
k itchens. 2 baths, in good
nc-llgn,ed parties out of the act.
S250 . John Krowsczyn . 300
condit io n
Close
f or
Kibbitzers could muddy the
Broadway. Middleport . Phone
1974 GALA XIE SWINGER Starera ft
shopping
,
extra
lot
,
live
in
water.
992-2717 .
camper . Sleeps 7. S20:l0 . Inone , re nt the other . AL
TAURUS (April 20-May 211) In
dudes owning . port -o·pot . LP 197 4 ONE TON Ford V-8 long
FOR ONLY $15 ,000 .00.
sotlal situalions today make
gas tonk . spare tire. one e~e ·
NEW LISTING - So
sure you r conversation is ligt11
wheel base 1973 ' • ton Ford
tmguisher . swing out stove and
wan t a trailer! Thi s
and breezy . Serious subjec ts
pic kup. b cyl. 4-speed .• 1q75
table . Very good Condition. Con
Bdr ms .,
12x60,
important to you may only bore
Jeep Cherokee . Harold Brewer ,
be
seen ot 305 Wri ght St . or Call
l ong BoHom , Ohio. Phone
others.
equipped kitchen. a ni
992·3255 or 992·39b4 .
'
GEMINI (May 21-June 201 Con98S·3554.
in Middl epor t . In g
ditions appear pro fitable loday .
cond
ition. Pr iced a t FA I
SOLID WALNU T ant ique gate leg
provided you don 't d ivide your
MARKET
V ALU E
drop
leaf
k1tchen
table
,
choirs
,
efforts between work and play .
$8,500.00.
..)
Hoover
po
r
table
washer
.
Concentra te on th e former .
LARGE NEWEN HOME Whirlpool dryer , dishes and
COUNTRY ' MOBILE Home Park .
Eliminate the latter .
In the cou ntr y , 4 bdr ms ..
Reule 33 . north of Pomeroy . -~-~~r~. 992 · 7 660·~·-din ing room , beauti f
~o rg~l~-'_:.: ~~I I 992-7.&amp;79 .
SAlE 20' off men·s. western
kitchen wi th ha ndmade
boots , work boots, work shoes
SE NIOR CITIZENS
Our new
ca binets, · 2_car garage, 1
July
17·2q
.
Bailey's,
Mid·
rente rs ois istonce. you moy be
ac r e. 536 , 100.00.
able to li\le in ou r apartment _! leport , Ohio .
NICE TWO STORY - In
for le s ~ than $50 o month . For ADMIRAL AVACADO electr 1c
Midd
le port on a' corner l ot,
more mform ot ion , con tact
s t o~o~e and refrigera tor . $325 fo r
Attendance at t he Sunday
in good condition . Cc;&gt;uld
Village Manor Apartments .
bo th . 992 ·6192 ,
have apl. up . ONLY
morning ser vices at the Free
992-7787 .
DRESSING
TABLE . refr igerator
S29.000 .00.
.
Methodist Church was 79. 10", ACRES. 7 room home . newly
$25 ,
motor cycle
raci ng
CLOSE TO POMEROY Choir members present were
remodeled . Mulberry HtL
leathers . 9~ q · 2286 .
Good condit ion, 2 stor y ,
Pomeroy A ll ci t)' util ities . S100
nine . Mr . Bob Barton
many
new features, l evel
~OLI
O
OAK
hexagon
cattee
table
.
month plus util itier. . 992.5q70 or
preached in t he abse'ltce of
lol . shou ld V.A. or F .H.A.
Slid 1ng
door
both
tub
1·4.U ·8b01.
Price adjusted for quick
Rev . Shook, who is attending
enclosure . TV stand. 992-3079.
FURNISHED THREE roo·ms and
sale . Sl 6,500.00
conference in Mansfield.
1971 HONDA CB 500. 4 cyl , Ex both . 992-2598 .
RANCH - 31;, years old . 3
Mi ss
Pearl
Scha ver,
cellent condi tion. $700. hrm .
bdrms .. equipped kilchen,
Coli
aft
er
5.
992.7967
.
Clarence
Athens, visited relatives here
level lot all in excellent
Hill.
this past week .
condit ion . $27,700.00. ·
lONE STAR boot with til t troller .
Mrs. Patricia Hysell is a
ABOUT 2 ACRES - 4·5
HOOF HOLlOW Horses . Buy , sell
50· h.p. Mercury oy tboard
patient in Holzer Hospital.
bd rms .. storage bldg s .•
trade or train . Ne'W ond used
Ca::I~I9:;4~Q;;·2~2:-'
77-='~~ ~ garden , in good cond i tion
Mrs . Esta Wise, Columbus,
saddles . Ruth Reeves. Albany. ::::m~o::;lo0::'7,'O:
REALISTIC SlEREO speakers :
and
seclu d ed .
CALL
(61&lt; ) 698·32'10.
is visiting with Mr . and Mrs.
Nova 8$ 160 pa ir , list pr ice S180
TODAY , $25,000.00 .
Otto l&lt;lhn and other friends . RI SING STAR Kennel , Boarding.
pair . No~o~o 78 $130 pa ir , list
HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL
Indoor and outdoor run s.
The graveside services
pme $2.. 0 pair. less than o
- In Pomeroy , 3 Bdrms,
all
breeds
.
Clean
Grooming
which were held for Mr.
year old. Col! b 1.. -378·6283._ ~
bath ,
gara ge ,
part
soniiory tocil ities . Chesh1re .
Jimmy Lewis at the Rock
basement.
Only
55,900.00.
ASTRO
-BEAM
3
element
CB
Phone ~b14 )_367 · 0292_:_ _
antenna , $45 . 9.. 9.2322. .
OVER
40
~ OTHER
Sprin gs Cemeter y. was well
PAOPERTI ~S
TO
attended with Rev . Floyd
1
CHOOSE
FROM .
Shook officia ting. Those from
BUSINESSES,
HOMES,
a distance were his mother, 10 • 50 TWO bedroom mobile
FARMS.
RENTAL
CARRIERS
NEEDED
for
the
Doily
home $1800. 992-5858.
Mrs. Shirley FraSier ; his
PROPERTIES . CALL
Sentinel. Pomeroy . Middleport
stepfath er, Mr . Frasier , 19b6 HOUSE TRAILER . 8x35: one
TODAY .
and Syracuse area . Please
bedroom . Col17-i2·1001 .
HENRY E . CLELAND
phone 992·2156 between 8:30
Columbus; Mr. and M rs.
REALTOR
- d""ro
_o_m
- . -~~~00 pm·'-'·.,-:--....,-William Jacobs, Columbus ; 1971 TRAILER JWOb,-e
HANK,
KATHY &amp; LEONA
Co mpletely
tu rn1shed . 3 liFEGUA.RO AT Hic kory lakes
Mr. Paul Jacobs and Tornn1y
bvild
1
ngs
.
Wa
ter
softe
ner.
Campground
.
614-667
·3349.
Lewis,
Kentucky ;
Mrs.
Deep l reele . Reasonable
OtEsfiMfcHANIC for Coterpiller
ASSOCIATES
Barbara Lane , Columbus,
992·201l4 .
Hl-2259 - H2-6 19 I
and Tere x equip'menl. 742·2806
and Mr . and Mrs. Phill Wise ,
_ _3 ffer_
b: 3~ _P_~ ~·_ _ __
Belpre.
IIH.Il ll
NEW MACK TRUCK FACiliTY . L - - - - - -. '
Gro und for opportunities. E• ·
perie nce d second general LOT AND nic§;3 bedroom house..,
drilled well or ci t)' water . oi l
mechan ic§ Mechanics helper .
The ~uarantee soy" t he
furnace . Sacrifi ce at S7000 . See
P a~ls manager . Ports cour1 ter
mower will star!; it's due"' 'I
l uther Bartee at Long Bottom,
helper, Ports deli vvry truck
OH
say anything r """ uring
Pul first things first """
drivers . Secretory . G:enerol ofabout whether the stllrter is
hce work . Send resume to· niHH BED ROOM hou;;, b~i~ ''' ,
you 'll l1ave not hing to do
Galli c Mock , PO 8o111 -i91 ,
goroge. ufihty room . 1 acre .
tomorrow. aCllOrdmg tu the guaranteed to do 'anything
Gollipol1s 45031 .
Ou t of town . 741-21b2.
.
way t he boss !isls priorities.
bul fly off the ha ndle .

'219.95

Pomeroy Landmark ·

9 ...

!\li!..

Laurel Oiff

News Notes

w;

•

7-'111e o.llySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Moiiday, July 17,1978
DICKTRAt:V

,1!~,~~
ffl -332S
•' .
l lt E. S.cond 5trMI

.

Pomtro, , Ohio

MIDDLEPORT - 4
bedroom briCk, 11/2
baths, . large eal-in
k itchen, front porch ,
basement, double
garage with shop .
Level Jot near stores .
Now only $27,500.
RUTLAND - 3 or 4
bed room 9 room
home with 2 baths,
equipped kitchen ,
dining room, 2 car
garage and level lot .
$35,000.
10 ACRES - More or
less on Rl . 143. Water
and
electric
ava i lab le.
$10,000.
4 ACRES - More or

less on Rt. 681 near
Tuppers
Plains.
$5.500.
BUILDING LOT Near Middleport 6n
Rt . 7 business loop,
$6,000.
.
MIDDLEPORT - 1
room frame with
n ice
bath.
Has
natural gas forced
a ir
furnace ,
basement , 2 car
garage and 2lf2 level
lots . Near stores .
W i ll lake $15,000 lor a
qu ick sale .
75 ACRES - Abo\JI
40 tractor tlllable
balanCe nearly all
clean . Old 3 bedroom
house and several
outbuildings .
All
mine r alS: .
Only
$25,000.
4 FAMILY BRICK For the price at one.
Let the income pay
for it and yqu l ive
there free . Wan t only
$23.000 .
NICE OLD HOME Ha s 5 bedrooms,
good solid floors ,
carpeting ,
eat - in
kitchen.
d i n i ng,
basement.
natural
g~s forced air fur nace and two -thirds
of an acre . For sale
now fo r only $25.000 .
PICK YOUR IN ·
VESTMENT
TODAY, WE HAVE
A FEW FOR YOU
TO SEE.
G. Br·uce Tuford
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Associate

SEPTIC ·TANK
CLEANING
.

.

MASH BROtHERS
;

ALUM. &amp;

.Roll I d 1 n t I a I

• ·nd
:c ommercii I. Coli far
ntlmote, ~4 hour Mrvlco. ·
Anyday, anytime.
'
~hont 915-3106
Jack Ginter 915-3106
'

·~
.

Soffit, Raom Additions
&amp; A -From• Homn.
For Free Estlmatos
CALL
"l-6l2l or m-4011
·
6·19·1 mo. pd.

~l)k

Box :1'

I'II.HZ-2174

..nntor, Olllo
10,30-&lt;

Construction

ROGER HYSEll

See
Denver Kapple
At

"'• mile off Rt. 7 by-pass on
St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,

Ph. t92-2141

EXCAVATING . dozer , lood~r and
backhoe work : dump trucks
ond lo· boys for hire ; will haul
fill dirl , to soli , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fers . da y phone 992·7089, night
phone 992·3525 or 992· 5232 .
EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
ond ditcher. Charles R. Hotfield . Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland. Ohio . Phone 7-i2-2008.
WILL do roofing , construction ,
plumbing and hea li ng. No job
too l'lrge or too small . Phone
7•2 -23-18 .
HOWERY

AND

MARTIN • Ex -

cavating , septic systems ,
dozer , backhoe . dump" truck .
limestone , grovel . blacktop
paving , Rt. 143 . Phone 1 (61-i)
698· 7331.
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
Service . Phone qq2 ·2-i78:.
PUDDLE POOLS . All sizes and
-shapes. Swim pools , 2 years
experien ce, free estimates,
anything you
need for
unde rgrou nd swim pools. New
chemical and supply store .
Albany , Ohio . Phone
bl4·t»'1 B-655S. ( After b pm ,
61-i-689-5251 John Jeffers or
b89·52b5 Bill Gilleffe . ) We ore
NOT all wet on PRICES .
NEIGLER BUILDING Supply tor
building houses , repair wo~k
and cabinets . Call Guy H
NeiQier . 9-i9·2508 after Spm.
REEVES TRADING Post , Poge~o~ille .
Grocer ies , dry goods, hard·
wore , feed , tack shop. Special
251 b . ol dog food . $3 . 8~ .

m

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST

IlEA! TO~

REAL ESTATE AGENCY
CAU 446 3643

.... .

I'ICJCaO U' K. FOU I&gt;ARI&amp;J

I

I

-..

.

·IBALEEEj
.I I

HOME MAINTENANCE

Storm Windows
Call Professiona I
Builders

' •

'

WANTED TO buy : Pol ice scanner.
9•9·2065 .
WANTED TO buy : Eight fa eleven
H.P. Briggs and Strofton motor
wi th electr ic starter, werti col
cra nks haft. Wr ite price and
location to Ellsworth Cri!ipin ,
PO Box IS, Long Bot tom .. Ohio
45743 .

ACROSS

I Transparent
mineral

AUEYOOP

T48 ACRE FARM - UNUSUALLY GOOD BUY - The
owner 's aoe prevents her from continuin~ to operate
the I arm and she desires an Immediate sale. SO to 60
acres tillable with some very OOOd creek bOttom and
hiil lop land . The balance In pasture &amp; woods. Tho SIX
room home i s gOQd (does need. ~ome modernization),
larg e all- purpose b.!J rn and several good outbuildings .
Minerals go with it and it 's located In an area where
gas. oil &amp; coal have been found to bt plentlft" a.tear
Ru tland . \60's.
.
E.

M.

Wiseman, Broker446- 3796 Eve .
Jim Cochran, Assoc. 446-7N1
Nancy Smith, Assoc. 446-4910

1% Manifest

1500N'

13 Emotional
li Mournful

II Salvador or
Sebutian
17 Pipe elbow

.18 Cullllrtson

!8 Ablaze
ZO Never: Ger:

u Fleming
1- 17

Ga .. - . . _
, -17

lose L;ar
fool head if it
WU1.n't
tied t'
4E!rfool
tonque

I'se los' th'
ke4 riqht
enouqh!

Alt carpal lnstallad wlffl l
padding ol .no chorgo
Expe'rt installation.

Z3 Enchant,

ze Ftnds out
He~h

up
an' fetch
th' sledqe! '-~"'

purcbase
t GllliWlkel

gr and 12r Vinyl

employees !5 Short
14 Muallm's

~tic

siing

faith

n Fury

Z8 Beauty
In Muslim

zz Poet's
"over"

peradlae

n Rmllln

·\

33 PIIWpplne
laland
II BW
st Clumsy

Moaday, July 17

BRIDGE

boat

Qswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ztGreek

Learn when not to finesse
NORTif

-~ !"'-~

Y A 97 2

•AQ
WF3T

·e I

llutland

enclave

WC~D

Of'

ADVI~&amp;

IISOUT
fttiS Pl.Ac.E •••
DON''P I!II'P
ftNY'PHIN6 You
c.oUN,..
r...,...,.~

!IF YOU NEED
A -S OFA THAT

I\ORKEDANO

yOU'RE A FREE
MAN AGAIN.

IM NaT KIDDiN~~~~~~~v;
THERE'S A GUY OUT
fJAYS HI:: CAN SHOW
HOW 10MAKE

MILLION.S !!I

MAKES A
lED' feR

YOU

. tO Require

n Standal'd .

~+-+-+-t-t­

qum~ty

42 U.S. Navy
"hardhat"

I

I

l
J

NOT TO VISIT, TO STAY~ ALTHOUGH, HE I-IASN'T I KNOW THAT FE.fLING ...
HIE CotOTE5 KICKED FELT WELL LATELI(... HE'S I'M ALWAYS AFRAID
HIM OUT... l-IE HATE ~
LOST WEIGHT A6AIN,ANO
I'M GOINGTO
TO LEAVE NEEDLES...
HE'S BEEN DEPRESSW... OUTLIVE Mt{ TEt;TH!

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : South

................._

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how to work

lt:

A X .Y D L BAA X I
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this eample A Is
u sed lor the three L's X for the two O's, el&lt;. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the ' words art all
hintJ. Ea&lt;h day the code letters are different.

Well

North Eaol

Soulb

Pass

3•
Pass

4e

Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead :

••

tract. West opens a diamond. If · South takes the
diamond finesse and it
works, he will maite five or
maybe even six spades. It
doesn't work . East takes hla
king and Jeada back the
queen of clubs. Event~~&amp;Uy 1
South loses four tricks ana
complains about two
finesses out of two being

wrong .''

Oswald : " The man who's
worth his while at the bridle
table coWtts hla wlMen and
loaers and seu that he
doem't need lillY succeuful
finesse to make hll contract.
Then he playa dwnmy'a ace
of dlamonda, drawa trumps,
loses the heart
bill
will be able to get rid OJ any
potential loslna club on the
ace of hearts fn the cool of

tin__

the evening ,...

es

A New York I'Nder wants
to
know when New York's
By Oawald Jacoby
CRYPTOQUOTES
Cavendish
and Resency
aad A'-'t Sontag
Clubs were founded.
Alan : "Are you the author
The Cavendi.lb Club WM
SYDKO
UK
XN
UKDDKL
XD
of the lines 'The man who's founded In 192&amp;, ~ Reworthy is the man who can gency ClUb ln liM, but In
D S Y H smile
YLK
ASYD
MJZ
QJL
when all his finesses 1964 lt merged with the
go wrong'!"
Whist Club founded ln 18113
ASYD
MJZ
QJL
OJ
UK
E J I KO
O.wald : "No, I'm not. But and became the Recency
.
.
the man who knows when Whist Club.
TXOK not to finesse can wind up [NEWSPAPER ENTERPIUIE ADN.)
YLK
HJD.
YHOLK
.millng whether the finesses
(For a copy of JIICOBY MODYNt diJ'I Ct)) II!*~ WE FORGI!;'t' l11A'l' 'l'HE MOST are l'lght or wrong. "
ERN, send I! to: "Win at
SU(Jt"!*" ULSTA'I'ISMEN HAVE BEEN Pil0li'E88IONA18.
Alan : "Here's a good Bridge , " care of thla ,.w~
LIN(X)LN WAS A PROFESSIONAL POIJTICIAN.-FELIX example . South is in a nice, per, P.0 . Box 48i, Radio City
comfortable lour,.pade con- Station, New York, N.Y. !11019.)
F'R ANICFURTER

D..J

SAKES ALIVE !!
~

• 72
Y . K 86
• K 1082
• Q J 10 5
SOUTH
• AQJ 1086
" QJ
• 64
· -A 8 7

~....._....._

BARNEY

,,

• 643
EAST

91054 3
•J9753
+K 92

ellllic

A

7·17·A

• K 9 53

drama
37 N.Y.C.

: ~~ ,;. ~'7\.f'NZJ'i'.)
1..!:.----=---' ' . · g;;;~~·'G

..

Movie Channel 4 5 II. 9 ·P .M . - Airport '77 ( PGI
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Bridge Too Far (PGI

goddeu

zz Fatigued

river
34 Flab egga
35 Poet's
''ever"
IIIIO'NeW

FRANK &amp; ERNIF.

Boy wMre ~au c1n com~ 1n

Largut Select._ In T1lt Vllley

Cornmager

1111 Mlsrepraent

tenn:

--··

Floor Cow!ring In Stocki

15 IN..iTOCk

Z8 Henry -

symbol
in Boston
I TV adjWict U FeminiBt
t Flakier
ro1e
11 Banlt
model

30 Heating

'4.11 .:.\;d.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Z3 River

.bnrer

name

As Low As

GARAGE SALE. Tuesday thro1.1 gh
Saturday til dark . Gordon
Caldwell , Tuppers Plains . Nice
item!i , lot5 new .

%1 In our
midst
· Z8 Spaniah
C01111J08er

Y~nlay's

nidi-

Rubber Back Callllt

TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grote
or Gene Smith

7:31&gt;--Hoilywood Squares 3,4; Let's Go To The Racis 8;
Candid Camera 6; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
That' s Hollywood 13; Cliffwood Ave. Kids 15.
8:0G-Mon From Atlantis 3,4,15; Happy Oaya 6,13;
Movie " Tom Sawyer·Part I · 8~ 10; Evening of
French Television 20; Movie "The Iron Horse" 33.
8:31&gt;--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.13; 9 :0G-Seventh Ave.
3,4,15 : Three's Cqrnpany 6, T3; Movie "The
Magnificent Seven Ride! " 8,10.
9:31&gt;--Carter Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13; 10 :0G20·20 6,13.
10 :3o--Volces of Freedom 33;
11 : 0G-News
3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Over Easy 33.
11 :3o--Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Soap 6,t3; McMillan &amp;
Wile 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie "The World of Suzie
Wong" 10; 12 :0G-Janakl 33.
12 :05--Movle "Most Wanted" 6, 13; I :DO- Tomorrow
3,A: 1: 15--l&lt;ojak 8.
1:45--News 13.

C3 Curse
DOWN
I Bllllard
shot
! P~rfect
s Cinema

5 Ta.,.Y
I Blessed 7 Fraternity

4:0G-Mister Cartoon 3: Superman • ; For Richer, For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family I;
Sesame St . 20,33; Match Game TO; Dinah 13.
·
4:30--My Three Sons 3; Gilligan's Is. ~.8; Batmon 10;
Lillie Rascals 15.
5:DO-Monroes 3; My ThrH Sons ~~ Gunsmaka I;
Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33; Voyage lo lite
Bolfom of lhe Sea 10; Emergency Onel3; Pottlc:aat
JunciiOfl 15.
5: 30--&lt;)dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogon''
Heroes 15.
6:0G-News 3.~.8.10,13,15; ABCNews 6; Zoom 20;
Making hings Grow 33,
6:30--NBC News 3.~.15&gt;'A BC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, TO; Over Easy. 20; Antiques 33.
7:1l0-Cross-Wits J,A ; Newlywed Game 6,13; Pqp Goes
The Country 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Is. 15; French
Chef 20
'

abbr.
Sl Swedish

iM GLAD OJ
· - R~PlA~N"""'

OWNER DESiRES IMMEDIATE SALE - The owner
of this home in Pomeroy is leaving the area and needs
to sell now. A 1'/&gt; story ho]Tle w ith 4 bedrooms including
a spacious master bedroom , tovely kitchen with all the
appliances, Iaroe living room , washer &amp; dryer plus
patio &amp; 6 acres of laf'ld and It's onlvh 1 mile from
downtown . 527 ,500,

5Meal
11 Jewiah month

~,AU.r-f!
rr'll • 'J:IIIRI(

SAVE ON
C#;ll niNG
DRIVE A Lim£
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

8 FA.MIL '( GARAGE Sqle . H.A. 1
Cole residence, Tuppers Plains,
Ohio. 9.9 doily . Junk to anti· ·
ques.

I I I I I )"

..

zz Individual

IF VOU ho~o~e a service to offer ,
wont to buy or se ll someth ing , ond ... whot you're gloltlno
oe looking for work . . . or - Good Mloctlone - Full•
stocked;
.. '
whatever ... you "llget results
fester with a Sftntlnel Wont Ad. '
Caii992 ·21S6 .
· ,
Calt 742-2211

Now ,..ange lho drded letters to
fonn the surprise ansWer, !18 aug·
geated by lhe llbovO cartoon.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

-=="---------

WOULD like to tok e over
payments on o mobile home .
304-773·56 15.

EXPE~iENCE.

&gt; ~ ~-

BRADFORD , Auction•er , Complete Service . Phone 9_.9.2-i87
or 9.C9-2000. Roclne, Ohio , Critt
CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x .
Bradfor.d.
Elc'W
:':00
:::0:0
diameter 10" on largest end . SB =
0~8;::0c:W::E;;R;::S-;R;;E=PA-;I;R::--­
per ton . Bu ndled slob_, $6 per
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pollet
Sweepers , toasters , irons, all
small appliances
,
Co., Rt . '~ . p qmeroy . ~2
..,.., · 2b8n.., _
,, . hLawn mower
Go
ne•t "to State n lg way
roge
TIMBER . POMEROY Fore5t Pro·
on Route 7. P.hone (61") 985·
duct5 . Top price tor standing
J82S .
~ ow timber . Cal l 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby. 1·4-i6·8570.

OlD COINS, pocket watches .
doss rings , wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or si lve r. Call
Rog er Wamsley. 742·2331 .

.... . 20 ; ,33.

Tilt IIIHI JUMBLES orw here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 Wid JUMBLE
BOOK. 111 . Avlllllbl• for' $1.35 EACH, po1tpaid from Jum~e . cJo tl'lla
newtpapef, P.O. SOIC 34, Norwooc:J , N.J. 07648. Make C~kl peyllbll to
NtwiPIQtrbaokl.

Generol Contraelon
Phone 949·21101
or949-2NO
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sundoy tails PIHH
].9. t mo.

OLD FURNITURE . ice bo.es. bran
beds . iron beds . desks , etc .,
complete households . Write
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
co ii9Q2 .7Jb() ,

Ill

MAGIC.
CARPET Mlt&amp;Hi I!IE
THIS KIND OF

··.

Bissell Siding Co.

All types of roofing, gulfers
&amp; downspouts . 20 yean
experience .
All
work
tuar•ntaed . Call Tom
oskins, 949 ·2160. Free
Estimates.
7- 16-1 mo.

&amp;Y

(Answers loiiiOITOW)
SaMoa 'sl Jumbles: CHASM BURLY HUNGRY ABOUND
y
Answer: The argumentMive beltpllyer't fiVOrite
pie-RHUBARB

11 ·9-lfc ·

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

FL.'iiN~

Print answer here: " (

UTI'lE ORPHAN ANNIE

SALES AND SERVICE

742·2211

QUICK SALE N
D - 68 acres of. good botlom .
pasture &amp; wOOds on Van zandt Road . The. owner Is no
longer able to take care ot this lovely pi.!Jce so they
must sell now , Attractive remodeled 1q roor'n farm
home with liice siZed roorns, l l/2 baths, _.bedrooms &amp;
carpel throughout . Rural &amp; well water pius several old
outbuildings. Pr.i ced to sell at $46,900.

7·'7

()

300Moln St.
!'omoray, Ohio
POmeroy !'92-4212
or'!'9242'l
I A.M. to4 :30 P,M .

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
SERVICE

FELLA ...

PLUMBING &amp;
I . HEATING INC.

4-»-lfc

t)

I COFE'B
0
I I

H~,

mo.

i

ShoW

ll•tn .. n..c:o-1- - - - -

CARTER

.

'

I

w. Main St.
-~- 1

- - - - --

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE A

w•

Nt~

POmeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164

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

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-tfc

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser ·
vice, all moke!i , 992-228-i . The
Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy .
Authorized SJnger Soles and
Ser'o'i ce . We sharpen Scissors.

399

GARAGE

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
ln!~bllation Service

HAP Of'

Small onglnt &amp; moww
servlc:o, MISMY Forou&amp; Gilton Tillers, LAwn loy
Mower S.los &amp; Strvlct.

For The Best
Price In Town

0.

. TI4U8 eon
IHY CHANce

MODERN SUPPLY

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
7-7-1 mo.

742-2328
Free Estimates
Work Guaronleecl
7- 10-1 mo.

MOORE'S

'

New or Repair
Gutters· and
Downspouts

AI Tromm

CAPTAI~EASY •

''
'

J

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

Roofing, Si~ing,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

'

VINYL SIDING

IT'S FIXIN' TO POUR.
DOWN CATS AN' DOGS- '
I BETTER GIT MV
WASH IN'
!NTH'
HOUSE

�•
S-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 17, 1978

?::::::::::;::::::·::;:;:::::;:;::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :-::::::::.;:?·::;:;::;:;.;:;:.:::·:::·:·:·:;::::::::::::;:·::;.;:;.;:;.·:::::;:;:;:;:;.;-;: .:-:: ::::::;.: :-:::::::::·:·::;:;::·:::::;::·:·:::::::::::_:;

35,000 attend 'Jamoor.ee in the Hills'·--..

HOSPITAL NEWS
Velerans M~morlal Hospital
Admissions Saturday Charles Beaver, Morgantown, W. Va .; Carl Findling,
Reedsville ; Avril li a
Donahu e, Pomeroy ; Yvonne
Edwards, Pomeroy ; Bertha
Reibel, Pomeroy ; and Tern
Roush , Pomeroy .
Dtscha rges Saturday Telltha Casto, Larry Smith,
Jeanette Christtan, Edward
Rtffel, Beba Fisher, Mary
Nichols, Angela Hubba rd ,
Sheila Bing, Larry Bissel,
and Glena Milhoan.
Admissions Sunday Steven Dunfee. Middleport ;,
Terry Wolfe. Racine ; Larry
Pickens , Pomeroy ; Grace
Price, Long Bottom, and
Linda Martin, Middleport.
Dtscharges Sunday
St even Dunfee, Charles
Beaver, Lowell Collm s, and
Lona Cozart.
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges July 141
Victor Bahr, Stanley Busy,
Roberta Ca me ron. Judy
Canter ,. Conme Chamberlin,
• , Belinda Clark, Phyllis
Dr ehe l, Synthia Gilmore,
Elatne Grogan, Dulcte
Horton, Th oma s How ell ,
Connte Johnson, Steven
Johnson, Lmda Kova lchtk,
Jant ce Lee. E hzabeth
Lowery, Vivtan McConntck,
Denver McF a nn , Tr avts·

McFarland , J ames Middleton, Kathleen Moody, Mrs.
Edward Pott and daughter,
Norman Rayburn, Cynthia
Redmon. Edith Rupert ,
Mable Shirley, Leona r d
Smith, Verlie Smtth, Lucille
Watson, Sandra Woods.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Conrad, a son, Jackson . Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Murphy , a
son, Minersvtlle.
(Discharges, July 15)
Oscar Dawson, Lt lhan
Deal. · Roscoe
Fowler,
Gregory Gooderham, Scott ·

Mike Swiger
992 -7153
t49 &gt;. 1 hlrd Sf

Middleport, 0 .

"See me for car, bojM,
life, health aod busiaess
·iosuruce!'
Srtt,

f.,,. ...._,

Cuo•-~n

"omto Clll •tfl ........... ' " ' -

Thefts probed
(Continued from page 1)
vehicles were forced open
and CB radios were stolen.
The vehtcles were parked at
Old Town Creek across from.
the Kaiser Plant ,
- Robert K. Sayre, Rt 2,
Racine, reports that hts 15

(Continued !rom page I )
motorcycle and was takmg
the curve on the inside and
hts cycle collided wtth an
eastbound auto dnven by
Larry Patterson, 38, Rt 2.
Racine, Oh10.
Patterson's a uto was
datllPged on the nght front
fender and the windshield
was bro ken apparently by the
handl ebars of th e cycle .
Sellers was transported, to
Veterans Memortal Hospttal
by private auto where he was
treat ed
lor
numerous
abraswns.

NOW YOU KNOW
A za rf is a holder for a
coffee cup wtthout a handle.

•........
, ................•.
••

lAs
••
••
•• the
•

••
••
••
••
••
•

(

•

•••

••
••
••
•e

•••
•

••
•

••
•

e

•
•
•
•

•

worm •••
·••
turns ... -•••

••

••
I

-

•

Your Interest multiplies
as fast as earthworms
when you open a savings
account with us. We bave
a number of high interest
plans you can choose
from , depending on the
amount of deposit and
the length of t_ime you
plan to- keep your account.

••
•••
••
••

A Gallipolis man is 10 the Point Pleasant Rescue
stable conditwn this morning Squad after being transferred
in the intensive care unit at to the emergency vehicle
Pleasant Valley Hospital from a private vehicle.
James Curtis Bump, 31,
following a stabbing incident
which too k place at a Letart Route 2 (Flatrock ),
Flatrock residence Sunday was arrested at his restdence
by Mason County Shenff's
mght.
Admttted to the hospttal at Deputy Sgt. Detner Roush II
10 :48 p.m. was Fred V. and State Pollee Trooper
Holley , 29, 845 Second St, M.S. Smtth on a charge of
Galhpolt s. Holley wa s mahcious wounding in
transported to the hospttal by connection with the stabbing
.. :.::_:. ;....;•· ...···.·..··:.:::::;·.· ::;.·::: whtch allegedly took place at
Bump's home.
Bump wa s arratgned
EXTENDED FORECAST
befo
re MagiStrate John
Wednesday through
"Andy
" Wilson this rnornmg
Friday, chance of af·
who
set
bond at $10,000. Bump
teroooo and
evening
entered
a request lor a courtshowers
and
thunappointed
attorney and is
dershowers each day .
bemg
held m the
currently
Highs will be io the I!Os with
Mason
County
jail
in lieu ol
a low lo the mid or upper
posting bond.
60s.
Assisting m the in·..
. ·.·.
vestigation are Mason County
deputies E.F. Crump and
LADIES DAY
G .S. Rodger• and State
Ladtes Day will be ol&gt;- Police Trooper C.W. Kimball.
served at the Pomeroy Golf
Course Tuesday at 9 a.m.
Spectal welcome is offered to
all st ud ents who are LEGIONNAIRES
CLEVELAND ( UP! )
presently takmg lessons.
1be American Legion of Ohio
'
voted at its 60th annual
LIONS CU B
convention in Cleveland thiS
TO MEET
weekend to send the leg ton 's
The Pomeroy - Middleport .national convention a
Lions Club will meet at noon resolution opposing reWednesday, July 19 at the election of any senatoc who
Metgs Inn:
voted foc ratiftcation of the
All Lions are urged to at- Panama Canal treaties .
tend this spectal meetmg.

..

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Marriage licenses were
iss ued to Wilbur S. Smith, 59,
Rt I, Langsville, and Mary
Frances McC allister, 55,
Middl eport ; Burlin Ol iver
Mullins, 40 , Rt. l , Dexter, and
Debra Lynn Quivey. 20, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy .
'"

POTLUCK DINNER
The women of the Chester
United Methodist Church will
hold a potluck dinner at the
church Thursday, July 20 at 6
p.m. in honor ol Pauline Rice .
All lrtends and family are
welcome. Persons are to
bring a covered dish and
table service.

••
•••
••
••
•

:
:
:
•
••
•

•
••

TUIIO.WII.ITUICI*LI
--

•

= 'L

M'¥111 FIll

e
8

•

.

~

'

~

POMEROY , OljiO
Member F'DIC

1503 E~slernAve .• CO.Uipolis, Ohto
Jackson Ave. &amp; 24th St ., P.!i"Pieasant. W.Va.
_

698

'

. '

'I

tal'l WHDI YOU'LLPIIIDTMI PUNt

•

HERMAN F. CHEVALIER
Herman F . Chevalier, ·79,
Rt. I Reedsville, died early
this morning at his home
following a brief illness.
Mr. Chevalter was born in
Meigs County, the son of the
late Charles and Minnie
Smith Chevalier. He was also
preceded m death by three
brothers and one Sister. He
was a farmer and a resident
of Meigs County the greater
part of his life.
He is survived by his wife,
Dorothy Griffin Chevalier,
three brothers, Charles
Chevalier, New Lexington,
and Ivan and Roy Chevalier,
both of Reedsville, one sister,
Mrs. Naomi Snooks, Lancaster.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
the White Funeral Home in
Coolville with Elden Blake
officiating. Burial will be in
Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 1 p m . on

Tuesday .
CHARLES E. SINDEL
Charles Emerson Sindel,
56, Springfield, died Sunday
at Humanity Hospital in
Springfield. Born August 25,
1922 he was preceded in
death by his parents, Charles
. and Maude May ley Sindel.
Mr . Sindel served in the
United States Army during
World War II and retired two
years ago from International
Harvester where he was
employed for 30 years. He
was a member of Faith
Tabernacle Church in Springfield.
He is survived by hts wife,
Eima Lawhorn Sindel, a son,
Charles B., Sprmgfield ; two
step-daughters, Mrs. William
(Lorena) Ault , Middleport,
and Mrs . Gene (Agnes)

.

Fish Fry at
Wilksville to
be July 29

West Mlln 1., Pomeroy. Ohio

'Jf'Jf'Jt''Jf'Jf'Jf'Jt'Jt
I

SQUAD CALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad went to 477
Sycamore Street, Middleport,
at 4:13 p.m . Saturday for
Jenny Hensher who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis.
PICNIC SET
The Magnolia Club will
'hold its annual picnic Thursday , July 20, at t.he Racine
i "cks and Dam on the West
Virginia side. All members
are to meet at the home of
Erna J esse, West Main
Street, Pomeroy, at 6 p.m.
and are tu bring their own
table service.

!
I

Dodson , Middleport ; two
step-sons, Thurman and Roy
C. Lawhorn; two brothers,
Pete, of Columbus and
Elwood, of Springfield; two
sisters, Helen, ol Kentucky,
and Jeanette, of Springfield;
five grandchildren, 18 stepgrandchildren, 12 step •
great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wiU be
held Wednesday at the
Jackson - Lythe - Coffman
Funeral Home in Springfield.
Burial will follow in the
Rosehill Cemetery, Spring·
field .
·
HOWARD D. NOBLE '
· Howard D. Noble, 80, died
Sunday evening at the home
of his daughter, Mrs. Maxine
Grinstead, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Mr. Noble was born July $,
1698, in West Virginia the son
of the late Eli and Diamia
Rogers Noble. He was also
preceded in death by his wife,
Josephi!le in 19$3, also
preceded ..bY · one !tep-o&lt;&gt;n,
Charles Hysell, one granddaughter, two sisters and one
brother.
Mr. Noble was a retired
coal miner.
He is survived by the
following children, Mrs.
Grinstead, Mrs. Raymond
(Ruth Ann) Priddy, Rt.· I,
Middleport ; Mrs. James
(Joann ) Furguson, Pomeroy;
step-daughter, Mrs. William
Cassie Hall, Rutland, stepson, Raymond . Hysell ,
Columbus; one brother, Gora
Noble, Mason; 2~ grand·
children and eight greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral
Home with the Rev . Uoyd
Grimm officiating . Burial
will be in Middleport Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call
at ~~~e funeral home Tuesday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 and
Wednesday until time of
serv1ces.

The Wilkesville Volunteer
Fire Department is gearing
up lor their armual Fish Fry
which will be held Saturday,
July 29.
Plans are being made for
the afternoon activities which
will mclude children's
games, softball, and a
ftreman 's water battle. 1bose
fire departments wishing to
participate are to contact a
member of the Wilkesville
Volunteer Fire Department
for more details.
Plans are also being
completed for the street
dance which will take place
from 9 p.m.-12 midnight.
· The firemen would like the
public to come and enjoy
themselves. Three prizes will ·
be raffled off durmg the
evening.
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-·H--·f
:• Fs Farmers :• ** Oi f. -IWT"".._ 0**
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.•: =zww.ut Bank .•: ***
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Area Deaths

•

BY GREG BAILEY
Powerful &lt;ltUlicoUte pitching beld Ute Meigl American
Legion to just two """" aa the hollll swept a twlnbW from
visiting Meigs, &amp;-1 and 12,-1, Sunday.
But Meigs, hurting still from 1IOIIle nagging injuries, gave
a good account of themselves as they didn't give the hoell any
big inning uniU the laBt frame of the second game. ChUIIeothe
is now~ and often runa away with their ball games, but they
couldn't yesterday.
In that first contest, the hOlts picked up a nm in the first on
a single and double. 1bey added another in the second and two
in Ute third. Meanwhile, winning pitcher Brett Mavla wu
holding Meigs hitleu until they got a single in the fourth, one in
Ute fifth, and a triple in the sixth lhatacoced the only run.
Mavis and reliever B. 7Jcllafooae fanned seven IUld walked
only two. John Sayre got that Meig1 triple In the llixUt while
Kelly Winebrenner and Kermy Young had the two singles.
Art Fogelstrorn took the loss as Tom Owenl, Sayre and he
farmed three and gave up six free paSIIell. Chllllcothe got a total
of ten hits, one twiH'un horner ln the sixth by 7Jckafooae.
M
. 000 001 ~I 3 I
C
112 302 x-9 10 I
Fogelstrom (lp), OWens (4), Sayre (6) and D. Kermedy,
Becker (5) , Mavla (wp), Zlckafooae (4) and Ireton.
Meigs got ooly fotir hils in the second game, but they did lead
briefly as they got Uteir one run in the top of the first in lhall2'1
loss. In that inning, Winebrenner got a single, and on a hit.andrwt play, the speedster came aU the way home when Sayre
cracked a single up the middle and the centerflelder ,... slow
in getting the ball back in. But from Uten on, irinntnc pitcher
Jones and Glassio shut the crew of COach Charlie Hamilton
out.
Chillicothe knotted the score and went ahead in the bottom
of Ute first when they scoced two unearned runs on four walka
and a Meigs error. But then losing piteher Tim Ebenbach
settled down and gave up two runa in the fourth and lw~moce
in Ute fifth befoce being relieved by Sayre in the sixth. Eight
walks by Meigs pitching and four errors helped Chillicothe in
Utat second win.
Kelly Winebrenner led Meig!l in Ill!' second game with two
singles while .Sayre and Mike Wayland had a single each.
Jones and Glassio fanned eight Meigs batters while walldng
just ooe.
Meigs travels to Wellston Wednesday to round out ita regular
season before beginning tournament play next Saturday
M
100 000 G- I H

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIX NO. 65

: _,. _, ,. _,. _., ,. . . . .-.·. .-.,. . . -.-:-.-.- · n
To avoid a 10 percent
penalty on second half 1977
real estate taxes they must
be paid no later than 4 p.m.
on July 20, George M.
Collins, county treasurer,
announces today. Books
will be closed at that time
In order that the Auditor
can add a penalty lo unpaid
June taxes. Books will be
open alter Aug. I, for
payment of delinquent
taxes Collios stated.
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(Continued lrtm page I)
There were no injuries.
Both vehicles Incurred
moderate damage.
Foreman was cited for
failure to yield.
At 8:46a.m. , a deer ran Into
Ute paUl of an auto driven by
Robert RMd, 37, Reedn!Ue,
on SR 881, one and two-tenths
of a mlle east of SR 33, in
Meigs County.
The deer was killed. 1be
Reed vehicle incurred
moderate damage.
1be windshield of an auto
driven by Kermit Fisher, 51,
Gallipolis, was -shattered at I
p.m. on SR 211 , at the junelion ol CR I.
According to the patrol, a
stone was thrown from a
farm mower operated by Kim
Saunders, Eureka Star Rt .

YOUTH MISSIONARIES - Libby Barnette, left, and Sally Christie, n ght, pose in front
of the Hope Baptist Church on Grant 5Veet in Middleport where they are currently doing

missionary work

College students

Southern belles doing
missionary work here .
'

DOFATOMEET
Chester
Council
323
Daughters of America will
meet Tuesday at I p.m.
Quarterly birthdays wm be
observed. There will be
potluck refreshments. 1boae
who celebrated a birthday
during AprU, May and June
do not have to bring a covered
dish.

'

ELBERFELD$
I
.I

shorl sleeve knit shlrls .
E.cellent setec;tlon . all
sizes. Fsmous brands such

as Van Heusen . Campus •

Golden Vee . Wrangler ,

SALE

PRICES
I
I
I '2.95 SHIRTS .................. '2.06
I '3.95 SHIRTS .................. '2.76
I

I '4.95 SHIRTS .................. 3.46
II '5.95 SHIRTS ................... 4.16
1

19.95 SHIRTS •••.••••••• ~ •••••• '6.96
'10.95 SHIRTS. ................. 17.&amp;6.

1 16.95 SHIRTS .................. '4.86

'11.95 SHIRTS.~ ............... '1.36
'
'14.50 SHIRTS.................
'10.16
'14.95 SHIRTS ................. 110.46

1 7.95 SHIRTS ................ :. '5.56.

'16.95 SHIRTS .................'11.16

1

1

·

I '8.95 SHIRTS .................. '6.26

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• •

mer, have also served with and dt!ferent hie styles.
BY JUDY OWEN
" Moving around as we ' ve
For those wh o always the Faith Baptist Church in
thought missionaries were Well ston and the New been doin g all ; ununer ts
people wh o traveled to Philadelphia Baptist Chapel gtvmg us a different view of
remote foret gn countries or in New Philadelphia and all kinds of ltfe," Libby says,
serviced backwoods areas of were sponsored in Nelsonville "and I think the Lord is
the United States, two by the First B•ptist ChufCh of givtn g us a little taste of what
southern ladles are here in Logan. After finishing in we'II be running into the rest
Meigs cOunty to set the Middleport at the end ol this of our lives. He' s showing us
week they wtll return lor two that tt's not always a bed of
record straight.
Sally Christie · of Meldon, weeks in Wellston and will roses either."
" Not havmg all the niceties
La. and Elizabeth (Ubby ) spend a week in Coalport
ol
home and the secunty of
Barnette of Charlotte, N. C. before returning to thetr
my
family has taught me to
are completing their final homes on August 10.
depend
on the Lord llke I
week of a three week mission
Their work has been mostly
(Continued
on page 8)
stint with the Hope Baptist vohintary. A small sa lary of
Church on Grant Street in $32 a week is being provided
Middleport. Sponsored by the by the convention but, as thfi,Y
Southern Baptist Convention, say, " we could be- doing
the two are college students something else for mor e
spending their summ er money but this is what we
vacation working with the want to do.''
Basica lly thetr summer
Home Missions Board in
various churches throughout experience is one of learning.
" I'm · making sure that the
- Southeastern Ohio.
While in Middleport, the mission world is really where
girls have conducted a door- the Lord wants me," Libby
to-door survey for Hope says. A semor at Baptist
By DICK KIMMONS
Baptist and are c11rrently affiliated Mars Hill College in
COLUMBUS (UP!) - One morning James A. Duerk
North Ca rolina, Libby is
~!ping with Daily Vacation
saw something in the newspaper which he dectded to show
in
church
Bible School in an aide and majoring
to his boss, Gov . James A. Rhodes .
which
she
advisory capacity. They are recreation
The clipping was a brief announcement - Duerk holds
also participating in revival describes as being ''just like
his fingers about two inches apart when he tells the story
services being held at the ph ysica l education only
- about how Japanese automobile manufacturers were
· rehgion oriented." She plans
church .
considering expansion of their produclton fa qhties 10to
Their major duty has been to work for two years after
the United S~tes .
•
canvassing Middl e port graduation next spring ·before
" I told him I thought we ought to go to Japan wtthtn the
homes, "seeking prospects entering seminary and her
next several weeks," saill Duerk, director of the Departfor Hope Baptist Church." ultimate goitl is [o go -into
ment of Economic and Community Development. " Jim
They've spent five and one . foreign missionary service .
said, 'We'll go lomocrow.'"
" For me it's deciding
half days with the survey for
Duerk said he rushed back to his ofliee and arranged for
a total of .I ,051 homes In 34 whether to major in religious
Ute traveling party to gel the necessary tmmunization
education or basic elemenhours and 20 minutes.
shots and visas and to arrange lor a schedule for the
"The map of Middleport," tary education with emphasis
traveling Ohioans.
Ubby jokes, "is permanently on missionary work, " says
"We were gooe the next mocning at 10 :30. We '!ere back
Sally. a junior at Louisiana
xeroxed on our brains."
in four and ooe-baU daya and in that ttme we had called on
Alter meeting with so many College in Pineville, I.a., also
all the majtr auto makers. That was Ute start of negotiaMiddleport resident•, both Baptist affiliated . " Very
tion• lor the Honda plant," satd Duerk . ·
contend that the people of the oflen," she says, ~'you can
On Oct. 11 , 1977 - about IB months after Duerk noticed
area are, for the most part, best reach parents through
the press clipping - RhOdes gathered Honda officials arxj
their children." Sally also
very friendly and warm .
the news media In liill cabinet room to announce Honda 's
"I've felt completely at plans to enter seminary after
selection of a site adjacent to the Transportation
her
un- ·
eaae ~re," Sally aaya. Ubby completin~
Research Center near Marysville for a $25 million plant
agrees and adds, "Everyone dergraduate schooling and
!lesigned to assemble 80,000 motorcycles a year.
In this town must know who hopes to enter into lull time
The plant will mean :;oo immediate jobs, and far more if
mtsstonary work, etther at
weare by now! "
Honda decides to make cars at the now under•
1be pair, just two of the 28 home or abroad.
construction plant.
They also ~t~~ree that
atudent miuionariea the
"Jobs" I! Rhodes - and Duerk's - favorite four -letter
convention haa placed they're teaming to adapt to
llt!fughout Ohio this sum- all sorts nf different people

.

·

e Cl S10n 0 n
•
Income tax
•
18 delayed

WASHING TON (UP!) - The Treasury Department has
thro wn tn the towl, and no lon ger will oppose putting theillnage
of suffragette Susan B Anthony on a new $1 com due for
dist ributiOn within a year .
.
" We want the coin , no ma tter whose hkenes~ is on tt, and
we don 't think it, ta worthwhtle to fight over tl,' ' satd Stella
Hackel, director of the U S Mint , alter test ify10g in the Senate
Banking Commtttee Monday .

•

BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday
mght aga m dtscussed - but
took no act wn - on .the one
percent ctty mcome tax that
Metgs Co unty Shenff was proposed at the last
James J Prolfrtt reports that meetin g
the department mv esttgated
Cou n c tlm a n · Larry
a motorcycle acc td ent Wehrung told members that
Monday even ing at 9 p.m
he bel teves to add the tax an
According to the report admimst ratpr would have to
flied by Deput y Randy be hired and it might prove to
forbes, Ga ry L Roush, 22, b&lt; very complica led.
Rt. 2, Racine, was traveling
"' I don'tthink we can selllt
west on a motorcycle on at the prese nt u me ,"
Letan Townshtp Road 95 Wehrung stated'.
towards East Letun and lost
Wehrung also added that
euntrol of h1s motorcycle. the $5 permtssive tax would
Roush advised that an in- have been much sunpler. He
dividual had thrown tomatoes also commented that the
at him causing him to lose eommittee appomt ed to study
control of the cycle.
the tax proposal had not met
Roush · rece1ved abraSions and until they do Ihere was
to lhe shoulder. arms, and" nothing definite to report
legs. He was not munediateiy . Meet ing with l'ound l was
treated.
E. F. Robinson and Dale
Arrest uf th e tomato Smtth of the Board of Pubhc
thrower IS pending the fllin K A!fa trs.
uf charges by Roush.
Robinson told counctl that
Roush was ctted to Metgs they arc ha vtng a problem
County Court for not havm g with a demand meter located
hcense plates on t he tn th e old wa ter wor ks
motorcycle.
building Robmson explamed
Shenff Proffttt aga m thai there ts onl y one hght
remmds co unt y residents bummg 111 the butldmg and
that tratl and dtrt btkes are they have never had an
not to be rtad en on county and electnc !Jill uver $7 to $8 a
roa ds.
Any inunth .
to wn shtp
motorcycle ndden on the
Robmson further ex plamed
roadway or private property that they recently received
frequented by the public fo r an electri c bill m the amo unt
vehicular lravc l, mu~t have a u! $291 for a period of H days
hcense plate and the operator The buildmg is servtced by
have cycle endorsement.
the Columbus and Southern
Metg s Co un ty Shcrtff's Ohto Elec tn c Com pany ·
(Continued on page 8)
Robin son and Smith in·

Cycle wreck
investigated

Opposition is withdrawn

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1978

Gallia-Meigs Post
backing onto 588 from opposite &amp;des of the roadway.
The Richards vehtcle
Struck the McCarty auto in
the right front.
Both vehicles incurred
slight damage. Richards was
cited lor improper backing.
At 7 p.m., Charles Price, 17,
Gallipolis, was south bound
on SR 218, two-tenths of a
mUe north 'of Ingalls Rd.,
when a tie-rod on his auto
broke, sending the vehicle out
of control.
1be auto passed off the
right side of the roadway and
struck a fence owned by
Ralph Young, Eureka Star
Rt.
Accordmg to the patrol,
Price was uninjured. The
Price vehtcle incurred
moderate damage .
Sunday at 7:15 p.m., officers were called to the
scene of a two-car accident on
SR 160, at the junction of SR
554 .
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Debra Russell,
26 , Bidwell, ll'as in the
process of making a right
turn onto Sli4, when a vehicle
operated by June Foreman,
36, Bidwell , turned left,
striking the RIIS5eli auto in
the left front.

Tom Owens, Cliff Kennedy. Second row . Mark Forbes, Mtke Tnplett,
John Sayre, Mike Wayland , Chuck Kennedy, Tim Hood, Terry Wayland,
Roger Carson. Back row, Coach Charlie Hamilton, Terry Wall, Kelly
Winebrenner, Greg Becker, Kenny Young, Ttm Ebersbach and Art
Fogelstrom.

en tine

at

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MEit;S AMERICAN LEGION TEAM - The 1978 edition of Ule Metgs
American Legion baseball team wtll close out tts regular season play at
Wellston Utis Wednesday and then move into tournament play on
Saturday. Team members are front row, 1-r , Assistant Coach Ed
Kennedy. Dan Edwards. Ray Andrews. Brian Hamilton, Dave Kennedy.

_i.,....,.....·i)---T-he_W_o_r-ld_T_o_d_a_y_

228 x-12 11 2

Includes all of our men•s·
shor1 sleeve sport and
dress shirts and our men's

I

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Ebersbach (lp), Sayre (8) and Ftrbes, T. Wayland '(6).
Jones (wp), Glassio (4) and Ireton, Gecrge (6).

SALE! MEN'S
SHORT SLEEVE SHI

I

the ·~ ·:·:

•

e

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t~am

Students on the
are en)oymg
broad educational opportunities provided
by the co~nty health practition ers and
cittzens. They are currently lookmg lorward to meeting even more county
residents at future sites throughout the
area. For more information on screening
sttes or future speaking enga gements
contact the Sen tor Citizens Center in
Pomeroy at 992-7886.
. The Student Health· Team ts made
posstble by the Consortium for Health
Education in Appalachia Ohio arid has
been assisted by the Meigs County Health
DepartJDent. the Ohio Department of
Health, the Metgs County Sentor Citizens
Center and the Commuruty Mental Health
Center .
The next screening clinic. will be conducted this coming Friday, _July 21, between 9:30a.m. and 3 p.m. at Riverview
Elementary School in Reedsvtlle.

:;:::;:::;:;:::.:::;:;:::;:,:,:.:;:,:;:;:;:::.:_:,:, :'.:::,:,:, ,:::.:,:,:,:_.,:.:,:::::;: :;:;.,:::.:.::-:: :.:: ::::.: :_:_:;::: :-::·::·&gt;.·.;-: :&gt;- -:=: :&gt;- :; : ::::;:;::·:·:::::::·: :·.::::: ;:.:,: :: ...: :: :-:: : :.:.: .· ·.·.

~---------- ·--------.-----~------~--

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Student Health Team members satd
today citizens ol Meigs have been very
receptive to the health screening project
that is in progress in the county.
To date, 185 residents of Pomeroy
Harrisonville, Rutland and Salem Cente;
have taken advantage of free diabetic and
high blood pressure screening, immunizations and hearing tests.
In .addition to the screemng program,
the Health Team has been· adve rtising
their proJect and visiting various communlty groups.
A loca l Grange, Racme EMT's,
HalTisonville and Long Bottom Sentor
Citizens and the Farm Bureau are JUSt a
few groups who have hosted team members at their meetings. Youngsters at the
Chester Girl Scout Camp also proved
eager candidates lor learning about their
blood pressure.
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m

Man stabbed in.~
Mason County

Teenager cited

•

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horse powe r Evm rude out-

board motor was stolen from
ht s boat tied up on Old Town
Creek. Deputy Sheriff Robert
Beegle made the imtial investigatiOns on these complamts Sunday .
- J erry Powell , Tanners
Run Road, said his 3 horsepower motor wa s stolen from
his boat at Old Town Creek
sometime Saturday night .

stands. An army !if wockers labored into the night
cleaning up.
.
"! was really pleased that the audience reacted in
the way that they did," cmunented Tom T. Hall
diminutive auUtor of "Harper V41ley PrA" and ~
dozen other hits.
. "You know, there's a kind of a mystery to going
onstage :, sometimes you go on and it's electric and
sometimes you go on and it's not. This was one !if those
days when what I wanted to happen ha~~Ptned . "
"Once I hit the stage, I knew it was' going to be
great," added blind sl118f!r - songwriter Ronnie Milsap,
the Country Music Association's 1978 Entertainer of
the Year, alter his Sunday morning performance.
"It's hard for me because so much It depends on
my being able to !eel electricity with an audience. And
it was there today."
"An outside show is a lot different from an ·Inside
show, but as long as people are having a good time, I '
have a big time too," agreed Stella Parton, yowiger
sister of superstar Dolly Parton. "It's hard to play to
this many people, though. You do play to lbe people
that you can get eye contact with, it's natural. But I try
to play to all of them."
"I really don 't need Jamboree in Ute Hills to tell me
bow popular country music is," said singer and
instrumental switctwtitter Bar_bara Mandrell, who
brought tens of thousands of cheering fans to their feet
Sunday afternoon with a round !if solos on every
instrument onstage.
"I've always known Utat it's a growing music in
popularity, not just in this country but in other
countries as well. There are a lot of what I call dose!
country music fans that are coming out of their closets
now ."

ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (UP!)- " I'll tell you what
all losing ~ball teams says: 'Wait till next year,' "
Satd producer Glenn Reeves, grinning Sunday night as
super-ptcker Roy Clark c!OIIed out Ute second annual
"Jamboree in Ute Hills" country music festival before
35,000 hoarse, sun-baked fans.
The l~our weekend festival, organized and
broadcast by Wheeling , W. Va., radio station WWVA,
established itseU with a star studded debut last year as
the nation's biggest live event in country music.
Clark, Mel Tillis, Charlie Pride, Bill Anderson and a
half-&lt;lozen other major country artists headlined the
two-day event, which also featured newcomers Stella
Parton and Crystal Gayle, dozens of regional acts and
an amateur talent competition won by a Wheeling
teenager.
After a sun-drenched opening Saturday, heavy black
rain clouds began forming Sunday morning, but blue
skies broke through the clouds by midafternoon as
veteran trucker - songwriter Dave Dudley took the
stage. ·
A spot check of local law enforcement authorities
revealed Utat it rained or hailed practically everywhere else in southern Ohio and PeiUISylvania and
norUtern West Virginia, but not on Ute festival site at
Brush Run Park.
"I told you it wasn't gonna rain," drawled Reeves,
who spent ftve years convincmg the station's owners,
Columbia Pictures Industnes, to let him produce Ute
show. " We didn't brmg all these people all that way
just to have 'em ramed on."
Ja m~ree in the Hills attracted fans from every
state in the United States and from as far as West
Germany and Great Britain, who consumed well over
four tons each of barbecued chicken and ribs and left
behind armies of empty beer kegs at the concession

Hineman, Wtlliam Hummell,
Mtchael Kight, John Kmg,
Glen Kisor.' Oscar Kitts,
Mary . Layne ,
Jimmie
McGuire, Veulah Murray ,
Melissa Nance, Mark Porter.
Jeffrey Richardson, Mary
Riffle, Elsie Shaffer. James
Walters. Maude Wilson.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Denny, a son, l't . Pleasant ;
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wallace,
a daughter, Pt. Plrasant. Mr.
apd Mrs. Gary Burrows, a
son, Vinton .
~Discharges, July 16)
Gladys Ford, Mrs. Oni ce
Hunt and daughter, Mrs. ·
Robert Jmdra and daughter,
Mrs. Charles Moody and son,
Mrs. Robert Murphy and son,
Mrs . David Ra wlin s and
daughter . Mrs. Jesse Whtte
and son, Mrs. Samuel Willard
and son, Maxwell Runyon .

Meigs Legion
teaffi loses
doubleheader

Poll favors Kucinich
CLEVELAND ( UPI) - A poll taken 10 days ago by the
Cuyahoga County Democratic Party showed embattled
Cleveland Mayor Dennis Kucinich would defeat the drive to
recall him from offi ce.
The telephone poll of 450 Clevelanders showed 40 percent
opposed to the recall , 36 percent supporting tt and 24 percent
undecided The margin of error is 4~ percent.

Defense completing
case
'
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CLEVELAND (UP! ) - The uefense was to complete of its
case today in the federal obscen tty trial of reputed worldwide
pornography kmg Reuben· Sturman . Closing arguments from
, anorneys
on both stdes were lo follow th e fu11sh of the defense
dtcated that they hope the
case
.
problem can be resolved
Robtnsun also told council . Ear her , a San Francisco psychologtst who co-authored the
thai he had been tn touch with famous Kinsey 'Report on human sexualtt} testthed tbat none
the en gine enng firm of of Ute film s and magaztnes dtStnbuled by defendants 10 the
Burgess and Ntple and one of Sturman case "ere legally obscene.
the water well s in Syracuse IS
not producmg fi e also stat ed
they are thinking of drtlling a
CLEVE LAND IUPI J - /\bout $50.000 in cash and other
test well. To drill th e test well evidence beheved to be part of a $100,000 a day bneball and
wi ll cost $5,000 , according to horse betting operatton was confi scated dunng ratds at nearly
Robmson .
a dooen Cleveland and suburban rcstdences Monday mght.
He added that they do have
The raids, conducted by 75 Internal Revenue Service
a location for the well WhiCh mtelligence agents, produced no arrests of those alleged to be
IS nea rer the rive1
prtncipal operators of the gambhng ri ng, The ?lam Dealer
" If all works out we may
reported today .
gamble on a test well."
Rubmson observed. He alsu
pointed out lhat tu mov e the
equ1pmcnt from the present
COLUMBUS 1UP!) - A spectallegtslative sub&lt;ommittee
,.. ell to a new \o,. ell would cost
m the neighbor hoo d of was scheduled to open hearings today on a death penalty law
for Ohio to replace the one found unconstitutional by the U. S .
$75,000.
Co un cil , at last week 's Supreme Co urt July 3.
m ee tin g , had tentativ ely
Named ear her this month as chatrman of Ule O.!JjQ House
accepl ed the btd of t he Judtctary Subcommittee was Rep Paul Leonard, D-Dayton.
Pum eruy Nat wnal Bank Ctt Members included Reps. Kenneth A. Rocco, 0-Parma ; Terry
four a nd one-half percent M Tranter. D-Cincinnatt , Wtlham J Healy, D-Canton ;
mt e1esl for the sa le of $30.1100 Wtlham Batchelder, R-medina. Donna Pope, fi-Parma; and
Mtchael Ox le). R-Fmdiay.
(Continued on page 8)

$50,000 is confiscated

Hearings open today

Southern board adopts budget
esu mated
at
The Southern Lo cal Board -were
of Education met in special $1.321 ,500.59 and anttctpated
session recently and ad'opted cxpi!ndttures of $1,295,933.29
the · annual budget for th e leavmg a balan ce of $25.575:
year beg innmg January 1. bund rcttrcm ent fund , an·
1979 for the considerati on of llc l p~ ted recei pt s,
th e co unt y budget co111· $111 ,147 70 , anttctpated ex·
pe nditure s , $8 1. 213 JJ ,
misswn.
General fund recetpts (or lea vmg a btdan ce of
the year. beg10ni ng 1979, $29, 934 57. all other funds.
anticipated r ece ipt s,

$242,130.87. antlctpated expenditur es, $2 10,573 .63 ,
balance of $20.057 .24 .
The next meet mg wtll be
July 25 .
AUendmg were Dallas Htll,
prestdent , Shtrley Johnson .
and Betty Wagner, board
membe rs, Lm da Spence r ,
cl rk a nd Bobby Ord ,
supenntendent

For Rhodes, Duerk ...

'Jobs' favorite four-letter word

'11

word . " J obs mean virtually everything ," said Duerk in a
recent interview.
But Ohio's efforts, accordmg to critics, are misdirected,
despite major successes m the past few monUts of
acquiring the Honda plant, a $500 million Ford Motor Co .
transmission plant nea r Batavia, a · $25 million
Montgomery Ward distrtbution center in Sharonville near
Cincinnati and a $100 mtlhon expansion ol Ford's Brook
Park facility .
Ohio has about t wtce the national average of heavy
manufacturing industry m relation to gross state product.
FurUtermore, heavy manufacturing - machine tools,
metal wocking, steel - ts an mdustry that is plagued with
low productivity due to the lar k of modernization and low
growth rates.
Ohw's would be better of! , according to some
development strategists, to go alter high-growth firms
and service-related industries rather than getting another
automobile plant.
·
·
• Duerk's own department - under tht Democratic
administration of Gov. John J . Gilligan- concluded in a
1974 study that 90 percent of new capital expenditures and
81 per cent of new jobs 'were created by the expllJlsion of
Ohio firms .
State development official now in Duerk's office, say
that Ute service indust,ries, plus computer, letsure
products, medical and educational technology and '
cll'Ctronics !il'llls, will follow the big, heavy industry into
the state .
Rhodes' and Duerk's development policies are destined
later this year to• be a t•a mpaign theme of Lt. Gov. Richard

Celeste, the Democratic nominee against Rhodes for
governor
In the last six months , however , three laws have been
enacted which may help Ohio keep its existing busmess,
prompt expanston of current industries and as a
byproduct help Rhodes· chanc-es for reelection .
" It's caught on very fast and we're very pleased," said
Robert M. Stutz of Duerk 's office of local government
services "In contrast to six months ago, we now have the
programs that are most beneficial."
The three new laws give industn es a credit on their
corporate fra nchise taxes, allow local gpverrunents to
exempt new construction from increased property taxes
and exempt industries !rom certain sales taxes.
The corporate franchise tax credit is cited by Ford
officials as " the thing that tipped the scales' 1 with the
company's decision to locate its $500 million transmission
plant m Ohi o rather than in Michigan.
However, economtsts have long maintained that state
tax structure is far from the top of the 10 most important
fa ctors an industry evaluates when tt has expanswn on its
mind .'
Quality labor, market access and the "quality of life"
for its employees are more important, according to one
recent analysis.
Ohio has all this in abundance, satd Duerk. In fact, he
predicterl in hts 1977 year-end report tha't Ohio would gain
150.000 jobs m the next 18 mo~ths .
'

Next: Ohio's three new Industrial incentive laws.
~trst of 3-part series.
1"1

•

•

- ''

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