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.

~

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

�2- The Dailv Sentmel, Mutdleport-Pomeroy, 0 Tuesday, July 2!i, 1978

Cleveland infighting causeS- bizarre
CLEVELAND ( UPI) The
VICIOUS
pohhcaJ
inftghting m Cleveland thiS
swruner, the result of the
effort t&lt;&gt; oust mavertck
Mayor Denms Kucuuch, has
produced more than a few
btzarre moments
There was the tune a few
weeks ago when Ctty Council
PreSident George Forbes cut
off Kucmtch 's microphone
durmg a counctl meeting
promptmg a
dramaltc
walkout by the mayor and hiS
entire cabmet
Another time, the 31-yearold Kucuuch, upset about the
counctl s fatlure to pass

iegtslallon he supported,
went mto a name-calling
tirade ,. referrmg to the
council as a collection of
lunatics and baffoons "
And then there was the case
of the rather strange news
conference called Monday by
Seth Taft, prestdent of the
CUyahoga County Board of

Corrumsstoners
Taft , one of the most
powerful Republican leaders
m northeast Ohto, had wtdely
distrtbuted a press release
last Frtday , announcing
Mr Taft wtii announce hiS
posttion on the recaii of
Ma} or Kucmtch "

But when Taft sat down m
his accustomed seat at the
comrntsstOners '
offtce
Monday afternoon,
he
dedar!!d, "I take no poSIIlon
today on recall "
He
proceeded to level vehement
crtllctsm
at
Kuctmch
stoppmg Jus! short of calling
for his ouster
The n!Hlews announcement
evoked strongly worded
queslt ons from reporters,
who were
under
the
unpresston Taft was gomg to
take a stand on the recall
ISSUe - a subJect that has
grtpped the Cleveland area
for several weeks
Although
Taft

areas before the Aug 13
recall elechon
In the
remauung three weeks be
hsted these matters for
Kuctmch's actton unemployment, a !letertorallng
water system, a sagging
credit rating and stalled
urban redevelopment
Taltfaces strong opposlhOO
thts fall m hts btd for reeiec llon from State Rep
Edward Fet ghan, who
narrowly lost the Cleveland
mayoral elecllon to Kucmtch
last year
"Kuctmch has attacked
busmessmen who pr ov tde
JObs He went back oo hts
wntten approval of the titg-

acknowledged that a major
part of his C&lt;ltSittuency lives
m Cleveland and that
deciSions made at Cleveland
CityHaUcanaffect theenlire
metropohtan area, the
commissio ner
sa td he
couldn't offer hiS opiRion on
the recain because he dy 't
live wtthin ctty luruts 'I'm
not sure I should take a
posthon, for I m not a
Cleveland restdent"
But the comnusstoner, m a
political dogftght hunself thiS
year, listed several major
problems coofronting tbe ctty
and said he couldn't support
the mayor unless he makes
81 gniftcant progress m those

'

momen~s

dock and the new
boat ore
In Co bakery
Orlando Bak g ork wtth the
He refused to ~es Coallttoo
Steel Communi ffl
f
11 o
set up by o cas
Pittsburgh , Youngst=::
Gary (Ind ) and other
to
dependent communities I
deal wtth the loss of stee
jobs," Taft satd
1\
Earlier Monday, Kucm:c. •
did hts best to undercut Ta
posttion when the mayor to~
action of\ a lmgering dtspu
between him and the county
comnusston prestdent
the
Kuc mtc h announced
s
ctty would assume the costll
of relocatlllg sever~ sma
" People are trymg to seW! oo

I:

:' Pete k~eps Rose
'em ~oarz·n-g-.. -·· "~.;..~~~~ ~ ~~~y ~~~

this llsue and make It another
political footbaU In the recaU
game, " Kuclnlch said,
referring to Taft
With most of Cleveland's
business labor and political
community already lined up
against him In the Aug, 13
U election Kuclnlch auf~~ yet another blow over
t~
weekend
when
Cl eland-area 'Teamsters
u:on officials announced
thell' support lor the recaU
S g n 111 can 11 y,
1 he
1
T msters repfesent much of
th": ctty's non-uniformed
mumclpal work force,
IIICiuding streets samtatloo
crews and garbage haulers.

•

NEW YORK (UP!) - Pete1
Rose lauglungly says that if
he wtnds up breakmg Joe
DiMaggio's
consecutive
game hittmg streak of 56
games , he's also likely to
wind up bald
"I've been tippmg my cap
so many times lately that my
hall' Is begmning to fall out,"
quipped a happy Rose
Monday mght after he
extended hit hittmg streak to
37 games, tymg the National
League record set by Tommy
Holmes back m 1945
Three times Rose, standing
oo fll'st base after lmmg a
Bingle to left m the seventh
inning off ex-teammate Pat
Zachry, tipped hts cap as a
crowd of 35,939 gave him a
three-mmute
standtng
ovallolfi'
The htt was the ftrst of two
for Rose durmg the game as
the Cincmnall Reds extended
thetr wmrung streak to four
games wtth a 5-3 vtctory over
the New York Mets to move
wtthm a half game of the tdle
Ssn Francisco Gtants, who
lead the National League
West
That's what ts so much

ly

listemng 1 ' '
Probably most of us are like that boy So much of the time
we are so busy, engrossed m our own affatrs, that we have
difficulty llstemng to others Yet, most of us would proftl by
taking ttme out from our routine to look around and see what IS
go mg on about us
If we would take the tune to listen to the unfortunate's cry
of despatr hear the laughter of the happy, catch the
determmed' s song of hope and asptrat10n, and pay attention to
the successful's counsel for achtevement, we rmght find new
msptratton and mstghts for new accomplishments ourselves
There IS information and excitement all about us, but we often
have to take the tune to look and liSten for It
Actually unless we do take the lime to stop, look, and
listen much of what IS gomg on around us wtll be a confusmg
babble Very few of us are capable of bemg actively engaged m
one activtty while at the same ttme observmg and l1Stenmg to
other matters
1 we ll remember a safety slogan that was popular when I
was a youngster m elem entary school To everybody under the
age 30 this reference may seem to be something taken from
ancten't h1story but that 'old slogan advtsed us to "stop, look ,
and listen before crossmg a street It still holds an llllportant
message for us tllday concermng life Itself
Without domg any tn)USI!ce to that safety slogan, we could

Slow me down, Lord, when I m going too fast,
But don 't iet me run out of gas '
Help me to see my task wtth a steady look at hfeNot JUst a fleetmg pass And may I take tlffie to listen to WISe counsel
Wtthout self btas

'Almighty Dollar' takes
another spectacular plunge
TOKYO (UP!) - The once chased doiiars m a futtle patterns
ratsed pnces by 9 5 percent ,
•Alrmghty Dollar ' spurned effort to prop up the
"When the dollar declmes, keepmg the same share of
by ma ne} trad er s and dwtndl tng currency but tt ts supposed to make customers
aband oned by Japan' s aba ndoned 1ts efforts because Amencan
go ods
more
An Amencan m London
centra i hank took another of perSistent sellmg pressure
compettttve,' satd tbe trade wtll pay $8 30 tomght for a
spectacular plunge on the market sources satd
council spokesman But he seat at the National Theater
Tok yo fore tgn excha nge , Though Amencan touriSts
sa1d U S manufacturers Last week 11 was $8 II In
market today
US
servtcemen
and generally have lost the edge West Germany the beer stem
It c losed the da y's trading cor p o rate
em ployees by ratsmg !hell' pnces m lme that cost $1 21 last week was
at 195 50, a sharp drop over overseas felt the pmch first , With foretgn pnce mcreases $1 2!i today A bowl of ltaltan
Monday s pre vtous re cord sooner or later the shde will
For example, the Treasury pasta that could he had last
low of 199 10
Department mcreased the week for $1 17 was about $1 20
hit pocketbooks at home
Unless the Uruted States E ve ry t hm g Impor ted wtll minimum pnce of unported today A Japanese tape
and Japan take seriOus and cost more everytlung made stee l by 9 9 percent last year recorder that cost $123 m
posttt ve cooperate steps to or
transported
usmg Instead of trymg to get a Tokyo a year ago costs $157
defend the psy c hologi ca l llllported otl wtii go up
larger share of the market, no..
'
bamer of 200 yen the dollar
Amertca ns are pa ymg the Amencan steel mdustry
will drop further and possibly more tht s year for the same
to 180 yen as predicted by volume of goods they bought
monetary experts a seruor last year," a spokesman for
offtcla i of the Bank of Japan the Japan-Umted Sta tes
warned
Tr ade Coun cti sa td tn
The offt cl3 1 ct ted the . Wasbmgton
doiiar 's fail on world money
" The standard of livmg ts
ByKENNETHR CLARK
markets Monday and reports gomg down Thts ts the
Unlted PressiDLernatloual
the OPEC cartel would stop stmple effect of the dollar's
DEJA VU : Jackie Cooper can dtrect " Rambow" by almost
usm g doiiars as tts sole declme "
too personal a memory The movte , based on the book bv
pncmg mechamsrn and also
The lower value of the Christopher Finch, IS the childhood btOJ!I'aphy of the late Judy
ratse o!l pnces 5 percent on dollar also may lead to a new Garland, takmg her life through the age of 17 when she made
Nov I
surge of mflatton 1f Amertcan the now urunortai " Wtzard of 0. " One scene recalls her fll'st
The Bank of Japan, the manufacturers follow recent date wtth another chtld-5tar - Jackie Cooper Johoay Doran Is
natwn s centr al bank purcast m Cooper's role, opposite Audrea McArdle - late of
' Anme ' fame on Broadway -as Miss Garland A line in a
Hollywood rehearsal from Piper Laurie - playmg MISS
Garland's mother - brought applause from the cast and a
blush from Cooper the other day Says Marna "I'm glad

peopletalk

He ' s~~

delphta, ''

IN WASHINGTON

.

In ,search of a cause

for variOus orgamzatwns public and pnvate, commttted to
reordermg soctal and econormc pnortlles ·but compellmg
tssues now are few and far between
~--..::.:.:=-.:._-------------~- The veterans of those earlier struggles recently gathered at
Concordia College here, lor a bnef look back at the '60s and to
ST PAUL, Mtnn (NEA l - They made thetr mark at a very seek a new agenda of ' tssues for the 80s "
early age, as the young but savvy leader s of the maJor protest
The 70s have produced stgmftcant success.:s. but they Inmovements of the 1960s Tom Hayden, Sam Brown, Mi chael variably have been confm ed to the tedwus complex and httleHarrmgton , Paul Booth, John Lewts, Davtd Mtxner
nobced fteld of commumty orgamzmg
Their 1ssues tumbled onto the national stage m raptd succesThe country's most respected and successful grass-roots
'1on dunng that turbulent decade The " war on poverty," the orgamzer probably ts Wade Rathke, head of Little Rock, Ark ,
e~vtl rtghts movement m the South, oppostllon to the war m group called the Assoctallon of Comrnumty Orgamzations lor
Vtetnam
Reform Now or ACORN
Most of the orgamzers of those crusades still work full-time
Under Rathke's leadership, ACORN has establiShed thriVIng
communtty-based groups m dozens of ctttes and towns m 13
states Its membership now ts approachmg 20,000 farmh es
Yet even Rathke diSplays stgns of dtscontent The guesUons are becommg more difftcult 1n this busmess, ' he says
When reader s w e re
Dr eam1 ng about what we
The btgger and older the orgamzattons get, the more s ubtle
wtll bec ome when we asked whi ch tamo us woman
and sophiSticated the attacks '
grow up doesn I slop at lhey would mosl l1ke 10 be
Bert DeLeeuw, head of a Washmglon, D C group ca lled the
age 21 And us ua ll y !hose I he top selection was telev1
Moveme nt for Economic Just1ce notes that durmg the iHst
s10n

more ew llng than real11y

Walle rs

McCall s

11s female

Newlon John and Beverly
S1ils former l1rsllady Betty
Ford and actres ses Helen

chotces were
1 Singer or musician
(especially 1 concert
piln!SI)
2

Bus1ness executive

3

Wriler or edilor (eo·
pec1ally of child·
ren s book&amp;)
Shop owner (especially gills or clothing)

5
6
J

Hay es

Suzanne

Somers

and Soph1a Loren
Iron ically smce the sur·
vey was co nducted Ford

own ed up to drug and alco
hoi abuse, Somers diSclosed a youthful bad c heck
rap Walters lost her anchor w o man

ass •gnment

and Loren was reported

Journalist or news
1nchorperson
Nurse

under 1nvest1gahon for cur-

(T1e) Doctor, rui
estate agent inlerlor

response ol one survey par

rency s muggling
11 all goes lo prove the

(Tie) Social worker
lucher, psychologist,

IIC!pant
I
lh1ngs a little
grass 1sn I
whe re else

actress

work to create a better me

decorator

I

Barbara

popular

cho ices were Singers Ohv1a

readers whtch c areers they
dreame d about Thetr l op

4

Olher

re

magazme

cenlly aske d

per so nality

m1ghl want
beller butlhe
greener any
I jus l have lo

~ NEWSPAPER

ENTERPRISE

ASSN I

mrP. hov"

STAR DRAWERS Not coolent wtth tdol ststus among the
natton s teeny-boppers, Donnle and Marie Olmond are
expanding !hell' horiZOns They presented thell' Ill's! fashtoo
show Monday m New York - a 7f&gt;.ptece sportswear line aimed
at · young men, juruor m15sell and children " The mvltattooonly showmg -staged at New York, New York diSCO - was
labeled 'Olive's Kids " And who 1s Olive? Why the lady who
Ford 1nd Somtr• " Tho fl""lon'l fl"'"""
founded the whole Osmond emptre bonny and Marte call her
Mama
L----------------~-...J
·
TOP TUNE Tim Moore, grand prtZe winner of the first . . - - -; _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - -,
Amertcan Song Festival, Will represent the United States ln
the Pactfic Song Competition m New Zealand In October
Moore, who won With hts song "Channer," has signed a record
II your lavonte magaz1ne seems heavie r Ihan II used 10
be lhe likely reason IS more advertising According to
contract and has wrttten tunes for Art Garloakel, the Bay City
Adverllstng Age, ad pages In U S magaz ines were up 10
Roiiers and Cher.
percenlln Aprll 1978 over AprlllQH
Products that accounted lor lhe largest advertising
QUOTE OF 111E DAY: Terry CAmpbell, 24, of Leucadia,
expenditures were
Calif , ooe of 50,000 persons who jammed Anaheun Stadium to
1 Automotive
SZU12,143
see the Rolling Stones " I'm glad I made It because I've never
2 Clgorett. . , lqbocco
1J ,111,314
seen the Stones before and I thought I had to before I get too old
3 Toiletrleo, coimatico
11,211,117
and can't stand Uus anym&lt;re "
4 Food, food product•
14,11UOZ
5 Bur, wfne, liquor
12,UI,IZI
I Butlne. . and conaumer
11,22UZI
GLIMPSES· The Dan~e Educators of America - whtch
numbers such terpsichorean teachers m Its alumni as Peter
""'Ice•
7 Trnol, hotelo,,raaorta
11,M2,UZ
Gennaro'and Gwen Verdun - presented Its "DEA" awards
I Publiohlng, modlo
10,334,241
Monday to Ann Reinklnc of "Dancm"' and Eartha Kltt of
t Apporei , footwur
1,113,712
·
Tunbuktu"
Carol Burnett la back In C&amp;lifornla after
10 Houuhold furnlahlnga
l,131,7to
extenor filmmg m New York ol Erma Dombeck's " The Grass
IS Always Greener Over the Septic Tank"
Desi Aruaz Jr.IS
The lop advertiser for lhe month was R J Reynolds
lndustlres a tobacco company which spent 18,438,4t5
tn New York to film Alan King's " How to Pick up Gil' Ia"
Runners up Included Sears, General Motors Seagram,
Ceiesle Holm wtll costar as Florence llllrdilll opposite George
Philip Morris, General Fooda Cryaler, Proc:tor l Gamble,
K•nnedv as President Warren llllrdlag m the NBC-TV
Amerlr.on Brands and Bristol -Myers
mtmsertes "Backstall's at the Whtte House "
!NEWSPAPER ENTERl»RIU: .USN I

The homers were th ree o f
Rose has hit Uns
season
" That's why the crowd was
so amazed that day," satd a
Rose " The fans mllll have
thought Lee Majors ( televtston's SUI Mtlhon Dollar
Man) was tn my uniform."
Rose was renunded that the
day after he hit those three
homers hack on April 29 he
had a 10-i!ame hitting streak
come to an end when he went
hitless against the ,,same
Zachry who yteldeil hts
record tymg btl Monday
rught
" Yeah," cracked Rose,
"but I was sttll out of breath
from runnmg out those three
homers the day before and I
didn t have any bat speed
left Sttll, I remember hittmg
two balls real good off Zach
that next day even though I
four homers

~~~~~~~~~~~~ lh':ts:r:::":e:~=~~~~~~::fseb~tlt the

moveBrown, now head of ACTION, the federal volunteer agency,
IS especially blunt m hts assessment Amertcan liberalism,
the liberalism that most of us gre~&lt; up and fought for, ts out of
touch wtth the nation's mood '
Those comments were made durmg the annual meeting convened here by the Washmgton-based Conference on Alter·
nattve State and Local Public Pohctes a national coalition of
communtty leader s and state and iocai public offtctais
Detenmned to regam lhe tnlllatlve, the more than 500 acttvtsts attending the four-{jay conference reached a consensus
on potenttai new tssues for the years ahead The liSt mcludes
-Development of aiterna llve energy sources wtth emphasiS
on solar energy (Hayden now heads the Cahforma Campaign
for Economic Democracy whtch has worked almost ex·
clustvely on that tssue J
-A broad-based attempt to reduce the concentration of
power m the private sector, ranging from local challenges to
utility company rates to a natwnal effort alllled at making corporate boards of directors more accountable to the public
- A parallel dr1ve to reduce the mfluence of the major tn•
stttutions in the pubhc sector, the mcreasmgly unresponsive
governmental structures at the federal and state level Their
functtons would be assumed by netghborhood and conununlty·
based government Units
- A tax reform campatgn emphastzmg not only tax reduc·
lions but also a drastic overhaul of the current system, destgn·
ed to mcrease the tax burden on the wealthy coupled with
redtstrtbut!On of more mcome to the poor
The tssues are complex and controverstal, and there IS no
guarantee of success Carol Beiiamy, prestdent of the New
York Ctty Council, offered perhaps the best swnmary of the
actlvtsts ' current dilemma when she referred wtSUully to the
1960s
'It was a tune of spectal certamty We knew our goals •
and we knew our frtends and enermes I wonder if we shaD
ever be so sure of ourselves agam "
The Allllllnac
United Press International
Today is Tuesday , July 2!i,
the 206th day of 1978 wtth 159
to follow
The moon is movtng toward
ItS last quarter
The morning star IS
Juptter
The evening stars are
Mercury , Venus, Mars and
Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Leo
American artist Maxfield
Parrish and actor Waher
Brennan were born on July 25
- the artist in 1870 and
Brennan Jn 1894
On thla day in history
In 1866, Ulysses S Grant
became the first American
olftcer to reach the rank of
general in the U. S Army
In 19S2, Puerto Rico
became a self·governinc U. S.
Commonweelth.
In 1972, Democratic vice
prestdentiai nominee Thoma

GREENVILLE, S C (UP!)
- Middle linebacker Ralph
Ortega abruptly the Atlanta
Falcons' trauun g camp after
his Ill's! practice, saymg he
didn 't think he had the proper
attitude for football
" The Situation IS 5UCh thaI I
don't feel I can gtve tbe time
and effort that I have in the
past," Orte ga satd 1n a
statement released by the
Falcons "It would not be fatr
to the' coaching staff , the
players or myself to have
somebody m camp with that
attitude "
ATHENS, Ohio ( UP!)
Harold N McElhaney, who
bsd been athletic dll'ector at
Aiiegheny
College
1n
Meadville, Pa , smce 1970,
has been named athletic
director at Ohto University,
school Prestden t Charles
Ping announced today
McElhaney, 42, succeeds
Btll Rohr , who resigned
esrller this year to enter
p~wate business

Eagleton, a M1880un senator,
dtsclosed he had had
psychtatrtc care for " nervous
ailments" In the 19601
Presidential nominee George
McGovern removed him
from the ticket and replaced
him wtth Sargent Shriver
ntE DAILY SENTINEL,
DEVOTED TO THE ....,

IN'I'EIIut or

MEIGS-MASON AIIEA

,... •

·

ROIIE!ITHOEFLICH

CllyPubl"""' dolly mopl Souordoy
by The Ohio V•Uey Publbhln¥
Cumpr~ny·Multlmedba Inc:
111
Cwrt Si PutnerU)' Ohkl 6:1711
8 W1Jnf:M Offke Phone 1112- 21M

F..dillwull Phunt Vft 21l7
Se«:u~ c lull

pul\l&amp;e

Pl'kl

at

Pomeroy Ohav
Nat tiuNII lldvtrtlllflll r~
Lllliv~ l•ndoo Allocialtl 3101
E~~&lt;lld AY&lt; Claveland Ohio 44111
Sulll&lt;rl ..li.&lt;l "''" Doliverod by

car.,Wr wtwre a\'aU.ble 71 L...U ptt
~. By Nut.« Rwll wheN t.'UT'Ie!

1\'lillblt One rauMh
Sl 26 By IRiil In Ohkl and " · v • .•
()w Yt!ar t22et, Ita .,...,_,
' II 50 Thru munlha f1 01,
'F'.bltwhlft • oa Jftl' I Sb ,.......
11:1 Kl Three mtnUtl. t11f
Siallk~ft prk.'f lkiudft ......,
liti'Vll..'t nul

____

...__
TUun&amp;ntlnC'I

conttnued,

scratch thetr watches "

What's up in daydreams

lantas tes are cons td erably

he

"and I had thoughtthal would
00 IY ha ppen ifldrop peddea d
at third base
' And," he added , a b1g grm
spreadmg across his face ,
"the last time I was here the
fans were so confuse d when I
hit those three hlmers m one
ga me that they' didn't know
whethe r to wind their tails or

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

What's up in advertising

li)1978 1:1y NEA fn ~ ~~

didn't get a htt"
The score was tied 2-2
Monday night when Rose,
hitless m his fll'st three at
bats, stepped to the plate wtth
ooe out m the top of the
seventh inning
Rose fouled off Zachry's
ftrst pltchilttempting to bunt
"That," he sald, "brought
Lenny R.andle (Met third
baseman) m so close I could
almost shake hands wtth
him "
Randle bardly had time to
plant hiS feet fmnly on the
ground before Rose lashed a
liner to left for hts fll'st htt of
the ntght as the crowd roared
Three times Rose tipped hiS
cap
"And," satd Reds' coach
Alex Gramrnas , "If Rose had
continued tippmg his cap the
crowd would probably sttil be
out there cheenng him "
Rose s reaction to the ovabon •
"It made me feel so good,"
hesatd, 'thatlwtshedl could
have gone mto the stands and
shaken bands wtth everyone
of them "
Ma1or League Leaders
By United Press International

.z

..

......~

II

,

SAN ANGELO, Texas
(UP!) . - Running back
Anthooy Davis wUI be lost to
lite Houstoo Oilers for at least
SIX weeks because of a broken
leg suffered m a trainlng
camp practice sesston, a club
spokesman said today
Davis suffered a broken
ftbula in his left leg in a
collision
Friday
with
linebacker Steve Kiner
Team doctors said Davia may
not be ready to play before
IRI&lt;I'eeason
LATROBE, Pa (UP!)
Pittsburgh Steelers running
back Rocky Bleier will be
tddellned for a week to 10
days with a hanutrlng Injury
and problbly wU1 miss the
team'a Aug. 5 exhibition
opener againat the Colta in

Baltimore

Ca r ew M•n

R1ce Bos
LezcanoM d
Lynn Bos

also

was

GOLF CLASSICS
Ttps from an 0 Id ReI18ble

96401 129 322
80261 84 322

88 318 101 J IB

103 31S
97 306
86 306
101 lOS
83 3o.&lt;
99 303
74 JOJ

20

valenlone

M!l

and

C lar ~ SF 11
Amenciln Leilgue R1ce Bo$
2• Baylor Ca l and H1s l e M il
23 Thornton Cle\1 ThOmpson
Det and Thomas Mtl 20
Runs Batted In
Niltlonill League Foster C•n
78 Clark. SF 76 Wmfield SO
65 Montanez N Y 64 Ga r 'fey
L A 63
Amencan League Rice Bos
and Staub De l 81 H1sle Md
7'1 Thompson Del 68 Thorn
ton Cle'f 61
Stolen •••••
Nahonal League
Mor eno
P1tl
42
Lopes
LA
29
Richards SO 28 Taveras Pttt
26 Sm1th SO 24
American League
LeFlore
Det 39 W•lson I( C 32 Dllone
Oak 31
Cr uz Sea 30 W1ll s
Te )( 29
P1tch1ng
Victone!i
Nallonal League Blu e SF 13
4 Gr msl ey Mtl 12 7 Knepper
SF 11 6 John LA and Rog er s
Mil 1 I 7 N1ekro A l l 11 10
Amencan League
G u •dry
NY 14 1 Tana na
Cal 13 5
Ball 13 J
Torrez
F la nagan
8os and Ca ldwell Mil 12 S
Sorensen
M 1 12 7
P81mer
Bait 12 8 Leonftrd KC 12 II
E~rned Ru.n Average
(Based on 90 1nn1ngs p1tched !
National Leilgue V uclo.ovtch
St L 2 19
Rog ers Mil 2 26
Swan NY 2 .&amp;8 Reusc hel C, 1
2 6 5 Knepp er SF 2 6 7
Amencan League
Gu•drv
NY 2 t1
Matlack l ex 2 25
(ftldwell
Mil 2 40
Pa lm er
Bait 2 59 Johnson Oak 'J 76
St1:1keouts
National League
R1chard
Hou 185
N1ekro
All
140
Seave r C• n 130 Montefu sco
SF 116 Bly leven P111 107
Amencan league Ryan Cal
153 Gu1t1ry NY 145 F l anagan
Bait 110
Leonard
K C 109
Jenkms Te)( ftnd Underwood
Tor 87

Sam Snead
Th e ca r ee r of legendary
goller Sam Snead, a threettme wmner of the PGA
Champt onshtp proves th e
value of do tt yourself
Instruction s

Snead a n allt1me great
who reeled off 84 tour v1ctcr

rtes from the 1930s through
the 1960s, never had a
tea cher to help htm wh en h1s
game faltered
So Slammtn Sammy con
stantiy e xpenm e nted to
make adjustments n eeded to
low e r h1s scores After a
hfellm e of sell-t eachtng, the
66-year-old star - a favonte
for h1s easy-gotng slyie kn ows more than a few go lf
secrets
For mstan ce Snead ac c la imed for hts smooth
swtng , ts one of the longes t
httlers m the ht st ory of goll
In h1s younger days ht s e ye
po~p!n g te e s hots oft e n
zoomed on a straight hne
more than 350 yards
Now Slammm' Sammy,

covermg key aspects of the
game from tee to g reen
shows weekend golfers how
to tmprov e th eir pla y
H1s su: lesso ns tn the m
formative seraes - GOLF
CLASSICS Tips from BD
Old Rellable - be~ m tomorr nw m The Datiy Sentmei

I'd be gomg for more Pete
Rose ts a Hall of Farner and
I'll always be glad my record
stood 33 years and tl took a
Hall of Farner to break 11 "
So Rose wtil go for 38
tomght and the chance to
stand alone m any City U It's
any consolation to hllll, Lou
Gehng also got shoved from
the headimes m New York
when he htt four homers on
June 3, 1932 That was the day
John McGraw restgned as
manager of the New York
Gtants and was replaced by
Bill Terry
" Swan's a hard Ulrowert'
satd Rose " But I've laced a
lot harder throwers (Sandy )
Koufax could throw a ball
through a carwash and not
get 11 wet
" BeSides I've gotta keep
thts streak gmng Jackie
Clark I who has hit safely m 25
games for of the San
Franctsco Gtants) IS rtght on
my tail and that would be
awf u1 to break the record
only to have hun break mme
next week"
~In other National League
game s Atlanta dumped
Phtiad elphta, 5- 1, Houston
edged Montreal, 6-5, and Los
Angeles stopped Chtcago 3-2
Braves 5, Phdlles I
Btff P ocoroba 's two-run
homer trtggered a three-run
fourth mmng to lead the
Braves over the Philltes
Buddy Solomon s shutout btd
was spo1led ~&lt;hen Rtchte
Hebner connected for hts 12th
home run wtth two out m the
Sixth
As I ros 6, Ex pus 5
Rafael Landestoy's two-run
smgie capped a stx -r un ,
runthmmng rally that helped
HouSton snap an e1ght-game
losmg streak
D.Jdgers 3, CUbs 2
Davey Lopes two-out
: mgle scored Steve Garvey
from third wtth the wmmng
run m the bottom of the nmth
to gtve Los Angeles the
VIctory Joe Ferguson was hit
by a pttch and exchanged
words w1th lo ser Don me
Moore, 5-3 , causmg both
benc hes to empty but no
blows were exchanged One
out later Lopes smgie ended
the game

·· they wm tt "
By MIKE TU!L Y
the other's convtcted
laced a patr of RBI doubles
UP! Sports Writer
U:tter wtth Dtck Howser
The reference wa s to Stem- and Leon Roberts contrtbuted
Nearly three years of con- mana gmg untd new Manager brenner's convtcl ton m 1974 a two run homer to lead
troversy, ne a r-h nngs and Bob Lemon could )Otn the for making 1llega l campatgn Seattle rn the mghtcap Bruce
general clubhouse mayhem team, the Yankees lost , f&gt;-2, to contributions And for that Boehle Singled home Ruppert
ended
Monday
when Kansas City, droppmg 10¥.. statement the man who Jones m the nmth mmng of
Manager Btlly Martm stood games out of the East wanted more thljn a nythin g th e fir st game to g1ve left·
011 a balcony outside an
DIVISIOn iead
'
else to manage the New York bander R1ck Honeycutt hts
anttque shop m Kansas Ctty
Martm' s tempest uous rela- Yankees, no longer wtll
ftrst maJorieague shutout
and tearfully announced he tionship wtth upper manageIn other Amencan League Angels 5, Indians 4
would no longer manage the ment
reached
an games, Boston won, 4-2 after
Dav e Chalk smgled home
New York Yankees
trreconcthabie pomt Sunday losm g, 5-4 , Seattle sw ept Don Ba}lor from second base
"There 'li he no questtons when he tnsulted George Toronto, 1-0 and 7-2 , " 'th two out tn the 16th mmng
and answers after th1 s Ste mbr enner, the team Californta edged Cleveland, to end a marathon that was
statement," Martm satd " I owner
5-4, m 16 mnmgs, Detrott prolonged when both teams
am a Yankee now and forever
Martm raged at Regg1e thumped Oakland
4-1, scored two runs m the lith
and Yankees do not talk or Jackson, who had JU St been Chtcago upended Milwaukee , Tigers 4, A's I
throw rocks I don't want to remstated from a suspensiOn f&gt;-i, and Balbmpre outlasted
Rusty Sta ub htt hts thtrd
hurt th1s team's chances at and then extended his ange r Texas 10-6
home run m four days , a twothe pennant w1th this undue to mclude Stembren ner Twms 5-2, Red SoK 4-4.
• run blow, and rookie Ktp
publicity The team has a saymg, they deserve each
Carlton Ftsk belted a three- Young pttched a SIX hitter m
shot at the pennant I hope other - one's a born llar and run
hom er
a nd
Ca r l his ftrst maJ or-league start
Yastrzemskt drove m the Staub now shares the league
1 SOOth run of his career m the lead 1n RBI wtth Jun Rtce of
rughtcap to help the Easter n Boston at 81
DtVlston leaders end a ftve- White Sox 5, Brewers I
game ios mg streak Rod
Do n Kess mger smg led
Carew doubled m two runs home the dectdmg run m t he
wtth a pmch-hlt smg1e m the fi lth mrung and Steve Stone ,
8-7 , ftred a four·httter
stxlh mnmg of the opener
Blue Jays 1·1 Manners 1).2
helpmg Chtcago snap a mneCralg
Reyno
lds
collected
game
losmg streak U:try
'\..
thr ee htts scored a run and Sor ensen 12-7 took the loss
Or!Ules 10, Rangers 6
KANSAS CITY, Mo t UP!) what he sa td and m what
----------Lee May smgled m two
- The Great American fra me of mmd he sa1d tl
runs
to start a flve·run , mnth
Tragedy, draped m Yankee
"! dtd not ask , Btll} to - '
Sporh Tran sac tion s
By Un1ted'Press- International
mmng outburst tha t sent
pmstr1pes, has come t o an restgn
and
George
Monday
end after a three-year run on Stembrenner dtd not ask htm
Texa s to 1ts seventh stratght
Baseball
loss Don Stanhouse, f&gt;-.1, the
Broadway
Kan
sas
C
l
y
Trad
eC
le
ft
to restgn," satd Rosen
de d p k h e r Andy Hassle r to th trd Baiumore ptt cher,
Billy M a r t 1 n, whose
The events that have Ir an· han
Bost on tor a m1n or lea gu e
managerial gemus has been sptred have ltttie stgntftcance player to be na med and earned the VIctory Scott
su rpassed . only by hts when compared to a man s acl t"J at ed ou ff •elder A I Cowens. McGregor got the flna i out for
N ew Y or k ( AL )
A nno unced
mabtltty to get along wtth hts concern for hts own well- res,gn
at o n o f Ma nager B lly h1s f1r st save
bosses, restgned as manager being," Steinbrenner sa td
Mar11 n and repl aced h m rw lh
L emon
of the World Champton New
'These things, along w1th hts Bob
St LOU IS ACQU i red r tgtll
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
York Yankees Monday
famtly, a r e far more h antl ed p 1tc her Rob Dr essier
The volatile Martm was llllportant than the game of fr o m Sa n F ran c1SC O s rn nor
lea gu e team
n Phoen 1K a s
replaced by third base coach ba seball i am grateful to complef 1on of a pr ev ous trade
NEW YORK (UP I ) Dtck Howse r tn Monday Btlly for his contrtbullons as and ass gned him to Spring Cincmnau reliever Doug Ball'
mght's nationally televiSed mana ger of the Yankees He 1 eld
Californ .a
O pt on ed John has been selected as the
game wtth Kansas City Can
e
ra
to
Salt
L
ake C11 y ot the Nattooal League s Player of
brought us a champtonshtp
Pa c f 1c
Coa st
L eague
and Qte Week, tt was announced
won by the Royals, f&gt;-2 - and and his apoiogtes over this pur
. USEDCARS
ch ased AI F l zm or r s f r om
Mooday by NL Prestdent
Bob Lemon already has been recent mctdent are accepted Sa lt Lake C1ty
Special!
Pro Football
Charles Feeney
hired to direct New York for ,wtth no further comment
AI ant a - M dd le tm eba c ke r
Batr the Reds relief ace
the remamder of the season
necessary '
Ra lph Ort ega an no unc ed h iS
all season long appeared tn
Ma rlin
weanng s un
Stembrenner satd he would r e t 1r !;'men t
Clevel tl nd - Cu t quar ter ba ck hve games Since the All Star
glasses wtth a tan sweater hon or the rema in de r of Gar't
M M fH)Qt def en SI VE' baCkS
tied to hts shoulders, read a Marlm 's contra ct - which ts B 11 Cr a'fen a t;~d E ar l Dou t h i tt break did nol a llow a run
a lmeba c ker Steve Reese over 10 2-3 mnmgs str uck out
prepared statement late valued at $80,000 th iS year an
.AI~o re lease d f 1v e r ook oes 14, won one game and saved
Monday afternoon followmg a and $90,000 the nex t
r u nn1n g ba ck s Da n Sale et
others Ball' s ERA ts
three
Bow
t.ng
Gr
een
and
V•ncent
two-hour telephone huddle
Martm
dtr ected
the Thom as Tennessee Sta te w 1de now a sterlmg I 48 and the
wtth Yankees Prestdent Al Yankees to two Amertcan r ece 1ver Ken Roman V r g n 1a
BONNEVILLE SEDAN
nght-hander has struck out 53
Rosen and General Manager League pennants a nd one Un on and de f en s ve bac ks
batters m 61 mnmgs
Aar
on
B'
"'
n
s
Toledo
and
1
CedriC TalliS at one end and world champlonshtp m hts Ar nold Co lem an Hof stra
owner George Stembrenner three lull seasons at the helm
Gr een Bay - Wat ved center
NEW YORK (UP! )_ C h nt
at the other from hts summer but he fe ll Into deep dtsfavor Ma r k Totten F lor da and
runn ng
ba c k
Pat
Hea l y Hurdle, Kansas City s rookie
borne m Tampa, Fla
for his offthe fteld comments Co lg ate
first baseman was n amed
New York Je t s - Cut two
'I owe 11 to my health and thts year as the Yankees
v et er an s
w•d e r ece tv er American League P l ayer of
my mental we li·be tng to slipped further behind the Gerald Butl er and corn erba c k th e Week Monday m an
res 1gn
I'v e
had
m} fr ont runmn g Boston Red Ron Mabra t wo w a 1ver acau •s
d b AL
r.ons t ght end B tl I Cha moc r s ann ouncement rna e y
differences wtlh George but Sox
an d lin eb ack er Bla 11 e Sm •th
President Lee MacPhail
we ve been able to resolve
Jackson, trom cally, was an d fou r rook ie free agents
Hurdle hit 391 from July
them I'm sorry about tlungs enga ged m a pn vate 4(). w rd e rece ver Jtm H&lt;H r el Oh o
St at e au a rt er ba c k Bob Nelso n
17 2.1, with e1ght RBI a nd SIX
lhal were written about mmute sessiO n of ext ra
Shipp ensb urg Pa State w ide runs scored Has hits tnCl uded
You'll Loke Our Q"•ilty
George Stembrenner He battmg pra ct ice when word r ece1ve r Tom Sa le et Bow l ng
Gr een an d
1 ne bac k. er
Russ two doubles, a triple, and a
W•y of Do•ng Busmess
doesn t deserve them nor d1d ftltered to Royals Stadtum of
Wdl • mson Okl• homa
threerun homer off Boston s
GMAC FINANCING
I say them I d like to thank Marlin's restgnallon
P ttl sburgh
wa .'fed tr ee De
E k s1
~
ag ent
daf en s1v e back
J 1m
nrus
c e r ey m a S lX
992
5342
rvmeroy
the Yankee management, the
After the game ln whtch he Randolph ot Tennessee
RBI game agamsl the Red
Open EvenltlliS 'IIi6 00
press, the news media, my did not play, Jackson spoke
Ta mp a Bay - Wa iv ed t• ght Sox Friday
Ttl S p m Sat
coaches, my players and wtth the press bnefly and
Los
Ang
eles
- Acau •rea k iC k
end
Cha
r les
Waddell
most of all "
guardedly
returne r Edd 1e Brown from
Martm, strugglmg through
"I haven't satd anythmg for Wa shi ngton tor guar d Don n e
H ic k m an Iac ki e J eff W llh a m s
tears and several long two days but No comment
and three dra ft p c k s p laced
pauses, was unable to fimsh and I'm getting tired of on w a1vc r s ocf enSt'fe tac k le
Edd •e Ca toe ot u sc l •neba c k er
the statement and was led hearmg my votce Jackson Ma
n on
0 apm a n ol
New
away from the medta by a satd "Do you want me to say M ex 1co of! tackl e Tony Rtce of
club offtctal The typed he s a bad man - that I m Sa n Jose Slate and sa fety Pat
awa 11
statement handed out by the free at last like m the slave Schm 1dl of HHockey
New York Ranger s ( NH LJ club later m the day revealed days' I won t I have no
R gh t w n g Don M urdoch was
Martm had wanted to tliank comment
It wa s very suspen ded by the NHL tor all
" most of aU the fans for thetr unfortuna te and I m sorry
e M:hlb tllon reg ul ar season and
pl ay off gam es n 1978 79 w 1lh a
undymg support "
It marks t he ltrst ttme m chance
o f retn state m ent after
The " lhtngs that were four st ops Marttn has 40 reg ular se a son ga m es
M tn ne so t a { NH LJ - S• gned
wntten
about
George voluntarily sever ed his ties as
lctr w n1g J mm y Robert s to a
Steinbrenner'
that manager of a club But thts two
year con tra ct
College
eventually ied to Martm's departure obvtously pamed
strained
restgnatton him lhe most
'
H~~~~~ ~ n·~e;~·~~Yan~ J{~f';~~
s~emmed
from
a
The pe t ' of Ma nager d •r ector
Okla homa - Named Donn e
conversation he had wtth two Casey Stengel dunng hts
Duncan
as
ass slan t
he8d
New York reporters at playmg days ( 1900-57) m New footba ll coa ch
North D ak.ol a Slate - Na med
O'Hare Airport m Chicago York, Martm had satd at the
l r'f
tn n1g er
Jr
as
head
Sunday
foiiowmg
the ttme of hts hirmg that the ba
skel ball coa ch
Prote.ct1011 Fot Your Property!
\
Pro Bil ske tball
Yankees' 3-1 vtctory over the Yankee Job was the one for
N ew York ~ H r ed Bob
White Sox
which he had watted all hts Hopk•ns and D 1Ck Ta ylor as
Martm was lrrttated with hie
ass•stant coa ches
Protection For Your Fami~!
Jackson, who was coming off
a ftve-day suspeRSion., for not
Don ' t be the vlct tm of a burg lary and lose
taking extra hatting practice
all of ' your valuables We have several
before the g8IIle wtth the
m ~ urall ce packages to cover both home
White Sox He castigated both
-"-owners and home or apartment renters
Jackson and Steinbrermer
" The two of them deserve
You can be covered for loss of personal
each other," Martin was
property such as 1ewelry or cameras and
quoted "One's a bom har
for damage to your home 1n the event of
and the other's cortvtcted "
f1re , or other disasters
The reference was to Stembrenner 's convactton on
cha rges ste mming from
tllegal politi ca l campatgn
cootributions in 1974
Rosen flew to Kansas Ctty
from New York Monday
morning to " talk wtth Btlly
Mtddleport, 0
head-lohead, to find out just

1973 FORD
T-BIRD
'1695
1969 PONTIAC
895
1973

DODGE CHARGER

SE
'1895
Karr &amp; VanZandt

~;~:~~-----.!::;;:;;:;:;:;:~

Ma1or League Standings
By Unated Press lntern•tlonal
Nat1onal Leaoue
East
W L Pet
GB
53 40 S70
Phd a
49 46 516 5
Ch icllgo
47 46 505 6
PtlfSbrgh
47 53 410 9 1h
Montrea l
43 58 .426 14
New York
39 60 394 17
Sf LOUIS
west

W L

Pet

GB

san Fran
59 39 602
Cmcma t•
se •o 592 1
Los Ang
57 42 576 2 h
San 0 1ego
47 52 .475 12 1
Atla nta
44 53 454 14 1Jo;
Hous ton
42 56 .1129 17
Monday's Results
C1nc•n nat1 5 New York J
Atla nta 5 Ph1ladelph1 a 1
Houston 6 Monf reat 5
Los AnP.eles J ChiCago 2
Tod•v s Probable Pitchers
(All T1mes EDT)
Atla nta (Boggs, 1 5) at Phil a
de lp,la (Chr iStenson 7 8) 7 35

pm

C•nclnnat1 (Hume 4 9) at New
York (Swan 2 SJ 8 OS p m
Montreal ( Fryman S 7 ) at
Houston (Ruhle 0 0 ) 8 35 p m
P •llsburgh (K!son '2 2) at SM
OtegO (Qwchmko 5 71 10 p m
ctucago &lt;Reuscnel 9 7l at Los
Angeles (RhOden 7 5J
10 30

pm

St Loui s (For sc h 9 9) al San
Francisco (Hal icki 5 J) 10 35

pm

Wednesday's G1mes
Cincin nati at New York
St Lou is. at San Frt!nc lsco
Allanta at Phil a night
Montrtal at ~ouston n lg,t
Ch•cago at t:.os Ang night
P ltt!bOh at San 01 ego n ight

American League
E~•l

W L
63 33
57 38
54 43
52 43

Bo!i.ton
Mliwauke
Balfl m r e
New York
Detro1 t
Clevelnd
Toro nto

50 47
45 50
3S 6l

Pet

GB

656

600 51 2
557 9 1f 1
547 1Qit1
515

13 111

47.&amp; 17lf1

357 29

West

W L Pet
GB
Kan C ty
54 41 566
c ar 1t
SJ 46 SJ S J
Oakland
50 49 505 6
TeM:aS
46 SO 479 8 1 1
M.ne50ta
4 1 53 436 12' 1
Ch1 cago
40 55 42 1 14
seame
35 64 354 2 1
Monday s Results
Seattl e I Toronto 0 lsi
Sea ttle 1 Toronto 2 2n d
Mmnesota s Boston 4 l si
Bo ston 4 M 1nnesota 2 2nd
Cal •f 5 Cleve • 16 .nns
Oetro1t 4 Oakla nd 1
Kansas C• f y 5 New York 2
Ch cago 5 Milwaukee 1
Baltimore 10 .:re•as 6
Today ' Probable Ptlchers
( All T1mes E DTI
Cal l torn•a
( F rost
2 31 at
Cleveland {Pax to n 7 6 ) 7 JO

pm

Seattle (Abbotl 3 7) at Toron
to (Underwood S 9 1 1 JO p m
New York (Gu1dr y 1• I I at
Kansas C1ty (SPIIttOrff 11 8 ) 8

pm

Oa1d~nd
( Broberg
9 7 or
Renko • •l at Oefro1t (W1I cox 6
BJ 8 p m
Milwaukee ( Rodr iguez 2 3) at
Chicago (S chu eler J 4) 8 30

pm

Boston 1 Lee 10 •1 at M in
nesoH1 IEcrickson 9 6) 8 JO
P m
• '
Balhmore { Kerrlg~n 0 0) at
Tex8S (A iex8nder 6 AJ
8 35

pm

Ch1
100 000 01 o- '2 10 2 ,..
LA
200\100001- J 50
Krukow
Moore
{7}
and
Rader Blackwell (8)
W elch
Forst.,- (I) and Ferguson WForster (l Jl L - Moore t5 l l
HRS- \..OS Angeles, Sm i th (20)

Wectnesdav •s Gamts
Cleve at New York 2 tw1 n•te
Balttmore at Detro1t n1ght
Californ ia at Milw n1ght
Oakland at cn1cago night
Toronto at M !nnesota night
Seattle at Kan City night
Boston at Texas n ight

t

•

nmth
Among the fans cheermg
Rose was the 61-year old
Holmes, who sat w1th hiS
family m a box oo the press
level of Shea Stadium He'll
also be there again tomght
when Rose attempts to break
the r ecord agamst Mets
righthander Cratg Swan
" I'm glad the btl was
leg1t1mate ," sa1d Holmes
'Thts 11 as his toughest game
The pressure was really on
him and he was up agalllSt a
tough p1tcher Knowmg Pete
Rose, I know he ' s not
sat1sfted If tt was me, I know

Lemon named ·
Yanks manager

N1t1onal League Foster C1n
and l u Z1nSk..1 Ph1l 23 Sm1 t h

LA

scormg Rose wtth the ttebreakmg run However, a
smgle by Elltolt Maddox and
a trtpie by Tim Foll !ted the
score agam in the Mets' half
of the mmng, leavmg to Rose
to start thmgs agam m the
runth
Wtth Skip Lockwood haVIng
come on to pttch for the Mets,
Rose led off the nmth wtth a
It "
Zachry eventually loaded smgie and Lum followed wtth
the bases on another smgie to his ftfth horner of the year Mike Lum and a walk to Joe and thtrd game-wmner
Morgan before George Manny Sarmtento pttched the
Foster's soft fly to rtght fmai two mnmgs of htUess
dropped m for a base hit, relief to gatn the wm hts

proudly
"Gtvmg up the btl doesn't
bother me as much the way I
went about 11, ' SBld the
deJected Zachry who InJUred
his toe durmg a Itt of temper
m the dugout afterward ' It
was a dumb call asking for a
lhll'd stratght change-up and
1t was even dumber to throw

Billy Martin resigns

btddUlg to Wln hlS

~9AJ~l ~1 3 PJc4tl

Brett KC
80)27
Sundberg Tex
90 liS
OltverTex
70281
Bell Cle
88 351
J• ckson Ca l
77 273
F osk sos
89 327
Pm 1e11 a NY
68 244
Home Run•

lith game for the Mets
Then , With one out and the
score tted 2-2 m the seventh,
Zachry changed hiS strategy
and threw Rose three slratght
change-upo; The lhll'd, whtch
came on a 1-1 pitch , was lined
mto left field and the 35,939
fans who had obviOusly
forgtven
Rose
hts
transgresSion of flghtmg wtth
ex-Met
shortsto p
Bud
Harrelson m the 1973 NL
playoffs , stood and applauded
for a full three mmutes
" I wanted to shake every
one of their hands,' ' satd Rose

• town, Pete Rose wpuld have
the sports page headlmes aU
to himself after equaling tbe
modern Nallonal League
record by hitting safely m hts
37th straight game
But Rose the Cincmnat•
Reds' rele~tiess bit-master
was the ftrst to admtt that his
record-tymg hit will have to
take a back seat - m New
York_ to the restgnation of
Yankee Manager
Btlly
Martm which climaxed that
year and a half long soap
opera earlier m the day
" That's OK,'' S81d Rose
" When 1 get my htt
tomorrow, I 'll be m the
headlmes Wednesday -even
' here' 1 could've probably
upstaged Martin thiS tune too
if I'd have announced that I
was qutttmg 1 wouldn 't even
have had to tell off George
Steinbrenner •
For awhile Monday mght, tt
looked as If Rose might not
equal the 37-5tra1ght record
which was set by Tommy
Holmes of the Boston Braves
back m 1945 In his fll'st three
frtps to the plate, Rose flied
out to center twtce and hit
mto a force play _ all on
fas tballs from hts exteammate Pat Zachry, who

fun about thiS streak The
BATTING
different crowd reactions m
( Based on 225 at bats)
the different cttles," sa1d
Nat•ona t ~~~e H Pet
Rose, standmg on a platform Clark SF
96 los m l2l
before
a
battery
of Burr oghs All
91 297 9S 310
Ma dlock SF
71 267 85 318
IRicrophones and surrounded Wh lf•eld SF
94 111 98 JIS
91 382 120 314
by some 80 members of the Bow• Phd
Rose Cm
97 411 126 307
news medta durmg a post- Parker P•t
ao 316 97 307
game press conference
vatntme Mtl
96 370 113 305
Sm1fh LA
79 289 88 304
' I even got a standin~ Foster em
97 379115 303
ovat1on ov e r 1n PhtlaAmerican Lugue

Berry's VVorld

you re dating Jackie

1

·

lEV. HOWAlD C.
say that tl was advising us to take time to live Now, think
about tl are you actually takmg the time to really live today?
Or , are you so busy trymg to do thmgs and make a livmg that
you are rushmg death's door by a fast-paced and frenzied
acttvtty whtch you have rmstakenly called livmg? Some people
don 'I know the difference because they haven't taken the time
to stop look, and listen
The world ts movmg at a qwck pace, and tt tsn't always
easy to slow down m this modern age wtthout gelling run over'
Espectally when the !mal whiStle blows at the end of a work
shift' (Have you ever noticed how much faster people move
gmng home from work than they do commg to work• ) To be
sure, we have to exerctse caution and good JUdgment when we
take tune out from rouune acttvtttes to relax and renew our
ener gtes Otherwtse, we could e!'SIIY become mdulgent m
lazmess, coppmg out from responstbtlities, and never be an
achiever
Stop look , a nd listen 1 How much we can beneftt by 11 1
Take tune to evaluate what you are domg and analyze what's
happemng around you Take time to exanune your relattOnshtps w1th others and enJOY frtendshtps Take time to learn
from others, as well as from personal experience Take time to
enJOY life today 1

going for new mark tonight

0

&lt;tr~e @[p)~~ ROAD
218 W Seventh St --Ml carmel,IL. 62863
Telephone. (618) 262-5778
STOP, LOOK, AND USTEN!
'Do you have trouble heanng?" asked the teacher of a
fifth grader who sat drearmly at hts desk m school
No Ma m," replied the boy, 'I JUSt have trouble

'

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tues!Jay, Jul): 25, 1978

•
'

YOU'RE
ALWAYS
SURE

WITH

jlftl

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

�Purdue-coaches hope .to turn .things around

JUST ASK

By Jlni YoUDg
Purdue Foot ball Coach
Wrlttea for UPI

By Murray Olderman

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind .
(UP)) -

The tipoff:
The domesti c s plit involving one of baseball's Big
Heroes was not because he was straying off the
reservation . but because he was dOing hls dallying
within the reservation - a fact that attracted too
mu ch attention to suit La Spouse.

Last season I

I' d have to th ink Jim Palmer of the Baltimore Orioles is
among the best hitting pitchers . But he doesn't get to bat
a ny more because of ,the designated hitter rule that limits
the fie ld to National League hurlers . Of! last year's results,
I pick Steve Carlton of the Phillies, who batted .268 and had
three home rs . Bruce Kison of Pittsburgh and Tom Seaver
of Cincinnati are n' t automatic outs either . There's nothing
wrong with George Foster , who's been hitting in the .300
range and gettin g his normal cluster of homers . Last
sea son just happened to be a s up~ r one for the Reds'
sl ugger .
·
Q. · Recently you staled that tbe baseball card wltb a

pidure of Hoous Wagner was rare. I have a card wttb the
above player. It was -..·ith maoy other old time baseball
players ia the deck of a game called Faa Craze. Does thecard hav e any value today? - Joseph Prokop, Wilber,
Ne b.
The valuable Wagner card would be vintage 1910,
ad vertisin g Sweet Caporal Cigarettes on the nip side.
The r e are only .13 in existence - old Hanus pulled his
picture from the card when he heard it was plugging
cigarettes - and the price is now up to about $3 ,000 for one.
Howe ve r, the card you mention would be nowhere in that
r ange. You might get $10 or you might get 100 bucks - it
depends on what someone is willing to pay and how eager
he is to fill out a set or cards .
· Q. Let 's say Detroit is playing Callforala at Detroit aad

after eight inntags Caltforata leads, 1~. Ia tbe top of tbe
ninth, manager Ralph Houk replace&amp; tbe pltcber Oet's say
Mark Fldrych 1 wltb Job a HOler. Callforala scores lbree
runs ort Hiller. The score Is now 4-0, aad Detroit scores two
runs but loses 4·2. Wbo is· the losing pitcbtr'!' - Edward
Kothe . Mr. Clemens, Mlcb.
Th e losing pitc her is Fidrych . He went out with his team
losj ng, a nd nothing c hanged .
Q . What is the difference between au earned rua aod au

unearned run ? - Ernie Lovitt, Wltliamsburg, K}' .
I' ll let the rul e book define it fcir you. as per Paragraph
10.18 of OfFicial Baseball Rules : "An earned run is a run
for which the pitcher is held accountable . In determining
earne d runs, the inning should be 'reconstructed without
the e rrors ( whi c h lnclude catcher 's interference) and
pa ssed balls, and the benefit of the doubt should always be
given to the pitcher in determining whic h bases would have
been reached by errorless play ." An unearned run, of
cour se, is on e in which ~n error or passed ball directly
contri buted to the scoring .

Q: Thi s is an appeal for belp to make a once io a lifetime
ex pe rien ce truly memorable for two 2~year.old frus•tra·led E nglish fans of Americ an football . Havtag taught
our selves the gam e over the last eJgbt years, we have
started up a team. However, we have never seen a full
game and feel there is nothing more we cao learn about
football without seetag tbe game played aad talklag to
people involv ed in the sport. On Nov . 18, we ioteud to start
a three· week va~ation in San Francisco to gain an Insight
into the game . Can you arrange opportunities for us to talk
to people inside football, includJng players, coa ches and
administrators, and arr·a oge for us to see some games?
We would be eternally grateful. - N. Pearson, Middles·
br oilgh. Cleveland TSU-9HZ, England .
It wil l be do ne .
Q. H ow much is Jam es Harris of the Chargers belog

pa id yea rl y?- P .J . Bridges. Mobile, Ala .
The fir st blac k qua rte rba ck to play regularly in the
~atio nal F'ootba ll Leag ue ca m e to the Chargers from the
Los Anl:{eles Ra m s last ye ar with a 1175,000 per year
contrac t. This ca used Dan Fouts, the incumbent field
ge nera I. tu hold out for th e first 10 weeks of the season. The
Charger s fin ally gave in and boosted Fouts, who was
n1a ktnJ.; hcll f of Har r is' sa la ry, above the ex-Ram . James_
w1ll kee p hi s sta te ly paych ec k a nd probably be a backup
quart('rb ac k thi s yea r .
.I

Pa rting shot :
. lnt: id(• buzz of pro fo otball 1s why Lance Alworth,
rJr-.,t \Fl. pr oduct to be ind ucted into the Pro Football
Ht~ 'l nf F;trrll •, 1~nored his lo ngtiin e San Diego coach,
"\1d (.illman. ~lncl chose AI Dav is of the Oakland
ft' d··r'i, wh(l ha ndled hi m as an ass i ~ tant for oitly
" :lt' year . lu be his presente r in th e induction
cerernon1cs at the Ca nton , 0. , s hrine .

WE INSURE

TRACTOR-TRAILERS,
SEMIS, COAL TRUCKS,
ETC•..

STOP IN OR CALL

DAVIS INSURANCE
" Acros s from the court house in Pomeroy"
t 14 Cou r t Sl.
Pomeroy, 0 . .
Phone 992-6677

contended we would win
more games than we lost. My ·
coaches and our players believed it as much as I did.
The winning season was not
to be and we were disappoin-

Sports briefs: ..

WETHERSFIELD, Conn .
, (UP! ) - Reigning PGA
champ Lanny Wadkins is
expected to be among the golf
Q. Wbo do you tblak Is the best bltllag pitcher Ia pros participating in the
b.-seball? Has George Foster beeo hampered by Ilia Greater Hartford Open this
Injur y? He doesa ' t seem to be bllllag quite as well as be week .
was last year? - Bob Beal, Roseburg, Ore.
Officials said 1966 PGA
champ AI Geiberger would
also compete in the GHO, to
he held at the Wethersfield
Country Club July 26-30.

jNEA[

r

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-PornHnv, 0 .• Tuesday , July 25, 1978

4...., The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July :!:i, 1978

BLOOMINGTON,
Minn .
( UPI) - The Minnesota
North
Stars
Monday
announced the signing of left
·winger Jimmy Roberts to a
two-year contract.
Roberts, 22, of Toronto,
played 42 games with the
North Stars last seasnn
scoring from goals and 14
assists for 18 points.
NEW YORK (UP! )- For,
ward Don Murdoch of the
New York Rangers , who
pleaded guilty earlier this
year to a charge of possessing
cocaine, was suspended
Monday for all National
Hockey League exhibition,
regular season and playoff
games during the 19711-79
season '
'
'
However, m assessmg the
suspension , NHL· President
John Ziegler laid down guide~ ..
lines under which it can be
terrrunated after the first 4ll
regular season game~;. In
addition to tbe suspension ,
Murdoch was ftned $500.
SALT LAKE CITY (UP! )
- Demetrio Cabanillas, a
Mexican
studying
at
Brigham Young University ,
won his third straight Deseret
News marathon Monday in a

time of two hours, 27 minutes,
47 seconds, Cabanillas beat
runner-up Norherto Seguro in
the 9th amual race by more
than five minutes , Segura
finishing in 2: 32.48.
Jane -Wipf of Logan, Utah.
was !he first woman to cross
tbe line, setting a race record
with a time of 3:03.17. A race
r~cord 1,096 entrants started
the Intermountain AAUsanctioned marathon .

Meigs
Property
Transfers

LOS ANGELES (UPl) The Los Angeles Rams
Mooday acquired .two-time
Pro Bowl return specialist
Eddie Brown· from the
Washington Redskins in
return for guard Donnie
Hickman,
tackle
Jeff
Williams and· undisclosed
draft choices.
The team also .waived
defensive tackle Eddie Catoe,
linebacker Marion Chapman,
offtackle Tony Rice and
safety Pat Schmidt.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
New York Knicks Mooday
announced the hiring of
former Seattle SuperSonics
Coach Bob Hopkins and Dick
Taylor as assistant coaches.
Dick McGuire, the former
Knick coach who was an
assistant to Head Coach
Willis Reed last season, will
return to his duties as chief
scout.
HARRISON, N.Y. (UP!) Defending champion Andy
North , winner of the U.S .
Open at oenver last month,
and Jack Nicklaus a winner
the last two w..;ks were
among the first two players
announced Mond;Iy
to
compete in the Westchester
Classic next month.
Also among the early
entries in the $300,000
tournament, sponsored by.
American Express, to be
played at the Westchester
Country Club Aug, 17-20, are
Dave Stockton, Tom Watson,
Miller Barber, Bruce Lietzke ~
Mac
Mc Lendon,
Tom
Weiskopf, Ben Crenshaw ,'
Jerry Pate and Ed Sneed.
SARATOGA SPRINGS,
N.Y. ( UP!)
Frank
Whiteley and Sherrill Ward,
tbe two trainers who helped
develop Forego, were named
Mooday to the Hall of Fame
in the Saratoga National
Museum of Racing .
topped
the
Whitely
balloting for active trainers
and Ward lor old-time
trainers . Forego, recently
retired, was a three time
Horse of the Year.

WEST HEMPSTEAD, N.Y.
(UPI J - The New York Jets
Monday trimmed their
training camp roster to 78
players by dropping eight
players .
The Jets cut two ve terans
- wide receiver Gerald
Butler and cornerback Ron
Mabra ;
two
waiver
acquistions, tight end . Bill
Chambers and lineba cker
Blaine Smith; and four"rookie
free agents, wide receiver
Jim Harrell , quarterba c k
Bob Nelson, wide receiver
Tom Saleet and linebacker
Russ Williamson .

Ori on W. Roush, Kate
Roush, Ori on R . Roush,
Dorothy G. Roush to Leading
Creek Cons. Dist ., Right of
Wa y. Salem .
Br adford Church of Christ
to Leadmg Creek Cons . Dist.,
Right of Way, Rutland .
Jane A. Rupe to Leading
Cr eek Cons. Dist. , Right of
Way, Rutland .
Salem Twp. Trustees to
Leadmg Creek Con s. Dist. ,
Right of Way , Salem .
KANSAS CfTY, Mo . (UP!)
Monad Ma y Wils on to
The Kansas City Royals
·Edward L. Tanner, Eunice L.
activated AI Cowens
today
Tanner , 19 acres, Olive.
the
disabled list and
from
Edward L. Tanner. Eunice
traded
lefthanded
pitcher
L. Tamer to Monad May
Andy
Hassler
to
the
Boston
wltson, 2.387 a cres, Olive .
lor
a
minor
league
Red
Sox
Leo R. Stor y, Lucille I.
be
named
later.
player
to
Stor y, Kenneth R. Story,
Cowens
sprained
a
Donna Story to Mina Hart
of
his
ligament
on
the
inside
form erly Mina Bailey, .8
acr e.
Corrected
Deed , right knee sliding into second
June 26 against the Angels in
Bedford .
Leo E: . Smith, Kate Smith Anaheim. He was placed on
tbe disabled list June 29.
to Mina Hart , .8, Bedford.
Ha zel H. Hojema n, Harvey
FARGO , N.D. ( UP! ) E . Holeman to Mina Hart, .8
North Dakota State Monday
acre, Bedford .
announced the appointment
Adran D. Smith, dec . to
of Irv In niger Jr . as the new
Marilyn J . Smith , Gert . mK
head coach of the Bison
trans .. Bedford ..
basketball team.
Ra ymond F . Hatfield,
lnniger , 33, has been head
Bertha E. Hatfield to Fred A.
coach at Augsburg College in
Hart we ll , Th eo dora R.
Minneapolis for the past five
Hart well.
72. 28
acres,
years.
He succeeds Marv
· Rutland .
Staar, who resigned earlier
Donna V. La ve nd er to
thi s summ er a rt e r six
William T. Lavender, Lot 2G,
seasons
.
Middleport .
Billy Humphrey , Sandra
GREEN BAY , Wis. ( UPI )
Hum phre y t o William L.
Hoover , Rebecca M. Hoo ver , - The Green Bay Packers
I a cre, Orange .
Monday asked waivers on
J ack:e Ra y Robinson, rookies Mark T otten of
Diane Kobinson, Samuel E . Florida and Pat Healy of
Rubinson to Cappi e Lange, Colgate.
Lot , Rutland Village.
The cutS put the Green Bay
. Marilyn J . Smith to Nor- roster aP7 - 41 veterans and
man M. PresleyJI Gladys !.. 33 rookies. The team must cut
Presley , und. Int., in. .8 acre, to 60 by Aug. 15.
Bedford.
Cec il Kaufl, dec . to Eva
TAMPA, Fla . (UP!) Kauff. James Herbert Kaulf, Veteran tight end Charles
Freda Mae Bing, Paul Ed- Waddell was placed on
ward Kauff, Pauline Searles, waivers Monday by the
Hel en Capehart, Hazel 'Jean Tampa Bay Bu cca neers ,
Kauff , Aff. for trans., trimming their training camp
Rutland Village • Salisbury. roster to 76 pla yers , a
Eva Kauff, dec. to James . spokesman announced .
Herbert Kauff, Paul Edward
Waddell," a free agent, was
Kaufl, Freda Mae Bing,
tbe fifth-round draft selection
Pauline Searles, Helen of the San Diego Chargers in
Capehart , Hazel Jea n Knuff. 197\

ted , but not discouraged. On
the contrary, the coaches and
players l~med a lot about
each other and because o!1
.tb.a t we will be better in 1978.
We had ·three unusual
tbings in mind for spring
practice . We wanted to work
on cutting d_o wn errors and
turnovers. We wanted to
expand our offense to include
a· sound_ruming attack. And
we wanted to accomplish the
first two without serious
injuries.
We scrimmaged heavily as
ihany as three or four times a
week. Fortunately it paid off .
We didn 't lose a single player
to severe injury .
Last season our reliance on
tbe passing game and the use
of so many first-year players
caused us to cough up the
football at
the
most
inopportune tim&amp;i. We were
penalized 60-some limes,
intercepted 30 times and
lurt)bled the ball away 12

Linescores
Major Le-ague Results
Bv United Press International
National League
Ci nci
010 001 102- 5 12 0
N.Y.
011000100- J 5 0
Mosk.au , Borbon (7), Tomlin
(7). Sar miento (8 ) and Correll ;
Kob el (7 ). Lo c kwood

Z ~c hr y,

18 1 and Stearns . w__,. sarm iento
(9 -6), L - LOCkWOOd (7 -8 ). HR S
- Cinci nn at i. Luni (5); N ew

York , . Ma zzill i ( 11 ), $ .He nd e r son ( 9 ) .

Alia

000 320 000-

5 90

Phila
000001000- 1 7 0
Solomon ,
Skok
(B ) ·
arid
Po coroba ; Lonborg, Brus sta r
(5 ). Eastwick (6 ). Reed ( 9 ) and
Boone , Foole (8) . W - Solo m on
(3 4 ) L - Lonborg 1 {7 -8 ) . HR sAIIant a, Pocoro ba 15 ); Phila .
delp hi a, Hebner ( 12 ).

times . OUr top priority will be
con centra tion on keeping
offensive errors to a
minimum.
Defenses keyed on our
passing and we suffered .
During the spring, I fell our
backs ran pard and the
linemen responded well to
run blocking. We feel our
ground game wll be much
better this season and
complement our passing
attack .
Last year's seniors will be
hard to replace, but there are
a number of veteran s
returning on defense. Keena
Turner could be one of the
best defensive en·cts in the
league . Ken Loushin will
return after a year off and
joins four other lettennen
who have started on the
defensive
front .
They
included Marcus Jackson and
Calvin Clark who have ·
trimmed their weight and are
vastly improved.
Kevih Motts most likely
will start his third season at
linebacker and Rik Moss, a
talented kick returner, should
team with Willie Harris and
Rock Supan in the secondary.
Wayne Smith, a converted
tailback, was a pleasant surprise in the secondary too.
So de spite our losses the
would
be
defense
significantly improved .and
have more depth than a year
ago.
When we talk about the

offense, the first thing people challenging Macon . We feel
think about Is Mark Herr· these lour will generate our
nnann . He Is a highly poised running attack.
We believed we had a
young man who endured
than
average
incredible pressures as a better
freshman . His statistics recruiting year, better than
speak for tbemselves and he last' winter which turned out
is bigger and stronger and nine lettermen including four
tbrew the football very well starters. We are hoping for
during tbe spring. Chuck . immediate help at running
linebacker
and
Oliver and Tom Gedt:se are back ,
back -ups and both could he defensive end. But freshmen
starters on a lot of teams, are unpredictable. you never
making quarterback the can tell who will contribute
strongest position on our: and how soon .
If we can become more
club.·
Raymond Smith at flanker diversified on offense and cut
and Dave Young at tight end down our errors, we'll have
are excellent athletes and the winning season that
receivers. We recruited Mike escaped us in 1977.
Harris from junior college to
replace Reggie Arnold and he
tnterna!lonat League
has been impressive.
United Press International
W. ~ - Pel . GB
We feel we have some · Charleston
59 39 .602
stability in the offensive line, Pawt ucket
53 41&gt; .535 6'"
but not much depth. John Richmond
50 44 .532 7
Td
t
. 49 49 .500 tO
LeFeber , Steve McKenzie, T~l~do" er
41 47 .500 tO .
Pete QuiM and Dale Schwan Columbus
46 49 .484 11 1h
have played side by side a lot. Rochester
41&gt; 51 .474 12•;,
We moved tight end Tim Syracuse
37 62 .314 n •;,
Eubank to tackle and he has Charle~fo~d~~·~o~~~~~s 4
battled Henry Fell for the Pawtucket 7, Toledo 1, 1st , 7
starting spot.
innings
We worked our running Pawt ucket 4, Toledo J, 2nd , 13
· th
· g innings ·
.
ha ck s h ea\'1')Y m
e spnn · Richmond tO , Rochester J
Russell Pope was the starting Tidewater 9, Syracuse 7
tailback last season until he
Today 's Games
was hurt. Bobby Wiiliams Columbus at Charleston
be Pawt..()cket at Toledo
started tbe last ha If Of t
Richmond at Rochester
season . John Macon backed . Tidewater a t Syracuse
up John Skibinski and is an
Wednesday's Games
extremely hard runner. Mike Columbus at Charleston
·
ff
Pawtu·c ket a1 Toledo
Augustynia k • commg 0 8 Rich m.ond at Rochester
red-shirt
sea son,
is Tidewater al Syracuse

§

·~

~

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

A reception honoring Mr.
and Mrs . Mark Howard on
their golden wedding anniversar y was held recently
at thei r Hartford home.
Hostin g the event were Helen
Riffle and Mr. a nd Mrs.
Donald Howard and gra ndchildre n Mark and Debbie " f
Rockford. Ill.
Mark and · Martha Riffle

NEW WAY TO A'ITRACT MEN
BY HELEN AND SUE BO'ITEL

RAP :
I 'm out of school, not bad looki~. and manless . This never
happened lo me before, but my college friends aren't around,
my high school buddies have disappeared, I'm working in a
largely female agency, and I'm lonely.
.Have you any suggestions outside ol church organizations,
singles bars or discos, adult education classes ( I struck out
here ), and the like? - GETTING DESPERATE
DEARG .p .:
How about jogging (or running) in the park' That's where
the young people are these days. (And the not-so-young too .)
-HELEN

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
AbQut student dress codes: There is &lt;rdirect correlation between breakdown of dress codes and classroom behavior .
Studies indicate that children have been conditioned to equate
"dressing up" with being on one's best behavior.
Parents instill this thought process long before children
reach school age. Remember how your mother used to say
when you were dressed for something special, "Behave
yourself, sit quieti~, don't get dirty."
Play clothes- jeans, T-shirts, sneakers- were for fun, when
you could let yourself go.
'
Most of your answers, Helen and Sue, are well thought out,
and I rarely disagree with you, but I think you should reconsider your stand against finn school dress codes. A deeper look
into some sort of clothing restrictions would benefit our
schools, I believe .- MARILYN DEAR
MARILYN :
I liked your ge~Ue disagreement much better than the one
which went, "May God forgive you! When we have so many
filthy , stinking people , aboundin~ in lice, disease and indecent
clothes, you had the nerve to tell •Jersey Josie ' you agreed her
school dress mde was too strict 1... ''
But I still vote ''No " to specific codes because they create
·more problems than they cure. A ruling, backed by the student
council, that clothes must he in good taste (not disruptive to
the classroom) is generally enough . -HELEN

Howa rd were married in Clifton, W.Va . on July ~. 1926 by
the late W.L. Gearhart.Assisting with the r ecepti on ,
were Janel Burr is, Debbie
Andrews, Vera Howard a nd
Jean Howa rd.
Attending were Russell and
J ean Howard, Dayton; Rose
McDade, Middleport ; Clara
Lewis, Smyrna , Ga .; Mr, and
Mrs. Howard Pullin , Lesage,
W.Va .; Malinda Gerlach,
" Leetonia; Grace and Flo ·
E.v.i' n~.
Ri c hmond , Va .;
Thelina and Herman Reese. ·
Cheshire; Erma and Oscar
Kelle nbuger, Cha rleston,
W.Va.; Charles and Bermce
RifO e, Jean Strouse and Tom
and Janice Reuter, Pomeroy ;
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Howa rd
and Mark, Debbie and La rry
Andrews and Tom a nd Mabie
Treflt¥s. Rockford , Ill. ;

r------..-,
1 Social

1

I Calendar'

G.Q .:
Or start playing tennis with an attractive girlfriend. You can
always find a few unattached men on the courts:- SUE

DEAR MARILYN :
Remember back to how uncomfortable you were in " dressup" clothes' Students sitting stiffly on ··best behavior" might
bore their teachers as well as themselves.
I do my best work in jeans, pullovers and flats, and if 1
returned to college , that's probably what I'd wear- must of
the time. -SUE

Mtt
' 004 000 001 - 5 8 0
Hous
000 000 006- 6 16 0
Du es , Gar man {7), K nowl es
(9). Pir tle (9 ) . and Cart er ;
L em ongell o, For sch ( 9 ) and
Pui ols . W- Forsc: h (5 -J L L Know les 12 JJ.

Golden reception held

.......

TUESDA)
VACAT.ION Bible School at
Ra c in e Bapti st Churc h
Monday through Au g. I from
6 to 8 p .m . Ev eryone

welcome.

VACATION Bible S~hool at
South
Bethel
Un1ted
Methodist Chur ch (Silve r
Ridge ) Monday through July
28 9 a .m. to 11 :30 a.m .
Everyone welcome .

'

THOR AND LINDA NELSON
TO PRIDlENT SERVICE- Calvary Bible Church on
the Pomeroy Pike, is pleased to announce that on July 30,
representatives of the Forever Generation will be having
the evening service. The Forever Generation is a local
church oriented cainpus ministry that is reaching college
students for Christ. After accepting Christ as Savior, the
new convert is trained in such areas of Christian life as
prayer, Bible study, and personal evangelism. Converts
are channeled into Fundamental, Bible-preaching
churches where they receive further training and
guidance . In less than a decade, the Forever Generation
has exp!l!'ded from one Bible study -group at Clemson
University to outreaches on more than 'l:l , carnpuses
acrossthe United States. Thor and Linda Nelson, Forever
Generation workers at' Ohio State University , are
graduates of Bob Jon.e s University of Greenville, S. C.
They will give a slide presentation of their work at O.S.U.,
and Thor, along witb presenting the work, will also be
bringing the evening message . The public is urged to
attend this service at 7:30p.m. on Sunday evening, July
30. Calvary Bible Church ·is located 1.2 miles off
Flatwoods Road on County Road 25 .

THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrinelt es
Thursday at 7 p.m. picnic at
h ome of Cora and Shirley
Beegle, Racine.

LADIES AUXILIARY of
Pomeroy
Eagles
Club
Tuesda y at 8 p. m. at th'e club .
All members invited to attend .
WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM Co m·
munity meeting Wednesday
7:30p .m . at Leona Hensley's
store.
MEIGS BAND Boosters
Wednesday in bandroom to
' make plans for Fair booth .
WILDWOOD Garden Club
Wednesday at 6:30 p.m. a t
shelter house at Royal Oak
Park . They will observe 40th
anniversary . All old mem·
hers and past presidents are
invited to attend . Bring
covered dish and table service .

Janet Burris, Howard Selby,
Janet Miller, Jim and Blanch
Howa rd, and Mandy Gilkey,
Point Pleasant ; Carrie Russ,
Hazel Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Turnbull, Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Roach, Beth
Smith and Lillian and Carol
Elliot, Mason , .W.Va .; Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Riffle, Wilma
and Dal e McGraw , Racine;
Elizabeth Pullin , Point Pleasant ; Mae and Steve Howard,
Alice Randolph, Rex Howard ,
Helen and Okey Howard, Jr .,
and Bnl Howard. New Haven,
W.Va .; Thelma Duncan ,
&amp; ther Mae Knight. Edna
Wayland, Bernard and Ann
Cook, Addie Knight , Willi e
JAMES STEELE
Knight , Stbyl Knight, and
HAS ENLISTED ~
George Turnbull . Hartford ,
James C. Steele, soa of
W.Va .
Al so, Garcia Ada ms, Robert M. Steele, Athens,
Chrissy and Willie, Long Bot- . and the late Ruth E. Steele
tom ; Mr . and Mrs. Howard has eolls.l ed ln the U. S.
Pullin , Jr ., Kath y and Darla , Marine C orps, Parris
Huntington , W.Va .; Ron and Islaod, S. C., for 10 weeks
Loretta McDade, Athens ; baslc training. Pvl. Steele
Barbara Gilland , New Is In the Marine Choir. He
Haven , W.Va .; and Daisy attended Eastern High
School.
Heckle , Hartford , W. Va .

TWIN CITY Shrinett es,
Thursday 7 p.m. home of
Cora and Shirley Beegle.
Picnic will he held.
REVIVAL now in progress
at Hobson Church of Christ in
Christian U~ton . The Rev .
George Jones, speaker. Keith
Eblin, past or . Services
nightly at 7:30 p. m. Special
singing by Country Hymntimers. Public invited.
MEIGS COUNTY Women
Fellowship Thursday ,at 7:30
p. m. at the Bradford Church
with Karen Moraz as
speaker .

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS
IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OF' EN:
Mon .• Tues .• Wed 1• &amp; Sat.~: 30 til 5: 00
Thursday Ti 112 Noon
Friday Until 5 P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason, W. Va.

Ame'r ican· League
11st gameJ
Sea
·
000 000 00 1- 1 7 1
To r
000 000 000- 0 3. 0
Hone y cult and St inso n ; L e ·
m a nc zyk and
Cerone.
wHoneyc utt ( 4 5) . L - Le ma nczy k

13 121
C2nd game!
Se a
001 110 03 1- 7 14 0
To r
000 010 000- 2 10 1
Ro m o
(7 )
and
Co lborn ,
St inson ; J eff er son , Coleman
(5l . V .Cr u z (6 1, M urphy ( 8 ) and
ASh Oy . W - Col bo r n (1 8 ) . LJe tt e r ~o n
( 6-9 ) . HR s- Sealtl e,
Rober ts 1'14 ]
( 1S1 gam e)
Bo ~
100 010 001:- 4 6 1
Minn
070 01 7 OOx - 5 10 0
Burgmei er . D ra go · (5) and
Montgomery , J a c~so n , Mar
sha l l ( 8) and Bor'g mann . W Ja ckson (3 3) L - Orago ( 2-4!.
HR s
M inn eso t a, Borgmann

BOYER RIVER

:~~~N. . . . . . . . . . L~.~~~;.9 9 e

11l.
( 2nd game)
Bos
ooo 004 ooo- 4 7 o
M lnn
100 100 000- 2 9 1'
Torr ez, Campb ell { 1L Ha ssler
(51, Sta nley (8 ) and Fis k ; Zahn
and W ynegar W - Ha ss tl" r (2 ·4 I.
L - Zahn (8 9 l. HR s- Bo ston .
Fis k ( 15) .

CENTER CUT

5

Cl eve la nd
000 010 100 020 000 0- 4 1
Hart ze ll , L aRoc h e (! OJ. G r i f f in ( 14 ) a nd Down ing ; W is e,
Ke rn 112l and Alc&gt;&lt; and er . wG r itf i n (2 J) . L - K ern
( 6 4).
HR s - Cal it or ni a , Bay lor ( iJ ).

Oak
Oc t

010 000 000100 002 00)( -

N Y

K .C.
Tidrow ,

020 000 000-

7 80
5 C/0

000 00041)( L ·~te (7) aM H eath ,
Leonard
and
Por ter
W
L eonard ( 1'1 11 ) L - T idrow I 11

81
M ilw
000 00 1 000
I 4 l
Ch i
010 010 2h&lt; - 5 13 0
Soren sen , McCl ur e (8 ) a nd
Moo r e ; Stone an d Colbern W
Slone ( 8 71 L Sor ensen ( 12 71
HR s -- M ilwaukee , Og11vie ( 13 )
Batt
201 010 105- 10 11 0
Texas
000 03 1 011- 6 9 0
T Mar tiner. O .Mclrl 1ne.z {51.
Stanh ouse (8), McG r egor (91
and Skaggs , Jenkins , Cl ev e l and
(9 1. U mb arge r (91 and Sund
ber g . w · stanhouse 15 5 ) L
Jenk ins ~ 9 6) H Rs - Ball imor e,
Mur ray { 18 ).

JUMBO

BOLOGNA

ASSORTED CUT

1 6 1
4 10 I

Ke ough , L acey ( I ). Sosa ( 5).
Heav er lo ( 6 ) and New man ,
Young and Ma y . W - Young 11
ll. L - K cough '(6. 7)
H RS
Detr oi t , Sta ub ( 16 1.

'1

PORK
.
LB
89
C:ttOP!i............•................. ~ ..... .

( 16 innings )
Ca l itorn i a

000 002 000 020 000 1-

SUPERIORS

Welendahand.
When you're making an addition (of any kind), or need money for any good
reason. talk to us at The City Loan Company. When rhajor projects requirt
larger amounts, we can arrange a Homeowner Loan quickly and With
consideration.
-·

':~~$ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~ . ~ }49
FRESH LEAN

GROUND PORK SAUSAGE •• ~~~99

· LB.

SMOKED

!iLAB .BACON ••....••......••.L~: •.. 99~

•

CITYLQ\N
COMPANY
~ ~~ E .

Ma in St. • '!92-2171

r.u:\ d fioNl(i&lt;'U

~rvke

LARGE

GRADE B

69e

· ·
DOZEN
IEGG!i ..•••••••.•.......•..........

of

'='CI CONTilOt: Cl'\TA COR,rOR,ATION
We lind WilliS to help.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
MIDDLEPORT
PHONE
' 992~2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

AVORITE
BREAD

•

4/$1
PEPSI
or 7-UP

'1 00

4
QUARTS
THURSDA ·Y -ONLY

R.C. COLA
.
OR

DIET RITE
'

oz.
BOmES

8-16

99/llt
.,-

BROUGHTON

89
HOMO MILK......~-~~~-~?-~. 89¢
oz:
COTTAGE CHEESE ..~.~~!! . 99
HOMO MILK ..... :.~..~~~~~~. -

12 OL
CAN

VALLEY BELL

DIAL
5BARS
REGULAR

'1 00

KOOL-AID

PRICE

DR.
PEPPER

BROUGHTON

24

VALLEY BELL

.

¢

.

2% MILK .. ;...........~~~~?.~...

10 PKGS. $}00
ALL WEEK

¢

VALLEY BELL

WISH

LAUNDRY DETERGENT
"h PRICE 32 OL bottle

8

SHERBET............:~.~~~-~~.~-

$
149

..

89¢

�Middleport.Pomerov. 0 ., 'l'ueaday, July 25, 1978

'
1-The Daily Sentinel, ~iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. TUesday
, July 25, 1978

Davidson-Rhodes wedding plans made

OLD FASHION
DOLLAiR DAYS

Polly Cramer

food jars

$

2/ 1

$1 .34 Value

F.I.P. Price.....

.

CLEAN UP Kl
5Pc.
$1 .98Value

$100

F .I.P. Price •..

COLGATE
TOOTH BRUSH
Hard , Medium , Or Soft

GILLETTE
Trac II
5s

COSMETICALLY
YOURS
EYE MAKEUP
$.99Value

Prlce ..

65¢
EFFERDENT
TABLETS
40s w /8 Free

:, . . .
""

I

1 .J?;]
- ..

\r~j~ ifr. ·,"' )loiiZ.
I

~~

fRUlER B~GS

$. 59-Val~

·

F.I.P. Price .•..

·3J/ $1

DEAR POLLY - I have
been saving empty baby food
jars and would like some
ideas lor putting them to use.
I am sure niany of the
readers have e&lt;cellent and
JH'adical purposes for these
jars and I would appreciate
hearing from them. -JILL
DEAR JIU - The following two letters have ideas just
as you asked for . I am sure
we will be hearing.! rom other
·readers, too.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY- Do tell the
mothers of new babies to save
baby food Ja rs. They are
great lor storing baby's cotton tipped sticks, to hold leftovers in the refrigerator and
also as jam or jelly jars. K.I.A.
DEAR POl.!.Y - I lind
baby food jars are handy for
holding diaper pins, cotton
balls, small oiniment tubes,
etc. Nail lids to the underside
of a wooden shelf, screw the
jars into the lids and they will
be right at your fingertips by
simply unscrewing them. DIANA
DEAR POLLY - II the
steak you are cooking lor dinner does n~t get tender
enough to serve, substitute
tuna or salmon sandwiches
and use the steak lor tomorrow's lunch. Chop or mince
the steak, add mayonnaise
and have a delicious spread
lor sandwiches. Also such
stea k can be cut into cubesize pi eces lor soup or stew. It
will become quite palatable

lifter being boiled for 30
minutes or an hour.
Pet owners can make their
own easily replaced cat or
dog dish by simply cutting off
most of the top of a hall•
ga llon milk carton, leaving
the bottom one or two inches
as a dish for Fido or Kitty. WINIFRED
DEAR POLLY - When
children are learning to button their sweaters, shirts,
blouses, etc. teach them to
start at the bottom instead of
the lop and there will never
be an e&lt;lra button or buttonhole left at the top . MARGUERITE
DEAR POl-LY - When
making rolled sugar cookies I
use a pastry wheel to make
bars, triangles or diamond
shapes. I find this fa ster and
easier than using cookie cutters and there is less rerolling. When making a salad
with canned peaches or pears
1 save the juice and use it for
making apple sa uce.- FLO
DEAR POl.!.V - When putting on a jacket or sweater
some of the charms on my
bracelet were always getting
caught in the sleeve hem. So
now I put a small plastic bag
over my hand and bracelet
when putting on or taking off
a ga rm~ nt and have no more
problems. - SHIRl-EY
Polly will send you one of
her s ign ~d thank -yo u
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column . Write POLLY.'S.
POl NTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Private black colleges
enjoy new popularity
By PATRICiA McCORMACK
UPI Education Editor
Black private colleges are
more popular than ever with
black youths.
·
Between 1976and 1977 there
was a 12.4percent increase in
the number of freshmen
signing up ·at the 41
institQtions supported by the
United Negro College Fund.
At predominantly white
colleges nationally,
meanwhile, there was an 0.8
percent drop in enrollments
during the same period.
The black JH'ivate schools
are in a growth curve on total
enrollment which increased
12.6 percent over the years
197f&gt;.l977.
"The trends indicate the
awakened interest on the part
of bla.ck youngsters to a
coll~ge
education, and
especially an education at a

.. Better than 30 million

AFL -C IO Pr esiden t
Ameri ca ns regula rly and I George Meany pa ints .
Helen Gurley Brown of
unhappr ly expe ri e n ce
slee pless nights.· : repor1s
Richard Trubo , author of

and Doris WoodaU, all from
Columbus; John, Francis and
John McGuffin, Angie, Tony
and Tina Stricklin, all from
So uth Point ; Katie, Tammy
and Donna Mathias, Barbra,
Sentt.v. Larry and Mary
T~ylor, . aU from GalliPolis.
Btll, Sharon, Haymonu,
Beverly, Wanda and Peggy
Rupe, Winifred Thompson,
all from Northup; WiUiam,
Becky , Billy and Stacy
Morris from Grove City;
Alien, Dian, Todd , and I.ois
from Syracuse. The goingaway dinner was held July 9.

" Cosmopolit an" plays word
games .

" The Co mpl e le Sleep
Book."

.· Former footbal l great Joe
Noinath plays pooL

The nation ' s ce lebr ities
are not immu·ne from inso mnia These are some of th e
method s th e famous use to

Actr ess Gloria Swanson
curls up in her !1\ling roo m

get to steep . accord ing to
an

excerpt fr om Trubo ' s

on a thrck Japanese q •Jilt .
Former frrst lady l'elty
Fordreads histor ica l nov.11s.
.Years ago . repo rts Trul•o .

book that appeared in a

Catherine the Great

recent issue of " Good
Hou sekeeping ·· magazine :

brush ed her hair unti l she

Co ngresswoman Shirley
Chisholm

tak es

a

warm

bubble bath
Actor Cary Grant watches
old movie s on televis ion
Newswoma n Barbara

Walters makes a li st of
lhrn~s 10 do the next day.

beca me drowsy . King Louis
XIV loug hl insomn ia by
movi ng to another of hi s 413

beds.
Benjamin Franklin recommended a cool mattress

and Charles Dickens In·
sisted that the head of hi s
bed point due north .
, NEWSI"APP. U ENTE ltl~ fUSf-~

ASSN

DE,LICEIOA~S-K
' TEENTDTERES . ·.

S

the total.
Another statistical index
pointing to the economic
JH'Oblems of students at the
ppedominantly black private
colleges is this: At least half
of the prospective freshmen
require maximwn financial
jiSSistance due to the fact that
median expected parental
contribution is. zero dollars.
The median expected
parental contribution of other
collegebound high . school
senior nationally is $1,200.
The poor economic base of
students means the United
Negro College Fund schools
cannot raise tuitions as the
solution to the common finan·
cial problems on the
academic trail - inflation,
higher fuel cosis, raises for
·
siaff.
The black colleges charge
an average of $3,216 for room,
board, tuition, books,
·supplies. Private colleges
nationally charge 20 percent
more - .$4,405.
Teachers at the United
Negro College Fund schools
are said to help with financial
sacrifices.
The average professor's
salary at a Fund 5chool is
$16,371, compared to a $20,000
average at other colleges in
the southeast , where most
Fund schools are.
The percentage of faculty
holding earned doctorates at
the United Negro Fund schols
is 40.7 percent.
Edley said the issue fo~ the
JH'ivate black colleges and
universities these days is
whether they will be able to
find resources sufficient to
keep pace with rising costs,
new program development
and salary improvement.
' 'Further increases ir.
tuition would discourage and
deJH'iVe large numbers of
students from atioonding these

historically black college, "
said Olristopher F. Edley,
the fund 's executive director .
The UNCF's Annual
Statistical Report, compiled
· by Alan Kirschner, research
director, shows also that
about 40 percent of the
students come from families
with ificome of less than
$5,000 a year .
· Some 75 percent are from
families 'With incomes under
$10,000.
By
contrast,
according to Kirschner , only
IS percent of students in
JH'ivate colleges nationally
come from families with less
than $10,000 a year.
Only 3 percent of the
students at the black private
colleges comes from families
with incomes over $20,000 a
year.· Families in the same
economic bracket at other
schools make up 52 percent of

What's up ·in sleep

Rupe joins Army
Raymond Rupe, 18, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Rupe has
joined the Army, He left July .
14 and is stationed at Fort
Jackson, S. C. He · will be
taking schooling in Welding.
There was a going-away
dinner held at Krodel Park.
Attending were: James, Geri
and Robin Cottrell, Stanley,
Vivian, John, Marie, and
Dust in Thornton, Terry and
Sherry Herdman, all from
Point Pleasant; Kenneth,
Linda, Kenny , Timmy, and
Krista! Rupe, Brian Cairellt,
Kay Woodall, Mrs. Ora Rupe,

ring bearer will be . Todd
Davidson, Syracuse.
~
Guests will be registered by
Corena and Becky Rhodes,
Racine. Music to· begin at t
p.'m . will be presented by
Mrs. Mary .Louise Shuler,
Letert Falls.
A reception will follow the
wedding t'eremony in the
church social room .

Plans for the marriage of honor and Allen Davidson,
Bill Davidson and Karen Syracuse, will serve as best
Rhodes have been finalized. man. Miss Cindy Roush, ApThe open church wedding wiD ple Grove, and Miss Dianne
be an event of July 29 at 7:30 Davidson, Middleport, will
P,.m. at the Apple Grove serve as bridesmaids. Ushers
United Methodist Church . will be Greg S[llith and Ranwith the Rev. David Harris dy Houdashelt, Pomeroy.
Flower girls will .be Tracy
officiating.
Miss Debbie Baird , Norris , Letart Falls, and Lois
Cheshire, will be the maid of Davidson, Syracuse and the

POLLY"S POINTERS
Job for baby

CURAD BONUS
. BOX P~~STIC

o

Modern Woodmen pkm dinner

SUPER ACE
GLIDER

'

$.15 Value

HAWAIIAN TROPIC
DARK TAN. LTN.
B oz.

SUAVE BALSAM
PROTEIN SHAMPOO
i6 oz . Norm / Dry or Oily

F.I.P. Price ...

7
CEPACOL
12oz.
$1 .78 Value

Moaern Woo dmen of
Am er ica Camp !0900 is
having a dinner to honor C.
Lee Henderson, Alfred, Ohio,
and Ada Kennedy, New
Marshfield, Ohio, lor their .
service to Camp 10900 and the
community . The dinner will
be held.July_30 at 12 :30 p.m.
at the Woode 's Grove, Allred,
Ohio.
The camp will furni sh ham
and chicken, buns, Boston
bak.ed beans, salad, donuts,
coffee, tea and punch. Bring a
covered dish and table ser·
HAVE GUESTS
Weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs . Norman Wood and
Ronnie, Pomeroy, were Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Brickles and
Jeirrey ,' Gaithersburg, Md.
and Mr. and Mrs. Kennelh
Wood, Carrie 'and Cathy,
Ric kenbac ker AFB, Ohio .
Sunday afternoon visitors
were Iona Brickles, Weber
Wood, Vicky and Tammie
QeBord, Pomeroy , Ernestine
Stephan, Naples, Fla., Mr.·
and Mrs. Harold Gilliam and
Terri , Zane.svtlle, Mrs. Goldie
Lynch, Athens, Mrs. Earie
Wood and Stephanie and
Edith Wood , Midd leport.
Mrs. Debbie Cadle visited on '
Saturday.

vice.
Those attending are asked
to bring favorite family
snapshots. Prizes will be
awarded families haVing 3 or
4 generations of members in
.attendance . Drawings will be
held for door prizes and
recognition will be given to
the ~ and 511-year members
in our camp.
There will be games,
contests and group singing
lor both children and adults.
A reply by phone or ca rd
must be received by Friday,
July 28' to Ralph Henderson,
Box M, Coolville, Ohio 45723.

ATTEND CONFERENCE
Representatives from the
Hysell Run Free Methodist
Church recently attended the
fOOth annual conference of
the Ohio Free Methodist
Conf erence in Man sfield .
Bishop Paul N. Ellis presided
at the July 14-16 event. The
first session was opened at
West Windsor, the site of the
first annual Ohio conference.
Attending were Pastor and
Mrs. Herbert Ailing, Mrs.
Pauline Tillis, delegate and
Mrs. Carrie Moore. Pastor
and Mrs. Ailing ha ve been
appointed for a third year at
Hysell Run .

Gra nt watches llick,.s while Walters makes lists .

16 oz . Reg . or XBody

•

•70'¢

$1 .49 Value
F.I.P.Prlce ..

I baby .sit several children in my home on 11 regullr
basis. Is my Homeowner ' s Policy adequ.te protection
against accident claims?
·
Q_

A. Probably not. Homeowner' s are designed for claims
affecti ng you as a prl'v'ate citizen, not as an a.wner of. a
business . An Owner' s, Landlord' s aind Tenant's
liability Pol icy will protect your business situation .
This pollc;y covers the property and any negligent act
which might occvr on the prem ises, also providing
payments for bodily In jury. An extension to include
Premises Medical Payments , whereby negligence
does not have 1o be proven 1o provide protection. can be
. purcha sed for a m .i nlma l cost and might be considered .

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
The lnsur•nc• Stort
Pomeroy •.D.
.
..,._ _ICO_XM:_O',,.,r....,;....i-.,..&lt;:_ _ _ _ _ _•
214 E. MAin

~ ~ ~ ·,o

t

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
-

.CHICKEN LEGS

¢ CHICKEN

CHICKEH
. .
&amp; THIGHS.• ~.J!;r89e BREASTS .• ,••.•..•~~-.

99

WINGS

.

¢

UIOIIIIIIIIOO~~; 49

BACKS

.
.. ¢
&amp; NECKS~ ........ ~~~-29

FOOD PRICES

....

GATEWAY GROCERY SPECIALS

.

KRAFT

3 714 oz. ggc

..

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE DINNER.......................
DEL -MONTE
. ·

CUT GREEN

BEAN~

CREAM STYLE

Boxes

·

~~~ ~:~.~~~~~--~-~~. ~~ . . . . . . . . . . 3~}s $1

GAroRAoE~~~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~~.?:.~!~. 49~
GRAPE JEllY.................................·.... ··~~.-~~:-~~~.. 6gc
GOO

$1~

.

.TRASH BAGS......................................... ~-~-~~:.~~...
·
24 oz. Bottle $P9
CRISCO OIL......................................................... .
stlW' DRESSING ...............:..............~.~.?~.~~~...$1 39
DAIRY VA LUES
TROPICANA

$129
JUICE .............•.•!..~.~.....
V: G llo

ORANGE
KRAFT

DELUX·E CHEESES ........•..!~.~:!.~~ ..~ 1 ~
1

PRODUCE
F~hHomeGrownP~oce

The

Bought Daily-Check Us Out

SP61D€L

for Variety, Low Prices &amp; Freshness

Digtd \f\b1c
"b.J'I feel good

r ( ll

,

rrJ•JP [)IW

gettngone.
You'lfeel good

'

r' f l N

TOMATO KETCHUP
NO. 755

.26 OZ. BTL

3 LB. CAN
Limit One PIHSO wilh This Couporo
Coupon Expires
29, 1978

TWI

CITY

Y

69

¢
VV(C

GOLDEN ISLE

GOLDEN ISLE

LAUNDRY BLEACH

FROZEN ORANGE JUICE
6 oz. $189.

49¢

GAL JUG

W/C

TWIN CITY

::::;;;:;

MARGARINE .

99c
2
1 LB.
CTNS.

.

W/C

NO. 105
15 OZ. CAN

59¢

39'

W/C

12 CT. BOX

-,...-·-·GOESSIER'S

....... "

1 , ,..

bouloi.
'lho . _ 111\11111-. ilrl'l N

JEWELRY
STORE
Court St.

Pomerpy

.

W/C

NO. 155 ·
15 OZ. BOX

694

WtC

llmll Olio PieaH wllh This C:oupon
Coupon
July 29, 1978

TWIN

GATEWAY

99

NO. 155
22 OZ. BOX
Um1t

!!!!~
· =TW=IN

{J.JI't1N

O~e

¢
W/C

• , I·
: · il

.
'

Plea se with This Couoon

-~

NO. 155
W/C

Coupon
29, 1978

Thts

==-==== :=!!!!!
..

12 OZ. BOX

69'

Limit one Pltlsf wllh This Coupon
Coupon Expires July 29, 1978

TWIN CITY

EWAY

W/C

.

VANISH

.

"
•• j

'

: ·I

. 'I
. :1.

NO. 155
9 Oz. SIZE
Luni1 One Plea se with This

I

'\

. .'

COUPON

I

HONEYCOMB CEREAL

LEMONADE MIX
NO. 205
$139
10 QT. CAN.
LimH one PIPH wllh
Coupon E

(

POST

COUNTRY TIME

ANGEL
FOOD MIX
. (10013700)

·'

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
I

BETTY

., ·'.I

'( 10013~00\

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

,_,_,

.,

Coupoh Exptres July 29, 197H

--!llft. -.-~·•noc
Juoc
• gift or gift of~
too.· "'" .., ~~ogon~

....,._.,__ _

:~~

BROWNIE MIX

Limll One P!HH wilh This CouPOn
Coupon Expires July 29, 1978

,._._1-·oLCO·o
...
_ _,.-.g,_._

EWAY

BErrY CROCKER

ICE CREAM CONES
· NO. 105

•

COUPON

!OU PON

KEESLER

AEROSOL WINDEX

VV/C

CANS

Lim it One Please with This Coupon

C DLJP'lN

BLUE BONNET

Tho lpoldol ~ WIICII It on

:
6

Coupon Ex pares July 29: 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

TEWAY

;
I

COUPO N
&lt;

Limit One Prease with ]his Coupon
Coupon Expires July 29, 1978

l.lmil One Plus• wllh This Coupon
Coupon Expires July 29, 1978

TWIN CITY

t.OUPON

-

HEIN%

MAXWELL HOUSE

~lngone.

7:0_..,._____________..,....,._1&gt;011

SUAVE BALSAM
PROTEIN COND.

~ ]39

LB.

BUY ONLY THE PIECES YOU lii&lt;E

"Cutting costs below
already low levels ' co uld
seriously diminish the.
. attractiveness and
effectiveness
of
the
colleges."
The Fund currently is in a
drive for capital funds. The
Honorary Cbainnan is President
Jimmy
Carter .
Chairman is Thomas A.
Murphy, head of the board,
General Motors Corp .
The goal is $SO million .

BABY BORN
AITENDED SERVICE
Mark and Penny Clark are
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Wolfe,
announcing the birth of a son, Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Conroy,
Christopher, on June 17 at Chest~r. and Mrs. Rose
O'Bleness Hospital in Athens. Reynolds, Middleport , atThe baby weighed in at tended the July IS wedding of
eight lbs., IS oz. and was 22 Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe's grandinches
lon g. Paternal daughter, Beverly Wolfe, to
grandparents are Mrs. Rick Jindra, Akron, held at
Phyllis Clark, Pomeroy, and the Methodist Church in
Mr. and Mrs. Alva Clark, Akron . They also visited
Langsville. Materna I several relatives while there.
grandparents are Mr. and The Conroys visited with
l'v!rs. William Walters, their sons, George E. Conroy,
Middleport. Paternal great - . Jr., Tallmadge, Ohio and
grandparents' are Mr. arid Hugh Conroy and families,
Mrs. H. D. Geoglein, Akron.
Pollleroy, and Mrs. Dorothy
Clark, Pom~roy. Maternal ·
SEEN AND HEARD
great-gran&lt;!pa~ents are Mr.
S. Sgt. and Mrs. Kenneth
and Mrs. Charles VanCooney, Wood, Carrie. and Cathy,
' Middleport, and Mrs. Ruth bave returned to Grand Fork,
Walters, Columbus. Mrs . A.F .B., North Dakota after
Rose Raines, Vinton, is a spending a 30 day leave with
great-great - grandmother. their family, Mr. and Mrs.
•
Norman Wood and Ronnie.
They had been previously
REUNION SET
The annual Matlack stationed at Rlcltenbacker
reunion will be held Sunday, A.F .B., Ohio.
July 30 at Rising Park in
HAVE GUE$TS
Lancaster. There will be a
Recent visitors of Mr. and
basket dinner at noon . All
relatives and friends are Mrs. A. J. Slusher, Kerr St.,
were Mr. and · Mrs. Roland
invited.
Steadman, Grand 'Rapids,
Mich., Mr. and Mrs. Ted
SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. DOnald Casto, Lunde, McLean, Dl., Mr. and
Ft. Campbell, Ky., formerly Mrs. Joe Zuldgeon and sons,
and
Matthew,
of Pomeroy , &amp;Mounce the Joey
birth of a son, Joshua Bradenton, Fla., and 'Mr. and
Eugene, born July 20' at Mrs. John Roush, John and
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Jennifer of Alhley, Ohio.
The Infant weighed eight
pounds and four ounces.
MEETING' SLATED
Maternal grandparents are
There
will be a 111eetlng for
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hart·
aU
prospective
Meigs High
man, Chester, paternal
School
Girls
Volleyball
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
playera,
grade
9-12, on
Charles Buckley, Miners·
ville, maternal great· August I at 7 p.m. at the high
grandparents, Mrs. Florence school.
Hartman, Lebanon, Pa., and
Mr. aod Mrs. Curtil Wolfe, . A thought for the day:
Cheater, paternal gr'eat- American statesman Daniel
graftdparenta, Rev. and Mrs. Weblter said, "Let our object
George Caito, Pomeroy, and be our country, our whole
Mr. and .Mrs. Guy Priddy, country, and nothing but our
country."
Rutland .

---~

•. ·············

SAVE MONEY CHECK OUT
OUR FAMILY PACK MEAT SECTION

schools," he said.

$1 .49 Value - • ·

•

W/C
~oupon

Coupo.n Expires July 29, 197.~

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

::\

:J

�,

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 25,1978

-

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into ·Cash
~EGAl

F...- Rent

WANT AD
CHARGES

FOR BIDS

Separate. sea led prop osals
tor the re pa i rs to the Ch ester

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom e Po1k .
~ o ut e 33. north of Pomeroy
Lo1ge lots. Call 997 7479.

E tement l!ry .schoo l bulld•no

w ill be re ceived "' the off .ce
. of the clerk of tht board of
edu .c.al ion of Eastern Local
Sch ool O istr ic t. Reed sv ille ,
Me i gs County , Oh ro unfi l 12

o'c lock noon . E .S.T , Augus t
1. l97fl ana w ill be publicly
ope ned a nd r f&gt;ady by the
clerk t hereafter a t the usual
place of
said board
of

educa t ion . t abulat ed .a11d a
report thereof made by the
cle rk to sa id board at rts ne"t

lj Wt•l'tb; tit• Undl't
l 'a :-h
I

:t Ll&lt;tl ~
ti Ua~·.~

C heste r ,

Oh i O. ) • e ·

Root

r e pa •r
to
th e
Chester
E le mentary scho ol bu i ld rng
Copreso t the spec il!c at ion s.
in s tru c tions to b td der s may
be obtai ned attheolftce ot the
cle rk of
t he b oard
ol
educa t to n of Eas ter n L ocal
Sch ool D tstr tcf. Reedsv il le.
Oh10
A certifted check payabl e
to the cle rk. treasu rer of t he
above ):loard of edu cat •on or a
sa t is fa cto r y
bt d
bond
e)Cecu te o b y the b 1dder a nd a
sure tv c o m pany , tn
an
i'lmO'ifilt equ a l io f tve per ce nt
ct thiJ'"b rd Shal l be subm 1tfed
. w d h each brd
Sa 1d boa rd ot
edu ca tron res erves t he r ight
to wa ive tn for m alt l ies , to
accep t or r e 1ec t anv and all
or parl s ol anv an d a ll , b tdS
f hc success f ul b1dder Wtl l
be r equ tr ed to furn i sh
a
salts la c t o ry per f orma n ce
bond l or on e hundred percenl
ol the con tr.-t r t nrore
No bids ma y be with drawn
tor at least th~rty (30 ) da ys
alter the scneau led ct os i ng
Ttme for re cetp ! of tn ds
Boa rd o t E duca t 10n . ot
E aster n Loc al School D t Si rt cl
B y Douglas Btsset t,
Prest dent

1!0

I""

I :!;j
1.00
1.:!$

.! t"-1

.t 75

Eodt wunl

u~· t· r tht• mliumwu 15
Wtll'lb 1..' ~ I'CII I.S pl' l' '4 !1111 jM 'I' da~
Atl-; I'UIIIIII I~ ttlho·r· than toii\SI.'o'tl\1\'t'

day'

~~o· r ll lit·

t

haq.!t'll

~~

llw I d;.n

I ,t ~t ·

meet inQ

Descrtptron of ., the im
prov eme nt
tocatett __-. at

1.1

ld;n
:11.1il;~

I 'tll:tl').:t'

lrt

ONE BEDROOM opt
Contact
Vi llage M anor A p l
Mrd ·
dlepon 992 ·7787
J AND 4 RM furn1shed aiJ,.d un
lurr11shed
opt s .
Phone
99:jl.5434

rtt t'IIIOI\ .

l'oud u( Tl1a11b cmd
"'''nl, $;1.1141

IIIUl UIIUIU t.:11.sh Il l adVllll l't'

M11lH k' Httl llt' ~ It•:; and
ol l"l' &lt;ill l'!)h•d

't't~rt l

sail':.

ul tl) '4tlh t ·a ~ h \lo'llh
d ta t !-!•· fut tub n u r ~ ·

oordt·t :!.5 ·~ n l
u t~ Ht•X Nunt lot•t In ( 'att' uf Titt• &amp;.•••lJJwl

Bernice Bede Osol

July 26 . 1978

tll-t·nwd to l.IJt't'l lurwl Tht• l&gt;u lllishcl V.IIJ 11011 bt
1'-' Sjmll:.lll lc f u r· tlll ll't' tlu:t n tll lt' liWol'•
t l&lt;

I

111"''11JIJII

&lt;f' hull t' ~l-:?lJii

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
M vrt o.hn
\'tKJ il t lll Sa l irt t l li~

Tu._•:.tla,\
tluu Frul&lt;11
~I ' M

tht• t1&lt;1 1 b .• ft•l t' puhltt\tl t"tt •
.'! u uda~

t-

1974 PONTIAC VEN TURA
52000 992· 7453 .

o

cyl

1974 FORD MU STANG II Vin'r'l
top. 6 cyl , au l a . Good condt ·
lion N ew spnng s good t1re s
94q -2042

NOTICE OF publt c Sole
Nott ce tS hereby given that on
A ugus t 1 1978 , at lOam a
publi c sale will be held at the
Ci tiz en 's Notional Bonk , M td
d leporl Ohto to sell lor ca sh
the lo llowtng colla ter al to wtl
One 19bS Che .... ro let El , Camin o
1r uek ser no . 13b805Z 118 884
The Citrze n s No ti ona l Bonk , M td
dlepor t Oh to reser11e!. the r tg ht
to b1 d at tht!&gt; sole .

ma tt e r ho w d lfli cu ll 11 ap pe ars .
hono r vour promrses · to th e
te ll er today and yo u ' ll gat n
grea ter res pe c t and lulf tl lmen t
1977
STAR CRAFT lo ld ·down
tha n you anlt Ctpat ed
cam per
Sleeps 8, !&gt;love .
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0cl. 23) Some
re fn gero tor , LP giH spor e ttr e
one mtght renege toda y on a
Used twt ce . 742·2750
prom 1se but II yo u ke ep the
fatth all wj fl ngh t •!se lf bett er
than when thiS person wa s
•nvolved

SCO RPIO (Del 24-Nov . 22) You
may have to mak e a ra ther

HOUSE 01 Tr oll er won ted to rent
b y young co uple with house
If
dt ll iClll t dectston tod a y
pel
Needed
tmmedo otely
yo u ' re convrnced 11 s b es t for
Phone 992 -7023.
all conce rned . std. by you r
guns

SAGIITARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19)
If :·our be ll e r JUdgment tSn t m
co ntr ol at all l tme s toda y you
co uld ge t tn"JOived tn somethm g tha t will cos t you mere
than •t's wo·rth

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb . 19) A
lamily mat t e r wtll be popp tng
up It re qu ir es your coo t h ead
and a ftrm hand to stra 1g ht en
out Don 1 pass th e bu ck

PISCES (Feb . 20-March 201 You

H:MALI:- MIN lA TUR t blo clo. poodle
o lrl er dog . Alter 5 JO coli
9Q2 .728 4 "
PUPP IES and mot her
mo th er is o !&gt; moll , gentle dog
ond
h ou se br ok en
Phon e949·2626 or q4q 2952

fWO

fWO M O NTH o ld Schnauzer ty pe
lema le pup , gray
healthy
IO \o'ob le
Call
~92 · 7639
01

992.2592

PUPPI ~ S

M other
Bro llony
Sponte ! Fothe1 tn gltsh Se n e '
99'1· 7b44

may have the o pporl untty to be
ol servt ce to someone D o 5o HI CYCLE PAR TS 992·0208
wtll tn g t~ Thts person wt ll r epay
you later 1n larger measure
lha n you Ql '-1 € today
ARIES (Marc h 21·Aprtl19 ) Way s
wdl p resen t the m selv es to f trm · fo!H VES Tli!A L&gt;ING Pos t Nt~ w sh•p ·
me11 1 of We ster n show saddle s
up your pos •ll on matertal ly
stl11e1 trimmed S700 up Al so
Tak e c are . h o w ever no t t o hur t
pony sadd les $50 up All horse
a frtend •n yo ur eag erness 10
su pplt e!&gt;
Open
M o nday
tak e adv an ta ge o f the SituatiOn
thr o ugh
Sa turday
l:l H
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) One
b 14·b98 543b
wh o IS anx 1ou s to help you IS
confu sed b y yow methods
Clan fy yoUr atms You ' ll s pare
yo ur self so me uncomfo nable
moments
.
BASE stot ton s. Siltr on t •
GEMIN' (May 21-June 20} A Cl!10 11--1)
Freq co ur.ter OIQ.I m tc
solu!lon to u se rtous pr o blem
1ube type om stde bond . $32 5
can be found today 1f you
l?od• o Shock m odel TR C A ~8
exerc tse a ltl!le patten c e ano
new
40 channel om stde band
toleranc e Trytng to go tn tw o
U !&gt; t~d 2 rn onth5 $200 992 -iOOO
dtrecttons Wi ll · co nfu se the
ISSue s

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Ca rol Mowery, Dolly I'
Mowery to Leading Creek
Cons . Dist. , Right of Way ,
Sa lisbury.
&lt;; urtl s E . Balthaser to
Leading Creek Cons. Dost.,
Right of Way, Salem .
Arnold E Riggs, Ela one M.
Riggs to Lea dong Creek Cons.
Dist ., Right of Way , Salem.
Pai ge A. Humphreys ,
Juanit a Humphreys
to
Leading Creek Cons. D1st. ,
Right of Way, Sa lisbury .

TH RI:l: FA MIL Y Yorrl Soie Man
USED TRA CTORS
24 th and Jues 25th htd Col
MF2JO Diesel
MFI JS Dtesel
l11 1~ re~ tden c e 1u sl above 7 and
M F150 Dt esel MF735 D1 esel
\ 43 eK tl Baby bed one! lo ts o f
MFl b5 Dte sel MF 285 01 e~e l
othe r otelll!&gt; .
Mf ll JS 01e sel Cob
ot r &amp;
heo te1
YARD SAlE l ues thr ough Fr 1 !til
NEW &amp; U5W IMPUMtNT S
dll'"r k l oh ol good cl othJ ng
MF9 Boler M flO Boler MF 170
toys 1ewelry some new tl ems
Boler Mollhews ~ o t01 y Scy th e
On Unt on A ve nue dose 10 Rt .
Mf !:II:IO Semt ·moun led 0 bo t
7
lOrn Plow
MF520 12 Dt sc
HVt
FAM IL't' Yar d Sole Wol f e
MF200 2 Ro w Chopper · MF39 2
Pen
Rd
Chade s
Ktng
Row Planters
Mechamco l
res tdence July 20 27 Follo w
Tronsplon te t .
s•gns Fur mlure clolh1ng mtsc
SHINN S TRACTOR SALES
99
Phon e 458 1630
l eon. W Vo
YARD SAl E. Jul)' ~b 27 / 8 3
forntly 10om to 5pm Nelson
Roar! Hutlond Oh oo l ook l o r
1975 BlACK EL Comm a Clas!&gt; tC
s1gns Cloth es c urro~;l s e tc
~50 two barr e l
oulo rn o lt c
p owe r steettng orvi brake s !:lACK YARD Sole !h urs f- ro and
May be seen I ' • rrule s oil
Sot 4\7 ltn&lt;Oin St M•ddl cpor t
Route 7 l:lypo ss on 14 3 01 co li
992 3750
Good condt tiOn
$7b00
P.,t. (or Sate
F RIGIOAIR~ tl E C TF~l C

10nge $25
May tag porta ble dryer Ha rvest
Gold e~~:ce ll e nt co nd ttt on $100
Kodak camera
The Handle
new S20 992 798!'1

or 992-6263
8 A.M. to 4:30P.M.'

BA '::lS BOA f 15 olum mum Lo we
t me 2b h.p Mere St1ck steer
on g t lec tnc start Eag le trolltng
m otor Coli 985 4339
CABBAGl: , CORN pototoe '&gt; , half
r unner beans {ptck your own)
$4 bu C W
Prolhll For m
Porllonrl Oho o

;.-

1977 CHtV't' VAN A ( 991 2066
ROANOK~

51 AR Kennel . 8oord tng .
Ind oor and ou td oor r uns .
Groo rno ng all breed!i Clean
so ntl o• y /oc!lttt es Cheshtre
Ph one (614 ) 30 7 0192

Will C AR~ '!or !he elder I)'
home P ho n(.&gt;~9'} 73 1&lt;1

FOUR NE W 15 tnch whote spoke
whee ls l or Dodge or Pl,.moulh
SIOO Phone qq7 628 ~

111

0u1

A

NN
N
G
I O AMIO~ ~ Pt clo. your o wn Br
mg ow n con to ,.le r oV)orsha ll
R ou~ h ~ o~ t t e ton / 47 375/

l ONG BO TI O M Gener al Store .
Bu ddmg lo t and mvcntor 't' of
se parately
~ ea,onoble
9f:l~ 4 3~ I
'
1WU !5 watt Reol. ~ to c Novo 8
55
w a ll
speaker!.
Sl 60
Reoltsto c Novo 7 H ~pe oker !i
S130 l c!os tha n a ye ar o ld Coli
61 4 J 71j 6283 al ter 5

CA MAkO

For All You1
GE T V '&gt; &amp;

Ja ck . B. Freeman to
Leading Creek Cons. Dost. ,
H1g ht of Way, Rutland.
J ohn Yost to Leading Creek
Cons . Dist.. R1ght of Way,
Rutla nd .
Robert Steele, Oian M.
Stee le , Hele n J . Steele ,
Rebecca J . Broderick, James
V. Broderic k . Jam es C.
Stee le, Kar en S. Faber ,
Ha rold R. Faber to Behnda
G. Connolly , f\i chard L.
Co nnoll-)&lt; ,
30 .75 acres ,
Chester
Cec1l I. Longstreth . Affidavit, Scipio.
Paul Eugene Clark, Mary
Cla rk to Thomas B. Siobart ,
Phyllis M. Siubart. Lot 521 ,
Sut t on - Racine

Sal(' Pr1n's
Jack W. C1rsev.

Mqr.
Pho1w Y92 2181

.-

PA RT TIM~
Commun tty
hea lth
nursmg e~~:pe li ence
prefer r e-d Must be res td en l of
Metg s Coun ty and be able to
"0' y worlung days Rel e t ences
requ tr ed Ptck up oppli co1 10n
form and fu rther 1nl ormo l1 on at
Metgs County ol ltce of Planned
Ponmthood oi Sou!heostern
Oht o
County Cour thouse
weekdays eKcep l Thursday .
l: quol Oppor tun tty Empl oyer

HIGH SC HOOL boy for aft ernoon!&gt;
and weeke nds Crow s Fomdy
Res taur ant Apply in person .
Nli:O SO M~O N E t o br ush hog htl
ly pos tur e Rea sonabl e 10te
9!i5 4?J4 , mor nmg or even on g

W~ Will hau l you r tras h odds and
end !&gt; .
I' h one
Ha ymon s

94'1 b3J ')

~

model

4 cyltnder'&gt; bog~ onrl
f e r 1m g ~
'I
new t1 re'j onrl
1ne w
t tJ ne up
ba tt e r ~
· 304·773 ~ 9 Ji'
I:SKA 7 hp ou !boor d mot or ~eo
Kmg 7', hp Ou tboar d mo tor
le'&gt;!&gt; thon I 'r' t'OI old ~ac Km g
olumtnurn flat bott om boo t .

Birthday , specialty

and

wedding

cakes

cakes

specialty .
Stat e hcenn d .

'1 4 1 1 4 t I

!Jeosoned

ll , ~001 tru ck compc t sell con tom rl'i 1.1'0 ':ll./83

Nancy Roush
Tuppers Pl•ms, Ohio
Phone 1-614-661 -lt'll

a

!IHia.tor

lo the

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

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
p~

9!2-2174

H.al Estatr for Sall•

MASH .
BROTHERS
ALUM. &amp;
VINYL

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
4-30-1tC

sotlit, Room

~dditions

MINIFARM 7 ', well l encedo cf e!&gt; THHH· BEDR OOM frame home 1n
cl o~e 10 tow n and ~choo l ~ .
M iddleport Colt 992·3457
Lorge '} story hous e ha s room
for Ior ge lo tndy w1th 5 o r 0
bedt ooms r ec •oom . dtntng
room h'o' tng roo m and coun lr)"
k1tc hen . Btg bor n and o!her out ·
EAFQR~
butldtng s hu t! tree s berries
ond 2 garden!. firtvo te paved
IRGIL 8 . SR
roorl to p• ope dy ' Ohd - '( \0, '"'11"'1:'
,,J ,nn '"' ,.., .,.._,"
Jt6 E Stund ~ lr lte t
water
Ftve l mtn ute fr om
Pom~r oy Ottto
Mmon WV . Shown by oppt .
only . 30 4 77 3·5535

r

LONG BOTTOM

Rt. 114. V 1ew of t he
Oht o Rtver Over J l ':~
acr es of la nd , drilled
we ll , 3
be droom
F leet wood
mob tle
home wifh central
hea t and ai r . 1' 1
bi!!hs, sun dec k and
lo i s o f shrubbery

RUTLAND

0.

NEW LISTING

Newer

~

for 131 .000 .00
NEW LISTING

~

Super

126.000 .00.
BEAT THIS ~ 3 bdrms .,

larg e ba th , 1 stor tes , n ew
( c arpet i ng .
s i d i ng .
gutt ers$. down spoutin9 .
paneling. cei li ng s). on Oht o
Pwer . cl ose t o Pom eroy .

Onl y 111.000.00
LOW DOWN PAY

~

bdrms.,

~

Large

bedroom f rame
home Has bath . ci ty
waler , nat u ra l gas,
f irep l ace
in
th e •
l iv mg , '1 c ar garage
and e~t lra level lot

4

ra n ch type , 5 bd r ms .. close
1n App)C
t. 10 acres . 2
stor ag e b ldgs.. in good
cond lf to n . l a rge l i v i ng
r oom . equip p ed built i n
k it chen a n d ttl e kids go t o
Pomer oy elem Looks good

Only 514 ,000 .
NEW LISTING

6

Full
in

BEFORE YOU BUY OR
SELL
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN APPRAISAL BY A
APPRAISER . IF WE CAN
BE OF ANY HELP
PLEASE CALL.
HENRY E. CLELAND
.
REALTOR
HENRY,E. CLELAND,
JR
SR . CEIHIFIED
APPRAISER
m -l2S9, 992 ·2S68

~

Ch es l er
ar e a
3
bedroom hom e wi t h
cenlral h eat and--. a 1r ,
fu ll basemen t. and
r ura l wa ter . 2 c ar
ga r age and o th er
ou l budd1ngs
4.14
a cr es w 1fh p ond Has
a tra iler hook -u p and
tre e hou se . Jus t

535,000
NEW LISTING -

Larg e J b ed ro o m
h o me wi th
ba t h ,
natural gas furnace,
oak floor s d own and
full ba sement , Oice
shady
s p o t ,
overl ooki ng th e Otlio
River . Th• s ts a good

buy at 119,500
UNION AVE. -

3

shady lot s L arc;J e 10
room house wtl h 4
bedrooms , 2 ba ths
nat ura I g as . f .a .
furnace. Hobby shop,
garage ,
cove red
pi cn ic patio , all fh ls
tS V .A . approved .

L1 NCOLN

All types of rooling, guHtrt
&amp; downspouts. 20 yNrs
experience. All work
guaranteed . Cell Tom
Hoskins, 949-21,0.
Estimiltes. ·

CAPTAIN EASY

Free

90 vou AIM ro 1&lt;1o.o. us
AW/W FROM
THI! MAlt INA ·· WHERe

~OM!PLACI!

7-16-1 mo.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

Residential and commer cial. Call tor estimate . 24
Hour Servtce . Anv day,
anytime.
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 985-3806

Jatk's Septic
Tank Service

..·PEDA~ --

WHICH WI I. I. LIMIT OUit
!&gt;PEeD TO TWENTV MIL-e5
AN HOUit !

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

in Hartford, W. Va .

BDRNLOSER

PULliN S EXCA VA TING . Com pl ete
Sef vtce . Phone992·24 7_8
PUDD LE POOLS. A ll !&gt;lles an d
shapes Swirn p oo l!&gt;, 2 years
e• per ien ce. free es timat es
o ny1h1ng
you
need
for
und.:Hgr ound swtni pools New
chem tcol ond supply siQH:L
Alban,.y .
O h to
P h o ne
b14 ·!'!98-b55S. ! All er b pm
0 14 ·089·5151 John Jeff ers or
bSQ.Sl65 Hill Gillelle ) We Ole
NOT oil we t on PRICES
~""&lt;- ·

NEICtER BUILDING Supply lor
• bu ildmg hou ~ o s . repai r wor k
and cobmets . Call Guy H.
Neigle r 949·2500 alter 5 pm
HEE Vl: S TRAOIN G P o~t . Pcge"Ji lle .
Cr oc erte !&gt; dry goods . hard wor e f eed lock shop Special
25 lb of dog food . $3 88.

mower

uwn

NfW 3 bedroom hous e, 2 bath s.
a ll &amp;lee. 1 acre. M iddlep ort
close to Rut land . Phon e 9q2
7481 '

Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-2164
..5-4-1 mo.

I ' YE

SOME
BOOt&lt;S lHAT

SIIOULD

11E

BURNED .1

SO SOMEBODY 6 ETS
A HEl PIH ' 0' lAIHTED

VA·FHA , 30 yr l tnondng , als o
re fin on c1ng Ir ela nd Mor tgage ,
77 1:, State , Athen s phone (b14 )
591 ·305 1

FOOO .. · SliOULD WE 00

PRISSY DO~

ONE. HiiMG lfAOS TO

Vester_day s

ANOTHER ··· NEXT SHE ' Ll

WANT TO SlCf'

$6,000.
NEW
COUNTRY
HOME 3 nice

bedrooms. s tep saver
kitchen , dining room.
famil y room with
wood
bu r' ning
fireplace , la rg e su n
deck. fr on t porch a nd
larg e wooded lot.
60's .

3t4 CONDOR ST. - 3
b e droom s ,
b a t h.
natural gas furnace ,

, and2
r:~~ -~:~;~~~~~di~space
gs
r oom tor off street
parking . Want $9,500.
we
have
over

S1 ,0IMI.OOO.OO WORTH
OF
PRO~E RTY
FOR SALE .
G. Bruce Teaford

Holen L. Teaford
Suo P. Murphy

3 bedroom , I' ,
bath, total elect11C. o.r cond i·
11omng. lull bosem&amp;n t, lorgt!
lo t CW2 3!ttl5.
'

Now arrange the c•rcled leners to
form the surprtse answer, as sug
gested by the above cartoon

I

Jumbles IDIOT ONION FlORAl ABSORB
What the locksmith waa mH.ing when the
piKe wu ratded - A BOLT FOR THE OOOR

An swer

NEWS~PERS

FROM PRIHliH' AllY
riEWS

o·

.JI.Irtil Book No. 10, wllh . . . . . 110 puzzlltl, • ...,..... for $1 36 polt·
Pl6d from Jurnb6e, e1o fill
. b 34, Norwood. N.J 07148. lndudt
'fOJI rwne. ~. ztp t::10ct. end rMM c:hecb Pl¥etlle., tis 1 •t~GC~U.

CRIII\E ...

HAR Ol t&gt;
. GRA'f •

tS~dla1. ~

*,(

by THOMAS JOSEPH

702-2321
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed

l LilJt..:.[::j:J.:;J,L'_L'I__

7. 10-1 mo.

,.THERE: AIN 'T
ANY SENSE' IN

WRITIN' 'r()LIRSEl" """' VETI
I ·-- ..

J.Il__jL.!-L_j ACROSS

WILL do roofi ng cons tr uc ti on,
plumbing and heating No jOb
too large 01 too small Pho ne
742-2348

·----

HO WER¥
AND MARTIN E.:
Colo'otmg
sep tic
sy1 terra ,
dozer , backh oe . dump tru ck ,
lim estone, gro\lel , blod•,!op
po vt ng , Rl , 143. Phone \ (OU )
b9Et-7331 .

r-=

s ·3()-Qdd Couple 4; News

6; Elec Co. 20,33 ; Hogan 's
H er oes 15.
6 QO-News 3,4,8,1 0.13.1 5; Zoom 20; Makin g Things
G ro w 33
6 30-- NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 : Andy Griflilh 6.
CBS News 8, 10 ; Over Easy 20; AntiQues 33 .
7·00-C ross .Wit s 3 ,4: N ewlywed Ga m e 6, 13; Sh a Na Na
B; N ews. lO . G i l liga n ' s I s . 15. Dick Cavett 20 . Mi ss
H ope 33
•
7·3o--A n .Sta r Any u thlng Goes 3. Sha Na N a 4.
Wo l fman Jac k 6 ; Family F eu d 8; MacN eil · Lehrer

t Old movie
feature :
abbr.
Reporl 20.33. The Ju dge 10; In Search Of 13; Wild
Krngdom 15
or Barton
5 Susa native
a 0(}-Grtzzly Adams 3,1 5; Eight IS Enough 6, 13 ;
'
11 Shack
8 Military
Even mg N ewsmaga ztne 4 , F unny Busi n ess 8, 10 ;
~~~- U Brother
group
Nova 20.33
"Tl-IE' COilNI!Il1OF
of Moses
7 Varnish
9.DO--B1ack Sheep Squadron 3,4, 15; Charl ie's Ange ls
"THE' WA~~ •
Land of Oz
Ulgl"edient
6, 13 , Great PerformanCes 33 ; Po ldark II 20
10 OQ- Pol tce W oman 3,4, 15; Star sky &amp; H utch 6,13;
metropolis 8 Late tycoon's
CBS Report s 8, 10. Ne ws 20
Yesterday's Anllwer
15 Chemin
nickname
10 , 3Q-How To 20 , 11 OQ-N ews 3, 4,6,8, 10,13, 15; Di ck
9 Nonsense!
de Zl Tend the
3I Hag
Cav ell 20
lawn
33 Of aircraft
l&amp; Spoil
JOSome
17 Carnival
14 Take on
Z2 Dismiss
34 Reclined
feature
Z3 Toward
35 ~ fixe
cargo
Z2 Cloth of old 17 Move
shelter
36 Monk 's title
Z5 Weight
sideways
24 Cartoonist
37 Man's name
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag_ _
allowance is Got up
Caruff
38 Ventilate
27 Mixed
39 ~ Dieu !
19 Stringed
,
29 Choir boy's
40 That
instrument
ZSGWynne
collar
female
20 French river
29
Fled
to
weol
r,--,;-r.-r.---;r1h porch
30 Spotted
is in th'
msure four diamo nd t r icks
32 Guidry of
NORTU
&lt;Jgamst a nything excep t a 5·
wa4, Joel!
the
0 break . If I had bee n in
• K ~
seven I wou ld ha ve p layed
• K B2
Yankees
t K 9 76 4
rny ja c k an d been down two
33 Famous
a t tha t ~:o n tra c t.' '
+ AID :\
boxer
Look th Js hand over Sup·
WEST
EAST
36 Scenic spot
pose
that erth er Eas t o r West
.8 7641
• Q J 10
hr ld four 'd ta m oncl s t o th e
on Oahu
• Q 96 :1
• J 10 4
q ueen South w oul d h ave
Island
• Q
t 10 B 6 I
r e t u r ned to d urnmy w ith a
• 972
• 8 ti 5
41 Sky hunter
r lu b and then led a d aarnond
4Z GhosUy
SOUTH
towa rd hi s jac k If East held
• A 9 :1
t he rest of the d ia monds h e
U French

:t"r'S A

~eASE

___-6e~ W!L~ ~ARD
F~OM 11LL TH!' .

1 Pursuit
8 Bow

44 Humming
sound
DOWN
1 King of
cuisine
· 2 It's seldom
stolen
3 Affirm

Nutzse-.s ON "I'"HIS
FLOoll.

CALL 446-3643

" Ai S
t AJ 2

lrr-+-t---t-----1'-

North

F.asl

Pass

It

Pass

6 NT

Pass - 2 NT
Pass Pass

1+

LONGFEI.l.OW

Opening lead :

LYYT

TR

RTXOWHJYD

AWQEPXC

LYYT

w

OWCP

LYYT

HY

w
J B

ARWT

+6

You hold
7-25- H

By Oswald Jaroby

One l etter simplv stands f or an other. I n this sample A is
u sed f o r t h e thre(' ·l :s, X f or th t' two O 's . (' tc Single l et t e r s.
apostrophes, the l eng th and fo rm at i ~ n o f ! he \\•J rd s ar e all
h ints. Each day t he code l ett e rs arc dtfferen t.

HAW D

J B

and Alan Sontag
It took ex pert So uth abou t

30 seconds to play the sox -

a

lead the four of clu bs as the
card a11d s Uit least like ly to
cost us a tri c k .

diamond

TWDORQ . dropped

-

W L DRB

SALE ~ The owner
of this hom e in Pomerov is leaving the area and needs
to sell now. A 1'h story nome with 4 bedr oom s IOCiuding
a sp acious master bedroom , lovely kit chen with all the
appl iances, large liv1ng room , washer &amp; dryer plus
pa t io &amp; 6 ac res of land and i t 's onlyh 1 mile from
downtown . S27 ,500

" J B4
t J B3
• 9~14

A California reader wants
to know what we lead a fte r

X B X - dummy's king of s pades, Jed

SRHHRQ

• Q 74 3

notrump contra (' t T wenty o f
them w e nt f o r ana l ysis of th e
diamond suit Sout"h sa w th a t
he needed four diam ond
tri c k s
H e r ose w1t h
to

West ·s

hiS

hand.

si ngleton

queen and clatmed his sl am
with tw o tricks i n ea c h rna ·
)Or s utt and f o ur m each
mmor
" How did you see my
singleton q u een ? "
ask ed

E J C C R'
West. " I guess I had better
Yeslerdloy' l CI')')IIOqUOie : WE DO NOT 50 MUCH NEED THE rea lly hold my ca rds ba ck."
HELP OF OUR FRIENDS AS TilE CONFIDENCE OF THEIR
" I didn 't see a nything at
HELP IN NEED.,-EPICURUS
all," replied South. " I JUSt
made the safety play to

OWNER DESIRES IMMEDIATE

the 10 would be !messed
late r
Suppose the su1t broke 3-2.
Th er e w ou l d be on e a nd just
one diam ond loser .

Pa!i!:i

Is

w

South

West

AXYDLBAAXR

W CC V

' ll!E PUBLIC SEEM:&gt; TO HAVE A_
fii/S$10/Y FOR ~UYI NG i'&lt;IN3.::&gt;
WITh 5 1GNAiURE501\l TYE~ ...

would show out The jack
would force the queen and

Vulnerable: Neithe r
Dealer. South

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to work it :

w

WINNIE

would scor e his queen , but

that would be aiL If West
held four dia m on ds East

+KQ J 4

CRYPTOQUOTES

E . M . Wiseman, Brolcer446-3796 Eve
'
Jim Cochran, Assoc. 446-7881
·
Nancy Smith, Assoc. 446-4910

10, Dinah 13
4 30--My Three Sons 3. G tlligan ' s Is. 4,8 . Batman 10,
Litte Rascals 15
s·oo-Monroes 3, My Three Sons -4 , Gunsmoke 8,
Mi st er Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33 . Voyage to the
Bottom of T h e Sea 10 ; Emergency One! 13; Pet t icoat Junction 15.

river

. GALUA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

148 ACRE FARM .- UNUSUA~~ Y GOOD BUY - The
own er ' s age prevents her from · co ntinuing to operate
!he t arm and she desires an Immedi ate s ale 50 to 60
acres t illable with some very good creek b oftom and
hill top l.md . T he balance In pasture &amp; woods. The six
room home is good (does need some mOdern iza tion)
la~ge a ll · purpose barn and several QOOd outbuUdings'
M•Mrals go w j th It and it' s located i n an area where
gas. a l l &amp; c oal have been found to be plentiful Ne
h!uttan&lt;J S60's
·
er

In
The · Family
8,10 . Almana c 20 ;
Economic a lly Speaking 33
-1 ·oo-- F or Richer , For Poorer 15; Mer v Grtffin 6;
Addams F am ily 8, Sesame St 20,33, Match Game

tu+-+---1rr-

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

pasture &amp; woods on van Zandt Road . The owner is no
longer ab le to take c are of this loVe ly pla ce so they
must sell now . Attrac tive r emodeled 10 room farm
home with nice sized r ooms, 11!1 baths , ·.4 b edrooms &amp;
c a rpel throughout . Rural &amp; well water plu s severa l old
oulbui !dings . Priced to sell at $46,900 .

20,33.
3 Jo-AI I

South's play clairvoyant

GASOIJNE ALl EY

tXC A VA TING. dozer . ba ckhoe
and ditcher , Charles R. Hot
ft eld
Bo clo. Hoe
Service ,
Rutland , Ohto . Phone 742·2008

QUICK SALE ' NEEDED - 68 acres of good bottom.

11 3(}-Wtleel of For1une 3, 15; Family F eu d 6.13 ;
Partridge Family 4; Love of Ltfe 8.10. 11 : 55-C B S
News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 00--Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; Amer ica Alive! 15.
You ng &amp; the Restles s 8, Wat ch Your Mouth 33 .
12 3o--Ryan 's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4 : Search for
T omorrow 8. 10 ; F r ench Chef 33 .
1 QO-For R icher , For Poor er 3; All My Ch it dre n _6, 13 ,
News 8. Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not F or Wom en
On l y IS : E ven ing at Pops 33 .
1:30--Days of Our L ives 3.15: H ee Haw Honeys 4 ; As ·
The World Turns 8. 10.
2 00- B aseball 3.4 ; One Life to Live 6, 13 ,· F 1ve Red
Her rinq s 33 .
2 3G---Oocl ors 15 , Gu iding L1gh t 8, 10 ; 3 Do-Genera l
Hospit al 6,l3 ; A nother World 15: Ltlias Yoga &amp; You

BRIDGE

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

wt "'! Oil

AAR M CAI'I

AWAY "!'lH All FOOD?

THREE BEDROOM h ou s'e m Ra cine
oreo . N ear 11ver Comp le te ly"
r emodeled . 949 2545.

[H

OH, WHA'T

Construction

BRA DFORD , Auctioneer . Com ·
ple te Ser "Jice Phone ~49· 2487
or 949 -1000. Ro(lne , O hio Crill
Br adford.
HWOOO BOWER S REPAIR
Sweep ers , , 1oos ters irons . all
small opp l•anc&amp;s . lown rnower .
ne• t to Stale Highway Gorogt.t
on Route 7 . Phone (614) 985
3825,
'
···-c-c:---:cSEWtNC. MACHINE Repotrs , , er ·
'lice . all make s. 992·2284 Th e
Fa br ic
Sho p ,
Ponieroy
Authotltlld Slng11r Soles ond
Ser vice . We shorpen Seiners .
-fXCAVA fiNC dar er looder and
bockhov work : dump tru ck s
and lo boys l or hire- , wi ll hau l
fill dtr t, to soi l limes tone and
'
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jel
fers . day ph one ~2 · 7089 . night
phone
.
, 992-:.1525 or 992· 5132.

DAUGHiER WA'S,

(Answers 1omorrow)

5 E~

B ui ld ing l ots wt th
sewer , water , and
eleclric
available .

rUPP~R~ PLAIN ~ .

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Roofing, Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

I
WHAI iHEIFt L.I'TTL-5
I

''[IJ(ll)(IXI)"

Answer here:

BFS ID E~ .

- --

os Rogh t 8.10; S20,000 Pyram id 13 , Palnf Alo ng Wilh
11 oo-High Rol lers 3', 4,15; Happy Days 6.13.

r

II

.

HOMESITE S for so le I acre ond
up Mtdd leport , near Ru!la nd.
Co11 992 -7481 ·

News 8, Underdog 10.
7·25--Chuck Wh i te Reports 10, 7 .30-Schoolies 10 .
8·oo--(apt Kangaroo R, 10, Sesame Sl. 33
9 ·00- Mer v Gri ff in 3; Phil Donah ue 4 , 13, 15;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8,; Tic Tac Dough

Nancy Komtnsky 33 .

HEm
tCLAJEO,
b
_XJ I _
\SHEERAj 0

&amp; Gilson Tillers,
Boy
Mower Sales &amp; Servico.

7-20-1 mo. pd.

A----\-'\

'

AI Tromm

FRED'S TIRE CENTER

7·00-Today 3, 4, 15, Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS

Over. Easy 33 .
10 ·3Q- H ollywood Squares 3,4, 15 , H igh Hopes 6: Price

She's so sweet

IRI~

Mounted on new wheels,

prices everr

6·4s---,..Morning Report 3; 6 : 5()-Good Morning, We st
- , Virginia 13, 6 ·Ss-New s 13.
·

10.

NEW FIBERGLAS TIRES

at discount

,,._

9 30--Andy Griffith 8; Family Aftair 10.
10 oo-card Sharks 3,4, 15; Edge ol Noght 6; Tic lac
Dough 8. Joker' s Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13;

399 W. Main St.

ready to go. 530 to us
complete. Truck owners,
don't miss this d&lt;oal. We sell

6:0D--P TLC iub 15; Summer Semester 10.
6·30--News Conference A; N ews 6 ; '!s ummer Semester
8; Christopher C loseup 10 . .

6. 13; Movie " Darker than A mber " IS; Movi e " M an

service, Milney Ferguson

10-30-c

Pr ice Is Right 10; That's Hollywood 13; Cliff wood
Ave . Kids 15.
8:oo-Baseball I Reds Metsl 3.•,--Happy Days 6, 1~ .
Man From Atlantis fs; Movie " Tom Sawyer ' ! 8, 10;
National Geographic 20; Movie " The Phantom of
the Opera" 33 .
8:30--Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13; 9:00- Three' s Company

SO DOt.i'T COUNT ON ANY WILD DRIVING
TO THROW ME OFF SALA'-lCE ~

I'VE AO.SO iNSTAlO.I!O A 51MPI.Ei
LITTLE:' !&gt;TOPPeR: 0'-l THE' GAS

~
MODERN SUPPLY

Chester , Ohio

WEDI!IESDAY , JULY 26,1978
5·45-- Farm Report 13, 5.50--PTLC iub 13.

On A Sw ing" 8, 10.

..

Small engine &amp;

5&amp;9 P.M. ~ Orca The Killer Whale l PG I
7 &amp; 11 PM . ~ Hollywood Old ie IGI

Candid Camera 6; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;

MOORE'S
Muffler - Brakes Shocks - Tires -

Battery .
Installation Service
Ph. 992-2848 Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-lfc

Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 15-Ko jak 8; 2 Os-News 13

Movie Channel 4 -

The Country 8; News 10; Gilligan 's Is. 15; French
Chef 20; How To Buy A Home 33.
I 30-- Hollywood Squares 3.4 : Let' s Go To The Races 8:

HTS . -

. YY? -6191

J. IVt ~OOM house , both ol'ld lot ,
new ly po t~He-r:l . qM ~ Jn:l )I
Mtddlepot t, 9Y1 ':1'11:!11
.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

day . Stop in at

SIDING

IN 5't' RACUSl: 2 bedroom house
New st01 m window!&gt;
New
olummum buo ld ong 2 p orche&lt;,
991 3719

MAIN
POMEROY,

B. ABC News 33, Movie " Honkey Tonk" 10; 12:00Janakl 33.
12 :05-Movie " Bang the Drum Slowly " 6.13. 1:00-

CBS New s 8, 10; Over Easy 20; Ant iqueS 33
7:00--Cross.Wits 3.4; Newlywed Game 6 , 13 ; Pop Goes

· SERVICE

ROGER HYSEll

BoX 3

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

QUA~IFIED

Roush's Cake
. Decorating

.....

1M . .

&amp; A -Frame Homes
For Free Estimates

at 16.750 .00.

39HS

H R~ WOOI.l G HHN or
~1:1 ~ J'::l07 9r !f4q 13Ja

fl N

4

Phone992 2181

1 9i' ~ '!; UP~R ~ P OIH 5 ~0 ~l on rlo

CARRIERS NEEDED lo1 th e Dotly
Senltne l Pomeroy. Mtddleport
and Syrac use oreo
Pl ease
phone 992·2156 betw een 8 30
om and 5 00 pm

is r ellecled wit h th is 2
brdm home in good neig h ·
borhood and good con
d il ton N ew carpeltng , et c·.

21 CU ~ 1 Hotp o1n1 lr ec t c r S 100
4H~

Service•.-- the ..,..., rrudi:
u.._....

120.000.00.
FAIR MARKET Vf\LUE -

Phone 99'l -H81

EXPERIENCED

Radiator~

room s. 3 bdrm s. 1t' bath s.
sepa rate uti l tt y , st orms,
ki ds walk
t o sc hool

W Carsey , Mgr .

General Contractors
Phone 949-2101
or 949-2UO
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Colis Pleose
7-9-1 mo.

mo.

7·7-l

I

Onl y 116,500 .00
EXCELLENT ·
NEIGHBORHOOD -

fc9,J/"ck

t;7C •Jack W. Corsey , Mgr .

~

--

11 .31)-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 , Soap 6,1 3; Hec Ra msey

Making Things Grow 33
6· 30--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13. Andy G• lff lth 6;

POFneroy 992-2181

- Ni ce new 3 bdrm ra n ch ,
t a cre . ga r age. many
fea t ures
Prt ced r ight .

Will DO boby stlltng tn my hOrne
~ rloys a week
7J1 70~0 0 1
1.192 1054

Bissell Siding Co.

St. Rt. 124 toward Rutland,
D.

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Pomeroy Landmark
ck w
:Carse•' , Mgr.
--

EASTERN SCHOOL DIST.

Pomeroy Landmark

Pomeroy landmark

appointment.

6 ACRES In Syracuse.
really c lean . 3 bdrm . one
floor p lan hom_e , la rg e
k 1f chen . bas e m ent, 2 car
garage .
fron t
porc h
over l ooks t he beautiful
Oh io Value 1s $32 .000.00.

I·

Let us test your water Free

August 10, 1978
tor

, Storm Windows
Call Professiona I
Builders

:v. mile oH Rt. 1 by-pass on

New or Repair
GutteJS and
Downspouts

Exptres

now

Siding

GARAGE

ROOFING

All lor 116.500.00 .

Hotpo1nl Appl

Let Pomeroy Laridmark
sotten &amp; condition your
1water with Co·OP water

softener. Model UC-SVI,
Now Only •289.95

OFF

nice 197 J mobi le home i n
excellen t canditi6n on a
beaul tful l acre fenced lo t .
Storage bldg .• ' ca rp ort.
f ull y
lu rntshe d
an d
eq uipped Close to m tn es.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

1c170 CHl: VROL l: l NOV A wt lh JSO
htg h pe rfor man ce. 1974 Harley
Do v t ds o n
35 0
5 70 0
61 4 6b7 0489 or 0 14 bb7 3305

C

H. L WRITESEL

SPECIAL
PRICE

Call

Adam 12 4; Black Per spect ive On T he News 20.

11 :00-News 3,4,6,8,1 0,13,1 5; Di ck Cavell 20 ; Over
Easy 33

5.30----Cdd Couple 4 : News 6, tlec . Co . 20, 33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 15.
6:0D-News 3, 4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ;

NO ONI:'O.L- HeA~t
THI! 9HOTSl

R I~I N G

HAY bole1 Ne w Ideo
hoy rake
N ee d~
1epo1r WA l lJI WHl drtlltng Wt ll 1d1r1 . 1
Gran t / 4'1 '1!579
'149 1273

REGI ST ERED OUARTI:R horse 8
yea t s old $500 Co if 992 29b2
after 4prn or see John ( honey .
a• Ftve Potn t s

SALES AtjD SERVICE
11-9-ttc

HO OI HOl LOW H o r ~e~ Hu)' !&gt;ell
l torle or tro tn New and used
~orlrlles Ruth Reeve!&gt; Albany
!'11 4] bqB 3190

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

CANCER (June 21-July 221 You Auto Salee
cou ld save yo urself a lot of
gn e f anc1-o r mone y today If yo u
CH!:V ROLI: l
ask adv• ce !rom an older or 1975
985 JSO.t
e ~p e rt e n ced
per son wh en
dea lt ng w1l h a ne w pr o tec t

B 8. 5 MOBILE HOME S Pt Pl ea ·
sont . W Vo b es td e Heck s
1973 Broodmore 1.4 ll' M 2
IF YOU ho ve a ser ..,.1 ce to off e•
bedroom
'
won t to buy or sell somelhtng
1973 Dor ton 14 • 00 2 bedroom
oe look mg lor wo •k
or
1972 V tdonon 14 • 67 3 bedt oom
whote ... er
you II ge t results
2 both
fo'O ier wtlh a Ser11 1nel Wont A d
1972 Coven tr y 12 • 65 3 bed100m
Col l 99'2 2156
1969 Statesman 12 • bO 'l
bedroom
VARD SAL E Monday luesdoy a nd
Wednesda y (l olhw.g gome5
COAL. LIME STONE sand . gro ve l
odds &amp; end~ 9 o m to A p.m
cole tu m chl or •de . fert ilizer , dog
250 So ~ o ur th A ve , Mod ·
food and all t.,.pes of soli h ·
dlepo rt
cel"or Salt Wor ks Inc E Motn
St , Pomer oy r:,:n. 38Q1
TWO FAMil Y Yorrl Sol e July 18 &amp;
'] q
10 5
Gil bert
Ha r t
BURROUGHS SENSI MA TI C oc
res tdencf" , Oak G rove Rd
co unt1ng
mochtne
Phone
Ro &lt;t,., e Lomp s toys bo1 ltve
q97 :1156 The Doily Sen 11ne l
plant ~
knt clo lo. no c l.. ~
Ro m
1 I I Cour t Street Po merO)'
ca ncels
Ohio .

100 /Min St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992 -6282

Fores t Pro ·
for stonCi mg
992 ·59bS o r
8570

HOU5E IN pomeToy of Middlepor t
or w tth acreage m thts area
.l and contract or owner lmonce
poss tble 992-5014

rtt

SIA N S BARG AtNLAND A st or e
fo r th e people We buy trode
and se ll New and good used
rner chandt'&gt;e l urntlure and op·
plton ces . Anf!~ues . Vou will
alway s gel a fot r deal wtth
Stan . Open 7 days o week .
M onday th r u Sa tu rday (j1 om to
5 prn Sunday 10om to6pm
·

fiM8fR POM EROY
ducts. To p price
sow ltmber Coli
Kent Han b.,. 1 44 6

PWMBING_&amp;
HEAnNG INC.

Any U.S. made car - parts
utfa if needed . Excludes
front -wheel drive cars.

s~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminu!"

CARTER,

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

Beiderbecke Memorial Jazz Fest ival 20; Ph i! Ochs
33 .
10:00-20 20 6, 13; News 20 ; 10 : 30-o-Truth or Cons. 3;
Memorial Celebration

TUESDAY, JULY 25, 1978

$1295

SPECIAL

CHIP
WOOD
Pole s mo •
dto meler 10 on larges t end , SB
per ton. Bundled slob, S6 per
to t1 Delivered to Oh1o Po llet
Co ~t '2 . Pomeroy 992·2bB9

197 5 BLACK El Com ma Closs1c OLD FURNITURE . tee bo•es bra ss
350 two bonel
outomott c.
bed s tron bed s desk s. e tc. .
power sleer mg and brak es
complete hou!&gt;£&gt;holds
Wnte
May be seen 1 ' ~ mtles o f Route
M D. M iller Rt 4 Pomero y or
7 8ypos\.. on 143 or co li
call 992.1760
q92 ·3750
G oo d ·c ~n dttl o n .
OLD COIN S pock e t wat ches.
52b00
cl os!o tmgs . weddtng bonds ,
l: JST RA NIC E 1976 Sutck Regal 2dtomonds. Gold or stl ver Call
door hardtop 350 auto P. .S..
Roge1 Wamsley 7A1 2331.
P B , power wmd aws and
lock s Cr u• se . loll whee l, A C TUR NING PlOW ond whe-el .
W~ ig h! s l or Formoll Cub tr ee ·
18 000 mtles
J. Codner
tor 985 3885.
6 14 .8.4 3·26/1

~PM
~· , lll&lt;l \ ••
t llllotll

Tht s cci mtng year you w 111 expand and bu 1ld upon foundalt Ons yo u ve alr eady latd Yo ur
oa t• ence and perstsl encc wtll
reap rewa rds tha t up un t il now
appeared •mposs! bl e .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Don 'I be
re lu c tant to ba rgat n fo r be t ter
terms today. but try to pre se nt ACC O SEEO Dea ler s o ... otlabl e m
tht ~ o•eo Write Sta n Coakley ,
yourself so that 11 doesn ' t ap·
Rou te I Killbu ck 44b37 or co li
pear to o setl -ser vmg or yo u ' ll
co llect e..,en tngs. 210 270·4584
tarn tsh you r rmage ~•nd o ut to
wh om you ' r e romantrcal ty
su •ted by se ndrng for your co py
ol A s tra-Graph Le tt er M all 50
ce nt s lo r eac h and a long . sell
HMA LE shor lho tred
adr:1re ssed . s tamped e nve lope LOS T
bea gle Weonng o brown col
to Astro·Graph . P 0 Box 489 ,
lor An swers to lucy l ost on the
Ra dto City Stat ton NY . 1001 9
Rut
land Leading Creek or eo
Be sure to speci fy btrth srgn
VIR\lO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) No Ph one 747. 22A9 .

21) Stnglen ess o f pu rpose on
wo rthwh tle pr otec ts wtll le ad 10
a success ful day Ign ore nega
' trve types wh o d th ro w c o ld
wa ter o n your goed wo rk s -

1909 BROAOMOOM 12 x 05 with 8
K
10 e.pondo J bedroom , 2
both~ ,
gas heat . $4 700 .
949· 2288

l'l w J•uohsht•l' l'l'St'l'\'t':. til~.' 't t.:ln

26

lSTROeGRAPH

~~: 70 COMPlEtE furn tshed
Fleetw ood lro1ler wit h 24 ft . ex ·
panda. living room . Coli 12
6pm . JOA-773·598'1

I•• t'tlll or rt')l't'l auy atls

75 . 20. 2tc

For Wednesday, Juty

11

SPACE FOR comp1ng Ira del , ideal
f or co nstru c tion wor ke rs cl ose
Ia power plant . wa ter elec tric
for
.Rent or Trade
and wate r optd
Pr 1110 1e
992,2343,
MOBIL~ HOME l or rent or sole
1973 Noshuo 12 x 60 3
FURNI SHED APT l of t en t. Adult s
bedroom port1 oll y lurn• shed
no pet s. down town Pomef'CIY'
Con 00 !&gt;een nex t 10 Green
Co n s t ruc t1 on
w,o rk ers
wood Cemete ry . Rocme- Sole
we lco m~
Coli 99 2 234 7 or
Pnce $5000 . . 9 92 - ~70 1

Elo1se Bo s ton ,
C lerk
(7J

home. $1800 ~2 · 5858 .

Sale •

DlJIIUary : 6. n· ms pt•l'

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

10 x 50 TWO bedroom mobtl@

9 JQ--Car1er Country 6; Mary Tyler M oore 13, B i)(

Business Services

-~~~~~-----

ADVERTISEMENT

9- The O.ily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, July 25, 1978

th~ oppon e nts h ave b td one
n o trump~stx notrump . We

• :-.'t~ W S P A Pf:H. f:NT E HPH I S f'~ ASSN . t

(00 you have a ques t1on lor
the experrs' Wn te A sl&lt;: th e
E:(per/5 care o lthl5 ne wspa·
per lndrwdua l ques ttons Will
be ans wered If accompamed
by sta mpea. self-addressed
er'lvelopes rhe mosr tnterestmg QueSfiOfiS Will be used rn
fhts column and w1 1/ receive
cop,.s of J ACOBY MODERN .)

AFTER

'-IE PAY TH'
DADBURN BILL!!

l(OU WANT US TO

ADOPT rHI5 006?

WELL, I DON'T I&lt; NOW..

DOES HE HAVE A
GOOD NOSE ?

HE CAN SMELL .-\

PLATE: OF FUDGE

THREE MILES AWAl(!

�Ohio Vallty Livntock
Mari&lt;tl Rtporl

10 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. July 2S, l978

lOOpostal

President serves
•
notice on staff
WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Carter is making it
clear " in no uncertain
terms :" marijuana smokers
and drug users have no pla ce
111 the White House staff.
Describing himself asdeeply concerned over recent
' repocts that some of his staff
use illegal drugs, the
president served notice in a
memorandum circulated
Monday that he expects
"every member of the White
House staff to obey the law ."
On another front, Carter
planned an appeal to
Democratic
congresSional
leaders tOday for support of
one amendment repealing the
Turkish anns embargo, and
defeat of another lifting U.N.
trade sanctions against
Rhodesia.
Press secretary Jody
Powell told reporters Monday
that Carter views the lifting
of the Turkish embargo as

crucial to American !&lt;reign
policy. ~ nd believes resuming
trade with Rhodesia would
encourage ''chaos and
bloodshed" in Africa.
Powell said this is a crucial
-week in Carter's legislative
drive and the outcome of the
vote count so far oo the two
amendments is "extremely

close."
Carter acted to stop any
drug use among his staff
after a flurry of reports were
published a bout drug use by
White House workers .
Some of the reports carne
from mterviews with Dr.
Peter Bourne, who said after
resigning under fire last week
as the president's adviser 111
drug abuse problems that he
knew of White House staff
members who had smoked
manjuana and sniffed

cocame.
Bourne is under police
investigation for prescribtng

Gallia man injured
in Monday accident
Myron Kent Wiseman. 23.
Old Fort Trail, Galllpohs, "
in satisfactory condition in
the intensive care unit of
Holzer Medi cal Cent er
followin g an aut omobile
acc1dent in Jackson County,
Monday .
A spokesman for Holz er
stated thiS mor ning. th at
Wiseman was adm1tted at
4:50 p.m., yesterday, suffering multiple nb fractu re ,
concusswn , shock, and

a

collapsed lung.
Two persons were mjured
in a one--auto m1shap m Me1gs
County . on CR :!11, one mile

north of SR 124, at 9·45 am.
Monday.
According to the Gallia Meigs Post , H1ghway Patrol,
a vehicle operated by Herbert
0 . Hoover , 51, Middleport.
turned off 26 and started up-a
steep grade, when the auto
slid on the muddy roadway .
The auto passed off the left
s1de of the road and turned
over .
Hoover , and a passenger,

Carl H. Norton, both clamoed
injury and were taken to the
Holzer Medical Center by the
Rac 1 ne
V o l untee r
Emergency Squad

Hoover was treated and
released for mild strain to the
left shoulder .
Norton was treated and
released fo r a mtld strain and
cont usions of the left hip.
The Hoover vehicle incurred moderate damage .
Officers were called to the
scene of a second one·vehicle
accident on SR 7. at the
JUnction of George's ·Creek
Rd ., at 6 p.m.
According to the patrol. an
auto driven by Harold Darst,
37, Rutland, south bound ,
went off the right side. of the
roadway. traveled back ont o
the highway, and then passed
off SR 7 on the right side. The
vehicle crashed through a
guardrail and struck a n
embankment.
Darst claimed tn]ury and
was t aken by SEOEMS to the
Holzer Med1cal Center.
A s pokesm an for the
medical center states this
morning that Darst had
VISible signs of mjury to the
left arm, but refused treatment.

Da rst wa s cited by the
patrol on charges of DWI.
The vehicle was demolished .

· ~;....;....;-~----,

(Oolltlmlttl tr.n ....

I~

UMW disappointed, ~ngry

Prl ces taken from the
auction of Saturday, July 22,
1978 . Trends: Feeders, St -2
higher ; Cows, steady i Veals.
steady : Hogs, $1 lower.
Total Head 440
Feeder Steers : (good· .
choice) 250 to 300 tbs . 53-73 ;
300 to 400 lb!. 50-67 .50 : ~ to
500 lbs. 48.50-64.50; ·500 to 1&gt;00
lbs. 47-60; 600 to 700 tbs . 43.5057.75 : 100 and over 42.50·50.
Feeder Heifers (good choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 49.7553 50 . 300 to ~ tbs . 47.5053:so ; ~to 500 lbs. 45.50·54 ;
500 to 1&gt;00 tbs. -Q.75-49.75 ; 1&gt;00
to 700 tbs.41.50-48.50; 700 and
over 37.75 45.50.
Feeder Bulls (gQOd-cholc.e l
250 to 300 lbs. 60-67 ; 300 to 400
lbs. 52-65.50: 400 to 500 lbs.
49 .50-63.50; 500 to 600 lbs.
47 .50-57.50. 600 to 700 lbs. 4051 1 700 lbs. and over 38.5047.75.
1 000
Slaughter Bulls (over •
tbs 1 39.50-46.10.
s'taughter Cows : Utilities
J4.50-38.20; Canners-Cutters
30.75-34.75.
I
Veals : Choice and pr me
6u 5-73.50; Standards and
med1ums 52.75-61 .50.
Baby ca lves (by lhe head)
30-70.
.
(Hogs)

most wockers, particularly
.. those .in cities with high' costs
CHARLESTON, W.Va . ( UP! ) court.
'
of living.
" It seems incredible that anyone could.,
Disappointed and angry - that's how the
"We need the strike, we
United Mine Workers union feels about a ~ critical of a decision that enforces the
have to have It to get a decent
movement 1o soften the blow of the West safety laws," Charleston-based District 17
contra~t /' said James Nolan,
Virginia Supreme Court's ~tern war:ning said.
th'a mail handler from
"We are angered because
.. case
about obeying safety rules m coal rrunes.
Elizabeth, N.J .
The court ruled two weeks ago that doesn't concern, as Justice ( Rl~)
Quaalude, a powerful and
The U.S. Postal Service
safety measures must be followed strictly. Neely said, •a mere point of law in routine
frequently abused sedative, said Monday it had fired 40
Of prime coo cern in the three-fold ruling civil ligitation ' it Is Uterally a matter of
for an assistant in his office, people at the Jersey City
was a provision that barred operators life &lt;r death f;.. 'our members."
using a phony name for his center, 42 at the Richmond
"!( Is extremely aMoying to encounter
from moving heavy equipment in the
patient.
center and another 14 who
presence of workers. Some lawmakers cynicism and hypocrisy on the part of
"Whether ~ou agree with walked out of the Los Angeles
saw this as a threat 1o the economy, those who in the past have complained so
the law or whether or not bulk mail center Saturday .
loudly of the 'lawless coal miner,'
clauning that some mines would be forced
others obey the law is totally
especially when the legal chaMels have
" All these. firings, can be
1o close. .
irrelevli'nt,' ' Carter sa1d. appealed through the normal
The court's decisloo faviH'ed a lawsuit by been 115ed from .start to finish by our
"You will obey it , or you will grievance process," said
coal miner Danny Walls, who claimed in a members.''
The union continued, "We don't think
seek
employment Harry Nigro, a Postal Service
lawsuit that Mines Director Walter Miller
spokesman in New York .
elsewhere."
wasn 't adequately enforcing mine safety. this decision should be enforced lo the
"But if these guys are on the
Miller, then, planned to seek a extent of prohibiting a pick and ilho~el
ptcket line when they ' re
rehearing, .which, in effect, would stay the from being moved into the mines in a mme
supposed to be at work,
ruling, pending a further ruling about the car," the district said.
they're
breaking
the
law.
We
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admissions - Cectl Moore, have no other choice but to
Pomeroy ; Mag gie Hoy, se nd them letters · of
Hogs : {No. 1, BarrowsTEEN DANCE
Pomeroy ; Le na Heilman, removal.''
A teen dance will be held
200-230
tb• .&gt;
...50-45.
New York-area Postal Ser11 t ilts.
Butcher
Sows
38.50-41
.70.
Pomeroy ; Dillon Taylor,
Friday, Aug . 4, at Forest II
1
Butcher
Boar$
27.75·30,50.
vice
officials
also
got
a
Portland, and James Parker,
Acres Park on New Lima
1
p 1gs (by the head! tl -38.50.
temporary injunctioo against Road , Rutland from 8 p. m. )
Pomeroy .
Community
Church.
NORA E. REUTER
Discharges - George the strike. It banned any until midnight. The dance is
She is survived by five
Nora E. Re uter , 90,
Edison , Norman Lehew and picketing at any postal being sponsored by the
sons Roy and Elmer of
facility
anywhere
in
the
Pomeroy,
died
Monday
at
Jestie Molden.
Rutland Roadrunners 4-H
Toledo; Paul of Middleport;
country.
Club. Admission is $1 per Hillcrest Manor in Sidney, Charles of Lima and Robert
But pickets still marched
person. Refreshments wtll be Ohio.
Holzer Medica-l Ceoler
KALAMAZOO, Mich.
Mrs. Reuter was the of Rt . 1, Bidwell ;' six
Monday night out&amp;de the
sold at the dance.
(Discharges, July Zl I
(UP I) - A North Central
Jersey City center where 37
daughter of the late Amos daughters, Mrs . Charles
Shirley Adkms, Raymond percent of the scheduled
Airlines turboprop airllDer
and Minnie Ruscoe T1gner. Marjorie Nelson, and Mrs.
Collms, Ralph Davis, Mrs. employees did not repoct for
carrying 4Z people auffered
She was also preceded in Gary Helen Alexander, both
William Dodson and son, the rught shift.
au engine faUure on takeoff
death by her husband, Val of Paden Citv. W. Va.: Mrs.
Mrs . Thomas Drake and
MARRIAGE LICENSE
The 42 strikers at the
Reuter ; tbree sons, Guy • Eldon (Kathleen) Painter, and crashed early loday in
daught er, Mrs . Marion Ric hmond center were
a fog-shrouded cornfield
A marriage license was Russell and Roy : three Webster Springs, W. Va.;
Ferguson and daught er, &lt;rdered to appear in federal issued to Wilham B. brothers, Carl. Flave. and Mrs. Arnold (Mary) Green , about a mile south of the
Richard Geige r , Zollie court today to explain why Davidson , 21 , Middleport, Ro~ Tigner, and one Sister, Charleston; Mrs. Robert
city airport.
Gordon, Dorothy JayJ ohn, they failed to obey an and Karen Sue Rhodes, 21, Ruth Schoener.
(Ruth) Bobo, Langsville;
AuthoriUes at the scene,
Ralph Jeffers, Mrs. Donme tnjunction against the strike . Racme.
Mrs.
Dennis
(Agnes)
however,
reported no
Mrs. Reuter was a member
Johnson and daught er, Bette
Thompson;
Stafford,
Ariz.,
41
deaths
among
the 4Z
of the Pomeroy United
Jon es, Clarence Jones,
grandchildren,
18
greatpassengers
and
crew
Methodist Church.
Kennet h Madd en, Mrs .
o
'
She is survived by one grandchildren, two brothers, members on the twonR1chard Mays and son, Roy
daughter , Ferne Davis, Joe and 0 . J. Boggs, both of engioe Convair 580 even
McManis, Roy Newell, Judy
·Gallipolis; two· sons, Paul St. Albans: five sisters, )\Irs. though tbe plane was
O'Neil, Ruth Seymours,
Reuter, Tipton, Iowa, and Dr. Mary Carter, Titusville, Fla.; • " totaled."
Donna K. Stewart , Harley
The plane, North
Roxie
Dobbins,
0
Raymond Reuter, Canton ; 12 Mrs.
Thoma s, Micha el Thompson.
grandchildren, and 17 great- Columbus ; ~; Donna Central Flight 801, wao en
Elizabeth Vance, Sharon
route to Detroit from
grandchildren, two brothers, Holter, Kim~ W. Va. ;
bargaining with police, but he Walter T1gner and Joe Mrs. Ollie Rogers, Fairmont,
Walter.
ATHENS, Ohio (UP! ) Kalamazoo-Battle Creek
Births
Ctty
Co unc• l met
in would not say how much T1gner, both of Nelsonville, W. Va ., and Mrs. Onnie Regi0 oal Airport.
Mr . and Mrs. Willi am emergency session Monday money the city is prepared to and several ni eces and Hardway, Pinch, W.Va., and
Dunn, a son. Oak Hill. Mr. mght to discuss wage offer the officers.
several nieces and nephews
nephews.
The 21 officers and
and Mrs James Ervin , a demands that tngge red a
Funeral services will be and cousins.
daughter. Wellston: Mr . and one-&lt;iay s1ck-out by pollee dispatchers called m sick held Thursday at 3 p. m. at
Funeral services will be
Mrs . William Morgan, · a last weekend.
F.. day night but returned to Ewing Chapel with the Rev . held Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
REUNION SET
daughter, Wellston, Mr. and
Co un ci l President Ed work Sunday. The walkout Robert McG ee officiating. the Langsville Christian
Th
e
Hayes - Young Mrs Gregory Smith, a son, Beckett sa1d the city decided left only a captain and a Burial will be in Beech Grove Church with the Rev. Miles
Holiday
School reunion will
Wellston.
to be "more fl exible" in sergea nt to assist Chief Ted Cemetery . Friends may call Trout officiating. Burial will
be
held
Aug.
6 at the school
Jones during the walkout.
at the funeral home after 9 a . be in Miles Cemetery ground
.
Everyone
is
Fraternal Order of Police m. on Wednesday .
Friends may call at the
welcome.
President Tom Pyle said the
Walker Funeral Home in
group is ready to walk out
Rutland after 2 p.m. today
PEARL B. SIGMAN
again if negotiations do not .
wttil noon on Wednesday
Pearl B. Sigman, 75, 766 when the body will be taken to
show progress. Beckett said
council wants to begin talks South Fourth Street, Mid- the church. Friends may ca ll
CLASSES TO RESUME
dleport, died at her residence at the family will receive
again Wednesday.
Baton classes at Royal Oak
The contract covering the Sunday afternoon unex- friends at the funeral home Park wiU resume at 6:30p.m.
Carl Tucker , Alternatives Metgs Counties.
off1cers
expired the first of pectedly.
today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 Wednesday, instructor Judy
Purpose of the camp is to
Program Coordinator of the
Mrs. Sigman wa s born June p.m.
the
month
a nd the walkout
Riggs announced today.
Gallia - Jackson - Meigs provide an opportumty for
4 !903 in Calhoun county, W.
Community Mental Hea lth youth to join together m came after two months of
Va . to the late Elliot and Julie
Center, reminds all area group discussions and negotiations on a wage
Nichols Boggs. She was
youth of the summer youth recreational activities led by package failed to reach a married Nov . 26, 1923 to
camp sponsored by the professional staff. The week satisfactory conclusion .
No major crimes were Flavy Sigman who preceded
center. The camp. which will long sessiOn wUI be fully
her in death Nov . 30, 1973. She
and
off er reported durmg the strike in
be held Aug . 14 through 20, supervised
was also preceded in death by
(Continued on pqe 10)
will be located at the Canter's disc usSion groups and the southeastern City of
one
daughter, Erma Haynes
24,000,
which
is
the
home
of
Cave 4-H Camp outside of recreational activihes such
tapping Greene's telephone · "'! mobsters could monitor
. and five brothers.
Jackson . Registration is now as sw1m m1 ng, volleyball , Ohio Univ~ r stty.
telephone
conversations. Marcoo1 wsa arraigned late Monda~
She
was
a
member
of
the
Patrolmen and dispatchers
open to any youth who will be so ft ba ll , bask et ball a nd
War Mothers Club in Paden before u. s. Magistrate Jack B. Streepy on federa
seekang
wcreases
are
entering the seventh through hikmg.
Cit y, W. Va., and Midway racketeering charges. His bond was set at $200,000.
The cost is $15 per camper totaling $1.90 an hour over a
12th grade this fall and who
reSides 10 Gallia , Jackson or whi ch mcludes lodg in g, three-year penod, while the
meals and most supplies. c1ty has offered 59 cents beginning officer makes
Spec1a l arrangements can be during a 27-month co ntract. A about $8,000 a year.
made £or those who cannot
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!) - Presl~nt Anwar Sadat rej~cted a
pay the fee . The deadlme for
message
from Jsr aeti Prime MiniSter Menachem Begm that
re g1strat10n IS Aug. 1
repoctedly
called for a summit between them and s~oned
Fo r more inform a ti on
the
National
Security Council mto emergency sess1on on
contact the Center nearest·
Wednesday. ·
.
ts of h' h
One citation was issued in you. The telephone numbers
Sadat 's rejection of the Israeli me~•: conten . w tc
of
the
Centers
are
in
Gallla
two accidents investigated by
were undisclosed, coincided with Begm s ftrst public offer ~
COLUMBUS (U P! ) - Legislation to give
the
Middleport
Police Co unty, 446-5500, 1n Jackson
discuss
Arab sovereignty of the West Bank and Gaza Strip
homeowners a state income tax credit this year for major
De partm ent Monda y af- Co unty. 26&amp;-5075 and in Meigs
following
a five-year transitional period. ·
Co unty 992·2192
home improvements was signed into law Monday by Gov .
ternoon.
James A. Rhodes.
.
At 2:f&gt;B ' p.m. a minor acwith
the
bill
late
last
month
forced
tbe
Ohto
Problems
cident on the corner of
General Assembly to stay in session an extra two days to
Hoo ker and South Fourth
cHICAGO (UPI ) - In an attempt to avert further prl~n
FREE
CLOTH£NG
DAY
send
th e tax credit bill and a $202 nullion supplemental
Avenue occ urred when a
riots in Illinois, Gov . James R. Thompson has put trunates m
appropriation
measure
Free
Clothing
Day
will
be
to
the
governor
slmultaneo115ly.
veh1cle driven by Susan Baer,
three state prisons oo indefinite l~kup, IIICreased guard
1n the end, a conference commit!~ blunted much of
South Fifth Avenue, Mid- held at the Salvation Army on
salaries and approved a guard recrwtment program.
Thursday
,
July
27
from
10
a
.
the
impact
of
the
bill
as
originally
mtroduced
by
Sen.
dleport , bumped into a car
Overcrowding and hot weather were blamed for the riot
Charles L. Butts, D-Cleveland.
.
.
belonging to Betty Jo Allens- m. un til noo n. All area
Saturday at the Pontiac prison in wh~ch three _guards were
The
new
law
will
allow
homeowners
to
obtam
a
credit
residents
m
need
of
clothmg
worth, Groveport. There was
killed and six injured. Inadequate staffing was cited as one o1
on thetr state income taxes beginning this tax year for
minor damage to the Allens- are welcome .
the reasons for an uprising by 400 inmates three days earlier at
of
more
than
$300.
home
improvements
worth vehi cle. No c1tations
Stateville Prison near Joliet. No one was hurt.
were issued.
JOINT MEET£NG
At 4:10 p.m . Thomas
Ther e Will be a joint DRUG HEIST
Loucks, Mineral Wells, Tx.,
was coming out of Lmcoln meeting of the Juruor and
COVJNGTON,Ky. (UP! )Street and struck a car driven Senior Auxtliaries of the Drugs worth an estimated
by Rolen Snowden, Rt. 4, Ameri ca LegiOn , Drew $100,000 on the street were
Pomeroy. There was minor Webster Post 39, tonight at stolen from a drugstore m the
damage to both vehicles 7:30 at t he Legion Home. Cincinnati
of
suburb
Loucks was cited on charges Rhonda Reuter, Girl's Stater, Covington , Ky., over the
of D.W.l. and [ailure to yield will speak . Convent ion weekend.
reports w11l also .be given.
the right of way.
Store owner Philip Van
Lokeren told pollee he discovered the break-in when he
arrived for w&lt;rk on Friday.
'About 6,200 pllls, including
codeine, Demerol, Dexedrine
100 Pel. Cotton-:- crew- neck,
J
and Quaalude tablets were
tailored {or comfort and Ill,
missing.
reinforced pocket to retain
Police say the burglars
shape .
Small
(34 -36) ,
disconnected an alarm switch
medium
(38
--401
,
large
(42·
at the front door .
44), e~tra large (46-48) . Solid
Do you want the most In

Hospital News

---------------------------I

).

Area Deaths

At h ens Co uncil st u d Ies
·
Wage demands f police

Begin registration

for camping session

iD

The World Today

Sadat rejects message

Two wrecks
probed

Bill giving tax credit for.

home improvements is inked.

lrunates on indefinite lockup

·4SSURfD
'

... of peace of mind when you h~ve a
checking account. Whether 1t be
persona I or business, the records a
checking account gives you can help
make tax time or any time easier to
know wpere you ·stand financially .

Walk·Up Teller Window and
Auto Teller Window
Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

"THE FRIENDLY RANK"

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
ANOTHER SHIPMENT!

HAN-ES POCKET T SHIRT

SPRING
AIR

durabl.l lty, comfort and support?
See the Spring Air, Back Supporter
Mattress with the U'nique 'Karr'
Innerspring Unit.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURE.D TO "40,000

•.

GRANT AWARDED
CLEVELAND ( UPI )
The Cleveland Regional
Transit Authoriiy has
received approval fiH' an $11.2
mllllon operating assistance
grant from the U.S. Urban
Mass
Tr'ansportation
Administration .
RT A General Manager
Leonard Ranis said Mooday
the funds would help
maintain lower fares and
providl! increased ~ ~t·rviee .

•

colors .red, light blue, navy,
Dartmouth green, gold.
Men's and Boys' Dept.
1st Floor

Mountaineer Power Plant workers
under court o-,;der to end strike

.

CIIA_RLESTON, W. _ya. (UP!) WUdcattmg employees of the Union Boiler
Co. in New Haven, W. Va., were under a
court order today to end an unauthorized
strike and report back to their jobs.
U. S. District Court Judge Dennis
Knapp issued the back-to-work order
Tuesday, demanding that the workers refrain from strike activity.
The wildcat walkout came at the ·
construction site of Appalachian Power
Co.'s proposed Mountaineer Power Plant.
A picket line was set up by members of
Local 230, Millwright Union, and other
employees and those of other contractors
did not cross It, the firm said.
Union Boiler said it did not know why
the men were out, but strikers claimed

•

I'
I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - In
what the White House called
a
"constructive
and
statesmanlike action," the
Senate has voted to lift the
31.&gt;-year-&lt;:&gt;ld arms embargo
on Turkey as long as progress
is m ~clo toward a solution of
the Cyprus dispute . ·
But the action still faces a
tough fight in the House Of
Representatives.
"The
president
is
gratified," said White House
press secretary Jody Powell
shortly after the 57-42 Senate
vote late Tuesday. "This is a
c onstruc t ive
a nd
statesmanlike action that wili
strengthen the security of the
United States and the

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, July 26, 1978

solidarity of the NATO allian&lt;;e'"

A second issue the administration wants badly to win is
due for a Senate vote today or
Thursday. Carter opposes an
amendment by Sen. Jesse
Helms , R-N .C., to lift l,J.S.
trade sanctions imposed at
the instigation of the United
Nations _against Rhodesia 12 ,
years ago .
The Turkish embargo compromise was in the form of an
amendment to the $2.9 billion
International Security Assistance Bill in the Senate.
Sponsored by Democratic
Leader Robert Byrd, it calls
for a presidential review
every 60 days on progress

•

at

toward a negotiated solution whether expediency for
of the Cyprus problem.
achieving a Cyprus sol ution
It also would require Carter and preserving the strength
to report' to the speaker and lo of a NATO ally outweighs the
the chainnan of the Senate moral cons iderations that
Foreign
ReI a t ions Turkey VIOlated U.S. law and
Comnuttee , a ny requests for committed huma n rights
military or economic aid abuses in Cyprus, where
funds for Turkey or Gr~ece, · some 2110,000 Greek Cypriots
or any anticipated arms sales have been ousted from their
to those countries.
, ·homes.
The emhargo on the sale, · " U this country is going to
gif t or transfer of arms lo stand fiH' human rights,' ' said
Turkey was imposed by Sen. John Durkin , D-N .H.,
Co ngress after Turkey "we have to stand f&lt;r human
violated strict stipulations in rights in Cyprus. What is this,
the foreign military aid law 1o a selective program'"
use American-&lt;~upplied arms
But the'' NATO security
to invade Cyprus in 1974.
' aspects appeared to outweigh
The vote came after a full other arguments.
day
of
so metim es
Ca rter and Secretary of
Impassioned debate on Sta te
Cyr us
Vance

en tine

maintamed the Turkish
military had seriously
deteriorated through lack ·of
spare parts and new !lrmS,
weakening the southern flank
of NATO , and officials
warned the Turks might turn
to the Soviet Union for aid if
the United States continues to
deny it.
Rep. John Brademas, Dlnd ., the House majority
whip, warned late Tuesday
that " the story will be
different in the House " where
it is expected 1o come up next
Tuesday.
" I note that the president 's
own party rejected hi s idea
and he had to rely on
Republicans
fo r
his
majonty ," Brademas said.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 71

$45,000
•
grant.1s
approved
Meigs County Commissioner Richard Jones announced at '
the regular meeting of the commissioners Tuesday night that
be had received word that the $45,000 ARC grant application
had been approved for additional funds for the constr.uction of
the multi-purpose building.
He also reported an additional grant of $75,000 in mental
health money should be approved this week .
Wesley Buehl, county engineer, met with the board to
discuss road repair projectS now being undertaken by the
highway department.
Buehl suggested that a meeting between the highway
department and the board of commissioners be held in 'the
IMIJ[ IJR:e lo dilcuu future road projecta.
Alao meeting 'with th~ board was Bob Bailey, EMS
administrator, to discuss the purchasing system for EMS.
Bailey alao advised that It was the inlention of EMS to move
1/te existing rtidlo antenna from its present location to the
SEOEMS tower located behind Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Bailey also stated that the sheriff's department had decided
not to have their antenna moved . The commissioners received
a letter from the sheriff advising tbat he did not wish a change
at this Ume.
'
It was reported that iJIStances of orooerty destruct.ion had
taken place a t' the Meigs county jail by juveniles who had been
incarcerated and it was the fe eling of the board to contact the
parents of juveniles involved in order that reimbursement
could be made for the amount of damage incurred now and in
the future .
Attending were Commissioners Henry Wells, Jim Roush and
Jones, and Mary llobstetter, clerk.

CHAMPS, RUNNERS-UP - The Athens Medics won the Syraeuse
Tournament for Little Leaguers by defeating Powell's Giants in a nine-inning thriller, 7~ .
Displaying their trophies in the photo at left, following their presentati on by Syracuse
Mayor Eber Pickens, are memebers of the Medics team. Pictured are front row, from left.
Jim Stricklin, Jeff Hanning, Scott Stricklin, Travis Thompson. Second row,_ Derek Hysell ,
Scott Lagraff , Bill Finnearty, Joe Hanning, Andy Stout, Benny Bennett . Thtrd row, KeVIn
Hysell, Jeff Jones.carl Matl1eny, Chris Leonard, Ray Finne arty . Back row, Mayor Pickens,

i;JI.J_r_h_.e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Manager Bob Finnearty 'and Coach Charles Leonard. At right are members of the runner-up
Powell 's Giants team with representatives of three sponsors of the tourney . Shown are,
fron t, 1:-r; Tim Lemaster, Bryan Korn, Lonnie Lemaster, Bret Korn. Second row , Gary
Coleman, Bobby Jeffers, Kevin Mowery , Rodney Roush , Richard DaviS. Third row , Lee
Powell, Bobby Foster, Randy Stewart, Dave Landaker , Sean Doidge. Ba ck row , Sponsor
Bob Crow of Craw's Steak House, Coach Roger Stewart, Larry Powell of Powell 's SUper
Vatu, Asst. Coach George Korn, L.., Roush and Gary NorriS of tiJe Racine Home National
Bank .

Pr~tty Baby Contest entries being taken
Meigs Count y parents have
until Aug. 15 to register their
children to part1 c1pate 111 the
fourth ann ual pretty baby
contest to be held at I p.m.
Saturday. Aug. 19 at the 115th
annual Meigs County Fair.
The Elberfeld Departm ent

months: 18 months to two
years, and three year o)ds., Pretty Baby-- Little Mr. or Miss _ _ _ _ _ _ __
The date for determimng .
the age brackets into which Child's Na me _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
the youngsters will be placed
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Sen. Howard M. Metzenbaum's
is Aug. 15. Only children four Sex _ _ __
top aide has resigned charging the Ohio Democrat with paying
through se ven can parwomen staff members less than men, abusing the Senate with
ticipate m the Littl e Mister
Parents' Name - - - -- - -- - - -- - - questionable filibuster tactics, preoccupatiOn with good Store, sponsoring the contest and Little Miss contest.
headlines and mistreating staff members, the Cleveland Plain again this yea r, w11l present
E nt ries in any of th e
Dealer repMted today in a copyrighted a rticle.
$5 g1ft ce111fica tes to the ca tegories are to be ac· Addr~s----~-----------Mary Jane Due, 56, an attorney who served as winnmg bo y and girl m each companied by a 50 cent entry
Birth Date----:· ·Metzenbaum's chief of staff the past 18 months, said she u·f 't he seven age ('ategones fee . Unl ess the fee a c- Child's Age _ __
unsuccessfully tried 1o have her salary increased to the same and in add1tion there w11l be a
Plea.•e send entry nu later than Aug . 15 to Mrs. Eloise
level as that of William R. White, Sen. J ohn H. Glenn 's top Meig s Co unt y Li ttle Mister companies the application
the
child
ca
nnot
be
entered
In
Wilson,
338 S. Filth Ave., Middleport, Ohio. Entries not
aide. Mrs. Due was paid $44 ,750 and White -makes $49,941 a and Meigs Co unty Little Miss
the
contest.
Handling
the
accompanied
by the 50 cent entry fee will not be acc~pted .
year.
contest. The buy and girl contest will be the Middleport '-----:----:-----:---;-- - - - - - - - - - - '
winning these events will Business and Professional one boy and girl to be selected
receive $50 gift certificates - Women 's Club and all ap- blue ribbon w1nners in each
pli catwns are to be sent to age group . All entries must
MOSCOW (UP!) - A Soviet court freed Mariya Slepak from Elberfelds .
A iawyer with the Oh1o without punishment today after hearing charges of "malicious
Categories fo r the pretty Mrs. Eloise Wilson. chair· be resident s of Meigs County.
Legal Rights ·Service ha s hooliganism" brought against her . The Soviet court re l"":sed baby .-onlest incl ude : birth to man, 338 S. Fift h ave.,
Mrs. Lucille Lei fh eit. a
charged that 73 mentally the 52-year-old woman with a stern warnmg that the n~xt U~ e three months : three months Middleport .
member of the Me1gs Co unty
retarded
re sidents
of she committed an offense she would face three years tn exlle to six months: ~ ix. months lo
Out of county judges will Fair Board, heads the contest
Gallipolis State Institute have
Mrs. Slepak, wife of Jewish activist Vladimir Slepak, was 12 months; 12 months to 18 select the winnero with only on beha lf of the board.
been " dumped " into un· charged in connection with the June I demonstration she and
The Student Hea lth Team
...
certified nursing homes since her husband staged when they unfurled a banner demanding
·.··
·'·. ...
.·.·.·· ·..
will be presenting diabetic
June I.
that they be allowed to emigrate to Israe I.
edu cation classes for the
Kate Haller, chief of the
people of Meigs Co unty with
..
..:· two classes scheduled for
(Continued on page 12)
Thursday , August 3.
SAN CLEMENTE ISLAND, Calif. (UP!) - Two cruise
&lt;:..
The first of the two classes
.
l
missiles. the weapon the Carter administration is dependin~
:-. will beg in at 10 a.m. with the
oo to fill in for more expensive weapons that won't be bwlt,
·· second class ~ta rting at 7
were test fired from a submarine publicly for the first time
.. p.m. Each class will run
Tuesday, with Defense Secretary Harold Brown looking on.
.. approximat ely one hour .
Both flopped .
·
:.: Through the court esy of
The July Stat e School
..
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Foundation subsidy payment
:::
the classes will be held in the
of $72,691 ,036.77 to 611 Ohio
::·
East-West Dinmg Room of
city, exempted village and BY JUDY OWEN
CXJMPrON, Caltf. (UP!) - Barbara Williams pleaded
:::
the
hospital.
local school districts and 87 innocent Tuesday to charges she collected almost a quarter of
When the papers arrive each afternoon, six year-old
:::
A
30 m1nute mov ie ,
boards of education, was a million dollars in welfare paY!llents, which would ·be the
Joey Hysell1s anxiously waiting and ready to start on his
" Living
with
reported today by State biggest welfare fraud in U. S. History, a nd then drove her
route.
. i entitl ed
·::
Diabetes
Your
FuAuditor
Thomas
E . Cadillac back to her $170,000 home: She remained free on
The son of M". and Mrs. Milford Hysell, N. Third Ave .,
.·
ture
wit
h
a
Difference,"
Ferguson.
Middleport, Joey is perhaps the Sentinel 's youngest -ever ;.
$50,000 bail and was ordered to return to Superior Court Sept. 5
.. will be shown It 1s an exTotal payments received in for a pretrial hearmg on 10 counts oLgrand theft aJJo--!.·• -"n--ccr 4-f--l~---"~~·.~:, carrier .
Meigs County was $248,287.62. perjury.
-'c
" inherited" the route from older brothers, Dan, 14, :: eel lent film that depictSsome
The breakdown is as follows :
and Dave, 16. Dave, who still has a paper route of his own, :;., of the problems associated
Mrs. Williams, 33, who lives with her hushand in the well- ...
with diabet es and the possible
accompanies
his little brother and will do so until " Joey's
Eastern Local, $65,156.45 , to-do Ladera Heights district of south Los Ahgeles, was ,...
basic dnd transportation accused of filing claims at eight different county welfare ::::
old enough to cross the street alone," says their mother, ·· complications . The film
.· primarily concentrates on the
allowances less deductions, offiCes under eight different names , claiming 34 children . She :.;;
Polly
newly diagnosed diabetic but
$1,676, school employees has four.
Both
Hysell
routes
cover
some
100
homes
.
Joey
claims
.:::...
retirement , less deductions,
57 of those fiH' himself and knows all the rest by heart. His :: a lso discusses some of the
$6,526,61 , state teachers
favorite part of delivering the route, which he 1S.ys takes .::_: chronic implicatiGns of the·
retirement, $56,953.84, net
him about 45 minutes to complete, is "throwing the papers .. disease . ·
Everyone Is invited. The
payment; Meigs Local,
on the porches." He contends it helps to strengthen his ::;·
·.•
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - A man whose brother-in-law served in.
$161,384.89, 'basic and trans- the Missouri Penitentiary with James Earl Ray says he ont-e
pitching arm for baseball season. Joey plays for the ::: heR lth team feels it is par··;: t icularl y Importa nt for
portation allowances, less turned down $50,000 1o arrange the de~th of the Rev , Dr.
Middleport T-ball Tigers.
deductions, $4,396, school Martin Luther King Jr., The New York Till!es reported .today .
In addition to baseball, the soon-to-be first grader · :- fam ily members and fnends
YOUNG
ENTERemployees retirement, less
enjoys visiting zoos. His favorite animals are the baby ::': of the diabetic to a!tend the
The Times said Russell G. Byers has told the House
PRISER
Six
year
old
::;- class Diabetes is best condeduction, state teachers committee investigating King's April4, 1968 assassination that
monkeys.
Joey
Hysell
Is
possibly
retirement , $26,238 .+2, he rejected the offer in late 1966 or, early 'l967. The Times sa1d
Although he.'s just recently begun his own route, J oey :::: t r olled when everyone Is
the Senllnel's youngest- has been helping out since he was 3. His mother and the :;:: aware of all the potential
$130,750.47, net payment; Byers' claim has spurred an " intense inquiry" by the
ever n ew.s pa~r ca rrier. older bo~s pulled him , along with the papers, in a wagon ':'-:·:: problems that accompany the
Southern Local, $68,996.48, committee.
Here Joey pauses belore then.
·.-. disease . Family members
leas $1,768, school employees
tossing a paper on the
retirement, less $6,845.17,
.:-:
and friends of the diabetic
How long does he figure to be a paper boy ? "Well ,"
porch of . one of the 57 Joey tells, "prohably 'til I 'm about 17."
::: who know what to expect can
otate teachers retirement,
:::
CXJLUMBUS (UP!) - A special subcommittee of the Ohio
Middleport homes his route
S60,583.31, net payment ;
That's dedication!
:.:.: mdabeke the adj ustment to
House
Judiciary
Committee
held
its
second
hearing
today
lo
direct allotment to county
ta tes . . ~.s well as the
(Clllltinutd on p~~e 11)
board, $15,652.93 . .
.-....·--..
(Continuitd on pqe 12),
.;- . ·~-cover.
' : :-,-.-: .' ..·.·
·..-....
·.·. ·.· .·.·..·. ·'·' ·.·..........
.. •.•.·,·.'_,·........
·.·. ' .· ·.......................................
.· .... . . ..·. ,·,· ·...· ·.·. .. ·..·.-.....-.· ..·.·_·.· ..._-.·.-.·.·.·.·.·.·..·.-.·..·.·.·..·.·..-·...·.·.·..·.··..·..·.· ·-·.· ·.···.· . ·.-. ..-.....·..·..-, ...·'.:_,'.:._
I

Top Metzenhaum aide resigns

Charge against

GSI is denied
Supt. John A. Beattie of the
Gallipolis State Institute
today denied a charge by
Kate Haller of the Ohio Legal
Rights Services that the GSI
transfer patients to nursing
home s without consulting
county mental retardation
boards. district offices, or the
Ohio Department of Public
Welfare.
"In the first place," Beattie
said, " all placements are
made in licensed facilities. In ·
the second place, we have
sent our people in coordination with the department's advanced regional
offices which have provided
programs for them.
" We insist upon a ledge gf
approval routinely from the
welfare department.
" The law requires that we
send them into the least
restrictive
environment
where the district offices
provTde programs for them .
There is a brand new nursing
home in · Chillicothe, for instance, where we have sent 2S
residents and where the Ross
County Mental -Retardation
Board is in the process of
providing programs for them
in cooperation with · the
division of mental retar·
dation."
The United Press In·
ternational story released
today illld:

Weather

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

they left their. jobs to protest working
conditions. The finn said it would lose
$50,000 each day the strike continued.
Pickets carried a sign reading, "Union
Boiler Discrimination" at the construction
site.
.
A union steward was quoted by
Everette Sullivan, business representative
for Local2430, as saying the firm had fired
two millwrights for refusing to work inside
a pulverizer. Workmen claimed they were
required to weld inside the machine
without a helper.
" We're trying to get the signs down
anrl get this matter processed through the
proper grievance procedure/' Sullivan
added.

Turkish arms embargo lifted

Higba lt!diY and Thund(IY
upper 101 or lower 801.
owa tonllht In the upper tiOtl.
roblblllty of precipitation
1 percent today, tonlJl)lt, 50
er~t Thursday.
i'

Soviet court frees ·woman

Cruise missiles test fired

Subsidy funds
are received

Gasses set
on diabetic
education

,•,

6-year-old has

Sentinel route

Welfare fraud is denied

$50,000 offer rejected

Fashioning new Ohio law

~

~·

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