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                  <text>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

~

~·

�•

~

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., WednesdaY , July 26, 1978

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , July 26, 1978

'
'

11\1
WE BOUGHT

THE WMOLE THINGI

Must reduce inventory

e eed
HELP I
.

.

.,

R e,Is' ace no~ sho.o ting
for Ty Cobb's matk
··'

'

I

.

'•

~

·•

'·.·-

,,

.---

Whirlpool

-~-~"

~ ~?=-·
'-'

NEW YORK !UPI )- With
Tommy Holmes sa fely
eclipsed, Pete Rose is now off
and running after the one
baseba.ll inunortal he 's been
,relentlessly pursuing
throughout his entire 16-year
career - TY Cobb.
"I'IJl just starting now I've got hall a building. I've
, got to keep building the rest
'of it ," said Rose, who
surpassed Holmes' 33-year
old modem National League
record by hitting safely in his
38th consecutive game
Tuesday night - a 3-for-4
performance against New
York Mets' righthander
Craig Swan. "I've got to get
me another hit tomorrow so I
can be in reach of Ty Cobb.
''I've tied or beaten almost
everyone of his records
already and I'd liketo get this
one too."
By that Rose was referring
to Cobb's hitting streak of 40
games, accomplished back in
1911 . It's not a record- just
the next "milestone" in
Rose's bid to ~ibly even
catch Joe l)iMa ggio, who
holds the all-time major
league record of hitting
safely in 56 straight games in
1941 .
.
Rose's historic hit Tuesday
night came on his second at·
bat in the game eve ntually
woo by the Mets, 9-2. Reds
starting pitch er Tom Hwne
drew a walk from Swan on
four straight pitches to
precede Rose and set up an
obvious bunt sit uation.
" Sparky (Anderson , the
Reds manager) told me he
wouldn't take the bat out of
my hands,''Rose said.
Thus, after foulin g off one
oitch and taking another for a
THE ONE AND ONLY

Bolens•

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'259.95

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SALE

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ball, Rose hit a liner to left
field and the crowd of 38,158
leaped to its feet in a
thlJJldering ovation .
"I fouled that first pitch off
after hitting it right 011 the
trademark ," said Rose. "So I
choked up about an inch and
the · nex.t pitch was right
there."
"I wasn't upset when he got
the hit," said Swan. "It was
more of a relief. I was glad t(e
gol it over with so I could
concentrate on winning the
game."
As it was, Swan gave up
ooly four othe~ ·. hits besides
the three by Rose .
Meanwhile, the 61-year-old
Holmes , who is employed by
the Mets in their community
relations depart~J~ent, rushed
ooto the field to embrace and
congratulate the man ' who
had broken his record.
"I told Pete before the
game. 'Go out and get the
record'," s_aid Holmes. "I
couldn't wait to get out there
and congratulate him . The
best thing about it was that
neither of the hits he got to tie
it and beat it were cheap .
They were both screaming
liners."
Someooe asked Rose if he
was goi ng to give the ball to
the Hall of Fame.
" No, sir," he · said,
grinning. "I hit the damn
thing, I'll keep it."
Should Rose hit sa fely
today against Mets' starter
Nino Espinosa or a possible
reliever, he would then be
within one game of Cobb's 40
stra ight games. Next up
would be George Sisler , who
hit in 41 straight for the old St.
Louis Browns in 1922, then the
little kn own Bill Dahlen who
hit in 42 in a row for the Cubs
in 1894 . The next milestone
would then be Willie Keeler's
all-time NL mark of 44
straight, set in 1897. Then, the
big one, DiMaggio 's 56 which eve n Rose 's own
manager doesn 't believe can
be beaten.
" DiMaggio' s streak is
untouchable, I believe," said
Ande rson . " Pete won't
coovince me any different
until he gets to 50." ·
But even Anderson admits
that Pete Rose, at 37, is never
at a loss for a challenge .
" That's what keeps him

.

'

TtiE DAIU' S F. .~T I Nt:l.
OHUTF.llTHTI-IE 1

20"- 3'1, H.P.
Reg. 5197 .50

INTF.RFA
"TOI-'

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169.95

No imirarion wo rks as we ll

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as the ortgtnal Bolen s
Mul ch •ng Mower. lt cho ps

and rechops 9rass clippings into a hne mu lch .
One that's blown deep into

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J •u LJ h s h~.'\1 dati) t'Xl't' pl S;ttun lay
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( 'uul p;tuy-Multum'l.h it, lrw .
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HUJo. llll'M&gt; Offll't' l' hvnt• 991·
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C.-il' 'r\·ur. $21.00 , SIX
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$7 1lil :

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Thi'Cl' II WIIlh lo. $7 ~(1 .
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$[ ;1,50 ;

Middleport, 0 .

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Sportable

By Greg Bailey
In a nine-inning thriller, the
Athens Medics, 16-2 on the
season, captured the crown of
the 1978 Syracu se Tournament for Little Leaguers
by downin g the Powell 's
Gia nts of Pomeroy , H .
Catcher Kevin Hyse ll
si ngled with two out to knock
in the winning run.
Athens scored four runs in
the first. a ll unearned, but
were allowed just one run
after that until the ninth .
Powell' s picked up one in the
third and fourth and three in
the fifth to account for their
scorin g until the top of the
ninth .
In the top of the ninth.
Powell's broke the deadlock
when losing pitcher Randy
Stewart singled in Roger
-Davis who had walked .
But in the bottom of the
&lt;nning, Athens ca me to life.
. CONSOLATION WINNERS - Hubbard's Greenh ouse
Up until that inning, Stewart
of Syracuse won the consolation game Tuesday night to
had held the Medics in check
place third in the Syracuse Tournament for Little
with ju st two hits, both
Leaguers. Pictured are, front row, from left, Bobby
coming in the fir st fnning.
Willis, Tim ( Bo ) Willis, Jeremy Dill, batbay, and Malcolm
In essence, Stewart pitched
Gui nther . Second row, Tony Deem : Brian Allen, John
a no-hitter foi eight .innings.
In the winnin g inning , single~
,\!len had doubles and Tuny
Robert Finnearty led off with , Fpr the f.iant s, Stewart had Deem and Tony Hiffle each
a single, followed by one by two singles and ·a double had a sin gle.
B. Finnearty who wound up while D. Landaker had three .
Hh ctt Milhoan led the
With the win. A fi elder's hits . Sean Doidge had a Ya nk ees with a single and
· choice lied the game, and double and Brct Korn and double while Harrisun had
then aft er a strike out, Hyse ll Bobby Foster each had one two sing les. M. Thomas and
soc ked his game-wi nni ng _ single.
blow.
In the consolation game,
B. Finnearty and start er C. Sy racuse Hubbard's Green·
Matheny fanned 13 Giants house (23·1 1 romped over the
CANTON, Ohio IU Pl i and walked nine, but the Pomeroy Yankees 9-4 with
pitching stand out
wa s Dennis Teaford gett ing the Two pla yers for the North
Stewa rt wh o went th e win. Teaford fanned ten and h&lt;1 ve decided they do not
wi:lnt to pl ay in lhe Ohio High
distance and faru1 ed nineteen walked just three .
and walked six while· yielding
Scott Harrison took the loss School All .Star Game Aug. 4,
just' fiv e hits. The Giants had as he fanned seven and and a South player fai ll'&lt;l the
phy sical exarnina tion .
eleven hits .
walked a lik e number .
Dropp1n ~ out for th e North
B. Finnearty l'ed the win·
Mark Salser led the win·
ners at the plate with two ners with a triple and single Tu esday were Adre Royster,
singles. R Finnearty, Hysell , whi le R. Arms had two an All.{)hio linebacker from
and
Terry
and C. Leonard each had one si nKies. GreK Nease and B. Allian ce,

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60 1 Ma1n St .'
Pt. Pl easant. W. Va .
Riffle, Randy Arms, Mark Sa lser. !lack row. Bob Willis
mana~e r: Eric Cunnin!;ham , Dennis Te aford, Greg
Nease , Tony Riffle. and Vtrgil Dill, ossisl&lt;l nt ma!l&lt;lger.
Hubbard 's Greenhouse is 23- l on the season with their only
loss to the tournament championship Athens Medics team

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in the semi-finals .

67.5-2988

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Litt le l,ca guc Tournament.
And it was t he firs! time in :w
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Dit cctor Bill Hubbard that

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We don't just
have tune-up parts.
We have

A
SET

.~

experienci ng pressure .
'~ l enjoy ha\•ing my back
again.'1 the wall ," he sa id.
" because then I come out
sY.,. inging.
he
' ' And
tonigh t ,"
co nti nued , "Sw a n wa s
throwing good and I w&lt;:t s
swinging good .
"You sa w that ball oon ball
that bounced onto the fi eld
tomght ," he added. " Well ,
that 's how big the baseball
looked to me tonight when I
was at the plate."
Just before Rot;e lined out
his fir st hit , he asked plate
umpire Joe West tu put
another ball into play.
" I noticed on the pitch
before that the ball ha d a
scrap e on it ," exp la in ed
Rose.
" I'm not sa ying. though.
that Swan put it there, " he
added , hastily.
The smil e on Rose's fa ce as
he answered questions said
he wa s enjoying the streak
" So arc my teamme:ttes,"
he said . . " You !:iaw wh;H
ha ppened after they took the
pictu res a t fi r st base after rny
first hit. No on e brought my
glove and ca p out to me wh en
tile innin g ended . The guys
kept them in the duguut. 'T'ht-y
wanted me to come to lhe
dugout so they could sha ke
my hand . congratu late rne,

• Fi shing Tackl e
and Rod s
and Reels
• Gun s an d
Re loading
e Ba II Glove s
Campi ng
Equip m ent
• Arch e ry
e Ind oor Gam es
• We
hav e Gi It
Ce r tif ic ales

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His next ta rget is the 41J.
ga me strea k compi led by Ty
Cobb in 191I. Afwr that . the
41-game string J&gt;Ut together
by George Sisler in 1922. And
then the ultimate - ·Joe
DiMagg io's 56-game streak ,
set in 1941 and a record many
figure will li ve as 10ng as
maJ_.,or league base ooll .
Cha lle nges , Rose love
them .
'' When peopl e arge me on r
ca n do things that seemingly
a re impossible, " "!:i&amp; id Rose.
And he ha d pl e nty of
e ncoura ge ment Tue sday
night.
" l have to believe that 95
percent of those fans in the
stands wni ght wanted UJ 'see
me get a base hit. not go 0fo r-four," said Rose.
What bette r proo t was
there _tha n the st[lnd ing
ovations he rec·eived each
lime he stepped to the pl ate
Tuesday ni ght.
Ro se
s hrugged
off
Question!:i uf whether he w&lt;Js

But Wednesday it was Rose
whose named was bannered
across the top of the sports
pages of the Ne w York
newsp31&gt;ers.
''I feel great about the
record, but not about the
game/ ' was Rose's opening
remark to members of the
news media.
Then t ame the barrage of
quest ions .
Exhib itin g th e sa me
patience he displays when
he's crouched in the batter 's
box awaiting his pit~h , ftose
fired ba ck one liners as sha rp
as the s hots tha t ha ve
ri cocheted off his oo t during
his 16-year career w1th the
Reds.
And as he talked more than
one wr iler was hea rd muttering, "The guy"s unbelievable. He can't be for reaL"
'' I've got ha lf a bu ilding
built," he said. "Now I've got
to keep building ."
For Rose , it 's now one d9wn
and three to go. '

too ."

BATTERY TERMINAL
RCA
Black &amp; White

autographed baseooll."
.
With the crowd of 44,210
yelling "Go Pete, Go ," Rose,
after nying out to Met left
fielder Steve Henderson in
the first inning, lined a ~'wan
fa st ball to left for his record
br eaki ng hit following a
leadoff walk to Reds' pitche r
Tom Hume in the top of the
third.
Even before the oo ll was
returned to Rose as he stood
on fir st base beamin g
hap pily , ph otograph er s
swarmed onto the field .
' 'Be sure I'm smiling when
you take the pic t ures,"
quipped Rose, "because all!
saw in the papers tod(jy were
pictures of Bill y Martin
crying."
Rose had been upsl&gt;lgcd by
Martin's resigna liqn as
manager of the New York
Yank ees after he lied
Holmes ' record streak with a
pair of singles : in Monday
night's opener of the thr""
game series.

Medics de.feat Giants in 9 innings
to win S acuse LL Tourn crown

0

REGULAR '279.95

NEW YORK•(UPI) - The
pitches of Craig Swann , the
New York Mets' fast-balling
righthander , didn't fool Pete
Rose and neither did the
telephone ca ller posing as
President Carter .
" I knew it wasn't Carter on
the !)hone because hi!-i vok:e
didn 't sound tired enough,"
cracked Rose.
The call came after Rose
pounded out a pair of singles
and a double to extend his
consecutive game, hitti ng
streak to 38 games, a
Natiooal League record, as
the Reds took a 9-2 drubbing
from the New York Mets
Tuesday night.
~~ Anyway," add~ Rose, "I
once had my picture taken
with (form er P resid ent
Gera ld) Ford on Fountain
Square in Cincinnati so l
knew President . Cart e r
wouldn't be calling to
congratulate me.
"His mother might," he
added as
afte rth ought. "1
once
gave
her
:•n

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going,", said Anderson . "I
don't care how much you love
something, it gets boring
after a while. But Pete loves
this and he keeps finding new
challenges."
..
"There's a lot of things I
want to do this year besides
the stri ak," said Rose. 11 l'd
Uke to win another batting
title for one thing. That would
be something for a guy who's
37 . No one would say I'm old
anymore.
"I'd also like to lead the
league in hits. That would
make it seven times and
nobody's ever done that."
Should Rose hit safely
today , his next challenge Friday night's double-header
with the Philadelphia Phillies
- would be an even tougher
one.

Rose· sets NL mark

North loses two players ·

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Giants win on
dramatic .run
· UPI SportsWriter
.Sa n Franci sco's ·· youn·g

ng ht fielde r Ja ck Clar k
Tuesday night extended his
httting strea k to 26 ga mes
wtth a double tn the Giants' 32 vid ory over t he St. Lou1s

Hut it was Mike !vie who
provided the real fireworks blasting a two-run pinchhomer with one out in the
bottom of the ninth to give the
Giants ·the win and increase
their lead in the NL West to
two games over the R~ .
In other NL games, Atlanta
blanked Philadelphia, 4-0,
Houston edged Montreal, 3-2,
in 13 innings. Sa n Diego beat
Pittsburgh , 2·1, and Los
Ange les defeated Chicago, 3-

Ca rd ina Is.
" [feel real good about th e and Holnies ran out on the
hitting streak ." said Clark, fteid to &lt;'ongratulate him.
who trails Cincinnati slugger "It 's really important to me

Pete Hose ' s · modern-da y to get a hit tomorrow because
National League mark of 38. I can go after Cobb."
1.
by 12 games . ··J tN out e1.: ery
In San fran cisco, before
day and just try and keep it 39.289 fans, Clark. whose . Braves 4, Phlllles 0 :
Biff Pocoroba's second
~wi ng . As surprising as it may
st reak has been a silent one
home
run in two days - a
seem. I don't feel anv eom pa red
to
Rose's,

pressure at all. ..
·
f\osc lined a singl e on a 1-1
pttch from New York right ba nder Craig Swa n in the
thi rd inning of the Reds' 9-2
luss to the Mets an.d
lengthened his hitting streak
tu 38 games to surpa ss
Tommy Holmes' string of 37

smac ked his hit

tn

three-run shot in the second
inning - backed the four-hit
pit ching of Tommy Boggs to
lead
Atlanta .
Larry
Christenson, 7-9, took the

the fourth

innin g.

" E\'eryone on thi s team is

pl aying hard and I'm just
going along with the crowd ,"
sa id the 22-year-old Clark ,
who leads the league in hitting with a .322avera ge and is
second in RBI with 76.

.

Scioto results

Clark's streak reaches 26

games set in 1945.
His neKI goal is to surpass
Ty Co bb's streak of 40 games.
" I'm just starting no\11 .. .
I' ve got hall a building and I
gutta build the rest of it,"
Rose said, after ·a Shea
Stadium crowd of 38,158 gave
him ~ long sta nding ovation

loss.

COLUMBUS ( UPI)
Cami Almahurst woo her
fifth straight Ohio Sires
Slakes race Tuesday night as
· Scioto Downs hosted a f24 ,200"
OSS event for lhree-year-()ld
·trotting fillies.
Cami Alrru!hurst, driven by
Bruce Riegel, cruised to an
8¥, length victory over Terry
in the SeCOJ!(I of two division s
of the prelinninary OSS race.
Patty Tad came in third.
'The winner covered the
mile in ~:04 3-5 and returned
$3, $2.160 and f2.20.
Dash Of Sl;noke captured
the first division, beating out
Bingo Winner by threequarters of a length. Ninnble
· Mite showed.
Guided by Pius Soehnlen,
Dash Of Smoke covered the
mile in 2:06 2-5 and returned
$6.110, $5.20 and $3.40.
The series for three-yearold fillies will climax at
Northfield Park with the
running of the $34,00o Capital
Trot.
Exterminator · won the
ninth race ·at Scioto Tuesday
night to kick off a 1().5-4
trifecta combination that was
worth $4 ,167. Tangy Lang
came in second and Ellies
Tar Baby was third.
A crowd of 4.773 wagered

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Today ' s Probable Pitchers
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Cincinn at i ( LaCoss 1 0) "'
New York ! Esp inosa 8-Sl. 1.05

tickets rema in available for

p m

between

Miam i

a nd

Philadelphia .
He also announced that the
game ball will be delivered
by sky divers jumping from
5,000 feet into the middle of
the stadium .

Ph. 992 -2101

2,

CANTON, Ohio IUPI J
Pro Football Hall of Fame
Publt c Relations Director
Don Smith ann ounced
Tuesday ni ght that some 500
Saturday 's exhibition game

700 S.

3, Montr e at

1n ns
Sa n D iego 2, P i ttsburgh 1
L os Angeles J. Ch icago 1
San Fran cisco J, 51. Lou is 1

St. Louis (Ma rt ine z 4 4 ) a t
San Francisc o ( Knep per 11 6 ),
• .OS p m

Atlanta

I Nie kro

Ph 1ta dclp h ,a

II 10 )

\Ru thv en

at
7 8),

7.35 p .m

· MOntreal !Gr imsley 12 7) at
Ho uslon ( N ,e kro 6 Sl. Bi35 p m .
Ch i cago !Rober t s 4 41 at Lo s
An geles. ( Hooton 10
10 : 30

n.

p .m .

Pi tt sburgh · ( Bibby 6-.d ) a t San
D iego ( Ras mussen 9 n 10 p m .
Thursday ' s Games
P i tt sb urgh .at San D 1ego
New York at HoUston . nig ht

Linescores

1111-it-yourself

Major League Result s
By United Press Internati onal

National League
030 001 000-

Afla
4 83
Ph i Ia
000 000 000- 0 4 1
Boggs an d Pocoroba ; Ch r is
t enson . M cG raw (l f, Ree d ( 9)
ancJ Boone . w ~ Boggs ( 2 5). L Chr istenson (7 9 ). HR - AIIan ta ,
Pocor oba ( 6 ) .

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POWELL'S Pomeroy Pee Wee Team members are pictured . Front, Mascot Rodney
Newsome, Ray Ztmmerman, Todd Hoschar, Sue Ellen Frye, Cathy Carter, Sean Jeffers.
Mark Corbatt, ~nd mBS&lt;:ot. Penny Aeiker . Second row, Terry Newsome, Bryan Ingles, Todd
Hysell, Greg Faelds and Btlly Brothers. Thirtrow, assistant coach, Frank Newsome , official
scorekeeper, Candy Brothers and coach Pat Aeiker.

2
1
1
I
1

6 0 2

Harbour wins sprint car
featurt1 at Atomic Speedway

5 2 2
4 1 3

CHILUCOTHE - George
· Harbour, Huntington, W.Va .,
driving car No. I H, captured
the big ·:!a-lap Sprint Car
·feature at Atomic Speedway

sketchy.
Last Saturday, The P-M-N
team downed Marietta 8-S
with winning hurler Randy
Stewart pitching a five-hitter.
The righthander fanned
twelve. Hitters for the locals
were Van Meter with a double
and single, Perrin with two

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Guidry ancl H·earn , Spt i rtorff ,
National Lugue : Foster , Cin . CiUb S fourth -round
H r ab os~v (8 ). M in gor i (91 and
78 ; clark, S F 76; Winf ield . SO pick
Porter w - Guidry 115 . 1) . L·
Spl ittorff 111 9 1.
· 67 ; Montanez , NY 65 ; Garvev ,
·
1

000 0010 10- 2 53

Oa k
Det
002 00 4 SO x - 11 15 0
J;lenk o, Br oberg (61, Sosa ( 6).
M e. Ca tt y (6) and Newman ,
Ess1an (61 ; W ilcox and May . W
Wi lcox ·u 81. L - Renko (4 -51.
HR Oakla nd . Wallo's 16 1.

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000 12 1 01
M'
~Lee . Wr ight (6 ) and F isk ;
Er ic kson , Marsh~tll (8 1 and
Wynega r . W - Er ickson ( 10 6).

L

L

110 Sl

L A 63.
American Lutut : Staub . Oef
82 ; R ice, Bos 81 ; Hisle, Mil 72 ;
Thompson , Oe t 69 ; Thornton ,
( lev 6l
Stolel\ Bues

Nitlonal
P i tt
~2 ;

Leatue : ,:. Moreno ,

Lopes ,
(A
and
Richards . SO 19 ; Ta ... eras, Pitt
26 ; Sm llh • SO ••
~ ·
A mercan
1
L e1gue : LeFlore,

De t 40; Wilson , K'C and D itone,
Oak 32 ; Cruz . Sea 31 ,· Will5 ,

T e~

2 9·

Pitching
Victories
N•tional Le11gue : BlUe, SF u
4; Gr imsley ¥11 12 -7; Knepper ,
SF 11 .6 ; John , LA and Rogers ,
Mll 117 ; N 'te kro. All II · 10·
American League : • Gu idrv .
NY 15-1; Tanana , Cal 13 -Si
F l anagan , Salt 13-7; Torrez ,
,

draft

Sor ensen. Mi l 12 7, Pa!mer.
Ba tt 12-8: Lecinard, KC 12 -11.
El
d R
A
·
rne
un llerage
lBased on 90 innings pltche~l
National Le•gue : Vuckovich.
Si .L 2, 19 ; Rogers , Mtl 2. 26 ;
Swan . NY 2. 4~ ; Re usc hel. Chi
"' ; Knepper , SF? 67 .
..• .uv
American Leatue
G 'd
ry,
NY 1""' · Mol. lock :T'· Ul225
' "" •
•
ex . :
Caldwell . Mil 2.40 ; Pa l mer,
Ba H 2.59 ; Johnson , Oak 2.76.
Strikeouts
Nlfional Leatue : . R ich ard,
Hou
185; N lekro , Afl 140;
Sea11er , (in 130 ; Montefusco.
SF 116 : Blue, SF 115.
American League : Ryen , Cat
and Guidry, NY 153 ; Flanagan,
Ball 110 ; . leonard , I&lt;C I09 ;

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This Week's
Dairy Valley

4-2.

Twius 5, Red Sox 2:
Dan Ford drove in three
runs wiih a triple and a single
and rookie Roger Erickson,
10-6, hurled 7 1-3 innings
llefore Mike Marshall
reliev ed to post his 13th save.
While SoK 4, Brewers 2:
Reliever Mike Proly held ·
the Brewers hitless for 3 I-3
innings to pres.erve Francisco
Barrios' sixth win against
nine losses. Bob Molinaro hit
hi s fourth homer for the
White SoK .
Orioles 7, Rangers 6 ;
Doug DeCinces drove in
five runs with a grand slam
and ·a solo shot to lead the
Orioles. Ken Singleton

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hitter.
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Mariners t, Blue Jays %:
lndlans ,S, Angels 1:
Tigers II, A's 2:
Leon Roberts smacked a
Andre Thornton s ingled
Tim Corcoran drove in two
home two runs and Bernie runs with two doubles and two-run homer to break a 2·2
Carbo and J ohnny Grubb two singles to pace a l:i-hit ninth-inning tie and Glenn
belted solo homers to help Tiger offensive and Milt Abbott tossed a six-hitter to
Mike Paxton t~ his ·eighth win Wilcox, 7-8, pitched a . five- spark Seattle.

campaJgn

-

--..
-.......
-

run Guidry needed in the
third when Mick ey Rivers
reached first on a throwing
error by shortstop Fred
Patek, stole second and came
home on a double by Willie
Randolph.
In other AL games
Tuesday , Minnesota downed
BoSton, 5-2, Chicago tripped
Milwaukee, 4-2, Baltimore.
nipped Texas, 7~. Cleveland '
downed California, 5-l ,
Detroit popped Oakland, 11-2,
and Seattle trimmed Toronto,

lOrange Whip'

•
•

Beauttlul styles with slatS
tor 1 to 6 Childr' n - or ·

ROUND
STEAK

SLICED

ElBOW ~ ACARON I .......... ! . 1.~. 2/89' PANeAKE SYRUP..................2.~ ~'; ... 49'With 110.00 or more

"Nullo Elberletds
in Pomeroy "

He then got caught betwee n a
lapped car and Linder, who
;till hadn't backed ufl, and
with no where to go the cars
tangled . After taking a very
wild ride botli Di ckson and
Under were through for th e

•'

birth stars '" colors that
match the b•rth month of

~

the cars went into turn one .

CHAPMAN
SHOES

•

Haudenschild took several
nasty · ffips in turn tw o.
Haudensc hild wa s not in jured, but hi s ca r was out of
action for the rest of the
night. On the restart Dickson
again jumped into the lead
and was really pouring it on
when Jim Linder broke away
from the pack and challenged
him for the lead .
They battled several laps
up until the half-way mark
when they began to get into
lapped traffic. Dickson , who
has been plagued with bad
luck all year, was leading as

Gallipolis'
Tommy
Spencer, hitUng safely In
five of sevea games b.e's
played with lbe Chicago
White Sox thus lar, learned
Ia at night he wiD remaiu In
thr major leagues the
remainder of ihe 1978
campaign.
Speucer was called up
from the Class AA ·
Suulhera League receully
to fill lu for lujured White
Sox players, an~ had expeeled to spend about two
weeks wllh lbe Amerieao
League club.
Spencer called his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Spencer; and"his old bigb
nhool coac h, C. L.
(Johnny) Ecker late last
night and toid them he
would be slaying on with
the White Sox the rest of
the campaign.
Spencer, playing ceo. terfield, bad the besi nlgbt
· of his major league career
against the Milwaukee
Brewers last night with a
double, two singles aud
RBI In four trips to the
plate.

Ron Guidry has the
evening .
reputation
of starting the
Randy Ford then.,inherited
the lead and looked like a New York Yankees to winsure winner until the last lap ning again after their losing
when he got boxed in behind a streaks and Tuesday, after
slower car . Harbour, who had the team lost a manager, he ·
been the "sieeper" in the made sure the new manager
race, sul'(!_ri sed Ford and shot won.
" It's nice to break in with a
by him on the .backstretch.
15-1
· pitcher ," said Bob
George chose the high groove
Lemon,
in his first game as
and Ford the low groove as
new
manager.
they battled side-by-side
"I try a lot harder after we
coming out of the fourth and
lose,"
said Guidry, who
final tum . But despite Ford's
blanked
Kansas City, ~. on
last effort, Harbour had more
six
hits
to end a !().game
momentum coming out of the
Royals'
winning
streak that
tum and won by a car length
incl.uded a 5-2 win over New
in an exciting finish .
· The preliminary events York Monday night.
" I'm still leaming how to
went to Tucker Nunnery of
South Point, driving car No. pitch," said Guidry, who in
56 froni -..Gallipolis. The Fast hurling his fourth shutout of
Heat went to Tommy Dickson the season, lowered his
· in ca r No. 99 with a beautiful, major-league leading ERA to
Red, White, a'n-!1 Blue 1.99. "I paced myself in the
Sprinter with the-consi going first few innings. It was real
hot and humid, but in the
to Harbour.
fourth
or fifth inning I started· •
In the accident filled Late
throwing•
hard again."
M'udel F ea tur B, it was
The
lean
lelt-hander bas
Chillicothe 's Greg Hatfield
now
struck
o-ut 153 this
driv ing his own No. 28 to an
season
,
tying
him with
impressive victory over
California's
Nolan
Ryari for
Waverly's Jake Dyke. The,
Late Model Heats went to the American League lead.
Richard Hall, AI Nunnery , • New York scored the only
and Jim Taylor .
For any of Hilton Wolfe's
racing fa ns, the Racine
driver ha s been sidelined the
•
past several weeks with a
blown engine.

e.•._..............~&amp;&gt;~s.:an~d~C:a~ld~w~e~II~.~M:n~1~?·;S,~·•U~n~•;•~rw:oo::d~,~To:r~9:S~.~------~':''::•:·:M:A::I";:·:':O:M:I~R=O=Y:i ~

Smuckers

,

.,....__,

•

Mot~er's love 15 eRprened
by the genu ine diamond ,
her children by the glow 1ng

12 b~rttl

GRfA T SAVINGS

•'

Saturday night.. He led only
one lap, but he made it the
most import'ant one , the
" last" one! This victory
assured Harbour of a starting
berth in the upcoming
Sprint
Ca r
Syracuse
Nationals tn Syracuse, New
York .
On the first lap of the
fea tu re, Marietta's Tommy
Di ckson, dri vi ng the "Charlie ·
Brown Spri nter" No 99 , shot
into I he lead and started to
pull away from the rest of the
field only to hav e the red na g
come oul when young Jac

Featuring

controlled scrimmage

•

11

I
1
3
2 __
2
1
1
'I .'

:

CIDER VINEGAR .............. ; .... '1.59

.,

4

singl es, and Harrison,
Stewart, and Pethtel with a
single each.
On Monday, they won
again, this time over
Williamstown, West Virginia,
I(). I. VanMeter pitched a two' hitter as he fanned seven and
walked two . Stewart socked a
homer, double and single,
Perrin had a triple and
single, and VanMeter had two
doubles and a single. Pethtel
and. Spradling each had a
double, Milhoan had two
singles, and Harrison had one
Seattle 4, To ronto 2
single.
New York 4, Kansas City 0
n p troit 11. Oakland 2
The next game for the P-MChi cago - 4. Milw~J~ukee '1
N
team will be at Belpre at 8
KENT,
Ohio
(UFI)
)lat·
ligament
in
his
left
knee
late
Minnesota 5. Boston 2
tling to avoid early preseason in the preseason las.t year. He p.m. this Saturday against
Baltimore 7, TeMas 6
Today •s Prdf:lable Pitchers
roster cuts and preparing for returned to action in mid· the Parkersburg North team.
I All Times EDT)
a conlroled scrimmage season, then damaged his
Cle ve land (Waits 7 10 ) at
Sunday against the Buffalo right knee in the last game of
New York (Beattie ~ - 4 &gt;. 8 p .m .
Balti more (Flanagan 13 7) at
Bills, Cle veland Browns' the year. The right knee
Detro it (B il l ingh&lt;'!m 9-Sl. 8 p . m .
veterans and rookies are required surgery.
Cali forn ia !Tanana 13-5) at
M1twaukee (Travers 7 4), 8 ·30 hard at work this week.
"This is the most critical
p .m
But
for
veteran
defensive
time
of my life," · Sherk
Oak land
(Re nko
4 -d l
at
Chic ag o (Wood 10 71 , 8 .30 p m .
tackle Jerry Sherk, its a light admitted. "I'm optimisiic,
Toronto
(M oor e
4 2J
at
to save his nine-year National more optimisiic than three or
Minnesot;J (GOII2 9 61. 8 : 30p .m .
• ,four weeks ago. My legs haY!'
Seattle
( Pa r rott
1-2)
at Foolbdl League career.·
Kansas Ci t y ( B ird 3 4 ). 8· 30
.Sherk, whc never . had a felt better the last couple
p.m .
weeks than anytime last
Bos ton (E cker sl ey 11 3J at sertous InJury until last
seaso n, partially torn a season ."
·
Te xas (Me&lt;;Hch 4 5 ). 8: 35 p .m .
Thunday 's Games
Team physicians have con Clf!ll'eli'lnd at New Yor k. 2
Major lugue Leaders
eluded the defensive tackle's
Toronto at Minnesota
Balf at Detroi t , n ight ·
By United .Pre ss Inte r national
recovery is on scheduie and
Bos ton at Te xas , n ight
BATTING
Sea ttle a t Kan Ci ty , nig ht
t B•sed on 250 at b•ts l
that he will be ready for the
Oa kla nd at Ch i c ago . n ight
National Lugue
start of the regular season on
Cal i f or nia at M itw , n igh t
G AB . H . Pel. S
Cl ack SF
97l67 118 . 322
ept.
3.
Bu\
Sherk
Burroghs All
91 300 96 .no. commented "I'm concerned
Madlock S F
n 271 86 .317 I may not have the same
Bowa Pt1 rl
92 386 12 1 .313
Rose Cln
98 m 129 .311 quickness. lf I come back and
Am edcan League
get another injury, 1'11 have
G AB . H . Pet. to sit down with (General
Carew Min
90 332 t 14 .343 Manager) Pete Hadhazy and
89 321 103 321
Fros t. Fitzmorr is 18l and
Ly
nn
Bo
s
Ri ce Bo s
97 405 119 ·.319 discuss mv future ."
Dow ning ; Pa x ton . Spittner &lt;BI Br ett KC
Bl 33 1 105 .317
In other Browns develo~
and AleMander . W - Paxton 18
r
81
265
84
31
7
61.
L ~ Frost
12 4) .
HR sL eLcano M il
·
ments ' rookie guard Pete
Fisk BO!J
90 331 102 .308 .
Cleveland , Carbo OJ . Gr ubb
Sundberg Tex
91 318 98 _308 Pullara, of Chattanooga, may
( 11 ).
Jac kson Cat
78 277 85 .307 have seriously injured a knee
Sea
100 000 101 - 4 B 0 Ol iver Te •
71 286 87 .304 d .
,
Tor
_
Mon ey M i t
7J. 270 82 .304
urmg Ia s t Sat u d·ay ' s scrun010 010 000 2 6 0
Abbott and Plumm er ; Under
Home Runs
mage against the Bills.
WOO&lt;l and Ashby . W - Abbott ( 4
National League : Fos,er , ~in
If physi cianS detennine he
and Luz ln!tkl , Ph il 23 ; Sm i th ,
.
.
tun c:ut
7) L - Underwood (S IO I. H RsL A 20 : Valentine , MU , W lnfield , has SUStalned ligament Or
Toronto . Car ty (15). AShbY ( 6 J; s o
diemond .
se a11 1e, Ro bert son tSJ , Ro berts
and .cl ark , SF 17·
cartilage
damage
that
Amencan Lea1ut ; R ice, Bos
ti'IIM t&gt;trtf'l ltlf'l ,
115 )
24 ; Baylor . Cal and Hisle . M lt warrants surgery, he would
N y
001 000 030 _ 4 8 o 23 ; Thornton . Clev. Thompson , be lost for the rest of the
'130"
t&lt; .C.
000 000 000 ..... o 6' De t and Thomas . Mil 20.
season Pullara was the
Runs B•ttrd In
·
By Greg Bailey
The Pomeroy - Mason · New ijaven AII..Stars , a Little
League all-star team from
those three towns, have now
played two games in the
Belpre, Ohio, Lillie League
Invitational Tournament.
The loeal AII..Stars have won
both games , but result.&lt; are

CATSUP.................... !!.~~-. 31'1.00 . WHOlE KERNEl CORN .... ?~!.~~~.. 3/11.00

5th &amp; Pear

5 1 3
~ 1 1

..._,

•

K Ie e ne

I

~•

Brook s

1

4 I

•

All-stars ·from here have
won two in Belpre tourney

(.. '1

• ' '.'"~'-+ '/

Gallon

5 0 I

Pete Rose's National League record 38-game 17.7-1 LA, Rhoden ·
hitting streak began .June 14, off Gallipolis native 18. 7-2 LA, Rau
19. 7-3 Hou, Bannister,
Dave Roberts, of the Chicago Cubs.
Here is Pete's game-by-game record of the
McLaughlin
historic streak :
·
20. 7-4 Hou, Richard
No., date, club, pitcher
,
ab r h 21. 7-5 Hou, Niekro
1. 6-14 Chi,Roberts
4 1 2 · 22 . 7-6 SF, Blue, Curtis
2. 6-16St. L, Denny
4 1 2 ... 23 . 7-7 SF, Barr
' '-·24 . 7-8 SF, Montefusco
3. 6-17 St. L, Vuckovich,'
Schultz ·
4 2 2 25 . 7-9 SF, Halicki, Knepper
4 · I 1 26 .7-13 NY, Koosman, Lockwood
4. 6-18 St. L, Martinez
5 2 2 27.7-14 NY, Zachry
5. 6-20 SF , Montefusco
4 0 1 28 .7-15 NY, Swan .
. 6. 6-21 SF, Halicki
4 0 1 29 . 7-16 NY, Siebert
7. 6-22 SF. Knepper
4 o I 30.7-17 Mon. Bahnsen
8. 6-23 LA, Hooton
5
I 4 31.7-18Mon,Dues
9. 6-24 LA, Welch
3 1 2 32. 7-19 Phil, Reed
10. 6-25 LA, John
, ,
I I 33. 7-20 Phil, Kaat
5
1I. 6-26 Hou; Lemongello
4 1 1 34. 7-21 Mon , Grimsley
12. 6-27 Hou, Niekro
4 o 1 35.7-22 Mon , Schatzeder
13. 6•28 Hou, Dixon
3 0 I 36. 7-23 Mon , Rogers, Knowles
14. 6-29 Hou, Bannister
4 I I 37. 7-24 'NY, Zachry, Lockwood
15. 6-30 LA, Rautz)lan
16. 6-30 LA Welch, Forster,
38. 7-25 NY , Swan
3
5
Hough

·.:,( ~ ~
•.HO' ·
I

••

Spencer gets 3 hits, RBI in Sox win

' . ...r~~
~R

v ~r\1' ,·

.0,.

Will remain in Windy City

off Gallipolis native Dave Robert_s

.............. ...... ......·.............-..

..~...........-..~:i~..............~=-

01 • 000 01x

( 1.....

.

Pete's streak began on June 14

Aslros 3, Expos 2;
Art Howe' s based - loaded
single in the 13th inning gave $309,621.
Ken Forsch his fourth win
over Montreal in 12 days .
Padres 2, Pirates I ;
,Dave Win£ield tied the
game with his 17th homer and
drove in.Gene Richards with
the winning run with a one- ·
Amvriun Le•.g ue
Lugue Standings
out single in the bottom or the By M•ior.
United Pr~n International
E•st
vi. L. Pet. GB
Netion•l Le1gue
ninth inning to pace San
63 34 .649
east
Boston
Diego. Bob Owchinko, 6-7,
57 39 594 511z
w. L, Pet. GB Milwauke
went all the way for the Phi l a
SS 43 .56 1 8111
53 ~1 .56.4
Balflmre
53
43 .552 91/z
Chicago
49
47
.sio
s
New
York
Padres.
51 47 .520 12112
Pitlsbrgh
47 47 .500
6
CJ:etroil
Dodgers 3, Bubs I;
46 SO . 47~ 16'/z
47 54 ..465
9 117 Clevelnd
Montreal
35 64 .354 29
44 58 ..4)1 13
Tor.onto
Dave Lopes equaled a New York
1
West
39 6 1 .390 17
career - high with his lith 51. L ouis
W . L. Pet. GB
West
w. L Per. GB I&lt; an City
54 42 563
home run to pace Los Angeles
Calif
53 47 .53 0 3
San F ran
60 39 .606
and give Rick Rhoden his Cincl
Oak land
SO 50 .500 6
nat i
58 41 . 586 2
eighth win in 13 decisions. Los Ang
58 42 . 580 71'2 Te•as
46 51 .41.4 81h
1
Minesollt
41 53 .442 1 Jl/1
San
D
iego
48
57
.480
12
1
Reggie Smith drove ln his Atlan ta
~ 5 53 .459 14, 1
Ch ic ago
41 55 . 427 13
_16th run in the last nine Hous ton ·
43 56 .434 17
sea ttle
36 64 .360 20
Tuesday 's Results
Tuesday's Results
games.
Atlant a 4, Ph ila del p hia 0
Cl evelend 5, Californ ia 1

ON

-.

~--::' 'l'ne JJauy :.enunea, Mldoleport-t'om~roy ;o., l'l~nellday, JWY 21;, 191~

4- The Daily Sentinel. M:ddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 26, 1978

By MIKE SHAUN

~ ...

'

CINCINNATI ( UPI)- Can
"Orange Whip" hear fruit in
Cincinnati ?
Pat Matson, recalling that
" Orange Crush" worked
wooders in Denver , hopes so.
Matson,
a
former
Cincinnati Bengal lineman,
has decided to juice up his old
teamma.tes with an "Orange ·
Whip"· campaign.
He envisions rejuvenated
Bengal
[ans
wearing
"Orange Whip" T -shirts and
drinking "Orange Whip"
fruit drink - all the while
stirring the orange-clad
Bengal team on to the· Super
Bowl.
Matson, of course, is selling
the T-shirts and fruit drink.
·"Well/' he shrugs, "[am a
capitalist, you know ."
But, commercialism or not,
"Orange Cr)ish" definitely
worked In Denver last
season, where the slogan
hecame a hattie cry for the.
orange-unifonned · Broncos
and helped them make the
•
Super Bowl.
"I'm a native of Denver
and I know what happened
olit there last year," said
Matson . "1 think a lot of the
Broncos' success was due to
that
•ora nge
Crush'
promotion. The fans really
got into it and it definitely
spurred the players oo."
The Bengals have never
,woo a playoff game and the
team has been criticized for .
lacking that special "spunk"
to win the big ones .
"If my 'Orange Whip' idea
catches on, it could set
Cincinnati on fire this year
just like Denver last year,"
said Matson . "I've talked to
some of the Bengal brass and
players about it and they're
hoping It catches on."
Matson, who has become a
successful Cincinnati
businessman by opening
several "Nautilus" fitness
cenlei' around town since
retiring from the Bengals,
already Is distributing his
'Orange Whip' drink ("Fruit
juice , egg whites, milk solids,
just a heckuva drink," he
says) and lining up retailers
to sell his Tofihirts.
From this, he hopes, will
s11ring "Orange Whip"
' banners, ·bumper stickers,
songs, and rn and rn .

.

~··

NOWI

8-YEAR CERTIACATE

7.7

COMPOUNDED

%
ANNUAl
RATE

an annual yield .of
%

DAILY I
·--

MINIMUM '1000.

ALSO NEWI

6-MONTH MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
Available at existing six-month U. S. Treasury Bill rates at time
of purchase. Minimum $10,000.00

Federal Regulations require a substantial
penalty lor premature· withdrawal of
certiflpte funds.

There is no penalty lor premature .
withdrawal in the event of the death of
the Certificate owner.

OhioValley Bank
GallipO it$ . Ohio

Four Localions To Better -Serve You

Me mbe'

FDIC

~.

-

o¥

�6- Tile uauy :sentinel. Mid&lt;lleoort-Pomeroy, o., Wedne8day, July 26, IY78

•

Ordination service held

Murphy and

Wolfpen News Notes
Weekend visitors of Iva
Johnson were Barbara Steadman, Julie Stevens of Fairfax
and Louise Earnheart of
Ollumbus.
Julie Stevens, Barbara
Stea dman, Iva J ohnson,
Louise Earnheart and Evelyn
Thoma were Saturday
visitors of Neva King of
Carlton Kingsbury.
Janet Pierce, James
Johnson, Kenneth Johnson,
Geneva Shumate honored.

at Mason · Faith Baptist
On Saturday, July 22, the

A report of the Examining ordination message. Rev .
Faith Baptist Church of C&lt;&gt;uncil was given by Rev. Paul White had the , rdination
Mason held an Ordination J•rry Lewis and then Gene prayer.
Service for Jay Mitchell and Olleman asked for a vote of
The Laying on of Hands
Paul Wears. Mitchell became the
church'
which was done by au pastors and
an ordained pastor and unanimously gave its ap- Gene Qlleman. Mr. Qlleman
proval.
Wears became a deacon.
also presented the two men
The serv.ice was called to
Reva Ca rdw~ll · sang with their certificates. Rev .
order by Rev . Jerry Lewis "Broken Pieces" Which is a Cliff Coleman gave th e.,.
(ollowed by scripture and favorite of Rev . Jay Mitchell. benediction followed by the
prayer by Rev. Lawrence
Rev. Bcb Stec.kert gave the ChUrch extending the right and Mrs. U.rry Johnson and
Haskell.
charge to the church and the hand of fellowship to Jay and family.
Mr . and Mrs . Robert
Paul.
A reception followed at the , Russell and Bertha Russell
park in Mason on Front and Mr. and Mrs. Jed Russell
were visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Street.
Tom Summerfield and
daughters of Illinois. Mr. and
Mrs. Jed Russell are
Outstanding style, quality,
returning to their home in
Oregon .
value. In a word: Lane
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy
Mrs. Homer Circle, Mrs. of Qllumbus were weekend
Dorothy Harden, Miss Dixie visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Clean . uncluttered lines. Lots of emphasis
Cirlc,e Pam and Sa)1dy McElroy and Mr. and Mrs.
on the · natural beauty of richly grained
Harden spent Friday and BHI McElroy, Jeff and Joey. ·
woods. Scaled. for modern needs . Styled
Saturday with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mrs. Doyle Multi and family Kail , were in Columbus
with a fla ir for understated contemporary
of Mansfield, Ohio:
elegance. Crafted with the integrity of a
Mrs. Zelba Ours, daughter
':ompany whose n;~me has stood for qual ity
Mrs.
Evelyn Clay of Hebron,
Mr . and Mrs. Homer
rurniture for more than 60 years . And priced
Ohio were guests of Mrs. Circle, Dixie and Sandy and
r eal istical ly . This is the Lane story . One to
Euni e Brinke.r Thursda y Ralph Harden attended the
live with happily ever after.
night. On Friday they visited Wilson reunion a( Zanesville
with Jesse Gainer of on Sunday. ·
·
Pomeroy.
There were 411 present for
James Circle was at the Sunday School on July 16.
home of Mary Circle on
Melvin Weaver of Franklin,
Sunday.
Ohio visited with Mr. and
Farmers are very busy Mrs. Arthu• Johnson, Sheryl,
MIDDLEPORT. 0.
combining their grain.
Patrick and Betty VanMeter.

M~:r~=~Ie.

t'riday on business and also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Knapp and family of
· Westerville.
·
Charles and Kevin Knapp
spent a few days with their
grandmother, Lena Knapp of
U.ngsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith were Sunday afternoon
.
visitors
of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Smith of Kanauga.
Mr. and Mrs. John Do wns
visited recently witti his

~~~r~a~o:tthoe\~~!r!~'l:!. ~'Jii~S.~rb\:~~:l'OJohn J.

LANE

Cannel News,
By the "Day

BAKER FURNITURE .

family of

and Saturday
visitors of Mrs. John · R.
Murphy, Peggy and Barbara
were Mrs. Louise Earnheart,
Col umbus, Mr. and Mrs.
J
M · h Se A dr
ames
ey
d D' urp 1y' M an, uHill
1ana
o
organ
an
ca !if., Mr. a nd Mrs. John E .,
M rph
d Ch 1 0 f.Ra ·
u y an
rs
cme,
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs
d Ada
local 11'1
nd
an
m,b rt • Mr. ah
M
R
rs ..
o e
urp• y'
Minersville.
Tanuny, Cheryl and Terry
Johnson, local, Chuck,
Shelley and Don Rowan and

r..-.----~._.---....
',

1.

Mason County

News Notes

By Alma Marshall

1

,
M"""'
• ~"N - "orris
Br-",
"'
_, Pt. PI-nt,• ,..__,•
.-.... ,.,..._r
~"'''"
~th
the
West
VIrginia
..-.....
•
.tment
of"-"---'-• at the
,.,
~.-w..
l.lnited Meth~'~
.,..... Women's m-''- - • on July 10 at· u-United Methodlst lllurch. Mrs. ~ c.--, )ll'tlll'alll
leader introdu-• ..__ ~-~ --'-er.
,
""' Y"' ·~M - · Mr. B.r•"g
s.....,e
on
Juvenile
J1lltlce
llld
nroc
lUI
ol the
..., I""'
r
Ia-.
A
.
qu~•-n".
a
·
nd
··-er
__._.
lollowed.
.
"
''""'
~~- ..-For the Augu.st meeting the United MethodUit Women wll1
have a picnic at Muon's Park. H~ were Mrt. Ray
Proffitt and Mrs. Glaclys Th0018&amp;.

.....,,,....__,,_..

Store Hours:

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

~~n!~ol:,"'~\~~:tt,Wr.r~~'Mn~.::

friend Jim of Athens, 0 ., ··
Mr. and Mrs. Robert visited recently woth Peggy Sydenstricker, ,lllrs. Frances Stewart, · Mrs. Joyce c.rton,
Murphy,
·Debbie
lfitd Murphy
a nd
enjoyed Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Catherine Smith, Mrl. Mlrpm
Veronica, Minersville, Mr. sw~~mi~~-d Mrs . Robert Pickens, Mrs. Lois Test and Mrs . Earl- Bwnsardner.
and Mrs. John E. Murphy and M h M'
'll 0
Chris, Racine, · Carmel
urp y, mersvl e, ··are
CLIF"I'ON
Members of the Senior Senior NutriUon
announcing the birth of a son
n1ng
the h
Murphy , Joe Evans of July !4, 9, 10 a.m. weight 6 Program recently spent the eve
at
CIIIW Ill Mary
Nederland, Texas, and Mr. lbs. I&gt; oz. named J. Robert .• Plc~ens with M~ry and Etoilla ea-u as hosteut · The evening
imd Mrs. John Downs and Travis. Gra ndparents are wasspentinv!SJtlng,~ngtngandlooklnga acrapboilb.
Adam were Fourth of July Mr. and Mrs. John R. Mur- · Refreslunents of 1ce cream, cake and punch wereiii'Ved
weekend visitors of Mr. and phy, local, Mr. and Mrs. Ill Laura Dunba~, Anna Hoffman, MaUJda Noble, Joy
J. R. Murphy, Peggy and Virgil Tea ford, Pomeroy, For~n, Ada VIckers•. Sybil Grinltead,r Rhoda Y111pr,
Barbara.
great . grandmother, Mrs. Maxme Arnold, Mary_Pliilllps, Allee Blalte , Mildred Zirkle,
Ca rmel Murphy, Joe Iva Johnson and Mrs. Edith Gladys Wolle, JaJDie Weaver, }Jelen Stewart, frances
Evans, Nederland,' Texas, Teaford.
Stewart, and hostesses, Mary and Etllilla.
Mrs. J . .K Murphy and Adam
A layette shower honoring
LETART - Mr. and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo, Letart, were
Downs visited recently with Mrs .. Robert Murphy of
Mrs. Iva Johnson.
Minersville was held at the among .the many from West Virginia that joined the camper
Tammy Johnson was home of Mrs. John R. Murphy caravan to Ontario, Canada. The group (!'om West VIrginia are
overnight guest recently with recently. A cake in form of known as the Star Craft Rolling Mountaineers.
From western Pennsylvania, they went to Niagara
Peggy Murphy, local.
block
spelled
baby,
Meadows
Traveling Park where the group st.yed two nllhta.
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and deco rated by Mrs. John
While
there
they went sightseeing to Niagara Flllla lind other
Peggy enjoyed a cookout at (Elaine)
Davis,
was
scenic
spots.
From Mmday untll Friday they and many.1.."'!tnY
the hom~ of Mr. and Mrs. served with punch, nuts and
more
persons
from other states camped at Fanlhlwe t'UK at
Harley Johnson and family mints to the following guests : ·
Lmdon,
Ontario,
and were guests at the Ontario Star Q-aft
on Fourth of July.
Mrs. James Reeves, Mrs.
'
Cheryl Arnett and Belinda Paul Darnell and Jeff, Mrs. Flally.
On Thursday evening, Bob Whlttlngtm, Star O'aft Dealer-·
Whittington were overnight Howard Thoma,
Mrs.
guests of Barbara Murphy . J ohn E. Murphy, Mrs. from Pt. Pleasant (W. Va. Chapter) was holt at a cblcken
recently.
Harley
E.
Johnson , barbecue.
One evening a group from Wisconsin had a cheese tutlnJ
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and Tammy, Cheryl , Mrs.
Peggy were Tuesday visitors J ohn
Down ~ ·-· Debbie . spree - with various cheeses and crackers served to many
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy, Peggy and Barbara guests,
On Wednesday evening the hosts at Ontario Starcraft raUy
Murphy and guest of honor,
served
dinner under the big top when a deUclous meal ol rout
Mrs. Robert Murphy, also
beef,
all
kinds of salads, apple squares and lee cre1111 Were
Robert Murphy,
John
served
Ill
approximately 3,000 and they also served bnakfut
Murphy, · Chris and John
on
Friday
morning.
· Downs and Adain. Sue
Entertainment was provided by the York Uon Steel &amp;and
Murphy received many nice
gifts. Those sending gifts and the best Men's Quartet from Ontario which Ia cou1.,..c! ol
were Mrs. Virginia Wyatt , approximately 40 singers.
Other forms of entertainment consisted of an Idiot Paraclt,
Mrs. Berdie Wyatt, Mrs.
and
competitive sports between women, men and ehi1cln!l
Helen Johnson , Mrs. Grace
from
the various stales.
Warner , Mrs.
Margie
Enroute
home the Luckeydoos camped near Streefccra,
Proffitt, Mrs. Lois ThompOhio
and
from
there went to Sea World near Cleveland! 0.,
son, Gina and Cindy, Mrs.
where
they
saw
the following : Dolphin show, Anytldng Goe11,
Naomi Smith, Mrs. Jo Worley
F1ipper
Fairy
Tales,
Canadian Lumber Jack Show, Little
and Mrs. Jan Knapp and Mrs.
Sheiba
and
saw
a
Japanese
Pearl Diving Demoilatration.
Steve Haggy·.
WEST COLUMBIA ..:. A wiener rout was held on friday
evening, July 21, for the girls, boys, teadlen and helperl ol
Vacation Bible School at Salem Community Olurch, wblch
was held J11ly 10 through July 14. On the last day of the 1Cboo11
program was beld. A good time was had by all - u giiiiQ
were played . Those that were unable to atlend were milled.
Attending were Tonuny and Jennifer Doerfer, ShaimCIII
Sunday School attendance and Wendy Neal, John Untalan, Kevin Jlonecutler, BruCI ~
on July 16 wa s 40. Joyce and Brian Decker, Jenny Roush, John' llld Travl8 'Jolualian
Jackie Archer were awarded Michelle, Troy and Brandl Young, EDell McDermitt,
gifts of Praying Hands VanMeter, Mr. and. Mrs. John C. Johnson, Mr. lind Mn,
Necklaces, at the close of Ronnie Neal ·Retha· Decker Sandra Fowler N
ROtilb
Sunday School by the church, Arlene Mc~nnlU, Rhonda Young ·llld Mlc;kie ;~ .
'
The attendance at the Salem lllurch on SUtiday wu 74 and
as IS c.u•iomary for those ·graduating from college, as offering was $216.19.
they buth d1d recently.
Muon and Area .,_Ia
·
Worship serv1ces were held
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bumgardner llld family ~pent lhelr
at II a.m. w_lth a guest vacation at North Bend Slate Park.
speaker tlay l Richard Ash of
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Blake and girls, Clltton, and Mr.IIICI
Syracuse, Ohw, who spuke Mrs, Oscar Casto and daughters, New Haven, camped over the
from the ~k. of Judge~, 0 ~ weeken~at Holly River Stale Park, Hatcher Valley, W. Va.
the subjet1 Give me a Sign.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gllkey, l\!n. Sarah WUU. 1nd Allll
Attenda nce at thiS service WllUams attended Gallla Countcy at Rio Grande Ohio
was 28. Our speaker for next recently
·
'
'
Sunday will be lay speaker
·
·
Winebrenner from Syracuse, . Mr. and Mrs. John Nichols and son of Fayetteville, W. Va:
Ohio as our pastor, Rev. VISited Saturday and Sunday with Mrs. Elizabeth Jeffera who
Richard Thomas is .on Is recuperating from surgery.
vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan Ruuell, Jr. and Paula, Mr. and
July 29 will he Northeast Mrs. Sheridan RusaeU III and two chlldren cunped 11111 IIJd
Cluster Hymn Sing at Alfred spent' vacation at Cedar Point, Sandualty, 0 ., and alao Yltlted
Church at 7:30 p.m.
Sea World, near Cleveland, 0 .
'
There will be a shower
(layette) for Susan Pullins in
PUILIC NO'riCI ' ·
B•dford rowntnlp Tru1tee1
the church basement on the
will hold 1 public hearing on
evening of July 28.
!he proposed budget for
Fiscal Veer btolnnlng Jan . 1,
The Modern Woodman will '
1979, at 7:00P .M . on tl'lt l1tt
have a picnic in Woode Grove
. da-; of July 1971 at Htten
By Mrs. Herbert RoWib
Swartz: .
on July 30 for all members
8tdfora Twp . Trutteet
Mrs. Shirley Ables held a
and families with Mr , and
Helen swartt , Clerk
tupperware
party
at
her
Mrs. Ralph Henderson of
(7) 26. lfc
Coolville, Ohio spunsoring it. home Friday. Her daughter,
Vicki Ables of Canal WinEveryooe 'is welcome.
chester
was hostess. Games
The Carr School Reunion
played
and door prize
were
will be held in Woode grove
on Sunday, Aug. 13. Everyone !VaS won by Mrs. Herbert
PUBLIC NOTICE
Roush. Attending were Mrs.
ls welcome.
s.. led bidt will be rec•lveCI
Alice Balser, Mrs. Lucille In the offlc:e of the Vlltaoe
Clerk. Second Street , Vllagt
Rhodes , daughter Karen, ot
Pomtrooy , Onlo , until 12
On Aug. 5 the Gospel Tones Mrs. Violet Bush, Mrs. Jolla o'clock noon on Mondlly ,
August 7, 1971 , for the
will sing at Alfred Church. Norris, Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, following
prop·o·sal :
Mr. and Mrs. Murray Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
The changing of the Pllmp.
and body on an u lsttng
Hopkins of Dayton returned Shirley Ables, Miss VIcki tlank
ire truc:k to 1 new ct1ass11, to
Ables.
Refreshments
of
to their home Saturday after
be furnished by the Flrt
spending several days here sandwiches, pop and coffee Department.
speclflcatlonl are
with Grace Swartz and other were served. Vicki also waa on Detailed
file at the Fire Ctlltf't
hostess at a tupperware party Office. VIllage of _P omtrov .
relatives.
bid must cont11n tht
Quite a number of people at the home of Mrs. Ruby fullEach
name of every ptrJOh or
from here and elsewhere Congo, Portland, Friday company Interested In tht
attended services ·at the evening. She spent a week's · same , and be accompan !td '
by 1 bond or cerfltltd chtck .
Orange Christian Church vacation with her parents, In
the sum of 1100.00 to thi
satisfaction of the VlllagJ
Sunday, July 16 for Louise Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables.
Coun~il as 1 guaranty tnat (f
Mrs. Margie Hunt ~pent the the
Keebaugh of Sumner, Ohio.
bid Is accepted, contract
Charles Woode and Gamer weekend with her niece, Mrs. will be entered Into 1nd Its
Proptrf~
Griffin visited Ewing funeral Marie Skein at Evans. She performance
secured .
home Sunday evening paying was accompanied to Evans
These checks or bam•• wiN
last respects to James Snjith by Mr. Filbert Southall and be returned at onu ta an
the IUCCIIIfUI bldCitr.
of Hemlock Grove, Ohio.
returned home Monday by ll(ctpt
H 11 checks or bond will be
A large number of people Mr. Southall and Mrs. Skein. held untU tht contract or bid
propertv executecr by him :
from Meigs County and other
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell Is "!he
r ight It rellrvtCI to
places, lili·wellas local folks, spent a recent weekend with retect
any end all b ids.
attended services for Robert Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart at
Jane Walton , Cltl-k
White of Keno on Basban C&lt;&gt;lumbus and attended the
1/ILLAGI 0~
Road Wednesday; July 12 at Cincinnati Reds and San
PO .... EAOY
the Ewing Funeral home with Francisco Giants baseball t71 26 !II 2, 2tc
buri.al In Meigs Memorial game Sunday. Mr. and Mrs.
Gardens.
Bruce Hart, C&lt;&gt;liunbus, spent
Monday night wlth Mr. and
' . Nellie Parker's Mrs. Don Bell and Tuesday
Mrs
mother (Mrs. Michael is not with Mr. and Mrs: Robert with Mr. lind iln. Cllr.Jet
Shul~ and family at Urbani,
so well at this writing) .,- Hart at Racine.
ru.
Mrs. Martha Poole and son
Mrs.
Elsie
Shiller,
Mrs.
Mra. Buale E"la of
will have come to be with the
Racine
wu 1 SlllldaJ dlnMr
Michaels and Parkers for a Flossie Badgely, Mr. · ·~
peat
of
Mi. and Mrt. DaB
Mrs.
Ernest
Shuler
visit.
•.
daughter, sprnt a lew day~ Bell.

298 SECOND ST.

WE WISH to BlCiend our sincere
fhoriks to our dear friends and
relorives .
espec ial ly
o ur

NTA

SUNGLASSES ·\

beautiful flowers , gifts , cords

and phone cal ls given us on our
50th Wedding Annh1ersory

Eloise Bos ton ,

en

Clerk

25, 26, 2tc

obser..,once. May God
each ond every one.
Hermon and Inez Cor~or .

NOTICE OF SALE
Pursuant to an Alias Order
Df E•tcution Issued by the
c;ourt of Common Pleas ot
MtiQI County, in Case No .
15, 9-4-4, being the c auu of
Donald Phill ip Miller ,, et at ,
vs . R: icharct Shadduu , et al. ,
1 wilt offer tor Sl!lle , at publ ic:
·•oct lon , at the fr on 1 door of
the Courthoun at Pomeroy ,
Ohio , on Aug . 5. 1978 , at 10 : 00
O ' Clock A .M .. the undiv ided
one .half i n te rest ot Leora
Strom
In tht f o llowing

l

•

LIST '2.49

OFF
PREPARATION-H
OINTMENT

ALL LEGGS HOSE

··299

1QC}'c OFF

ONLY

ALL
TIMEX
WATCHES

ACCO S.EEO Dealers availa ble in
this area: Write Stan Coakley .
Route 1. Killbu ck 44637 or call
~ ollect evenings . 216-27b· 4584 .

1975 c.. tle Mob il e Home ,
Serial No . 3597 , Model No
6512 .

For Tliurldoy, July l1

. APH
ASTRO GR
•

B
. e

LIST '2.39

%

1

15 OFF

6-12 PLUS

CHIP
.

mice Bede Osol

INSECT REPELL.ANT
1

oz. 99e

ANACIN-3
.(ASPIRIN-fREE)

REG. 99' ·

66 ~·

·DON'T MI~S OUR MID-SUMMER TOY REDUCTIONS!
WE ARE THE AREA'S LEADING FILM PROCESSORII
Your Full Service Village Pharmacy Features:

• COMPLETE PATIENT PRESCRIPTION RECORDS.
• 10% SEN lOR CITIZEN PRESCRIPTION DISCOUNT.
• WE ALSO FILL UMWA, MEDIMET AND MEDICAID PRESCRIPTIONS.

271 NORTH SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992·5759

309 FIFTH STREET
NEW HAVEN, W.VA.
882-2005

'

WOOD .
Poles
mo* .
d iameter 10"' on largest end , S8
per ton , Bundled slob , Sb per

July 27, 1171
There might be sudden shifts
and et11ngea In conditione at. 'reC\ino Y.9tJr work or car~er thl~
corfli"rig year . Be alert . You can
' easily manipulate these happenings to your advantage .
LEO (July 2:1-Aug. 221 You
could be lucky in your commerCii! dealings today , but only if
you keep those who don ' t
belong out of your business .
Having tro uble selecting a
career? Send tor yo ur copy of
"-stro~Graptl Letter by maihng
SO cents for each and a tong ,
se lf-addressed. stamped enve·

IO Astro-Graph , P .O. BO K
489, Radio City Station . N.Y.
10019. Be sure lo specily birth

lope

!on .

DoU&lt;ered

to Ohio Pallo!

1
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S.pt . l2) Place
the blame where It belongs .
Don't colle"Ct Qu ill when a
troublemaker tries to twist and
distort. Your 1nte·nt .
LIIRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You
might go against your betler
senses today and put your self
In a position wh ere you 'll have

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes . brass
beds, iron Qeds , desl-; s·. et c.,
complete households . Wr ite
M .O. Miller , Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
c o11992 -77t:IJ .

OlD COINS. pocket wotc.hes ,
• c; latt rings , wedding band ~ .
d iamonds . Gold Or . silver . Coli
Roger Wamsley . 742·2331.
PLOW and wheel .
Weights for Formal! Cub trac tor. 985·3885,
·

TURNING

HOUSE IN pomeroy of Middleport
or w ith acreage in this or.a .
land conlroct or owner finance
possible . 992· 5014 .

to pay ror another's mistakes .
Heed ~our Inner voices,

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. Zll

Even though your intentions
mav be good , don 't try to
arbitrate an argument between
a couple of friends . You might
wind up as the sc1pegoat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dac .
:u, Problems that ordinarii)'
·wouldn't arise could pop up .
today If you take your mind off
your duties in order to socialize
with coworkers.
CAPRICORN (Doc. lZ-Jon. 11)
Soclol situations might be a bit
. more complicated lhan you 'd
like today . The right atlilude
goes tlong way"toward helping
you thrOugh some sticky spots .
AQUARIUS (Jon. zt.Feb. 111
You're the one wno can help
out a situation lhat got a lillie
out ol hond al home. You 'll do
10 In a manner that leaves no
bent noses .
PISCES (feb. 18-Morch lO)
Eorty today you may lack direction and even appear moody ,
built the flral sign of someone
needing aaaletance you 'II show
your otoblllty .
ARIES (Morch It-April 11) You

de..rve to occaslonatly ueat

$}69

WIENERS •••••••••••• ~ .~z~ ••
4

742-24b0.
-~----

lloltllnQ th• baQ .

'

gonorolly gOOd 10 attempt to go
Ilona with · tho majority ,. but
lodiY lo 1 In your beot intereat
to rJo' thlngo lho woy you feel
thlfy lhoUid bt dotMI.

PUILIC NOTICI
ltdford Townlhlp.Trutttts

Will hold 1 public hearing on
tht propos~ uttl of Revenue

lhlrlnt lfuncts 1nd the Anti Rectnlon Fundi an tht 3111
diW' of July It 7!00 P .M . It
Helen swaru. Clerk .
I

ltdford Township

Trustefl

Htiefl Swarfl. Cltrk

CENTE~

-$

CUT LOIN

PORK CHOPS •••••••••L~-

•••

CENTER CUT RIB

PORK ROAST.......... ~s~

fWO

ond

PUPPIES

.

mother

mother is o small , gentle dog
and ho use broke n .
949·2b2b or 949-2852 .

Phone

fWO MONTH old Sc hnouz:er .type
femal e pup . · gray . heahhy .
lovab le , Coli ~2 - 2639 or
992·2592 .
PU PPIES. Mother
Br ittany,
Spaniel , Fa ther · Engl ish Se tter

~2 - 7bot~ ---~--81CVCLE PARTS . 992·6208 .

- ---- --·

197• PONTIAC VENTURA . b cyl.

$2000. 992· 7453 .

BORDENS
.
PLASTIC $
39
2% MIlK .............:A~-.. ..
FLAVORITE
¢ MARGARINE ....... ~ ...L~;.

1975 BLACK El Camino ClassiC .

350 two barrel, ou tpmo tic ,
power steering ond brakes .
May be seen I •1
, miles ol Ro ute
7 Bypass on 143 of colt
992-3750 . Good condition .

'

•

$2b011.
1975

CHEVROLET

CA,.~RO .

985-3564 .
1974 DODGE CLUB cab pickup .
53,500 miles . $1650. 7&lt;112·2460.

I

'·

COUNTRY MOillE Home Park .
Route 33, north ol Pomeroy .
• Lorge lots . Coll992-7479 .______,
ONE

BEDROOM

opt .

Contact

-------

CAIICIII (J- 11-July H) II' s

'

priced.

CAMPER . REASONABLY

Village Monor Apt. , M idyouraell for your hard ertorls ,
dleport. 992· 77 87.
but that doesn't rnean you have
license to spend frivolously .
3 AND 4 RM . furnished ond un ·
TAUIIUI (A~I Z..Moy lO) Alfurni s hed
op ts .
Phone
though you II be lucky today
992·S.34, .
ooclally , you could generate
tome epert.;e with 1 bualness SPACE FOR camping trailer , ideal
for con tlruction workers , close
aeaoclate or on the home front .
to power plant , water , electric
GIIIINI (lloy %1-JuiMI Zl) Be
and water apid . Private .
caretut what you volunleer tor
992-23&lt;3.
lod.ly. You could become
cought In tho middle ol an FURNISHED APT. for rent . Adults ,
lnoolubl• problem ond wind up
no pets, downtown Pomeroy.

01 26, lie

$ 39
PORK rCHOPS •••••••• ;s~ ...

20 CT.

FOOT CONfAOLLEO electric troll·
ing motor . 992 -3717 . ..........-~­

slgn .

,

FRENCH CITY

Co. , Rt 2. Pomeroy. 992·2689 .

TIM8ER . POMEROY Forest Products . Top pri.ce tor standing
sow timber . Call 992 -5965 or
Kent Ha nby , 1' 446-8570.

·-·

•

CENTER CUT RIB

( 71 26, He

Apple Grove
News Notes

COPPERTONE
LOTION

',

Ble\s

STAN'S BARGAINLANO . A store
·for the people . We buy , trade
and sell. New and good u ~~
merchandise, furniture and ap pliances . Ant iques . Vou will
always get o lair deal with
Stan . Open 7 days o week .
Monday thru Saturday . q om to
5 prn . Sunday 10om to 6 pm .

described per-sonal proper t y :

leoti

LIQUID
12 oz.

CHICKEN
BREASTS •••••••••••••••L!~.
CHICKEN
THIGHS ................. ~8~

wonderful children ond grand·

children who made the event
possible and for all
the

Alfred
Social Notes

AU

a-am-Ul pm

Mon.-Sal

Construct i on
workers
welcome . Call 992·2347 or
992·3201.

CHICKEN OF SEA

.
6.5 oz.
CHUNK TuN A•••••••••••
JOAN OF ARC .

..

KIDNEY BEANS•• !5.~1;.~
I

( !llJPDN

I

-- - --··-

---

!illt71, Apollo 15 bluted off
for the moon with . . ronauts
David Sc:ott, Jarilla Irwin and
Alfred Wordell ebolrd.

CIDER VINEGAR
GAL. $129 W/C

W/C

•

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 29, 1978

Limit I Per ·Customer
Only at Powell's
Offer Expires J
29, 1978
Good

;,;

'

•

•

$ 39

CHOCOLATE MILK •••c~~ •••
CO UPON

.

ELF

HEINZ

LEMONADE .
Pi~k or Regular $}39
10 QT. SIZE

I

$1 VALLEY BEll

l Ill tPII!'-tl

I

'

C9UNTRY TIME
AUCTION , FRIOAV 7pm. New
mercha ndise and lots of used
furnitu re ·
tables , choirs .
wooden bedt . chest.s , chet t
type frHler , color TV . gas
range and much more ot Ohio
Rl... er Auction', now locol.d ot
537 High StrHI , Middleport,

AI

"ANQUET

FRIED CHICKEN
32 OZ. $199 W/C

12 oz.
CANS

COUPOI\i
.
-

W/C

Limi·t 1 Per Customer
GoDd Only at Powell's
Offer Expires July 29, 1978

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires
29, 1978

~~;~~;;;!~!

..

•

•

�•
I

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Weclpeoday, July :1.8, 1978

Meigs

Diana Eberts conducts 4-H interviews Property
•

The annual 4-H food interviews, conducted by Meigs
Ceunty Home Economics Extension Agent Diana Eoorts,
were held July 21 iu lh_e_Meigs

Hig h School gymnasiUm from
9 a .m .noon .

inducting a measuring
demonstration, evaluations
In addition to the adual in- of each others foods, table
terviews 4-H'ers participated settings and menus, a guessin a v8riely of othe r activities ing game of all white ingredients from the kitchen and
word find puzzles.
Participants were divided
,. into five groups for these ac- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - tivilies and led in the fun by
Jean Spencer. Pansy Jorda~.
Becky Cotterill, Diane Smith
and Mandie Rose. Assisting
the group leaders were some
Polly Gramer
of the older 4-H member,s including Kathy Parker, Mary
Culwell, Paula Hysell, Tamhave a fine ball that children mie Starcher, Raeleen
Be' cautious
can throw indoors without Oliver, Patty Parker, Patty
with suede
fear of breaking the lamps. Dyer, and Opal Dyer.
•
Al,so, I cut plastic bags into
A grand and reserve chamEAR POLLY - 1 have a
on~-inch strips and Crochet
pion winner was selected
sy 11\etic suede suit a nd after thevintu very pretty, durable from each project. Winners
rt urning: fromdinner at a flour mttls. Granny squares were : Carla Rife, G.C. and
rl'&lt;ll&lt;lumnt found I had sat on are also good for this.
Anita Smith, R.C., F,oods to
s&lt;lne wax thai hi!CI dripped
For ea rnping or outdoor use Take and Share; Kim Eblin,
frOm a ca ndle. I scraped the I put pillows in plastic !awl- G.C. and Barbara Chapbil pieces off but how can I dry bags and then cover with pelear, R.C., Tricks for
r~ove the remaining stains 1 a zippered pillow case. The
Treats ; Denise Stegall, G.C.
- t&gt;&lt;JROTHY
pillows stay fresh and dry . and Patty Parker, R.C., Do
. 1JEAR DOROTHY - I think The zipper is to keep the
)'tiJ should take your suit loa children away from the
.cl fdner who specializes Ill plastie bags. Colorful wash
su.e de. Anything stro ng doths sewn to~::ethe r with fr- the new container and it has
t:! !Ztugh tu reJJ W\ l' the stains inge on them make pretty proven to be l::l real time
rnay lakt~ the ftnish a long pillows that ci::ln Hlsu be incx-· saver. - D.E.
Polly will send you one of
with it -POLLY
· pensive gifts.
her
s igned ·thank-you
DEAR POI.!. Y - I spr-inkle
I cover m y old turn
newspaper
coupon clippers if
a utomatic dishwHshn soa p in blankel' with squares of leftscorched put:;, pcm.s ur gla.s::; over material that I have

Your Thing With Foods;
Brenda Chappelear, G.C.,
Outdoor Cookery I; Angie Spent'l!r, G.C. and Tammy
Pitzer , R .C ., Outdoor
Cookery II; Beth Ritchie,
G.C. and Barbara Grueser,
R.C., Quick Meals; Kim Bir-'
chfield, G.C. in Tasty Meals ;
Lea Ann Gaul, G.C. and Tammy Black, RC., All
American Foods; Raeleen
Oliver, G.C. and Tammie
Starcher, R.C., International
Foods; Cindy Pitzer. G.C.,
Teens Entertain; · Tammie
Starcher. G.C. and Tammy
Pitzer, R.C., Breads ; Kim
Schul, ·G .C. and Tammy
Calaway, R.C., Preserve and
Serve ) (Fruits); Terri
f'ullins, G.C. and Tammy
Pitzer, R.C., Preserve and
Serve II (Vegitables); Tammie Starcher,
G.C.
{Microwave Cookery) and
Paula Hysell, R.C. (Food
Preservation), Self Determined Foods.
From these winners the

POLLY"S POINTERS

'

~

Ua king di shes
overnig ht.
all tht.• scorch
\.\'it hout much
~et

and let them

sewn together to make inex-

The next day

pensive quilts that enhance
any roum. To gel the quilted
effect I draw lines diagonally
acroS.''i tlw blanket squares

will slip CJ way
serubbing . -

MRS. H.C.B.
DEAR POLLY - To keep
my dis h cloths looking clesu
fi"OJTI WHSh to W&lt;.IS:h' l keep (I

bar of soap by the sink .
Before using them to wash
the sink I rub the soap on
them a nd it works.- MARIE
DEAR POLLY- I save all
the string tha t comes
pc~c kages and use it

mi

to
crochet dura ble dish cloths . I
also crochet s1x srnall granny
sq uares and sew t l1em

together to fo rm a ball . fill
this with plastic bags a nd

a nd sew alcng these lines on

the se wing mac hine :
DIANE
DEAR POLLY - I have
fo und

a

W.i:IY

to end the

searching for tha t certain
recipe using a special product. mix or ingredient that I
might not otherwise buy, Instead of putting the recipe in
one of rn}' many t•ookbooks or
fi les I now (&lt;Jpe it to the
special prod uct used in the
recipe . When replacing the
product I !ape the . recipe to

with

(,.om DuPont
o. ••·llery gallon of LUCITE you buy!
Sale pr ices m effect Ju lv 22 1hru Aug.

~-·

~­
:~

:§:
~;

Sf

•

Economics Extension Agent

Poole family makes visit
Mrs. Joseph R. (Martha)
Poole and son, Will, Conroe,
Tex., visited ber parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wilber Parker, July
llf-20.
They came especially .to
visit Martha's grandmother,
Mrs. Florence Michael, who
is 92 and in. poor health .' They
also visited Mrs. Janice
Kestner, Mr. arid Mrs. Arthur
Atherton , Mrs . Emma
Findling, Mr . and Mrs .
Garland Caldwell, and Mr.
and MrS. Howard Parker.

she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve, or Problem
in her column. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of
this newspaper.

They also attended the
meeting of the United
Methodist Women at the
home of Mrs . Janice Pullins,
On Sunday, July 16, a
family basket dinner was

held in their honor at the
Wilber Parker home. At·
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Parker, Bobby and
Kelli, Marietta; Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker, Homer
Parker, Mr . and Mrs.
Howard Parker, April and
Aaron, and Mr. and Mrs.
James Carpenter and Jay, all
of Meigs County. Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Parker were
afternoon callers.
other callers in the Parker
home during the P.ooles' stay

were

Barbara

Mantel,

Athens, who was a dinner
Thursday;
Mrs .
guest
Carolylf Smith, Sherri and
Michael and Valerie Baker,
and Mrs. Garland Caldwell.

Chair caning now offered

Helen Help

Us ••

·--·

judges seleded seven state in Lawrence County; Bettie
fair participants to represent Clark, Home Economics ExMeigs County at the Ohio tension Agent in Gallia CounState Fair. These delegates ty ; Jennifer Sheets, Meigs
will be announced on Junior County homemaker and
•' air Night at the Meigs Coun- fonner Home Economics Exty Fair, Wednesday, August tension Agent in Meigs Counl6Ht8p.m .
ty ; and Dale stall, Athens
Judges for the fuud inter- County homemaker and
views were Mary Ann Ater, fonner Home Economics Exhomerna:ker from Lawrence tension Agent in Vinton CounCounty ; Judy Burgess, Home ty .

By Helen Bonel

'CLOSET BABY' CAUSES TROUBLE
z:JEAR HELEN :
While my husband and I were separated for sever~! months,
he went with a woman in his office. She's a "closet baby"
- very immature- and her two children are incorrigible. Tom
says he could never care for them as they're so badly untrainedShe Daunted their relationship and I said nothing because it
wasn't my place, being separated.
Now we're back together, and she won't give up. She calls
our house using vulgar language , even knocks on my door saying'he's hers,
How do you discourage a persistent woman? Since they're
co-workers, it's touchy, so I don't complain to Tom . - P.R.
DEARP.:
·
1
Alert Tom to the situation and let him handle it. If the affair
is definitely -over, the woman should be told, never mind C&lt;&gt;worker friction . If il isn't, then you should be told- by him, not
her.
Honest talk may hurt, but more likely it will persuade Tom
to make a clean break with the " closet baby."- H. - - DEAR HELEN .
My friend and I, after a bea.utiful relationship, have d'ccided
fA&gt; live logetber. We're very happy about this and want to announce it to the world.
Would it be OK to throw a party celebrating our joy, before
or after we move in• We don't want gifts. -FAN
DEAR FAN:
A party celebrating happiness is OK any time, for any occasion. Enjoy! -H.
DEAR HELEN.
Though her acquaintances consider her " unnatural, " I applaud " Not Meant For It'' who faced the fact that she was not
the moU1er type and gave her children up lo foster homes . This
is far better than keeping, resenting and perhaps abusing
them .
But why foster homes• An adoptive' home would offer the
luds real security, much love, and possibly they could be
together .
As the mother of an adopted child , I know how difficult it is to
adopt. We had to wa1t three years, at the same time reading
daily about youngsters who were abandoned, abused , even
murdered .
May I' appeal to all those couples who consider leaving their
uffs pnng : If you don't want them, someone else does ! Relinquish rights so that they can find permanent homes in grateful
families. Give them up for adoption , rather than foster placement where they might be shunted around and never really
belong, all the while thinking their folks may someday take
theln " home." (It seldom happens 1 )
·
For Ihe sake of your children, lei go 1 - MEANT FOR IT

RIO GRANDE - The
seventh of nine craft
workshops held at the Bob
Evans Craft Bam, Route ·35,
west of Gallipolis, will begin
July 31 and --run through
August 4.
r
The course, chair caning,
will teach each student
basics , t echniques and
weaves of cha ir ca ning . Each
student will be required to
bring chairs, stools or frames
in any combination totaling
three. Time for the course
will be 9 till II :30 a .m. and l
till 4 p.m. Monday- thru
Thursday · The · Friday
session will meet from 9 til ill

a.m. Cost of the course is $36.
The five day workshop is
offered by Rio Grande
College and Community
Office
of
Continuing
Education
with
the
cooperation of Bob Evans
The school of homestead
living , as this group of nine
courses is known, will also
. offer pottery and blacksmithing at later times.
Registration may be made
by ca lling 614-245-5353.
Deadline is at the first sesson
on · Monday. Information on
food and lodging is available
upon request .

~ e

SAVE

WITH
LUCITEI

MASON, W. VA. .

\ l ure con trol

T

I

in -p lace ins ulation fo r
mo re space inside

DE:AR DR. BLAKER - My reading diet to help his in13-year-old son absolutely te!lectual development.
Last week I got so upset. I
loves to read science fiction . ·
In fact, he finishes at least finally started. returning the
books to the library without
,two books each week .
· I have never read those any explanation. Each time I
stories. But from what he found one lying around, it just
tells me, ' they are very · disappeared .
My son is mad, but f plan to
strange.
keep
this up until he gives in
Sometimes I wonder if they
starts
reading something
and
will bave a bad effect on his
·
'mind. Other'times I get mad else.
DEAR READER - You
because that far-out sluff
seems like such an escape have embarked on a
dangerous. ' unrealistic and
from the real world.
"far-out"plan .
First of all, your son's
behavior is not unusual. Most

---------t
t

I

Social
I Calendar
•
.
I
1

WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM Community meeting Wednesday
7:30p.m. at Leona Hensley's

pre-adolescents , c hoose

means of escape away from

him without explanation will
no doubt add fuel to the
smold ering rebellion of
adolescence that lies just art."und the l'orner.
Looking at science fit:lion

a

single category or series of
books lo read until they are
tot&lt;JIIy familiar with all the
possiple moves of the-' main
characters and all the variations of plot.
I remember reading every
book on the five library
shelves reserved for horse

more carefully might help
you see your son,s reading ·
choice

in

another,

more

favorable light.
Although some critics hold
science fiction in low regard
us ·a branch of literature, it
can be viewed as a kind of
sociology of tomorrow. Alvin
Tofner recommends science
fiction · as required reading

ploratiun of 'the jungle of
p o litical.
s uci a l ,
psychological and ethical
issues that will confront these
children as adults." We play
a cruel trick, on our children
by failing to help them local&lt;!
Utemselvcs in time. They arc
delu~ed
hi~ tury

in school with the
of the nati~~r1 and
world. And a few teachers offer them a slice of the present
by usin~ current events i:iS a
teaching mt'&lt;iiwn.
But that is where it stop;;.
There is no speculation about
the future. As a result,
s tudents are fo~used
backward instead of forward .
If we want to help our
. children adapt to the rapid
change ahead, lve would be
wise to end this distortion of
time. We must make them
sensitivu to the possibilities
and prubabi.Jities of the
future .
Whether you know it or not,
yuur sun is gctHng

lt

mania.ge vows Sunday , July
30 in- U1e Helen Mauch .
Galbreath Memorial Chapel
on the Ohio University Campus, Athens, at 2:30 in I he
afternoon . Ronald Laughery,
minister of the Belpre Church
of Christ, will offi ciate ahd
the gracious c ustom or open
church will be observed .
The bride will be attended
by her s iste r , Julie, as maid
of honor. Bridesmaids will be
her older sister' Jean r' rydJTIIHI , Buffalo Grove, II. : Patti
H_ewitt, Cincinnati; Don.na
Marks, Cleveland; and Nancy Hugus of Findlay.
Serving as best man will be
the groom's only brother .

If you are troubled by
write

for

,;Dr.

-.......

store.
MEIGS BAND Boosters
Wednesday in bandroom to
make plans for Fair booth.

a ll

of

Mayfield

stamped,
envelope .

io ned 1uch . And we "Ill alee_

the lime to make surt they

REALISTIC® "MINI" CAR
8·.TRACK STEREO PLAYER.

REG. s59,95

SALE s29.95

-

VISA"

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

•

CHARGE IT

se lf-addressed

992-3662
- ~ -·-

24HRS•
bce,t Closed Satlni•J Mid•iPt Til 9 All S.Ur
bcept Hillton &amp; White Sulph1r Spriqs

ldven..-.:1

1l.rM ,. fQ!II.cl Ia D. !udoly
UCt()l fl
~if~ noacl•ll tnll ICI .
(IJII 001 ol , , IK!v•IIMCI it~t~~ , ••nil ott.f VOU 'f'OUI dlOIQI ol I OOmiWU•bfc
ittm. wP1fn MoiaOII'. 1ef1KI1~ ll'le ume U\llfltl 01 I lllf\
check W'lloc:h M l P!lllle yOY 10 pu!ChiM ll'le .clv 1n1MO ,.,...
I I thladw«1.-l Jlfltll """'~ JOOIYII
E&amp;h ol , . _

............ tor .... WI NCh 1'\roget S tOlt ,

·,,-do

-·

TOTAl SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

REVIVAL now in progress
at Hobson Chureh of Christ in
Christion Union . The Rev.
George Jones, speaker. Keith
Eblin, pastor. 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
wllb Karen Moraz as
speaker.

SchoU

9-7 M/S 12-6 Sun.

O·P EN

CITY Shrinettes,
Thursday 7 p.m. home of
Cora and Shirley ·Beegle.
Picnic will Pe held .

titk e will be a c'Qm·
lm1able one.

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS P~

ALL KROGER STORES

TW~N

lit, so eve ry step you

Eugene Wickstrom , organist,

and Jim Bonkowski, vocalist.
The reception will be held
following the ceremony at the
Ohio University·Inn. ·

A
L
E

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

TWIN CITY Shrinettes
11Jursday at 7. p.m . .picnic at
home of Cora and Shirley
BP&lt;&gt;~Ie. Racine.

mad e lrom soh leather with a cosh·

Athens.
. A half hour of pre-nuptial ,
music will be presented by •

Village. Ringbearer• will be
the groom's nephew, Benji
DeJohn.
Lisa Huffman and Amy
Berkhimer will be the flower
girls and guests will be
r~g isterecl by Debbie Wilson .

5

iu rt1re of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 475, Radio City Station , New York, NY. !0019.
End~e 50 cents and a

his individual preference .

Blaker's Hotline on Shyness"

me rino, Ron Metrks, and Jim

Sasa k ,

.

very

special educCIUon in the in·~
teresl of his choice . Support
s hyness,

Waller Hensch. Ushers will
be Hick Belin, Chud Am-

THURSDAY

Roundabouts ar.r made the way your l eet are
made. They're rounded up lront lo j~ive
your toes plenty ol room . They 're

- ·-..............
'

EwrvtNna You Duf fll(r~ il r.:WWIIM&lt;I 101 VIMJ• 10'-'
...Wkticin ''VW~ of ,..nu Kh,,., II ~ " ' no!
.......... ,;roe~' will r~ VOVI ll«n ...,11'1 l l ' l e - br.nd
1 ~- t)j~ 01

,.,unci VOIII' P\#l'tfiMI DfOC:I,

CGFIWff I,._TMI UOOII CO. lftMI AINO PIICU
OOODIUNOA't JUlY II JMIUIATUID!Il'f JULY 2t, 1m•
I&amp;V. 111D01 I 'OMIIOY 1100111. WI .uiVI THI
110MT TO UMf1' OU.vmnD. JIOIIIIIOlD TO DULle.

FREE clothing day at
Salvation Army Thursday
from 10 a.m .- until noon. All
area residents in need of
clothing are welcome.

Fresh
Peaches ..............

TENTH aMtlal reunion of
Taylor-Harper famil.i es
Sunday at Forest Acres ParK,
Rutland. Basket dinner at l
p.m. Brfug own table service.
CHESTER high class of
1931 annual reunion at
Chesler Firehouse Sunday.
Basket dtnfler at 12 :30. All
teachers, members of the

French City

class,

2 lb. ROLL HAMBURGER ••••••••.•••••r.o~~ . $2.89

and

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••• ~.~-. '1.09

schoolmates

Bottom
Round Roast

KROGU

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk

WIENERS •••••••••••••••.•••••••••••~........ :•• ~~~~ •.89$

'le LB. Teen Queen

Charcoal

Fresh
Cauliflower ....

Springdale
Fruit .
c;.~.
Drinks ......... c...

12 oz. Package

SLICED INDIVIDUAL
CHEESE ... ,.......~-~.&lt;?: -~1.29

EMIIIS

I

welcome. Bring pictures of
families .
ANNUAL
MATLACK
Sunday
at Rising
reunion
Park, Lancaster. Basket
dinner at noon. All relatives
and friends are invited.

·aa

$

w~
U.S. GOV'T OIIADID CHOta.

····••·····••·······

1'11M CU1101111S

3 lb. bag

................. . . . ....,._ •• 11X1• ~· fH tiM

..... ,.., ..... ,... ........... c. . . .. w• .,.
--.........
Mill....,., .. ""............ .,..,..,,.....
...., .., ... .:,..... ...,. .tftce t.r c....,.. ...... We
-~

MARGARINE ..~~-~~~~~-s 2/89 LODI APPLES ............$1.29
4

....

wMI

.... :;::J •..,...... .,.., ,_...,.... .., '" et ....,
'

w..........

..,_,IMewuhnatt-1•,....,..,..~ .

Full Cut
Round
Steak .... .................. u.•

fill UOGII CO.

'

l'tNT IITUINAIU IOmts

e asy-open door
D Automaiic interi or light

0 Exterior safety s1gnallight
Model FU166

GREENE'S
SALES CENTER

ruCKER WILLIA!Wi

.

TURNS THREE Tuclter
WUiiama was
..... al 1111 his third btrlhday reftatly with a party
at 1111 home iD Rustic Hills.
He II &amp;be soa of Jack and
Jlld)' WDIIamo, S)'I'IICIIIf.
1'lleker wu preaenled two
iD the replica of a
..... Deere lndor and
.,...... Alia II!I'Val were
IMIDelaade lee cream,_lea
and XooJ.Aid. Atlendilll!
were 811111111 JWea Retub,

Twin Pak

New Haven W. Va .

FOAM PLANTERS ••••••••••••••••

ou ••••••

~~:.~.

..

Potato

1

Salad ...... ....... ......... '.....lb.

caa.

BOUNTY TOWELS •••••••••••••••••••••••••• ::k~~. 89'
'
·REG. KOOL-AID ••••••••••• ·•••••••••••••••••••.6/69'
1• oz. VanCamp
PORK &amp; BEANS •••••••• ~ •••••••••••••••••••• 2/694
9lf• inch Divided
10 oz . Folger•$

Regular o~, .
Diet Pepsi.. ..

.

1 Ol·

0 Magnetic door gas&gt;.e ts-

Special
Price ·

Q!j.'Ourse, I would also like

him to have a more varied

Pi aiiS have bt•en completed
fur the wedding of J a ne
Danclt Whil&lt;!head, daughter
of Mr . arid Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Rtoedsville, and
Edward Cullen Hensch II , sun
of M1·. and Mrs. Edward C.
Hensch of Ml!yfield -Village.
The couple will exchange

U1rough an imagincitive ex·

SUNDAY

01.

0 Lack with pop-oul key

$439.95

"' 'For out' practices

Wedding _plans set

He thinks these books are a
ntind-strelching fo rce that
can "lead young minds

vice·.

HOT
PACILILI ••••••••••••••• ~···················· 49e
18
THANK
YOU PUDDINGS •••••••••••••••••• ~=~. ·S3c
10112 oz.
OYSTER STEW ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~- 69'

[J ln fini te-posil ion tempera-

Pri~e

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

for all courses on the future .

hayride in the evening was

12 oz. Vlasic

Model FU188

Reg .

CHOICES

HUNTS MANWICH
•.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.65'
.

0 Woodgrain handle

PICKENS HARDWARE

stories. My best friend cons umed
Nanc y
Drew
mysteries fur a solid _year.
A!ld the boy who .Jived . next
dour finished 20 " Black John
of Half-A-Day Creek" books
during the swnmer bet ween
si ~th and seventh grade.
Although rather obsessive,
thai kind of mastery is
especially pleasureable . to
pre-adolescents who feel
threatened by many WJ·
predict&lt;Jble changes occurring around them and wittlin
· ""~'
lhelr own bodies.
For them, an escape into
reading is wekomed, valued
and gro·wth-promoling .
You may also want to consider another problem of your
plan. Taking your sun's

,15'12 01.

Westinghouse
18.0 Cu. Ft.
Upright Freezer with
~fety Signal Light
Model FU 188

u De frosl dra m

Buttersoft leather,,
and plenty of
toe-wiggling room.

·'

TV Dinners ...........:.........~~-~~. 69

0 Slim-Wall design - foa med -

July 22 &amp; Aug . 11

Katie Evener loSt the most ·
weekly weight. Theresa
Hawkins was the runnerup.

e,..The DaUy Sentllw!l, Mlddle[lllrt-Pomeroy, 0., Weqnesday. July 26, 1978

4

like ~hey

[J Easy-lo-clean interior,
baked ena mel eKterior

took in one new member 'and

Edwin Farley and so ns,

shelves

Du Pont 's $1.00 per gal. CASH iiACK
ap plies 10' all LUCITE gallons purchased between

The Monday Nlgh,t Conway
Class met and inducted eight
new members. Mrs. Ann
Wiles was appointed to the
Forever Slim Program and
Angela Payne lost the most
weekly weight. Dale Luster .
was runnerup. The Tuesday
night class accepted six new
members. Barbara Mallette
lost the most weekly weight
and Linda Wells and Betty
Ber~ley tied for runnerup.
The Wednesday night class

Complete Selection of School Shoes

Genheimer of Chester.
Rev. Steve Wilson attended
and all enjoyed a hymn sing.
Games were played, some
attended church services
held at Royal Oak Park. A

still builds them

Fo ur Fast-Freeze Shelves
[J Bulk package s1 orage
0 Full -w.idth , dee p doo r

HURRY!

CLASS GATHERS

Those attending were Mr.
and Mrs . Henry Henried of
Trenton, Michigan; David
Stewart and fa(nily of
Warren, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.

(J

SI.OOperyallonCASHBitCK
on other LUCITC Paints, too!

MEETING SLATED .
There will be 'a meeting for
aU prospective Meigs High
School Girls Volleyball
players,
grades
9-12 ,
Tuesday. August l at 7 p.m.
at the high school.

Roundabouts

While- ·

lUCIT~-

Arthur Spen~er, Margaret
Spenrer to Keith Weber,
Brenda· Weber, 1.083 acres,
Orange.
James J . Proffitt, Sheriff,
Bashan Div. Citizens Tele.
Co, etal to Charles Bi~ll. I
acre, Chester.
·
James J . Proffitt, Sheriff, .
Margaret Russell, etal to Dan
Cremeans, 5 acres, Rutland.
Wilinetta B. · LeiTheit to
Roger Eugene Leifheit\ .30
acre, Salisbury.
Wilinetta Leifheit to Roger
E . Leifheit, Lenora · F .
Leifheit, .71 acre, salisbury.
James Herbert Kauff,
Frances Kauff, Paul Kauff,
Guy Bing, Fre&lt;J$ Mae Bing,
Robert Searles, Pauline
Searles, William Capehart,
Helen Capehart to Hazel Jean
Kauff, II&gt; acres, (Lots 8-9),
salisbury - Rutland.
· Hazel Jeari Kaufl to
PAtricia Cleland, .Lo!.~ 8, 9,
Rathburn Add., Rutland.
·
Marlene Kay ·Hoffman to
Dena F . Hoffman, Parcels,
Rutland.
Larry W. Lavender, Edna
M. Lavender to Douglas
Baqrum, Cheryl Bartrum,
Lots 12 and, 13, Syracuse.
Dennis L. Roush, Ethel R.
Roush to Terry C. Proffitt,
Pamela 8. Proffitt, 8 acres,
Lebanon. ·

enjoyed.

Ronnie and Denny and
families, all of Newport ;
Mi chigan ; Mr . and Mrs.
Richard Plymale of Bucyrus,
Ohio and family , Mrs. Dale
sayre and family; Hilliard,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Sayre, Plain City, Ohio.
James Custer, Columbus;
Floyd
Joseph,
South
Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs.
William Harris arid family.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Brown
and family ; Mr. 'and Mrs .
Terry Smith and · Son, Willis
Joseph, all of Racine; Joseph
Custer, Melinda Custer and
Pat Graig, all of Middleport ;
Jerry Custer and family,
Esther Joseph of Minersville;
' DEAR MFI:
Marie Amberger, Syracuse,
Yes, natural parents who give up their children to foster and the host and hostess, Mr.
homes should be more honest with themselves . Letting go and Mrs. Delton Fowler.
comp letely is a wrench- moreover, society places stigma on
married or formerly married people who do- but they must
consider their youngsters' welfare. Adoptive homes provide
A lovely dinner was served
real security. Foster homes keep kids in limbo.
and joinin~ them for dinner
Better to cut ties clean than leave them hanging on a skimpy were their aunt and unc1e,
. hope that will NObably never materialize. - H.
Mr. and Mrs. George

WHITE

.

Transfers

Fanns, Inc.

joseph reunion held
The children, grandchilden
and great-grandc~ildren of
the late Clara and David
Joseph of Minersville; held a
reunion hosted at the home of
Mr .. and Mrs. Delton Fowler
of Racine.

I

SHOWER HELD
A bridal shower honoring
Pam Barber was held at the
horne of Oretha Swider,
Racine, recently. Attending
were Doris Miller, Sandy
Carey, Patty Might, Denise
Wolfe, Christine Martin, Iris
Buchanan, Marie Pickens,
Edna Pickens, Peggy Caton,
and Betty Williams . Sending
gifts were . Emma Lyons,
Ollie Mae Cozart, and Sue lmlioden.

~untryauba

CaniNcl

.. ew-e ....

!Iuter; alii 1111 lamUy,
Mr. ..d Mrs. Jeek
11'1Waw, Joe AM and
~ U!llllle te 1Uead but .

Polar Pak v.-ew
Ice Mlk ..... a...

Vlace

Mixed
FryerParts ............. ,

'

II Jlllft...,Mr.and

Mre.

IUCED
FlU

HOUY PAUII, U.I.~.A.I*''ICll

lk• 1 eer·• Tlleiler'• 1rand·
puall, Jolla P. Wllllaml
Girlie!

INSTANT COFFEE.........................1::• . _s3.79

·•·

Ha111s ... :........ ;.c.

Terri IIIII CroekeH; Keany
aad Jeule Buckley, Tam·
ml aDd Tyson; Belly

sse

Chopped

Kibbee,

Knlletl .... ~I

'I

'

.

Ham

99

"

Dfl
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

..

�,
10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u., Wednesday, July 26, 1978

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-PQmeroy, o., Wednesday , July 26, 1978 ·

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
•

- - -- - - - --·

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wu n.ls ur Untkr
Cil ~h

! day
2Uayll

. 1.00

Jt.l.a)'ll

1.80
J.OO

I."

6Uay~t

-

l ' llal"j!l'

1.25
1.90
t .25

:u s

Ea d1 wurd u\"t'r lht• rnmu nw11 15
1rwrds I.'&gt; ~ t..:nll! pt•r wua·tJ 1W1· day

Ad~ t'\Jnll Ul~ otht&gt;r th&lt;!n l"UilSo.&gt;t·ulln•
dltys will ~ ch il rg~ at tht· I J&lt;1 }
ral ~

In nwmo r ~· , C&lt;trd of Thanlo; and
OIJ I IUlll" ~ 1i Ct'IIL~ pt.'r 1\;unt , $;tilt)
nunun wn . ra.~h m advant't'

Mulnk Humt•.sa lt'.!i illld \"t~ rtl1".&lt;1 ! t·.~
art:' &lt;~en•plt•ll only wat h n t:sh w1\h
un.ler . !:!5 t~ nl ~·har ~t' ful' ;u.b earn ·
1 1.: Bvl( NLtmbt-r In &lt;:a rt' uf Tlw St•it·
lind
Tht' ?ubhsht•r rl'£t' F\' t' ~ lht· n .dlt

8 &amp; S MOBILE HO MES. Pt. Plea
son t. W Vo besode He-c k s
1973 Broadm ore 14 )I b4 2
bedroom
)973 Do ri an 14 )( 60 2 bedroo m
1972 Vic tonon 14 )( 67 3 bedr oom.
2 both
•
1t;;'71 Co11en h y 12 JC 65 3 bedroom
19tl9 Sto tesrnon I'} K bO 2
bed r OO ill .
CO AL. LIM ES TO NE . sand. g ro\Je l ~
ca k:ium chlor1de. fertil izer. dog
food , ond oil type$ ol salt . EJ(
ce iSior Sol! Work !&gt; , Inc .. E. M ai n
Sl .. Pomero y. 992·38q I .
SENSI·MA TI C ac co unt ing m achine .. Pho ne
992 2 156 The Do il y Sent inel .·
111 Cour T Str ee t
Pomeroy
O hi o .

BURR O UG H S

USED TRA CTORS
MF !35 Doe sel
MF230 Oresel
MFI SO Die sel Mf235 Diesel

tv t'1.h t ur rt'Jt'l1 a n ~ · ad:. tlt't'lllt'\l ,IIJJt.'t'lwnal. The Pubhs lwr " "Ill nul bo·

n•sptlr\Stblt' !or llltrn' than ur1e u1rnr·
l"r'\:t IIISt'rlt ull

Phullt' 99'!·2156

NOTICE

MF 165 Dresel

Mf 1135

heat er
NEW &amp; USEO IMPU:MENTS
M F9 Sole1 M F10 Boler Mf 120
Boler · Matthews Rolory Scy the
MF 680 Semr moun ted 6 .bot
Tom Pl ow
MF570 12 Oi sc ·
Mf '}OO] Row Chopp er MF39 2
Row Plant ers
Mechonicol

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
MuT1d&lt;w

~UOIIllllSiJ(iJ.rd i:l~
Tlw~J •n

lhru Fmi&lt;~v
~

lht'

da.~

P.M .
Ol'fure pullh l"&lt;.i lll•lt

Suuda;
~ P M
1\ r u..l ;:~y

ilflt' rn uun

IF VOU ha11 e o ser vice to off er .
won! lo buy or sell so meth1 ng
oe look ir1g for wor k
or
whate ver . . you fl get res ull s
las1er w ith o Sent1n el Wont Ad .
Coli 992-21 56.
TWO FAM !l Y Yard So le . July 18 &amp;
29
10-5.
Gd bert
Hort
residen ce Oak Cr ove Rd .,
Roc ine . Lamps . to ys. bo r , live
plants. k nrck. -knock s. Ro1n
can cels,
YARD SALE . Tues. thr ough Fr i . till
dodo; Lot!&gt; of good cl o thing.
toys , ie w ehy some new i tems.
On Un ion A ve nue. cl ose to Rt .
7
---~- . ·-

FIVE FAMILY Yard So le. Wolf e
Pen
Rd
Ch a rles
K1ng
residen ce . July 26-27. Follo w
sogn '&gt; . Fu rnrlure . clothrng . mr sc
9-9.
YARD SALE . July 26 27 28 3
fa mil y. 1Oom To 5pm . Neh;on
Rood . Rut land. Ohoo Look for
si g n~_:_E i o th es cu rta ins etc.
BACK YARD Sole Th urs Fn and
Sat . 4l 7 l incoln St .. Middleport.
- --THREE FAM ILY Yard Sole I mrl e
N . of Tupper ~ Piains. Fr 1 ond
Sot 8om til dork l lom 1ly s • H~
ten t. we1ght ld ti ng ~ et . rnon'
good jte m s . Wor ch for signs .

YARD

Mf285 D iese l
0 1esel Cob o tr &amp;

Transp l an te r·

SHINN S TRA CTOR S AL~ S
Ph one 458 ltl30
leon VI/ Vo .

S2c00.
FRIGID AIRE EU:CTRIC range 525.
Moyt og pon able dryer Harves t
Gold eJ.ce llen l con dit ion $100
Kodak cam era . Th e Handle
new S20 99 2 2986
BA SS BOA 1 15 al uminum l owe
l 1ne 20 h.p M ere Sti ck .steer
rn g .~ fl ec tn c s1or1 Eag le tr olling
rn otor Coli q85-4339
CABB AGE CORN poto t oc~ holf
runner beon) (pock your ow n).
S4 bu C W Prot hll For m
Por !la nd , Olr1 o
1977 CHE VV VAN . A.C 9&lt;1 2 '}Qtlb
R O AN O K~

HA Y bo ler New Ideo
ho y ra ke
Need s rcpo•r .
9119-1273

FOUR NEW 15 inch wh 1te spok e
w hee ls lor Dodge or Ply mou th .
$1 00 Ph one q92 0288
1970 ( HI: VROLI:.I NOIJ A wrth 350
h1gh pe rformance . 1q74 Harley
Do 11 •d son
3 50
S700
tl 14 6b7 b48q 0~ 6 14 b67·3305 .

A

N

N

N

SPECIAL
LONG BOTTOM

RUTLAND -

G

TOAMl OES. Pr ck yo ur own Br
1ng own con l amer . Ma rshQII
Rqush Eos t l elort 247 -3752
l"WO 75 walt Real istiC. No11(J 1:1
s pe ak e r ~
Slt!O. 55 wall
Reah !&gt; !ic Novo 7 B speoker!&gt;
SlJO. Less thon o ye ar old . Coli
tl1.4 378 :0:?83 aft er 5

extra if needed . Excludes
front -wheel drive cars.

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

Large

bedr o om fr a me
home Ha s ba th , ci t y
w ater , natural gas.
f i r e pla ce
in
th e
l iv ing , 2 car garage
and ex t ra level lot .
J

SZX~

On ly $14,000 .
N-EW LI STING .,Ches t e r

SPECIA~

PRICE

ar ea .
3
hom e wi lh
cen l ral hea t and ai( ,
full ba sem en I, a nd
ru ( al w at er . 2 car
garag e and oTh er
ou t b uilding S.
4. 14
acres wi th pond . Ha s
a fra iler hook -up and
tree
ho u se . Ju st

Call now

Pomeroy 992 -2181

l.Os!aud:Fouruf
LOS T
FEMAL E sho rtha ired
beagle. Weor ing o brown co l·
lor . An swers to l ucy, l os t in the
Rut land , Leading Creek or ca.
Phone 747·'224q _

ffi.al Estate lor Sa).,
HOU SE A.NO LOT in Dan vill e. Pric ·
ed for qui ck sol e ' 7 4 ~ · 2068
15 A. CRES. Coli Phi li p We 11 y .
98 5 4255
l oc ated on Sand
R1dge Rood in Ches ter Twp

Bu i ldi n g lo t s w it h
wa ter. a nd
ele £1r ic
ava ilable .

sewer ,

'
COUNTRY

HOME

-

THREE
lH OROO M
h o u!le
p loyroorn , uti lity room Ioy er .
l&lt;:l rge k 1tchen ond li11mg roo m
m os tly car peted w1 th frr epl oc e
on '1 acre of land near town.
coil
For more mf&lt;:lrrn ation
9 9'} 3973

3 nice

bedr ooms . st.ep save r
kitc hen , d ining roo m .
fa mi l y roo m wi th
wo o d
burni ng
fir ep lace . larg e sun
deck . I ron ! por ch and
lar ge wooded l o t .
60's .
31&lt; CONDOR ST . - 3
b ed roo m s ,
b ath ,
na tura l gas furna ce ,
ga r den
space,
·2
ou lb uild 1n g s
a nd
room for ofl str ee t
parki ng . Want $9 , 500.
we - ha -ve
over

HI

YAR D SAL E Fndoy at Old Leta rt
F";rry lond ong 10 arTl 2 famr ly
FOUR FAMi l V Yord Sole Mos es
Normor"l res tdence lhu rs Fr t
ond Sot
Hysell Run Rd
9922518
TWO FAM !LY Yard Sol e . 3rd .St ..
Roetne n e~t to loundr omot
New ond used •ler'ns . Wed .
lhurs ond Fn
FLEA MARKH Sbl
Ju ly 29 .
Sll 174 neor Salem Cem er
where Jarr ell Grocer y used to
be Sta r ts Qom
YAR D SAl t Fr, ond Sot Jul y 28 th
and ;x? th form q 10 dorlo. 3 m1lcs
~ou l h ol M•ddlep or t ne ,.t to Be t
ty s Carryou l 992 ·2909

.
HOOF HOLLOW

H o r ~e!&gt; Buy sell
tr ode or tra rn Ne ... and uS&gt;ed
saddle~ Ruth R~~ ve!&gt; A!bony
1 0 1 ~ ) b9B 3290

RI SING 5 TAR K ~nn e l Boord•ng
Indoor and outdoor runs
Groolll lng all breeds (leon
sonrtory l a cdr t1e~
C he ~ h1 1 e
Phone ~ b1 4 ) 307 · 0 2~2

•289.95

Let us test your waTer Free

Pomeroy Landmark
1\?.,••,'.!_ack W .. Ca rsey , Mgr.

- ·
~

G. Bruce Teaford
He len l. Teaford
Sue P. ~urphy

NEED SOMEO NE ro br u'&gt; h hog hd
ly pos t ure Reo son oble rote .
985 4244 mornmg or ev en1ng

forSare

HAND CON TROL 70 ~peer:!
Pflueger tr a!l 1ng motor SSS
99'} .3717
TRA CTOR FARM Al l Super C anrl
equ•pment 2t. 7 2142
HITC H AND o;. woy bar for tr avel
trorler Paul ~ Vol I W o o c he~l"r
St Syr ocuse Oh10 bel ow Hub
bord s Green house
GRH N BEA NS Col! 949 147?
CA NNI NG TOM A TOtS H(J"Y H.ll
Form letart Fa ll~ Oh•o

'r

::io!nic"" Oft.,nd

POMEROY
LANDMARK
For All Your
GFTV.'s&amp;
Holp01111 Appl.

Sal(' Prtcf's
Jilek W C.Hsey,
Mqr
PhOtl(' 997 2181
WI: WILL haul you r trash odd!&gt; ond
en d s
Ph on e
Haymon s
9Q2 634!l

1

1

608 E .

0.

NEW LISTING Newer
r anch type , 5 bdr n'"ts .• cloSe
tn Appx
1 10 ac r es. '1
stor age bldgs ., in good ·
condition . l arg e l iv i n g
r oom equi pp ed built i n
k itchen and the ki ds go to
Pomeroy elem Loo k s good

tor· \3 1,000 00.
NEW LISTING -

SUPER SPORl 550 ~on da Fmodel, 4 cyhnde r s bogs ond
fernn gs, 2 new trres and
tuneup
ne w
bo tt er v
30. 773 ·5957

our
and
and

ESKA 7 hp oyt boor d mot or . Seo
I&lt; •ng 7 ',, hp. outboard motor
less !han 1 yeor old See K1ng
olummum /lo t bo tt om boa!
2.. 7·2.. 11

Pomer~ Landmark
~ack W. Carsey, Mgr.
+.MMMn ·

MINI FARM .• 7' 1 well fenced Ocres
cl9s e to town ond sc hools.
Lorge 2 story hous e has r"o om
for lar ge family with 5 or 6
bedroom s. r ec room, dining
r oom. living room ond country
ktl chen . Big barn ond oth er out·
bui lding!&gt; . Fruit tree!&gt; . berr ies
and 2 ga rd ens. Pr ivate pav ed
rood to pr operly . and city
Fi11e. ·mmute from
w o ter
Ma son , WV . Showri by appl .
only . :J04 ·773 -553S.

on Lincoln Hill w1 th
w at er and sewage Mak e on of·
f er
Ph one 99/ 6333 or
991. 5739

n ice 197 ~ mo bi le hom e in
e;oo:ccl1ent con d i t ion on a
bea utiful I acr e fen ced lot
S to rage bl dg . . c'a rp ort.
t ul l y
f u r nis h ed
and
eq ut pped Close to m ines .
Al l lor SI6 , SOO.OO .
6 AC R E S - In Syra cu se ,
really c lea n . 3 bdrm . one
f l oor pla n home , la r ge
k1 tchen . base m ent . 2 car
garage .
f r ont
por c h
overloQkS t he be a u t i ful
Oh 1o ~alu e is $32 .000 .00.

.,.
older home, J
bedrooms , fam i ly rOom
with fireplace, living room ,
dining room , carpeted

2 story

kitchen

Completely eq u ipped ,
laundry room witM washer
and
dryer ,
2
baths ,
outbuilding with electric
for storage, alum . sidinQ ,
storm windows, new roof,
on double lot. Asking
$35,000 . &lt;::M-ner" will "take
mobile nome as down
paymen t.
Prefer
3
bedroom.
2
Bedroom
ca r
modern
kitchen
dishwasher.
Middleport
Large
lot , cori"'lple1ely remodeled ,
garage .
cellar,
outbuildings, grape arbor .

No. 216. S27,500.
804W. Main
Pllmeroy
m-2291 1
After Hours

eaum.ml
CONTACT :
Lois Paute'f'

Branch

CALL JIMMY DE EM, Associate, 949-2388

EASTERN SC HOOL DIST .
- N tce new 3 bdr m . r an ch.
1 acre . ga r ag e . m an y
fea t ures . Pr1ced ri g h t.

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
~

l ... , 1() 11

GALLIA COUNTY'S LARGEST
REAL ESTATE AGENCY
CALL 446-3643

$?0,000.00
FAIR MARKET VALUE is re f lec; ted w ith this 2
br d m . home 1n good neigh
borh oO d and goo d con
d i l 1on New carpeling , et c.

On Iy $11 ,000.00
LOW . DOWN PAY -

Phone 992 -2181

•

o

r ooms . 3 bdrm s., \1 ~ ba ths,
se parat e uti li t y . sl orm s. ,
Aids
w a lk to sc ho o l.

Ful l

BEFORE YOU BUY OR
SELL
YOUR
BEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN . APPRAISAL BY A
QUALIFIED
APPRAISER . IF WE CAN
BE OF ANY HELP ,
PLEASE CALL.
'
HENR Y E . CLELAND
R EAL TOR
HENI!Y E . CLELAND,
JR .

IH

SR . CERTIFIED
APPRAISER
992· 21YSY9, ,9 92·2H8
.
19 1_ _ _ • [ "'.!J..OII.
2· c_•...:._
t...._ _...:._

ReSidenti•l and commer·
cial . C•ll for estimate. 2•
Hour Service. · Any day,
anvtime.
Phone 985-~IQ'

j~*~

Jack Ginter 915·3806

SMITH n~:,,..,
MOTORS, INC.

QUICK 5ALE NEEDED -

68 acres of good botlom ,

pas tur e &amp; woods on Van Za ndf Road . Th e owner Is no
longer aol e to t ak e c ar e ot th is lovely p late so th ey
mu51 se ll now . A tt rac t ive re modeled 10 room f arm
nom e w i th n tce sized r oom s, 11'' ba;h s,- 4 bedrooms &amp;
ca rpet th roughout . R ur al &amp; w ell wa ter plus seve ra l olct.
ou1 bui!d ings . Pr iced to se ll at 546,900.

OWNER DESIRES IMMEDIATE SALE - The owner
of I his home in Pom er oy is le.w ing 111e ar ea and needs
t o~e l l now . A 11 ~s to r y nom e w i th 4 bedrooms in cluding
a spacious mas t er b edroom , IO'W e lv ki t ch en w i th aft the
aPpli a nces. large l i ving roorrt . wastier &amp; dryer plus
pa1io &amp; 6 ac r es of l&lt;tnd and if's onlyh 1 mite froM
dow nt own . S27 .soo.

148 ACRE FARM - UNUSUALLY GOOD BUY - The
own er's age pr events her from con t inuing 10 operate
the farm a nd she desir es an Immed ia te sale . 50 to 60
acres till a bl e wi 1h som e very good c r eek bottom and
hill top l and , The ba lance in pasture &amp; woods. The six.
r oom home is good (does need some mode rn i zation),
largo el l I Pur pose barn and se v eraf .good ou tbuild ings .
M 1ncr . -,1s go wt fh It and It 's IOC4t fed in an area where
gas. oil &amp; CO il I have oeen touhd to ·be plentif ul. Near
Rutland . S60 's .

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

· Jack's Septic
Tank Service

""112-2174

'J

10 ~ 3o ~ c

Mounted on new wheels,
ready to go. no to S35
complete.

•

Truck owners,

don't miss this dtol. We sell

at discount prices

every·

cloy . Stop in at

soffit, Room Additions
&amp; A· Frame Homes
Fo"r ·Free Estimates

Cat\
992-6323 ot 992-6011
6-19-1 mo. pd .

GARAGE .
lf• mile oil Rt. 7 by-pass

on

St . Rt. 124 toward Rutland ,
Aut,.&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

Ph. 992-2148

Storm Windows
Ca II Professiona I
Builders

Bissell Siding Co.
General eo.._tr•ctors

~~~~~'W~- ~
HOMES!TES fo r sole , I oue ond
up . MiddleporT . ncar Rutland .
Coli 99'2 -748 1.
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 baths .
oil e!ec ., 1 oc re, MiddleporT .
close to Rutland . Phon e qq'} .
7481 .

HOBSIEIIER

HOWERY AND
MARTIN
h ·
ca votmg. septic sys tems ,
dozer . backhOe . dump !ruck .
l i m e~ t one ,
gro11el . blacktop
pavi ng Rt. 143. Ph one 1 (b 14 )
PUlLINS EXCA VA TING Complete
Ser ll r(e . Phon e 997 ·2478

GeorgeS . HobsteHer Jr .
Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio

Pllone 992-6333
Office Hrs.
9a . m .• sp .m .

Closed Thursdays &amp;
Saturday at noon
Your Full Time
Real Estate Broker

$25,000.00.
Rullond - 3 bedroom total
electric
home ,
full
base ment and attached
garage .
Located
in
Hutchison Sub-division .
Racine 1971 fleetwood
mobile home, 2 bedrooms,
carport
and
storage

build ing . On lot 145' x 126' .
Excellent buy at $16,000.00.
Spacious
Split
level
Colon ia l loCated in Riggs
Crest Manor . Has many
lUxuries too numerous to

mention . Call today

for

more info .
$60' 000.()().

for

Selling

PUDDLE POOLS . All sizes ond
~ h op_e s . Sw im pools . '} yeors
e)lpcrien ce . free e~timo te s .
o n ~th1ng
you
need
for
undergr ound swim paofs . New
chem 1cal and supply !&gt;l o re .
A l bany .
O h i o . P h one
tl14 b98 ·b555 . ( After 6 pm .
b 14-089 ·525 1 John Jeffers or
b8'1 ·51b5 Bill G illette, ) We ore
NOT oil wet on PRICES .

--

New listing Nice big
older home with wood
floors and beautiful trim . 3
bedrooms, full basement
and attic. Home has new
roof and furnace, l 1! 2 baths ,
sitting and dining room and
much more . Located on
Sou t h J rd Avenue in
Midd le por t. Se ll i ng for

Middleport - 7 rooms and
bath, 4 bedrooms, nice size
k ltcnen and living room·.
Sit uated on l 1t1 acres on

Happy
Hollow
Road .
Ask ing price S32.000 .00.

home.

Wil l do rool mg .· cons truc tion ,
plumbi ng on d heat ing . No job
too lo1g e or too srnoll. Phone
742 -2348

c9B 1331

REALTY .

Rutland home, bath,
dining area .
Main Street.
could make

EXCAVATING , dozer . backhoe.
and ditch er . Cho rl es R. Hal·
l 1e ld . ,Bac k Hoe Service ,
Rut land , Ohto . Phon e 74 "2 -2008 .

-~--

NEIGL ER BUILDING Supply for
· bu ilding houses , tepoir wor k
and cabinets. Cdtt Guy H.
Neigler . 9.. 9-2508 ofter SE.:__
R~EVES

TRA DING Post. Pagevi lle .
Groc eries , dry goods , hord·
wore. teed , tack shop. Special

25 lb. ol d'og food . SJ_:B.B:_~ __

1'}

)(: 70 COMPLEH fur nished
Fleetwood Trailer w llh 24ft . ex panda . living room . Coli 12 ~ p_
m_._
J_
0 4 · 77 3 - 5982 . _ _ __
MOBILE HOME . Marie tte 1957, 2
bedroom . goochondition . 1900
( heslnut St ., Gallipolis , O hio .

'iWOLUt.JTARILVo TITLIS'S
au11 HAND FLiES UPWARD
TO WARD OFF THE RED·
HOT 9ADGIH ~
'

Selling

prIce

I JONEV .,

Lov lr.g Free I 0.

12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; America Alive! 15
Y.oung &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13;
Watch Your Mou t h 33 .
12 : 3~Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun A; Sellrch for

BORN LOSER

Tomorrow 8.10; Romagnolls' Table 33.
I :oo-For Ri cher . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; ·the Restless 10; Not For Women
On l y 15; Soundstage JJ .l : Jo-Oays of Our Lives

3,4, 15; As The World Turns 8, 10; 2:oo-one Life to
Li ve 6, 13 ; In Performance at Wolf Trap

Now arrang·e· the circled letters to

IOfm the surprise answer, as suggested by the above Cartoon .

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

'

WH¥ GEl 50 EXCITED
ABOUT O LD PRISSY

Yes 1erday 's

Hfll O! JANE~
WHAT ? THE t!Bf?AR'f ;:t
l"EY'Rf MAI?&lt;H!NG ·· ·.
To BURN lHE

PUTSCH AND HER
C5lUSADE?

Norwood, N.J. 07~. toclude your name, address, zip code •nd make

~

--

··"-- -

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE A LITTU
.&amp;

.,....,....._

L..::J.lll.J:..LC::~~~~:::::::._

SAVE ALOT
Expert installation .

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

'4• 88

___~~,~-2,~·=--

GASOLINE ALI.E Y

All aorpet instolled will1
padding at no chorge .

Mind

You don't have t'
wreck th' whole
porch t ' qit at
th' p1pes, Rufus 1

LjOU

don't

brealt. t.h' sledqe'

sq, yd ,
&amp; up

Ameri ca 20,33 .
9: Do-James al 15 3.4 , 15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Ce lebr ity
Concerls 8; World 20.33 ; Hawa ii F i ve -0 10.
'-9 : 3D-Movie

Yesterday'• Alllwer

II

Board~r 1

15 Bacterwl&lt;&gt;gist's wire
18 IIL'Itance
21 Shape
22 Clinging
fish
Z3 Usually
:!4 Traffic

sound

you can comt in
and SM what you're gening

Fully
FRANK &amp; ERNIE

I

RUG REMNANTS

J

Up

Cail742' 2211
TALK TO
·Wendell or Horb !irate
or Gene Smith

ae '-""e

~'L&amp;..
fo~
~ QINI\IIfl
~
,SI!!M ~ TD HAVE

S...APL.iD MY~~J.r
~~~~~::::~ To Mf DeSIC.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

partments
2S Wallace
or Noah
29 Spiny
shrub
30 Gennan city
3S Sflooze
36 Parliament,
e.g.: abbr.

.

50 M//CH N:JWA'DAI S.'
UIBOR UTI !.!JIJ:'~ 1
R'IW W\TJ::~IA LS .. .

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT

Trump coup made in slam

EAST
• 65
• K 10 5 2

used f or t he th r ee L 's. X f o r t he 1wo o·s. etc. Sing l e l c u er s.
.a·postrophes , th e lcn g1h and fo r m at i o n 1of thl' w or ds ar c al l
hint s. Each rl ay lh r code !P tt cr s ar e cli fT t.· r ~ n t.

J T U

KM

Pa ss
2•
:l t

5t

6+
PH S.s

PRSS

commonplace

CP

JQAYJUX

about

seven-time national champion Peter Wei chsel, demonOYJA stra ted the te nder touc h a n
expert. can e x:e rt t o bring
0 Y J A home a slatn contract, e ve n
CEAYY

t he same leng th as his

oppo-

nent. !\t trick four We 1Chsel
ruff ed a low c lub in his hand .

At t ric k five he led a s pade to
th e ace, then he cashed the

ace of clubs 1pitching a
diamond 1, the king of clubs
I pitc hing a nothe r diamond I
a nd ruffed a nother club .
He now played a spa de tb
the kin g and, when it won, he
w as c ol d for

By Os ,.·ald Ja coby
and Alan Sontag
The bidding was s traigh t·
forward . That was all that

was

declarer to sh o rteri

himself in trllOlp to at least

this hand, however . South,

C E..P M Y ... ·S E P

JAY

li•

hearts, which no longe r
could be fine ssed, "-'Ould be
the setting t ri ck. But declarer had other plans.
sar y fo r

.

Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

jack and .queen and ruffed
by th e three . Eas t now
thought his protected 10 of

To brin g a bout a successful trump coup , it is neces-

Op e ning le ad : • K

I. 0 N G t' E I. I. 0 W

Qne l etter simpl y stand s f or an o th e r I n thi $ samp le A is

QKOY

~·

I NT
5 NT

Pass
Pass

1\X\'DJ.BA!\XK

Q KO \',

I•

Pass

QPG\'

2

Vulne rable : North-South
Dealer : South
West North Eas t South
Pass
Pass

0 y J !\

• 95
• Q70
SOUTH
• I 2
• Q9 8 i 6 l
t A .I 10 :1 ~
~

won With the king

bY

+ A K 1118

...

e r ed h 1s trump with
dumm y's jac k which East

East retu r n ed a diamond
whie h wa s coVe r ed
the

t KQ 8 7 ~
• J965

DAILY CRYI'TO(!l) OTE - Here'" how to work it:

CP

BRIDGE

....

37 Church
settings
38 Different

•

'
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

• A J :1
• 0

34 Destroyed
36 Fat

EvER.YTY I"-'G Cc:;r:;

' 65

Street " 10; 12:01)-J anak i 33 .

NORTII
;. 2Jl. A
• A K J \0 7

(:RYI'TCJ&lt;IUHTES

WINNIE

4'

-

·Rullond

lO : QO-C iass of

11 J_o - Johnny Ca r son 3,-4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13 ;
Mash 8; ABC Ne ws 33; M ov ie "Green Dolphin

WEST
• Q 9 8 :\

is

6.1 3;

33.

2C Cargo com·

r-------------------------------------------------------------------,~Thwnb

Good Soloctfon Of

" Claudine "

3,4, 15; Barnaby Jone s 8, 10; Polark I I 33 ; News 20.
10 : 31)-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20 : 11 :co-News
3,4,6.8, 10, 13. 15: D ick Cavet t 20; Lil ias Yoga &amp; You

family
i6 - up
( hibemaw 1hr-+-1-+-27 Spoil
28 Slavery
31 .Hour : it.
32 Wapiti

Butt where

742-2211

player 's
I Group of
holding
plotters
9 English
2 Fragrance
composer
3 Having
F:lag down
troubles
Richness;
4 French
substance
!llllrshal
13 Shed
5 D&lt;tvoutness
II French
6 Moslem V.I .P .
friend
7 Almost
15 Grain
instantly
16 Old Calif.
a Cousin of
fort
a vicious
circle
17 It 's sometimes grand 10 Point of
19 Designate
view
20 Bridge
position
u Nursery
trio
22 Chinese
civet
24 Epic

25 Italian

Floor Covering In Stock

Szgts I

8 :30--What ' s Happening \ 6, 13; In Search ol the Rea l

poet

9' aod 12' Vinyl

- Good selections stocked.

Tat tletales 8; Mac Ne il· Lehre r Report 20,33 ; Thai' s
Hollywood 10: Nas hvi lle 0~ The Road 13 .; Marty
Robbins' Spotligh t 15 .
8:QO-Chips 3,4, 15: Welcome Back, Kotler 6, 13 ;
Waltons 8,1 0: Once Upon A Cla"ic 20,33.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Sight
1 Biblical
40 Secluded
name
valley ·
S Poker
DOWN

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers. toasters . irons . oil
\ mali opplionon . lawn mowe( .
ne)l t 10 Stolo HighWay Garage
on R.oute 7. Phone (61-4 ) 98S·

3825.

Over Easy 20 ; Antiques J3 .
7:oo-CrassWits 3; The Se ll i n' 4; New lywed Game 6,l3;
Gong Show 8; Gilligan's Is. 15; Hock i ng Vlley
B luegras s 20 ; Consumer Sur v l v.al Kit 33 .
7: 30--Hollywood Squares 3, 4; Match Game PM 6;

checlla payab le to Ntwspaperbooks.

ALLEYOOP

Economically Speak ing 33 .
4:00-Mi ster Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Fam i ly 8;
Sesame St . 20,33 : Match Game 10; Dinah 13 .
4:3o-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan ' s Is. 4,8; Batman 10; '
Lit11e Ras cals 15.
5:00-Monroes 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke B;
M ister Rogers' Neighborhood 20 ,33; Voyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10 ; Emergency One 13 ; Pett icoat
Junction 15.
5:31)-Qdd Couple 4; News 6: Elec . Co. '20,33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 15.
6 :QO-News 3, 4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Mak ing Things Grow 33 .6 :.3G-NBC News 3 . ~ . 15;
ABC News 13 : Andy Grifllt h 6: CBS News 8, 10;

EIGHT CAJOLE HEARSE
Answer: Wha1 their linle daughter W81 "AN ICE GIRL"

able tor $1.36 postpaid !rom Jumble, clo this newsp•per, P.O. Box 34,

7-16. \mo.

-

·1Jumbles: MINOR

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS.! JUMBLE BOOK 111 wllh 110 puzzlnlaanll·

BOOKS&gt;

All types of roofing, guHers

BRADFORD . Auclloneer , Com ·
plete Service . Phone 9.. 9·2•87
or q.. 9.1000. Ra ci ne. Ohio . Cr ill
Bradford .

"( I I I I I 'I )"
(Answers tomorrow)

-

332 : 3~

Doctors 3,4,15; Guid ing Lighl 8, 10; 3:oo-Another
Wor ld 3,4, 15: Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
J :JG-AII In The Family 8, 10; You Bet Your Life 20;

IH\5 &amp;IGN COULD
ee 11 ENGL.15H."

the contract . He

r u ffed a spa de in his hand
with

the

ei ght

a nd

the n

ruffed his good d iamond in
d ummy with ' the ace of
trump. East had to under·
ruff.
·
In the two-card ending,

declarer

l ed a spade from

dummy and East 's !().f ive of
hearts were trapped in front
of W elchse l 's quee n-nine.

East thought he had wit·
nessed

is atrocious.

lege rdemai n of a n expert
ha d made a trump trick
disappear.

'

W e i c hsel won the op e ning

a magic

The

whe n the trump distrfb utio n

ac t.

lead with the diamond ace
J
Z J A C M,
YACAJTU
and led a trump towa rd
dummy. When W est s h o w ed •NF:WSPAPt-: H t: NTEHPHI Sfo~ A."iSN. 1
AVMMYQQ .
·out it wa s time to do some , ·-. (Foracopyof JA COBYMOOYesterday' s Cryploquote:A GOOD EDUCATION IS USUALLY serious thinking . He hit upon ERN. send Sl to : ·· w m at
HARMFUL TO A DANCER. A GOOD CALF' IS BETTER THAN a co urse of pJ·ay that
Bndge, "' care of th1s newspa·
promi sed the rnax1mum · p(!r. P.O Box 489. Rad1o Ciry
A GOOD HEAD .- AGNES DE MILLE

uy

BED fCI)R .•
YOU
~

u

chance ·of su ccess . H e cov-

3 bedroom
kitchen and
Located on
A little work
this a nice

114,000 .00.

byHenri ArnaldandBoblee

Unscramble thase' tour Jumbles.
one !ener to each square. to form
tour ordinary word s.

~--

..

10.
9 :31)-Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair 10.
10:QO-Card Sharks 3,4;15; Edge of Night 6; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Joker' s Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Over Easy 33 .
•
10 :31)-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Righi 8,10 : $20,000 Pyramid 13 : Paint Along With
Nan cy Kaminsky 33 .
11 :OG-High Rollers 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13: 11 : JI)Wheel of Forhme 3, \5; Family F~ud 6,13, Love of
Life 8, 10; Partridge Famliy ~ : 11 : 5~CBS News 8;

'jl\J~~ ~'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®

Print answer here:

From

10 x 50 TWO bedroom mobile
home . $1800 . 9&lt;12 -5858.

Emergency One 6 ; Brady Bunch 8; Tic Tac Dough

Evening New ~ maga zine 4; Funny Business 8. 10;

Pllmeroy. 0 .
3-15-tfc

7·9-1 mo.

REEVE S TRADING Po st, New. ~ hi p · SEWING MACHINE Repa irs : ser men t ol We ster n show saddles.
~&lt;" lc e . oil mokes , 992 -7284 . The
~ilv er Tr immed , $200 up. Al so
Fabri c Sh op , Pomer o y .
pony soddl e ~ . SSO up . All horse
Aul hOi ited Sin9.er S ole~ and
wpplie s .
Open
M ond ay
Se rv ~e . We s ~arpen Scis sors .
thr o ugh
So l u r doy
8 -t:l.
1
EXCAVAl iNG . dozer . !ooder and
Ol 4-t&gt;q8· 543b.
..--· ~·
........,......:_
...
backhoe work : dump trucks
AUlOMOBf[E INSURANCE been
and •·to·boys. for hire . will hau l
can celled? l os! YOI.I { Q pe~~tor~
f ill dirt , to sOli , limes tone and
licen se? Phone 99'2· 2143.
grovel. Coli Bob or Roge r Jel ·
l cr s day phone 99'2·· 7089 . night
phone 9Q].JS2S or 99'}. 5232 .

For You .. Black Woman 10; 6 : 4~Mornlng Report
J.
.
6 : 5~Good Morning, West Virgin ia 13; 6:Ss-News 13.
7:QO-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morn ing America 6,13 ; CBS
News 8: Underdog 10. 7' : 2~Chuck White Reports 10.
7:Jo-Schoolles 10; B:oo-Capt . Ka ngaroo 8,10: Sesame
St . 33.
9 : 00- Mer v Griffin 3 ; Ph il Dona h ue 4, 15, 13 ;

Nova 20,33 .

&amp; downspouts . 20 years
experience .
All work
guaranteed . Call Tom
t-toskins , 949 -2160 . Fret
Estimates.

Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sunday Colis Please

1 J.9 ~ 1fc

HAg A~SO

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

. SALES AND SERVICE

THI 19111TIO'-lo

eA~V

Muffl.e r
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

4-30-lfc

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

AFfl!l'l KI!VIIIJ&amp;

MOORE'S

0.

CARTER

CAPTAIN EASY

6:30-0octors on Ca ll4; News 6; Summer Semester 8;

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

ROGER HYSELL

Free Estimates
Phone 949-21162
or 949-2160
7·7· 1 mo .

Grow 33 ,

6 :Jo- NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 ; Antiques 33 .
7:oo-Cross·Wits 3,4 ; Newlywed Game 6, 13; Sha Na Na
8; .News 10: Gilligan's Is . 15; Di ck Cavell 20; Miss
Hope 33.
, 7:31)-AII -Star Anyufhi ng Goes 3; Sha Na Na 4;
W olfman Jack 6; Family Feud 8; MacNei l-Lehrer
· _,. ,~"(" Report 20,33; The Judge 10; In Search Of 13: Wil d
Kingdom 15.
8 :QO-Gr lzzly· Adams 3, 15; Eight is Enough 6, 13;

Construction

7-20·1 mo. pd .

New or Repair
GuttetS and
Downspouts

Heroes 15 .

6 :QO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; Zoom 20: Making Things

AI Tromm

in Hartford, W. Va .

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING

5:31)-Qdd CQuple 4: Ne ws 6; Elec . Co. 2D.33; Hogan 's

Roofing, Siding •
Room Additions
.&amp; Spray Painting

742-2321
Free Estlmatos
Work Guoranlotd
).10-1 mo.

12 :Cl0-Janakl 33 ; 12 ,41)-Mystery of the Week 6, 13;
Kojak 8.
1:OG-Tomorrow 3,4; 2: lG-News 13.
Movie Channel • 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Rollercoaster IPG I
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Hedda l P G!
.THURSQA Y, JU\. Y 27, 1971
5 :, 4~Farm Report 13; 5 :51)-PTLCiub 13.
6:QO-PTL Club 15; Summer Se mester 1Q.

Bottom of The Sea 10 ; Emergency One ! 13 ; Pet·
t icoat Junction 15.

PUSHI!P IN THE!'
CIEMI'li!Tre
LI&amp;Hfi!IU ANP
AS If POPS OUT. ..

FRED'S TIRE CENTER

News 33.

WEDNESDAY , JULY 26, 1971
5 : oo-Monroes 3: My Three Sons 4; GUnsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; .Voyage to the

399 W . Main St.

NEW FIBERGLAS TIRES

MASH
BROTHERS
.. . ALUM.&amp;
Vl!\lYL
SIDING

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Small ongfno &amp; mower
service, MIIMY Ftrpson
&amp; lilloon Tlllors, Lawn Boy
Mowor SOIU I Sorvico,
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph. 992-216.4
. 5·•· 1 mo.

9 :QO-Biack Sheep Squadron 3,4, 15; 'Charlie' s Angels
6,13; Great Performances 33 ; Poldark II 20.
IO :QO-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hulch 6, 13;
C BS Reports 8,10: News 20 .
10 :31)-How To 20; 11 :Cl0-News 3,, ,6,8, 10,13,15: Dick
Cavett 20.
11 : ]I)-Johnny Carson J.• . 15 ; Pollee StorY 6, 13; Hawaii
Flve.08; Movie " The Three Musketeers" 10; ABC

1

~
MODERN SUPPLY

Che5ter. Ohio

BoXJ

Selling price $32,000 .00.

BEAT T HI S- J bd r m s.,
large bath , 7 stor ies. new
(ca r p e ting ,
si d i n g ,
g utt er ss. down spo uting ,
pan elin g, ceilings) , on Ohio
. Pwer . c ~ose 1o Po meroy

On ly $1 6,500 00 .
EXCELLENT
NEIGHBORHOOD -

...

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

300 Main St.
Pomeroy,' Ohlo
Pomerov 992-6282
orm.626l
8A,M. Io4;30P.M,

JUST LISTED : 3 bedroom . li ving room , kitchen &amp;
bath, lots ot paneling , mostly a l l carpet ed . All
insu la ted, nat ural ga s hea t. outside ce l lar . N ice Ohio
Ri ver v iew . Lo ca ted near Racine . Pr"iced for quick
sale . $9 .500 .
TWO ACRES - A beaut il u l 4 year old, 3 bedroom horr.
with large eat -in ki tc hen, 3 bedrooms, all nicely
ca rpeted , 2 baths, fu ll basem ent wi th T V room . Many
more ex tra s. low heat bill w ith na t. gas for ced a i r
furnace : All this and two nice acres of land in a good
location . Will go quick tor $35.000 .
57 ACRES - With a nice 11 • story hou se w ith 3 Qedrms .
and 112 ba t hs Mostly ca r peted . Big central f irep lace
wi th heato later . Sm all barn and outbuildings, 20 ac re.s
fen ce d . Nice count ry se tting off bla cktop road just 6
minutes n01: th of Rac ine. Aski ng $42;000 .
,·
6 ACRES - N ice 11 2 story home mostly c arpet ed with 3
or 4 bedrms., li v ing r m .. family rm ., with fir eplace,
basemenf. f uel oil furna ce , ga r age and out buildings .
Som e len ci ng , plen ty of r oad frontag e and g~rden
spa ce . Ci t y w ater and dr il led well Loc . close t o
hosp ital and school a t la ure l C l i ff . Asking S-42,500;
A BEAUTY AT FIVE POINTS - Her e is an excellen t 3
bedrm . hou se w ith 1' 1 ba th s. ki tchen and bUil t-in
app liances. fa mily rm . w ith firep lace, all nicelycarpeted . Full basement wi th woOd -bu rning stove.
Atta ched ( 2 car ) garage. Chr ys ler Air -Temp . centra l
hea ling and coo li ng . Very low e lec . bi ll s . All this and
approx . on e acre land. Have a took . On ly $47,900.
S.l 1.700 w il l bu y a. good 2 be~rm . 11ous.e and garage,
stora ge build ing and garden space on St . Rl. 124 in
Syra cu.se .
VACANT LAND - 10 acre s of land on Rt . 33·4 lane
aboul on e m il e nor th ot 7-3J bypa ss. Asking S12.800.
510,900 - 1 acr e level land wi.th a 64x 12. 3 bedroom
mobile home w ith -nat ur al gas heat. city wate r &amp; sept ic .
s'1s.oao - W i l l buy a good S bedrm . house wi th large
li vi ng room a nd kit c hen . 2 ba th s, basement. F."A.. nat.
ga s heat in Ch ester .
We Need Listings (Middleport)
We have buyers for many types of proerty

IH

,_

•

Supe r

basem ent , 4 bd r m s. . in
town . Chea p af $6 ,750.00 .

1~75

8'' FOOl Truck camper . sell con
'
tain ed , .992-5983

1
lH RH BI:DROOM lrorne- home "'

MAIN
POMEROY.

IN SYRACUSE . 1 bedroom house.•
New storm windows · New
olum inum building. 1 porche s.
992 -31 Jq .

126.000 00

11 CU FT HolpQon t f 1 e e u:~ r $100,
985 3985 .

FIREWOOD. GREEN or seo soned.
985-350 7 or 94q·235B.

I HRH BW ROOM house tn Ra cine
01 eo Nt..!or rr ·~e r
Completely
remode lerl q4q 1545

(8

AIR EDAl E FE.MALE I yeor old
Spayed Reg1s tered good w1th Will CAR E for the el derl y rn o u 1
rhddre n, !r ooned S50 fornl
homto Phone 997 731 4
985 41 34 0 ( b 14 667 3878
WA TER WEl l do rll,ng Wdloorn I
AK C RFGtSrERED
Dobe-rman
Cran l 747 '1.879
mole l ', y e ar~ old Black anrl
W1 l l DO babysrtt rng Hl my horne
ton S150 30.4 773 5873
S day s o week 741 7030 0 1
Q92 -20S 4

RN
PARf fi Mt
Commu ni Ty
health nur~ ~n g e " per 1ence
pre ferred M u~ t be res•dent ol
Me1gs County and be able to
vary wod, ,ng days Re l erences
, requ1red Poc k up opplocor1on
' l orrl"l ond ! uothtc&gt;r 1nf or mo t1 011 at
Me 1gs Coun ty office ol Planned
Parenth ood of Sou the"astcr n
Oh1 0
County (o ur I hous e
weekday s e• cept rhul sdoy
i:quol Opport unot y Employer

VA- FHA :}0 yr fin anci ng , al so
re lo n(Jn(lng tr c&gt;IQ nd M or !goge ,
77 E Sro re At hor1 s phone (61 4)
~q1 305 1

Phone t92 -2181

BASE o;.tallorl S S.ltr onr .,.
lO l l 0 Freq {ou nte1 DIOd fl lll
l ube lype am ~ ·d e bond SJ2~.
Had10 Sha ck mode l I RC 45 8
new 40 chon••e! a m ~ ·de bun d
Used 2 m on t h ~ 5200 qq'} 7066

ROOM house , bath and lot ,
newly pai nted. qb4 S. Jrd St ..
Middlepor t . 992-S98q.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

$1 ,000 ,000 .00 WORTH
OF ' PROPERTY
FOR SALE .

M•dd!cpor t Col i 992 3457

A C R~ S

_...

HV ~

throughout.

HTS .

$6 ,000.
NEW

lUPPt RS PLAIN ~ 3 bedr oom. t
both. tolol e.l ectnc. ai r cond1·
!lOlling , lull ba seme-n! . large
lo t. 992-3SB 5

appointment.

W. Carsey , Mgr .

SOFTENER?

j;jow Only

for

Pomeroy Landmark

la rg e 3 bedr oo m
hom e with bath .
na tural ga s l ufna ce .
oak f loor s down and
full ba se m ent, n ice
s hady
s p o t
ov erl oo king the Oh io
River . Thi s ts a g ood
buy a t s 19,500 .
UNION AVE . - 3
shad y lot s. l arg e 10
r oom h ouse w it h 4
bedroom s, 2 bath s
nat u ral gas . f .a .
f urnace . Hobby shop ,
g a r age .
cov er e d
pic nic pat io. all t hi s
1S V .A . a pprov ed .

LINCOLN

Business Services

Real Estat" tur Sat.,

. Expires
August 10, 1978

NEED A WATER
Lef Pomt""oy Landmark
son·e n &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water
softener, Model UC-SVL

OFF

bedr ~om

-----~

SAL E. Corner of CR32 and
CR28 . in Boshon . Fndoy onQ
Saturday 9a m to .4pm . Gos
ro ngli!' . bo J&lt; sprr ngs ond mol
tress desk plu s other 'm 1sc.
item!&gt; .

$1295

Any U.S. made car - parts

Rt . 124. View of the
Ohio River . Over 3 12
acre s o f !a nd . drilled
3 bedr oo m
w el l ,
mobile
Flee t w oo d
hom e wilh central
Ileal and air , ! 1 2
ba ths. sun deck and
lois a t shrubber y .

$35 ,000 .
NEW LISTING -

1975 BLACK ~l Corn •no Cloo;.sic .
350 l wo barre l. ou rorno11c .
power steerrn g on d brakes. .
May be seen I ' . miles · oft
Rou l e 7 Bypas s on 143 or col i
qr.n 3750 Good condrlron

(

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

DlCKTRACY

.J= llllll
15 IN STOCI(

DEE Oil

WOULDN'T l/OU LIKE TO

~

OWN A GOOD WAKHD06 ?

For 1 quick Ule of your
property, sa us tor fut
service.

Clleryl L.omley, Assoc .
Home Pllono 742-2003
Hilton Wollo, Assoc .
Homo 949-2519
Georgo S. -tottor Jr.
Broker ·
Homt Pllono m .s7J9

Stat1o n. New York , N . Y 10019. )

MIIW!!

LOWER "'ORE

DADBURN
VOICE

•

.,
J

'

.

�•

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middl•porl-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, July 26, 1978
--

\

•

Somecunion leaders believe second
postal strike will start in New. York
.

UDlted Preos lnleruattooal
Eight ' years ago the
nation's first postal strike
began with a New York City
walkout.' Some union lea.ders
say they believe the natioo 's
second mail strike will start
the same way nod week.
Since the proposed na tiona!
postal con tract was agreed
upon in Washington last
week, there have been

wildcat strikes at bulk mail
centers in California and New
Jersey.
The U.S. Postal Service

Our Interest is
Greater For You

locaUoo or ownership are

5.75%
On 90-Day .

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit.
$500 .00
Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quartecly.
A substantial penalty Is
invoked on illl certifiute
accounts withdrawn prior
fo th&amp;

~Iff

of maturity.

Meigs Co. Branch

~~~
The A!liens County
s.vina• &amp; L.oon Co.
w. Main St .
Pomeroy , Ohio

fSIJC

--..---

Ohio Departmeot ol
Liquor Control director
Clifford E . Reich ao·
nounced today thai oppllcallons for oew liquor
permits and traoslers of
now being prll(;es•td by lhe
deparlment.
Making appllcallons for
traosfers were Gerald
Grove, dba , Tall Timber
Nile Clul&gt;, Salisbury
Towoshlp , Pomeroy to
Edgar W
: Ellis, dbo, Tall
Timber Nile Club; Mary L.
Crossan, dba Big Maple, 19
W, Main Sl.. Cheshire to
Donald Montgomery, dba,
Big Maple.

SQUAD SUMMONED
. The· Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to Dr. James Conde's office
at 4:32p.m. Tueday for Alan
Shuler, t3, Route 4, Pomeroy.
He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center with a
possible ruptured appendix.
pAST MATRO~S MEETING
There will be a meeting of
the Past Matrons of
Evangeline Chapter , Mid.dleport , Friday, July 28 at
7:30 p.m. at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Hostesses
will be Bessie King and
Jennie Cheshire .

.

seems to have weakened
tllose walkouts by firing
a'Imost 100 strikers and
promised more dismissals as
soon as other wildcat strikers
can be identified from
pictures and V·ideotapes. .
In Jersey City, N.J., w~efe
40 workers were fired, a
spokesman for the New York
Bulk and Foreign Mail Center
said about 60 percent of Its
wockers showed up Tuesday
- up 30 per cent from
Mooday .
Attendance at the San
Francisco Bulk l.lall Center
in suburban Richmond ,
where 42 wockers were fired,
was reported at about 60
BATON CLASSES RESUME
Baton classes at Royal Oak
Park will resume . this
evening at 6:30 ·p.. m. according to Judy R1ggs, mstructor.
SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad transported Webster
Hodge, Laurel Street , to
Holzer Medical Center at ~ : 45
a.in. Tuesday. AI 5: It this
morning El oise White,
Lincoln Terrace, was taken to
Holzer with a possible
fracture ..
SCOTCH FORESOME
There will be a Scotch
Foresome at the Pomeroy
Golf Course Saturday, July
29, at 6:30 p.m. A wiener
roast and dance Will follow .
Activities are open to the
public.

Stale No. 223X
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company .
of Pomeroy, Ohio aod Fo•eign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business June 30. t978, a stale banking iostltutlon organized and operating

under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Published lo accordance with a call made by the Slate Banking
Authorities aod by the Federal Reserve Bank of this District.
ASSETS
Cash and due from banks .. .
. '. ' ' ... . .. ' . .. .. ' 1,983,000.00
U.S. Treas ury securities .... .
. . . . . . .. .. . " ·~ " " . .... .... 2,937,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .
: . . ...... .. ..... 1,594,000.00
Obligations of States and political subdi visions . . .... . ·., .. , ...... . 2,596.000.00
Federal Reserve stuck and corporate st uck .
. ... 24,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; securities purchased under
agreem ents to resell in domestic uffi ccs.... . . .
. ......... 350,000.00
a. Loans, Total 1excluding unea rned incume J' .......... 11 .238,000.00
b. Less: Reserve for pu.sible loan losses . . . .
. 61,000.00
c. Loans, net. ....... .....
. . ... . 11 ,157,000.00
Bank premiseS. furniture ami fixtures. and
.... 399,000.00
other assets rePresenting bank premises . . . ..... .
Other assets .
. . . . . . . . . . . . ..... . . . .... ' .... ' i61000.00
.. . : ..21.Mii.ooo.oo
·.....
TOT AI. ASSETS ........ .
LIABILITIES
'
Demand deposits uf individuals,
. 4,728,000.00
partnerships cmd &lt;.: orporetlions ...
Time and savi ngs deposits of individua ls,
partnerships. and corporations........
. . .... . . .. ..... 14,137,000.00
Deposits of Uni ted States Government.
................ , . . .. 95,000.00
Deposits of Sta tes and political subdivisions ........ . .. ....... ... .. 340,000.00
Deposits of co mmereial banks .
. .......................... 4,000.00
Certified and officer s' checks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .... 223,000.00
Total Depos its 1n Domestic Offices . . .
. . ..... .... 19,527.000.00
a . Total demand depos1ts .................... ........ 5 325 000 00
b. Total tim e and savings deposits .
. ............... 14,202,000.00
Total Deposits 10 Domesti c and Foreign Offices ................. 19,527,000.00
Other liabilities . . .
... .. .....
. ......... !14.000.00
TOTA!.I.I ABII.I TIES
... .. .. . . . .. . . ... .. . . . . .
. ... 19,641,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL

Castro .celebrating
, 25th
anniversary of revolution

'

percent Tuesday.
But the most serious threat
to mail service so far will
come Monday when some
23,000 New York City postal
workers will vole to decide
whether to strike. A union
spokesman said if the vo~ is

Charge
(Cunllnuld frGm ..,, 1)
Developmental Disabilities
Unit of the legal rights service, said Tuesday that the
nursing homes " are not ..
capable of providing for the
residents and there appear to
be ·no plans to do so."
Shesaid none of the nursing
homes are certified by the
state to handle mentally
retarded patients and none of
them have even applied to be
certified.
"They were transferred to
nursing homes without
·consulting county mental
retardation boards or district
offices. and in some cases
withoui contacting the Ohio
Departmeht of
Public
Welfare, " she said.
'"They were dumped. "
The welfare department
gener"ally requires prior
authorization before reimbursing the nursing homes
for the costs of housing former residents of institutions.
Ms. Hailer said she has sent
a letter to the welfare
department asking it to stop
authorizing placement of
Gallipolis residents in nursing homes that are not
certified .
The state plans to release
from 2,000 to 3,000 residents
from mental institutions
within the next year in an
effort to me et national
standards for placing th e
mentally retard ed int o
community settings.

yes, the walkout probably
will start at dawn Tuesday.
Moe Biller, leader of the
New York City local,
pfedicted a New York City .
strike would.mean a national
mail strike.
Leaders of a number of
postal union locals around the
country, who said their members were ,a gainst the
proposed contract, said they
would be watching the New
York strike vote.
In Washington, Emmet Andrews , president of ~he
American Postal Workers
Union , said Tuesday he did
not think a New York City
strike would mean a national
walkout. " I don't think
everybody's going w follow
the situation in New York ,"
he said. "In fact, it is
questionable in some people's
mind whether members in
New York will vote to hold a
strike."

Monitoring
•

station
funds OK'd
WASHINGTON (UPII - A
Senate appropriations subcommitee Tuesday approved
a 1275,000 amendment under
which four .more monitoring
stations would be established
to check Ohio River
water
.
quality .
About $135,000' of the appropriation would operat e
stations at the confluence of
the
Monongahela
and
Allegheny rivers in Pitt sburgh, near Beaver, Pa., at
Parkersburg, W. Va., and at
Evansville, Ind.
,, ... , ...
The remaining $140,000
would be for operation of
se ven current monit or ing
stations and the four new
stations on a daily basis.
The
program
would
provide early warning to 25

.

ENROLL NOW

FALL TERM

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COL~EGE .

j JIL'_r_he_w_o_rl_d_T_o_d_ay_

Choose an exciting Career in one of these
success proven fields:

11111

.

•EXECUtiVE SECRETARY

•SECRETARIAL
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
• JR. ACCOUNTING
•GENERAL OFFICE

..

Financial Assistance Available
Approved for Veterans

"'

GAlLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

f

shag - jute back.

OR WRITE:

ro-A'U:i;Eii'siuiiN"iiscoi:L'EG'f1
I P.O . Box 74t
I
I Gallipolis. OH . 45631
I1 ( ) Please provide me

State of Ohio County of Meigs, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me thi s lith da y of July, 1978.
J oAnn Crisp, Notary Publi c
My Commission ~:xpires July 17, 1983.

II

~

. I orma t ton
' '·
wt'th more 1n

Age

Name

Address

I Phone

'

brown and biege sculptured

CALL 446 4367

No.

City
·

~-------'

State_ z,~

1

1
II

-II

~ --~---~

I

-aoo test theories that his 1959 suicide attempt in Russia was
a Soviet cover-up for ertocts to brainwash the KeMedy
assassin .
FBI Director J . Edgar Hoover blocked the 1964 CIA
suggestion, and the W!ll'ren Commission decided not "to force
the FBI's band on this point," according to docwnents
oblatned by a private researcher and made available to UPI .

Peasant girl finds diam~nd
HONG KONG (UP!)~ A peasant 'girl unearthed a 158.786
carat diamond while tilling. a commune field in the northern
province of Shantung, the China News Service reported
Wednesday .
The light yeUow-hued gem has been~presented to ChinCooununist Party Chairman Hua Kuo-feng, who named it ''the
Chang Lin diamond," the news service dispatch carried by
Hong Kong's Ta Kung aoo Wen Wei newspapers said . The
finder, Wei Chen.fang,ls a member of the Chang Un commune
and C&lt;mmunisl Youth Brigade. ·

'

Trade deficit called smallest
NEW -YORK (UP!) - Investors, encouraged by the
smallest u. s. trade deficit in more than a year and the
strengthening dollar abroad, sent stocks higher Wednesday in
heavy trading .
The Dow Jones Industrial average, which gained 7.97
· points Tuesday, was ahead 4.51 to 844 .07 shortly before noon
EW. Advances held a better than tw&lt;&gt;-lo-one lead over
declines, 870 to 365, among the 1,659 Issues crossing the New
York Stock Exchange tape.

G~bage crisis comes to end
WJU.JAMSTOWN, W. Vo. (UP!) - Rats and maggots
must (lnd· other sources of meats from now in Wllllamatown.
The great. garbage crisis bas ended.
.
Stacks of refuse bave been hauled away, ending
complaints fed to Mayor Hennan L. Fischer that collections
had not been made f..- many weeks . cans were slUffed to the
limit. With publicity aoo the help of a state Public Service
Commission official, however, collections were Increased late
last week. Garbage cr..,.s Tuesday completed their roundup.

Engineer firm set at Piketon
BOSTON (UP!)- The Energy Department has selected
the Stone &amp; Webster Engineering Corp . to be the construction
management contractor for the department's Centrifuge
Uranium Enrichment plant at Piketon, Ohio.
Continued on page 7

(Oontlmted frlllll .... 1)

FOR INFORMATION

We. the undersigned directors, attest the correctneSS of thi • report of condi·
tion and declare that 1t has been examined by us and tu the hest of our
knowled ge and belief is true &lt;:tnd correct.
Leslie F . Fultz
Fred R. Carsey, Jr. - Directors .
R. C. Follrod

WASIUNGTON (UP!) - CIA officials wanted to dig up

Lee Harvey Oswald'scorpse to examine a scar on his left wrist

'1100 YARD
· SQ.

INSTALLED OVER '12 INCH
FOAM PADDING

ELBERFELDS IN -POMEROY

strike and can't comment oo
what we ·will do if it occurs,"
a spokesman In Washington
said. "We have a contingency
plan that covers any
emergency."
The. proposed contract is
being voted on in mail
balloting expected to be
completed in about two
weeks, but the Postal Service
will have to face the threat of
a strike before then.

In New York, ~.ooo postal cost of living areas wl!ere
workers plan to vote Monday -~· postal workers complain the
on ·a strike proposal. A union proposed average 19.5
S]lOkesrnan said If the vote . percent wage and· cost-&lt;&gt;fwas yes, the . walkout living increase over three
probably would start at dawn years Is not enough.
"There's
always
a
Tuesday.
Moe Biller, leader of the possibility of It passing,
New · York City local , because
opposition
is
predicted any New York City geographical," said Stephen
strike would mean a national Albanese, head of the 4,~
mall strike.
member Boston local of the
Much of the opposition to American Postal Workers
the contract comes frorn high Union.

Fiftee n Ce11ls
Vol. 29. No. 72

Committee
completing
tax cut bill
/

WASHINGTON (UP!) Spurred by Sen . Russell
Long's predictions the Senate
will make similar but even ,
steeper tax cuts, the Hollse
Ways and Means Comlnittee
Is completing a tax bill
containing major tax relief
for investors.
The average taxpayer
would benefit from the bill,
but to a. lesser extent .
Chalnnan AI Ullman, DOre .,
told
reporters
Wednesday he expects to
report
the
legislation
containing capital gains tax
cuts - which President

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
new effort to help reduce
crime against senior
citizens, through
s\.e~la.llzed training
prOJ!UIIII . for
laW•
e:nforeemeot

personnel

around Ohio, was annouoced Wednesday by
Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The stale Department of
Economic and Community
Developmeal's Dlvlsloli of
Crime Prevention will
lmplemeol a lralalog
program developed by the
pollee tralniog sedloo of
the National Retired
Teachers Association American Association ol
Retired Persoos, said the
governor.

carter has called "windfalls
for millionaires" - to the full
House late today. But some
committee Republicaos said
Friday Is a more likely
target .
Long, chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee,
told a National Press Club
audience Wednesday he
favors limiting the capital
gains tax to 19.5 percent. The
present tax· on profits from
lmg-term inv~trnents ~uch
, as property Of stocks and ·
bonds iS 49 percent, and the
·House committee has voted a
maximwn of 35 percent.
"The facts of life today will
force the House to seoo us a
large tax cut bill, and we will
amend it," Long said.
"The Finance C&lt;lllmittee
will also recommend that we
expand the investment tax
~ credit for employee . stock
ownershil! from 1 to 2 percent
and provide a tax credit
measured by payroll to make
the concept more attractive
to
labor
intensive
companies," Long added.
As Long spoke, the House
committee refused to grant
the same infla lion tax relief
to iooividual taxpayers that it
granted to investors earlier.
By a 23-13 vo.te, the House
committee defeated a motion
by Rep. Willis Gradison, ROhio, that would have
eliminated any increase in
individual income taxes
caused solely by inflation.

DEMONSTRATION - Donald Whitman of Computer
Election Systems, Inc., is shown giving a demonstration
in the latest technique in modern system of voting in
Meigs County :-vednesday. On the left is Leslie Fultz, a

BY KATIE CROW
A demonstration on the
latest technique in modern
system of voting was given by
Donald L. Whitman of
Computer Election Systems,
Inc., at the Meigs Co unty
Board of Elections W e d~
nesday afternoon.
The " Votomatic" is a
punch card method of eiec·
tronic voting.
A person is given a smgle
ballot card which they slide
into the vote recorder. The
person voting, using a stylus
which is attached to the
recorder, pu shes down
through the card for each uf
their choices .

clerk for the commissioner s. The demonstrati on was held
at the office of the Board of Elections .

After voting, they slide the Hocking. Scioto and Monroe
ca rd out of the vote recorder counties·, to na me a frw . Th e
and place it under the flap In vote recorder will fit in any
the write-in envelope. If a voting booth.
Another advan(age IS t hat
person makes a mistake they
may ask for another ballot. ballots t hai are nul used may
The purpose of the modern be used in later elections.
system of voting is for Whit man indicated that if
g reater accuracy by using Meigs County would go to the
computers to count baUots
also reduced election costs by
elimination of paper ballot
counting boards.
Computer elect ion systems
began selling in Ohio 'in 1974.
Fifty co unties in Ohio are now
using this type of voting
system.
Whitman e xplaine d t hat
they are in use in Gallia,

'"votomat ic '' system t hey

would need approximately
100 vote recorders.
When th e ballots are
-coll ected 1 from the precincts,
they a re taken to the Boa rd of
Elect ions and placed in a
ba ll ot count er to obtain
Continued on pa ge 7

Education funds
available for
Rutland youths

The Middleport Fire
Department was called to the
scene of an accident near the
Gavin Power Plant on Route
7 at 4:47 p.m. Wednesday
where the gas tank of a
vehicle driven by Donald
Goeheen, Point Pleasant, has
ruptured: The squad washed
the gasoline off the road.
At 12 :27 a.m. this morning
the emergency squad.went to
the Merry-Go-Round on
Story's Run Road for l!etty
Clark, 42, Millfield, who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital with a posslble
fractured ankle.

RUTLAND - WiUiam j _
Hobstetter of Rutland has
informed the Daily Sentinel
that as trustee of the will of
Unnie B. Taylor, he has some
funds and the authority to
assist needy children who live
in the village of Rutland , to
help · obtain a college
education .
If any eligible person would
like such assistance the y
should contact Mrs. Hol&gt;sll~tter at S&amp;lem Street,
Rutland .

Recall try
dismissed
DENVEI\ (UP!) - The
Mine
Workers
.united
E&amp;ecutlve
International
Board adjourned Ita meeting
two days early, dilmlulng a
recaU effort against union
President Arnold Miller oo
coolltltutlooll grounds and
giving him a vote of
coofldence.
"We haw completed a very
productive board meeting
and handled 10111e divisive
act! vii)' and put lha t to rest ,"
. Mill• uld after the board
adjourned Weclnesday. He
l8ld the recall effort faUeclto
follow the UMW conlltllutloo.
"¥011 mUll fUe char~U
before you get petitions.
There have been a lot
allegallonl, but no charges.
And there Ia a heU of a lot of
difference
between
~~~tiona and charges," he

member of the Mei gs Board of Elections and on the right
is Richard Jones, commissioner and Mary Hobstetter ,

Electronic voting system
demonstration given here

auto accident

1

week , there have 'been was charged with trying to
wildcat r rikes a t bulk mail run down a seeurity guard
centers iii California and New with his car.
A second man , who
Jersey . Th.e U.S . Postal
Service wea kened those supposedly entered th e ]iostal
walkouts by firing almost 100 facility to pick up his wife,
was arrested for allegedly
strikers.
Two men, including a fired knocking down another guard
postal worker , were arrested with hi• car and then biting
at the New York Bulk and him on the arm , Neither
are .' '
Foreign Mail Center in guard was hurt .
Since the proposed na tiona I Jersey City, N.J..
Both men were ordered
postal contract was agreeed
The fired postal - worke ~ held in lieu of $5 ,000 hail each .
upon in Washingt~n last

"It's hard to. speak nationwide: In this particular area,
chances of it being turned
down are very good. · Other
areas, the South and
Midwest, I would say chances
of it turning down are next to
impossible - the areas that
aren't experiencing the cost
of living problems that we

Squadmen go
to scene of

maintenance of health, much
easier for the diabirtic.
In addition to the film , the
Student Health Team hopes
to be able to make a small
Pfesentation on some of the
different aspects of diabetes.
The team will also be
available to answer any
question s they can concerning health. No reservations are necess ary to
attend the class.

Brown sculptured shag or

The World Today

FBI blocked exhwnation

Oasses set

12 Foot wide - 100% nylon.

St . No . 75 ·02 -04728

j]

Four persons were fined
and two others forfeited bond
in Middleport Mayor Freel
Hofhnan's CO!lrt Tuesday.
Fined were Sammy Uttle,
41, Middleport , disorderly
manner, 125 and costs; Emily
F. Price, 44, Shade, Thomas
L. Cleland, 23, Langsville,
and ' Thomas L. Loucks ,
Texas, all OWl, 1225 and
costs plus three days In jail
each.
Forfeiting bond were
Buddy McKinney, 61, Middleport , disorderly mamer,
$50; and Tony M. Hutton, 19,
Langsville, spinning tires,
$25 .

SALE I
CARPETING·

Accredlttd by the Accrediti"9 Commission of the
Association of Independent Colleges and Schools.

the National , Association of
Letter Carriers. "We are
trying to hold the line. I think
if there Is going to be a strike,
it
should
be
called
IJ&amp;tianally,"
Despite the growing
reports of unhappiness with
the proposed contract, the
U.S. Postal Service says it
11
'11lere is an undercurrent does not expect a national
to go out oo strike," said strike.
Harold Lowe, who represents
"We don't anticipate a
Cleveland's 2.500 members in

Six court
cases heard

WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC STREET

.Begin September 18, 1978

Ulitecl PJ'eu llllel'll8tlo~l
Although the U.S, Postal
Service says It does not
anticipate a nationwide mail
strike, there Is increasing
opposition to the proposed
contract
national
especiaUy in big city areas
where malbnen say it just
does not offer enough money,

yield the right of way, $30;
Gaylord Young, Albany,
.loitering in the parking lot,
150 and possession of a
controlled substance, $100;
Richard Stone, Groveport,
speeding, $10 ; Lois Hawley ,
Pomeroy, failure to yield the
right qf way , $30 ; Carl Clay, •
Rutland, speeding, $25; and
Robert Grossnickle , Belpre,
no motorcyCle endorsement,
$30.

ELBERFELDS

DAY M EVENING CLASSES

1. Roger W. Hysell , Cashier. of the above-named hank do hereby declare
that this report of condi tion is true to the best of my kn owledge and belief.
Roger W. Hyse ll

(Cuntlmled frun .... 1)

fashion a new death penalty law in.Qhio to replace one ruled
unconstitutional by the Supreme Court July 3.
Scheduled to .testify were representatives of the Ohio
Prosecuting Attorneys Association and the Ohio Council of
Churches .

enttne

Opposition to mail pact increasing

Pomeroy mayor fines three

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Three persons were fined
Admission s - Norman
and
eight forfeited bond in
Lehew, Portland ; Elsie
Pomeroy
Mayor Klarence
Spence, Pomeroy ; Herman
·Tuesday.
Andrews'
court
Warner, Pomeroy ; U:mnie
Fined
were
Lester ZimCohen , Pomeroy ; William
merman,
Pomeroy,
Kennedy ,
Middleport ;
Brenda LeMaster, Pomeroy ; malicious threatening, $200
and Glennie Milhoan, Long and costs; Roy E. Anns,
Minersville, failure to stop at
Bottom.
a
red light , $30 and costs; and
Di scharge s - Stephen
Snider, Columbus,
Marian
Simpson, Paul Fraley, lola
driving
under
suspension, $50
Damewood, Dana Covert,
and
costs
and
OWl, $350 and
Dillon Taylor, and Enna
costs.
Wilso n.
:"'y•
Forfeiting bond . were Carl
Holzer Medical Ceoter
Hendricks, Jr., Pomeroy ,
POSTAL EXAM
t Discharges, July 25)
squealing tires, $50; John C.
The United States Postal
Brian
Alliz er, ~Haro ld Hite, Middleport , failure to
Service announced that an
Arthur, Cheryl Basil , Mrs.
examination for substitute
James
·Cochran
and
rural carrier at the Reeds- muhicipa1 water systems on
CHICKEN DINNER
Merl
e
Conley,
dau
ghter,
ville, Ohio Po•Hlffice will be toxic materials that may be
The
Constant - B uilders
given at Parker sburg . spilled into the Ohio River.· Oretha Crookham, Dorothy Class of the Racine Wesley an
Griffis,
William
Gru
ese
r.,
Closing date for applications The demonstration was
United Methodist Church will
must be submitted before . begun tn 1977 after a major Randy Hall. Rhonda Hoff- serve a chicken dinner, with
man,
Edna
Holcom
b,
Elias
Aug. 15.
spill of carbon tetrachloride.
Howard, Jr. , Dollie Jividen. all the trimming, on Aug. 26
Matching funds for the· Douglas Johnson, Jr ., Joan from 5 to 7 p.m.
operati on of thi s demonTickets may be purchased
King, Eutha McDaniel, Terry
In 1967, four days of racial stration sys tem will be Neece, Dana Rayburn , Irene from any member of the class
rioting in Detroit ended with provided by the Ohio River Ree d, Halli e Robertson, or reservailons made by
Va lley . Sanitation Com·
39 dead .
Fl orence Scott , Rebecca ca lling 949-2671 or 949-2789.
mission .
Snavely, Steven Siginan,
VISIT HERE
Saman\jla Spears, William
Tommy
Tucker and family ,
Stuver, John Vance, Mrs.
Maryland,
visited recently
John Weethee and daughter,
with
Hilah
Jones
, 109 S. Third
Tracy Whaley, Steven White,
Ave.,
Middleport.
Tucl\er is a
Etta Young , Eleanor Zeiher.
·
former
resident
of MidFOR
Birth
dleport
and
returned
for the
Mr . and Mr s. Paul Musick ,
in
some
30
years.
first
time
a daughter, Jackson.
ADDITIONAL SURVIVOR
REUNION SET
An additional survivor of
Annual Zuspan reunion will
AT
Nora E. Reuter who died be held Saturday, Aug . 5 at
Mon ~ay is a great - great Krodel Park. Basket dinner
granddaughter,
Melissa will he served at 1 p.m .
Wolfe.

Common stock :··
300,00o.OO
b. No. sha res outstanding 12,000 ........ . ....... I par value I
... ...... .. ' ' ........ .. ' ..... 500,000.00
Surplus . . .
. . . .. .. .. .
SIS 000 00
Und1v1ded profits .......... .
TOTAI. EQU lTY CAP)TAI. ..
.... ' ....... . ' . . '' ..... ''' ''' 1,415,000.0
TOTAL I.IABILITl ES AND
.......... ............ ..... . ... ' 21 ,056,000.00
EQUITY CAPITA L .
MEMORANDA
Averag e fror 30 calendar days ending with report date :
. . " . ' ... 1,885,000.00
a. Cash and diw from banks.. . .... . . . . . ..... .
b. F'eder&lt;:d fumh sr' ' ....HI sec.: urilies purchased wtder
agreement to rese11 . . . . . .
. . .. . ......... 892,000.00
c. Total loan s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . 11,161,000.00
e. Total de[J&lt;lsi!.'l in domestic and foreign offi ees . .
. .. ..... 19,194 ,000.00
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value I :
U.S. Gove rnment obligations, di rect and guaranteed,
pledged tu secure deposits and other liabilities ... . .
. .......... 1163,008.94
TOTAL. ..
. . ... , ...... ................ .. ..... .... .. .... 863,008.94

'.

Hospital News

a1 y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, July 27 1978·

MIAMI (UPI) - At dawn on July 26, exiled io Mexico, where he org.,uzed
1953, Fidel Castro and a band of guerillas another attack in December 1956 which staged an abortive attack on Cuba's after two years of guerrilla fighting in the
Moncada Garrison that made Castro a mountains - toppled the Batista
criminal and sent him into hiding in the . government aoo brought castro to power
on Jan. I, 1959.
nearby mountains.
Participants in this week's celebrations
The bearded Cuban president returns to
"the crad,le of the revolution " in Santiago will include , Palestine Liberation
de .Cuba today to celebrate the 25th. Organization leader Yasser Arafat aoo
anniversary of his revolutionary Mrs. Salvador Allende, widow of the leftist.
movement and praise those who died In the Chilean president, along with Communist
leaders from around the world.
skirmish.
Workers in Santiago de Cuba aoo
The 26th of July celebration comes when
Havana
have spent months sprucing up
once-thawing U.S.Cuba relations appear to
buildings and repairing streets in advance
be near their lowest point since President
of the amiversary aoo the weeklong youth
. carter took office.
Unlike the r,nass rallies of previous festival .
Havana Radio recently reported the
years, Castro will speak today before
17,000carefully chosen delegates at the old .capital city was being turned into a
"beautiful and wann headquarters" for
garrison, now called the 26th of July School
the festival .
City.
The flurry of construction also Is aimed
The garrison audience will include
at luring American tourists and their
" l,oOO outstanding members of the
Committees for the Defense of the dollars to the Caribbean Island . U.S . tour
Revolution " and 1,000 delegates to the lith groups beg!lll visiting the Island last year
annual World Youth Festival, which gets after carter allowed a travel ban to expire.
Lifting the ban was seen ~ the first
under way Friday in Havana .
concrete
step toward renewing relations
Preparations for the youth festival aoo
the
two nations, broken by Presibetween
its 20,000 International delegates have
overshadowed the anniversary of CSBtro's dent Eisenhower in January 1961.
But the thawing relations chilled after
revolution, which in years past has heen
the United States objected publicly to
the island nation's majoc holiday.
After days of hiding in the mountains Cuban military presence in Africa aoo
linked diplomatic relations to Cuban
following the 1953 attack, Castro finally
withdrawal from that continent.
surrendered to Fulgeneio Batista's forces
The prospects of reaching full relations
when he was guaranteed he would not be
reached a low point in May when Carter
executed.
accused Cuba of c&lt;lllpllcily in the
Castro was imprisoned in the Isle of
Katangese invasion of Zaire. castro called
Pines, but was pardoned by Batista and
the accusation a "total lie."

•

!~DAY A-"FAIR" ?- This billboard on the Route 7
bypass has Meigs County motoriSts slightly baffled . ·
"MEIGS COUNTY FAIR AUGUST 5th-19th ," the sign
declares . No, folks, this year 's fair is not scheduled to be
the longest in county history - the sign is a slip up.
Festivities will begin on August 15 and run t hrough the
19th . One week as usual.

Southern teacher, employee
TROPHIES TO BE PRESENTED - Maidie Mora,
president of the Meigs County Fann Bureau Federation Is
shown with trophlell that will be awarded at the Meigs

Weather
Showers ending this
evening and clearing tonight,
with lows between 60 and 65.
Mostly SUMY Friday, with
'high temperatures In the
upper 70s or lower 80s.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday
thr.ou1h
Mnday, fair S.ltlrday aDd
a ~haaee of tbaaderahtwen Saaday aad
MHday, HIJiul wW be Ia
the Ml aid Iowa wW be Ia
lbe lh,'
1

.

i;}}~::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::t::I!:f::{f(f

County Junior Fair. The Meigs CoUnty Farm Bureau
Federation has provided trophies for the junior fair for
many years. The Meigs County Fair will get underway
Aug . 15.

Two-vehicle wreck probed
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports that
deputies lovestlgated a twocar accident that occurred at :
5:40p.m. Wednesday in Olive
Township on the Hutson
Valley Road.
According to the information, a· ·southbound
vehicle driven by Nanna J .
Wllliama, Rt. 1 Reedsvilte,
was on the inside of the curve
and struck head-on a northbound auto driven by Inez C.
Boring, Rt. 1 Reedsville.
Heavy damage resulted to
both vehicles, but no injuries
were report . Mrs. Williams

was. cited for foiling to keep
her vehicle on the right half of
the roadway .
Sheriff Proffitt alsQ advises
that his office has heen
notified that a 25-inch threespeed Huffy bioycle braWl!
frame and chrome fenders is
missing from a Harrisonville
residence. Cora Lee, Rt. 1,
Harrisonville, reported that
the bicycle was discovered
missing Tuesday · morning .
Anyone seeing a bicycle
answering this description
is asked tu contact the
sheriff's office or call the Lee
residence a.t 742-31~7 .

'

GRIDDERS TO REPORT
All boys, grades 9 through
12 , interested in playing
varsity or reserve .football
should report at Eastern High
School Monday, July 3t at
6:30p.m. to get t!leir helmets
fitted.
MEETING SLATED
The association of the .
Meigs County Trustees and
Clerks will meet Saturday,
July 29, at 7:30p.m. at Rock
Springs Grange Hall. The
budget for the Meigs County
Health Department will be
discussed also other busines.•
mAt t t•rs .

reps meet with. school board
Repres~ntatives from tht
Southern Loc al Tea chers
Association and Southern
Local Public Service Em·
ployes Association met with
the Southern Local Board of
Education this week to
discuss salaries and contracts.
The board agreed that
payment of certain bills will
be held until discussions on
all employes' salaries are
concluded.
In other business, the board
accepted the . resignation of
William Jewell as a teacher
at the junior high school,
accepted the resignation of
Mrs. Patricia Fletcher as a
teacher •at the Racine
Elementary, approved a
maternity leave of absence
f.,r Mrs. Barbara Lawrence
J

for the 1976-79 sc hool year Meadows, Marshall Adams,
and agreed to purchase Don P. Smith, Hilton Wolfe,
student accident ins urance Jr ., an4 Ray Proffitt.
from the Personal Service
The board authorized the
Insurance Company.
clerk to mak e an advance
The board hired the draw on tax co llections and to
following teachers for the make transfers.
1978-79 school year : Miss
The board also approved a
Karen
Rhodes,
Mrs. public service employment
Michaele Hoback, . Mrs. ag reement between the
Patricia Struble, Mrs. Connie So uthern Local School
Sue Giikev, and Miss Reha District and the Ohio Bureau
Miller.
of Employment Service (or
Substitute personnel hired the employment of Joni
for the 1978-19 School year Sellers for a 12-month period.
· were : cooks, June Ashley,
The next regular meeting
Sharlee Evans , Linda Grind- will be Aug. 22 at 7: 30p.m. In
1
ley, Dorothy Johnson, Hazel the high school cafeteria.
Selle.rs, and Lizzie Wood;
Attending were Dallas Hill,
custodians, Ann Cozart. Gene Yost, Shirley Johnson
Robert W. Lewi s, Lizzie and Betty Wagner , board
Wood, and Hazel Sellers : bus m embers , Linda Spencer,
drivers, Willi am Downie, Jr ., clerk and Bobby , Ord,
Wendall Er vin, Martha superintendent.

&lt;'

'

,•

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