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[).8-

The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, July 23, 1978

A Gallipolis Diary

Pee.p s. ·.

•

BY J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALLIPOI.IS - Louise B. Adams of Colwnbus last week
wrote to this newspaper in q\lesl of information on some of ht'r
anl·cstur&gt;. thl' Uardings. She is a granddaughter or lhc c

founder uf Hn· 1;"";1, n,.,.,., which now makes up about half of
your"iu "''" ~ · 'I·; "'' '!(-...;,." t; ,,.,,

He was Arthur Robert Harding, born July' 17, 1871, on the
famil y farm ncar Kyger. He died March 3, 1930, in Columbus.
The cu-fuundcr was lrct W. Booton, a Civil War veteran and

former Gallia Cowtty recorder , maternal grandfather of J .
Samuel Peeps: Louise Adams ctnd Peeps. therefm'e, arc sort of
j11urnalistit· second'"l·ousins.

Booton left the 'l'iuw~ a.fter nin e r.nonths. however, and Harding becaml' the sole owner and editor on March 1, 1899 , but
suld the paper in 1904 tu devote full time to a magazine,llunt!•rTmd. ·r -Tn.,., ...,., which he had st.Hrtcd in October, 1900. We had

OHIO Gov . James A. Rhodes wi ll deli ver a luncheon
speech at the Gallia County Shrine O ub on Tuesday, July
25, from 12 noon until 1 p.m. Tickets for Gov. Rhodes '
reelection campaign ar e $25 a plate, a nd may be
purchased from Neal Insurance, Bob Saunders, 0. M.
Stewart, Clarence Thom pson, Atty . Ot!an Evans or GOP
Central Committeem en . Ticke ts ma y ell so be purchased a t
the door .

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~al ~
CT:"sta
-U1 · l~o.a:
~
Today
By
Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

A MASS OF DETAILS
So it won' t come os a
compl ete sur pnsc to you

e as it does to a lot or
... homeowners who fry to spll
their ow n homes. here's
.•
• some t hing you shou ld kno w

•

e
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e
e

a bout
Sel l ing o home
invol ves a mass of petty
deta ils There ' s paper work

to do, at1orn eys to be deal t
wi th . a t it le sear ch t o be

m a de .

and

v i tal

• ~· arrangem ents to be m,ld e
•

con cerning down P&lt;'~'(me nL

•
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escrow a ccounts and m ort
gage f inanc i n g . Un l ess

:

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e

Honest l y , it pays to sell
you r ho me thro ugh a local
Reol tor It' s his fu ll l im e
busr ness to keep on top ol
these details . He ' s alert to
ever y step ot the t ran sac t ron know s how to make
lhP nec e ssary arran ge m~n l 5 and fol low thro ugh
on det.l 15. He knows how
,rnporl ol nl i t 15 to prot ect all
p~rl oes
agains t
m rsu nder standings. an d the
impor tance
of
all
aqr~~men t s
bein g
in
wr hna

If t here IS anything we

can do to help yo u i n the

you 're an ex pert on the se
sub jec ts, yo u' ll be workrng
at a d isad van tag e Err 1ng
on an y one at th ese deta ils
could r uin your sleep 1ng
hab its and your f i nanc~al

ph one o r d r op I n .at
LEADI NGHAM
REAL
EST ATE , Sl2 Second Ave.,
Galli polis . Phon e 446-7699 .

pos ition

We're here to hel p.·

f1 eld o f re al estate please

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a feature story on that magazine Jul y 31 , 1977, playing up the
idcc1 that a nationally ei reulated ma~azinc was printed in
Gallipoli s.
It's that fea ture stury las t sw mn~r that · prompted Mrs.
Jldams ' lctter. A friend sent her a copy of tlte arti cle, she said,
and she endose!l a two-page biography of A. R. Harding. with
another page of Harding genealogy.
" If any of your readers have any genealogical data on the
Hardi ngs, who lived in Gallia County," she wrote," [ would appreciate hearing from them." She is bus iness manager of
,-,,-f"i.&lt;~lr -1 .nm··· 2878 E. Main St., Colwnbus 43209.
In 1914 Harcling sold "'"''''r-'f',·Nrl••r-'l'n'f'I'N' , which fina lly
was discontinued aft er being published by several firms. He
then wrote books, mostly on trapping, and coliunns for other
magazine::;, s uch a::; Sw···· ··'~·"ful f';~rmifl.l!. and 1-'~trm./ullnwl .
In 19.25 Harding went into the publishing business agai n, buy·
ing a magazine and changing its name to fur- Fi.~h -t ; 1,,, ., This
he edited until a short lime before his death in 1930, when his
son , Arthur Vincent Harding. took over as editor, and his
daughter, Louise Harding Adams, became business manager .
In 1965, Arthur Richard Harding, an Ohi o Uruversity graduate
cmd grandsun of t he fow1der . became editor, and his father
took over as advertising manager.
Her e a re the ~enerat ions prior to Louise H . Adams:
· Arthw· Hobert Harding ma rrit&gt;d Marilla Jt.'annetlt· Vinc.:ent
111June, l901
,\]\'in Bar-tlett Harding 1B:J5·1908 married Mary Thumpsun in

181i4 .
Alvin Ha.rding bum -1805 married Sarah S. Paine 1828. She',
his second wife. was a rclativl' uf Judge Paine uf Pomeroy and
dit'd in 1842.
Perry Barding 1748·1824 marric'&lt;l Mary Smith and the
ge nea logy notes that they were pioneers from Onta ri o County .
N. Y., in 1821.
.
If you can fill any gaps. write to l&gt;!lUiS&lt;' .
SAVING ESTIMA Tl'D
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
James. A. Rhodes signed into
law Friday emergency
legislation the Bureau of
Work er 's

Co mop ne. $:1 ti nn

estimated
will
save
empl oyers $309 million in
a d v a n ce
worker ' s
co mpensatio n in sur;- a nce
depos1ts.

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NOTICE
GALliA COUNTY CHILDREN'S SERVICES

••
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· NEED FOSTER HOMES FOR CHILDREN
..
OF ALL AGES
•
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1...-------------------...J
Ph. 446-4963 For Information

Stolen
vehicle
recovered

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis
City
pollee
received a complaint Friday
from Catherine Pratt ,
reporting the theft of a pickup
truck , owned by Windell
Williams Pomeroy.
The vehi cle was reportedly
taken in Gallipolis, from Vine
St . Witnesses at the scene told
police that the truck had been
stolen by two male subjects.
After an extensive ·search
involving the City Police,
P .U.C.O., and th e county
sheriff ' s departm ent. the
vehicle was discovered
behind a Pine Street Tavern.
Upon examination o( the
truck, City Police office rs
discovered a shotgun and
fo ur beer cans in the driver's
compartment. Those items ·
were r e m oved from th e
vehicle, and the truck was
released to Pratt .
In further City Police ac-

KROEHLER and BERKLI"E
CHAIRS
,.. -"

. ~.

''
'FAREWELL BLUES' - The Joe Mead ows
Flddler's·Convention concluded Sunday with the finals in
every category of com petition. Playing 'Farewell Blues'

tion, offi ce rs investigated a
collisio n on th e·
pa rking lot of the Frosty
Freeze, at 5:41 p.m., Friday.
According to the report, the
accid ent occurred when an
auto driven by Terry N.
Waugl), 20, Crown City, was
attempt ing to enter the
parking lot, as a vehicl e
by
A.
J.
operated
Ill ,
16,"
Fogelstr om
Ga llipolis, was exiling the lot.
Bot h vehicles incurred
slight dama ge.
Harry Ray , Crown City,
was cited by the City Police
Sa turda y on cha rges of
operating a m otor vehicle
without a va lid license.
·
Cited Friday on charges of
driving left of center was Joe
K. Barris, 22, Gallipolis .
Burnie E . Wa tso n, 25,
Crown Cit y, was cited on
c ha rges
of
rec kl ess

VOL XXIX

SALE
PRICES

operation, Friday .

NEW TICKET MANAGER
CLEVELAND ( UPI I The Cleveland India ns have
appointed a new ticket

Save also during our Summer Furniture Sale on Kroehler living
room suites. sofas. love seats, and sectionals. Occasional tables.
good selection sale priced, Table Lamp sale. Dinette furniture,
Bedroom Suites. Picture and wall accessories .

manager, Jerry Wa ring, a

And ' Elberfelds big July Clearance Sale on Summer wearing
apparel continues all this week . Savings of 20 pel .· 30 pet. and even 50
pel . on men's , ladies', children's and infants' wear .

in arctic wh ite
matching Landau top

with
and
beautiful burgundy 60-40 seating .
EquiP ped wi th power windows,
Finished

air cond it ioni ng , power door
lo cks , power sea t , Rally II
wheels. t ilt whee L cruise con trol.
and AM rad io with B track stereo.
We sol d it new .

Elberfelds In Pome
See Southeastern Ohio's largest st!lettion of clean late model
used cars. Most of these cars carry Smith's special 100%
warranty. See Gene Johnson, Bob Brickles, Harland Wood .or
Greg Smith today for that extra special deal!

1976 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO
Tr iple black wit h bucket sea ts,
consol e , a i r con ditioned ; tilt
wheel and Ral lye whee ls. This
Monte has it al l. Com par e at

1977 CHEV.

CAMARO
Black on black . equipped with air
con ditioning, power st eering ,

power brakes, AM -FM stereo, t ilt
whee l, and Rallye wheels . This is
an extra clean hard to find model.

'4595

•4495

'5495

1977 BUICK LIMITED
2 DR. COUPE

1976 DODGE ASPEN
2 DR.
Forest green metall ic exterior

1977 CHEV. MALIBU
2 DR.

wi t h matching cloth in ter ior . Thi s
econom model f rom Dodge is

Bu cks k in finish with mat ching
gold interior . This GM factory
official ' s car is equipped with air

Medi um green fin ish wi th
matching padde-d landau top and
velour 60 -40 seats. Loaded Wi th
all the options you would e~&lt;.pect
on Bu ick's t op o t th e line. Don ' t
miss this automobile.

'6995

v

equipped With Chrysler' s fa mous
Sl a nt Six engine, automatic
transm ission and power steer ing .
This local one Owner ha s only
17 .299 miles.
'

WAS '3695

NOW'3295

c ondition i ng , power steering ,
power brakes , rear defogger and

accent stripes.

PRICED

--~1~97~5~M~E~~U~RY~~~1~~~D~EL~~~~
COUGAR XR7

ClasS ic black exterior with
burgundy 50 -SO custom viny l
seats and a black Landa u top .
This Mercury intermediate is
imma culate Inside and out .
Equipment
Includes
'air
con dit ioni ng.
AM·FM
stereo
rad io, sport mirrors and chrome
sty led wheels. Th is local one
ha•; only 25,081 miles. Most

AT

WILL OPEN FOR L4NCHEON SOON

PT. PLEASANT INN·

Rt . 62 North
Phone 304·675·6276

'4595

GMAC
AND BANK
FINANCING

Breakf ast served daily 6 : 00 A. M.· ll : OO A.M.
Dinner se rved S: OO p.m .· 9: 00 p.m . (Except s·unday 1

Watch For Grand Opening

DR.
Stunn in g Chesterfield brown
finish with contrasting buckskin
vi nyl roof. . Buck sk l n cloth
interior is protected by clean seat
cover s. 'AM- FM stereo. crui se
· con trol, tilt wheel. rear defroster
and more. If you are lookin g for
lu xury and rid i ng ~o mfort ,

inspect this sedan now .

TO SELL 13995

•

NO. 69

•

at y

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

enttne
PRI CE FI FTEEN CENTS

MONDAY. JULY 24, 1978

Th is is truly an e~::~~~~"r,~ai)Ja~:~~~

automobile. F lnlohed In

black with matching Landau top
and 60·40 seating . Only 26,510
mile~ on this limited cOupe.
Options you would expect like
cruise controL tilt wheel , power
· windows. seat. door lo cks,
automatic temp . control air and
chrome 'p lated wheels .

'649
40 MORE ,
TO CHOOSE
FROM

BANJO STRUMMING- Besides fiddles , guiU.rs,
mandolins and bass fiddl es, banj o competition was also
featured at the 3rd annual Joe Meadows Fiddler's
Con ventioo. Shown is Jim Capehart, South Charleston,
who won in the banjo competition .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wecloudoy lbrouch
Friday, warm and humid
.with thundershow e rs
possible each day. Highs
will be In the upper 80s or
low 90s with a loli· ln the 60s
, Wednesday and upper 60s
or low 10. Friday.

Boat fire

is doused
At 10 :19 Sunday evening
the
Middl eport
Fire
Department received a call
that a boat on a trailer was on
fire on Pearl Street. F'lreman
Kevin Daily went to the scene
and extinguished the blaze,
apparently caused by the
starter being left on, with a
fire extinguisher. There wa s
extensive damage to the boat
owned by D\&gt;nald Newell, 718
S. Third Ave ., Middleport.
At 3:07 p.m. Sunday, the
Middlep or t Emer gency"
Squad was called to 769 Short
Fourth St. , for Pearl Si gman
who was D.O.A. At3:22 p.m.
the squad went to 383 Ash St.
for Myrtle Harrison who had
fallen . She was treated on the
scene.

Weather
Low tonight in the upper
60s .
Probability
of
prec ipitati on is 80 percent
toda y through Tuesday.

OU hires
'

McElhaney
ATHENS, Ohio (UP! ) ~
Harold N. McElh aney has
been named athletic director
at Ohio University, · school
president .Charles Ping
announced today .
Aformer football and wres·
tling star at Duke University
in the 1950s, McElhaney had
been athle tic direc tor at
Alleg heny
College
in
Meadville, Pa., · since 1970.
McElhaney, 42, succeeds
Bi II Rohr, who r es igned
earlier this year to enter
private business.
While he was at Allegheny,
the school won the all.,ports
trophy the pa st six years in
the Presid en ts Athletic
Conference. McElhaney. said
rai sin g OU's standing in the
Mid American Conference
will be his first concern.
Before going to Alle gheny,
McElhaney was assistant
footba ll coach at Duke from
1960 to 1966 and th en served
as administrative assistant to
the director of athletics.
At Duke, he served as head
football recruiter and was
coordina tor of alumni·
athletics relations.
As an undergraduate at
Duke' he was a membel' or
the 1955 Oran ge Bowl team
and was team captain in 1957.
He was the 195-pound
champion wrestler in the
Atlantic Coast Coo ference in
1956 and 1957 and was named
most valuable wrestler in the
coofernce in 1956.

Strike talk spreading
among postal workers
Workers dissatisfied
\)
with new agreement
United Press International
Wildcat walkouts slowed bulkmail handling in the New York
and San Francisco areas as strike talk spread among poswl
workers dissatisfied with a cootract agreement reached
Friday to head off a nationwide job action .
The New York Bulk and Foreign Mail Center in Jersey City,
N.J., reported a day' ~ backlo!! In pr&lt;&gt;te81ing we to a walkOOII&gt;that kept as many as two-thirds of the facility's scheduled
employees off the job this weekend . Only 37 percent were on
the job early tnday.
At the San Francisco Bulk Mail Center in Richmond, Calif,
only half the day shift and 60 percent or the night crew showed
Sunday, despite a back·ln·wofk court order and dozens of
dismissals. Handling delays of 24 hours were reported.
"We're running, we're just not running up to speed;" postal
service spokesma n James Meldrum said in Richmond .
Postal workers in other major cities threatened to join their
Jersey City and San Francisco colleagues on 'the picket line
and there were increasing rumblings the money pact would be
rejected as too skimpy.
·
"Most or my members are very upset a bout the contract,"
said Cecil Romine, West Virginia president of tile American
f'ostal Workers. " I'm ool advocating a strike, but at the same
time, our people are fed up .
"The te legrams and letters I got are from members who
wholeheartedly agree they want no part of this contract,"
Romine said. He added job security also was a sore spot with
West Virginia postal workers.
The mail ratification vote · is expected to be completed in
about two weeks.
Opposition to the pact, which provides an average 19.S
percent hike in wages and costof.Jiving payments over three
years, was reported strong in New York , OJicago, Washington,
Philadelphia, Los Angeles and other cities.
In J ersey City, postal offi cials said little more than half the
normal load of 175,000 parcels was processed by the day shift
Sunday. Only 30,000 of the 55,000 sacks of mail were handled .
The walkout began Friday a nd continued despite threats
that wor kers could be dismissed for an " illegal action ." A
strike a lso slowed processing of mail - including first class
letters - at the sorting plant in Kearny, N.J .
A judge Saturday issued a temporary restraining order
barring the walkout at the Richmond Bulk Mail Center, which
handles parcels, publications and " junk mail." Union officials
said posU.l inspe ctors served dismissal notices on about 50
strikers.
But the workers stood firm and voted overwhelmingly late
Sunday to continue the job action.
"The consensus is tl!at we should go to jail before we break
the strike," a spokesman had said earli~r. He said of tbe
firings, " It' s un-American to dismiss people for striking ."
Or Saturday, 200 delegates of the Tri.State and Northeast
regional branches of the American PosU.l Workers Union met
in Allentown, Pa., unanimously approving a resolution calling
for amnesty hr the wildcat strikers.

The Ken Amsbar y
Chapter Of lhe lza a k
Walton Lea gue of America
will hold Its annual lamii)'
picnic Monday evening at 7
at the club grounds. Mea t
will be furnished by the
rhapter with each family lo
bring a covered di sh and
table serv ice. Sollie
families should also bring

Sundar Shoppers
Welcome
Come in &amp;' browse around.

BUICK
PONTIAC

The World Today

Talmadge plans reimbursement

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A spokesman says Sen. Herman
Talmadge. D-Ga ., plans to pay promptly "Whatever amount is
required" to reimburse the Senate £or expen ses he may ha ve
claimed improperly.
.
Talmadge 's own auditors, called in to review his specia l
some lype ol beveraKe .
of! lee account, tOundne had been ovel'Jlllld !rom 191\ to 1977 by
::&lt;:-:=:-: :':-:-:-:-:-:::-:-:·:-: :·:-:·:-: ::&lt;: :':':':':': :-:· _:::· • approximately S35,000, sources said.

Lumber
theft

•

lS

alleged
A 25 yea r-ol d Glouster man
has been charged with theft
of lumber from the Facemyer
&amp; Sabnons Lumber Co.. at
Hobson fo llowing his arrest
late Friday nig ht by Meigs
Co unt y Sheriff's Deputies
Robert Beegle, Ra ndy
Forbes, and Special Deputy
Cor by Cleek.
According to Meigs County
Sheri ff James J . Proffitt, the
deputies 1'esponded to a call
from the railroad office a t
Hobson of a suspicious truck
in the a rea . After ta lking with
the railroad of!icial, deputies
checked the area for the
tru ck . A short lim e later, the
deputies loca ted a tru ck
answering the description
obt ~ ined from the ra11roaaers
along SR 7 a short distance
south of Hobson Yards. He
was
having
batt er y
problems.
When the deputies saw the
pickup truck was loaded with
new lumber, the driver was
advised of his rights and later
the driver gave a statement
{Ccinllnued on page I)

l ast of

See 11111 cor todoy.

Appearinlj Nightly 9 :00 P. M.·2 : 00 A.M. (except Sunday)

•

"We are at the dawn of the first four-generational society in
the histocy of our nation, " said CaWano.
·
The baby boom followin g World War II, Califano noted , wiU
become a "senior boom" in the early 21st century. In 1940, 7
percent of the population was 65 or over ; today it is 11 percent ;
by 2030 it will be nearly 20 percent.
Today six active workers support one in retirement. By 2030,
the ratio is expected to be 3-to·l, and under present t&gt;ends, the
federal government will have ln spend $635 billion by 2025 - up
from $112 billioo this year - for Social Security, other
pe:nsions, Medicare ,~ welfare , food stam~ and various other
st!rvices for the elderly.
This would be a growth from 24 perce nt to 40 percent of total
fed eral outlays.
Dr . Harold Sheppard, director of the Center on Work and
Aging of the American Institutes for Research, said the
corning senlor boom means that by 2000, there wiU be 8 million
Americans over 80 - 1.7 millinn more than had been projected
as late as 1971.
(Oontlnued on page 8)

'

A big selection in the furniture department on the Jrd floor. Wall ·
way reclin-er. Rock· O· lounger. Plain recliner, swivel rockers .
occasional chairs.
· Vinyl or cloth ·uphol stery. large selection of colors .

former New York Yankee
assistant ticket TJ¥)nager .
Waring is a graduate of
Ohio Slate University. Before
working for the Yankees, he
was ticket manager for the
New York . Mets and before
that was traveling secretary
of ·the California An gels.
He replaces D\&gt;n Anderson ,
who resigned last Monday.

WASHINGTON (UPI) ·- Thirty years ago, nearly ha lf of all
men 65 and over were employed or seeking jobs. Today, among
pe~le 65 and over, only ooe mar. in five and on e woman in
twelve are in the workforce.
But two Cabinet members and other experts question
whether the' natioo can afford the trend toward ear ly retire·
ment - especially when the people horn in the post World War
11 baby boom become se nior citizens.
Wil1lesses at recent hearings of the Senate Special Commit·
tee oo Aging testified on the percentages or those wor.king over
65, and expressed concern about the Social Security costs and
the loss of sk illed workers to early retirement.
Secretary or Health, Education and Welfare Joseph Ca lifa no
tnld the committee other changes also are taking place which
may require a reconsideration of the whole U.S. policy on work
and retirement:
People are living longer, he noted. In 1940, the average life
· expectancy at birth was 63.5 years - now1l is 69 for men, 77 for
women. Three.fourths of the population now reaches 65 and,
once there, lives on the averagP. to 81.

e

1975 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

Under New Management

·in banjo rnmpetition is George Ward, Hinton , who
finished fifth . On his left , playing the guitar is Troy
Herdman, Colwnbus, 0., while Dusty Withrow, also or
Colwnbus, plays the bass fiddle .

t wo·ca r

Doc Says:

OPENING MONDAY JULY 24th

Coming 'senior boom,' costs of
Soc~l Security c~using · concern

SUMMER FURNITURE SALE!

1

INTRODUCING

Early retirement- -

3 die in prison uprising

Turkey and the economic
boycott or Rhodesia.
Secretary of · State Cyrus
Vance predicted Sunday the
Senate will vote to lift the
Turkish embargo, but he said

any move to link such action
with an end ln trade ~nctions
against Rhodesia would have
"a very damaging effect ."
Vance said "the time has
come to turn a new page" in

Man injured in accident
The Gallla·Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
eight weekend accidents.
Saturday at 12 :13 p.m .,
officers Investigated a two·.
auto accident on Bob Me·
Connick Rd., four·lenths of a
mile south of SR 160.
Officers rejiort that autos
driven by Johnny R. Sanders,
20, Gallipolis, north bound ,
and Raymond F. Biland. 22,

"

Gallipolis, travelin g south,
met in a curve and
sideswiped .
Sanders displaye4 Vl$ible
signs of Injury and was taken
by SEOEMS to the Holzer
Medical Center, where he
was admitted for treatment
of lacerations or the left ann,
and a possible fra cture.
Sanders is listed In good
condition .
'

The patrol )"as called to the
scene or a one·vehicle mi sha p
Monday at 12:01 a.m., on SR
160, at the junction of SR 35.
According to the officer's
rep?rt, Sumuel L. Morris, 38,
Jackson Pike, passed out at
the wheel.
The vehicle he was
operating went off the right
side of the road, incurring
(Cantlllued on P.,e I)

relations with Turkey. He
said he has 1 'deep conviction''
that if the arms embargo is
lifted it will lead to progress
lnward rfso)vlng the Greek·
Turkish dispute over the
·
island of Cyprus.
The House scheduled a vole
this week on the compromise
bammered out by a House.
Senate
co nfer enc e
· co mmittee, to provide
· co ntinuing fed eral loan
guarantees to help New York
City survive its financial
pinch.
The conference report then
would need Senate action
be,fore going to the White
House, but is not thought
likely to generate new
controversy in that body.

Pr esident Carter has made
all-out efforts to win grudging
support in the Senate for two
important foreign policy
proposals this year - the
Panama Canal treaties and
the package !ighter.plane
sales to Saudi Arabia, Egypt
and Israel.
·
From all indications, the
administration is fighting
just as hard ln lift the Turkish
arms curb and to prevent
!rode with Rhodesia .
But the outcome oo both is
in doubt and showdowns are
sched uled when the Senate
takes up the $2.9 billion
international security-assist·
anee bill.
In an in terview on ABC·
1V's "Issues •nd Answers,"

Gandolfi
on Student
Health unit

Workin g with the Mei gs
REIDSVILLE , Ga . (UP! ) - Two irunates and a guard County Student Health Team
were killed and aoother guard stabbed repeatedly Sunday in this sunuu er is Roy Gandolri ,
the fo urth outburst of violence at the Georgia State Pr ison 23. of Grosse Point Farm , Mi.
smce March. The cause of Sunda)"s distu rbanee was not
Hum in Detroit , Gandolfi
immediately known .
·
graduated
from
the
The h our.Jong uprising broke out a bou t 4: 10 p.m. when Uni versity·uf Mi chigan with a
several uunates grabbed four guards as hostages and set fire degr ee in microbiology and
ln bedding materials in two dormitories where the v had has just completed his first
erected barricades . .
·
yea r of m edi cal school the re.
He has been a research
assistant in the Hypertension
Research Lab at Henry F'ord
WASHI NGTON (UP! ) - A Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. Uospita I in. Detroit for three
spokesman says a story by the Knight News Service that the summers and publ!shed a
firm knew of but did not report serious problems three yea rs paper dealing with hormone
ago with its now controversial radial 500 tire is "e•aggerated product ion . Whlie at U. of M.
and incompl ete ."
•
·
he was also a res ident advisor
That passenger car tire is now being investigated by the and aca demi c and pee r
·
National Highway Tran sportation Safety Administration co unselor.
which has received thousands or consumer complaints about it
A
firm
believe r
1n
and fear it could be responsible for 34 highway deaths and at prev ent ive m edicine . Ga n·
least 60 injuries. The Knight service story said the Akron dolfi eventually wants to get
Beacon Journal obtained documents which showed the Akron· lfi \'Oived in healt h policy and
based company was aware of defects as early as 1975, but did reg ulat ion. •· [ feel that
not recall tires or report the problems to the goverrunent or to ed ucat ing people early is the
an auto firm it was supplying them to.
best method fo r effective
disease cont roI.·' he says·.
1-ii s a mbiti ons in clude

Says report exaggerated

Murder suspect is arrested

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Wayne Reed, 26, wanted for last
weekend 's murder of a Cin ci nnati police officer is being held
by Clevela nd homi cide detectives. The detectives would give
out no information about the arrest or the suspect.' Cincinnati
police set out for Clevela nd Sunday evening to question him .
Tuesday, Cincinnati police issued a na tionwide bulletin for
Reed, suspe cted in the shooting death of Offi cer Char les
Burdsall, 29.

Promoting World Peace ·
ACAPULCO, Mexico (UP!) - The preside~! of the Miss
Universe contest says ton ight 's beauty pageant will do mr&gt;re to
promote world peace than the United Nations.
(Ccinllnued on p~ge I)

SenB:te set to tackle sensitive foreign policy issues
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Two sensitive foreign policy
issues were expe cted to
occupy the Senate's time and
attention this wee k : the
embargo oo arms sales tn

~\

ROY GANDOLF I

Van ce
indica ted
the
administration might have to
accept a conditional version
by Democra ti c Leader
Robert Byrd for an end to the
arms embargo. It would
pel'lllit arms sales to Turkey
unly as loog as it works
toward a sol uti on to the
Cyprus issue.
Byrd, who originally
supported the embargo, told
reporters Saturday he will try
to lift it because it has so
weakened ,Turkey's defenses
that less than half its military
aircraft are operational.
Sens. George McGovern, [).
s.q., and Lloyd Bentsen, [).
Tex ., are co-sponsors.

Vance said imposition of
the ban was correct at the
\.

lime because Turkey used
An1erican-supplied weapons
in its 1974 invasioo of Cyprus'
- weapons designated only
for self-&lt;iefense. But now, he
said, the relations between
the United States and Turkey
and between Turkey and
Greece have deterlorated and
the NAT() postion bas been
damaged, "and and there has
been no progress in the
Cyprus negotiation s."

pract lctng in a rural com ·
111unit y as a famil y prac·
tit ion er or internist.
ln addition to his ·duties

with the five·member health
team . Gand olfi ha s been
spending two days a wee k

working with Dr. Lewis 1'elle.
"Meigs Co unty has given
me the opportunit y to ex·
perl€/tce· What rurai Hfe and
m edicine is like," he says.

" People her e are concerned
abuut health care a nd realize '
tha t more doct ors and · other
hea lth professio nals are
needed ln thi s a r ea ."
Ga ndolfi adds that, "From
ta lking with people who have
come to our cl inics or from
part icipating in local events,
l have found the people in
Meigs Co unty to be warm ,
open , an d interested in
ch a ngin g thin gs for the
better . Living in a town which
is active on important issues

shows me that rural life is
stimulating yet relaxing and
peacefu l.
ln his spa re time, Gandolfi
enjoys jogging and other
sports. An avid outdoorsman,
he has backpack ed in
Europe, the Rocky Mountains
and Michigan.
Gandolfi extends his thanks
CLINIC CANCEtLED
to the people of Meigs County
The "Stop smoking clinic" for hosting the Student Health
to be held this evening, Team which is sponsored by
Tuesday, Wednesda y a nd the Consortium for Hea!U.
Friday has been temporarily Edu catio n in Appalachia
runcelled.
Ohio.

•

I

�~The Dailv Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday July 24, 1978

l - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Jul y 24, 1978

Dollar plunge~ below 'psychological barrier'
TOKYO (UP!) - The dollar today plunged below the "psychological barrier" of 200 yen for the first time since World
War II, reflecting fears that OPEC nations may abandon tlie
dollar ~s the basis f&lt;r oil prices.
New York experts also attributed the drop to an overall
decline in the dollar since last week's economic sununit in
Bonn, West Germany , and the widespread belief that Western
leaders failed to advance solutions to the world's monetary
problems. '
~ite the Bank of Japan's maSsive dollar purchases to
prop up the American currency , the dollar hit i99.4ll only 20
minutes after trading opened today and closed the morniQg
session at 199.4S.

Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda's chief spo!lesman, Shintaro
. Trading was extremely heavy with an estimated $640 million
Abe, attributed the decline of the dollar to the expectaUon that
changing hands.
the Organization of Petroleum ExPQrting Countries wlll drop
The 200-yen level is primarily a psychological harrier "like the difference between $2.00 and $1.99," said one New the doll!u" as the basis f&lt;r oil prices.
Abe said the dollar's fall will he temporary, prompted
York financial source.
"The 200-yen level was sort of benchinark of how bad things - mainly by the recommendation by the OPEC nations .to
would go, " one monetary analyst for · an American replace the dollar with a "basket" of major international
multinational corporation said, "but no one really can say currencies such as the yen and the German mark .
A senior .official at the Bank of Tokyo indicated the U.S.
what it really means."
The dollar's slide to less than 200 yen has meant ·a aa.percent dollar may cmtinue to drop on the Tokyo money market unless
increase in the price of JapaneSe goods sold in the United the Japanese government conducta a sweeping package of
States since 1971, Prices of Japanese cars sold in the United economic measures to slice Japan's trade surplus.
state~ l)ave been raised six times within the past ~ear.

E1"r A,_ """""' ,-,. "1&lt;.rn;;c,!li&gt;M

fiVl.Mt

.

·

Outspoken

Fukuda has r~atedly indic~ted that Japan will Import
5001e f4 bUllon·worlh of aircraft and enrlched uranium from
western Europe and the United states to correct the trade
ed
h
.
imbalance.
But government and banking sources be 11ev sue comnut.
menta by Japan and other int!ustriallzed naUODJ at tbe Bonn
sununit are unlikely w be put into practice """" in light of
inflation and unemployment rates in the parUcipating
countries.
The Finance Ministry announced last week Japan's monthly
account surplus totaled $2.33 bUllon in June, bringing a rec&lt;rd
,
semi-annual high of $8.81 bUllon.

BY GREG. BAR.EY
Meanwhile,MeigswasgeUingitsrunsafewatatime.
The Meigs American Legion baseball season is now over
In the third, Brian H!Ullilton doubled and scored when the
after the team lost two games in the tournament at Athens
shortstop threw wildly to first on a ground ball by Kelly
over the weekend. On Saturday, Wellston barely got by our
Winebrenner. The locals got one more in the fourth. Tim Hood
boys in an extra inning contest, ~. and then on Sunday, singled, but was fOFI!ed by Art Fogelstrom. Two walks set the
Athens held m to win as Meigs [altered down the stretch, 12-10. stage for the Wellston third baseman to throw late to the plate
. In the Wellston game, winning pitcher Tom Montgomery on a Mike Wayland ground ball.
·
wtelded a hefty bat, ~etting three hits, knocking in two runs,
In the fifth, Winebrenm:r doubled. on a hil-and-run play !&lt;&gt;
and scoring the wmrung run in the bottom of tbe tenth inning score· Hamilton who had smgled. Wrnebrenner raced home
On the mound, Montgomery fanned five and walked seven then on a sacrifice fly by Terry Wail.
· •
·
while Meigs' Jobn Sayre and reliever and loser Tim Ebersbach
With the score s.-1 and two outs in the ninth, Wall singled
fanned eight and walked just three.
and stole second. Hood, with two strikes on him, hit a !ofty fly
The big inning was the determining factor for Wellston. In w the rightfielder who didn' t need to move, but who dropped
the second, the winners pushed across three runs on three free the.ball to send the game. into extra innings; Leading hitters for
passeil and three singles, one a lw&lt;&gt;-run smack by Mont- Metgs were Hamilton w1th a double and s1ngle and Hood w1th
~omer.y . Meigs Tim Hood threw out another runner at the
two singles: W~ebrenner and Greg Becker had doubles and
jllate.
Wall had his smgle.
In. the fifth, Montgomery I~ off with a single and scored Me1gs
001 120 001 0--li 7-1
on a triPle by Butcher, wbo then scored on a single by Norman. Wellston
030 020 000 1~ 9 4
In the tenth, Montgomery smashed a triple and scored on a
Sayre, Ebersbach (6, LP) and Wall . Montgomery and
sacrifice fly by Speraw to win the game,
Settles...

peopletalk.
SONG SQUABBLE: Tom Jooes and manager; Gordoo !\IWI. ·
have filed a $100,000 suit to regsin righlsjo a published novel .
and screenplay- "Gospel Singer"- written by Harry Cren. ,
Their suit, filed last week in Los Angeles, charges breach of .
..-a! coo tract by Larry Spangler and Global Productions. The
lawsuit says the defendants rejected the original agreement
and decided to sell the screenplay to someone else. In addition
to damages, Jones and Mllls want that transscUon stopped.

COMMENTARY
'

Donald F. Graff

Meigs team eliminated from ·legion tourney

.

An~y

' What about Andy Young'
PEACE PAGEANT: The rnsn who's been handling the Miss
In the crowd of professionally close-mouthed diplomats,
Universe pageant f,or the past 27 years ssys the everills more
the U. S. ambassador to the United Nations is a headline·
than just a beauty contest- it's a promotion for world peace.
making standout as one whose vocabulary evidently does not
Miss Universe will be crowned tonight in Acapulco, Mexico contain the words 11 no comment."
in full view of a worldwide TV audience estimated a\ 600
With his offhand reference to ''political prisoners" in the
million. Says Harold J, .Glasser, "This rnsy sound pompous,
Unit ed States, has he shot from the lip once too often?
but the pageant does more to promote world peace than the
Tilere is~ growing body of opinion that things - or hopes
United Nations ... People around the world will see that the
- the heated response in this case indicates he has.
contestanta are no different from Ulem. They will Und that,
Item : President Carter, who has defended or kept silent on
although men and women are different, we're all just human
previous displays of Young's penchant for eloquent btli
beings.':
undiplomatic self-expression , this time has been constrained
w a public expression of displeasure .
,
PLAY IT AGAIN TED: The old staffers didn't forget Sell.
Item : The current titleholder as most powerful man in the
Edward M. Kelllledy on the big day. Newsweek magazine says
U. S. Senate, Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, says just one
several former aides showed up in his Washinglon office the
more " irresponsible statement" and Young ·must go. House
other day bearing a cake - in commemoration of what exSpeaker Thomas P. O'Neill takes a milder but still critical
press secretary Rlcbard Drayne called "the loth anniveraary
lone. suggesting the ambassador sl10uld have "curbed his
of the first time you denied you were running fot' president."
4?ngue.' '
Inscribed on · the cske: "If nominated I will not ... Wm. T.
Item : Proving that there's still life in bipartisanship when
Sherman 18&amp;1; Ted Kennedy 1968.
the occasion calls for it, Republican National Chairman
William Brock notes the harm to U. S. [oreign policy and,
TALL STORY: The castlhg call was specific: blmdes only,
incidentally , w "the president and his party."
and nme under 6 feel nj!ed apply. Producers casting
"Listen Andy, if you can't read the musi~. why _don't you just hum "Treasures of the Amazon Women," in Beverly Hills, CaiH.,
For the record, the prisoner remark consisted of one
'
sentence in a lengthy interview with the Paris newspaper Le
'
'
got plenty of candidates. Fashioo model Caela Casart.o, at 6along?
"
Malin. It arose in connection with the CIJI'rent propaganda
foot.J, arrived in a car bearing the license plate "ZTALUU,"
'
tria ls in the Soviet Union , about which Young had mOFe to say :
and a photographer bad to ask 6-foot~ch Cludla Lee CUtler
" I think that the present Soviet dissidents could well be the
to "squish doWn a little so I can get all of you in the picture ."
salvation of the Soviet Union . Th!'y are a natural development
The ooly case of ErustraUon was that of Moot-64nch security
of Soviet society which the leaders haven't yet \lflderstood ."
guard AqeloTaormlno. Said he, "I don'tknow why I'm here.!
A succi nct wrapping up o[ both political and human rights
couldn't do anything against these amazons,"
posi tions of the United States, which by itaelf probably would
ha ve won Young a diplomatic gold star.
'
QUOTE OF 11IE DAY: New York Yankee superstar RegJie
He has already earned a nwnber. The inside word, usually
, Ja~, contrite now over , his five-&lt;hly . suspension [or ·
diploma ti cally off the 'record, is that he has scored at the
disobeying the ot'ders of team Manager Bllly MartiD: "I'm
Uni ted Nations as bot h a force(ul personality and an articulate
sorry for the griell'vecaused the rest of the guys.l'm a pain in
advoca te of U. S. policy . He has been notably effective in
the butt to them. What have I dolie but ca~ trouble? It's
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The administration and Congress result in tenns o[ his goals for stimulaUng the economy and uncomfortable being considered something l'm not. I'm an ·
winn ing a friendli er attitude and influencing more favorable
politica l ahgnments among African and other Third World have been at loggerheads for months over how the tax on providing relief to taxpayers," he said,
·
idol or a mooster - hated or loved . The real me has never
capital gains should he reduced, .but now a compromise may , Rep. William Steiger, R-Wis., author of one of the bills before surfaced."
M~M
.
He has been a voice in the Carter administration against be in the works.
Congress, indicated in an interview with UP! that he also is
President Carter previously denounced several pending considering a compromise as long as there is some reduction
extreme positions on Angola and inclinations to pull a few
GLIMPSF.'!: Country singer Donna Fargo, suffering from an
f rench marrons out of various fires - the Le Malin interview capital gains tax cuts spoosored by Republican legislators as in the capital gains tax.
·
inflamed spinal cord, has been released from a Callfor
inc\pded a pointed critique of France's role in the Shaba crisis helping only "millionaires" and giving "two bits" to the
Steiger's bill would make 75 percent of capital gaina free hospital after a 3J,O-week stay .,, Dovld RarlmaD, star of
average cttizen.
from taxes, while other versions of the measure would 'IV's "Good Morning, America," has volunteered to serw•
and 1ts general neo-colonialist policy in Africa.
But Treasury Secretary Michael Blumenthal now says the increase the Clirrent 50 percent exemption to 6S percent.
Whe n it comes to giving practical effect to open diplomacy
chairman of the 1979 American Heart Association's natiillll
administration
could go along with a cut if it helps average
The capital gains tax is based on profits from major sales. campaign ... Daanylbomas, Kate Jarklon and Marlo Tb....
and honesty in government, Andrew YO\Ing has few peers. He
could never be [aulted for not speaking his mind. But speaking taxpayers rather than millionaires.
Currently, !lalf the profits are exempted from capital gains were co-ltosts Sunday night for ·the second annual telethon II ·
The House Ways and Means Committee this week is sche- taxes and the other half is taxed at an indivdual's current tax Los Angeles to raise mooey flir St. Jude's Children's Hoopilll
out does not preclude a careful choice of words to be spo!&lt;en, a
truism the ambassador tends to overlook on unfortunate 'duied to consider two tax cut bills. One calls for a $i5.2 billion rate.
in Memphis, Tenn .... JOUDe Woodward, Sblrley
anti
tax cut; with reduced capital gains.
occasion.
Dovid Selby open. Wednesday at the Berkshire
The second bill, the administration's $17.5 billion tax cut
Young likely will ride out. this storm. Even Sena!Dr Byrd
FesUval in Stockbridge, Mass., in Ullian Hellman's .
plan , calls fOF a capital gains tax cutthat would not add further
says he ha s one more chance .
Children's Hour" ....
"•
, , _ .
I'··· 'l"' .•,, ~"
'
But should his outspokenness continue, his .real problem tax breaks for stock mark.et and other speculators and those
·
may be not his critics but his supporters. Tass has spoken up the administration has called "hi!lh rpllers."
"The president willlook.at the overallbill (that is passed) to
for him in this instance, and also a prominent African see if it meets his goal of helping the average person fight
Uga nda's ldi Amin .
WASHINGTON (UP!)
1be World Balik II
Jj ttle attention is ever paid til what the Soviet agency says. inflation and compensate for some of the other tax increases"
prepariog
to
lead
VIetnam
up
to
$10 m.Wtoo for rice
in
Carter
's
proposed
tax
plan,
Blumenthal
said
on
NBC's
But considering the pubhc relations standing o[ the Ugandan
its
lint
loan
to
!hilt
country
slace tbe faD of
development,
"Meet
the
Press"
Sunday.
ty rant, that 's the sort of endorsement that could really hurt.
the Saigoo goverumenl, baDk sources say.
" If the Congress wishes w substitute some capital gains
. A bonk oft lela! at the exeeatlve level said the baok bas
cuts, the president would look at that and evaluate the final
agreed Ia principle oo the lo1111, ud its 101111 committee
would advance the appllcatloo Ia proceediugs this week.
Bank spokesman Jobn Merriam cooflrmed the Io1111
was belag cmsidered, but be denied It would be voted on
any time soon.
,
"That loan has been put 'on hOld.' It won't be voted on
this week or next month," Merriam said. "There II
nothing imminent.''
France, Japan and other ladustrlal COWitrles in tbe
sin aller companies will use it hundred includes many and Merrilr Lynch, the
World Bank have strongly favored the agrlcnltnraJ-Ioan
By I.e ROY POPE
to some extent.
banks, universities and country 's biggest securities
UPI Business Writer
while the United States strongly objects, ballk sources
. c;uriously, though, Wilke colleges boUl in the United and investment house , have
said,
.
NE W YORK ( UPI 1
Befor e too lon g it will be doesn't think this will cut States and abroad , scores of facilities with similar
i However, a baDk executive director said the loaD
possible for big companies w down greatly on busine$'1 the world's biggest industrial capability.
would be approved over U. S. protests.
You've heard of bonds to
and financial concerns, plus
Much of Wilke 's work,
co nduct
busin ess
at travel.
build a school, well here are
Theo retically. business many architects and other however, is not so much
reasona ble cost by means of
concerned with long-&lt;listance
global
closed
circuit would ha ve a big incentive to professional firms .
some bonds to go to school,
Wilke's flrlll .tailors audio- communications as with ex•
te levi s io n, says Hu be rt use closed circuit TV as a
replacement for large-scale visual conference rooms [or tremely flexible multioflledia
U.S. Savings Bonds . .
Wi lk e,
a udio-v i s u Ed
travel
by executives and its clients.
.
Eacilities for boardrooms and
consultant.·
After all, Bonds are the
He was brought·in to design the large conference halls of
" There ar e no rea l tec hni cal people. Even if
safe, dependable way to save
technolog ical barriers now tr ansmission lsn't any the A-V complex on the 27th big companies.
Such fa cilities make it
but t he cos t still is cheaper than actual travel floor of the 109-story Sears
for just about anything. And
prohibit ive, " Wilke sai'd . co•1 , there would be an tower in Chicago by Saphier,, PQssible for a company to
Schindler utilize
tel evision
an~
.;However. either by means enormous saving in the Ume L~rner,
when you sign up for the
Inc., ~eatrical films, music,
of fi ber optics. laser beams. of the people involved, which Environetics,
Payroll Savings Plan, they're
mstantane ous language
satellite communications or often amounts to more in architectural engineers.
The Sears installation is translation, rapid data
somethi ng still in th e money than travel costs. But
a perfect way to save for
laborato ry stage now , the Wilke pointed out that fully capable of being utilized transmission from computers
college. Automatically . .
travel keeps for a world-wide conference and programming consultacost is bound to come down to bus in ess
~rowing by leaps and bounds 1\ow . Exxon Corp ., the
tion while meetings are in
a feasible level. "
buy U.S. Savings Bonds.
Big companies like Exx on even as satellite communica- world 's largest oil .company, progress.
When it comes to college,
and Seah, Roe buck will tions and closed circuit 1V
~-:;:m:::-r.:;~
standards
improve.
make use of global closed
they're the smart way to save.
"I just don't see the TV
circuit TV to do a lot of
business, he be li eves. Many conference making any huge
E Bonds pa y 6% lnt pn•st when hf•ld to maturity
pent in travel ," he said. "The
of 5 Year!$ (4 1h% th•· first year) . lnh•n•sl is not
numan f.actilr is too great .
~ •subjt•ct to sta.t'i*'lrr .l oc al in cumu lax c.' s. and fedt.&gt;ral
Business people like wtravel ~--r-­
tax may be dt•ft· r~t·d until rt•d,·mpt.iun.
ntt. IM II.'t' SJ..'\'T I :'I.I':L
ev en though it takes up an
nf:\ I !TEll T(l T tn:
I~ T F. H K~ T IIF
awful lot of their lives. There
ME: IGS· MASI J'\ Altl.,,\
can be no ultimate substitute
KO Rt: RT IUiEF LI Cfl
('i(\ fr: dt tur
for sitting down at table or
i'UIJII~III'tl d,1il1 ·· ~· 1' \1 1 S.-Jiurti.-J I
playing golf or tennis with
hi
l ilt• l )) ll oJ \. itllt•\ ]'lll lll,lllil~
yow- customers or associates,
(:!11Hpt11!) · \l ultnrWih,l h 11
Ill
1.. 1111'1 St
l 'ulfWI &lt;&gt; I
( lll h• 1 ;,~ tilf
or
even
with
your
B,, ,u,· ·~:-.. 1m, ... l'h•ttlt· ~f.!· 'I.J Jt&gt;
competitors."
l-:d11"r J,o) l'h,.n•· IG'!-.'1 "
-.,., urrtl d'&lt;~~' P"'t• •J.!•• p;nd ,,r
Even if it isn't going w let
l'uttt,•t ••• •111111
him
stay at horne (or induce
"idli"1idl
oi&lt; !~t'l'll~llll'
l l' jli"t'M' I I
liJ II\t
, l. r11tlr.n r\ ~~o•t&lt;rl l'~ . .111•1
him to ) the value of adequate
I,
&lt;:::::M-~ • ObAA.
l&lt;rn II• I ,, '. t' . l 'lnelitt rt l ' rl mo 14 11J
b u il t- i n
a ud io-visual
«!' 1971byNEA.InC. ~r.....,.-1'~
'Hlb.,lT tplit lll loth
]f• il\t•!'l·tllol
corporate corrimunications
t 'it~' (tt' l \ \, 1\.J.(!,. ~I·~ Ilor 1111- , .r I 't' ll l.~ ~~ 'I
1\\ •d\ IH \ ·l ul1lt H o•llit'l\lult'lfll 't'l&lt;' r
faci iitios&gt; to the head of a
~0.: 1 11 ~'1' "rt••1 •'''&lt;~tf,,l.J,., l ll)r· 1111'11111
sizable corporation already is
~1 .!5 Jiy m;rr l.rrr &lt;ilu t&lt; r111d ~\ Va
"'The majority of the people .feel I may lack
()111• Yt•a r· $1:! 1111
S r~
111"11111~
so great that Wilke 's firm has
!I I :ill . Thrct' JUIIII\ 11-". f; i nil .
the
competence to · do the job. That's the
provided theln · to an
EL~ t · wh• ·r~ f i litltl lt'itl' Srx rn o ntl r~
$1.1 ft !l . lfHl' l' lllh lt\1):'•. $7 j U
impr essive
list
of
GOOD news?"
Suil:;l'rtplhill Jrrtt'l' rrt l l u dt ·~ S urrtl1.1~
customers.
FADE.
AWAY=
'I Utot ''""'' ti( IIW]
His client list of sever~1i L~:::____...!,;!!!,!~~:!!!.!.!~!....~::__ __27_::-•:."!J L--------------~-___,.---J

Mason
ups ·
record

By Greg Bailey
In Pony League action
Friday, Mason raised its
record to 12-1 with a 10-2 win
over the host Pom e roy
Royals . Barry VanMeter was
the winner with a ni[ty fivehitter, fannine eight and
walking no one . Estel
Lavender pitched one inning.
Barry also led the hitting
with a triqle, and double
while Shawn Fields had a
trlple and single. Bodie Davis
and Kenny Bond ea ch had a
single.
Steve·Ohlinger took the loss
- although he · tossed a good
game. He fanned five and
walked none. and relievers
Rick Smith and Tony Gilkey
Eanned one and walked [our.
Ohlinger. had a double while
Jack Howett, Smith, Mike
Kennedy and Brett Carl each
had a double .

/

Compromise may · be iri works
on capital ·gains·tax ·cut

M
p

.,, · ·Rice development loan

Business Today

Audio-visual electronics changing
communications of big corporations

Berry's World

· So

I.

110 240 2-10 6

0000020- 25
Middlep ort held on to
second place in the league by
downing visiting Eastern 15-3
to raise their record to 11·2.
Jeff Wayland got the win in
relief of Dave Demoskey, and
Britt Dodson finished up .
They fanned ten and walked
just one. Mik e Miller, Terrv
Wayland, Bobbx Duckworth,
and Demoskey each stroked
homers while Miller and T .
Wayland also got a single .
Steve Carson and Bill Powell
socked doubles while Britt
Dodson had two singles .
For Eastern, Greg Wigal
took the loss, with relief from
Mike Whitlatch. They Eanned
two and walked five . Wigal ,
Rob Smith, Rogie Gaul, and
Charl es Ritchie each had a
single to account for the
Eastern hitting.

•

•

••

..

fin~s

Tuesday

Powell's Giants, Athens Medics in
championship game of LL tourney

...

By Greg Bailey
and the
Athens Medics will tangle
- Tuesday night to see who will
be this year's champs in the
Syracuse Tournament for
Little Leaguers. Both teams
won Saturday night to earn
the berth in the finals , while
losers Hubbard's Greenhouse
and the Pomeroy Yankees
will tangle in the preliminary
consolation contest. First
game will begin at 7 p.m.
On Saturday, the Medics
pounded out 13 hits enroiile to
a 8-:; win over manager Bob
Willis' previously unbeaten
, Hubbard ' s Greenhouse .
Kevin Hysell went the
distance for the win while
Dennis Teaford was tagged
with the loss.
Leading hitter for the
winners was Jeff Jones with
three singles while Chris
Leonard had two doubles .
Hysell had a triple and single
while Carl Matheny had two
singles. Ray Finnearty
socked a double and Bill
finnearty . and
Trevis
Thompson each had a single.
Powell's ~ Giants

..
''
CU-NNINGHAM

SCORES - Eric Cunningham
crosses the plate with a run for the winners here in the
Hubbard's Greenhouse 23-l victory over Letart in the
Syracuse Tourney for Little Leaguers Friday riight.
Hubbard's Greenhouse, of Syracuse, advanced w the
semi-finals, played Saturday night, with the victory. The
team was unbeaten this season going into Sall!rday's
game . In the background, as Letart catchet Alan Tucker
awaits the ball , are Syracuse pitcher, Tony Rime who had
advanced to third, Hubbard's Greenhouse manager Bob
Willis and umpire Jim Soulsby.
, ·

Pete Rose can
tie mark tonight

MONTREAL fUPI )- Pet e
Rose ran his record ·
threatening hitting streak to
MONTICELLO,
N. Y. 36 games Sunday with a sixth·
( UPI) - M.L. Carr and Chris inning single against the
Ford of the Detroit Pistons Montreal Expos.
have accepted invitations to
Eight innings later, he won
play in the 20th annual the ball game.
Maurice Stokes Beneht
Rose hit . a 14th - inning
Basktball game, Aug. 15.
sacrifice fly to drive 1n Rick
Carr averaged 12.4 points Auerbach with the winning
an.d Ford .10.5 during the 1977- . run as the Cincinnati Reds
78 National Basketball defeated the EXPQS 5-4 .
Asaociation season .
" I'm just as happy about

On Sunday, Athens got a comfortable lead , 12-3 at one Winebrenner hit back-to-hack doubles [or one run in the
time, but saw it dwindle before holding on for that 12-10 win. seventh. In the eighth , 4 Meigs runs got them back into the
Bush got the win with relief help from Pierson, and they fanned game. Wall wa lked and Cliff Kennedy, Fogelstrom, and Sayre ·
f1v e and walked h~e. ·.
.
.
.
. _ walked . Chuck Kennedy's ground out scored one run , and
. Athens fell behrnd rn the f1rst when Ham1lton hit the first Wayland 's double got another two in. With runners on first and
p1tch of )he hall game for a smgie. After .stealing second, he third later, a key double play on a shot down the first base line
raced home on a smgle by Wall for a J~Me1gs lead.
off the hat of Wine brenner got Athens' out of a jam. Two runs in
B~t in the second, the winners scored on two singles and a the ninth was just not enough as the Meigs season closed.
wild Pitch to knot the score . Meigs got another one-run lead 10
Wall tilok the loss, but he led the hit ters with three singles
the Wp of the fourth when Wall singled stole second and and a double. Hamilton had t wo singles and a double and
scored on a John Sayre single.
'
'
Wayland had two hits. Winebrenner ; Cliff Kennedy and FogelThen came a disastrous bottom of the fourth when Athens · strom .had doubles and Sayre and Tim Ebersbach had a single
scored five Urnes on just three hits . A walk an error and a hit each.
batsman,.ali sandwiChed around two singl~s and a double by
Lancaster , Logan , Athens , a nd Glouster are still in the
Halter, did the damage .
double-elimination tournament to be concluded next week. On
Afte~ Meigs got a run back in the sixth, Athens this time! Sunday , I.Jigan beat Athens w, and Glouster knocked Wellston
got SIX b1g runs on JUst two hits. After. two walks, the Meigs out B-7. Earlier in the day , highly-touted Lancaster just got by
defense seemed to fait apart, ~omm1ttmg three errors, ·while Weil•ton !~when the only run of the game was walked in.
two Athens singles were rightly-timed . That made a Meigs
100 101 142--10 14 4
comfortable 12-3 lead .
Athens
010 506 OOx- 12 8 3
But the gutsy Meigs crew wasn't finished . Hamilton and
Wall (LP ). Ebersbach (6 ) , Fogelstrom ( 6 ) and Becke r,
·wall (6). Bush (WP ). Pierson ( 8) and Brooker .

base and when Rose flied out
to Ellis Valentme in right
field , Auerbach scored the
winning run and gave Cincinnati reliever Manny
Sarmiento a record of !Hi.
The Expos had tied the
score 4-4 in tbe eighth when
Sam Mejias hit a scratch
infield single.
Roso: had singled in the
sixth inning o[f Steve Rogers
to extend his string to 36 and
Dan Driessen hit a three·run
homer for the Reds in the
sixth innin g.
"It 's a tough game for us to
lose ,"
said
Montreal
Manager Dick William s,
whose team lost the threegame series at home to
Cincinnati. "Our reliel.lers
did real well, but it 's hard to
win when you leave 28 men on
base. We lost on Saturday
when we left 11 on ·and today
we stranded 17."
In San Francisco, Jack
Clark extended his hiillng
streak to a team-record 25
games with a single that
helped the Giants defeat the
Pittsburgh Pirates, 3-1.
"It felt real good," he said.
"I looked in the dugout and
all my teammates were
cheering. That was very

nice."
"I like to get a hit the first
time and then I can relax a
litlle bit fOF the rest of the
game. Against (John) Cande·
iaria you have w get him
early· because he gets
wugher. It drove in arun and
helped keep us in first place.''

Tony Riffle gave Hubbard's
a 2-1 lead in the first with a
two-run homer over the fence
and contribut ed a sin gle
later, but it wasn't enough as
his team had just four hits.
Dennis Teaford had a double
and Greg Nea se got a single
as Syracuse (Hubbard 's ) was
held in check by Hysell.
Hubbard's Greenhouse had a
22-0 record going into the
·
contest.
, ln a wild extra inning affair, Powell ' s Giants scored
three times in the top of the
seventh for an 11-8 win over
the Yankees. The Yankees

out·slugged the Giants 13 hits
to six, but winning pitcher
Bryan Korn gave up just two
walk s whil e lo se r Rhet t
Milllone issued tw elv e free
pa sses as the Giant s took
advantage of them .
Sean Doidge led the Giants
With two singles while fulnd y
Stewan had a double. Korn ,

Richa rd Dav is, and Dave
Landa ker each had a single .
Milhone had 13 strikeouts
and cont ributed two singles
and a double to the attack,
but it wasn't enough. ·scott
Harrison

hitter with two t riples and 2
singles while John Aeiker and
Brill King had two hits e•ch.

FOR-YOUNG
DRIVERS
.

Young me rr qnd women
of1 €n ask. w hy t hey ha ve to
pa y
mo r e
fo r
t he i r
automobile insu r ance .
Dr ive r s in the i r teens and
earl ie r t wenties ca u se far
more t han th eir sha re of
t raffi ~ acci dents . Re ports
the
Nat iona l
Saf ety
Council : 21 .8 percent of all
motorists are 2-4 years o f
age or under , ye t the se
yout hf ul ope ra tors ar e
i n vo l ved as dr ive r s i n 38.6

..

f

WILMINGTON,
Ohio
( UPI ) - Three Cincinnati
Bengals - fullbacks Bobbie
Clark and Pete Johnson and
defensive end Gary Burley reported to t amp heavier ·
than their assigned weights
last week . .They were fined
$25 for each excess pound by
Coach Bill Johnson.
Although the coach didri't
disclose e•act amounts o[ the
fines, it was reported Burley
and Johnson lost $225 and
$250, respectively. Clark
didn't want til discuss the
matoor, saying, "l got a slight
fine ." But a team observer
estimated . Clark was 20
pounds overweight, which
would transla\e into a $500
fine.

blanked New York , 3-0,
Philadelphia
hamme red
Houston, 13-2. Chicago nipped
San Diego, 4-3, and St. Louis
blanked Los Angeles, 2~ .
Braves 3, Mets 0:
Rookie Larry McWilliams
and Gene Garber combined
to shut out the Mets and Cito
Gaston keyed three rallies
with a single, a sacrifice and
a sacrifice fly to sna p New
York's winning streak at Eive

Prevention is
the best policy : ..

was the leading

I

. In other games, Atlanta

Mike Thoma s. J on Perrin ,
and Phil King each had one
single.

pe r cent of al l acci dents
a n d 37 .3 per cent of al l l ata I
misha ps.
A great m a ny you ng
peop l e
a re
sk i ll ed,
r es p onsi b le
dr iv e rs .
Ob viously , th ough. q uite a
few a re not .
Ther e's no substi t ute f or
d evelopment c om petence
and th'e ri ght at titudes,
i nclu d ing
.a
p ositive
app r oach to d e f ensive
dr ivi ng .
·our agency provides
fi nancia l protection an d
ser vice rn case of acc iden t s
in11olvi ng you ng driver s ...
bu t
man y
at
these

acci dents

c an

be

preven ted . Th at' s why we
say ~ preven tion is th e
be st pol ic y .

On' IC!AL SCORER - Candy Brothers is shown here
in her role as official scorer for the Syracuse tournament
for little leaguers. In the background is announcer Rollie
Stewart.

hits. Chicago sc ored a pair of
runs in the sixth, one of them
unearned, to break a 2-2 tie .
Cardinals 2, Dodgers 0:
Pete Vuckovich hurled a
three-hitter to outduel Don
Sutton and George Hendrick
singled in the winning· run .
Vuckovich , 8-7, carried a no.
games.
hitter into the seventh .
Phillles 13, Astros 2:
Garry Maddox and Richie,.----Hebner belted three-run Mike Swi~er .
homers,
Jerry
Martin
99'J.. f !53
delivered a solo blast and
Greg Luzinski and Ted 149 S. I htrd St.
Siz.emore corttributed two Middleport, 0 .
doubles each to back Steve
Carlt on's 200th ca reer
victory .
. "Stt me for car, holM, .
Cubs 1, Padres 3:
lrfe, health aad busiaess
Dennis Lamp, 3-10, winless,..--'""'
insitruce!'
since he pitched a one-hit ' " " ""
shutout June 9, broke a
~~ .,..,,...,.."
personal five-game losing
"''·~· t ~&gt;CH .......~.,. ~~~strea'k when he scattered nine

DALE C. WARNER .
992 ·2 143

102

w. Main

Pom erov

Cust~m

fuU
In ooe or too dags

Our ~ • aff of d rn1r''' ,rnd

· ll'd1n1oan\ w 1JI ma ~~· \'llll r
L'l.J.~Inm d('tl!urc-, q r t iL' ~ h · .md

l'I.:O II Otn iL'all y

llillt••••-'

A

...... .....

Dr. Ronald ERivlere

......
_,...

• Dr. A.J. Sta ehl i • Dr . C. W. Bcal • Dr. G.J. Sromhaugh
• Dr. W D. l\11nbaii • Dr J.C, \h}rrhy •Dr. .1 . ().:hman

Th e __ Riv•ere Ce nt('r

949 E. ~ i \· i n gs1 o n A ve . Colurnbm

. ..-----·-·

------

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN ·
8 AM and 5 PM

�~The Da\ly Sentinel, MiddlellOfi-Pomeroy, 0 .• Monday, July 24,1978

=~~~~~'!_epon·t'omeroy, u. , ~onuay, Jwy ~4 , Hl"ta

.

Despite heat, 'Be.ar' sets mark
PIDLADELPH.IA (UPI ) ltven the incomparable Jack
liic~ can use a surprise
liVery now and then 1o win .

With Gil Morgan breathing · hill to the 16th green Sunday
down his ne ck in the faced with a downhill 56-foot
three so me behind him , putt, which he had to get
Nicklaus climbed the steep down in two to stay a shot
ahead of Morgan in the
• Philadelphia Golf Classic .•
Nicklaus
ended
the
suspense early, canning his·
first pull for a birdie that
turned out to be the winnlng
margin and won him the
$250,000 designated e~~ent , his
hilly Open layout provided second touroa,ment win in .as
the proper mental stimulus. many weeks.
"That ended up being the
"It keeps you oo your toes
difference,"
a sweat-soaked
and a UtUe pressure. maybe
Nicklaus
said
, following the
. that's what 1 nee&lt;!," Stacy
final
round
3-under-par
68 in
said.
n
e
ar
100
d
e
gree
She got it Sunday from twotime winner JoAnne Carner. temperatures that gave him a
who carried her to the last 72-hole score of 210, a record
hole of the storm-delayed for the tournament,· and the
final round before the curly- $50,oo0 first prize. .
"I think the keys were the
haired Stacy, emerged as the
winner by one shot . She birdies 1 had at 11 and 12 but
became the tourna ment's that putt at 16 turned out to be
decis ive
st roke .
back: to-back the
fourth
Something
went
in
that I
champion .
didn
't
expect
to
go
in. It
Stormy weather twi ce
wasn't
a
putt
I
was
trying
to
delayed the final round for a
make.
1
was
just
trying
to
get
total of more than two hours
and Stacy and Carner, the it close . ''
Even with the putt ,
final twosome, swapped · the
lead five times before Stacy Nickla us, winner of "la st
week's British Open , wasn't
prevailed.
Stacy, who won $15,000 sipping victory champagne
from the $100,000 purse, l&lt;lok yet. He bogeyed the long parthe fin al lead on No. 16 with a 4 17th hole of the Whitemarsh
par when Carner missed a Va lley Country Club course l&lt;l
five-foul putt. They halved cut his margin over Morgan
the next two holes with pars
but both had the shakes
River Dow11s
starting off the 18th hole.
Hollis missed her tee shot and
CINC INN ATI (UP I )
Carner put hers be hind a row Penaltv Declined wok the
of trees. Both made fine lead inio the tum and won the
approach sh ots and sank fe atured $6,000 all owa nce
pressure putts for one-()ver race at River Downs Sunday
par 12s.
by three lengths over
·Hollis, who went inl&lt;l lhe Sa lvage.
final round with a one shot
With J oh n Oldl1a m up,
lead over Carner, finished at Pe nally Declined covered the
five-over par 289. South mile on the turf in-1:39 and
Africa 's Sally Little; now of retu rned S2.80 , $2.40 and
Dallas , tied Carn er for $2.20. Sweet Sand came in
secqnd place at 290 by closing third.
out with a record 65 - the
A 3-2 daily doubl e of
lowe~1 rqund ever posted in
Mand1ble and River Ribot
the Open - after starting the was -worth $58.
last day eight shots behind
The 6,751 fa ns bet
Stacy.
$170 ,341.

Stacy wins second

straight U. S. Open
INDlANAPOUS tUPI ) -

lldlia Stacy got her wish - a

ltUe preS!Iure - aod it was
Just enough foc a second
araight U.S. Wornen's~en
..If championship.
Before
the
72-hole
lournament opened over the
Country Club of Indianapolis
tourse Thursday, the 24-yearold
Georgia
woman
eomplained her game had not
been up' to par.
She had won only one
LPGA tour tournament, at
Birmingham, Ala ., and was
lOth oo the money list. but the

MiljOr League Lecid£&gt;rs
By United Press International
BATTING . .
. (Rued on U.S a·t bilts}
Nat iona l League
w.
G AB . H. Pet.
8urr ogl1 s Afl
90 294 95 . 323
Clar k SF
96365 117 .31 1
Mad lock SF
71 267 BS 318
Wh ilfield SF
94 311 · 98 .315
&amp;wa Ph il
90 378 117 .310
f:tar ker Pi t
80 316 97 .307
Va lnt ine M tl"
95 366 11 2 .306
Maddox Ph il
88 327 100 .306
Rose Cin
96 406 114 .305
S1mmons St .L
97 334 10 1 .307
78 28 5 86 .302
Smi th LA
Am erican League
GAB. H pet.
Carew M i n
81326 111 :340
Rice Bos
94 ]J3 127 .323
L ezc ano M il
79 258 83 .322
lynn 6os
86 312 100 .321
Brett K C
79 322 101 ,3 14
S i.J ndberc;;~ Tex
89 31I 96 .309
Ol iver Tex
69 276 85 .308
Bell Cle
87 ] 44 105 .305
Piniel la NY
68 144 14 .303
Yaz , Bos
90 328 99 .302
Home Runs
Nation1t Lugue : Fost er , Cin
and Luzi nski, Ph il 23: Sm ith ,
LA 19; Valenti ne, Mf l and
Clark , SF 17.
Amerlun League : Rice, Bos
24 ; Hisle. M il 23 : Ba yror , Cal
22: Thornton , Clf'v , Thom pson ,
Oet and Th om.'l s. M il 20.
Runs BaHed In
Nationai Lugue : Fost er , Cin
7J , Clark , SF 76 ; Winf ield , SO
65; Montanez , NY 64 ; Gar vey ,
LA 63 .
• ~merican League : Rice , Bos
10; Staub , Dei 79 ; Hisle , M il 77 .
thompson , Del 68; Thorn tpn .
( le v 61.
Stolen Bases
National League : M or eno.
P ill
42:
Lopes,
LA
an d
KENT,. Ohio (UPI ) - For
Richard s, SO 18 : Ta ver as , P itf
76; Cabe ll and Cedeno , Ho u and the Cleveland Browns, it 's
Smi th , so 23.
American Lugue : LeFlore , back l&lt;l another week of
Oet 38 ; W ilson , K C 31 : Ditone, grinding practices benea th
Oak 30 ; Cr uz, Sea 29; Wil ls.
the hot midsummer sun.
Te x 28.
Pitching
The Browns rookies are
Victories
coming
of( a disappointing 18National League : Blue , SF 13·
6 loss l&lt;l the Buffalo Bills'
4 : .Grims ley , M il 12-7; Kn epper ,
SF'" 11.6 ; John , L A and Roger s, rookie s in a controlled
Mtlll -7; Niekro . Al l 11-10.
Ameriun League : . Guiar y . scrimmage Saturday at
NY 14 -L Ta'mlna , Cal 13 -5; Edinboro, Pa ., State College .
F l anaoan , Salt l"J -7; Torre z.
" ~e didn't
but we
Bos and ·Caldwel l , M il 12 5:
Sorensen , Mil 1'2·9: Pa lm er , a~~eved our prllnary gAa! ,"
Ba ll 12.8.
satd undaunted Browns
Earned Run Aver•ge
·
Coach Sam Rutigliano.
(Band on 90 Innings pitched)
N1tiona1 League : v ucko vic h .
Johnny Evans, " punter
St .L 2. 19 : Roger s, Mt l 2.26 :
who
also will serve as the
Swan , NY 2.48 ; Reusch el , Chi
2.65 ; Knepper , SF 2.67 .
Browns' fourth quarterback,
Ameriun League : . Guid r y ,
N Y '2 . 11 ; Matlack , Tex 2.25 ; wtde r ece ive r and kick
Cald well . M il 1.40 ; Pal mer . returner Keith Wright and
Balf 2.59; Keough ~ Oak 2.62 .
linebacker Clay Matthews all
Strikeouts
National League : Ric hard , 1mpressed the Cleveland
140; coaches in the scrimmage,
Hou 185 ; Niekro , Afl
Seaver , Cin 130 ; Montefusco .
which wlll be repea led at
SF 116 ; B ly le\len , Pitt 107 .
American League : Ry an , Ca l Kent State Uruvers1ty th is
153: Guidry , NY 145; Fla_nagan , Sunday.
Ba ll 110 ; Leonard , KC 103,
Eva ns completed seven of
Underwood , Tor 87 .

Red Sox lead cut to 5 games

to ooe shot and then drove
By MARK FRIEDMAN
into the left bunker on the
UPI Sportl Writer
18th hole.
The Red 'Sox, who all
But he hit his second shot sea
long have threatened
on the green, two&gt;-putted and (&lt;)
away from the rest of
then watched Mocgan com~-&lt;C"":e American League EaSt,
up short on
3()-foot bir ·
have a · new problem putt from the · e.
injuries.
Nicklaus said he ill skip
Butch Hobson's elbow may
the Greater Hartfocd Open not hold up through Ocl&lt;lber
next weekend to prepare for and will need surgery at the
the PGA championship at end of the year . Rick BurOakmont Country Club near leson 's ankle has him on the
Pittsburgh.
IS-day disabled list. George
Morgan ,
who,
like
Nicklaus, tied the course
record of 64 during the
l&lt;lumament, finished with a
67 and a final total of 271. A
pair of former U.S. Open
champions, Jerry Pate and
Hale Irwin , were tied for
third at 11-under-par 213s.
• ·
·
Hubert Green, who had
CHICAGO (UP! ) - Billy
held the 72-hole record score
Martin
appears 1o be writing
-of 271. had a hole4n-&lt;Xle on
the
final
script to his volatile
the 175-yard, par-3 12th hole
two-year
relationship with
to finish alone in fifth at 274.
Bruce Lietzke began the the New York Yankees.
And the ·goodbye · scene
final rouncj one shot ahead of
Nicklaus but saw his game promises to be full of passion
come apart after he hit his and drama.
Waiting lin til the end of
drive out of bounds on the
Sunday's
victory over the
seventh hole a nd finished
Chicago
White
Sox - New
with a 74 to join three others
Yock's
fifth
win
in a row at 275.
Yankee
manager
the
The scorching ·heat and
unleashed
a
full
-fledged
humidity resulted in the· Red
on
outfielder
Reggie
assault
Cross treating some 300
Jackson
and
then
fired
a lew
people for heat prostration
salvos
at
Ya.nkee
principal
during the l&lt;lurnament.
owner George Steinbrenner.
With the team waiting in
Thistledown
Chicago 's O'Hare Airport two
NORTH RANDAlL, Ohio hours after defeating Chicago
(UPil
Favored 3-1. Martin addressed
Jackson - who had just come
Commissi o ner Gabe, with
Perry Ouzts in the irons, ran off a five-game suspension
away from the field in the for: insubor~ination
$26,225 ~ick Step Stakes at through reporters.
"We're winning without
TI1istledown Sunday, runnlng
the siJt'furlongs in 1: 12 4-5 and you," Martin said. "We don't
need you making all these
paying $3:80 to win .
Commissioner Gabe,
turning in his lOth Stakes win
in less than three years of Road paid $448.20. There .
action , earned first money of were 119 winning ticketi.
$15 ,735 for his efforts .
A ~11 daily double of Stop
Ridawin was second and Talking and Overtime paid
Olympic Circ~it was third . $43.40.
A 3-2·1 Trifecta of Busy
A crowd of 1,178 wagered
Brick, Kii 's King and Pioneer $895,743.

&lt;!in,

· DO-IT-YOURSELF
HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
For all your do-it-yourself
Home Improvement Supplies
see Cross Hardware
• Housewares
•. Wallpaper
• Paints
• Electrical Supplies
• Plumbino Supplies

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon. lhru Sal.
9: 00 to 5: 00
Middleport

71 N: 2nd Ave .

shoulder . He is expected to
return to practice in a few
days .
Rutigliano's only complaint
about the performance of his
first ~y e a r men c oncerned
ei gh t
penalties
they

ccmmitted, costing t)lem at
least one touchdown. "Most
of the penalties were
unnecessary , but I attribute
this to youth and nervousness ."

992-38

Major League Standing5
By United Press lnter nationaf
Nat ional League
East
W. L Pet. GB
Ph i l a
53 J 'jl .576
Chic ag o
49 45 .521 5
Pitt sbr'gh
47 46 .505 61~
Mont r ea l
47 52 .475 911
New York
. 43 57 ,-430 14
51 Louis
39 bO .394 17 1 2

American League
East
W. L Pel.
Boston
62 ]1 .660
M ilwauke
57 37 606
New York
52 42 .553
Bal1 imre
53 43 .552
Detr oit
49 47 .510
45 49 479
Cleveln d
Tor onla
35 61 .365
weu

W. L . Pet . GB
59 39 .602
San Fr an
Cinci nali
57 40 .588 1' 1
LOS Ang
56 42 .57 1 3
San D iego
47 52 .475 1211
Atlant a
43 53 .448 I S
Hou st on
41 56 .423 1717
Saturday ' s Resulfs
Cinc inll at i 1, Montr eal 1
San F ran J. Ptt sbg h 2. 10
inns .
Ph iladelph i-a J , Houston 7
New Yor k 2, All ant a 0
San Diego 4, Ch ic ago 2
Lo s Angeles 4,· St. Lou is 3
Ph iladelph ia 13, Houston 2
Atlanta 3. New Yo rk 0
Ci nci 5, Mon rreal 4, 14 inns.
San Fran cisco 3, P itt sb ur gh 1
Chicago 4, San Dieg o 3
St . Lou is 2, Los Angeles 0
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
(All Times· EDT )
Ci nci nn &lt;) ti (Moskau 1 2) at
New York ( Zachry 10.6), 8:05
P.m .
At lan t a (Solom on 2 4) at
Pn il adelphia (Lonborg 7 7l. 7: 35
P m.
Mon tr ea l
(Du es
4·4)
at
Houston ! Lemongello 7.9), 8: 35
p m.
Ch icago ( Kr ukow 4·01 at Los
Angeles (Rau 10-5 \, 10 :30 p .m .
Tuesday ' s Game$
Ci nci at New Yor k. n ight
At lant a at Ph ila , niQht
M on tr eal at Houston , night
Chic ago at Los Ang , night
Pit l sbgh at Sa n Diego , night
St . Louis at San Fr an, nigh t

Kan Ci ty
53 41 .564
C.al if
52 46 .531 J
Oakland
50 48 .510 5
Tex as
46 49 .484 7' 7
40 52 .435 12
.M inesofa
ChiCa!J O
39 55 .415 14
Sea ttl e
33 6..4 .340 21112
. Saturday's Results
D(' troit 7, Californ ia 3
Cleveland 8, Sea !li e 5
M inneso ta s, Balt imore 4
Kan City 6, Boston S, 10 inns.
Tor on to 7, Oakland 3
New York 7, Chicago 1
M ilw 2, Texas 1, 10 inns.
Sunday' s Results
Sea at Clev e, 2, ppd , ra in
Detro it 4, Calilorn ia 3, 1st
Ca li fo rn ia 4, Detroit 3, '2nd
Oa ~ l an d 5, Toronto 3
New York 3. Ch icago 1
Bal timor e 8, M innesola 5
Kan sas City 7, Bo ston 3
M ilwaukee 17 , Texas 9
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT)
'
Seattle ( Honeycutt 3·5 and
Parrott 1·2&gt; at Toronto { Le·
manczyk J. ll and Jefferson 6·
8), 2, 5: 30p .m .
Boston
(To'tr ei
12·5 and
Ripl ey
2·5)
at
M innesota
{Ja ckson 1 3 and Serum 4.]), 2.
6 p .m .
Cal ifor n ia (Hartzell 1-6 or
Gr iff in J.J) Cit Cle ve lan d ~W i se
81 2). 7: 30p .m .
Oa kland ( Keough 6·6) at
Detr oit ( Young 0-1), 8 p .m .
New York &lt;Guidry 14-l l at
Kansas City (Leonard 11 11 1, 8
p .m .
M i lWaukee &lt;Sorensen 12 -6) at
Chicago &lt;Ston e 7-1l, 8: 30p .m .
Balti more ( K err ig an 0-0) at
TeJt:a s (Jenkins 9-SL 8:35p .m .
Tuesday's Games
Seattl e at Toronto , n ioht
Cal ifOrn ia at Cle11e, n ighl
Oakland at Detroit, n lghl
M ilWaukee at Chic ago , n ighl
Bos ton at M innesot a , night
New York at Kan Ci ty . night
Balt imorehat TeM as . n iQht

west

,.
.'
I

Manager
Don
Boston
Zimmer. " I hope I didn 'I
make a liar of myself."
George Brett rapped out
three hits, knocked in a run
and scored twice - once on a
steal of horne - l&lt;l help KC to
its nlnth straight win. •
In other AL games, it was
oBkland 5 Toronto .1, Detroit 4
Califocnia 3 in the first of two
and Califocnia 4 Detroit 3 in
the nlghtcap, New York 3
Chi cago 1, Baltimore. 8
Minnesota 5 and Milwaukee
17 Texas 8. Seattle and
Cleveland had ~ twinbill
rained out.
A's 5 Wue Jays 3:
Mitchell Page 's s ixthinning homer broke a 1-1 tie
and Rick Langford and Dave
Heaverlo combined on a five hitter
to pace Oakland. Alan
conunents. If he doesn't shut
Ashby
had a solo homer for
his mouth he won't play and I
Toronto.
don'.t care what George says.
.
He can replace me now if he Tigers 4-3 Angels 3-4:
Dave
Chalk's
fifth
hit
of
the
doesn't like it ."
"We got a good thing going double-header scored Don
here," Martin added, "and I Baylor from second with two
don't want him and his mouth . out in the ninth to give Nolan
coming along and breal&lt;ing it Ryan · and the Angels a
up ... If he wants l&lt;l play ball,
okay, let him shut up and
play, but I don't want to hear
any more from him."
Jackson was suspended for
five days for bunting, rather
than swinging away as
fl!"dered, in a game against
the R&lt;lyals last Monday night.
Jackson maintained he was
trying to help the team by· .
moving a runner inl&lt;l scoring
position .
·
Jackson, although shaken
by reports of Martin's
comments, would not respond
to his manager's remarks :
"I don 't have any

''

I

Visit our lumber deportment where
you're sure to find tke quality
i
you need for oil your building requirements · from o child 's sandbox too
new or remodeled room . Whatever
your project, look to The friendly One
for the right supplies and instructions.
Shop now ond save .

1

SoCial I
1 Calendar 1
I
I

nlghtcap win despite· a threerun horner by Rusty staub. In
the first game. Jason
Thompson raced home with
the winning run for the
Detroit vicl.ory.
Yankees 3, White Soli 1:
Chris Chambliss' RBI
double scored Lou Pinlella
from first and trhozered a
two-run, ninth-inning rally
that gave New York its fifth
straight win and handed
Chicago its ninth straight
loss.
Orioles 8, Twins 5:
Lee May belted a two-run
homer and Rich Dauer had
, Uiree hits, drove in a run and
scored another to lead Jim
Palmer and Baltimore l&lt;l
victory over the Twins, losers
· in 10 of their last 11 games.
Brewers 17, Rangen 8:
Sal Bando and Larry Hisle
each belted thre«un horne
runs to lead a 21-hit barrage
and bring Milwaukee within
fi ve . games of division.
leading Boston. Texas
dropped their s.ixth straight
game.

MONDAY
FAMILY Picnic by Bend 0 '
River Garden Club. 6:30p.m.
at Shriners Park, Racine.
Members are to bring own
table service.
SWIMMING CLASSES · at
London Pool in Syracuse
beginning Monday. Beginners age 5 and up, hasic
water and rescue age 11 and
up, advance life saving age 15
and up. Sign up at pOOl from 1
to 7 or bO-at pool Monday. o
TUESDAY
VACATION Bible School at
Racine Baptl~t Church
Monday through Aug. 4 from
6 to 8 p.m. Everyone
welcome.

VACATION Bil:!le School at
South
Bethel
United

For Tuoodoy, July 25

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede 'Osol

WILDWOOD Garden Club
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. at
shelter house at Rnyal Oak
Park. They will observe 40th
anniversary. AU old members and past presidents are
invited to attend . Bring
covered dish and table- ser-

•

July 25, 1978

This co m ing ye ar offer s much
of promise tha t will co me yo u r
wa y with sm a ll effort o n yo ur
pari. II yo u trea t th ese s itu a ~
l ions too lig htly , ho we\ler,
no th ing cO n c r e t e w ill res t,Jit .

vice.

mURSDAY'
TWIN CITY Shrinettes
Th4rsday at 7 p.m. picnic at
home of Cora and Shirley
Beegle, Racine.

LEO

BRUCE BARTON
TURNS SEVEN- Bruce
Barton was honored
recently on his seventh
birthday at his home by his
mother, Charlene Bartoo, ·
VIllage Manor Apartments, Middleport. He
received s.everal gifts from
relatives aod frlt:a,oJs.

Better bra-.,d
Peasant blouses are
fetching, but not when they
slip off the shoulder to reveal
bra straps. Strapless bras
work well here.

~J•Iy

23-Aug . 22) Make no

com m itmen t s toda y or yo u
co uld run . t he ri sk of having
vout gene r os ity highly a b u s~ d .
Giv e o nl y your good wi s he s
un ti l yo u· c hec k ou t the one in
need . Find ou t mor e abou t
you rs e l! b y se nding fo r y.o ur
cop y o f A s t ro--Graph Le tt e r .
Mail 50 cen ts fo r ·each and a
tong, .se ll~ ad dr essed . stamp ed
en ve lope to A s tra-Graph , P.O.
Box 489. Rad i'J Cit y Sta tion ,
N.Y. 10019 . B e sure to speci ty
bir th si Qn .

VAUGHAN'S

•

over.' '

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19

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•

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•

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W.;tt ;in.-,P;.•r; o ; lf

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Cre ate th e interior desi gn fhal fits the
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BEEF

SALE DATES
JULY
29, 1978

In 1969, Apollo 11 returned
to

-------------·

SKINLESS

LB.

guard today if yo u rely too
heavrl y o n o ne wh o promised
to help you au f in a pinch . H e or
she wo n' t.
·

CANCER (June 2t -July 22)

I1

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICEHOURS:9:30tol2.2toS(CLOSE
ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
.

21-June 20)

~May

.

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

**

GEMI~I

Trying to imitate th e way another lives could be cos tty
today . Those who can ' t accept
yo u for w hat yo u ar e are fair
weat her fr ie nd s anyway .

1~---------------------N. W. COMPTON, O.D. --l
I

111

play it.

un warr an ted o pt rnu srn . Yo u 'd
be w 1se to allo w mo re time
be fo re c ommitting yo ur se ll to
some th rng ser1ou s .

less ya u ·r e very ex pli c it about
you r targe ts vou; r e g o 1ng to go
oj f on a tangent and muddle
th incs .bad ly . unde r s tand your AQUARIUS (Jon. 26-Feb. t9)
objec tives.
Doubl e-chec k all serious w o rk
LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Take ' and don ' t ass um e o ther s ha\l e
th e big ne w s item another wtll do ne th1ng s ngh t. If a m1 stak e
be telli ng yo u wit h a gra rn of
ts made today , tt w ill be a major
salt. If yo u do n ·t , y o u could o ne .
jump in , on ly to d isco11er the
PISCES (feb. 20-March 20)
water ' s 0 \1€ ( your head .
Pro m ise s made today are lt k el y
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24- ~ov . 22) Ig- to be bro ke n late r so be c a reful
no re ··some th 1ng to r nothing ··
1n all you r dealing s, but espedeaJsw o u hear abo u l The on ly
ciall y in those m vo lvrng money .
way to g e t ahead to day ts to roll
ARIES (March 21 -April 19)
up you r slee11es and co to
Guard agam s t be 1ng too o p1·
work.
nionated today o r yo u cou ld
SAGITTARIUS ~~ov . 23-Doc. g•ve ~n e rroneo u s rmpre ssion .
21) Becau se you lac k th e drive
L1ste n to all points o f view
required to acc ompli sh you r
before you st at e yo ur case .
goat s today , ym{ r'e apt to gamTAURUS (April 20-May 20) You
ble on a_n y l h tng , s ig hl-unseen
could lull yo urself into false
U would be a mi s tak e .
security toda y . Wh e re you
CAPRtCOR~ (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) . l hmk ~ ou have an ace -in- thehole. it will be tru mped i~ yo u
Yo ur tudg m e nt IS c lo uded by

~.119

WHOLE

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHI'O

''I never considered what l

23-Sept. 22) Un-

HAM

BULK

did as an act of defiance, "
Jackson told a large
gathering of newsmen . "If I
knew what the circumstances
would be, I would have swung ·
away . At the time, though, I
thought that bunting would be
the best way to move the

~Aug .

SEMI-!IONElESS

(suspension ) I've ever been
in as a ballplayer," said
Jackson before Sunday ' s
game. "I am not that important , it's the hallclub that is
important. I'm socry for the
grief I've caused the rest of
the guys ... ."

rwmer

VIRGO

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2

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COOPERSTOWN, N.Y .
(UPI ) - Mel Allen and Red
Barber, the "golden voices"
Qf New York baseball for a
combined period of 60 years
will be inducted · lnt~
haseball 'sHallofFame, Aug .
1, aS'Ihe. first winners of the
Ford C. Frick Award for
broadcasting excellence.
Allen, the voice of the New
York Yankees from 1939
through '1965, . and Barber,
who spent 15 years with the
Brooklyn Dodgers and 12 with
the Yaokees, were voted the
honor by a committee

Methodist Church (Silver
Ridge) Monday through July
28 9 a.m. to ll :30 a.m.
Everyone welcome.

comment," said Jackson,
"It
was
the
most
uncomfortable position

A thought for the . day :
Ameri can singer Albert
Terhune said, " Win without
boasting, lose without excuse."

Less impre ssive in the
s c r i Ill m a g e
we r e

·- quarterback Mark Miller and
running back Larry Collins.
Miller. a form er Bowling
Green and Canton South Higb
School star , completed only
two of seven passes for 13
yards . Collins. a Texas A&amp;l
product, rushed 10 times for
28 yards .
One ot he r hi gh draft choice
of the Browns, tig ht end Olzie
Newsome. wa s left behind at
the Kent Sta te trainin g si te ,
sufferi ng (rom a br ui se d

Scott's hand is in awful shape
and now Jim Rice may have a
broken foot.
·,
And to add insult to aU the
injuries, the 'Kansas City
R&lt;lyals · completed a three·
game sweep of the Red Sox
Sunday, extended Boston's
losing streak to four games
with a 1-J victory.
"I said we'd never lose
· seven or nine games in a row
like we did last year, " said

Jackson shaken by
Martm
• ' S. comments

Browns achieve primary goal
12 passes for 159 yards and
the Browns' only touchdown
- a 57-yard toss to Wright.
Matthews, the Browns' No.
1 pi ck in this year 's collegiate
draft , was aggressive on
defense under a 93-degree
sun . " Matthews co nfirms
eve~y da y that we made the
rigl1t decision in the draft ,"
Ritigliano said..

1

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satles ttnd Yllrd Sllh;s

are ai:."t'tpled only with t&lt;lsh with
urder . 25 l&gt;ent til¥rMe for ads t•ar ry in~ Box Num~r In Ca.r~ uf Tlw Storr·

t.mel.

·

~

Publisher re~rv~ tht• n Khl
Ill edit or rejed any cnls drtmed ub:
~c:l ionl:il. T~ Publi.shtor wil l nul tJto
respo~ble

N!t'l

for mort&gt; than one

B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES. ·P• . Plea·
sonf , W. Yo . beside Heck 's.
1973 Broodmore 14 11 b4 2
bedroom
1973 Dor1on 14 x bO '1 bedroom
1972 Vi cto rian 14 • 67 3 bedroom,
']bath
1972 Coventry 12 x OS 3 bedroom
1969 Sto1esmon 12 11 60 2
bedroom .

Ull 'Uf-

insertion.
Pl~lem"2 1 56

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; · condition your
l water with Co.op WC!Ifer
softener, Model UC- SVI ,
Now Only

sa

----.-------TIMBER . POMEROY Forest

Produc ts. Top pn ce fo r sta nding
sow timber . Call 997 -59b5 or

F'nday afll:'rnoutl

-~en~n by.:.. 1 - 446 - 8~7?

OLD FURNITUR E. ice bo11es . brass
bed.; , iron bed !'i , desk s. etc.
complete hou se hold!!~
Wri te
M .D. M il ler . Rt , 4, Pomeroy or
ca11 992 -7760.

STAf'f S BARGAIN LAN D A store
lor the people . We buy , trade
and sell . New end good used
merchandise. furnitu re end ap pl iances . Ant iq ues. You Will OLD COINS, pocke t watches ,
doss rings , wedding bond s..
alway s gel o fa ir deal with
diamonds. Go ld or silve1, Call
Stan. Open 7 do.ys a week_.
Monday th ru Saturday . 9 om to 2o g erW om s~y 7 42 :_2~ 1 .
5 pm . Sundov lOom to b pm .
TURNING PLOW and wheel.
Wetghh l or Farmoll Cub tro c
NOTICE OF public Sole .
tor . 985 -3885.
Not ice is hereby g iven tha t on
Aug ust 1, 1978, at lOom a HOUSE IN pomeroy ol Middleport
publ ic so le will be held at the
or ~i th acreage m th is are a.
Citi ten's Notional Bank Mid·
land con tra ct or own er finance
dleport . Ohio to sell fo r coo;h
possible . 992 -501 4.
the fol low ing co lloterolto wit ·
One 1965 Chevrolet El Cqmino
-----==~'
Truck . ser . no . 136BOSZ ll'Ei 884
The C1tiren·s Nationa l Bon k . Mid dlepor t. Ohio reserves the right
10 ~.: 50 TWO bedr'oom mob'1le
to bid at th is sole
home . $1600. 992 -5656 .

-

99H18&lt;.:._.~--- - - NOTICE TO
CONTRACTOR

ST ATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
T R. ANSPOAT AT ION
Columbus. Ohio
Juty14 , l978
ContriiCt Sitles Legit!
,Copy No . ..18·6BS
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

S2600.

Expires

---

19b9 BROADMOOR 12 11 65 wilh 8
x 10 e11pondo. 3 bedroom , 1
bath s . gas heat . $4700
949-2288 .

Yi7Ktr ·

IF YOU hove o service to offer .
wont to buy or sel l 'ioomething.
ae looK ing lor worf..
or
who teve1 . , you 'll get resu lts
fos ter with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coii9Y2 -2156 .
YAR D SALE. July 24th ond 25th .
10-5 . 701 Beech St .. M idd leport.
Conce ll e~ · i l r ain s.
YARD SAL E Monda y Tuesd ay and
Wednes do( Clo thing. games .
odds &amp; end~ . 9 a .m . to 4 p.m .
2.56 So . Fourth A ve ., Mid dleport .
TWO FAM IL Y Yard Sol e . July 28 g
29 .
10-5.
Gilbert
Hart.
reside nce Oak Gfove Rd ..
Ro c1ne . Lomps .' toys . bar . live
plan ts. f.. n1ck -knacks
Ra in
cancels

1977 STARCRAFT f old .down CA BBAGE , CORN pota toes . ha ll
comper.
Sleeps
8, s)ove .
runner bea n!. , [p1 ck ., our o w n:.
refrigera tor , LP gas, spor e lire .
S4 bu . C.W Pro ff itt Form .
Used tw 1ce . 742-2750 .
Portland . Ohi o

THREE BEDROOM houH' in Raci ne
orea Nea r rive r. Complete ly
remodeled . 9.49-2545.

--

~

1970 CHEV ROLET NOVA wilh 350
h1gh perf orman ce . 19H Harley
Oo..-•d son
350
$ 700 .
bl4 - b67 - ~89 or 6 14-667 -3305.

A
N
N
1- .N
G
TOAMT OES p ,cl. your own 81
1ng own contQIIler Mo•,hall
Roush , ,Eo ~ t Lctar 1 1• 1 3752

11'109 ootiGf 6 [yl ' , ton pt ckup
G
qq'] .7465
LO NG ·aotrOM Gene•al Store .
Building , lot ond inventory of
o;epor ot ely .
Rea'itonoble

985 ·• 351
· 'two 75 wa11 Real istic Nova a
speaker s
Sl 60 . 55 wa lt
Reali tic Novo ., 8 speakers .
5130 . less than o year old Coli
b l 4-378 -62EI3ofter S
THREE:: LOVE't Y diamond rin gs: 1
clu'ioter wil h 6 sets and another
wi th o;e"erol 'itmo ll diamonds
Al so 1 sol itaire . 1AII !rpm
reputab le tewelers . worth 3
t tm e ~ as much as oskmg pnce .
May be se.en by opPomtment
only . Phone 742-2;106 .
RfDUCE SAFE &amp; fa st wllh GoBese
lablets &amp; E·Vop wa ter p1lls .
Nelson Drug
:ll CU . FT . Hotpomt fre eter SJOO.

985·3985 .

__,__-

1972 FOR D ' , ton trucK std shd t
Explorer 'w1 th camper . Slee ps 1
o; tove 1r e bol water toni-. . gas
ion!.. Co li alter Sprn 992 -5640 .

-ROANOK E HA Y baler
-·

hay rake
949 -2273 .

Needs

Will C AR~ l or the el derly m our
h o tr.e Phone 997-7314 .
WATER WELL drdl lng Wd lio.rn T.
Grant . 747 -2879 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
For All

Your

GETV.'s&amp;
Holp0111f Appl.
Sa IP Pr t CP~
Jilcl&lt; W. (M&lt;,(•y,

Mqt.
Phont• 997 7181
WILL DO babysitting m my home,
5 days o week . 742 2030 or ·
992 -2054 ,

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
have en /a .rged our
ice depilrtment and
service Hotpoint r.nd.
brands.

'

Pomeroy Landmark
t;;l,.

Jack W. Carsev , Mgr.

~.

Phone"1-1181

WE WIL L hau l Yow tro ~h o dd s and
en d!rt
Phone
Hay m an.~- .
992 6345

Roush's Cake
Decora~ng
Birthday, speci ally cakes
and wedding cakes a
specia tty .

MAIN
POMEROY, O.
NEW LIHING -

Newer

ranch type , 5 bdrms., d ose .
i n . Appx . 1.1 0 acres, 2
stor ag e bldgs . in good
cq nd i t io n , large li v ing
room , equi pped bui It - In
kitchen .and the« Ids go to

Pomeroy e lem . Looks good
for S31.000.00.
NEW LISTING - Super
ni ce 1974 mobile home In
excel lent condition on a
beauti ful 1 acre fe n ced lot .
Storage bldg . , ca rport.
full y
f urni she d
and
e q uipped . Close to m ines.
really clean, 3 bdrm . one
floor pla n h o m e , lar ge
k i t chen , basemen t . 2 ca r
garage,
front
_por ch
overlooks th e beau tif ul

Ohio. Va lue is S31 .000.00 .
EASTERN SCHOOL DIST.
- Ni ce new 3 b drm . ranch,
1 acre , garage , man y
fea t ure s. Pr i ced ri ght .

$16.000.00 .
BEAT THI S- 3 bdrms.,
large ba th . 2 stories, new
[c ar.peting .
si d i ng ,
gutterss. down spout ing .
paneling, cei ling s), on Ohio
Pwer , close to Pom er oy .

Phone 1·614.667-3828

Radiator~

RUTLAND 4

b edroo m

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
' .
ReSidential and commer ·
cial. Call for esti mate. 24
Hour Service . Any day ,
anyti me.

Phone 985·3806
Jack Ginter 915·38C6

I.

Large

Ch es f er
a rea .
3
bed r oo m home Wit h
cen tral heat and ai r,
full basemen t, an d
r ural water . 2 car
garag e and ot her
o u tbuild ings.
4. 14
a cr es wi th pond . Has
a tr ai ler hook-up and
h:ee
h ouse . Just

separat e utility ,
1-'. ids w alk
to

I11Jiine

basement ,

A

bdrms.,

Full
In

town . Cheap al $6,750.00 .
BEFORE YOU BUY · OR
SELL
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN APPRAISAL BY A
QUALIFIED
APPRAISER . IF WE CAN
BE OF ANY · HELP,
PLEASE CALL .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HENRY E . CLELAND ,
JR .
SR . CERTIFIED
APPRAISER
991·2259, 99n568
lHRH BEDROOM horn e hon1o tn
Muidleport Coli 992 -:.1457
TUPPERS PLAI N S 3 beUroom I ' ,
bath tolal e ie&lt;:t rk , au cond •
t1on ing lull basemen t l01ge
lo t 4fl2 35BS .

Persons to Persons : ..Selected Interviews

t}:!.l

&amp; Giloon Tillers, Lawn Boy
Mo,_r S.les &amp; S.rvlu.

24· 1 mo.

H. L WRITESEL

3

.

••.

~

Free

~

PI! . 992-2848

4·30·11&lt;

b

_..

·--

_ ----

HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex ·
C0110ting . septic
sy o; t emo; _
dozer . backhoe , dump truck ,
limestone, grovel . bla cktop
pav ing, Rt. 143. Phone I (61 4]
698 -7331.

HTS. -

Bui lding lo t s w i th
se.wer , wate r , and
electric
availab le .
Sl&gt;,OOO.

COUNTRY
3 n ic e

PULLIN S EXCAV ATING . Co'm plete
Service . Ph one ~~2- ~~~c~·-PUDDLE POOL S. All si zes and
sho pes . Swim pools. 2 yea_rs
e11 perience , fr ee es limotes,
anyt h ing you
need
l or
· underground swim pools, New
chemic al and supp ly store .
A lba ny , Ohio
Ph one
61 4-698 -6555 . ( After 6 pm .
61 4·089 -525 1 John Jeffers 01
689 -5265 Bi ll Gillette . ) We are
NOT all we t on PR ICES .

bedrooms, st e p Sayer
kitch en . din ing r oom.
fam i ~ roo m
wi th
woo
· burning
f ir eplace , large su n
dec k , fr ont porch an d
larg e wooded l o t .
60 's .
bedrooms ,
ba t h ,
natural gas furnace ,
gard en
spac.e,
2
outbuilding s
and
room tor off str eet
park ing . Want 59,500 .
we
have
over

----.-

NEIGLER BUILDING Supply fo r
build ing houses. repair work
ond cabinets. Co li G uy H
Ne ~g~e~.9~2~9 afte r 5 pm .

SI.OOO.OOO .OO WORTH
OF
PROPERTY
FOR SALE.

REEVES TRADING Post. Pogevi lle
G rocer ies , dry good!'i , herd w ore , feed , tack shop . Special

G. Bruce Teaford

-

15 lb. ol dog lood. $3 .88.

Helen L. Tealord
Sue P . Murphy

-

NEW 3 bedroom h o~se , 2 bath s.
all elec. . 1 acr e . M i'd dleport ,
cl ose to Rullan d . Phone 9977481 .

-

-

~~®=
HOMESITES for sa le , l acre ond
up . M iddleport . nea r Rutland.
Co11992-748l.

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGEN
GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
CALL 446-3643
;,

SEW ING MACHINE Repairs . ser·
"'ice. a ll mak es . 992 -2284 The
Fabr ic
Shop , Po mer o y .
A u thor ized Singe r Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

- EXCAVATIN G , dozer, loader ond

-~

JE8 1 AII!IE SHOULOf4'T
HAVE SliOUTED AT
PRISSY PUTSCH ··· THEY

I

-~----·

1 ~74

ALLEYOOP

---

~-··

80 '&lt;iU'RII AF!tAID "'"

~ ~Mf '1MIIM FREE
!miN "TO OS\OU~ AN'fTHIN6
IN "11-115 RaeiON ~ AN

Floor Covering In Stock

1974 Chrysler New Yorker
Brougham 4·dr Loaded. $2795.
Phone 614 -446 -0726 oiler 5 pm.

•nd see wh1t you're getting

EDII!IJ NAii.JAE ...

1975 VEGA ST ATION wagon.
Auto . 992 -6079 alt er 5
JCns BLACK EL Cam ino Class ic.
350 two barrel , outomol ic.
poWer steering and brak es.
Moy be seen 1'!. miles of Route
7 Bypass an 143 or call
992·3750. Good co ndif lon .

-S1600
--

EXTRA NICE 1976 8uick Regal 2door hardtop . 350 auto .. P.S. ,
P.B., power windows and
lacks . Cruise , tilt w hee l, A .C.
l B.OOO m ile s. J . Codner ,

b1H•3 ·2b21 .
1970 LTD FORD wagon rebui lt
motor. low mileage . Will tr ade
f or two wheel camping trailer
0 1 sel l. 992 -2214 oil day Sun·
day , olter 5:30 weekdays. ·

Rufus wu1 jes'
t' unbend - ---:::"
t.h' pipe so's
40U could
qit 4er A:Jf'\

e stud~

wuss'n ever!

Chef 20; How To Buy A Home 33 .
7:30- Holl-y wood Squares 3, J ; L et ' s Go T o T he Races 8;

the Opera " 33 .
8. Shirley 6. 13; 9 : DO--Three' s Company

6.1 3; Movie " Darker than A mber" 15; Mo vie " Man

On A Swing " 8.10.

14 Ultesome
novel.!

15 Jewel

9 Topil:,..,

9: 30-Car ter Country 6; Mary T yle r Moore 13; Bi x
Beiderbecke M emor ial Jc1zz Festival 20; Phil Ochs

Memorial Celebration 33 .
10:00-70·70 6, 13 ; News ~0 ; 10 : 3~Trut h or Cons. 3;
Adam .l2 4; Black Perspectl'e On The News 20 .
11.00-News 3,4,6.8.10. 13,15 ; Di ck Ca,ett 20 ; Over
Easy 33 .

Yettlerday's Allswer
Z3 Formic acid 37 Guest

13 Hastening
18 Dolt
11 Wahine's
garland
II "Thou -

'source·'" ·.''"". greeter ' ··

Z3 Dubllners
Z8 Large vase

2'1 Recline
28 Hire

31 Lukewann
3% Gnaw
~ "Hayseed" 33 Georgia

the man"

UOn

city

38 Former
38 Welllngton's schOOl

•
41 - Khan

4% "Blessed the poor . . . "
43 Tennis
round

11: 30-Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; So ap 6, 13; H ec Ramsey ·
., .. ".,,ft ;.. AiC News 33 : M ov ie " Hankey Tonk " 10 ; 12 :0()Janaki 3:

12 :0&gt;-Mo,le "Bang lh• Drum Slow ly" 6.13; 1:OQTomorrow 3.4 ; 1:15-Ko lak 8; 2 :05-News 13.
. Movie Chan net • 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Orca The Kil; . Whale (P GI
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Hollywood Oldie iG l

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
- - -- - - - - - - = - -- - - - -- =-- -

Safe play suits contract
NORTH

AK 6 3
973
Q7
AK 54
WEST
EAST
t J 982
• 10 1 5
•K
• JS2
• J9 63
• 1084 2
• Q J 10 3
• 987

«False

SOUTH

god
45 Orches-

• Q4

trate

lYJ~§~~~@)f~§~if @(F~0@§ NO'f' ONLy WAS
% RepLAG!D

/

8Y A

MAcHIN!., .... WA$

A MllC.HrNI lr'III,.H

46 Repudiate
o DOWN
~ 1 Rainbow

J z~~~,'s

'•

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it:

~

RUTLAND
.FURNITURE

••

l

I

muLb MAKE

A SOFA THAT
MAKES
A
•
BED fCDR

LW
\ 51CiN E!~5

ARE
IT!

LICEN51~G- M'\N·

-mERE MIJ$T

UFACTURERS TO
US:: MY NAME .

BE MONEY IN
IT.'

YOU
'·..

148 ACRE FARM - UNUSUALL Y GOOD BUY - The

JQ

YQG

FQ

UWOH

TRY ON MV NEW
60CIO MoRNING I I'M

lii?lluuot:. TO Flfi!D A HOME
llHS 6EAUTIFVL DOG

The Yeller

E. M , Wiseman, Broker 446· 3796 Eve .

Jim Cochran, Assoc. 446·7881
Nancy Smith, Assoc. 446·4910

.,

..

f.lE'S B.EEN LIVING JUST
OUTSIDE NEEDLES WITH
A SVNCH OF COYOTES

v ww

Q C

MAIL-ORDER

PANTALETS

QEN

•

wa s g uaranteed t o l ose n ot

more than one trump tri c k
unless West w ere to h old
king-jack

small.

c ase, no
s ucceed:''

In

p l ay

that

would

tA K5

self in se ven

hea rts . I am not

South

I+

Pass

going to give the bidding
except to t e ll y ou that it was
bad . Playing at seven, South
took the best percentage
play which was to lead a

I"

1•
J•

Pass
Pass

heart

3t

to hi s queen. West
made his king a nd later 011 ,

4• ·

East made his jack ."

4 NT

Pass

5 NT

Pass

6•

Pass

s•

6t
Pass

By Oswald Jac oby
ond Alan Sontag
Oswa ld : " T h e correct
play of a suit m ay not be the

You hold :
• A

a6 5

" 65
t K84
• AK J 7

same at different contracts .
At one contra ct you may

A Maine reader asks how
.J want to play sa fe . At another · yo u plan y our bidding in .
you won 't be a ble to afford response to a one-heart

CND WYJF that luxury ."
Alan : " He re is a hand
RF
GUW
PQY C DJWYPW
QC
GUWDN from an IMP m atch . ·The
bidding in the box is that of
the winning team. I am not
UWOH
DY
YWWJ . - WHDPE .NEF sure how they should h ave
bid, but they certainly. arY ..lerday'o Cryptequole: A GRACEFUL AND PLEASING rived at the right c ontra ct. "
FIGURE IS A PERPETUAL LEITER OF RECOMOswald : "I asswne tha t
MENDATION. -FRANCIS BACON
South led a hea rt to his ace
al trick two, dropped the
singleton
kin~ . went bjlck t o
BARNEY
GUW

I CAN'T WAIT TO

15 IN.. STOCK

AEP U

Alan : " Tha t 's exac t ly
what he did . His line of play

• 62

Opening lead : +Q

..

se v e n .''

" AQ10!6 4

One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A ia
u sed f or the three L 's, X f o r th e two O 's, et c . Si ngle l etters,
apostrophes. the length and f orma ti on of the words ar~· all
hints. Each day I h e code l etters are di ff ere nt.

- ..

·Rulllnd

AXYDI. BAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

dwnmy to finesse against
Eas t 's jack a nd m ade

Oswald ; " What happened
at t he oth er table ''"
Alan : " South found him ·

Vulnera ble : Both
Dealer : North
Wut North East

41 Conviction

•

7·24-A

•
•
•
•

rescuer?

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

Call742·2211
. TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grote
Or Gone Smith

In

7: DO-Cross.Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6, 13; P op Goes
·The Cou ntry 8: N ews 10; G illi gan ' s Is. 15; French

drag
tO John
Smith's

MILliONS...BY

Largest Selection

News 3,4,1 5; ABC New s 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Anti ques 33.

36 Wheel

• " '" .. , ... ! h ... · · -

QUICK SALE' NEEDED - 6B acres Of good bottom ,

owner's age pr ev ent s her from continu ing to operate
the farm and She desires an immediate sale . 50 to 60
acres t i llable w i th some ve ry good creek bo11om a nd
hill top (a nd , T he balan ce In pastur e &amp; woods. T he ·six
r oom hom e i s good ( does need some m oder nization),
la r ge etll · purpose ba rn and seve ral good outbuildings.
Minerals go '1\'i lh it and It 's loca t ed in an area w here
gas, oil &amp; coa l have been tound t o b e plent iful . Near
Rutland , S60's .
.

6 : 3~ NB'C

35 Generation

loose,
Joel!

~0 ;

Making Things t.row 33 .

34 Remaining

VE$. HE $AID WE

of'fhi s home in Pomeroy is leaving the area and needs
to sell now . A l 1f2 story home w ith 4 bedrooms i n c luding
a sp ac ious ma st er bedroom , lovef y ki t ch en w ith a ll the
applia nces, large l iving room , washer &amp; dryer pJus
pa tio &amp; 6 ac r es of land and it's onlyh 1 mile from
downtown . $27 ,500 .

H eroes 15.

6:0Q-News 3,4.8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom

Man F rom Atlantis 15 ; M ovie " Tom Sawyer " 8,1 0;
N a tional Geograph ic 20; M ovie " T he Phantom of

WINNIE

OWNER DES IRES IMMEDIATE SALE - The owner

5:30-Qdd Coupl e 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20.3j; Hoga n' s

Candid Camera 6; Mac Ne ii ·Le hre r Report 20133 :
Pr ice Is Rigltl 10; Thai's Hollywood lj ; Cli ffwood
Ave . Kids 1•.
8:00-Baseball I Reds·Metsl 3,4 ; Happy Days 6, 13 ;

CRYPTOQUOTES

pastu r e &amp; woods on Van Za ndt Road . T he owner is no
longer abl e to _take c a r e of th is lovely place so they
must sell now. Attract ive remodel ed 10 room far m
hom e with nice sized rooms , Pr, baths, .c bedrooms &amp;
carpel throughout . Rural &amp; well w at er plus seve r a l o ld
oufbu i ldings . Pr i ~ed to se ll at $46,900.

IJ

29 Scrap
30 Gould's
railroad
31 Musical
paces

F RANK &amp; ERNIE

RUG REMNANTS
From $29'5 &amp; Up

742-221 )

Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One! 13; Pet ·
1icoat Jun ction 15

8 : 3~Laver ne

past
1 Victor 8Gennan
city

Z4 Another
1876
Custer foe

c;iood S.ltdion Of

., _.,.-,-~­

t 1I

5:00-Monroes 3; My Three Son s 4; Gu nsmoke B;
Mister Rogers' N eighborhood 20,33 ; Voyage to the

5 River
In Hades
I In the

1% One 1876

Fully

-~~

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above _cartoon ..

4 Dimension

Custer foe

Buy whtr! you c•n come in

- Good seledions stocked.

Addam s Fami ly B: Sesame St. 20.33 ; Ma tc h Game
10; Dinah l3.
4 : 3~My Three Sons 3; Gi llig an 's Is . 4,8 ; Bafman 10;
Little Rasca ls 15.

trees

EXIST ON ~A!!ll!i
payment
MA"n51l. .. YM~ tiS
Mild th
WI-IA'T S AM •
11
08

foot

· 9' an~ 12' Vinyl

-

?0.33 .
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3: t-or A icher, For Poorer 15:

3 Candlenut

r:::-:-:--::::-=-=-=-=-===t.:---::::-=:=-=:::::;;;~
,8 Assist
i!I&amp;C\ueE 'THEt" T\10-HEADED ... AND ~ BeASTS II Make

GASOUNE ALLEY

FORO MUSTANG II. Vinyl
top~ b cyl .. auto . Good co ndi
tion . New springs , good tires .
949 -'1Q.I2.

Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20,33 .
3: 3o-AII In T he Fami l y 8, 10; Consumer Surviva1 K ;•

PSYCHOLOGY

Zl Evening,
In Napoli
L...JW.......U-1....-JI.--'.'-'= Z3 Sky god

14 , 88 sq.&amp;yd.
up

9'12-52'13 0' 9'11 ·5133
1974 PONTIAC VEN1URA . 6 cyl .
SlOOO. 99n•53.

2:JD-Another Wo rld 3,4,1 5: General Hospital 6, 13;

&lt;:il~"""'-.a•-:::0'/rr\1

Answer: The " 1ubject" .:~lwayao~ one 's mind-

1 Store up

DRIVE' ALITTU

As Low As

8, 10.
.
2:DO--One Life to Live 6,13; Meeting of Minds 33 .

Jumbles : TOOTH LOGIC SAVORY PAYOFF

girl

1q73 CU TL ASS SPORT Covpe .
3b,OOO m iles . Buehl seats .
Vinyl roof. Tope player . A .C.

: 3(}-0ays of Our L ives 3,4,1 5; As The World T ur ns

!Answers 1omom&gt;w)

II Wing: Lat.
1t "Good Night"

Rubber Back Carpet

News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Wom en

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SAVE .ON
CARPETING

All carpel instolltd with
padding al no chorgo .
Expert instillation.

I :1)11-.For R icher, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6. 13;

~.WS"tsf

3825.

1977 CH EVROL ET CAP RI CE Clossic
2-dool , J50 •bbl. Power win dows . vinyl to p . crui se control.
tilt whee l, AM· FM 8-i rock tape ,
power door locMs . $5000. Al) er
5 call 949-2754

12: 30- Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
T omorrow 8, 10; French Chef 33 ,

HnO&lt;"
GRAY

Sweeper s. toasters . irons . ol!
small appliance5. lawn mower .
r:'IIIUO: t to Stat e Hig hway Garogtt
on Route 7. Ph one (614) 985 ·

~
=-~·===o.,

Young 8. lhe Resfless 8; Midday Magazine 13;
Watch Yo ur Mouth 33.

TM 111111 JUMBL.ES 11e hera In JUMBLE BOOK 110 llld JUMBLE
BOOK 111. Available for $1.35 EACH, poalpaid from Jumble, cJa thll
newapaper, P.O. Box :W, Norwood, N.J.. 07648. Make checks p•ylble to
New IIPIPerbOOkl.

Pomeroy , 0.
3· 15-tlc

&amp;
SAVE A LOT

News 8; Lov ing Free 10.
12:DO---Newscen t er 3 ; News .4 ,6, 10; Am eri c a Alive . 15;

I I 0 0

SUR£-- f60TIST101 Sa
.
8USI'8001ES ...
turday s
THAT'S WHO "·
ANNIE DID RIGHT ...

Sltr IT 8ROI&lt;E UP
· H8t MErTIHG ·..

EL W.:O.:O_D
_ 8
_0:-W
-E
:::R:c:S - R
-EP- A-IR- -

~-- ----

Nancy Kaminsky 33 .

11 :00-High Rollers 3.4,15; Happy Days b.l3 .
11:311-W~eel of Fortune 3, 15; Fami ly Feud 6, 13;
Partridge Family4 : Love of Life 8, 10; 11:55-CBS

byHenri Arnok1andBobL""

MM: A ......
( ....,.I.....,I.....,I,......,) FOR THE

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

BRADFORD . Auctioneer. Com·
plete Serv 1ce . Ph one 949.2487
or 949-2000. Ra cine , Oh io . Crifl
Bradf ord .

ba ckhoe work ; dum p trucks
and lo-boys for hire : wil l houl
t ill dirt, to soil. limestone and
grov el. Coli Bo b or Roger Jef fers. . doy phon" 992 -7089. n ig ht
___J? ho~'!_?~·~S25 or 9~2 ·2~
EXCAVAT ING. dozer. ba ckh oe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hot. f ie ld . Ba ck
Hoe Serv ice,
Rutlafld , Ohio . Phone 742 -2008 .

Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6; Pr ice
is R ighl8, 10; $10,000 Pyram id 13; Paint Along With

WHA'T iHE '-'-''-'
5oMiiH WA5 MAKING&gt;
WHE.N iHE Pl-ACE.·
WAS FtAIDED.

ACROSS
WILL do roofing, co nstruction .
plumbin g and heati ng . No job
too Iorge or too smal l. Phone
742·234 8.

Over Easy 33 .
10 : 3~Ho ll ywood

Only 15; Austin Ci ty Lim its 33 .

IS. ABBO~

4 e.__ _ .L'··~

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Gr iffith 8; Family Altair 10.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3, 4, 15; Edge of Night 6; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Joker ' s Wild 10; To T~ The Tr uth. 13;

33.

... ....,.._

IFALLORj

•

MOORE'S

Repai~

7-7-1 mo :

=
=

Ye•rs

For.The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kappie
At

INNOO

I I I

M-'ll.

n6 · 1 mo.

Aut' &amp; Truck

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

STAMPS

Estimates .

mile ofl Rl. 7 by.pass on
51. Rl. rl4 toward Rutland ,

0.

:tO

rn

·:.• t,,. r ~~r-

All work
Call Tom

Hoskins, 949 -2160.

'~•

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

shad y lot s . La rg e 10
r oom house wi th J
bedrooms , · 2 ba ths
n a t ural gas . f.a.
fu rnace . Hobby shop ,
garage.,
co vered
p icni c patio, all th is
is V .A . ap proved .

downspouts.

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

ROOFING

Large 3 bed r oom
home w it h
bath ,
'na tu ra l gas fu rna ce ,
oak fl oors down and
full basement , nice
sha d y
spo t
overlooking the Ohio
R~
· ver . J'h is is a good

&amp;

e•perience.
guaranteed .

r~~ .

0

d
n.

10.

one tetter to each square , to form

lour .ordlf!aoy words.

e
n

9 : 3~Andy

Unscramble these 'tour Jumbles,

399 W. Main St .
Pomeroy; Ohio
Ph. 992~2164

All types ol rooting, gutters

Phone 949-2801
or 949·2860
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Calls Please
1·9·1 mo.

,

,f

9 : 00- M erv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4 , 13 , 15;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunc h 9; Tic Tac Dough

~ THA'r SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~~ ~

TUESDAY,JULY25 , 1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5 :50--PTLCiub 13; 6 :00-PTL
Club 15; Su mmer Semester 10.
Mornlng Reporl 3; 6 :50--Good Morning , West
Virgin ia 13; 6 : 55-News lJ .
7:DO--Today 3,4. 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
New s 8; Underdog 10.
7:25-Chuck Wh ite Reports 10; 7 : 3~Schoolles 10.
8:1)11-.Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesa m e St . 33.

8:311-Good T imes 8,10; Turnabo ut 20,33 ,
9:DO--Movle " Adam al 6 A .M." 3,4 , 15; M iss Un iverse
Pageant 8, 10; Opera Theeter 33 ; Faces of Com munism 20.

'ftft\if.\hl fii)'iJ

..

6; 3D--Focus On Columbus 4 ; News 6 ; Summer
Semes ter 8; Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6 :45-

6,13 ; Jeffersons 8, 10; Consumer Sur vl'lla1 Kit 20;

mo-r

&amp;

$70.000.00.
FAIR MARKET VALUE -

On ly $11 ,000 .00
LOW DOWN PAY -

IF NOT·· ~UPPOSI! THf: THR&amp;E
OF US TAI&lt;I!! A LITTLf' RtPE I

SOMEONE MIGHT Hi!!A~
IT-- THI!I'IE MAY II! PEOP~E
AROU~D HERE S~e!PING&gt;
ABOARD THEIR &amp;OATS!

SERVICE

Generill Contrilctors

storm s,
school.

is r ell eC:ted wi th thi s 2
brdm . home in good ne igh borh ood and good con dition New c ar pe t ing , et c .

CAPTAIN EASY
1: .

TYRONE TITU~ 5Ut&gt;PENLY
OF THf: PARI&lt;NE55 ••

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

Bissell Siding Co.

SALES ANO SERVICE
11 ·9·tfc

$35,000.
NEW LISTING -

Il l ~ 1 1 0."

Smoll

10·30·c

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

300 Main 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992·6282
or 992-6263
8 A.M. Io 4:30P.M.

Only $14,000.
NEW LISTING ' -

IH

___, -

~
MODERN SUPPLY

Chester, Ohio

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

wate r , natura l g,:~ s,
fir epla ce
in
the
li vi n g, 2 car ga rage
and extra l eve l lot.

NEW
HOME

Work Guarontoed
7-10·1 mo ..

servict, Messty Ftrouson

Jack's. Septic ,Tank Service

CARTER

home . Has bath , cify

LINCOLN

_____

,___

BORN LOSER_

f rame

b
al $19,500.
U ION AVE . -

742·2321

Fr"tt Estim•tn

-

5 &amp; 9 P M. - Airport '77 I PG I
1&amp; 11 P .M. - Bridge Too Far l PG I

0

Making Things Grow 33 .
6: 311-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlftll.h 6;
CBS News 9, 10; Over Easy 20; Antiques 33 .
7 :DO--Cross.Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; Marty
Robbins' Spot light 8; News 10; Gilligan 's Is; 15 ;
.Daniel Fosler, M.D. 20; Shepherd's Pie 33 .
7:311-That Nashville Musk 3; In Search Of 4; Muppel
Show 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Re port 20,33 ; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13;
Nashville On The Road 15.
8:DO--LIIIIe House On The Prairie 3,4, 15; Baseball

ConstrUction .

7·20· 1 mo. pd .

~ovie Channel . 4

6:DO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;

AI Tromm

TIRE CENTER

BoX 3

Ohio River . Over Jlf2
acres of la rld , d r illed
we ll , 3 bedr oo m
Fleetwood
mobi le
home with tentral
heat and air , 1V2
bath s, sun d ec k and
lots of shrubbery .

Roofing , Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

in Hartford, W. Vo .

EXPERIENCED

Only $16,500.00 .
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD 6
rooms , 3 bdrms ., 1117 baths,

Y~2 - H91

Tuppers Pl1in s, Oh io

Call
992-6323 or 992-6011
6· 19-1 mo. pet

All for $16.500.00.
6 ACRES - In Sy ra cuse,

State licensed ,

Nancy Roush

FR.~D'S

LONG · BOTTOM
Rt . 114. View of the

314 CONDOR ST. - 3

New Ideo
repa ir

FOUR NEW 15 inch while spoke
wheels lor Dodge or Ply rno uth
S100 . Ph one·992 .t,788

REGISTE RED QUARTER hone 8
year 'it o ld S500 . C.all 992·'J9b2·
after 4pm or se~ John (honey
aT Ftve Pomls
C

2.91~,'cc:
l.c::-::--C"'·~--­

1977 CHEVY VA N. A.C 992 -7086

For Salt,

" H e claim s he's absorbing
solar ener gy - I say he's just

-,----·----

VA-FHA 30 yr . f ina ncing , ol!to
reh nan c1ng. Ireland Mor tgage .
77 E. Stat e. Athens . phone (b\ 4]

--

O J 74 , li e

..

BASS BOAT 15 olum mum Lowe
Lme. 20 h p Mere. St1ck steer
mg . Electnc start. Eagle trolli ng
motor . (all985 -4339 .
'

---~

N i na Rob inson ,
Cl erk
Rt 7Coolv ille . O .

_-

. . . . Poineroy 992-2181

11105 LONE SlAR boot w1th tilt
tro•le r 50 h p. Mercury out ' YARD SAL ~ Tuc~ . th rough Fn ti ll
dark lots of good clo th ing ,
board motor Coli 94q.7277
toy s 1ewelry ~ome new 1tems .
af ter 4 30
O n Ur"~ Avenue , cl o!rte toRt .
FRIGIDAIRE E'LECTRI C ra nge S25 .
7.
Moy tag porloble dryer . H arvest
Gold , excellent con dttion tlOO .
Kodak came ra The Handle ,
new $20. qq'] .']98b .

---

PUBliC NOTICE
T n e Orange
TownSh i p
Boa r d of Trustees w i lt hold
tne ir Bud get Hear ing tor the
fiscal year 1979 a t the home of
the clerk On Aug 7. 1978 at
7:00p in .

9 ..J~ck W. Carsey, Mgr

10 11 55 TR A ILER . qq2 .J129 .

sealed pr oposals w i ll be
r ece iv ed at the off ic e of th e
D i r ector
of
t he
Ohio
Department
of
Tran~ portat io n , Colum bus . Oh iO,
HOUSE or Troller won ted to r enl
unt i l
10 : 00
A .M . , OhiO
by young couple wit h house
Standa rd T i me , Tuesday ,
pet.
N eeded 1mmediotely .
August 8, 19 78 . for i m ·
Phone 992-7b23 .
pr ove men ts in :
Athens , Ga llia , Guernsey,
Hocking , Me igs , Monroe ,
~ · -~Morgan ,
N oble ,
P er r y .
E:IJE
L Vinton
and
Wash i ngton
Cou nt ies , Ohio , on var i ous
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
routes and sec t ions , by ap Route 33 . north of Pomer oy
pl Yi ng center l ines and l ane
Lorg e lots . Call997 7479
I ines .
Pavement Width - var ies
ONE BEDROOM opt
ContoCI
Project Length - 0.00 f eet
Village
Mano
r
Apt
..
Mid ·
or 0.00 m ile .
dleport . 997. -7787 .
work L ength various
fePt or va r ious mi te
3 AND 4 RM furnished and un ·
" T he date set for com
l u r n 1shed
o pis .
Ph one
plet ion of t his ·w ork shall be
Y92 -543 4.
as se t tort h in th e b idd ing
pr opo s a 1."
UPSTAIRS ,APARTMENT . 3 rooms
Each b i dder sha l l be
and both , 9'17 · 5621 or 992 -2205 .
requ ir ed to f i le with his b id a
ce rl if ied check or c ashier ' s
SPACE FOR comp1ng frailer , •deal
check for an amount eoual , to
l or co n'iol ruct10n workers . close
fiv e per cent"ot.nis bi d, but in
to power plat)! . water electric
no event more than f ifty
and
water op1d
Pr1.,.o te
th ousand dollars or a bond
992 -134 3
for ten per cent of his bid .
payable to the D irector .
Bidders must apply , on the - FURNI SHED AP T l or rent . Adu lts ,
no pe ts downtown Pomeroy .
prO p er
forms ,
tor
Co ns t ru c t 1o n ' w o rkers
qua11t 1Cat 10n at least ten da ys
prior to the date set t or
welc o me
Coli 992 -2347 or
opening b ids i n accoraance
Y92 -3201
w i th Chapter 5515 Oh i o
Rev ised Code .
Plans and spe ci f ica t ions
J
I
t•
I'
:
. ' .
are on tile 1n Th e Depa rT ment
ot Transponalion and the
MOBILE HOME lor rent or sol e .
off ice of the D istr ict Deputy
1973 Nashua 12 11 bO 3
Dire c tor
The Di r ector reser .... es the
bedroo m . pa1 tialty . furn ished .
• r 1ght to re jec t any all b ids
Con be 'seen ne-"t' to Greenwood, Cernet01y , Ro cone Sole
DAVIDL WEIR
ProC: e SSOClO.
DIRECTOR
.Rev 8 17 73
Ju l y 74 . 31

Pomeroy Landmark

~~~2-Siifr

--·--

sotfit, Room Add itions
&amp; A · Frame Homes
For Free: Estimates

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

Ca II now for appointment.

ALLIS CHALMER S B t1ocr o r . E• cellent condit ion . Hydraulic
mower , d1 H , plow~ Cul ti.,.o tor.
9B 5-J560 .

COMPLETE fur nished
Flee t wood , t ~ailer with :l4 ft . e11
pondo . L1.,. ing room . Coli 12
bpm . 304·773 -5987 .

VINYL
SIDING

&lt;Mo.

THR EE FAMILY Y'ord So le. Mon. ,
24th and Tues .. 75th , Estil Co llin s resi dence 1us t above 7 o nd
143 e11 it . Baby bed ond lo ts of
other i t em~

70

ALUM.&amp;

MONDAY , JULY 24, 1978
5:DO--Monroes 3;My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8; Mister
Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Voyage to the Bottom
of lhe Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat June.
tlon 15. ·
1
5:31)-()dd Couple 4; News 6; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.

on new whlel1,

rudy to go. $30 ta US
&lt;ompltlt. Tru&lt;k ownors,
don't miss this dtol. Wt Hll
at dllCounl prlcts , ..ry
city . Slap In at

August 10, 1978

LAR GE GARAGE Sole . July iS .
Tuesday only . 10-4 at 127 l 1n·
coin Hill Rd ., Pomeroy , E11t ro
nice items.

12 11

FEMALE M INIATURE block poodle ,
older dog . Af te r 5:30 . co li

1975 BLACK EL Comma Classic.
350 tw o barrel , aut om atic ,
power o;teenn g and brakes .
May be seen 1' • miles off
Route 7 Bypa ss ort 143 or coli
992 -3750
Good con d 1ti on.

Mounted

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

SANSUI 140 watt lurner o m·
pilfier , open reel tope deck ,
automal •c turn table . tw o 70
watt spea k ers and
Teac
(O SSC i fe deck . $2000 . qq2 -53b8

---------

7

USED TRACTORS:
MF135 Diesel
MF230 Diesel
Mfl50 Diesel · MF135 Diesel - ·
MF165 Die!!el · MF285 D iesel ·
MF1135 Diesel . Cob , 01 r 8
healer .
NEW &amp; USED IMPLEMENTS·
MF9 Baler MF lO Bol er · MF120
Boler . Matthews Rotary Scy the
MFB80 Semi -mou nted 6 bot l am Plow . MF520 12' DiH
MF200 1 Row Choppe r · MF39 7
Row P-lo n te i's
Mechanical
Tra nsplanter .
SHINN S TRA CTOR SAL ES
Phon e 458 -ltJJO
leon . W Vo

NEW FIBERGLAS TIRES

MASH
BROTHERS

ServicePrMi tM ...... frvodl
............

SPECIAL
PRICE

BUR ROUGHS SENSI·MA TI C ao
coun ti ng m od11ne
Phone
9Q2.'Jl56 . The Doily Sen tinel
111 Coun Street , Pomeroy
Ohio .

CHIP
WOOD . Pole.;
max
di ameter 10' on largest end ,
per to n . Bundled sl ob , Sb per
ton . D e livered to Ohio Po llet
Co .. Rt . 2. Pomeroy . '19'2·2689

Sund&lt;t)'
4 P.M.

IN SYRACUSE·: 2- bedroom house.
New storm windows . New
. aluminum buildin g . 2 porches .

-

Noon on Satuniay

~P . M .

THR EE 8EOROOM tof ol eledric
house in Rust ic Hills. Syrecuse.
Ohio . Double concrete
driveway, patio with brick barb-que, storage building, sfove,
re frigerator and carpeti ng.
99Ub5b .

10 :00-News 20; 10:30-Qver Easy 20.
11 :00-News 3, 4,6,8,1 0,13,1 5; Dick Cavetl20.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Soap 6, 13; Movie
" Mes~e to My Daughter" 8; Movie "The Post.
man Always Rings Twice" 10; ABC News 33;
12 : 00-Janakl 33.
12:05- Pollce Story 6, 13; 1:00-Tomo rrow 3,4; 1:15News )3,

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~-

MINI FARM . 7 1'1 we ll fenced acres
close to town and sc hools .
Lorge 2 story 'house hoo; room
for Iorge family w 1th S o r 6
bedrooms . rec room , dining
room , living room ond country
k itchen . Blg born and oth er out
bui ldings . Frui l trees . berries
and 2 gardens Pri"'ote paved
road to property ond city
wa ter . Five minuie from
WV . Shown by oppt ,

sll' OFF

•289.95

-~e~~u~.~-t App~y ~" ~~~~son .

Uu:•'da}' llt&gt;fure publu·:m url

Cilrs.

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

ond weekends . Crows Family

Tuesdl:l\'

-.=;::_ - · ·-· -~

99).3119.

R.N, PART ,TIME . Communi1y
health nu rsi ng experience
preferred . Must be res ident of
Meigs County and be able- to
vary working days . References
required . Pick up application
Let us test your water Fr~ e
form and fu rther in formation ot
Meigs County office ol Pl anned - ·
Parenthood of Sou th eastern
Ohi o . County Cou r thous e ,
-~Jac k W. Carsev, Mgr.
weekdoy!'i except Thu rsday .
0 '-"
Equal Opportunity Empl oyer
. Phon e992-21B1

M 0 n~)'

loafing."

Any U.S. made car - parts

- .__.....
HIGH SCHOOL boy l or afternoon.; . l....----------..1

thru Fntiay

S}295

tront.wheel drive

Business Services

i ; --==-- ~"'

FI VE ROOM house. both and lot .
newly. po inJed . %4 S. 3rd St.,
Middleport . W2 -5989.

~-----.-

CARRI ERS NEEDED fo r the Doily
Sentinel. Pomeroy . M iddleport
and Syrac·use area . please
phone 992 -2156 between 8:30
om and 5:00pm .

---~·--.......--~-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

-

extra if needed. ·excludes

Pomeroy Landmark ·

NOTICE

BLACK FEMALE housedog .
weeks old . "192 -7597.

SPECIAL

COAL . LIMESTONE , sand , grovel ,
cal cium chloride, fertilizer . dog
food . and all trpes of salt . f.IC .
ce lsior Salt Works. Inc.. E. Main
St ., Pomeroy . 992·3891 .

Ads runniiHI otht!r than CQil!it't'Uti\'t'
Wtys will be duar~al Jtt lhto I day

RftfiDw

---WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 24, 1978
DICK TRACY

openi ng bid b~our partner .
We res pond.
th two clubs
intending to id s pades later
and. in ge neral, to get t o a
slam if partner s hows signs
of real life.
•
I NF.WSPAPERENTERPRISE ASSN I

/For a copy of J ACOBY MODERN. seno S1 to: ·'Win at
Bndge. · · care of fh1s newspaper, P 0 . Box 489. Radio Ci ty
Station. New York. N. Y. 10019.!

�•

.

~

Middleport Council meet~ ·

: 1-'nle !l8ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, July 24, 1978

~

Fiddlers' Convention is tenned as success

•

; For three days and nights,
'ltrumming, hununing and
iloedowim were the sights and
'10unds at the Mason County
'Fair11rounds. .
., The Joe Meadows Fiddlers'
&lt;?onvention is now history.
:However, while the public

Umout at times was slow,
,Meadows plans to bring his
Jpurth annual Fiddler's
Honvention back to the
&lt;~~·airgrounds next year. ·
; : Nearly a hundred musicans
:and dancers participated in
~·he
weekend marathon
.convention.
And, although competitive
music ended at midnight
each eveni0 g, fiddling sounds
blended with guitar, bass
fiddle, mandolin and banjo
invaded the early momi.0 g
air.
• Muscians from as far away

as Idaho, Georgta, Kentucky,
Wirginia , Ohio and Mrc'higan
participated in the convention .
The mOst imNOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Columbus , Oh io
July 14, ''78
Contracf Sales legal
Copy Na . 78 -6911

UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sea ted proposa Is will be
rec ei\led at the office of the
D i rector
of
the
Oh i o
Depar tment
of
Trans

por t at ion , Colum bus , O H io ,
unti l
10 : 00 A . M . : Oh tO
Standard T1m e , Tuf&gt;sday .
August B. 1978 . to r
rm
pr O"Wemen t s in :
Meigs County, Ohio , on
MEG , J3B - ( 116 .01 ) Sta te
Route 338 , by r esurfa cing
with asphalt co n c rete
Pavement Wrdt h
IB t e et
Project and wo rK Length 17, 160 t eet or J 25 miles _
" T he datp set for c om
p letion o r th is work. shall be
as set forth 1n the o iddmg
proposal .' '
·
Ea ch
bidder sh a ll
be
requ ired t o f ile w i th h is, br d a
certif i ed c ne c k or cash rer 's
che c k tor an amount equal , to
fiv• Per cent ot his bid . bu t in
no event more than f i ft y
thovsand dollars, or a bond
for ten per cent of his bid .
pa yab l e t o t he Orrc ctor .
· B idders must apo ly . on the
proper
form s ,
lor
qualificat ion at least ten da ys
pr ior· to the da te set for
open i ng b id s in a cco ro ance
w i th Cl1apte r 5525 On ro
.R eiJiSed (Oeje ,
Plans and spec i t rc a t rons
ar e on file rn tne Oepar tml'nt
of Transporta t1 on and the
Off ice of the Orsl r ict D eputy
Orr ector .
The D i re c tor r eserves the
r igh t to r eject any and a ll
~ I dS .

.

OAVIDL WEIR
D I RECTOR
Rev . 8 . 17 73

portanl category, Fiddle
competition, was won by
Greg Durst. Bellaire, 0 .
Frank Boles of Leon finished
fourth .
&amp;bin Kessinger of Point
Peasant captured a first
place in the nat top picking
compet ition . The Mason
County Blue Grass Band,
Leon, finished second in the
band competition.
" I want to thank everyone
!or helping in·· any ..way ··to
make this a success, and I
hope to see everyone here
next year," Joe Meadows
stated.
Finishing behind Durst in
the Fiddle contest were : Ray
Sponan gle, Newton, 0 .:
Fra ncfi Mitchell, Buflaio ;
Frank Boles, Leon; Mike
Humphre y, Char leston;
Roger CooP.,r, Vanceburg,
Ky .: Angie Ratcliff. Martin ,
Ky .; Ronald Eldridge ,
Ashland , Ky .; Geroge Carr,
Madison ; and Jim Ady,
Woodfield , 0 .

Buddy Radcliff, Martin,
Ky., finished first in the Old
Time Fiddle competition. He
was followed by Lloyd
Steven, South Charleston and
Marion Moore, Eagle, Idaho.
Jimmy Gabehart, South
Charleston, finished first in
the banjo .competition. He
was followed by Allen
Daugherty , Jackson, 0 ,;
Leroy Haskins, Clarksburg,
0 .; Steve Eisenberger,
Aurora, 0 .; and George
Ward , Hinton.
Flat top Picking : Robin
Kessinger, Poin~. Pleasant;
Denver L. Rice, Middleport,"
0 .; Spike Stoop, Harrisonburg, Va.; Don A. Hatfield,
Chillicothe, 0 .; and Dwight
Daugherty, Jackson, 0 . ·
Mandolin : Bob Kessinger,
Harmony : Tex Corfee, Leon;
Steven Acord, Glen Fork;
Willard Reynold, Milton ; .and
Allen Daugherty, Jackson, 0 .
Folk Singing : George
Ward~ Hinton ; t"rank t.un·
ford, Chapmansville, Lois

Coolville fire department
receives $1,200 RCFP grant
The Ohio Division of
Forestry . in cooperation with
the U. S. Forest Serv ice,
allocat ed federal grant
monies to the Coolville
Volunteer Fire Department
under the Rural Communit y
Fire Protecti on program
1RCFP 1. The funds were
distributed · on an a p·
proximate 50 percent cost
sharin g basi s to provide
assistance of rural fir e
departments in upgradin g
theii- fir~ equipment.
The Coolville Vol un tee r
was
Fire
Department
awarded $1,200 as matching
funds for protective clot hing .

Clo.~e-up

With these funds they purchased two demand air mask
units and fire fighting gear.
Ernest Gbehart, Chief of
Ohio· Division of Forestry,
letter
of
sent
a
congratulations to the
Coolville Fire Department.
Donald R. Baun presented a
$1,200 check to Gary
Ritenour, Chief of Coolville
Volunteer F1re Department.
Coolville Wolunteer Fire
Department was eligible for
the cost sharing program
smce they protect a community
under ' 10,000
population .

view of .~nake.~ offered

' Charles Carroll
How much do you know about snakes?
and his "nun-human friends" will be walllug for school
age children at the Middleport Ubrary on Thursday, July
27, at 3 p.m. to help them learn more about often
misundersttJud animals.
"Chuck" Carroll has a zoology degree from Oblo
University and teaches Earth &amp;leoce to seventh graders
at the Athens Middle &amp;hool. His close-up view of snakes
and reptiles is one uf the programs sponsored by the
Pomeroy - Middleport Ubraries In cooperation wltb Ohio
Valley Area Ubrarles, the regional library S)'!ltem
serving ten southeastern counties. Phone 992-&gt;713 lor
mHre information about this free program.

(7 ) 24, 31 , 2tc

Possible protest intrudes on ·
break in chess championships

Croy, Princeton; and Pattie
Hess, Manton, 0. ,
Band : West Wirginia
Gentle·m en, Hurricane;
Mason County Blue Grass,
Leon ;
Acord
Family
BAGUIO CITY, Philippines (UPIJ - A Tuesday night , have sniped at .each other
through aides, officials and protest letters
Bluegrass Band; J:lluegrass
possible protest intruded on the first loug
Blade, West Union , 0 .; and
weekend break in the World Chess for weeks.
Their mutual personal dislike is well
B I u e g r ass S t a t ion ,
Championships today .
known .
Charleston.
Aides of challenger Wiktor Korchnol, a
The height - or depth - of the dispute
Clogging: Angela Bosia,
Russian defector, said they were trying·to
· Beckley; Vallie May Stroop,
verify that a protest had been filed against .was reached last Friday, when Korchnoi
Harrisonburg, Wa .; Brenda
U!em with the World Chess Federation, protested the delivery to Karpov of a cup
of yogurt just bel ore the men agreed.to call
Humphreys, St. Albans; and
known as FIDE.
their game a draw .
Jamie Dean, Huntington .
Officials with the team of Anatoly
Korchnoi's rompil!lri!,.. as it quickly
Junior Fiddle: Dorothy
Karpov, the 27-year-&lt;Jid Soviet. world
known, alleged life yogurt could
became
. Frerris, West Union; and
.. Cliliiiipion, reportedly had protested that a
have
been
part of a complex secret code
·nan Kessinger, Harmony .
Korchnoi aide had taken pictures of
aiXI his large team of
between
Karpov
Judges were : Jim Gordon ,
Saturday night's match after the official
chess expert aides . Karpov denied it.
Galli polis ; Rick Connolly,
time allotted for photographs.
The sideline antics have far
Mason; and Bob Whit e
FIDE and Karpov officials left the
overShadowed play, which in any case has
Athens. 0 .
Saguio mountain resort after Saturday
not been brilliant accbrding to .a host of
Emcees were: Bob White,
night's drawn game for a nearby beach
grandmasters who have come to observe
Toledo, o : and Randy
and other destinations.
the first championships since Bobby
Callahan, Gallipolis. Bernard
Petra Leeuwerick, the chief Koi:chnoi
Fischer beat Boris Spassky in Iceland in
Connolly was the ·stage
representative, told newsmen she had
manager.
·
heard she was the subject of a prot~st over . 1972.
Korchnoi defeated himself Saturday
Bernard Connolly expresed
the camera incident.
night
when he had Karpov almost hell'less,.
his thanks to the followin g
The complaint supposedly was filed by
and
was
forced to offer the draw.
sponsors :
chief Karpov representative Wikto
With
almost
no time left for his last
Peoples Bank, Argabrite
Baturjnsky to FIDE's chief m•tch arbiter
moves,
he
mi~laced
a rook on the 24th
Jewe]ry , Mason County
l.othar &amp;hmid. Both men left town
move
of
the
31-move
match
and allowed
Bank, Green Sales &amp; Service;
Sunday .
Karpov to slip out of his trap.
Sayre Hardware, Pomeroy
FIDE deputy president and organizer of
The first two games last week, also
the Karpov-Karchnoi match, Flrncio
National Bank : Farmers
draws, were marked by careful but highly
Bank, New York Clothing
Campomanes, told newsmen he also heard
predictable play as the two former
there was protest, but had no details,
House, Francis Florist ,
teammates felt out each other .
.Village Pharmacy, Musi c
Karpov and Korchnoi, who reswne play
Box, Point Pleasant Aut o
Sales, Smith Plumbing and
Heating, Tiffin Jewelers ,
Chamber of Commerce, ~--------------------------1
Citizens National Bank ,
Homestead Realty and Bob's
CB.
I
I

l

Area Deaths

I

Two atudeata from
Pomeroy · ban
been
awarded muale IC•olaroblpa al Teone11ee tech.
Wlooero
of
tbe
aeholaroblpo are Suoao
Wright, wbooe oebolarablp
lo oludy elarlnet at the
uulverolly
will
pay
required uolverally
malnleonee feu; aad
· Laura EDen Hoover, wllele
scholarship to atudy
trombone will pay 5D
percent of
required
ualverolly maloteaance
lees. The· awards are
renewable for four years
with satisfactory academic
and musical progress.

There will be a olght
screening clinic at the
Meigs County Senior
- Clllzeos Center this
evening beglnulug all p.m.
uatU 9 p.m.
The cllole Is lor testing
for diabetes and high blood
pressure. Persons are to
bring a urine s(&gt;eclmen and
have nothing to eat 3 or I
hours prior to attending.
For additional Information
contact the center at 992-

(Ccinlllltlld frGm Pill 1)
Hospital
at
Parkersburg.
How
will
the
increasing
proportion of Americans in their
PEARL B. SIGMAN
Born
October
12,
1886,
she
60s
in
the
next
century
support these octogenarians if
early
Pearl B. Sigman, 7o, 766
was
lhe
daughter
of
the
late·
they
themselves
are
retired,
h&lt;i
asked.
(CGntlnald tnm 1111• 1) . South Fourth Street, Mid- Charles and Margaret Taylor
Secretary
Ray
Marshall
said it may be difficult to
Labor
dleport , died unexpectedly
minor damage .
Palmer.
She
was
also
·ensure
older
Americans
a
comfortable
retirement by shifting
Sunday at her residence.
Morris was taken by
Arrangements wiJI be preceded in death by her money through Social Security, welfare and other programs.
SEOEMS to Holzer Medical announced
Joseph , two
He said it will be necessary to expand employment opporby
Walker husband,
Center. where he was treated
brothers
and
l
wo
sisters.
tunities
for U!e elderly.
Fune·ral Home in Rutland.
and released for neck inSurviving are a daughter ,
Congress took one step in that direction last April when It
juries.
ALICE FITCH :
Lenora Taitt , Little Hockmg; raised from 65 to 70 the age at which a private employer can
.Officers were called to the
Alice Fitch .. 92, of Long two sons, Carl and Oscar, require a person to retire solely because of age, and removed
scerie or a head-on co llismn on Bottom died Saturday Long Bottom ; nine grand- ·the upper age limit of 70 for most federal workers .
SR 141, at the junction of TR evening at Camden Clark children,
It also agreed to allow older Americans to earn larger
. 26
great4, Saturday, at o : ~ p.m.
·
grandchildren, and seven amounts of money without losing Social Security benefits, and
.
According to the Patrol, an
-.6. T great-great - gra ndchildren . to increase a worker's retirement benefits by 3 percent !or
auto driven by Harry ~·.
·
n L Mrs. F1tch was a member each year. of work past 65.
Neville, 21, Henderson, was
of the Long Bottom Christian
west boound, when a vehicle
Clmrch.
operated by Hazel Wilcoxon,
Funeral services will be
63, Gallipolis, pulled into the
held
Tuesday at I p.m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
path of the oncoming Neville
Ewing Chapel in Pomeroy
Saturday Admi ssions
auto .
With the Rev. Freeland
Oian Hysell , Minersville.
(CGntlmlea b'Gal 1111'1)
The vehicles craShed headNorris officiating . Burial will
Saturday Discharges
on , causing
moderate Paul McDaniels, Terry follow in the Morse Chapel
Harold Glasser, president of Miss Universe Inc., said
damage to both.
Sunday
the contest's estimated worldwide television audience
Wolfe, Carl Findling, Yvonne Cemet ery . Friends may call
A passenger in the Neville Edwards, Clarence at the funeral home any time. of 600 million "will see that the contestants are no different
a ut o, Betty Neville , 2o, Ridenour, Christena Grimm,
from them. They will find that, although men and women are
' different/, we're all just human beings,"
Henderson, was ~taken to imd Hazel Sellers.
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Sunday Admlsslons where She was treatetl an&lt;!, Stephen Simpson,GRacine ,
RIDENOUR WINS ,
released .
Jim
Ridenour , Chester,
Sunday Discharge s CLEVELAND (UPI) - Jury deliberations were to
Wilc oxen was cited on Retha White, Edith Burton won a putter for first place in
continue
for a fifth day today in the federal obscenity trial of
charges ol failure to yield.
the blind bogey Contest reputed worldwide pornography king Reuben Sturman and six
and James Sellers.
Saturday atl2 :45 a.m., the
Sunday at the Pomeroy Golf associates.
patrol investigated a one-car
Course. Dr. Ray Pickens,
The defendants are accused of interstate transportation of
crash on SR 790, four-tenths
Pom eroy , won a golf club for obscene material. Stunqan's Cl.eveland-based Sovereign News
of a mile south of CR 50.
WASHINGTON iUPI) second place and Bob Freed, Co. also is a defendant. Herald P , Fahringer, defense attorney
Acco rding to the in·
A live-day wildcat strike
Middleport , won a golf glove
for Sturman, moved for a mistrial over the weekend,
vestigating officer, a vehicle
against metropolitan
for third .
reminding presiding U. S. District Judge William K. Thtnlas
oeprated by Robert L. Long,
Washington' s transit
that
at that time the jury had deliberated nearly 23 hours.
22, Gallipolis, went out of
system Hoes showed slgos
control while traveling south
of weakening today as
on 790. The auto crashed
enough workers returned
through a guardrail, and
to their jobs to permit a
(CGnllllllld 11-. Jlllll) .
overturned in a creek .
partial resumption of
admitting that he had stolen
Long claimed injury , but
subway service.
the lumber from a stack at
ws not immediate!¥ treated.
But other employees
the rear of the yard adjacent
The Long vehicle incurred
vowed to defy a 'federal
to the railroad tracks.
moderate damage . Long was
court' s back·t~work order
Facemyer &amp; Salmons official
cited by the patrol on charges
untll180 strikers suspended
estimated
the value of the
of DW!.
without pay on suspicion of
stolen
lumber
at $64 .
Officers were ca lied to 'the
leading the walkout are
Charges
have
been filed
scene ur a one-vehicle acgranted amnesty . Bus
against
Gerald
Hammon,
25,
cident on SR 124,"six-tenths of
service remained crippled
RD
Glouster,
Ohio.
He
wus
a mile west of milepost 25.
during the morning rush
. The original Kitchenette
lodged ·in the County Jail
According to the patrol, an
hour .
Broom . fringe on top,
overnight and was. released
east bound auto driven by
natural broom
co rn
Saturday afternoon after
sweeping distance 97
LutherT. Amos, 19, Cheshire,
miles . American made.
posting bcmd pending hearing
went out of control on a
later this week in Meigs
curve, pa ssed off the right
County Court.
side of the roadway, struck
Unpolished look
Sunday afternoon, deputies ·
an embankment , and overWhen there 's more polish investigated a one car acturned.
Amos was uninjured . 'Ille uff yu ur nail s than on them, cident on SR 248 east of CR 28
Amos auto incurred heavy get rid uf it. .Half-done at Keno . A car was being
manicur~s do no one any
driven east on SR 248 by
damage.
good
.
Delbert Daniel Smith , 19, Rt.
Amos was cited on charges
I Reedsville. He lost control,
of operating a motor vehicle
skidded off the road and
without a valid license.
Housewares Dept .. 1st Floor
nipped over into creek. The
1'he patrol investiga ted a
. LADIES DAY
car
landed
on
its
top.
lwo-car mishap on SR 141 ,
I.a dies day will be observed
Smith was cited lor no
three-tenths of a mile east of al the Pomerov Golf Co urse
operator's license. He is to
CR 40, Saturday, at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at 9 a .~l. Ladi es day appear Friday in Meigs
Officers report that autos
County Court .
operated by Emma F . is every Tuesda y at 9 a.m .
Simpson. 58, Toledo, and
IN HOSPITAL
Albert R. Keller , 69 ,
Agnes White, Syracuse, is a
Gallipolis, were wesi bound surgical pa.tient at Pleasant
on 111.
Valley Hospital. Her room
The Keller vehicle slowed
number is 109 for those who
to turn left . The SimP.son auto
wish to send cards ..
failed to stop, and struck the
Keller vehicle in the rear ,
causing minor damage to
MARRIAGE LICENSE
both autos.
Marriage
li censes were
Simpson wa S. cit cd un
issued
to
Voictor
Anthony
charges of assured clear
Vaughan,
24
,
Pomeroy,
•and
distance.
Janice
C.
Gilmore,
24,
Saturday, at 8:20 p.m., an
25% Off Purchase,
Oglesly
,
Ill.
;
Stephen
R.
auto operated by Dorothy
Just Present Your
Thayer ,' 31, Shade, .struck a Tatterson, 26, Pomeroy, and
Sheline,
22,
Robyn
D.
deer on SR 33, one and sixGolden Buckeye Card
tenths of a mile north of SR 7. C.'heshire.
HRS: 10 :00
The Thayer vehicl e incurred
When Ordering.
tt:OO P.M. Sun.minor damage.
Thun. 10:00 A.M. Ill
AUXILIARY TO MEET
Offi cers were called to the
12 :00 P.M. Friday
The Ladies Auxiliary of the
and Soturdly.
scene of a one-auto mishap
Set Us Altho
Saturday, at 8:30 p.m., on Pomeroy Eagles Club will
Pomtrar
Bend
Georges Creek Rd ., one-tenth meet T~esday, July 25 at a
p.m. at the club. All members
nf a mile west of SR 7.
According to the patrol, an are invi1ed Ill all end.
auto driven by David C.
Cunningham, 22 , Gallipolis, Georges Creek, 't:ausing
became 'lud gcd on the moderate damage to the
ra ilroad !ra cks cro&amp;sing veh!cle.

j)

NEWS

The World Today

ANNOUNCING!

KITCHENETTE .BROOM

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Farmers
Bank

POMEROY, OHIO
Member FDIC

repairs on Grant were
carried over from last yea~
and since there is con·
siderable traffic south on that
street it is imperative that
some resurfacing be done .
Council voted to look into
the costs of buying materials
for the rep a irs.
Coun •ilman
William
Walters asked that the street

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, July 25, 1978

at
I

l

Man injured

HOSPIT

new physician practicing in
Middleport."
Dr. Conde moved into offices previously occuppied by
Dr. J . J . Davis on July 17.
In other action, councilman
Martin Kelly reported that
the street committee is
recommending that all
of Grant Street be resur·
faced. He commented that

Early

ELBERFELD$

But · if you 've go t c as h , im.portan t docu ment s and o lh er val uabl es to stas h a way ,
t h e n a sofc deposit box is th e bes t pla ce
for 1hc m 1 )u &gt;t penni e s a da y w ill pro tec l
vour valuab les from fire, th eft, d a m age ,
~ ncl yes. even c ook ie m o n ste rs' G e t fac ts 1

surance is necessary to
secu~e
bank loans for
b'1ilding in certain areas in
Middleport .
Council also extended its
appreciation, on behalf of the
village, to Dr. James Conde
for locating his practice in:
Middleport. "We're really
fortunate, " said councilinan
Charles Mullens, "to have a

:·:=::::::;.;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::;:;.;.;.:.:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:·:··

Lumber

"for cookies...

BY JUDY OWEN
M.iddleport c o uncil
meeting in regular sessio~
Monday night, discussed
restrictions on the proposed
flood insurance program
before unanimouslv ac·
cepting the first readinS of
that ordlnanc.e.
Mayor Fred Hoffman
pointed out that nood in-

7311.

Deliberations continue

cookie jars
great"...

Flood insurance measure given first reading

SENIOR CITIZENS

SALE

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VALLEY

••
IN SPITE OF THE RAIN Monday, Dwight Spencer
was at his usual spot In the downtown business district of

Food .price
trend being
investigated
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Food prices have riien more
than 10 percent this year, and
a House subcommittee today
was attempting to find out
why .
"The average family of
four will wind up paying $200
more for food this year than
last if the current food price
trend continues," said Rep.
Fred Richmond, D-N .Y.,
chairman of the agriculture
subcommittee on marketing,
coosumers and nutrition.
In a statement Monday he
promised
a long-term
investigation of U!e cause and
effect of food prices.
Barry Bosworth, chalrman
, of the Council on Wage and
Price Stability, was to give
the administration's views on
the problem today, backed up
by Howard Hjort , the
• Agriculture
Department's
chief economist; Kathleen
O'Reilly of U!e Consumer
Federation of A·merica ;
George Koch of the Grocery
Manufacturers of America,
and several members of
Congress.
Beef prices, which were
depressed for four years
before their recent jump, and
the costs of fresh fruits and
vegetables have been a major
factor in the rise of the
Consumer Price Index in
recent months .
Live cattle prices rose 45
percent between last fall and
this spring before they
leveled off in June.

Restriction·
on burials set .
At a recent meeting of the
Columbia
Township
Trustees, it was decided that
aU burials In the Temple,
Lebanon , School Lot, Castor,
Mt. Olive, Ogdin, Rawlings
and Half Acre cemeteries
would be for human bu.riai
only.
The trustees a iBo decided to
uae their revenue sharing and
anti-recession money for
Stone and labor.
:;:·:;:;:;:::::;:::;:::·:-:;:·:=:·:·::;.:;:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·::;.;·:·.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thuraday through
Seturday, a ~haaee of
ahowera eacb day, with
bleb• ill the Ill and lowo In
the npper • or lower 701.
:::·:;:·:·:;;!;.:.;::·:·:::::::·:·:::=:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.;.;.;.;.:.:::·:·:::·:·

Richmond said that in 12
months ending in May 1978
the average market basket
price rose by 11.3 percent .
The Agriculture Department
has forecast food inflation for
1978 will be B to 10 percent .
The
New
. York
congressman said he wanted
to dis cove r what federal
officials have done to curb
food prices and what their
future plans are.
" Americans are faced with
rampant food inflation, and if
the current trend continues,
the U.S. food bill could jump
as much as $13 billion over
last year's," ..he said, "Poor
people and elderly consumers
on fixed incomes are
particularly hard hit."
He said some of his
cons tituents in Brooklyn
already spend as much as 40
percent of their in·comes for
food .

.

committee also look into mud
on Hooker St reet that is
apparently becom in g too
deep for cars to park there .
It was noted that a sewer
leak on Dew and Grant
Streets is ca using a problem
with rats. Council agreed to
look into that probl em.
Al so, a compla int was
re~eived from a resident on

Oliver Street that lighting is
not adequate in the center of
that block. It wa s noted that
foliag e on a nea rby
propert y owner' s
tree
is bl oc kin g the st reet
lamp servicing that area
area . Rather than posting a
new light, council agreed to
instruct a letter be sent to the
property owner to trim the

en tine
lOOpostal
workers
ar.e fired

United Press International
walkouts so far has' been
The !irmg of alinost 100 minimal - a one.&lt;Jay backlog
postal workers in New Jersey of bulk mail - parcels, "junk
and California has failed to mail" and other low-priority
quell wildcat walkouts itellJS at bulk mail centers in
threatening to spread into a New Jersey and California.
full.,;cale strike in the New But the leader of the New
York City area.
York City union local said
Union leaders said they Monday night he was recomthought a New York City . mending the . 23,000 mail
strike would mean a handlers, clerks and drivers
Pomeroy selling fruits and vegetables . The rain was a
nationwide walkout.
in the union vote to strike.
welcome relief from the sweltering heat the past few
The effect of wild cat
Union President Moe Biller
days.
said a str ike authorization
vote would be held late r this
Week . and if the union
member s approve a strike ":"""
no matter what the margin of
the vote - U!ere would be an
immediate walkout.
He sa id a :-&lt;ew York strike
ACAPULCO, Mexico (UP!) - Miss Misses Ireland, Israel, Hollal)d , Mexico,
probab ly wou ld sta rt . a
South Africa - chestnuthaired, blue-&lt;!yed Belgium, Peru and Chile.
national postal strike.
Margaret Gardiner, 18, of Cape Town - is
Before the finals , Miss Gardiner said her
'I really do believe if New
the new Miss Universe and the first
life's ambition was "to represent my
York votes to strike, the rest
African to win the title of the most country internationally." She said the
of the country will follow,"
beautiful woman in. the world.
said Biller.
person . she most admired was Dr.
The stalueoque model, poet and short- Christiaan Barnard, the SDuth African
Asked abo ut the le gal
story writer triumphed over 74 tither surgeon who pioneered heart transplants.
ramlflcatlons, since postal
hopefuls at U!e Acapulco Arena Monday
workers are barred from
The winner told UPI in an interview last
night but was so surprised at her victory,
sinking
, Biller said, " You'll
week that a bla ck could be chosen Miss
She momentarily froze and was led to her South Africa if she "had the bea uty, charm
have to see.my lawyer."
wicker throne by Miss USA, who came in and intelligence."
The wildcat strikes began
second.
last Friday at U!e New York
She said the grueling contest had taught
The silver crown was placed on Miss her to be patient and that "being a
Bulk and Foreign Mail Center
Gardiner 's head by the 1977 Miss celebrity is hard work ."
in Jersey City, N.J., and the
Universe, Janelle Gominissiorig, Miss
Miss Gardiner said she kept a diary
San Francisco Bulk Mail
Trinidad and Tobago, the first black to win during since her arrival in Mexico for the
Cen ter in Richmond, Calif.,
the title .
contest and plans to write an art icle on the
after a nationwide contract
The l~ound Miss Universe is :&gt;-feel, experience.
propo&gt;al was agreed on in
lOll-inches tall - one of the tallest
WaShington .
Following a coronation dinner Monday
contestants in the pageant - and night attended by the other Miss Universe
Mail balloting on the
measures 38-2/l-38, the most naturally contestants, Miss Gardiner 's schedule
national contract proposal is
endowed .
today included a photograph session while
expected to lie complete in
She is a published poet and short-story She has breakfa'1 in bed a nd a news
·about two weeks, but postal
writer; who plans to model until She is 21, conference in front of a waterfall at a
workers in many a reas of the
U!en study journalism.
counlry wasted no• time in
hotel.
The first runner-up was Miss USA , Judi
Before the final selection, the 75 Miss · condemni ng the pr oposed
Andersen, 20, of Honolulu. The second Universe contestants Monday night went
contract.
runner-up was Miss Spain, 21-year-old through .their chorus line routines and
The proposal . would give
Guillermina Ruil:, followed by Miss Mexican hat dance for the guests and
postal workers an average
Colombia, Shirley Saenz, 18, and Miss .repocters attending the pageant at the
19.5percent wage and cost-ofSweden, 17-yearold Cecilia Rodhe .
arena, which was decorated like a Mayan
living increase over tl1ree
The other ·seven semifinalists were temple.
years, a raise scorned by
on page 10)

Cape Town beauty first African
to win title of Miss Universe

Mountaineer plant
workers on strike
Approximately 50 members
of Millwright Lo&lt;;al 2430 failed
to show up for work at their
jobs at the Mountaineer
Power Plant in New Haven In
what appears to be a wildcat
strike in protest of alleged
unsafe working conditions by
·the Union Boiler Co.
• A sign bearing the inscription " Union Boller
discrimination" was being
displayed by picketers at the
entrance -to the construction
site.
According to Everett
Sullivan,
a
business
representatl ve for the union
local, headquartered in
Charleston, he was notified by
a union stewart in a telephone
call last night that the Union
Boiler Co. had fired two
millwrights for falling to work
inside a pulverizer. The men
allege they were being
required to go down inside the
big machine and weld without
the aid of a helper.
"We 'are trying to gel the
signs down and gettl\is matier
processed through the proper
grievance
procedure,"
Sulllva.n said.
An
unofficial
union
spokrsman stated that several
employes have been injured at

the construction site in recent
weeks and cited unsafe conditions as the primary cause .
Dick Roush, who · handles
public
relations
for
Appalachian Power Company
at the plant, stated, " This is
the position of Union Boiler
Co. ahd not Appalachian
Power ·co. We can monitor
their safety and make
recommendations but we have
no authority to carry them
out."

foliage.
Coun ci lman Ca rl Hor ky
suggested that co uncil
contact the railroad company to see about having the
tra ck crossing un Railroad
Street repaired.
Fina lly, Clerk Gene Grate
reported that Middleport had
received $484 from the anti ;
recessional fiscal assist anCe

program for the JulySeptember period . He also
aMounced that a meeting of
Ohio public officials would be
held September 12-15 in
Columbus .
Attending, in addition to
co uncil members mentioned
above, was · co uncilman
Dewey Horton.

Fiftefn Cents
Vol. 29, No. 70

The World Toclay
F onnal hearings postponed
FORT JACKSON , S.C. (UP! ) - Formal hearings !or two
drill instructors, charged in the heat-stroke deaths of two
recruits , have been postponed for a week because defense
attorneys had prior commitments.
"The hearings will begin again on Monday, July 31,"
Bruce Andrae, an Army spokesman said Monday . "The
defense attorneys were gra nted a delay because they had
ea rlier commitments. ''

Washington subways rwming
The subways were running ·again today in Washington and
attorneys hoped U!ey had a plan to· restore bus service in the
nation's capital, but in San Antonio, Texas, police had to
protect garbage collectors from wildcat $trikers and the
chance of a traSh collection strike also threatened Detroit.
Besides the municipal strikes, Braniff slight. attendants
voted 99 percent in favor of a walkout. The Dallas-based
company said' it still does not anticipate a strike.

Stunnan freed of charges
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Trwnpeting his acquittal on federal
obscemty charges as "a victory for free speech," reputed
worldwide pornography king Reuben Sturman left the Federal
Courthouse_in Cleveland Monday free from charges that could
have put hun 1n Jail for 10 years.
A U. S. District Court jury deliberated five days in the
maJor federal o.bscenity case before finding Sturman and six
asso c t~ tes mnocent oo all counts of transporting obscene
mater~als across stale lines. Federal authorities believe
Sturman to be one of the biggest - if not the biggest distnbutor of sexually explicit films and magazines in the
Uruted States. Sturman's •Cleveland-based Sovereign News
Co., also a defendant m U!e trial, was found innocent on all
counts .

UMW board meeting opens
DENVER (UP! ) - 'The International Executive Board ofthe United Mine Workers opened a four-&lt;lay meeting today
during which It will dete rmine the •validity of a movement to
recall union President Arnold Miller.
Leroy Baca, a UMW international representative from
New Me.xico, said Monday the recall movement was on the
board 's agenda . Baca said he did not know when during the
four days it would be considered .

Books 'not auditable'
COLUMBUS (UPI )- A state auditor, frustrated with the
tangled mess Cleve land 's accounting records, has declared the
city 's financial lxloks "'not auditable' ' for the fa st two fiscal
years.
.
Only one other city, Washington , has been declared not
auditable, said T. Jack Gary, audit ma nager of revenue
Sharing for Sl&lt;Ite Auditor Thomas Ferguson. The sta te
auditor's conclusion disclosed Monday release of reports on
Cleveland's Finance Department from 1971-1977 and the Port
Control Department ,!rom 1975-1977.

Bond set at $200,000
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - A reputed underworld electronics
expert wanted in conneclion with the bloody bomb sla ying of
Cleveland racketeer Daniel J . " Danny'" Greene surrendered
to Cleveland police late Monday .
.
Cannen Marcon i, of suburban Cleveland , is accused of
(Continued on page 10)

Man wanted by
FBI is jailed
"GALUA COUNTRY" in "Galli a Countr·y."

Mei gs Co unt y Sheriff Sickles, Shid Si gles, and
James J. Proffitt advjses that Steve Redisi. Addresses used
a susoect wanted by the FBI include Tampa, Florida,
for unlawful night to avoid Columbus, and Mt. Vfrnon,
prosecution for burglary and Ohio.
a 24-year-old female comAccording to t he NCIC
panion
were
taken
int
o
entry
(National Crime In·
'·
"Doodle-Ups" featured in the Rio Grande Bean Dinner scene
cust ody Mon day morning formation Center ), Smith is
around 10 a.m. in Bedford wanted in Clarksburg, W.
Township after their a uto Va .. Columbus, Delaware,
went off the road and into a and Mt . Vernon, 9hio. ·
ditch .
The 24-year-old female is
Sheriff Proffitt advised that being ~eld for investigation
featuring , the ga me of FoolbaU, a nd three former
IJagataway (lacrosse ), and il . OSU football players; Dave he, and Deputies Michael and her identity is being w.ithJackson County Fairgrounds Diles, ABC sports announcer, Zirkle, Darrell Slone, and held pending completiOIJ.. f f
scene during the"Civil War . In and Bevo Fran cis , Rio Investigator Gary Wolfe were mvestlgatlon.
Both subjects are currently
addition, according to Miller, Grande College all-time enroute to a Hemlock Grove
residence, following a tip being held in the · Meigs
the cast has been enlarged, basket ball great.
from the Sheriff's Office at County Jail.
drawing many from the
entire area, many of whom . Curtain time for "Gallia Mt. Vernon. that the wanted
Sherif! Proffitt advises.that
are earning college credits Country" is 8:30 p.m . and subject wa• in Meigs County the FBI has Indicated that the
from Rio Grande College lor tickets may be purchased at and was enroute to a suspect will be turned over
the gate. Admission : $4.50 for Hemlock Grove residence. for pro secution in the state
lheir participation .
Merlyn Ross, professor of adultsi $2.50 for ch ildren 12 Enroute to Hemlock · Grove, courts. It is not knoWn 'which
music for Rio Grande and under. For group rates or the 1971 Olds 98 was spotted in department will be the first to
Co llege, is ·in charge of the ticket information , call 1-286· the ditch on CR 39 a short begin prosecution .
music and chorus, and Dave 2210 . Ample pa rkin g is distance off CR 20 . rold Rt.
Phillips' band accompanies provided and transportation ~ ) .
is furnished to the theatre site
the entire performance.
Taken into custody was 2~­
Audiences this year have by Bob Evans Farl)ls year-old Ricky Allen Smith. ; '. Clear tonight, with lows in
included such perStJOalities wagons. Light wraps are Smith uses aliases of Pete the mid or upper 60s. Sunny
as Woody Hayes, head recommended for those at- Quickie, Steve Harvey, Joe and warmer Wedhesday,
men t,· r f:•r · Ohio Slate tending .
Snow, Jack Dagin, Shid with. highs in the upper 80s.

Sixth season of 'Gallia Country' coming to end
Middleport sq1,1ad

" Gallfa Country" concludes its sixth season with
performances
Thursd~y
through
Sunday,
July
27-30,
answers two calls following a most successful
season for ·1978. The Gallia
Th e
Middleport Dramatic Arts Society is the
Emergency Squad made l wo producer.
runs Monday afternoon .
This highly amusing
At2:04 p.m. the squad went musical drama tells in song
to Dutton 's Drug Store on and dance the settlement of
North Second Avenue for southeastern Ohio by \he
Mrs. Mamie Hendricks. She French and Welsh. Cast ·as
was treated on the acene.
well as story changes have
At 3:06p.m . the squaJ went been made over the six year.s'
to the Nellie , Winston performan ces and according
residence at 667 S. Second St.• to Greg Miller, the director ,
Mrs. Winston's brother was audiences have received
apparently transport ed to them with great acclaim .
New scenes include the Ohio·
Holzer Medical Center.
Michigan border disput e

.

. Weather

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