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[).II)- The Swulay Times-sentinel, Sunday , July 30, 1978

Bergland accepts Here's so.m e summertime advice for energy savers
China ·invitation
..

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Agriculture Secretary -·Bob
Bergland Friday accepted an
invitation to visit China
offered by a high-level
Chinese
agricultural
delegation touring the United
siates.
The trip is tentatively scheduled for October.
In a sta ternent issued by
the Agriculture Department,
Bergland said he would seek
expanded U.S. agricultural
exports to China, which
herelDfore has considered the
United States as a secondary
source of grain.
Bergland said China was
"potentially a · tremendous
market," adding "We will
discuss with le:.lers of the
Ch inese government what
might be done lD expand
trade and assure them we are
capable of pr oviding a
continuing supply of high
quality foods and feeds at
reasonable prices."
The exact timing of the
invitation, which had been
sought through diplomatic
channels, carne as a surprise
to American officials. It was

issued as' Bergland m~
· gled
with leaders of th 26member delegation
fore
sitting down to a breakfast at
the U.S. Capitol.
· He accepted immediately,
saying, "Such a visit' is a rare
opportunity. "
The breakfast - attended
by four members of the
Chinese delegation , two
Chinese interpretors, three
Agriculture
Department
officials and six members of
Congress - was arranged by
Rep. Paul Findley, R-IU .,
who led an agricultural
delegation to Olina in March.
The entire delegation later
met with the House and
Senate . Agriculture
committees.
Findley said the group is
' 'the most
prestigious
mission that China has sentlD
this country."
The gro up included two
members of the Central Committee of the ' Chine se
Communist Party, including
the chairman of the
d'elegation, Ya ng Yi-chen. ·
Yang is adviser to the
Chinese Association of

-Victim critical

f

on the, eeyes oc gable ~
make your hom~mpletely
attaching 'lD the outside of
flOrthern Ohio the Farmers
walla can circulate .ttlc heat
airtight. says Jackson, you
windows are all avallable
Home Administration
to
the Olilide, reducing the
can reduce the amount of air
· sugge&amp;s the total uR" value
oow, says Jackaon. Roller
entering or leaving your
9hade8 and blinds are niD!It
for ceilings be 33; walls, 19;
air condltioner'l. ener@r
home with weather • stri(&gt;effective w~en mounted
and floors, 22, For the reo! of
use from 10 to 30 (ll!l'l'lft.
ping or caulking around door.J·
inside the window frame and
the state, the ceiling should
Window - mounted venand windows.
·
used in combination with
be:.l; walls, 19; and floors 19.
tilating fans help, and even
·- If you're ·buying an air
lither treatments - draperies · small room fans circulate
You can think of insulation
oonditioner, have it sized to
lined with fabric or foam and
as a so!1 of all1lUfll05e coat,
8nd d!Srt!Ue oool air. Oldfit the area to be cooled.
made of napped fabrics.
And just as overcoats that
time ceiling faris are popular
Draperies should not cover
"Bigger" doesn't necessarily
come with Ughtweight 1 fluffy
again, although they are not
mean "better,"
registers.
fabrics, or furry linings do a
very efficient aa all' movers.
- Operate the thermostat
- · Properly selected and
better job of keeping . you
Bathroom and kitchen
at the highest possible
placed deciduous trees and. exhaust fans, howeVer, are
warm, the ~ is true of .the
comfortable ·temperature,
shrubs encourage cooling
"overcoat" you put on your
valuable for nmo~ heat,
usually 58 degrees F. Keep
bree2es in the summer and
house - except that in the
odors, and moistw-e - work
don't interlere with warming
the heat discharge area free
Sllllllll!'r, the coat helps you
that the air conditioner won't
winter sun rays. · Plantings
of obstructions and clean the
stay cooL The lighter the
have to do. Fans and venfilter regularly.
Car! also shield an air con- tilators are energy misers
weight and the less dense the
- Changing your home
ditioner from the sun and
insulation,
the
more
oo01)11l'ed to refrigerated air
from non-insulated to inresistance it puts up against
save eneq!Y.
conditionllig: slnaD fans use
Sulated can do the most to cut
- DoUar for dollar, ventransfer of heat, and the
about the same energy 111 two
your swnmer electric bills,
tilators and fans used efbetter insulator it is.
ltD-watt Ught bulbs an oour, a
ficiently are the best
Since the alr\1 in summer is
says Roger Miller, Extension
tenth of that of a window air
mechanical energy savers we
to hold cold air inside,
agricultural engineer.
conditioner. Whole-house
Agriculture anq deputy lD the leadin g a
can use in cooling the home. ventilating fans UBe about 500
32-member
keeping draperies . drawn
Understand the "R" factor
National People's Co!lgress. American delegation tO China by
Whole-house ventilating fans
..n.en the sun's shining will ·
which
insulation
watts an hour. It takes 10
Yang said, through a tran- in September.
located in a central hallway
· pay dividends. Installing
resistance
to
heat
is
times that to air condition an
1
slater, 'The primary goal of
The Chinese presented measured to become a
canvas awnings (light color · pull outside air in through
entire house.
our mission is to further Bergland with a lengthy knowledgeable shopper.
windows and doors, forcing
for refleciion) with ven- Put a ' bol!td across
strengthen the friendship series of questions about
hot air in the bouse to the
tilating slots reduces demand
The "R" factor indicates
fireplace openings to avoid ·
with the American people and American agriculture·. the insulation's resistance to
for insi de cooling. Lightattic and outside through
cool air loss through the
lD exchange experiences in , Bergland, who is plaMing lD · the passage of heal - the
filterin g screens, fixed
windows or ·louvers.
dampers.
the field of agriculture, with meet with the delegation higher the R value. the more
ve rtical and horizontal
.And now, for that
An attic fan installed near
emphasis on our side to learn again in Detroit, said he and effective the insulation. For
louvers, and other devices for
lemonade.
the roof peak with air intakes
from th e United States."
other officials would fly to
The Chinese were at the meet the delegation a third
beginning of a visit arranged time toward the end of the
by the state of Michigan. trip to answer questions.
They will tour 13 states,
"We're prepared to spend
including Michi gan, Ohio, any amount of time for this
Indiana, filinois, Missouri, because we regard yo ur visit
Kansas, Nebraska, to ~ very, very important,"
Minnesota , South Dakota, Bergland said.
North Dakota, Wisconsin,
Iowa and California before
On Sept. 29, 1972, Japan
departmg Sept. 4.
a.nd mainland China agn•ed
Dale Ball, Michigan . tu reswne diplomatic relaagricu1ture secretary, is tions. · Japan and Taiwa n
By Diana S. Eberts
· All their scooting back and
forth · from yard to kitchen
Co, Ext. Agent
Meigs County
lets your cool.air escape and
POMEROY - Pour a
makes the air conditioner
lemonade, put on shariwork overtime while boosting
sleeved clothes, draw the
your fuel bill.
.•
Understanding the prindraperies, turn the· thermostat up to 78 degrees or p
ciples of air and beatloss can
the big fan on high. This is
~lp you start saving money
thiB summer, Jackson says.
good swnmertime advice for
energy savers.
· Cold air Is rmre dense, she
It's good advice for money
explains, (it weighs rmre per
savers too. Doing what you
cubic foot ) than wann air.
can to conserve electric
Because ills heavier, cold air
energy for air conditioning
pushes in through openings
your home &amp;~ves dollars a,nd
l&gt;tlenit'swinterandleaksout
makes sense. says G&lt;Jlden
through those openings in the
Jackson, instructor in the
swnmer.
Department of
Home
Und'erstanding that
· Management and Housing at
principle, you can easily see
The Ohio State University.
that the loUowing steps can
And while you're at it, teU
help you preserve your cool:
the kids to stay in or stay out.
- While it isn't practical to
------------------:...-

severed relations .

Secretary will not
approve early entry

ANNETTE CARTER, ielt , the 1978 Gallia County
Pork Princess, is presented the winner 's trophy by last
year's Pork Princess, Lynnita Newberry.

CHARLIE ANDREWS discusses fitting and showing
swine with swine exhibitors and other interested people .
Mr. Andrews wiU be the swine judge at the 1978 Gallla
County Junior Fait,
, ,

Annette .Carter named '78 Galliil Pork... Queen
GAL LI POLIS - Annette
Carter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Carter, Patriot, wa s
selected as 'the 1978 Gallia
County Pork Queen during
the Swine Fitting and
Showing Demonstration held
recently.
Miss Carter is a seven-y ear
member of the Rio Wranglers
4-H Club and her projects
include market hogs and the
saddle horse project which
she exhibits at the Ga llia
• County Junior Fair . As the
Gallia County Pork Queen,
Annette will represent Ga llia
County in the Ohio District 10
Pork Queen Contest.
LyMita Newberry , the 1977
Ga llia County Pork Princess
and District tO Pork Queen ,
assisted with the pl anning
and condu ct ing or this year's
contest.
The Fitting and Showing

Glassburn new
member of
AHA group

Now Appearing
Monday, July 31st thru Saturday, August 5th
Appearing Nightly 9:00 P.M. -2: 00 A. M. (except Sundavl

lWO DANCE FLOORS AVAILABLE FOR YOUR PLEASURE
Breakfast served daily 6:00 A. M.- 11: 00 A.M.
Dinner served 5 : 00 p.m .-9: 00p .m . (Except Sunday)

WILL OPEN FOR LUNCHEON SOON

Watch For Grand Opening

PT. PLEASANT INN

Rt . 62 North

Phone 304-675-6276

KANSAS CITY, Mo. ·James Chester Glassburn,
Bidwell, has been accepted as
· a junior member of the
American
He r e fo rd
Association, according to an
announcement by H. H.
Dickenson, Executive Vice
· president of the AHA .
By becoming junior
members of the · AHA ,
youngsters are able to take
advantage of the many
programs open to Hereford
breederS in their efforts to
further their own breeding
programs. Shows, performance records irdonnation and
being a . pa!1 of the many ·
activities· sponsored by the
AHA's junior department are
all benefits for the youthful
members.
·
The American Hereford
Association, headquartered
in Kansas City, Missouri, Is
the world's largest beef breed
registry organization. There
have been ·over 17 million
bead entered in its herd book
since the founding oi AHA in
1881.
QUARTERLY DIVIDEND
DAYTON - The. Board of
Directors of Robbins It Myers
(ROBN-OTC) today declared
the regular quarterly cash
dividend of thirty-five (35c )
per share on the common
stock of th e company,
payable September 15, 1978,
to shareholders of record
September I, 1978.
This is Robbins It Myers'
112th consecutive quarterly
dividend and the 27th consecutive yea r in which it has
been pai~ .
·

demonstration was conducted by Charlie Andrews,
the 1978 Gallia County Junior
Fair swine judge. He showed

4-H and FF A members the shown. This was an excellent
for
these
proper ways to prepare a opportunity
;t',l?.e prllifct for the fair and members to learn more about
now marki!t '!fogs--should be l!xhibiting swine projects.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

.

WiU Be Closed .AU Day
Monday, July 31st
For Inventory

A Mason man was seriously
injured early Sunday morning when he was struck by a
train at a railroad crossing at
Mason.
Lewis Dale " Jimmy"
Bates, 23, Center St., apparently was struck by a
Chessle System. train at
Railroad Crossing No. 1830 at

approximately 5:40 a .m.,
according to Mason County
Sheriff's Deputy R.W.
Colegrove, who is heading up
the investigation.
The Sheriff's Office was
notified of the accident by
Chessie officials.
Bates was transported to
Pleasant ·Valley Hospital by

the Mason Rescue Squad and
later transferred to St.
Mary's Hospital in Hunlington . Hospit.al officials
there report he is in critical
con dition with extensive
injuries to his head .and left
foot.
Coleg rove stated .that
circumstances surrounding

the accident are nor known
and are still under in· vestigalion. •
Assisting in the_ Investigation are Deputies E.F.
Crwnp, J.R. McCoy and Sgt.
Detner Roush Ill.
Bates is a employ.e of Hogg
and Zuspan M~terials Co.,
Mason. ·

Amin gives wife reins
ACCIDENT SCENE -

Mason County Sherllf's

~~· J&gt;el&gt;uti•es J. R. McCoy, Randy Colegrove, Detner Roush

and E . F. CJ'lllllp question Chessle Engineer Harry

Craig on details surrounding a Sunday morning accident
was struck by the train at Mason. The
victim, . Lewis Bates, has been hospitalized in critical
· condition .

ill which a man

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. ~Monday, July 31, 1978

•

at y

•

,

.

The World Today

NAIROBI , Kenya (UP!) Pre~~nt ldi Amln said
/today he is temporarily
handing over control of
Uganda to one of his wives
while he takes a leave from
his official duties to become a
raciilg driver.

I

The Ugandan dictator·~ ·
newest wife, Miss Sarah, has
been granted a leave from
her duties as a soldier in
Amin's "Suicide Mechanized
Regiment" to be alternate
driver for th e burly field
marshal 's 1971 Citroen-

Maserati, Radio Uganda
said.
"President ldi Amin will
.wear his famous jacket and
red ca p," Radio Uganda
reported in an apparently
tongue-incheek
announcement
of
the

en tine

Ugandan leader's latest exploits.
The decision to allow Amin
to · take part in the
forthComing "Economic War
Motor Rally" this week was
taken by the country's
1Continued on·page !OJ ·

Fifteen Cents
No. 29, No. 74

-----1

r_.. ....... _.._._.._..___.,_.._._,_._.._..

Public help is sought \14 wrecks
t
d
rt
repo e ·
b
l
t
I r pa ...0 l
1

WASHINGTON (UP!) Millions of Americans were
.asked for help today in
i dentifyin g blurred
photographs and sketches of
mystery· men coMected lD
the murders of ·John F.
Kennedy and Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr.
The
Assass i nations
Committee i&gt;u~day made
public . two' .chmposite
drawings a_nd three blurred
photographs "to make best
possible use of available
pictorial evidence and photographic techniques .. . in the

bope that citizen recognition

1

Warren Commission that Lee
Harvey Oswald acted alone in
killing Kennedy in Dallas
Nov. 22, 1963; and the guilty
plea by escaped convict
James . Earl Ray. tl!al he
murdered King in Memphis,
. Tenn., April 4, 1968.
Ray is. serving a 99-year
sentence at Brushy Mountain
['rison at Petros, TeM., but
. has since changed his story
and is trying lor a new trial
oo grounds be was tbe "fall
guy" for a mysterious
Catllldian .smuggler named .
" Raoul" who never has be en

identHied.
A series of public hearings
I
·
CLEVEI.:.AND (UPil- The mood was unabaahedly antllight on the assassinations of ·
is scheduled on both cases in ·
~
w::::~~ Union leadership - particularly InternaUonal
... Kennedy and King ."
August,
Sept
e
mber,
II
Frank Fitzsimmons - when Teamster dissidents
Anyone recognizing any of
November and December,
aroun(l the United States met thiB weekend for a national
the men depicted were asked
when all "new" evidence will
nfe•renc~ at Cleveland State University.
to contact the House Selecl
be reviewe d and many I
. .
~
Lashing out most frequently at the controversial FitzCommittee
on
witnesses, including Ray, will
.
union ref&lt;rmers gathered amid signs proclai'l'ning :
Assassinations, Washington,
be recalled for testimony.
-we are sick of sweetheart contracts," and "Fitz D.C. 20&gt;15, and submit any
. The three photographs
productivity Is zero ." ·
.
•
1
pictures they may have of the
released by the committee
'
.,
.
•
Sunday included a blurred
subjects.
1
~UJ:»ervist[)ry
Proven linkage of Sny of
image of a dark-haired man , r
. •'
the
men
to
the
Kennedy
and
(Continu.ed
on
page
10.
)
Four
people
were
treated
for
injuries
sustained
in
14
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Ohio Edison supervisory personnel
King cases case would
&lt;weekend accidents investigated by the Gallia-Post Highway
',')Jirovi•ded the 'sernce that normally would be done by some
Pa tro) .
directly
challenge
the
still
members of the UWlty Workers of America Union after
Officers were called to the scene of a one-car accident on
unrefuted
conclusion
by
the
members went on strike Suooay.
·
SR
554, at Shade Creek Rd., at5:30 p.m. Saturday .
The Wllon members set up picket lines after contract
According to the patrol , a vehicle operated by James A.
negotiations at Akron broke down. The strikers are linemen
Gorby;
18, Crown City , was unable to negotiate a sharp right
and repalnnen for the utility at Youngstown and Akron , as
curve
while
traveling. east. The auto dropped off the pavement.
wellu employees at flv~ Ohio Edison power stations including
The force of the impact was severe damage to the
thoee along the Ohio River. The union's contract with the
caused two passengers to fall Dabney auto .
uUUty ellplred July l, but workers remained on the jQb.
from the vehicle.
Wells was cited on charges
One of the passengers, Lisa of failure to yle)d.
Morrison, 17, Warren, Mich.,
Monday, at12 :20 a.m., the
displayed signs of injury and patrol was called to the scene
ToLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - The Wood County coroner did not
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - to cut ' SS84 million in U.S.
The embargo was imposed
was taken by the GaUia of a one-auto a.ccident on SR
Issue·an immediate cause of death after the body of an !Uinois
There
is
likely
to
be
both
good
con
tributions
to
international
Volunteer
Emergency Squad 7, at the Silver Bridge ramp.
after
Turkey
used
American
youth dropped from !&gt;eneath a tractor-trailer rig on the Ohio
and
bad
news
in
store
·
for
and
lending
banks
weapons,
in
violation
of
its
to
Hol~er
Medical · Center.
Officers report · that· a
Turnpike.
President
Carter
in
coogresinstituUons.
aid
agreement,
to
intervene
·
Morrison
was
treated
and
vehicle
operated by William
The State Highway Patrol said the youth had apparently
sional
actions
on
foreign
The
amendment
to
the
$8.4
.
in
Cyprus
in
1974.
Brademas
released
for
lacerations
of
the
Stone,
18,
Pomeroy, went out
been dragged for about two miles before his body fell to the
billion
foreign
aid has been a leader of the proskin . . The other passenger of control on the wet
pavement as a westbound truck was approaching a toll gate policy issues this week.
The House Is expected to appropriation bill will be embargo forces.
was reported uninjured.
pavement , and struck a
" Friday.
But both State Department
At 7:1S a.m.. officers in- I utility pole.
•
He waa identified by officers from the Patrol 's Swanton agree with the Senate on proposed by Rep. Clar~nce
lilting the 3-year-old embargo Long, chairman bl a House and House :10urces were
vesligated a two-vehicle . A passenger in the auto,
post as William Campbell, 17, Glendale, 01.
. oo anns for Turkey - an foreigp · operations sub- hopeful the House wiU vote to
crash on Nebo Rd ., two and Allen Dotson, claimed injury
action the president badly committee. Long. is critical of lift the embargo, voted by the MARY E. BEARPMORE
seven-tenths of a mile no!1h but was not immediately
wants - but may also give some of the
lending Senate la st week. 57-42.
of SR 32!i.
treated.
According to the patrol, an
The Stone vehicle incurred
"It's clear we've got the
. MANFREDONIA , Italy (UP!) - ·"Jarmer plowing a new him a setback with a vore lD programs, a,nd argues the
banks are not accountable to voles," Rep. Stephen Solarz,
auto operated by Ruth Sloan, minor damage.
field unearthed a marble statue of .. woman, remains of a cut foreign aid.
The House was starting the Corigress.
22, Patriot, traveling north,
Officers were called to
DN,Y., a major supporter of
temple and coins dating from Greek colonies of the 3rd and 2nd
week
today with general
Administration supporters, repeal, said in a te lephope
met a south bound vehicle
(Continued on page 10)
centuries B.C., antiquities officials said Sunday.
driven by Kevin W. Massey,
Antiquities department officials said the finds were made debate on both the foreign aid however, warn such a drastic interview.
•
cut
.
could
seriously
appropriations
bill
and
tbe
18, Oak Hill, in a curve: The
After disposing of these
by a fanner turning over a new field about nine miles outside
undennine
longstanding
$2.9
billion
for
eign
military
U.S.
the
House
will
major
bills,
vehicles collided head-on.
J
Manlredonla, a town on Italy's Adriatic coast.
Sloan was examined at
a
(l(J
aid authorization.
commitments.
tum later in the week to lhe
Assistant Democratic
Brademas declined to $119.4
. Pleasant Valley Hospital. /lr
billion
military
leader John Brademas, [). predict whether the Hou.Se appropriations biU.
spokesman for Pleasant
•
Ind.,
said
tbe
House
will
will
agree
with
last
week
's
Valley
stated
this
morning
A
floor
battle
is
coosidered
OCEAN CITY, N. J . (UPJ ) - Reporters and
that Sloan refused to be
, photographers proved to be a royal pain this weekend for a begin ameooing the foreign Senate action on lifting the tikely between opponents and
military
aid
·
measure
arms
embargo
against
admitted for treatment.
supporters
of
the
$1.9
billion
Working
with
the
Meigs
pair
cl.
newlyweds
visiting
southern
New
Jersey.
1
Both vehicles incurred
A crackdown on inoperable
The !llund of camera clicks rivaled the roar of the ocean as Tuesday, and the foreign aid Turkey, an issue the nuelear -powe red aircraft CO unty student health team
motor vehicles parked on
Princess Caroline and Phillipe Juno! tried to relax on the money biD Wednesday - administration considers to carrier, which both Houie and taking part in the free severe damage.
Sloan was cited on charges village streets, in the yards of •
beach in the front cl. the Ocean City ',summer house of Mrs. with a vote oo an amendment be of major importance.·
and Senate ha~e authorized, 'health screening clinics ofbut the White 1House doesn 't ·fered by -Meigs Count y's of failure to yield.
John Kelly, Caroline's 80-year-old grandmother and the
owners or in some location
At 12:01 a.m. Sunday, the where they are visible. to the
Health Department this
want.
, mother of Princess Grace.
'!'he staff of House and summer is Mary Ellen patrol investigated a two- public was promised today by
vehicle crash on U.S. 35, two· Middleport Police Chief J . J ,
Senate energy conferees Beardmore.
Mary Ellen, who will enter' tenths of a mile west of ·Cremeans.
planned to have the natural
· A wrecker wiD be available
gas price deregulation but ber junior year in medical Rodney Rd.
sr. LOUIS (UP!) - A man described aa a reputable St.
According to the patrol, a on Tuesday to remove such
drafted into legal language dietetics at Ohio State
Loulaan says Russell G. Byers told him he refused a $50,000
this week so Congress can University this faU, is a vehicle operated by James vehicles from the premises of
offer to arrange the death of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King
give it final consideration Michigan native who has also Wells, 30, Gallipolis, turned the owners, the chief said,
Jr., according to a publl8hed report.
soon . .
lived in Frot Wayne, Ind. and into the path of an auto driven and anyone knowing of any
United Press Inte111BIIOIIIII ·; · Killed were :
The St. Loula POII-E&gt;Ispatch said Sunday a prominent
An
Ohio
Highway
Patrol
Sunday
The Senate will act first. Cente rville $ nd Newark, by Michael D. Dabney, 24, such a vehicle should contact
citizen said Byers first mentioned the plot in generalities after
while at- the police department giving
car,
answering
an
emergency
Ca mbridge : Dura L. but has not yet set a date for Ohio. Her family, of wl)ich Jackson Pike,
the auassination of ~ in 1V68 and talked about It in more
tempting
a
left
tum.
call,
slammed
into
another
she
is
the
oldest
of
eight
Rhoades, 24, Arcanum, in a debating the conference verthe location and the per:
detail in about 1974. "He said that in the latter conversation
Dabney , transported· by mission of the owner for the
,. Byers told of a stockbroker taking him to the Imperial, Mo .. auto at an intersection in one-car acciaent on J n- sion, which would phase out children, currently lives in
SEOEMS, was treated and removal of the vehicle.
Clinton, Md.
fann of a· patent lawyer to disculs the plot," the newspaper Lorain County Sunday night, terstate-70 in Guernsey price controls ~raduaUy . ·
killing a Lorain cciuple. Those County.
said.
.
With plans to work in a released from Holzer Medical
Senate Democratic Leilder
On Friday morning, owners
deaths boosted Ohio's
borain : Paul A. Meyer and Robert Byrd's
Senate hospital counseling patients Center for · multiple con- of such vehicles which have
weekend traffic fatality co·unt Dayle A. Meyer, both 38 and schedule is
.
reiatively on special diets after her \usions.
not been removed from
graduation from O.S.U., , Wells had visible signs of village property or from
· to at least nine, the Patrol from Lorain, in a two-car noncontroversial.
HARGEISA, SomaUa (UP! l -Clouds of voracious locusts reported today .
mishap on Ohio 113 in Lorain
TJ!Dtatively scheduled are Mary Ellen feels working in injury, but was not im- yards where they can be seen
!11'1! III8ISing In the remcrte and forbidding mountains of
The Patrol car, driven by County .
•
funding bills for Conrail, Meigs County these past few mediately treated:
by the public will be subject
Somalia, waiting to ride the wind across East Africa and Trooper Gerald Burton of the
The Wells vehicle incurred to arrest, Chief Cremeens
Saturday
put&gt;llc works and ccmmunity months ha~ been an indestroy bllllona of dollars wocth of crops.
Elyria Post, was westbound
CinciMati : Charles King, services, and possibly a bill valuable C¥ perlence. " I moderat e damage . .There warned.
Health officials say vast swarms of the inJects have been on Ohio 113, with emergency Jr., 22, Cincinnati, in a on~­ increasing veterans pensioo would like to thank the people
swept into the high ground aloog Somalia's northern co$8t lights flashin g and siren . car a"ccldent on ·a Cincinnati benefits.
in the county for sharing their
SQUAD RUNS
bordering the Gull of Aden by strong monaoon winds. Now, sounding, when the other street.
community 1 with us and
The
Middleport
theae IIBll;le atron11 currents are preventing extennina.tlon vehicle pulled into Its path at
giving us a chance to learn
Cloudy and a chance of Emergency Squad w~s called
Denni so n :
Rupert
learnlin their light l!pray planes from reaching the locusta.
Griffin Road, according to McGuire, 26, Ulirichsvil)e,
things about working with showers tonight and Tuesday. to the office of Dr. James
Patrol Sgt. James Chapman. and Sandra Miku. 24,
people that we could have Lows tonight In mid 60s. Conde at 11:56 ~ .m. Saturday
st~ers
Killed in the accident were Uhrichsville, in a one-car
ne•er·learned by studying a Highs Tuesday i9 lhe upper for John Wilt, Middleport,
Paul
Meyer
and
his
wife,
crash
on
U.
S.
250
east
of
.
textbook,"
she says.
70s or 80s. Probability of who was taken to Holzer
ROANOKE, Va. (UP!) - Leaders of a striking clerks Dayle, both- 38.
'She
has
enjoyed
the
hills
of
precipitation 60 percent
DeMison.
union have dtnied a chars- by Norfolk 6 Western Railway that
Two cars received medlwn Southeastern Ohio and . today, 30 percent tonight, 40 Medical Center.
Elyria
:
The
Patrol
car
was
Jimmy
Ran5om
At .:i:41 p.m. Sunday, the
they dllrupted barpinlng talks and .then tried to cover up the responding· to a call for
damages and one driver was Pomeroy's setting on the percent Tuesday.
Jr.,
28,
Elyria,
when
his
squad
·answ~red a caD to
fact.
cited to Mayor's cou!1 as a . river and contributes her
·
asaiatance
from
neighboring
motorcycle
hit
a
curb
and
he
Gravel
Hill Cemetery for the
Jam• Volley, local general chalnnan of. the Brotherhood
result of an accident on East enjoyable experience here to
sexton, Ivan Grover, who was
of Railway 'and Airline Clerka, said SWiday ~re were no. Erie County at the time of the was thrown against a fire Main St., Pomeroy, at 1:42 ·
the friendliness of the people
'
EXTENDED FORECA$T
dead upon tire unlt ~ s
CGnferencee 1et for lhll weekeoo wheq union president Fred J . 7:$3 p. m. collision, Chapman hydrant in Elyria.
a.m. Sunday.
in the area. ·
said.
•
Newark
:
Mark
A.
Kroll said he could not atteoo.
·
Wednesdi!Y
through
Pomeroy Police said a
arrival.
In addition to her medical
Bu!1on was treated for Buchanan, 15, Pataskala,
Friday, fair Wednesday
westbound
car
driven
by
At 8:23 a.m. Mon·
studies,
Mary
Ellen
sings
and
miltor injuries at a Lorain motorcycllst wlien struck by
ilnd Thursday and a chance day the.. squad answered
Jerry
J.ohnson,
RaCine
,
plays
the
guitar
and
plano.
hospital and released.
a train in Licking County.
of showers Friday. Highs a call to :;()2 E. Main St.,
traveled over the centerline She also enjdys studying
CLEVELAND (UPII - Evidence. d. wlde~pread fraud that
'l'he accident remained
Frida~ Nipt .
wlll range from the 70&amp; to Pomeroy, ·for MIMie Benael,
striking
an
eastbound
car
enab1ld U, 8. Marine reeruiten lD meet qUOIU by recruiting under inv~stigation today.
Granville: Richard L. Ron- driven by Alma Pooler, foreign languages and
the
mid llh and lows wUI be who had laDen. She wu taken
unq1•1Hitd men and women 11M been uncovered by
learning about different
The Patrol counts traffic age, 12 1 Pataskala, when his
In
the
10&amp;.
Dailey,
·W.
Va.
·
bmllllltDrl f~W lien. Howard Me~, I&gt;Qdo, tile fatalities each n ·holiday bicycle was struck by a ca·r
to .. Veterans · Memtirl•l
cultures as well as more
Johnson
was
cited
for
Oevellnd PWII Dealer reported today.
Hospital with back and
athletic activities such as
weekend from I p. . Friday on Ohio 161 in Licking County.
~riving left uf !'filler.
shoulder r juries.
until midnight Su y.
volley, t~is and swimming.'
•
·
(Continuedonpa11eiO)

personel works

. Body

drbps &amp;Om trailer rig'

of them might shed additional

Presi.d ent expecting
go~d and bad n·ews. •

I

1
I

1

•

Farmer unearths antiques . .

Open Tuesday, Aug. 1st
9:30 ·A.M.
Take advantage of the · special
values during our final clearance
sale of summer clothing - infants',
children's, wom.en's, men's and
boys' wear. Savings up to 50 pet. on
many items.

E1berfelds In Pomeroy

Student
•
enJoys
county

Couple has "royal'' pain

·Kill bribe was refused

Cr.·ack Awn
promlSed

Emergency run
ends in tragedy

Locusts ready to destroy

seafood
Chic~en
~

Weather

.

so forth

Driver cited
after wreck

Otarges denied by

Announdng The Opening of
Fisherman~s Cove
• wheratheMiaeeiMihlfllfer"•~•

1207.WASHINGTON IOULIVARD

111111, OHIO

Fraud evidence is recovered

SUN. Thru THUll.

MI.AIMISAT.

·11tet.H

11 te 10

~

I•

�·•

-

ORLANDO,' Fla. (UP!) Their tree-limb and palmSome Florida ln~tional frond shelter, the first class
University students are asaignment, surprised them
learning that while primitive .all by withstanding the daily
peoples had the romance ol afternoon thundershowers.
· living free and close to the , "They are ao proud of
earth, they also had their themselves," said Dr. 'Allyn
share of chiggers and other Stearman, who helps leach
·
the claSs. "Some have never
incooveniences.
For two hours a day, four made anything in their lives
days a week, 20 of the with their hands."
students take a trip back in . Each class member must
time
to
"Primitive keep a daily journal. Janice
Technology," as described in. Robinaon wrote, "Today was
their anthropology hooks.
the first day of clearing. My
"lti5asclo5easwecanget hands ·are, so •!ired ~ can .
to the total anthropological hardly wr1te. It IS eas1er to
eJq&gt;erience," says Dr. David understand the technique
Jond, who once lived ·with than Ill put it inlll action."
the Plains Indians. "This is
Another student, Ann Vannot a sununer camp."
Iandingham, said in her first
In the woods behind the entry, "It .is difficult to
university, studenl.s whittle imagine how our ancestors
without
the
sticks, build campfires, sew managed
cowhide pouches and make cooveniences ol hand-held
bows from branches just as hair dryers." A month later
early hunting bands did . she was teaching fellow

Touriltslook · up

students the correct way to ·
string a bow.
The professors say they
limit lhj!ir authority in
keeping with the order in the
primitive aociety. "There are
no chiefs in hunting bands.
The students are not leaders
rior followers," Jones said. ·
And Ms. Robinson likes
being her own boss, noting in
her journal : "I really like the
way we keep our class
running like an egalitarian
aocid)'. I feel like we are aU
equal ill importance." .
A fellow student, however;
disagrees with those politics.
"EgalitarianisJn may have
worked for hunters, but it i5
hard in this day and age to get
something dgne without
having someone in charge," .
she said. "You should see the
mistakes we make. But I'm
learning a lot . I didn't think I

Democrats begin work

.
.
WASHINGTON (UP!.)
He calls the Steiger amend·
While Proposition 13 fever is ment the " millionaire's Lax
sweeping the country, the relief act" because it will
Democratic National give a $200,000 tax break to
Committee is mobilizing a each of 3,000, millionaires
modest campaign against the while the averagefamily with
, current wave of Republican- · an income of $15,000 to $20,000
backed federal tax cut will get a tax cut averaging 25
legislatioo.
cents.
The GOP is chartering two.
"'The Republicans have
jet planes to ·send "tax seized on the tax refonn and
squads" around the nation reduction initiated by Jimmy
preaching in favor of billion Carter and the demand of the
dollar tax cut legislation; the people for tax relief as an
poverty stricken Democrats opportunity to bamboozle the
are using one man and the . voter that tax reduction for
U.S. mails · to get their the rich is tax reform," he
message through.
said. "We are not going to IE!\
The main Largets ol the them get away with that."
Democratic campaign. are
The rest of the Democratic
the
so-called
Steiger program consists of using the
amendment which would cut U.S. mails to get the word
the capital gains tax, and the around. Last month a position
Kemp-Roth bill which would paper oo the Steiger amendcut income taxes rates by 30 · ment was mailed to about 800
percent over a three year state a!ld local party leaders,
period.
congressional candidates,
The GOP has made the two and Democratic V!Ps who
bills the cornerstone of its fall were urged to get the word
election campaign . The around .
A similar mailing on
Republicans hope the tax cut
issue can be used in the Kemp-Roth will go out soon.
November elections to cut and ots message will be much
heavily into the Democrats'
domination of Congress.
National party chairman
John White i5 the Democrat's
one man "tax squad." Flying
FORT JACKSON, S.C.
in
'tourist
class
on (UPI ) - Military-lllyle grand
commercialalrllnes, White is jury proceedings, susjlended
tnuring the country to speak
a week ago, were scheduled
at party gatherings . His Ill resume today as ·Anny
message these days is ahnost
entirely devoted to the tax cut officials tried to decide if
courts martial are warranted
question.
·~for
two drill instructors
Kemp-Roth, he says, would
in the heat stroke
charged
cause runaway inflation.
deaths
of
two recruits.
"That single inflation point
T~e
Article
32
alone is sheer recklesness,
investigation,
which
is
being
and an example of the short·
sightedness of the Repub- conducted behind closed
licans," he said. "They are door.s, was delayed because
interested ln the 'quick-fix.'" attorneys for Sgt. Willie
Alexander,
24.
of

makes

· the same as White
in
his speeches.
The position paper includes
a "Dear Friend" letter
signed by White in which he
subUy urges the receiver Ill
pass the w&lt;rd about the bad
points of the legislation and Ill
write to Congr.ess urging
defeat of \he measure.
."The point is to make sure
Olll' major constituencies are
fully informed," said Scott
Wolf, director of research for
the. Democratic Nationai
Committee. "It's a complex
issue, and we can't use a hard
seD like the tax cut advocates
do.
"We have Ill explain very
carefully what the bills do
because we feel once the
provisions are more fully
known · the popularity for
these bills is going to wane,"
he said.
''And there's no money for
us to send out truth squads
like the Republicans are,"
adds Susan Morrison,
director of communications
for the DICC.
"

. "She wanted to' go to the coast- I wanted to go to the.
mountains - then the utility bills came ... " .

:_
.:.:.:.:.:.:

Profits up for first tune ::i':W::;
·:·:·:-:

PI'ITSBURGH (UP!) The three largest domestic
steelmakers reported healthy
quarterly profits 1as.t week
for the first time in over a
year, but the industry has yet
to solve the problem of rising
costs and a declining demand
for baaic steel.
U.S. Steel,' the largest
domestic producer, reporied
second quarter earnings ol
$117.3 millioo, an impre88ive
54 percent higher thlm those
reported ooe year earlier.
The Pittsburgh steelmaker
attributed the improvement

. Ill increased elfic;iency, and
the end of the national coal
and iron rre strikes.
Natiooal Steel Corp., No. 3
in the field, reported second
quarter earnings of $34
million, a 26 percent
improvement, citing the
same factors along with an
improved
market . lor
Natimal's specialties.
And Belhlel\em Steel Corp.,
the No. 2 steelmaker which
last year recorded a net loss
ol $448 million, rebounded
dramatically · with second
quarter 1978 profits of f84.8

No SS benefits given

Many men with working
This latter provision also
wives who gained Social specifies that pensions
Security enti!lement based on received from government
· spouse's earnings as a employment that was
their
Timmonsville and Sgi. Ill! resull of a .. 1971 sex c'Overed by Social Security at
Class Lawrence Chapman ol discriffiination rUling by the the time th~ beneficiary
Pickens
had
prior ·U. S. Supreme Court won 't retired won 't interfere with
·commitments last week.
collect the benefits after all. theSocialS'ecuritypayments.'
Alexander and Uiapman
The 1osers are men who
The new law does not in·
are charged with involnntary have worked out government terfere with Social Security
manslaughter, derellcti~r~ of pension&amp; under State, Local, payments paid to an in·
duty and maltreatment of and Federal plans that are dividual who receives a
recruits in the deaths ol the not · alllO covered by Social Government pension based
11\-y~ar~ld trainees June 29.
~-- ·t y.
•
=Uri
on some otner
person •s
Pvts. Lester Watts of York,
The pensioners have ~n employment. For example, a
S.C., and Wayne Krassow of disqualified by a December widow who receives both a
Cygnet, Ohio, died after their 1977, amendment to the Social Security benefit and
first day of training from Social Security Art which Government pension earned
heart attacks lrought oo by provides that Social Security by her deceased husband wiU
heat strokes. the Army said. benefits payable to a man on continue to receive both
In a related ma~r. New his wife's earnings record payments.
York Congresman Sam Strat- may be reduced by the
Neither does the law affect
tnn, chairman of the House amount of any Goverrunent a Social Security benefit
Armed
Services pensoon
· he
· has earned.
which was earned by the
Investigations Committee,
At present the restriction pensioner himself.
said his staff's investigatioo does no! apply to male
The new rules affect those
into . the rna tter is to pensioners
who
were applicants who applied lor
determine whether it is an dependent on their wives for Social Security benefits after
By KENNETH R. CLARK
Army-wide problem 1r an at least one·half their support November !977 . lis purpose is
United Press Interoatlooal
LOADED UP: The eHhamp is in New Orleans, drumming· isolated incident.
to avoid payment of "wind·
at certain specified times.
"If we discover this is a
up a crowd for his Sept. 15 rematch with the man who lifted hi!
However, beginning with · fall" benefits to Government
crown , and if.fighting trim and Lalking trim are the same, Leon lroader problem, we might December 1982, these pensioners.
, Spinks hasn't a prayer. Muhammad .4:11 is staging a have some hearings, but that dependent husbands, as well
A more detailed ex·
promotional tour for the upcoming battle at the Louisiana would he at a later 'date, not as wives, widows. and planation of these, as weD as
Superdome, and the monologue is vintage tip. Says Ali, ''This before September," he said. dependent parents who have the many other changes in
Stratton emphasized that earned Government pensions Social Security can be ol&gt; .
event I predict will be the biggest event in the recorded history
no
cii11Jilen!.&lt;l 1r reports will may lose eligibility to Social tained at the Athens Social
of the whole earth .. . This fight is bigger than the Superbowl ,
he
made
on the incident until Security henefi\S based on Security Office,
the Rose Bowl, 'Roots,' the Indianapolis 500 ... It will be a
22112
legal
proceedings
against the earnings of wives, husbands, Columbus Road, Athens, Ohio
September to remember ... I'm going to wipe this sucker out .
Ali - you the king. ''
! drill sergeants are concluded. and children unless they have 45701 . The telephone number
Chapman and · Alezander, already qualified for their is 592-4440. Meigs County
. MANY WARBLED RETURNS: The big weekend party at who have been suspended Government pensions by that residents can dial 99U622.
the Hollywood home of Rudy Vallee celebrated two milestones from their duties pending the date.
•
- the 78th birthday of the megaphone crooner of the '20s and outcome of the investigatioo,
'30sand the 45th anniversary of the singing telegram. Western could
face
maximum
1
Union inaugurated the service in 1933 by sending a singing sentences of B'h years in
.
·
birthday greeting to Vallee - one warbled by LucUie Upps. military jalls if found guilty.
Western Union i5 out ol the singing telegram business now, .but
r---~~~----------~
another firm called National Onion - changed at Western
Union's insistence from "Western Onion" - carries on. Onioo
gave Vallee 's 78th a singing sendoff - but wiihout Miss Lipps
who has faded from the scene .

Decision .i s .awaited

peopletalk

B·e r r y s

w 0 r Id

Bribery.

BRANDO BRAND : Marlon Brando is working on a possible
series of television programs devoted to American Indiallll,
'~ whose cause has fired him.for years . An ABC-TV spokesman
says : in . I:I~ QYWC&gt;!&gt;&lt;J ..th,e networ.k is working with Brando's
company to develop ·scripts - that four ·now are being
prepared, and that "we've made no commitment to go to a
series 1r a film , but we have made a development deal. " That
means both sides are gauging the possibilities. Refusing his
Oscar for "the Godfather" in !973, Branda sent an actress
dressed as· an Indian woman to read a protest against
Hollywood 's portrayal of Indians.
.
·
QUOTE OF TilE DAY: California Attorney General Evelle
Younger, recovering from surgery, on why he eapects to
defeat Gov. Jerry Brown in the race for the Statehouse : "I've
got more in common with the people, the way !live- family·
grandchildren, mortgage on the house, kidney stones - the..;
are aU things Jerry Brown hal!l)'.t.experienced."
".- ' .. ... . " .
'

GLIMPSES: famed 116-yr,-old broadcaster Lowell TbOIIUis
will receive the Christopher Colwnbua award during CoJuni.
bus, Ohio's U.S.A. celebration in October ... Sylvetter
"Rocky" StaU..e i5 the new honorary chairman of "A Child's
Friend Club," whose members donate $1,000 a year to the
Reiss-Davis Center for mentally troubled children in Los
Angeles ... Cellist Nathalllel Rolen, the first American
instrumentalist Ill take Moscow's prestigious gold medal in the
annual Tchaikovsky Competition since Vu Cliburn captured
the prize 20 years ago, makes his first homecoming
~ormance in,the Hollywood Bowl Aug. 23 ....
•

•

trial

CLEVELAND (UP!) - A
federal bribery trial began
today
for
millionaire
Cleveland developer Carl
Milstein and Charles Lucas,
suspended head of the
Cleveland federal housing
office.
Milstein and Lucas, a
prominent
Republican
appointed to the U.S.
Department. of Housing and .
Urben Development Poet by
former President Richard
Nixon, are accused of taking 1
part in an alleged $100,000
.lribery scheme.
· According to prosecutnrs,
Milstein, 54, principal owner
of Northfield Park harness
track , bribed Lucas, 68, to get
special treabnent lor housing
projects he wanted to build
with federal support. Milstein ·
has built mWlons of dollars
worth · of HUD·Insured
projects in cuyahoga, Lalu!,
SulRII)it, Portage and Lucas ·
Counties and in,Michigan. ·

'

NEWYORK(UPI).- Some
people lillY It'• ..., ..., tell the
inbabllants and~ apart
in New York a()o1 TourisiJ
look up at the ~CS"apers
wblle ·tile rllldlllil keep an
eye oo the ground, caut10111 of
where tbey step.
Beping'l'lllldaY, there's
a chance New Y~en wiD he
able to look up •
again.
That's when a ._ lllate law
taketJ effect, rtqllrlng dog
owners to c1een up after their
pets.
.
·
It's difficult - e.pecially
for New Yorlu!rs - to break
old habits. But many city
officials and rllicllllll hope a
poaalble $100 fine will
convince dot! owa,n to ann
themselves with bame-p!llde
or store-bouaht. "pooper;
scoopers" when they take
Fido out lor hil constitu·timal.
For years, when venturing
out on the streets you had to
watch your step.
Dr. Alan Beck, an
behaviorist and ecologist who
heads the Allllul Affairs
Division of the dty•s Depart-

aruma!

.

"

~187S~NEA.' Inc ~~
·" Yessir, we're gonns do OUR part for Jimmy
an' get those oil prices right up thertt, 1/ktt he
promise(JI" ·

mllllon, a· 143 percen.t
improvement over the
previous year's second
.period.
All of which llllltes the steel
lnclustry lll!em like a prelty
prolitsble bualneu, no looger
deserving the 'alling' label
which preceded mentiCII of ita
name lrr the past few years.
(lut that is not the case,
steel ezperts say.
Alfred s. Rudd, steel
analyst lor SLBndard 1o: Poora,
warns: "We've. mly C~~~De
one step out of the valley, so
let's not start thinld!lll o1 the
mountaintop yet." ·
"II things cooUnue 011 like
this Indefinitely, that would
be jUII fine,'' Rucid said, "but
it is going to lake time to .
accumulate the funds that
Ire so badly needed in so
many easel."
He pr'edlcted the industry's
neitt ~ quarters wW be
good, but probably not u
good as the second qulrter.
Steel e:~pert David Healy,
of
Drnel,
Burnliam ,.
Lambert, predicted "three
more good quarters," but.hia
overaU all&amp;e8llllent of the
domelllc industry was not
optirnlallc.
"If the in••-•
.,_A.
~ 1 ..,.........
what it llll)'S it is going to
spend lhla year on, capital
ezpansion, pollution and
other things, I lhink tbere
would he 10111ething like a
$1.5 billioo abortfaU between
ita capital requirements and
earnings."
While industry volume wu
rising lhil year, he noted, the
ateelmakers' major market
-the automobile indllltry WU USing far leas llt.eel and
growth in other areas waa

=

1

Health Llw !SlO-changeda
bit 10 that ")1111 lib we
require people to ...,ve
drivers ~. you lhould
he required lo ...,ve a lealh
and a ICOC!P when You nlk
your dog." ·
.
It .Is now illegal for
someone .to .walk 8 dog
without a leuh, but 1lle new
law does not require owners
to cattY scoop~~.
Law 1310 simply lilalea: "It
ShaD he the duty ·of eacb dog
.owner to remove any feces
left by his dot! ori any
sidewalk, gutter, stree.t or
· other public place."
Most olflclala concede the
· major' problem with the law
will he enforcement.
1\fayor Edward Koch notes
a dog must be "caught
flagrante delicto" by an
authorized health, sanltatlm
or traffic officer~ who must
ask the owner to clean the
mesa up before issuing a
summons.
II the owner does not clean
up, he can plead i!allly by
returning the 8UIIIIIIOOJ with
a~ line, or take the cue to

m:em.
lots, and
.
.

arthe lalooklng for waYJ to beat

"There's about 320 'square
mUes in· the dty, so that
meall8 half a ton per square
mile," said Beck, trho noted
that dog waste JIOMI "disease
a n d e n v Ir o n m e n t a I
problems" - eapeciaUy with,
lr8l1811llsalon of worm larvae
to ehlldren.
"(And) studlea have shown
that ball the eyealalu!n out o1
people's heads because tht;r
!bought it waaa tumor was m
fact VLM," (Visceral Larvae
Migrans), Beck added.
"You have emission
controls on yo• car and
ho~~~ebold garblp," he said,
"and now you have emlssioo
control for your dog."
Beck said he would like Ill
!lee the new code - Public

''During the dsy I'm going
to carry one (a scooper)
around, but at night . when
there's no one around, I'm not
goiilg to use it," said one
Manhattan man who OWIIIl
two large dogs.
"Another man said he'D
carry a newspaper with him
when he wlilks his dog, but
wiD use it ooly if forced to.
Some neighborhood groups
have initiated patrols to l&lt;rce
dog owners to comply
through peer pressure.
One group which lobbied
stroogly lor the bill, the New
York Coalition for Dog
Control, said it wiD nionitor
both dog owners and city
agencies responsible lor
enfrrcing
. the law.

Jlllr •

L~rence

SKIM MILK HIGH
INCALCtlJM
By Lawreaet Lalllb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - For
the past two yean I have
been givinll lllJ' children,
ages 11 and 7, low.fat and
skim milk. I ulted the doctor
if they were ~~ enough
calcium and he said they
were. Recently i heard a
nutritionist claim that
children shoQ!d have whole
milk to get the calcium they
need. Whom do lllelleve? Are
there other foodl that supply
calcium?
.
DEAlt REAOI!lft - I would
suggest you plaet your trust
sluggilh.
in the food analJIIa of the U.
"And their COllis are stW S.
Department
of
rising rapicDy - the average Agriculture. Tbtre is no
steelwrrker is making about calcium whatsoever in the fat
$14 an hour, including fringe in milk. It is tile fat that's
hene!lta, and scra)lt coal and removed from low.fat and
rre are I!Oinll liP faster U.O skim rnlik.
thegenerallnDatlonrate," he
In fact, if'you wwe to check
said.
the agricultural . handbooks
"So 1lle indu.stry II ina good lor food values you
period," Healy said, "but I'm would lind · that forti·
not sure the incliltry'a biC lied sklln milll and forti·
JI'Olllellll are fundamtntaUy lied low-fat mJ.Ik, which
solved.
is what most peciple use in
these Instance•, contain
considerably IIIOft protein
THURSDAY PO'IUJCit
and calcium per J)us than
The United Methodlat · ordinary
whele milk.
Women of Chelter wW meet. Perhaps you Ji8unclentood
Thursday at noon at the the nutrttionla; ~·-may juat
church ·ror a potluclr: d!Mer. have been taw.ilabou\ milk
The recuJar U.M.W. meettna In cem;ral and etted whole
will follow at 1:30 'p.m. milk aa it Ia COIIIIIIOnly used,
Memben are to bring their nther tl)an lmplfing that if
. own table llerVIce.
the rnlik w181't whole you
·wouldn't get the caldwn you
REVNJON SET
needed.
.
.
The andual Teaford
To Kjve yo• more in·
reunioo "!!I be helit Sundar, formation about milk and the
AUCIIIt s, at the Racine Lodtl caldum and ~ content
and Dam. Lllncb be11Jna at ol whole mlik, ·low-fat milk
noon. Family memben are to · and lklm milk 1 am lending
brine a covered dllb.
you The Heal\b Letter
number 7·2. Olhln who want
lhla lUIIe on milk can send 50
lliJIII with a 11!*1, fllmped,
~elf-«ddreued Mt10De lor it
TRUITEEI MEETING
to
me in can If lhli now•
The Sutton Townahlp
paper,
P. 0 . llollllll, Radio
Tralteel wW meet Tuudlly,
City
StaUon,
~ft Y01'11:, NY
Ausuat I at I p.m. at the
IOOit.
SynCUM ManldJI!I} Bulldlnc .
MUll and milk Jlroducta are
ICE CREAM IOCIAL
our beat 10an.w Ill calcium in
The Oran1e Town1hlp the diet. One of lilY favorltea
Voiunt- Fin Dtpartmlnl in this P'01IP from • health
wiD IPOIIIOI' an lee cnU! point of view II lllw.fat cot·
IOCfal Saturdlly, AqDII I, It ta1e cheeie, 1ometlmea
I p.m. at file T•w 111 Plalnl rwflmld to u 111m i:beiM or
Grade School. A 114aare low calorie ..... You· can
dance wW follow at. t p.m. 1110 UM IeMt YOIUrt
Refreahmmt• lncllldt let provided YH~have a
eream, cllle, Jilt, 1¥11 clop problem of
lor
and lOft clrlnluo.
milk aupr: In
t inltanct

•

e

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E. lamb, M.D.
some of the yogul1s may not
he satisfactory.
Mature beans contain an
appreciable amount of ,
calcium,
considerable
amounts of protein and are a
iow.fat food. CaMed sahnon ·
or sardines, if you eat the
bones, also aupply an appreciable amount of caldum.
There is a certain amount of
calcium in the leafy
vegetables but very often this
caldum is not readily absorbed from the dlgea.tlve
tract. It isn't always
available to the body:
DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
a friend in college who
studlet many houn a dsy and
gets very little physical
actlvily. She eats quit~ a bit
but she doesn't get fat.
studying use a lot ol calorlea?
Would you use more calories :
studying for three hours than •
you would jUII sitting lor
three boura?
•
DEAR READER - I hate !
lo disappoint you but the
· litain uses very UtUe energy .
even when one is con· •
centratlng on extremely :
dl!licult talks. It has been •
said that you can run the ~
brain' on leas calorlell than •
you find in one peanut, wbich :
I gueu means that aU of us,•_
have peanut brains.
';

0oes::

This is one of the ID8in
rea10111 that ·olftce workers
.
and people who UN tbelr
brains ttnd to get fat. Deal!
work of any type in a penon
who doea very IIUlt tltercile
meauthatthepenon doesn't
use very many caloriea a dlly_.

Sport P

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"'':ir:.;a

:·:·

:ll~ of·~~~~ •~g:-courle.somedogowners

NewksYork 's

iii

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::: ::·!

.-

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..
,

rT:i..~"'""-·"'-1 Reds top Phils, Rose Royals /whip

•,

residents look down

was so strong."

....

~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy., 0 ., Monday July 31, 19'18

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2- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Mondlly, July 31 . 1978

A trip hack in time

_..__

Bosox again

el ~hits safely, Joe hurt
;m

.

::::
:::1 - CINCINNATI (UPI) -

United Press latematioaal the eighth when Dwight
· Kansas City manager Evans led off with a double
Whitey
Herzog
can and scored oo Butch Hobaon's
sympathize with Boston's single Ill center -'- ooly its
problems - up Ill a point.
third run in the last 46
His Royals won the 14th of innings.
"
The Royals scored in the
their last 16 games Sunday
and stayed four games ahead first when Fred Patek led off
of c8"liforliia in the AL West. with a double off Bill Lee, II).
They d\d it by defealing the 6. Patek went Ill third oo a
slumping Red Soz, 2-1.
single by Joe zdeb and scored
Boston bas now: lost 10 ol its on a fielders' choice by AI
last 12 games and wal.ched a Cowens. The winning run
!().game · bulge
over ._ came in the third on
Milwaukee in the American coosecutive singles by Zdeb,
League East dwindle to a 4\'z· Cowens and Amos Otis.
game margin.
While nooe of the trailing
"We've had two seaaons teams 15 exactly making a
tllis year OW"selves," said run at the Sox, the
Herzog , referring to the tumultuous New York
Royals' slow start. " But the Yankees have patched
Red Sox will snap out of it, themselves together and
and when they do, I'm glad I Sunday split a double-header
.won't he around Ill see it."
with the Minnesota Twins,
The Red Sox were held to winning the first, 4-3, and
just six hits as Paul Splittnrff dropping the second, 2-G.
struck out two and walked
one before yielding to AI
Hrabosky, who notched his
14th save. Boston scored in

&gt;:
Anderson quickly 1ent "in ..their dlaappolnting outings in

and Houston overtook New
NEW YORK (UPI) -Now that it's all ever and the two of There was some good news Joinior KennedY as
pmch Nell!" York early last week, York, 4-3 .
. them are buddy-bUddy again lollo'lriilg a surrealistic chain of for Pete Role, but BOrne bad runner lor the Reds' two-lime when the Reds lost two out ol
eventa which kept swinging somewhere between sheer farce news for Sparky Anderaon · MVP after he cootributed a three to the Meta, ndght have
Expos 19, Braves 0:
and pure fantasy, everyooe has the same I!Uestion.
~y.
single during a two-nn fifth bad ·soimething Ill do with . Andre Dawson hit .two
wey?
.
Rose, the ageless 37-year- inning that gave the Reds!! 4- their
improved . per- home -runs in an eight-run
wey did George Steinbrenner, ordinarily a tough, irm-wiUed old third baseman, eJttended 0 lead &lt;Ner the Phlla. .
. fonnances.
third inning and Larry
Individual with rocldike reBOive, suddenly tum around after hia coosecutive-t~ame hitting
Foster's 25th hOmer ol the
"T~y got a few balls Parrish bad three home runs
firing BWy Martin as manager of his New York Yankees' baD · streak to 'f3 ,with two hila as season, tying him with the up," said Anderson," but and five RBI. Mootreal set an
club and hire him back again five dsys later?
the Cincinnati Reds heat Phlls' Greg Lljzinald lrr the most ol the .time he kept his NL total base record with 58
People are aaltlng some other questions, too.
Philadelphia, [&gt;-3, for their · league lead, a lriple by Dave pitches down and away from . and tied a major-league mark
Uke, what happens to Reggie Jacklon now?
·third straight win.. Rose now Concepcion and a double by the hitters."
•
by hitting eight homers.
And w11l Billy Martin sclually evec take over as manager needs ooly a hit tonlgh.t Cesar Geronimo gave the
Even thoUgh lagged lor 12 Pirates 5, Dodgers '3:
again 18 mooths from now?
·
against A.tlanila to tie Willie Reds a ~ lead in the second hila before departing with
Frank Taveras' runBui, let's get back to the first one: What ·made George Keeler's all-time National inninll al!linst right-hander two out in tlie eighth inning, scoring lriple highlighted a
Steinbremer change hia mind?
League mark.
Larry Christensen, who Hume restricted the Phlls Ill three-run secood inning and
The answer i5n 't quite as simple as it waa Jll8de out to be in
However, the Reds w11l he wound up with hla lOth loss only ooe run. That came in Dave Parker added a aolo
the news conference immediately following Saturday's Old .without the services of second against seven victories.
the sixth innillll when Bob home run to help Pittsburgh
Timers' Day celebra.tlon at Yankee SLadlwn.
ba~eman Joe Morgan and BW
Foster's homer was his Boone followed singles by snap a seven-game losing
One of the aspects which wa111't even mentiooed, mostly Bonham, who bad been listed second in as many dsys. The Mike Schmidt, Riehle Hebner streak and the first win in Los
because. both men coosidered it strictly private, was the as a probeble starter for the Reds' slugging left fielder and Jerry Martin Jrith a Angeles since Aug. 22, 1976 .
mutual oath Steinbrenner and Msrtin took together one day Wednesday ntght serle~ sent number 24 aoarlnR intO bases-loaded sacrifice fly.
Giants 4-1, Cubs U:
last week.
finale with the host· Braves. the top•tlered red seats
Larry Bowa's ninth-inning
Villa Blue pitched .a sillIt concerns BWy Martin's health.
"I won't use Morgan, Saturday when the Reds homer, coming off Manny hitter for his third shutout of
The former and future Yankee manager can't really he unless I'm forced to put him · knocked off the PhUlies B-2. Sarmiento after the young the season, helping San
called a sick man but he has a condition, which if not properly out there as a pinch hitter," Only nine homers have right-hander had walked Francisco Ill a sweep. The
taken care of, could apprecisbly shorten his life.
said Anderson the Reds' landed in the red seats since Garry Maddox, gave the Giants won the opener on two
Within the past year, doctors discovered a spot on hia liver ' manager, afier Tommy the Reds moved . into Phlls their final two runs.
gilt runs off Rick Reuschel 's
and told him it probably came fro!D drinking. They also told Hume notched his fifth , RiverfrOnt Stadium June 30,
Doug
Bair
followed wild pitches.
him he could help the condition if he quit drinking.
victory against 10 ~osses 1970. And Foster has hit four Sarmiento to the mound and Padres 3, Cardinals 2:
. BY ordinary standards, BWy Martin isn 'I a bi&amp; drinker. I Sunday with some help from of them.
wound up with his 19th save ol
Gene Richardt· looped a
know a rmmhet of basebaU men who drink t.Uce as much as he the buDpen.
Danny Driessen's 13th the seaaon. But before pinch double to right tleld in the
does and it may be .t hat lhey have liver problema also, but the
And the
29-year~ld homer of the season, COOling hitter
Tim
McCarver seventh to score Derrel
majority ol them weren't under the same conUnuoua stress as Bonham whose sore elbow with two out in the seventh, bounced to Driessen lor the Thomas from second base for
. Martin.
hail.sidellned him since July gave the Reds their fifth and final out, Bair put the tying San Diego's sixth straight
As manager of the Yankees, BIUy Msrtll) felt the pressure of 7, remains a disabled arm .in final run Slmday.
run · on base by . walking · triumph, tying the club mark
. his job every day, the same way he felt it in the days he played the plt~h!ng corps.
Anderson waa particularly Schmidt and yielding a single for consecutive victories set
second base for the YankeeS. Some of those pressures as
"When BID wiD pitch again pleased that Hume and Paul to Hebner, his fifth straight of in 1969.
manager were relieved with a couple of drinks after a tough is a quelition I can't answer Moskau, a winner .saturday, the game.
Astros 4, Mets 3:
baD game.
now " Anderson said.
were credited with two of the
•
Pinch-hitter Wilbur
SteinbreMer becameaware of Martin's health problem only
M;..gan rapped out a pair Reds' three victories over the
In other NL games, Howard's long single over a
.recently~ When they talked about Martin's coming back thi5 ot singles in three trips to the Phils during the weekend Moo!real assaulted Atlanta, drawn-in outfield brought
past week, the Yankee owner carne up with an idea to help plate Sunday, blit bad to series.
19-0, Pittsburgh !ripped Los home the winning run with
M_artin.
struggle to run to third base
And he conceded that a Angeles, r.-3, San Franci!co one out in the bottnm of the
They'd Uck Martin's problem together, Steinlremer said. oo a George Foster double in UtUe talk he bad with the two swept Chicago, 4-2, !..(), San ninth for Houston's sixth
He would help Martin, but only on one condition - that he, the third inning.
young right-banders after Diego edged St. Louis, 3-2, straight victnry.
meaning Martin, make a genuine conscious effort 1'!, help
himself. Steinlrenner wasn't asltlng lor lip service now. He
Impressed upon
ex-manager, in every possible way he
could, that Martin himself was the key and if he made the
effort, Steinbrenner would match it.
That was a solemn promi!e the Yankee owner made Martin
undersl,aJJ.d. !n turn, Martin promised he'd do everything he
Could to justify SteinbreMer's faith in him. They took an oath
together, even shook hands oo it.
•
George Steinbrenner can he rough as naila or soft as butter.
He was born on July 4, unde.-the sign of Cancer the Crab, and
ooe of the characteristics of Cancerians is that they can freeze
you lo death with thei&lt; icy manner one minute and melt yow' " CINCINNATI (UP!) Larry Christenson. The 24- when
Cleveland
third
Sidney Stonestreet?
heart away with their utter devotion the nut.
"You've never heard of year:Oid righthander speared baseman Ken Keltner made
There's too large a gap.
There were those around him who urged Steinbrenner to ;&lt;I between WIUie Keeler and' him before," Rose . added, it oo one hop, and threw Rose two spectacular catches Ill
Martin's departW"e stand after last Mondiay's severance. "' Joe DiMaggio, Pete Rose unlealhing a grin. "But I out.
help snuff out DiMaggio's
"No," said Steinbrenner. "When a man is down and has a says.
One chance gone.
can't just go from 44 to 56. It
streak - came Ill mind .
"problem, you don't walk away from him. There i5 a time to he
helps me up the ladder."
Taking four pitches lor a Z.2
"I thought, 'If he doesn't
So he's liUing it.
rigid and a time to be compassionate."
Rose pulled himself up count in the third inning, get a hit this game, I might be
Rose, Just one shy of
Thla ahoQ!dn't be taken to mean Steinbrenner wam't aware Keeler's 44-game hitting another rung Simday, lashing Rose hammered the next in the record books,"' said
of the mood o1 the people, the legioo of Yankee fans who were streiok of 1897, Intimated Ill two singles against PhUa- offering deep into right- Martin.
unhappy over what happened to Martin.
The intrigue grew thicker
reporters Sundily he has at delphia to make it 43 straight centerfield. As cheering fans
By doing what he did, rehiring Martin for 1980, Steinbrenner least two more marks to · games with a hit. But it rose
. in
expectancy, when Rose strode to home in
made the perfect public relations move. He softened public break before Laltlng a cr.ack wasn 'I without a tinge of rightfielder Jerry Martin the fifth. Ominous clouds
opinion against him and bought time.
dashed toward the wall and · swirled above, threatening to
at Joltin' Joe's record. 58- drama.
That brings up the subject ol Reggie Jackson, the controver- game streak.
Leading off for the Reds in snagged the · shot with a resume a morning downpour
sial Yankee slugger some blame lor what happened to Martin.
and make it Rose's last at"Next
is
Sidney the first, Rose slapped the twisting reach.
Jackson says. there's "a :;o..:;o chance" he won't be with the Stonestreet's
Thoughts of July II, 1941 - . bat.
48-game second pitch back at pitcher
Yankees by the end of this season.
Would he bunt toward
streak," Rose deadpanned.
More likely, there's a :;o..:;o chance he woo't be with them by
golden-glove third baseman
the end of next month. The logical club lor him to move to i5 the
Mike ikhmidt, as he did in
Angels because they'dlike him to beefupthelrhitting.lt would
Philadelphia July 19 and
he rather appropriate for him to wind up in California because
again in Cincinnati Friday, Ill
that's where he originally achieved stardom.
keep the streak alive'
In my opinioo , Martin wiD manage the Yankees 18 months
Schmidt moved in.
Irorn now. True, a lot of things ·can happen between now and
"I gave him the benefit of
then, but if Martin has his health then, he'D also. have the job:
the doubt," said Schmidt. "I
I think he'll have his health. Once BIUy Martin makes up his
moved up"a yard on him. He
mind to do something, he thinks of nothing else.
still could have bunted."
Rose did.
Schmidt
charged. The bail
Babich as saying, "I'D get
If you're weD enough to
Poets who write about ihe
squirmed
foul.
him (DiMaggio) out the first
open the bottle , you don't rustle ol failing leaves very
Rose took the next two
time and walk him the next
need the aspirin.
seldom have to rake 'em.
Christenaon
pitches for balls,
three times. That'll stop
then lined a slider toward
him."
''The neJtt time DiMaggio third. Schmidt dove to his
face Babich," wrote Allen, left ; the baD streaked just
"he hit the first pitch oo a line past his glove, a single.
"( !'lliladelphia Manager
right between Babich's legs."
Danny)
OZark started yelling
The Yankees were in
at
Schmidt
when !.came up to
Chicago when DiMaggio
'Get
in
there
and make him
extended hi! streak to 55
hit
it
by
you,"' Rose
games , wrote Allen. The
explained
afterwards.
" So I
pitcher was Edgar Smith,
hit
it
by
him."
wbo was oo the mound when
Envisioning the crowd
DiMaggio's streak began.
reaction
. if the game were
DiMaggio made it 56
called
alter
five innings with .
coniecu.tlve games with a hit
him
hitless,
Role sliid, "I
off Cleveland' AI Milnar.
wanted to get a hit that third
time up. It looked like a
A thought for the dsy: cloudburst was coming, and I
American writer Henry Tho- dido 't want the people to tear
reau said, "It takes two Ill down the stadium. The people
speak the truth; one Ill speak, ,would have.
the other to hear."

a

GOLF CLASSICS ,
. '"See me foi'(U, ~~ e,
1ife, health aDCl busi.lt,oS
iDSII
. .. . u ..... ..

PREVENTION

IS THE

BEST POLICY

ru.

Ke.e ler's streak next
target for Pete Rose

r!'

Sam Snead

As

an

i nd e pendent

agency , our

insurance
He wasn't nicknam-ed
Slammin ' Sammy by. mis·

lake .
No

knows

golfer

more

about driving than Sam
Snead .
Snead believes the tee shot
is decisive because it deter·
mines your strategy - and
your mental approach - for

lhe rest of the hole .
"A ~ood drove is almost

essential to a par or birdie, a
poor dr&amp;ve is a good start

toward 'a bogey," Snead

says ... A poor drive immedi·

ately puts you behind the
eight-bali and makes par
seem pretty hard to get. "
Advises Snead : " Probably
the best tip I could give
anyone in achieving a solid ,
square hit with the driver is
to always swing within

primar y function is to
provide

pol i cies

which

afford financial protection
in case of loss.
But, we also have a vital
interest in loss prevention ,

as should our clients . We
encourage care, caution
and safety . . . preventive

measures which can keep
that

car

liCcident

trom

happen ing , that building
fire from st~rtlng , that
home burglary 1rom be ing

committed.
Prevention s·aves lite ,
11mb and property .. . and
helps control insurance
costs and premiums.
When losses do occur.
our policyholders can count
on protecting and serv ing
in time of need . But we still
say - prevention is the
best pol icy .

yourself.''

He says the secret of long
hitting is in the downswing .
1

'You can gain or lose as

much as 25-to-50 yards, de·
pending on how you perform
this half of the swing,"
Snead says.
"The long hitters accel-

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

erate the downswing gradu·

ally and delay snapping the
wrists until

th~

the beltline."

hand s pass

992 ·2143

102.W. Main
Pomeroy

Custoot full.
In one « nm dags
Our sta ff of den t iSIS and
lechnician s will make you r
cuslom den tu res quidd y ·and
eco nomicall y

DtRooald ERiviere
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•Dr. W.D. Kimball •Dr . J.C. Murphy •Dr. J . Ochman

The Riv iere Center
949 E. Livingston Ave . Columbus

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PARnCLE BOARD
Visit our lumber deportment where
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The Department Store of Building Since 1915

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 31, 1978

Eagles roll over Dolphins

· ;\\\\\\i''}{ft'::r::::t::::: : : : :tt'::;w:''''''':r:::g::urr:::::::fr:::::: : : : :'::'\:,\j \

i

J

Den Talk

By Greg Bailey
. Thai feeling is in the air! That feeling that only an outdoorsman koows and savors - the feel that fall is near and it
will soon be time take to the wooda.
As I sit pounding· these few wor(js on my typewriter , it
seems I've been away (rom Den Talk much too long; So as a
way to say hello, to you friends and sportsmen once again , I'll
just inform you of some of the things happening around our
county . As many of you know, squirrel season is jwrt around
the corner. The opening date this year will be Sept. 8 with the
usual four hag limit. Looks as if this could be a good year.
From all reports, the grouse population is again on the
rise. Reports from the state department verify this, and I've
heard much drumming my5elf.
·.
Take note all you pond owners. The deadline for lhe
Cooperative Slate Fish stocking program is August 15. For
more inf&lt;rmationon how you can get free stocking, contact
oilr game protector Andy Lyles at 985.3947.
Speakin&amp; of Andy, the yearly reports on the state's game
protectors are about finished . Andy, being the modest fellow ·
he is, would never want any specifics known, but let.it .suffice
for me to tell you that in most categories, Andy finished first,
or second, or third in perf&lt;rmance in Division Four that
encompasses all of Southeastern Ohio. He's a good man to
· have around. Incidentally, he had the only two turkey. violation
convictions in the State.
Geese are nesting and rearing their young in Meigs County
more every year. Don't ask where they are because as you
know, some hoodlums would probably have a compulsion to go
shoo! one.
In the upcoming month, there will be a Seminar for
Wildlife Officers held here at Royal Oak Park. OffiCers from
Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia will attend and share ideas
and try to solve some of their common problems.
National Hunting and Fishing Day will be coming up in
Septerh~r . and I hope some of you clubs will again get
together and promote our great outdoors and our hunting
heritage.
My hat's off to the Meigs County Fish and Game Assn .
Again, they had a successful Fishing · Derby for our Meigs
County youngsters. These guys exemplify what our hunting
and fishing fraternity is all about. Good job, fellows !
Here's somrt&gt;fthe biggest news of the summet. Would you
believe it ? Earlier this summer, Northern pike thai weighed
. eight and on~uarter poullds was taken from (are you ready
for this·' ) our little stream called Horsecave. How about that?
U you 're familiar with Horsecave, then you know what a feat it
was . I doubt if that stream is over five feet deep at its deepest
point. I guess there is still adventUre and dreams to be had
right here in Meigs County. See you soon.

CINCINNATI (UP! )- Cincinnati's Pete Rose hit a
ground !)all past Philadelphia
third baseman Mike Sehmidt
in the fifth inning Sunday, to
extend his hitting streak ·to 43

Lines cores
Mljor Lt•P• Results
ly Unl ed_Presslntern•tiOnal
C 1tt

Ch i

CANTON, Ohio (UP!) The smallest man . on the
Philadelphia Eagles played
the biggest role Saturday in
the Eagles 17-3 victory over
the Miami Dolphins at the
annual NFL Hall of Fame
game.
Walt Henry zig-zagged
throUgh and around the Dol.'
phins for a 72-yard punt
return touchdown and
reserve quarterback John
Walton hit Vince Papale with
a 19-yard scoring strike ·
Saturday to give the Eagles
their convincing preseason
win.
.
Henry, the smallest man on
the Eagles team at rHI, 170
pounds, broke a 3-3 tie in the
third quarter with his long
run. His run back of Mike
Michel 's .41-yard punt also
seemed to deflate the
Dolphins, who were stymied
by mistakes whenever they
threatened to score.

Walton's pass. to · Papale
came just after reserve
Miami quarterback Guy
Benjamin tried to hit Mike
Schuman IIIith a pass and
Eagles linebacker Jerry
Dandrlch Intercepted, It was
one of four pass thefts \)y the
Eagles, who also picked up a
tumble.
An Ill-yard field goal by
Nick Mike-Mayer capped a
79-yard drive for the Eagles
in the first quarter. But Garo
Yepremian hit a 22-yard
three-pointer for Miami in the
second quarter to climax a 73yard dt:ive that consumed 14
plays.
9
Walton took over for !'hiladelphia starter Ron Jaworski
iri' the second half. Jaw&lt;rskl
left after completing eight of
15 passes for 86 yards and no
interceptions.
Miami starter Bob Griese
left after one quarter with six

West Virginia to
host 35th baule

pme)

100 000 01o-- 2 7 2

San Frn
001 10l0 hr.- 4 6 0
Reuschel, Moore (8 } and
Rader ; Barr, Lavelle (8 L
Motfin 19 ) and T-amargo. WBarr (6-81. L- Reuschel (9-9 ).

c&lt;rnpletlons in nine attempts
for&gt;86 yards. He also bad two
passes intercepted.
Five more football greats
· were Inducted into the Hall o( Und t•mt)
o0o ooo ooo- o 6 o
Fame prior to the game, cnr
San Frn
000 100 OOx- l S 1
ralalng the membership to 98.
Roberts, M cGlothen (7l and
The five were former Bleckwell ; Blue and Hill . WBa ltlmore Colts and New Biue (1.5 -Al . L - Roberts CA -6).
York Jets Coach Weeb Mt l
OJI 133 102- 19 211 0
000 ooo ooo- o 7 1
Ewbank, New York Giants Atla
Frvm&amp;n ant! carter r Boggs,
running back Alphonse Skok · (l J. Mahle!' IS ) and
Nola,n 1 W - Fryman (6-7 ). L ~ 'Tuffy" Leemans, St. Louis
Boggs (3-5). HRs- Montreal,
Cardinals free safety Larry Dawson
2 08). Parr ish 3 {11),
Wilson, San Diego and Dallas • Cash (3); ~erez (9), Speier- (5 ).
wide receiver Lance Alworth Flhila
000 001' 002- 3 1.4 1
and Green Bay linebacker CineI
020 020 lOx- 5 11 0
Chr lstfmson , Reed ( 7) and
Ray Nitschke.

games, second longest of this
century and one behind the
National League record of 44,
held by Willie Keeler.
Keeler set the National
League record in 1897.

.

*

"MPUN"

~ :.:o:_ ·i·.; *~
** .:1
(' -···*
** Buler"~~N"
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
...........
c.., *
CJi f. _... _. 79c*

_

H ' - PI I'

*

*
*

_,_

tu• Ml PlldiAMO IWUT TMAt'

Hill'S WHilE YOU'U. FIND THE FUN!
1503 Ea stern Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
Jac kson Ave. &amp; 24th St. , ~"Pte,asant , W. Va .

***

;w;t';n!j..P';er;o;
'
.
'

~

*
**

**

NORGE

APPLIANCES
'

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immediate
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Major L••uut Standhtfl
By uni1ed Prell lnternafional
National Leagut
east
·
W. L Pel. GB
54 .45 .S.c5
Phil a
51 51 .500 41f2
Chlta'iJO
48 51 ~485 6
Plttsbrgh
49 57 .462 8 112
Montreal
45 61 .425 12 112
New York
40 .. .385 161h
St. Lou iS
west

Funseth

s,

Hartford
champion

WHEELING, W.Va. (UP!) point , but that is · to be
:_ West Virginia will seek its expected," Hahn said .
Rea said the West Virginia
sixth straight victory over its
offense
looked " pretty
Ohio counterperts in the Ohio
in scrimmage
decent"
Valley Athletic Conference's
although,
"We"
are not as
all-star game Saturday night.
sharp
as
I
would
like to be,
A crowd of 10,000 fans is
expected for ' the . 7 p.ll). but it wasn't bad for one week
kickoff of the 35th Ohio-West of practice."
secured the $42,000flrst pr e. 11-91 . L- Marshall IH !. HRs- Charleston
64 40 .615
Tim Lescallette of Weirton
Funseth said·the winnings Minnesota , Kusic.k (3).
Richmond
54 46 .5.40 8
Virginia Charlty AII.Star
Football Game at Wheeling is e•pected to start at will· help him pay back his 12no game!
Pawluckel
56,41 .533 8'1'
quarterback fo r
West daughter, Lisa Ann, roc some · Minn
ooo ooo 002- 2 a 2 Tidewater
52 SJ .495 1211~
Island Stadium. ·
·
M11jar Le11gue Leaders
N. Y .
0000001100--0 6 1 Toledo
4950 .49512'1'
The conference has staged Virginia.
build
d
Bv United Press International
of the money use to
a
Golt z, Ho11 y 19), Marshall 191 Columbus
48 54 .471 15
Mike·Dawson of New Mar- barn . for the family 's two and Wynegar; Beattie, Lyle 191 R h 1
the game since 1972.
Ba"illl
~
· Heath w - Gol ll no 7) L - . oc es er
...,. 55 .471 15
• t B.sed Dn :ISO It tiltS)
West Virginia has won 18 ·tinsvllle, who was recruited Arabian horses in Napa, and
Beatt ie 12_5 , _
40 65 .J81 2.4 112
•
Syr:acuse
Nationa l League
GAB . H. Pet .
games to Ohio's 16.. Til!' by West Virginia :University Calif.
Saturday's Results ·
Burroghs At I
97 315 100 .317
Charleston 4, Toledo 3
·Funseth,who hadn't played &lt;1st game!
Buckeyes' last triumph was a as a defensive back, is slated
Rose Cin
103 433 137 .316
to
play
halfback
on
defense
'
in
over
a
month
when
he
took
Texas
000
310
ooo4
10
1
Tidewa1er
.12,
Rochester
8
~win in 1972. West Virginia
Clark SF
102 386 120 .311
000011 03,.; - 5 111 Syracuse 9, R lchmond ' 6
and quarterback or halfback tothecourselastweek, wasa ChiCdmer, Umbaroer
Ri chari:fs SO
101 381 118 .l lO
won laSt year l~ .
(7), Cleve - Columbus 7, Pawtucket 1
BOWl! Ph i i
97 408 126 .309
little wary of the young bucks land
(8!
and
Sundberg
;
Wood,
Sund
.ay's
Results
"We definitely want to keep on offense . "
Vain tine Mil
102 396 122 . 308
Schue ler (.4 ). LaGrow (8 ) and
Ohio's starting aiming for the tiUe. But be Nah orodno; . w ~L aGrow (2 -J). Rochester 5, Tidewater 4, 11 Smit h L A
the streak going," said West
8.4 302 93 .306
Whitfield SF-. 1
100 335 103 .307
be L ~Ci e \l eland (J. 7J .
innings
·
, g
Virginia Head Coach Sonny quarterback will be either Ignored the f eeItn
as
Richmond 4, Syracuse 1
Madlock SF
77 291 89 .306
'Orsini
of headed down the backstretch
Rea of Brooke, who guided an Anthony
Foster tin ·
103 398 120 .302
l&gt;nd game!
Pawtuckel 7, Columbus 6
Steubenville Central or Sunday IIIith another veteran, Texas·'
Concepcn en
100 378 1\ J .302
~ victory In 197:&gt;.
100 001 000- 2 'o
Tod 0 y's Games
American LeagUe
Ch i '
000 210 01 x- • 11 i Toledo at Tidewater
Ohio Head Coa ch R'ich Gregg Bonar of Shadyside . Lee Elder.
GAB. H. Pet
Ale)( ander anel Ellis ; aarrlos, R h 1
1 Ch 1
The Ohio club has been
Hahn of Marietta said he was
The effort paid off. FWJSeth Willoughby (6) and Col bern . w oc es er a
ar eston
Carew M in
96 355 118 .332
Oli ver T ex
77 308 100 .32.S
~ d
264
- Ba rr ios ~J
. L- Aiexander Columbus at Syracuse
delighted by a drizzle which aided by the addition of two won wt'th a ..,.un
er-par
.
Richmond at Pawtuckel
Lv ~ Bos
93 335 107 .319
16.81.
tackles
on
leave
from
U.S.
cooled things down at West
and lied the record set here in
. Tuesday's Games
Brett K C
82 332 1a5 .316
P in ielli!l NY
76 270 85 .31.5
Uberty State College and Naval Academy summer 1973 by GHO winner Billy Sea
010 101 1QO- • 1&lt; o Toledo at Tidewater
Lezc i!lno M il
85 211 86 .309
training
6-foot-3,
2:&gt;6-pound
Casper
.
The
Californian
Det
203
000
ooxs
12
o
Rochester
at
Charleston
enabled his stars to get in a
Ri ce 8os
102 422 130 .JOB
Abbort . Hou se (J l. Parrott 14 ) Columbus at Syracuse
Thompsn Ot
103 40.4 123 .304
scrimmage last Keith Boring of Jefferson birdied seven holes 00 the and Sti nson ; Wilcox , svkes 16) Richmond at Pewtu cket
good
Munson NY
96 398 121 .304
,.,
d
Iter's and M ay . W- Wil co x (8-8). L Union and 6-foot-3, 210-pound 6,.,.,..yar
Saturday.
course, a pu
Abbott . ( 4-8l.
HRs- seattte.
Sundbero Tex
97 336 102 .304
Mike
Lockett
of
Steubenville
.
.
"Our defense is a little
Home Runs
paradise usually shunned by Roberls 116 ), Jones 141.
National League : Foster , Cin
ahead of the offense at this
power shooter Jack Nicklaus.
and L uz lnsk l, Phil 25 ; Sm ith,
w
0011
21 041 - 10 15 o
LA 20 ; Valent ine, Mtl 19 .
for
100 017. lDO- s 11 0
Elder' who picked up three Mil
Daw son , Mtl ond Winf ield , SO
straight birdies at 14, 15 and
Rod ri guez, Replogle (6). Stein
18.
. 16, gave Fbnseth 9 run
. but {7 ) and Martinez ; Underwood,
WEST
SALEM,
Ohio
(UP!
)
Amerlun League : Rice , Bos.
Murphy (51 , Will is (8 } lind
could only manage a 16- Ashby. V.::-Stein 13·21 . L- - Frank Bradley of Napa, 24 ; Ba y lOr', Cal . Hisl e and
. h 1 him Murphy ( 4-8) . HAs- M ilwaukee, Calif., upset Don Garlits of Thomas, M it 23 ; Tho m pson , De-t
Ullder.par 268 1 WhlC pu
Davis S); Toronto, Bosett i (4),
22.
Tampa, Fla., Sunday to win
PARAMUS, N.J . (UPI) - the dean of Anierican League in a threeway, second-place Mayberrv 111 1.
Runs 811tted In
Natlon111 League : Fos ter. Cip
the top fuel race competition
The eighth ·annual meeting of umpires, suffered a mild tie with Dale Douglass of 0 0 , 1
81; Clark, SF 76 ; Winf ield , SO
the Society for American stroke Friday night in 1 Boulder, Colo. and last year's Cl eve
•
r'~ ~ ~ at the AHRAGrand Nationals 71 ; Mo.ntanez , NY 70; Gllrvey,
LA 69.
GHO
champion
Billy
Johnson , Norris (4). La cey program.
Baseball Research concluded Toronto.
Lngut : Staub , Del
Cbylak, 56, who joined the Kratzert of Fort Wayne, _Ind . · ~~~ie~o~; J ; &lt; ~ax~~~. ~:;:,m&lt;B):
Garlits won the first four 85 Arilerlun
Sunday with the election of
; R ic e, 8os 81 ; Thom pson ,
new officers.
· American League in 1954, is
Each of them recetved Sp i llner (9) and Oiaz . w - sos a Grand American Series De! 76,· Hisle. M il 73: Tho rnton.
They are : President Cliff expected to be hack in actioQ $16,240. Howard Twitty, who 18·21. L- Kern 17.51. HRs- races, but Bradley captured Cte\1 67 . Stolen Bases
.
.
·d
I de Clev eland , Ota z (I)
the last two in the si•-run
Kachline of Cooperstown before the end of the began th
e roWI as co· ea r
·
Nationa l Ltagu e : ,.Mor eno.
IIIith Phil Hancock at 14- Colif
010 000 021- • 13 o series. Bradley racked up his Pit t -42 ; Lopes, LA li nd
N.Y., who also is historian of season .
Richard s, SO 29 ; Smi th, SO 77 .
'
th
"
d
Ia
8i!llf
,-. 000 000 02o- 2 8 1 second straight weekend
the Baseball Hall of Fame;
·Uild er, shared
If
P ce
Fr ost ,
La Roche
(8 )
and
Tav era s, Pitt 76.
·
Americln League : Le F lore,
Vice President Arthur Schott,
wilhRexCaldwell.
Down ino , Humphrey (9 ); victory with a 6.101 second
Funseth had scores of ~7- Flanag.,, stanhOuse '181 and win at 240 mph in the first Del .46; D il one, Oak 36 : Pa tek
KENT, Ohio (UP! ) - The
New Orleans La.; Secretary
and Wi lson, KC and Cru z, Sea
Dempse'y . W- Fros t (3.4) . L round at Dragway 42.
.
Cleveland
B~owns
and
the
Bob Hoie, San Marino, CaL ;
81Hi4 to land his first victory Flanooan 113-91.
'
32.
Pitching
Treasurer Dick Burtt, Buffalo Bills play,ed to a' 6-6 since the 1973 Los Angeles K.C.
10100000Q- 2 90
VIctories
Pittsburgh; Pa., who was re- tie Sunday in their controlled Open. His latest prize, added 80S
000 000 01 o- 1 6 a
Nlfional Lll!!lgue : Blu e, SF 15
Sp!l ltorff , Hraboskv (81 and
4 : Perr y , SO 12-4; John. LA 12 ·
scrimmage at Kent State to the $38,672 he won earlier
elec.ted .
er ; Lee t~nd Zi sk . w7 : Grim slev , Mtl 12-1: Niekr o.
University stadium before a this year , brings to $592,568 Port
Spl ittorff { 12 -9). L- Lee (10 -6) .•
All 12· 10.
•
BOSTON (UP! ) - The crowd of almost 25,000 pro the total winnings earned
American league : ...Gu idry ,
PITTSBURGH (m'l) :Y 15-1; Tanana. Cal 14-5;
Kansas City Royals will be football fans.
since he began the tour in
The Pittsburgh Pirates N
Ca ldwell , M il 13-5; Pi!ll m er .
without the se rvices of
The Browns scored first on 1961. His only other
announced late Saturday Balf lJ -8; Fli!lnl!l gi!ln , Ball 13-9.
Earned A:un Average
Freddie Patek for the riext a five-yard pass from David tournament win was the 1965
night they had sent shortstop
( Bned on tt Inning• pitched )
few games , th e team Mays to tight end Gary Phoerw&lt;Open.
Ken Macha back lo their
National league : Rogers, Mi l
announced Sunday.
Parris and Buffalo later lied
Joe Inman, whose 62 on
Columbus Clippers farm · 2.41; Swan, NY 2.-45 : Vuck
Friday was the lowest round
HOCK!;:NHEIM; West team after calling up Dale ovich, St. L and Blue,' SF 2.53;
. The sh ortstop pulled a it on .Terry Miller's five-yard
epper , SF 2.59 .
the
tournament,
had
a
67
to
Germany
(UPI) - Mario Berra in time for Saturday's KnAmer
·of
hamstring in Sunday's 2-1 win run around right end.
ican League : .,.Gu idr y,
NY 2.03; Ma tl ack, T ex 2.18 ;
IJring his four-day total to 1~ Andretti drove his Lotus to an 2-1 loss at Los Angeles.
over the Boston Red Sox
Ca ldwell, M il 2.38 : Gale, KC
while running to first hase in
LEXINGTON , Ohio (UP! ) under 271. He was joined by easy victory Sunday in the
Macha batted .229 in 26 2.61 ; Palm er , Balt 2.62.
Formula
I games with the Pirates.
th e ninth innin g . Royals - Rookie pro Dale Singleton , Dr . Gil Morgan , who haa a 69 . . German
Strikeouts
N11tional Leagut : ~· R ic har d ,
In a group at 12-under 272 Automobile · Grand Prix , Berra, 21, is batting .280 after
trainer Mickey Cobb said 22, of Dalton, Ga., won the
Hou 194 ; Niekro , Atl 149;
Pa tek would be lost "for a American Motorcycle were Larry Nelson, the first- improving his lead in the 99
games
with
the Seaver . Cin 140; Montefusco.
couple of days ."
Roadra ce of Champions round leader at 64, Bob world driving championship lnlernation ill League SF 122; Blue , SF 120. '
American League : . Gu idr y,
Formula. I class 25-lap race Walzel, Stan Lee, Grier rating to 54 points.
Clippers, InCluding 18 home ' NY 163 ; Rvar'i. 01 1 156 ;
Andretti and 'teanunmate runs and 83 RBI.
Leonard , KC 117 ; Fli!!M gan ,
BOSTON (UP! ) - The around the twisting 2.4-mile Jones, Bob Eastwood, Victor
Ban 113 ; Underwood. Tor 100.
American League . revealed Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course Regalado, Laurie Hammer, Ronnie Peterson of Sweden
and
Rod
CurL
held
first
and
second
places
Sunday that Nester Cbylak, Sunday,
One stroke behind · at :i73 from the start of the race
were Jim Colbert, · Fuzzy until Peterson's gear. box ~------------------------,I
Zoeller, Dave Graham, Mark broke down during the 38th
Hayes, and Mitch Adcoek . lap of the 4.219 mile track.
OPTOMORIST
..
George Archer, who won here The collapse of Peteroon's 1 OFFICE HOUR:.: Y:JO to 12,2 to 5 (CLOS.E I
in 1971 , bad a 68 to lead a cargavesecondplacetoJody I AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT I
group at !!-under 27~.
Scheckter of South ·Mrica. .
1-!~~2~~~---Funseth took some goodnatured ribbing about his age
from newsmen. " l feel like
I'm the oldest guy out there,"
'said the easy.going golfer'
Pondering his game
Sunday, Funseth said, "I gOt
off to a good stlirt today and
kept hitlili@ good shots to
birdie. That one m 16 (a ~
foot putt ) made me feel real
good."
Second-place Krallert, who
almost IXrdled the 16th, had a
25% Off Purchase,
strong front aide at 4-underpar. He pulled to lllithln three
Just Present Your
ltrlkel of Funaeth but W81
unable to capitalize on birdie •
Golden Buclleye Card
putts, geWpg mly one on the
When Ordering.
,.....LWA1010......_
14th. He lhot 6W7~.
IMIIM_L.III1010A ......... ...,_.
"I'm
pleased
with
the
way
I
"price .. ,..,,,., hlghw with Ghokle •f ... ....,...
played.! gave It my best shot,
bl!t lfHmder waa not g9Qd
enl\ugh," Kratzer! uld,
adding he wu worried aboul
lhe lnunlnent birth of his
child.
"It's difficult to play
looking at the meaaage board
to tell me that I bave a baby
boy," be said.

Sports briefs .

••

:;

I .N. w. COMPTON, O.D.
I .

I

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

·:::

LOVES TQEM, HATES TIIEIR DOG
DEAR HELEN : I like animals, but - every time I visit these friends I arii
£!fefted by their barking hound who jumps up on.my 'chest,
licks me on the face, and then runs his cold nose up my dress or
otherwise gels fresh. He snags pantyhose too.
They keep him In the house; and I feel that's no place for
larger dogs. Instead of making him mind, they are always
telling rne how cute he is.
What . can I say without hurting their feelings ? - ·
PERTURBED
.
·,

TeD 'em you're lired of run hose, messed-up clothes and a
~·scold nose- burdon't expect them to take it llghlly. Avid
arumallovers often Side with their pet against a critic. ·
A simpler way: If you can't stand the .hound, stay out' of
l'his '' house. -H.
DE4R HELEN :
In answer to "Grandma" who wrote a few· months ago
, regretting the passing of the "good old days": ·She should turn
back the clock to what life was really like 30 years ago.
Mothers then may not have worried about illegal drugs, but
how aboul polio and other diseases now controlled with
modern vaccines or medicallon]
.
A premature infant born in 1948 ran a good chance of being
blind, assuming it survived at all. Now, doctors know that the
amqunt o! oxygen used is crucial to~ eyes, and can regulate
rt to provide enough for the baby 's l}eart and lungs, but in low
enough amounts lo protect the sight.
A baby born in 1948 with a physical defect was usually afflicted with it throughout life; today doctors can cure many of
these horrors.
Go back to 1948? Not me ! Perhaps some of the social mores
were nicer than, maybe the music was better (that's open to
argument), but life is much safer now. -CAROL
!lEAR HELEN :
Before we were married last year, Tom and his folks didn't
· get along. They kicked h4n out at 18, and he hardly ever visited
them during the next four years.
· His mother is trying to change things by way of me. She insists we"go See them once a week , now that he's a,.'Jresponsible

married man. n

.•

ON THE i»EFENSIVE
By Kare• Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
am still very suspicious of my
husband even-though It has
been three years since he had
an affair with his secretary.
It hurt me a lot. But he fired
the woman and, as far as I
know, has been faithful ever
since.

l keep remembering how
terrible It was to feel like a
fool. I don't want It to happen
again. But if it does, l want to
he prepared.
As a ' result, ( question
everything he does without
me. I never let him criticize
me without fighting back and
l never· tell him when I feel
nervous or upset.
,
This plan helps me feel :
stronger. But it bas one
major drawback : Neither of
is is happy in .our marriage,
We fight all the time and I
never enjoy sex anYJ11ore, I
don't know what one has to do
with the other, bui I know I
am miserable.
,
Maybe this is too big ~· price
to pay to feel safe. What do
you think?
DEAR READER - Your
approach will' never work . It
will only cost you your
marriage after months - or
even years - of mutual
· suffering.
·

21" '
WIDE

He never gets away without a big lecture. They treat him
like al().year-&lt;&gt;ld . Often his mother calls after we return home,
to continue the llawlings out. Then she hangs up on him.
Should l keep trying to smooth things over or get them out in
lheopen? -GETTINGTOME
MOSCOW
(UP!)
DEARGTM :
Qlristina Onassis says she
·:our hushands should get things out in the open- by telling · wants her marriage to
his parents your visits will stop- if their lectures don't ! - H
Russian boyfriend Sergei
Kauzov to be a quiet affair
out of the world spoUig~t . ·
In an interview at the
Intourist hotel, where she is
staying until the wedding, she
said she will not allow any
reporters or photographers to
attend
the ceremony m Tues; . Polly Cramer .
day when she marries Sergei,:
a former Soviet shipping a ecutive.
·
.
BY POLLY CRAMER
contour bottom sheets and, of
I'm
not
that
kind of
"
POLLY'S PROBLEM
course, a pair of piUowcases.
person,"
she
said.
DEAR POLLY - Could you The bottom sheet always
The couple will marry at
tell me how.to store a fur coat wears out in half the time as
at home? I have spent a the .top one so by buying two one of the so-called "wedding
fortune each year on storage . and using them both (one one palaces," where Russians
- IDA.
week and the other the next) are wed in almost assemblyDEAR IDA - You have theyagethesameandthetop line fashion.
Christina, 26, a tall woman
-done the right thin,i! In sen- sheet will last as long ~ t11e
with
dark hair, piercing eyes
ding your coat to a furrier to two bottom ones. There are
a
warm smile, said she
and
be stored during the summer. no more old odd sheets taking
wants
to settle down in
Home storage is not · up space In my linen closet. Moscow and find the kind of
recommended, but when a COOKIE.
privacy that has eluded her
coat is old one may want or
DEAR POLLY - For ye~rs throughout most of her Hie.
need to cut down on this- my Pet Peeve was a plastic
"The last couple of years
apense. I do not recommend clothes ·basket that would have been very bad," she
home storage. But if crack ~nd break under said, nervously wrapping
necessary, remember heat normal usage,' For instance strands of her hair around
and llghl damage furs so they when carrying a basket of her fingers. "I just want to be
should be stored in a ctHrk wet laundry out to the line it somewhere where its quiet."
cool spot where there :: som~ would have to be held with
In Moscow, she may have
'atr. Do NOT put in a .plastic one arm again'!! the body found the place.
garment or cleaner's bag . 1 while opening the door, etc.
"There's not much to do in
have a friend who Is away all
Now . my Pet Peeve has the evening," she said,
summer and put her mink turned mto a Pointer. &lt;ev•·•I smiling. "What do you do?"
stole In her refrigerator that months ago I bo~ght two
Christina met Sergei in
was turned low. That Is not a baskets that were just alike Moscow In 1976. They nlet
reconunendation but just a and wove them together wilh again last year in Paris, when
show of someone's ingenuity. a couple of strands of yam at the relationship began
- POLLy.
the top going in . and out warming up.
DEAR POLLY - 1 have through the spaces. I have
read the readt.rs' many used this double basket for
suggestions to prevent · many months and it has been
dampened with anunonia. I
bathroom mirrors steaming satisfactory. - D. K.
up so 111ant to pass mine
DEAR POLLY - Wlfen used this to go over all lhe
along. I use a cloth with soap frying chicken at home and soiled areas and my light
on it and then wipe the mirror you .want the breaded fake fur stayed nice and.
off IIIith paper towels. Also, if covermg to stay on, dip the clean. (Polly's Note : Test
you wear glasses and come season preces of chicken first first for the effect on your
from the outdoors or any cold in. flour then in egg mixed fur .) - JOVE.
Polly will send you one of
place into a warm room tu.rn With milk and then In grated
your back as you come in and cracker meal or grated dry her signed lharik-you newsyour glasses will not fog up. bread crumbs and finally Into· paper coupon clippers if she
the deep frying oil. - V. B. uses your favorite Pointer,
- JOYCE. ·
DEAR POLLY - I have a
DEAR POLLY - I cleaned Peeve or problem in her
wonderful Pointer. When 1 my fake fur coat by using the column. Write POLLY'S
buy sheets 1 alway&amp; buy one cut-&lt;&gt;ff leg from pantyhose POINTERS in · care of this
top sheet and two matching that was first wet and then newspaper.

------------

ONLY

21"

WIDE

MANY ITEMS

SENIOR CITIZENS

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SALE

ADOLPH'S .

1- srm TABLE

DAIRY VALLEY

.· Y•lues to 510.00

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RACINE'DEPARTMENT STORE
Jrd

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949·2100

Racine. o.

'·

Instead, why not cmsider
two possible courses of
action. .
If you really want a fool·
proof protection plan, you
will have to leave your
husband and never enter into
another cloee relationship.
Emotional investments are
riskY by nature. This choice
will leave you feeling safe and emotionally hankrupt.
A second and more
reasonable option is to relax
and enjoy your marriage
while maintainirll! a low-l&lt;ev
vigilance
against
the
possibiUty of yogr husband
huring you again.
'f.he energy you save from
all the fights and suspicious
questioning could be poured
into constructive activities such as friends, a job or
hobbies ...:., that would help
you feel more complete as a
person and less frightened of
being deserted.
Why are you so terrified of
being left? Mariy people .
make the mistake of equating
being married ,with feeling
w&lt;rthwhile as· a person.
· Are you using your marital
status as your sole proof that
you are lovable? If so, it is
past lime to make a change
and begin to find your value
from within.

Christina
Onassis will
t ·'
wed assembly line style

.!

ONLY

·
another moilvation :
revenge , Although you say
you are picking fights
because you don't want to 'get
burt again , isn 't It feasible
thatyoui!Rjoy getting lfack ai
your husband for !hurting you
with his affair?
RIO GRANDE - At the
If this is your game IJlllst recent meeting of the
remember that you ar~ Ohio Board ~f Regents, a new
playing with fire.
course offermg was approved
Not only might your for Rio Grande Community
husband choose to retaliate College.
but you are souring tw~
The course in l'ood Service
huma{l beings on the Management is designed to
possibility of ever having serve the need of the food
industry
for
another meaningful, trusting service
relationship. Unsatisfactory managers, supervrsors and
sex Is only one aspect of the food preparation specialists.
havoe you can wreck by Areas cov ered in the
continuing this aSsault on P r o g r a m
incrud e
your husband.
· manas,em ent principles,
U you persist in:living in the sarutatton and . safety, food
past,youmayforcethepast pre s entatton
and
to repeat itself.
preparatton, labor and cost
Wri!(l.to Dr. Staker in caee \ co n t r oI , p e r s on n e I
of this newspaper, P. o. Box . management and others.
475 Radio City Station New
'):'he course is structured so
Y~k . N. Y. 10019. Vol~e of . that students will be given
mail .prohibits 'personal ) both . classroom and field
replies, but questions 1~f ; ••perzence. Five of the six
general interest will ··b&lt;r ·, quarters a student IS enrolled
discussed in future columns. mthe program they will work
ha~

US • . . ~y Helen Bottelj[_

DEARP.:

R
··
G
J
t
h
:::g~.y~!r~!m-:be~vi!~ zo. . ranue o teac
fi0 0 d service management
U neither of these options

Helen Help

Amtrle•n ·LtiiUt
Ellt
W. L Pet. Gl
64 31 .627
Boston
59 42 .sa. .fll,
Mllwauke
New York
57 "' .553 7'.7
Ba \flmre
57
&lt;6 .SSJ ''"
55 48 .5)4 91!2
Detro it
-48 54 .471 16
t levelnd
38 66 .]65 ~7
Toron to
WHt
W. L. Pel. GB
Kan Cltv
58 43 .574
w. L. Pet. GB Cal
if
56 49 .533 ~
San Fran
63' .42 .600
54 51 .514 6
LOS Ang
61 43 .587 Jl/ 2 Oakland
ctnclnati
61 43 .587
l 'h ~~~:~ta
,. :; ~: :!~ . ~g
San Diego
53 52 .505 10
Chi
cag
o
4A S8 .-431 14 1/ l
Atli!ln ta
48 SS .466 U
Seattle
36 69 .30 2-4
Houston
47 56 .456 15
S.turday•s RHults
S.turdav' s Rnultt
Tor onto 4, M ilwaukee 3
CiilCI 6, Ph lllldelphia 2
o etroil 9, Seattle .1
Boone ; Hume, Sarmiento (81 .
Chicago 5, San Fran l
Boston 1, Kansas City 0
8air (9) and B~nch . W- Hume
At lanta 9, Montreal 6
New York 7, M inneso ta 3
(5 -10). L - Chr lstenson (7 -10 ).
Los Angeles 2. P ittsburgh 1
Chicago 6 , Texas 2
!-IRs- Philadelphia, 8owa (3 J;
San Diego 7, St. Loui s 3
Oakland 6, Cleveland 5
Cinc inna ti, Foster (25 ), Orless Sundav's ResultS
California 2, Baltimore 1
1 San Fran -4. Chicago 2, 1st
en &lt;13 l.
Sunday's Results
San Fran 1, Chicago O, 2nd
New York 4, M inn 3, 1st
Ptsb0h
130 a10 ()()()----- 5 10 1
Montreel 19 , Atlanta 0
M inn 2. New Yor k. 0, 2nd
LA
010 100 001- 3 10 1
Cin e!
Philadelph ia 3
Chi cago 5. Texas .-4, 1s t
Rooker , Tekulve HI and
Pittsburgh 5, LOS Ang 3
Ch icago -4, Texas 2, 2nd
Oyer ; Rau, Hough (2). Lewal San D ieg o 3, St . Louis 2
Detroi t 5, Seattle 4
l vn (3 ).,. Rautzhan (5 ). Welch
Houston 4, New York 3
M il waukee 10, Toronto 5
( 7). Forster (8) . W- Rooker (6 ·
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
Oakland 5, Cleveland 4
7l.
L- Rau • ( 10-6).
HAS(All Tlmts EDT)
Calif 4, Baltimore 2
Pittsburgh , Parker (16) ; Los
Pittsburgh {Bivle v en 5-7) at
Kan Citv 2, Boston 1
Angeles , Garvev ( 14).
Montrei!ll (Grimsley 12-8&gt;. 7: 35
Today•s· Prab•ble Pitchers
p.m .
I All Times EDT!
St.L
000 011 ooo-- 2 8 a
New York (Kobel 1-21 . at
~ hicago
(Kravec 7-9)· at
WETHERSFIELD, Conn. Sari [)go
000 IOUOx- .3 6 .1 Phil adelp hi a {Kai!l t 5·31. 7:30 Boston
(Eckerslev 11 -Al. 7 : 30
liforru
"an
Rod
Forsch
,
Schultz
(7
)
and
·
p.m.
(up!) - Ca
Simmons ; Perry, Fingers (8)
CinC innati (Li!!Coss \. 1) at p .m.
Tex as (Medich 5-51 at New
Funseth, champion Of the and Tenace . W- Perry {12 -4 ). L Atlanta (Niekro 12-10 ). 7:35 York
{Figueroa 10 -7), 8 p .m .
$210,000 Greater , Hartford - Forsch (9·11 1. HRs - So n p.m .
Milwaukee (Travers 7-5) at
the firSt thing he Diego, Winfield (18) , Gamble
san Francisco (Halic k i 5-4 ) at
Baltimore !McGre-gor
11 -BI .
(7) .
Houst on (Ruhle 0-0) , 8: 35p.m .
Open' says
7
:
30p
.m
.
is going to do with his share of ,
Los ·Angeles 1Hoolon 11 ·11 ot
Detroit (Bil lll)gham 10-5) at
· ·
·
·If 1
NY
000100 a2()- 3 11 2 San Diego (Rasm ussen 9-71. 10 Toronto
(Moore S-2} , 7: 30p .m .
th e wmmngs
JS pay o a oan Hous
ooo
101 002- • 9 1
K ansas City (Gura 8-2) at
from
his
ll· year-old
Sw~n . Bernard (BJ , Lockwood p.m . .Tuesd1v's G111mes
Cleveland (Wa its 7-11) , 7:3a
daughter.
(9 1 and Stearns ; Lemongello,
St . Louis at Chicago
p.m .
Sambi to
(8) ,
Fors ch
{8 ).
P'ittsbgh at Montreal. night
Oakland (Langford 3-1) at
"I had to borroW money Andu jar (9) and 8ochy . WNew York at Phlla, night
California (Tanana 14-SL 10:3a
from my little girl's bank Andujar , 4-• . ·L- Bernard , 0- 1.
Cincinnllti at Attanta , night
p.m .
account to help pay for the
American League
San Fri!ln at Houston, n ight
Tuud11y's Gamu
Los Ang at San D ieg o, night
Ch icago at Boston, night
barn
"
the
41"&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld
golfer
·
game!
·
T e x~s at New Y'ork, night
. '
. . f
Minn
020 ·000 1oo- 3 6 1
Detroi t at Toronto, night
wd SlllldaY after his our- N. y .
• ooo 120 01x - • • 1
Kan CITy .at Cleve, night
stroke victory at the n. Erickson , Mar!h&amp;ll (81 lin~ · International League
Oakland at Calif. n ight
Wethefsfield Country Club Borgmi!lnn ; Guidry, Gossage United Press International
M inn' at seattle, night
.
lz.
(7l and Munson . W- Gossage
W, L. Pc1. GB

mm

TUIIDAY NIGHT INCI• 1 I

.g)

I'"

'

*~

5-The Dallv SenUnel. MiddlJ!port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, July 31,1978

.......'
......
BASEBAll SCOREBOARD
.........
...

I

Sergei, 37, the divorced
father of one daughter, has
been seen IIIith Christina
around Moscow, walking
unnoticed near the open air
market or shopping · in the
diplomatic groc,ery stoce.
fler own first .marriage, to
a California realtor, fell apart
in 1971. Then came her
to
father's · marriage
Jacqueline Kennedy, which
wa s a disappointment to
Qlristlna.
In 1973, a plane crash killed
her 24-year-&lt;lld.brrither and in
1975, her father died.
Four montha later, Miss
Onassts married Alexandros
Andteadls, a 34-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Greek shipping heir. That
marriage foundered after 14
·months.
Christina said she alt'eady
ha~ begun adjusting to the
SoViet style of living, which
may mean taking what you
can get al the meat counter,
"I've been eating a lot of
hamburgers," she said IIIith a
laugh. "It's oot always easy
to find veal."
Alter a two-week trip to
$iberia, where they will vWI
Lake Baikal and Magadan,
"'the couple will move In with
Sergei's mother until they
can
buy
their
own
cooperative apartment.
• Christina, who arrived In
Moscow June 26, said she
spent mOIII of the past month
running the bureaucratic
barricades, getting the
necessary marriage papers
and documents from various
embassies
and
Soviet
departments.
·
'Christina said the operation
of the $500 million shipping
and .-eal estate empire built
by the late Onassls will
remain in the West in the
hands of her lather's old
associates.
She also said she had
opened a personal bank
·account at the Soviet Bank
for Foreign Trade.
There was no report on the
bank teller's reaction.

•

Meigs
Property
Transfers•

Katherine Lawson to
William R. Lawson, Deed of
'Correction, Columbia.
'William R. Lawson to
William R. Lawson, Sherry!
L. Lawson, ·115 acres, 21.48
acres, Columbia .
Wendell Williams, Betty
Williams to Wendell Allen
Williams, Marilyn Fern
WiUiams, 5.4 acres, Rutland.
w..s. Cole to Robert F.
Gamble, 28 acres, Lebanon.
Joe F, McWhorter. LyM A.
McWhorter to Mildred
Frank, I acre, 1.01 acre,
Columbia.
, C. ' T. Wharton, · Nell
WoodaU Whart,on to Daniel E.
ThompliOR, interest In parceis, Mlddlej.ort.

The only people we know
who can manage on fixed ine&lt;mes are dishonest horse
players.

·'

77 hours In a food service

related a ctivity.
A group of food service
industry representatives
assisted in the design of the
program and have formed a
partnership with tl)e college,
by means of an advisory
committee, to secure field
experitmce, surruner intern
positions and post graduation
.employment opportunities.
The advisory committee is
comprised of the following
individuals and
their
organization s: Ro ge r
Williams and Virgil Brooks ,
Bob Evans Farms, Inc.; Ben
Watson, L &amp; K Restaurants
and Motels; Norm Orcutt,
Pizza Hut of Ohio, Inc.; AI
~hillip s and Bob Hoff ,
· Cantee n Corp ; Micha el
Jones, Holiday Inn, Inc.; L.
D. Maynard, Chessies
Restaurants, Inc.; E. R.

Finley, Kraft Foods, Inc.;
Jeff Snedaker, Shake Shoppe
Restaurants ; Mike Bunting,
Marshall University; Diana
Ebert s, Vinton County
Schools ; Bob Davidson, Dr.
K. Kool and Bernie Murphy,
all of Rio Grande College and
Community College.
·
The need for food service
management is visible in the
expansion of franchised food
outlets. A Reader 's Digest
article of May 1978 estimates
that $5!) billion lllill be spent in
the next year pn eating
outside the home.
The program curriculum
will be instituted into the
college's offerings this fall .
quarter . It will be a two-year
associate degree program.
Interested
individuals
should contact the Office of
Admissions and Records at
the college for registration
and admission details.

'

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Beca us e th e CB fad is ove r, now 11s fo r
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95
1978

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6-The Daily Sentin~l . Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Monday, July 31, 1978
-

" :""'

I

~ ·P•
•

BA'ITING PRACTICE
Randy stewart of the
Pomeroy-Mason-New Haven AU-Star team hits a lew
prior to the team's departure .for Belpre Saturday
afternoon. The AU-Stars laced Parkersburg Worthington
Saturday evening in the Belpre All-Star tournament aoo
will travel to Wellston Thursday to participate in an AllStar tournament there.
·

Finley will block any
cash deal for .:'R eggie
ALL-STARS - Members of the 1978 Pomeroy-MasonChris Shank, Dave Laooaker, Scott Harrison, Brill King,
New Haven All-Star Little League baseball team travelled
Brett K&lt;rn, aoo Matt Dawson . AM back row, Rett
to Belpre Saturday evening to play Parkersburg WorthMilhoane, Jon Perrin, Donnie VanMeter, Raooy Stewart,
ington in the Belpr e All-Stat Tournament . Thursday they
Jay Spradling, Ron Bradley, aoo Ron Denny. Not pictured
will participate in an All-Star tourney at Wellston . From 1are Mike Pethel and Jay Hysell. Roger Stewart of
r , front row, are Jackie Welker, Brian• Korn, Tim
Pomeroy manages the team and Dave Richardson,. New
Haven, and Jack Welker, Pomeroy, are the coaches.
•
Compson , and bat boy ·Mike Richardson . Middle r ow 1
_ _.:..__:__-:-_ _:__ _ _ _ _~----_:__----------------------,-

.
d
d
-.
e
·yet
C0 St S not d ec

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Not even President Carter
knows yet whether middleincome Americans wou ld
have to pay a set percentage
of their medical bills under
his national health insurance
plan .
But HEW Se cretary Joseph
Ca lifano said Sunday one
th ing is s ure : poor people
would get free benefits under
the proposal Carter wants to
pUt in effe ct, step-by.,tep,
· beginning in 1983.
" The level of cost sharing

e

and the exten t of cost
sha ring, if any, is something
that Will have to be
determined when we lay out
the bill," said Califano in an
interview on CBS-TV's "Face
the Nation " Suooay.
"Jlut low-income families
- the poor people - will not
he part of any cost--sharing

direct orders on how medical
care should be parceled out
or how it should be flnahced
- to draw up the legislatiDn .
He will seoo the bill back to
Carter lor final approval
before lt goes to Congress
next year .
When it gelS to CapiiQI Hill ,
however, it will have
company in the form of
another health insurance bill
to be presented this year by
Sen.' Edward Kennedy, 0Mass.
Kennedy attacked , the
Carter plan last week as
weak· and ineffective, and
said the proposal did not lend
itself to orte, hard-hitting bill.
" &amp;Ire, there'll be problems
in the Congress," said
Califano. " But whether one
can say that there will be
more problems if there is one
bill or more problems if there
are two bills is, to me, highly
questionable .
" Senator Kennedy has
introduced any number- of
different bills . Nme of those
bills have been able to be
passed by either house . None
of them have been reported
out
by
the
relevant
committees of either house .
"We Intend 1o Introduce a
piece of legislation that will
haVe the opportunity of passing," Califano said .
He said the Carter
guidelines do not preclude a
single bill , although he
pointed out Saturday that

component."
Califano r eceived 10 broad
on
health
gu idelines

insurance

from

Carter

Saturday . He will use those
guidelines - which give no

NEW YORK (uP!) -The
New York Yankees will be
wasting their time if they ask
waivers on Reggie Jackson,
Oakland owner Charlie
Finley said SUnday night,
because the A's would claim
the slugging ouUielder. ·
"The only way he can go 1o
any cll!b in the American
League is to get waivers on

deal with the Yankees."
Jackson was a memlH!r of
three wocld chainpions with
the A's, but he was traded 1o
Baltimore in 1976 and joined
the Yankees as a free agent
for the 1977 !eason.
Jackson is reportedly oo
the trading block In the wake
of his recent suspension and
the forced resignation andre-

ASTRO•GRAPH ~~i~~~

- Bernice Bede Osol

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Evans
and family , Mrs. Ada Van
Meter attended the Holter
reunion at Racine on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Vic Durst ,
Scotty, J ason and Kelly , The
Plains, spent the weekend
with . his parents, Mr . a nd
Mrs. R. R. Durst .
Mrs. Mary Greer and Leah,
Long Bottom. visited Mrs.
Merle Evans on Thursday
afternoon.

' ' •lW'" -'1 I"
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•.c

CALORIC '
EKP399 30 " Electric Microwave
Cooking Center
• Microwave Oven- uses 50% to
75 % tess energy • Self Clea ning
Bro•le r / Ove n • Smoot h-Top Cook •ng
Su rfa ce • Autom at• c Lo w er Oven
• Oot•onal Rotrs sene • lnfmi te Hea t
Con trols . • Su rface Light • Ove n
arid lndtcator Ligh ts • Utensi l
Sto rage • Lift -of f Lower Oven Door

Ki.si;lg guuramis du just
tha t. The fi sh, aqua riwn
favori tes , kiss other fish,
tank walls, even stunes,
Nobody knows why.

Aug. 1, 1978
There could be Quite a few
interesting changes in store _lor
you this co ming year. AltHough
th e~ might appear co nfusi.ng al
!he time they occur , llow with
events . They will work to your
"My boys and Charlie
Carter wants to keep all him tOmorrow or any day
soon, offering him for $20,000, Finley believe we 'can catch 'ullimate advantage.
options open to light inflation .
(July. 23-Aug. 22) You
sure I would claim Reggie the Angels and Royals," said · LEO
could be easil y provoked today
"The president's program
Finley . " I'm not going 1o let and overreact i n an unbecomJackson ."
is not· piecemeal," he said.
Finley said he is aware of Kansas City and the Angels ing manner . You c.an save fa ce
"The president's preference
reports the Yankees and fortify themselves if I can if you just laugh it oft and turn
and it is · a strong
the other cheek . Find out more
California Angels ... ere help it ."
about yourself by sending for
preference - is for a single
discussing a waiver deal. He
Oakland trails first-place
your copy of Astro-Graph LeibiD. We are traveling with said Jackson wasn't on the KansasCitybysixgamesand ter
. Mail 50 cent~ for eac h and a
Senator , Kennedy and those list as of Suooay, but if the lji'COnd-place California by
long , self-addressed , stamped
people who want na tiona I
to Astro ~Graph , P.O.
Yankees made him available ~ ' tl\&gt;o games in the American envelope
Box 489 , Radio City Stat ion .
health Insurance .. We are aU the A's would block any bid League West.
N .Y. 100t9. Be sure to specify
walking down the same paUi .
birth sign .
'
by California Ka"""" City .
If the Yankees
new
We are all going to the same
11
1 don,t want .Jackson.\: waivers on Jackson,·F~]ey Vt~GO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Be
willing to share the gains to day
place. And we are all going to
Finley stres~d. ''I w()J)lit said his , . ~\aim wbuld
with the one who supplies you
get there at the same
claim him f&lt;r ·one reason -&lt; ~upersede a Kansas City or
with the opportun ity. II he fee ls
time."
· only, to prevent Kansas City California bid since the 'A's vou're just pi cki ng h1S bra1ns ,
or Califorrtia from making a trail both clubs.
·· . · t ·he'll be irked .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Be
Sure your ambitions ar e in line
with vour high standards today .
Success throug h unbecom ing
methods brings Oflly hollow
victory .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov . 22)
There ' s a pos.sibi lity you cou ld
reject a sound proposal today
because you reel u·ntriendly
toward th e sou rce . Grudges
musn 't cloud your evaluat i on~ .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc .
OLYMPIA, Wasil . ( UJ;'I) said Curtis faces a. long Daniels said. " He took a
Z1) Rewa rd persons wh o are
Marlyn Daniels wants the process-of skin grafting.
mouthful of gasoline and spit
hetpfut .to you tOday , but don ' t
rock group Kiss to know
"I'd like to have thai Kiss it out give slices of the pi e to those
and the fire
who are no t. There 's a good
about his son, Curtis, 11, who group read this and hear backfired."
c ~anc e yo u' ll do just that .
suffered third-degree burns about this and hear what they
Daniels said his son has
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-Jon . 19)
trying to imitate its fire- have to say," Daniels said . always been a miinic . .
Handle important allian ces with
lreathing stunt.
all tact possible today . Don 't let
" If I got a letter or telegram
"He loves the music and
opposi n~ views 'destroy
a
Curtis Daniels is in St. from one of them, to let Curt the band aoo the rock and
wor
thwh
ile
relat
ionship
.
Peter Hospital in serious know they don 'I want kids roll . Since he 's been a litU....
AQUARIUS (Jon. 26-Fob . 19)
condition with burns inside doing that."
boy, this has influenced him, Co-workers co uld rrove a bit
his nose aoo throat and on his
unrel iable today . ! you want
Daniels said his son had I remember him pretending
someth ing done right. do it
lace, neck, chest and arms. bec0111e obsessed with the he's Tom Jones ."
yourself . Be a producer , not a
He was taken out of Jntensive bizarre rock group during the
Daniels said he aoo Curtis'
delegator.
·
care Saturday, but doctors past three months. He said 19-year-&lt;Jld brother were wor- PISCl:S !Fob. 211-Morch 20) SeCUrtis has stacks of Kiss ried about something hap- lec t companions with considerable care today . A poor c hoice
cards and has used his pening .
could dra ·~,~ you ,l nto si tuati ons
mother's lipstick to paint his
" We' ve talked with Curt that are both complex and
face to look like the band and told hirn it's a trick. He troublesome .
members.
just felt he could do it. The ARIES (Morch 21-Apr\1 19) In
joi nt ventures today your ac . On Thursday Curtis went to problem is, they have such an tions
will be both inge nious
a friend's house and the pair influence on little kids. You and expedient , yet there's a
put on lipstick and poured just can' t believe the strong possibility vour behavketchup oo their chests. They influence a rock 'n ' roll band ior will fr ustrate rour associate .
(Apr\ 211-Moy 28)
MONDAY
also wrapped a sock around a has nn kids, no matter what TAURUS
You 're a fast thinker today . Left
ALL BOYS , grades 9. fire poker , went out to the they're doing."
to your own devices you'll
through 12, interested in garage where a can of
A!J far as he knows, Daniels come up with solid solutions .
may lack the
playing varsity and reserve gasoline was stored and lit said, his son has seen the However,
courage o ~our convictions
football to report at Eastern the poker.
group only on television, and let others dissuade you .
Hlgh School Monday at 6:30
" Then my boy Curtis never in person .
GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) Fip.m . to have helmets fitted . decided he would spit lire ,"
nancial conditions are a mixed
bag today . Relurns will be high
LADIES AUXlUARY of
for your services, but you could
the llashan Volunteer Fire
show a dellclllf you speculale .
Depa:nment Monday at 8
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Persons with whom you have long·
p.m . at fir e house . All ladies
standing ties are not llk el~ 10
in the vicinity are asked to
be treated as well as your
come a nd join the auxlliary.
newer acquaintance s today.
Money-making projects will
You'd fare better if the reverse
were true .
be discussed.

~~~~~:~ s:;~ ~a?v'!~=g~ :.~gM~~~::~w,:.nager

or

a&amp;i

'Kiss' group act results
in serious facial turns

1 --------1

-

'

lt_~

· MEETING
of
all
prospective Meigs Hi gh
Sc hool Girls Volleyba ll
players. Tuesday, 7 p.m. at
the high school.

see Cross Hardware
Housewares
Wallpaper
Paints
.
Electrical Supplies
Plumbing · Supplies

'

CROSS HARDWARE
Mcin . thru Sat.

9: 001oS : OO
11 N, 2nd Ave .

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS N.J

Middleport

Alb- Uvestock Sales
Saturday, July !1, It'll
· (Cattle)
Feeder Steers ( 400-800
lbs .), Choice S8.50-i9; Good

'

'

. .....

•

-~

. • SoCI"a} Events·
.Racme

'
By Mrs. t"raacls Morris
t~e Booster Class of First
IJaptlst Church School held
the July ineetlng In the
L~tsement of -the church with
si xteen members present.
Mrs. Helen Slack, president,
op ened the meeting with

Dorothy Badgley using the
topic, "The Goodness and
,
Greatness of · God .~ ' Her
group singing "Jesus Is All scripture was Psalm 146 :$-21.
the World to Me." Prayer · The hymn, "Praise Him!
was by Helen Simpson. Mrs. Praise Him 1" was sung and
Slat-k's topic was " Wealth of prayer, " The Promise of
Friendship" Scripture was God" was given. Readings by
· John 15:13-15.
members included "Our
A business session followed
Great God, "How Great God
preceding a program by Mrs, Is," " Let 's Be Friends, "

··Who Is This One? ," " Leave
ittoGod," " It's Fine Today,"
"Christ Comes to Bir-

992-38 '

,,

'
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164
F&amp;AM Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
All master masons are Invited.
SATURDAY
ANNUAL :l.;uspan reunion,
Kreide! Park . Basket dinner
served at 1 p.m .

•

.
Rev . 8-17·73

mingham, " " Today ,". :•1

FlandersFJeJd,'' ''No Time,"
hymn, " How Great Thou
Art ." Meeting closed with

Rev . a. J7 . 7J

DAV I D L . WEIR
DIRECTOR

- ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIOSBids will be receivtd at tht
offices of Leading creek
conservancv District , Sta,te
Route 124 , in Rutland , Ohio ,
unt il 12 :00 Noon on Augus t
15th , 1978, at whi ch time the
bids will be openeG "publlclv
and read for . the following :
A 1979 Pick u p Truck with
the tollOvt"lng specifications :
Regular Cab 133 In ch
wheelbase
5.8 Li ter 351 Cubic Inches I
Cvl . Eng in e
Automatic
Transmiss ion
Tract ions L ok Rear
Standard T ires L 18 X IS ,
with m ud and snow tires on
rear wheel s
Power Bra kes
Power Steering
Rear Step Bumper Argent
Pa inted
Gauges A m meter and
Oil
6" bv 9" Mirrors we,rern
Swi ng LOC~
AM Rad io
Heav Y Du ty Black VInyl
Seat
•
Heavv Du ty Fro nt Springs
Auxiliary Rear Spr to gs
A ir Conditioning .
An equlva lent may be bid .
The r{ght is reserved to relect
any and all b ids. Del iver y
date shall bt by not tater than
sixty divs aftrr noflf tcatton
of occeptance of bid .
BOARD OF DtR ECTORS
OF
LEAOING
CREEK
CONSERVANCY DISTRICT
17)

31 181 7, •• • 31

Feeder Heller• ( 400-700
lbs. ). Choice 52.50-5UO;

VAUGHAN~S

Good 33-61-75. Feeder Bulls (400-Dllbs.),
Choice 8W9; Good 38-51.5o,
Slaughter Bulls (Over 1,000
lbs.) 37 .7HI.50.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities
33-41.50; CaMera aoo Cutters

I

FRYER · . A
-PARTS......~.~~~-~

@iiii-FRESH PRODUCE I

LEAN MEATY

PORI STEAl

POTATOES
10 LB. BAG

.,

LB.$~~·

29

~

3 LB. BAG

16-oz.
Cans

89t

LB.

Z9

~

1-Lb.
Pkg.
HEINZ KEG-0

79&lt;.

32-ol.
Bottle

Pluo Dopoo•t

.

.$

·

7-UP THE UNCOLA .........8 ~:~~;.
ON SUMMER FGDDS

9C
8
$ 1"
CIDER VIIIECiAR ........................... oouoo
MO~ARCH
$ 12•

HAMIURCiiER DILL CHIPS ........ ,~~~·
WHITE VIIIECiAR ....... ..

.. ...... Gollon

1\RA.FT PLAIN , eMOKH, HOT or ONION

B.B.Q. SAUCE ....... :...................... ~:;~~
32 .az.

. LEMON JUICE

IEALEMOII .........................._.. ,...........w.

HI-C

stc

i

7 sc

46-oz.
Can

·

I

HOUSE

.

TANT COFFEE ............

~,~

~-

SiO.o0 purchaM

3 -oz.
Jar

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2s :~ 4"

IVORY LIQUID

$379
s rO HlS • . _ ~; AROt~A L• uo o s ruH~S

L•~•

JIJt•liJ ilt•l: 1
·

BUGLES ·
,~.,.

owo w"'
on• coupon
" ' r.~

2
,

~

a

99

z
c;

5~

#
._.

7-oz
Bo••

~. . . . . IIIBJl B

~
~

Good I T e.ntlf!1l "Ofl l l lu1 5!0111
OO· JO 011

$ 69

fir

CARDINAL f&lt;:l

APPLESAUCE .........,.................... ·~;~· 59'

J.DIAPERS ...................................:...................

1I·CI.

MAIDAIIII ORAIIGES ........ 2 'c!~~: I

3 . $ 100
SLICED BREAD ............... :.. ~
·

f.---1
:;.:·

99(

LITE LIIIE_CHOSE ............. ',!,;~

1

GLAD TRASH BAGS ...... ................:...... •:;;• s1"
SENIC~

Umlt one

•

APPU
JUICE... .............................
:!;: 79'
.
.

LOWMAN TRAVEL

M~~ .

'

CARDINAL ASSORTED FLAVORS

VIEIIIA SAUSAGE ..................... ~:
OILMONT!
•
,,
.
,.
.••.
2
RED SALMO.
• ••• ••••• , , ,, •• , ...... . .... , .. Can

.

FABRIC SOFTENER

NU SOFT -

.

ICE CREAM ................................. a.,...99'
CARDINAL U.&amp;.D.A. GIIAOE :' A .

'

MEDIUM EGG$ "'""'""""' Oozon

""CH MAID IOODUS':...... ,:.':,;~- 49c

Limlt onoo w ith
Oftl

69•

$ · OO

POT PIES ...........:.........4 :t:.
'

1

V. Gillon

"'2:
TOIYS PIZZA ...................................... ,.~·~~99' ~ .
·

14·• · PIPHIIONI or 11·01 . IAUIAOI

gge

FESTIVAL ICE CREAM....................... ..
OllilA s.-I. .SPOTATOIS ..":.';' Stc

33-oz .

lonte

.......'tin•

a....J "DJ•I llu•

llmM

00 -20 0&amp;

~

.·

-..on
twnil,

Ooif •

FROZEII FOOD VALUES 1----1
UN QUIT CHICKEN, SU' oo TU~KEY

~ -

'·

.~~------~--~-----.

CHilli

..

f ORES • CARDI NAL fO OO Sf0R£ S ·~':"1'.,.~!"1"

UmltCNM

4~

.

.

IIU SOFT .......~ ............................. !!:~~ 79'

POmD MEATS .................. ,...... •~;~· 39c

Valley Bell

BUntRM,ut ..........................~!~... ~1..

FAIRIC IOFTENfR

ARMOUR

GIATID PAIMESAI .......... :.;::. 1·1

son MAIGAIIIE .......... ~~ Stc

sI,.

OIYDOL DOEIKEIT .......................... ::~:·
2
GLAD
WIAP
..........................................
':~,:· 79'
Umit OM

MID.. WID I or JCIWIOI

1 19

~nS10R £S

IO

• 10•0FFLAIEL

$2Jf

1

$

3 DtAMONOI

,.
3

•

-o.

SENECA APPL.E IAAAH

;

5

AIR FRESHENER ................ !. ................... ~:

I'

~~~·

'

......

1 o• OFF LABEl

PUIIIA PUPPY CHOW ..................5 ~ 1

Boara 30-32.
Pigs (by the head) 15-24;
- (Lambs)
Feeder Lambs 20-21.

29-oz.

I ESTEl

5 59

Glllll, 200-230 lbe. ) 47.20-47.:10.
Sowt 37-41.70.
.

SHORTCAKE$129 i5

~

INSTANT

K N BEANS ..... ~~~·- 69•

• two wUh 110.00 purche.n

1

•

U~" OM _ _,..
onio coupon IMt ,.,.,...._

SNACK FAVORITE

Jumbo.,~
Roll

CARDINAL

~

........_
:'j

100·C1.89'
SUGAR SUBSTITUTE ...............................

DRI

jl{ allJ;: ,] :1

MIGHTY HIGH STRAWBERRY

SWEETN LOW

ASSORTED FLAVORS

or ASSORTED COLORS or OESI

AENUliTPINE . L.AVINOIA , AOSE ot POWD f..A ROOM

~o STORES • CARDINA L Fooo ST OR£~

~

DOUBLE IUnY COOKIES .................. ':;;~ 79'

'

oo·, ·;oio~

1

KUILEA

limit thr.. with

tw•nT~

It

IABISCO RITZ CRACKERS ................ .':~:· 79'

VLA IJC

(Hep)
Hogs (No. I, BarroWI and

Hertford. W, Ya,
l'llanoii2-112J

BOLOGNA

'

SALE DATES JULY31 • AUGUST 5, 1978

IC!UA,NTITY RtG·HTS RESERVED

.

Rt. U

WHOLE KERNEL
or CREAM STYLE

Superior

SLICED BICOII

ONIONS····89'

CHEESE ........_.......:.. -

TRAILERS

""'""'""

69e

LB.

'

CARDINAL

.
PLUMS
•••••• ~~.49' YELLOW

AMIIIICAN

In 1974, John Elli'Uchman

•·

~

By The Piece

CELERY.~~"~. 69$

NEW APPLES·•·99'

r·~){

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

.....-.,~

3 LB. BAG

~o?arch

Piece

"Fine For The Grill"'

______ '229

DAIRY VALUES

wuen~ to :JO monlhlln

By The

20 LB. BAG

Baby Calves (by the head)

EIIJber'JI'I [II)'Chlalrilt,

MIXED

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

82-73.

prilon for 1111 role in the
brakln ol the oll'lce ol Daniel

Pound

UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

Veall (Choice and Prime)

STATE HIGHWAY SAFETY Director Robert
Chiaramonte (left) accepts the American AutomObile
Association's (AAA) 1978 Award of Ettellence !..pedestrian safety at a Stateh01.1110 presentation held July
28. The award, presented by Ohio AAA 'AIIOC(atlon Safety
Director Robert Comha (right), acknowledcll the efforta
of aU Ohio safety, education and enl..-cement acencies
who c&lt;iiltrlbuted to a dramatic II perC(lllt reduction In
pedestrian fatalities acrou the state during 1977. Ohio
was me of only two states to earn national recoplllon il!
· MA 's 39th annual Pedestrian Safety lnwnlory pnlll'llll-

Look for the Country Pride
Calico for the . ·
finest
fresh and frozen poultry.

WHOLE FRYERS

L'-I' ....

31-41.50.

28-10.

FRYERS

•

I

J UTAA AISOfUIANT

In 1973, 89 people died In the
crash of a Delta Alrli!tea
plane in Boa1on . There was
me survlv..-.

and Mrs. Gretta Simpson Brace Tuesday .
spent Sunday wi\h Mr. and
Mrs , Violet Fisher of
Mrs. Solon But ch~r at Uniontown came Tuesday lor
Spencer, W. Va .
her father , Mr . Henry Roush,
Bill McKenzie and son, who will visit several weeks.
Jell, of Gallipolis visited Mr .
Mr . and 'Mrs . Herbert
and Mrs . Roy Ri!Oe Saturday Sayre went t,o McArthur on
afternoon.
business and visited their
Mrs. Phyllis Harvey and grandson , Mr . and Mrs.
Edna and Lucy Haupricht of Bryce Sayre and family at
Toledo visited Mrs . Mabel J ackson .

COUNTRY PRIDE

MONARCH

Jti l v 24 . 31

Mr. Edna Foster and Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Ca~nter of Flemingsburg,
Ky, spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ervine
and their guests on Tuesday
and Wednesday were Mr. and
Mrs. Alden Dunbar of Cincinnati.
·
· Mr . and Mrs: Bill Hayman

BIGGEST SAVINGS IN

DAVID L . WE ( R
DIREcToR

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTOR
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus . Ohio
July 14, 1971
contract Sales Legal
Copy No. 78·615
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Sealed proposa ls w ill be
received at the Office of the
Direc tor
of
the
Ohio
Depar t ment
of
Trans porta t ion , Columbu s. OhiO ,
unt il
10 :00 A .M ., OhiO
Standard. T !me, Tues day ,
August 8, 1978 , f or im ·
provemen ts In :
•
Athens , Ga lli a . Guern sey ,
Hock ing , Meigs , Monroe ,
Mo rg an ,
Nob l e,
Perrv .
Vin t on
and
Wash i ngton
Counties , Ohio , on ·var ious
ro utes and sec tions , by ap .
plying center lines enct lane
lines .
' Pavement Width - var ies .
Project Length - 0 .00 teet
or 0.00 mit e.
Work Leng th vario us
feet or varlou~ m lie .
" The dltte set · for com ·
plet ion of this work .shall be
es se t torth In the bid ding
proposa I ."
Each bidder shal l be
reQ uited to file w ith his bid a
certi f ied check or cashier's
check for ltn amount eQual. to
five P" cent of hil bid , bu t In
no event more than f lttv
thousand dollars or • bond
for ten per cent of his bid,
p_ay'able to t he Director.
Bidders must ltpply, on the
prOoer
forms ,
fOr
quali t1catJon at least ten davs
pr ior to the date set for
opening bids In accorda nce
with Chl!lpter 5525 Ohio
Rev i sed Code .
.
Plans and speci fications
are on t ile in the Depart ment
of Tronsportatlon and the
office or the District Depu tv
Director .
The Director reserves the
r, ig ht to reject onv all bids .

prayer by Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm . Refreshments were
.a sack lunch brought by each
and exchanged .
Mrs. Ray Sayre and Mrs.
Harold Koehler of Roseville
spent a recent day with Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Waid Foster
and family of Columbus spent
a weell with their parents,.

Will, " "Giving," "I'll 0.,, B'ut
- /' "To Have Faith," "The
Art of Hope, " The Voice of
the Unknown Soldier," " In

to reject anv and al•l

38.~ .50.

players . Tuesday, August 1 at
7 p.m. at the high school.

. Home Improvement Supplies

Open

'

TUESDAY
MEETING
of
a ll
. prospective Me igs High
School Girls Voll eyba ll

For all
yqur';do-it:fi)QQelf
.
.
.

•
•
•
•
•

you

· RUTLAND
T owns ~ i p
• Trustees will meet en the
proposed budget for fiscal
year J an. I, 1979 on Monday
at 6:30p.m. at Rutland Fire
House.
SP.orts Tr•nuctions
By Un,ted Preu lnterniltionid
RUTLAND Garden C.lub
ht urd•v
annual
picnic Monday at 6
P ro Footbilll
p.m . at Forest Acres Park,
M innesota - Traded offen
slv e guard Ed Whi te to San
table number one on the
D iego .
·
right . Brin g fl o wers and
containers and participate in
Dower arranging using Fair
schedule .

DO-IT-YOURSELF
,.. ARDVtARE HEADQUARTERS .
...

.. ..

'' - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O ., Monday, July 31, 1978

(~I 2~ . 31. 2tc

Stiversville I ~cial I
News ·Notes I Calendar I

Jt •

•••

I

"'P'

·l

- ADVERTISEMENT
NOTI CE TO
FOR liDSCONTRACTORS
Bids will be received at the
STATE OF OHIO
offices Qf Le•dlng creek
DI,ARTMENT OF
conurvancr, District, State
TRANSPORTATION
Route 124, n Rutl•nd , Ohio,
· Columbus, Qttlo
until 12 :00 Noon on August
Jwrly 14, lt11 · ·.
15th , 1971', at which time the
contriCt Sllllltlll
bids will be Qpened publicly
CDPV No, 1•-lff
and reed tor the following :
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
A 1979 Plc:kup Truck with
seated proposal$ will be
1he follow ing specifications :
received at the office of the
F -150 Regular C•b with 4x.C
Director
of
the
Ohio
option
Department
of
Trans -.
5.8 Li ter , 351 Cub ic Inches,
portatlon, Columbus, OHio,
8 Cyl. Eng ine
unt i l 10 : 00 A .M .. Ot'tlo
Automatic
Transm lsJton
Standard Time, Tuesday ,
Trac ti ons Lok Front &amp; · August 8, 1978 , tor lm ·
Rear
provements In :
(5l1 .00 M 15 8 pr Tires , with
Meigs County&lt;! Ohio. , on
mud and snow t ires on front
MEG . 338 - J116.0ll Stote
and rear wheels .
Route 338, by resurfacing
Power Brak es
with asphalt conaete.
Power Steering
Pa vement W idth - 18 feet .
Rear Step Bumper Argent
Project and Work Length Pa in ted
17,160 feet or 3.2.5 m iles.
Ammeter and
Gauges "The da te set fo r com Oil
pletion of th iS work shall be
6" by 9" M irrors Western as set forth in the bidding
Swing Lock
proposal."
AM Radio
Each bidder sha ll be
Heavy Dutv Black Vinyl" required to file with his bid a
certif i ed check or cashier-'s
Seat
check tor an amount equal, to
Heavy Dutv Shocks Front five Dltr cent of his bid . bu t In
and Rear '
no event more than fifty
Heavy Du ty Fron t Springs thousand dollars, or a bond
Auxlllarv Rear Spr ings
tor ten per cent of hll bid,
Air Condit ioning
to the Director .
Free Running rrront Hubs . payable
Bidders must apply , on the
An equivalent may be bid . proper
form s,
for
The right Is reserved to re [ec t
li fl catiSJn at least ten days
•nv and all bids . Del i v ery qua
prior to the date set fo r
date shf:ll be not later . th•n opening
b_lds In accordance
siKt y days after notification with Chapter
5525 Ohio
of acceptance of bids .
Code .
BOARD OF DIRECTORS Revised
Plans .and specifications
OF
LEADING
C REEK
CONSERV ANCY DISTRICT are on f ile in the Depar-tment
of Transport a tion and th e
(7) 31, (8) 7' u . lt
office of the Distri ct Deputy
Dire ctor .
l=or Tuesd•y. Aug. 1
The ·orrector reserves the

..

.

. ..

I

TOIYS PIUA ...... :..........................:....... .,.. 1
EVaFIISII DOIUTS ............................':0:

ICE CREAM s•wta.$ ..................':;,."' 111'

~

�.. . ..

-.

1
a-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-P om e r oy. 0 .. Mo nda y. July 31. 1978

t--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday. July 31, 1978

Want Ads Turn ,.Unwanted.Items Into Cash
-------

--

•

Business Services

--·

WHEEL
HALF GROWN kitten ,
long haired , wearing
lor . LOti in Rodne area , o round
Jul~ 17th or I 8th . Co li 949-2CYY7
or 992-5085 .

A CAREER.JOB
IN
CONSUMER FINANCE
'G iin recognition and prestige through a career in

FO UND: BLACK femal e poodle
pup p ~ .
949-1065. McKenzie
Ridge a rea.

. consumer fiunce. Consumer finance is an integral and
Important force i n our country•s economic growth ·~

progress. '"'

ALIGNMENT

SPECIAL

$}295

1962 RITZCRA FT mobile hofne 10 x
SO, Good condition. Clean
$3500. 7·2-28&lt;4.
1976 NAS HUA 14 J1: 65 3 bedroom'
\ 'I t bot h , unde rp in ning. $'1500
a nd asSume loon . 9&lt;49·2683 or

Any U.S. mode car - ports
extra if needed. E JCcludes
frOnt-wheel drive cars.

eKception ~ lemployee

8 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES. Pt . Pl ea·
sant , W. Va . beside Heck's, .
1973 Broadmo re U x b4 2
bedroom
1973 Dorion 14 x '60 2 bedroom
1972 Vic to.ria n 14 x 67 3 bedroom.
' 2 ba th
1972 Co ... e ntry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Stolesmon 12 11: 60 2
bedroom.

Mnefits.
There are Branch Representative positions .open
now for high school graduates. You must have an
automobile.

Phone Mr. SnodGrass today for a confidential,
·personal ir,tervlew. Call 992-2111.

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.
300 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
An Equ•l Opportunity Employer

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

Mounted on new wheett,
rudy to go. UO to S3S

complete. Truck owners.
don't .m111 this dtol. Wt Milot discount prlcts tvtry
dey. Slop In 11

I MAl E puppy, 3 month s old , 553
So . Fourth Ave., Middl eport .
Phone 992-7623.

FRED'S TIRE CENTER

THRE E ,KI TTE NS in Middle port .
992-3173 .

in H1 rttord, W. VI .

~ Al . LIMES TO NE, ~and , gro"'e l,
cal cium chloride. fer tilizer . dog
197S VEGA STATIONWAGON ,
food , and all types of sa lt. EM·
aula .. 4 new radia l tires . good
celsior Salt Works . Inc ., E. Ma in
cond iti o n . 992·6078 o r 992-51 7 1
NEED SOMEO NE to brus h hog hil SPECIAL
St .. Pome roy . 992-3891.
alter Spm .
l~ pastu re . Re a son abl e rote .
PRICE
9.85--4 24-4 , morni ng or evening.
BURRO UG HS SEN SI-MATIC • a cTHREE BEDROOM house 'for sole
Expires
cou nti ng mach ine . , Phone
by "owner:. reaso nab le pr ice .
ACTIV
IT
IES
DIR
ECTOR,
previous
August
10,
1978
.
·,
9'n -2156, The Doil ~ Sent1nel.
We lshtown Rd ., Mine rsvill e .
e~~: p e r i en"C e
wo rk ing Wi th
111 Court Stree t, Pomeroy ..
991-5754.
.
ge r io le ric s . Mu5t be on
(6 WvrU~;or u'ndt&gt;r
O
hi o .
orga nizer w ith abilit y Ia comC&lt;1sh
Char~t!
tall now tor . appointment.
mu nic ate . l ot's of public Con- USE D TRA C1'0RS;
l.ZS
I day
1.00 .
). it)
2day!i
1.90
tac t. Ca ll 614-4-46-711 2 for inler - MFI 3S Diesel - MF230 Di esel 3dil)'!i
1.80
2..2S
... iew . An Equal Opportun ity
MF150 Diesel · MF235 Diesel ·
3.75
6days
3.00
Empl oyer,
MF165 Diesel - MF285 Diesel ·
9.-:~ck W. caruv, ~gr .
MF 1135 Diesel. Cob , a ir &amp;
Each wurtl OYI'r lhe m inimwn IS
DAIRY FARM he lp wanted ."House
hea ter.
words L'i 4 c enl~ per w9rrl per day .
f ur nished .
Rac ine ~ ar ea .
Pomeroy 992-2181
NEW &amp; USED IMPLEMEN TS:
Ads running other tlu!.n ttlnst"tuhvl'
9-49 -2579.
Uay!i will be dlllrgt'd i:ll Lhl' 1 d1:1y
MF9 Boler - MF\0 Bole r · MF120
f"clte .
Boler - Matthews Ro tar y Scythe
VIRGIL B. SR. -L.o~~
. MF880 Semi -mounted 6 botIn memory, Card of Ttumks a nd
lam Plow - MF520 12' Disc
t92 -3325
Obitu~:~ry : 6 ct!n\.s per wurd. $3.00
MF200 2 Row Chopper - MF39 7
CHIP WOOD . Po les ma x
llllflUilWil . C~Sh Ln lldVI:lll t'l' .
n6
E_. Second Street
Row Pla nters . Mec hon 1cOI
dia me ter 10" on la rgest end. sa
Transp lanter .
Mubilt' Home !iales and Y1:1rd sales
BRICK HOME - 12 rooms
per ton . Bund led slo b , S6 per
SHINN 'S TRACTOR SAl ES
1:1 r~ ltt'L'eplt'll only with cash with
at a r~afly good bu y. Has 4
Deli
...
ered
to
Ohio
Pa!lel
ton
.
unlcr .·2:i t"tnl l'ha rt(t! fu r i:lds t:llrryPhone -458-1630
baths and is on a cor ner lot
Co., Rt . 2, Pomeroy . 992-2689.
Lllg 81,):( Number In Care of The SenLeon , W. Vo .
near the .h eart of town .
tmcl.
TIMBER . POME ROY Forest ProWant just $23.000.
ducts . Top p'rice for stand ing
NEW . LISTING
Nice
Thl' r-'ublisher resl'rves lh1• right
1975
BLAC
K
£l
Cami
no
Cla
ssic.
sow timbe r. QQ.I I. 992-5965 or
modern hom e l' n new
to !'(}it or ri'Jt't'l llll)'_ads de~ m l'd ub350 two barre l. a utomatic .
Ken t Ha nby, 1 - 446 · 8 5.:_70-o·~jcdlullill. Tht' Publisher will 1~u l 1.._·
subdivi ~io n .
Ha s
3
power stee ring an d bra kes .
n•spons i bl~: fur murt' t~n u1w Ult'ul'bedrooni s. bath, garage, ·
O lD FURNIT URE . ice boJ~:es . brass
May
be
'&gt;een
I 't, mil es off
rt'l.'l insertion .
and large lot . To tal electric
be ds iron beds , des ks, elc. ,
Rout e 7 By pass on 143 o r· .call •
.Phone 99'.!-2156
home · on Ohio P o wer.
comPle Te househo lds . Wri te
Good condition.
q97 ·3750
$27 ,500.
M.D. Mille r. Rt . 4 , Pomeroy or
$2600.
NEAR
DEXTER
co11997-77b0.
CA88AG E. COR N. potataes . half Countr y home w ith 6
O lD CO IN S, p oc~et watc hes ,
runner beans . (pick your own).
r ooms. c en t ral heat ing ,
class rings . wedding bo nds .
$4 bu. C. W. Proffi tt Fa rm .
large
living
with
dia monds.. Go ld or silver . Call
Po rtla nd. Ohio,._ _ _ _ __
woodbu r ning f ir epla c e ,
Roger Wamsley . 742-233 1.
basement, and around 10
1q75 SUP ER SPORT 550 Hondo , f .
acres . Want only $33,500 .
WANT TO buy: Ut ility Trailer .
mo del. 4
bog s and
NEW LISTING - 2 large
614-985 -4329
ire!'. a nd
terri ngs ,
WATER WEL L dri ll ing. Will iam T.
lo ts
In
rest rict e d
tuneup ,
otte r ~ .
G rant. 742-2879 .
s ubdi vi sion . Has T. P .
304·773 -595
~-wat e r
and
e le c tr ic
Mv11d.ay
HO USE PAINTIN G. inde~or o r oul ·
ESKA 7 hp o tboord mo to r . Sea
Noonon .S..tun.!a~·
a vai lab le.
Build yo u r
doo
r.
No
job
too
big
o
r
small.
King 7'·, hp. ou tboard motor
iF YOU hove o se rvice to Otler ,
dream home here. 56,500 .
. Reoso nobl e prices . 992·6368 .
Tlll'Stlav
Les ~ thon 1 year old Sae King
won I to bu y or 'iell some thing
1 MILE OUT NO . 143 t11ru F'nd-a y .
a lum in um /lo t botT om· boo t
oe loo king for wo rk . . or
1975 14 ' x 70' Hol ly Par k ,
4P.M
247-2411 .
whatever ... yo u II ge t resulls
mobile home and .80 of an
tlw thiy bt-fon: pubhl'a lwn
fo ster w ith o Sentinel Wont Ad . FIR EWOOD.. GREEN or seasoned.
a c re. Central ~at , and air
Colt 992 -2156 .
conditioning . Rvral weter ,
Sund&lt;ty
985-3567 or 9-4 9-2358
4P.M.
pa t io . and nice outbuild ing.
GA RAGE SALE Ju ly 31 - Aug. 4. 8', FOOT truc,lo. camper , setl con ·
F riday t~ftt'nwon
$17, 500.
9-5. loco ted off Rt . 7 Bypass on
tained . 992-59B3
BRICK STREET - Walk
Old Rt. 143 south of Joc~ · s
to the stor es from your
CB
BASE slolions . Sill roni)(
Ca fe . Reasonable prices on
hom e with income . City
101 1-0 . Freq . counter DI 04 m1c.
new Toys . good sc hool clothing
water, natural ga s. and on
Tube
ty
pe
om
side
bond
,
S325
.
and mu ch more. (Follow the
Cl'lio Power . GoOO locatil)n
Radio Sha ck mode l TRC 458
STA N'S 8ARGAI NLAN D. A store
signs for great ba rgains )
for ,_,ly $9,600.
new 40 channel om side bond .
lor the ~pi e . We buy, trade
BASHAN ~ 3 bedroom
Used 2 monl hs . $200. ~2 - 7 066 .
a nd sell. New a nd good used BIG YAR D Sole , Thurs . and Fri. 3
mil t!s north of the Fa irg rounds
fram e home with ~ ural
merchandi~e . furnit ure and ap·
TR
ACTOR.
FARMAl
l
Super
C
o
nd
on Old Rl . 33 .
wa ter, n atural gas. and 3
plio nces . Antiq ues . You w ill
e qu ipment . 2-47 -22" 2.
car
garage .
lots
of
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
always ge t o fa ir deal with LARGE YA RD Sole and Rummage
out bu ildings and · over an
Sta n. Open 7 days a week .
So le . 1 mile oft 124 O[l Hop p~ CANN ING TOMA TOES . Har ry Hil l
Phone 992-2181
a c re of land . Woodburh lng
Form , l eTar t Fall s . Ohio .
Mo nda y thru· Saturday. 9 om to
Hollow Rd . Nellie Hyse ll
fir
e place foo . All thi s for
5pm . Sunday I Dam lo b pm.
residence . July 30 ' !J August 5. REG ISTERED APPAl OOSA more .
116,000 .
Will DO bOby silti ng in my home
742-299
1.
$
500.
12
yea
rs
59
in.
742-2844
.
ACCO SEE D. Deale rs a vai lable in
" in Middle por t_Mrs . Jo hn Lyons .
thi s a rea . Wri te Stan Coak ley , CARPORT SALE. August 2 &amp; 3 1q71 ', TON FO RD XLT Range r
WE NEED 1,500 ACRES
992-251 4.
Route 1, 14jl lbuclo. 44637 or call
9·30 to 5:00. 91 8 S. 3rd. Mid OF FARMS ALL IN ONE
tr uck . Good condition . $1500.
WILL KEE P children in m~ home.
collect e"'enings , 216 -276-458-4 .
dleport.
PIECE . DO YOU AND
742 -28-4 4.
Mo nday th ru Frida-,. . 7 om til
YOUR
NEIGHBORS
GARAG E SAlE continued. New 16' SKEET ER boot . 7', h.p . Mer4 :30pm , qq'}.70-40 .
WANT TO SELL
I
iTems every day . H.A. Cole
cury molar ., tr ol ling motor and
Wi
ll
BABYSIT
in
my
home
.
res 1dt!n ce . Tuppers Plo1 ns .
a ccessor ies
992-3483 . Tom
.G. Bruce Teaford
qq'l -6309
Oh iO
Smith .
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Parlo. .
Helen L. Teaford
Reule 33. north of Pomeroy . TWO FAM ILY Ya rd So le . Thurs . . A-M MUl TI UT H OFFSE T 85
Sue P. Murphy
Lorge lots. . Call992-7~~--_._
and Fo . Aug . 3rd and 4th hom 9
Assaci1tes
du pl icaTing machine , includi ng
t1tl 4~ F1rsl rood to lhe lefl off
sta nd . lig ht , supplY tra ys.
ONE BED ROOM apt . Con ta ct
Housing
new Rt. 3J north {l ong Hollow
mosier , maSte r lile cobinel ,
Mid Village Manor Apt
Rd .). fo llow signs . JO " drop-in
many supplies Bid open1ng an LI KE NEW 22 foot Iq77 Palomino
dleport . ~2 - 778 7 .
Headquarters
elect ric range . women 's a nd
August7 . 1978. lo cat ion - Ph ilip
fold dow n camper . Awni ng. ice
3 AND 4 RM . lurnis hed and un childre n's. clo th ing , lots al A.,.on
Sporn Plan! . Rt . 33 . New
bo ll- , lu rn ace , 51eeps b. $2295 .
lurn i shed op ts
Phone
bott les . and many mise items
SAVE: BY Ow ne r. Small for m .
WV
252b5 .
-7 42-2336 .
H oven
~2 - 5&lt;3&lt; .
com pl e te ly fen ced . woven
_ Ever t th 1ng 1n go_od _cond it1on
30&lt;-B82-J2 13.
CLO SE OUT o n all 1978 Storcrof t
wi re . 2 barns, storage bul ld ing ,
THREE BEDROO M modular home. •
VERY REASO NABl E: Hospilol
fo ld d0wn5 and travel Trai lers
city wate r. dr llled w&amp;ll, . Ior ge
Portland area . Secur ity Qeposi t.
beds comple te wi th side roils,
thru Aug . 5 onl y . Before ou r
14 ~~: 60 mob il e home , 2
Referen ce require d
$200
bed sc reens . ped1olr1c choirs .
vo co t1on start s. Ma ke us your
bedroo m . li ... ing room . ki tc hen .
mon th . Call 30-4 -273 -5272 otter
regula r cho irs . I por t-o -lilt ,
1974 PON TIAC VENT URA. 6 c ~l.
off er . on ly 5 uni ts . I used 15f t.
bot h, fi replace , central air .
~pm:.._
---table wit h 2 cho ir ~ . 992-5511 lor
. $2000.·992-7453
tr ode1 Ope n Sunda y. Ca mp
la lol e lec tric , 2 porche s , win Conley Starcrafl Sol es . Rt. b2 N .
MOBi lE HOME ~poce I a cre ,
or:_:m:..:•::'.:::
io n.
dow awni ngs , cedar fe nce in
1975 CHEV ROLE T CAMA RO . - -..m:..:o::r.:•:..:l":..:1:::
country . 614 -985-43 29 .
of Pt . Pleas a nt. 304 -675-5384 .
t. ont. Beautilul settin g, s.omw
985-3564 .
postu re , some woods a nd
RI VER FRONT trailer lot lor re nt. • 19)2 PLYMOU TH DUSTER . P.S.,
more. A-l condition . Call
593 N \s t St .. M1ddlepor1 .
A.C. new ••res , economi ca l.
b 14-69B -2b65:;___ _ _ _ __
q92 2238
s 1oq5 , 965·3596
AVAilABlE AT Aiver stde Apls. .. 1 1973 G RAN TO RIN O sta tio n
let Pomeroy L•nilmark
bedroom. Sl 13 per monlh . $1 50
wagon A.C . P.S.. P.B 64 .000 soHen &amp; · condition your
security depos iT. Equa l Housing
miles . 9n -5786 .
Oppor tun lt!:..!'~ -~qa _
- - - - - - 1 water with Co-op water
softener , Model IJC-SI/1 ,
1971 AM( HO RN ET wagon . Spa r ~
tabout 6 cyl , book ... otue S5SD . . Now On ly
Will sell lor SJDO because
re\lerse is ouT. 992 -2428 .
Let us test your water Free
--·-·HOOF HOllOW Horse!&gt; . Buy , se ll
1976
TRAN S AM . Block . loaded
Trade or lro1n . New and used
low ~ i leoge . Ex cellent condi ·
~addles . Ruth Ree..,e!&gt; , Albany .
I
lion . 992 -5296 o r 992 -7841.
ack. W. ·c a rser . Mgr.
( 61 &lt; l6q8.:_3 ~~ -·
RI SING STAR ' Kennel , Boarding . 1972 IN TER NATIONA l Seoul 4..--4
Phone 992-218 1
~2 5397.
Indoo r and o utd oor runs
Groom mg aU br eed~ . Clean 197-4 OLD S CUTlASS Supreme
sontlary lac. di t1es Chesh1 re
P.S .. P.B., A.C. Good shape . 1970 HO NDA CB-350 . good condiPhone [614 ) 367 ·0292 .
Cal l q92 ·78-4 1.
lton re cenTly overhaule d . new
boner ._,. One .new Bel l helmet ,
1969 FORO FAIR LAN€ 500. Std ..
med ium $15 Coi l 985-434,.
low mil eoge
F1r m
S400
. PLAN TOUR N AM E NT
alter 5 30 weekd ay ~ . ony !1me
992.7363:_.~-:-~-,LA NC AST E R
Th e
Sol . or Sun
P a rk s
an d 1972 FORD PINTO Runabout . ') . MI XED CO ND ITIO NED hoy ,
Lan cast er
door . In .good condition . Call
Recrea tion Depa rt ment is
Shade , Oh1o . 614 Mb-1n4.
qq1 -3b48.
spon so ring a Labor_Da y Slow
RED UCE SAFE and lo!o t wi th
Pitc h Softball T oUrnament.
G oBe se lab le•s &amp; E Vop "wa ter
pills ' Ne l!&gt; on Drug .
• Al
Brown ,
rec r e at io n
-··-----

s~

NEW ABERGLAS TIRES

OFF

WANT AD

CHARGES

Pomeroy Landmark

-

IAil

ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

~--

---~

Pomen, Landmark

9 ..

!l!iil. ·

-

N EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

-~-

'289,95

-

-

Pom'eroy Landmark

- ·

-

teams. The tourna ment i,s a
Pri( eindudes
Fed . Tax
( does not
include
sales tax or ·
b.alancl,ngl
· FULLY
RANTEED

.... "'4.

OWN E R DESIRES IMMEDIATE SALE - The owne r
of !his llame in Pomeroy is leaving fh e a rea a nd needs
fo sell now . A 1112 story home wit h 4 be drooms inc luding
a spacious mas te r beOroom , love ly k it c t'le n w ith all the
a ppl iances, large living r oom. was her 8. dryer p lu s
pat io &amp; 6 a c res of la nd a nd it ' s o nryh 1 mil e t r om
downtow n . '27,500.
148 ACRE FARM ~ UNUSUALLY GOOD BUY - The
owner ·s· age preve nts he r from c ontinuing 1o ope rate
the fa rm a nd s he desi res an immediate sa le . 50 to 60
a c res t illa ble wi 1h some ve ry gOOd c r ee k. bottom a nd
h ill top la nd . The balance in Pasture
woods. The s ix
room home is goOd (does need some mOde rn izat ion ),
la r ge a ll · purpose ba rn a nd seve ral good o utbuild ings .
Mine r a ls go w ith it and it's locll ted In an a r e a whe re •
gas, oil &amp; coa l ha ve been found to be ple ntiful. Ne ar
RU rland . $§C)'S.

a.

•

To be sure someone you

tial. "

CALL 446-3643

QUICK SALE NEEDED - 68 acres Of good bottom ,
pas ture &amp; woods on Va nZa ndt Road . The owne r is no
longer a bl e to take c ar e o f this tovetv place so th e y
m us t sell now . Att ractive remode led 10 room far m
hom e with n ice sized rooms, ll/2 b a th s, -4 bedrooms &amp;
c arPe t t hroughou t . Rural &amp; we lt wate r pl us se v e ra l old
ou tbu ildi'n gs . Pri ced to sell a t $.46,900.

call or wr ite for information
and en t r y form to Lanca ster
Parks and Recr eation , 203
E a st Fair Aven ue, La n caster, Ohio 43130, [614 ) 6546882. Entr y deadlin e is 5 p .m .
Aug . 28 . E nt ry fee is 165 for
A.S .A. sanct ion ed team s a nd
$75 fo r A .S.A. non-sa nction ed

don 't want to see it opens t he
mail , m ark it " co nfide n-

GALLIA COUNTY'S-LARGEST
REAL £STATE AGENCY

~

supe r viso r encoura ges all
class " A" and ;. B" t e~ms to

double elimination with play
beginning Saturda y , Sept. 2
and will ena Sept. 3. Sept . 4
will be reserved for a rain
date. Starting t lme each da Y
will be 10 a .m . at M iller P a rk ,
Memo r ial Drive (US 35) a nd
Sixth Ave_.

THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY

W. C.rsey, Mgr.

Phone 99:1-2111

E . M . Wiseman. Broker446- 3796 Eve .
Jim Cochran, Assoc. 446·701
Nancy Smith, Assoc. 446· 4910

Small ,,.int &amp; mowtr
service, Mlsay Ferguson
&amp; Gillan Til lin, uwn loy
Mo-r Salts &amp; S.rvtct.

399

W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph . 992: 2164

7-20-1 mo. pd .

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
'
SERVICE

MONDAY, JULY :U. 1971 '
s·: 00-Monr oes 3; M y T hree Sons &lt;4: Gun smo kt 8;

All types of roofi,., gutters
&amp; downspouts. 20 Y•rs
experience .
All work
tuaranleed . Call Tom
oskins. 949 -2160 . Free
Estimates.
'
7-16- T mo ..

CARTER

H. l WRITESEL
ROOFING

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

WeLL, HERE"!&gt;

5 UMTHIN fLSe
T' FIGURe OUT- THeSE K5E&lt; P

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

300 Main 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
Or992·6263
IA _. M . to4 : 30 P ,M.

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

UP IJoJ
PARTS SH IP·
AAENT5 FROM
MI!'XPOitT!

T URJoJI~ '

Radiator,;:

..............
Service
,,...tiM
........

'ft\1\}Nf jji)1l

SMITH
MOTORS, INC•.

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-ffc

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one lener to each square, to form

ROGER HYSEll

GARAGE
'I• mile oft Rl. 7 by-pass on
St. Rt. n• tow•rd Rutland,

o.

MOORE'S
Muffler
Shocks
Battery .

Aute&amp; Truck

Brakes
Tires

Repai~

ReSidential and commer·
cial . Call for estimate . 24
Hour Se-rvice. Any day,
anyt ime.
Phone- 985-3806
Jack Ginter 98.5· 3806

Pomeroy,O.
3-15-lfc

4-30-ttc

-

HOMES ITES for sole . 1 ac re and
up , Middleport, near Ru tland .
Cal l 992-748 1.
NEW 3 bed room house , 2 baths .
a ll elec .. I acre , Midd leport ,
d ose to Rutland . Phone 9927&lt;481.

awtz our FroM

~)(fUTW

L,orr:r tJ

Wl\f..T FUIJ 16 rT
IF 9-IE;')ci.0'./5

10 DO! ·

'1\JU'g£&gt; WJIJA
.

I CHAVO

'

~'IOU!

DO IT~

(JJ

AI Tromm

ConstructiOn
741·2328
Free Estim•tes
Work Guuo nlted
7-10-1 mo.

IN SYRAC USE: 2 bedroom house.
New storm windo ws . Ne w - .
a luminum building . 2 porche s . SEWIN G MACHINE Re pa irs , serCW2-37 19.
vice, a ll m o~es , 992-2284. The
Fab ri c Sho p .
Pome r o y .
HOUSE AND LOT in Da nv ille. Pr ic Author iEed Singe r Soles and
ed lor quic k sole . 7-4 2-2068.
Service .- We sharpen Scissors.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding

HOW ERY AND MA RTIN Ek
co vaf ing , l'ep t ic syste m s ,
dozer , boc~hoe . d umi jruck .
li mestone . gravel.
cktop
paving , Rt. 1•3 . Phone
61-4 )
6q B-7331 ,

PUDDLE P~~ All sizes and
shap es . Swim ' pools. 2 ye ar §.
e• pe rlence . fr ee · est ima tes .
a nythi ng you
need f o r
un de rg ro und swim pools . New
chem ical and ~upp l y sto re .
Albany . Oh i o
Ph o n e
61&lt;4-698-6555. ( Ah er 6 pm .
614 ·689-5251 Jo hn Jeffers o r
689-5265 Bitt Gi lle tt e . ) We ore
NOT all we t on PRICES.

SELLER NEEDS A
quick sale on this good
home. 2 a c res , storage
bui ldings , work shop. 4·5
bedrooms ,
tri -chlmney
F IREPLACES .
Original
woodwork ,
In
good
condition .
Close
to
Pomeroy . 525 ,000.00 .
FARM ~ 25 acres. fencing.
barn , nice ly remodeled
home · In
excel lent
condition . Basement and
many other features . This
should have been sold fOf"
$30.851 .00
NEWER RANCH ~ In
good
neighborhood,
3
bedroom . Beautltul nearby
leYel lot . Part basement.
Many nice features. Fair
Markel 1/a lue 11 $25,500.00.
MOilLE HOME -In good
condition 12 x 60. Nice leYel
lot. Equipped k itchen In
gc)Qd
location .
Only
$8,500 .00.
A 'STEAL - Nice home,
full basement, 1'12 baths,
small yard . Equ l ~ped
k itchen . Only $8,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 story,
remodeled downstairs ,
carpeting. etc . Asking
s t 5.ooo.oo.
RANCH
TYPE
Excellent condition , 3
bedroom. 2 boths. Covered
patio , central ajr , music
•nd Intercom s y stem .
LeYel
fenced ··· yard,
Mlddleporl
Elementary .
Many other
features .

S32.500.

NEIGLER BUILD ING Supp ly fo r
buildi ng houses , repair wo rk
and cabi ne ts . Ca ll Guy H.
N eig l ~u . 949 ·2508 afte r S pm .
REEVES TRADING Post. Page vi lle.
Groce rie s, dry goods , hardwore. feed . tack shop. Special
25 1b . of dog lood , _$3.88 .

YEAH.' I SEE

1-\FlER l'WEN.rt YEARS '
HE HA5 SOME
6000 MEMORY-'

Hf'S SURE ,
REMEMBER IN G
SOMET HIN' , ,

WH ERE 15 HE

Sa tu rd~·, s

GOING?

•

~•'Der
by

'2 Balmy
13 Citric o~

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE -.been
cancelle d? l ost your ope r~tor'
licens&amp;? Phone 992-2143 .
PLAY NINE holes w iththe cou ru1
professional. He 'll analyze your
gome a nd lr ~ fo r inpro..,eme nt.
Call 985-3961.

'--.__:_":..:2:..-':.1~
91

14

GASOUNE

ALLEY

Rubber Back tarpet

a·a sq.&amp;ydup.
'"111 .•11:'1 ~1\

th fo oI
ke4 ~

Buy Where vou un come in
and see what you're gefting

---

From

'

!F~RANK~~&amp;,!;E:!!R!":NI!!E;:_____-...___';"""~-------------------,

S2!JI6 &amp; Up

• I 11

rz./

I

u

RUTLAND
.FURNITURE

W

,.•,AI\!0 IN Nr!!.W

If

2&gt;~-- ' . ~~~~~~ I

C.ll742· 2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate
or Gtnt Smllll

742-2211

5 To the point
6 Antonym
of ally

7 Burro
,
Yeottenllly'o Amnrer
8 Hunters'. quar- 21 Worshipful
30 Bear
ry ; dupe
22 Egg dish
33 Boss
9 Won folks '
23 Of a city :
Tweed's .

20 Influence
24 Cab
occ upant
A founder
· of Rome

18 Tears apart
20 Popsthe
question

26 Multi-

II

• abbr.
~ For s hame 1

ne mesis •
34 Region

26 Playing ca rd
28 GJ . of the

35 Tiny brook
36 Valley
38 Paddle

comic s

YOIP~

"rODFtf,

,..! "C.INDe(lACJ.fi!V212S

I

WleRI'ff"ION ~,., C.LAIJIIIeD
~ GllEtUT Foil
RN ~pL0$10N
•
I
WHic:H Des"r"taoVEI) It
PMIC bNdt AND ,.OoJ(

.,.He LIVES . Of '7"Wo PaGION$.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

0

Luck helps fine play
NORTH
• 96 4

¥

K 10 52

t

A 3

+
WEST

31 Mirting find

• 05

Masefield's 1---1-.:__-1--+-

•

K J 32
EAST

+ AK JI087

"' 0

• 9 765 4
+A Q 8 7

,, - the

Fox"

7-J l · A

• 74
• 10 2
10 6 5

+

SO UTH

~~:otto

• 32

40::!

•A J9 8 3

• K QJ
• 91

u neal in

a

Vulnerable: E a s t -W est
Dealer : N o rth

t2 Shandy's
creator

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE 7
Is

Here's how to work

It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

West

North East

2+

I+
3•
P a ss

Pa ss

I+
Pass
Pass

Opening l e ad :

+Q

with o ur r e sults. I also think
yo u &lt;b nd B ill Pettis of Washmgt o n ( a comparative

unknown )

deserve

real

c r e dit for coming in fifth ."
Os w a ld : "'At least Newspa per Enterprise Association did right well · since no
oth e r w ri te r g o t into the first

10.""

Ala n : "' H e r e is a hand
pla yed by Swanson that
he lped him win. The four·
he art c ontract was optimJa.
tic, but fine play plus a UUle
luc k brought it home. The
defe n se started with three
sp a d e le ads. Paul ruffed the
third s pa de with his ace of
trwnps and proceeded to
finesse suc cessfully against
West' s quee n . E ventually
1
he had to try the clubs, ana
as W e st held both ace· and
qu e en , he c ouldn't go

wrong."

One letter si mply stands fo r another. rn thia sample A is

RutiMCI

THI!:o MAY ~E

HE $AID WE COULD MA KE

NI'\IAE .

WAITING

OTIZFUAF

WHAT HAVE WE

IPF

GOT TO LOSE?

fOR!

A SOFA THAT

CRYPTQQUOTES

MILL./ON8 OY LICEN51N0'
MANUFA CnJRf:RB 10 U5 E M Y

~EOREAK

'I 'VE: OEEN

B T KHI

ATUUJI

I J

ZI

AKLF

MAKES A

BED feR

¥0U

E

!MAW~

I NEED SOME

CARD PLAVIN'
MONEY ··

WE COULDN'T FIND A f LOANED HIM A·
HOME FOR HIM AROUND FEW THIN65 TO MAKE
HERE SO HE DECIDED . THE TRIP EASIER ...
10 HITCHHIKE BACK
, TO NEEDL.E5 ...

1S IN-..:STOCK

[B
ll .,

,,

BRIDGE

,

u sed for the three L's, X for t he two O's, etc. Si n gle letters,
aposttophes, the le ngth and form at ion of the word• are all
hin ts. Each da y the code letters are dUfer,ent.

•

r

Monday, July 31

30 Symbol of
industry

•· "'lnill 32

Fully

RUG .REMNANTS

t. Mak~ over

fault, Rufus. 29 Fencing
fer losin·
dummy

Floor Covlfring In Stock

Good Selection Of

2 That hurts !
3 Iroquoian

.28 :~e

It's 4er

9' and 12' Vinyl

stocked.

I Sheep's cry

\-

plied by
27 Pizzeria

As Low As

selections -

boric
Dwell

DOWN

I5 Assumption
17 Roulette
c olor
18 F rozen over
hearts
19 E ig ht pis. 10 Unc alled for ·

All corpel installed willl
piidding at no charge .
Expert installation .

~ Good

., 43 Narrative

s

&amp;

•

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
i South
African
Sppt
the ea rs
11 Entice

DRIVE ALITTLE

4

(Answets tomorrow}
CRANK BABIED ECZEMA
- ·
Answer: What you might say ·When you·buy a pair of
S2earrings from a pifate -"BUCK-AN·EAR I''

I Jumbles:
MOURN
·

The latest JUMBLES are tiere In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111. A'olallable for $1.35 EACH, pOstpaid hom Jumble, ~o lhll
newSpaper, P.O. Bo• 34, Norwood, N.J. 07S..8. Make checks payable to
New.apaperbooks.
·
.

BRADFO RD . Auct ioneer . Com·
ple te Ser.,.ice . Phone 949-2487
or 949-2()(X}_ Ra cine . Ohio . Crill
Bra dford .

1

arrange the circi.Etd !ene rs lo

tI I I I I I I I J

Prfntanswernere:

General Contuctors .'
Phone 949.2801
or949-2860
FREE ESTIMATES
No Sundo y Calls Plt. .e
-~ 1
7-9-1 mo.

REEVES TRAD ING Po st Ne w ship ment of Western shbw sa ddle ~.
sil ver Trimmed, $200 up. Also
pony saddles . $50 up. All horse
s up p li es .
Open
Mo ndoy
thr o ugh
Sat u rda y
8 -8 .
614 -698-5o&amp;3b . .

LARGE STATELY HOM
Beautiful equipped
k itchen - Could be a show
place . 515,000.00
BEFORE YOU BUY ,D R
SELL . YOUR
lEST
INVESTMENT MAY BE
AN APPRA ISAL IY A
QUALIFIED
APPRAISER . IF WE CAN '
BE
OF ANY HELP,
PLEASE CALL.
HENRY E . CLELAND
JR .
SR . (:ERTIFIED
APPRAISER
99:1· 2259, 9U·2"'

&lt;&amp;OT 1111 A
!MR !5Y 6MAL.L.

N~

Bissell Siding Co.

SAVE A LOT

~E

lonn the surprise answer, as sug·

W.H AT YOU
MfAN --· WHA T'S
HE UP TO?

I

20,33.
·
IS
4:DO-Mister Cartoon 3; For ' R icher, For Po.orer
!
Superman 4; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame St. 20 ,33; Ma t ch G ame 10; Dinah 13 .
4 :31&gt;'--My Three Sons 3 ; Gilligan's ·Is . 4.8 ; Batman 10.
5: 0Q-Monroes 3; My Three Sons 4; .Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33; 1/oyage to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One! lJ;. Petticoat J unc t ion 15.
5 :31}-{)dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20.33 ; Hogan' s
Her oes 15.
6 :0Q-News 3,4,8,T0,13, 15; AB C News 6; Zoom 20 ;
Ma~in Things Grow 33.
·
6 :31f-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlflllh6;
CBS News 8,1 0; OYer Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7:QO-Cross -Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6, T3 ; l!op Goes
The Count ry 8; News 10. Gilligan' s Is . 15; French
Chef 20; How T 6 Buy A Home ' 33.7 : J~Hollywood
Squares 3,4; Let' s Go To The Ra ces 8; Candid
Camera 6; MacNeil-lehrer Reporl 20,33; Price Is
Right 10 ; T hat' s Holl ywood 13; To Be Announced
T5 .
.
8 :0Q-MoY ie ; Happy Days6,13 ; Pilot 8,1 0; E·Yen lng at
' Pops 20; Movie "Colle ge" 33 .
·
8 :30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.13 ; Mo vi e " The Russians
Are Coming, the R uss ians Are Coming" 8.10.9 :0GThree ' s Company 6,13 ; Grea t Performances 20.
9 :30---C arter Country 6 ; Mary Tyler Moore. 1~ ; Five
Red He r rings 33 .
10:()()-20-20 6, T3; News 20.
lO ::)G---:-Li ke It Is 20; W il liamson O lsas1er 33.
1 1: ~News 3,4,6,8,1 0 ,13,15 ; Dic k CaYell 20; Over
Easy 33.
11 : ]~Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Soap 6, 13; ABC News 33;
Mov ie "The Brotherhood" 10; 12: ~Janak i
33. 12 :05-Movie " Retu rn to Earth" ' 6,T3; ! :()()Tomorrow 3,4; 1 : 15-Kojak 8; 1 :45-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M . ~ The Deep I PG I
7 &amp; 11 P . M .~ Outlaw Blues l P G I

gested by the abOve cartoon.

Storm Windows
Call Professional
Builders

Wil l do rooflog , '?n51 ruch?n
plumb ing an d l-, eot1ng. No JO b
too la rge or too small . Pho ne
7• 2-23-&lt; B.

PUlliN S EXCAVATI NG . Complete
Service . Phone 992-2&lt;4 78 .

POME_~OY. 0 .

IT MAY

UTILE QRPHAN ANNIE

SAVE ON
CARPETING

MAIN

0
CHILD~EN.

----

BUILDING SITES for'!ole . I a cre
lots . City wat er . 992-5869 or
985-3595.

.

2 :31)'-Docfors 3,4, 15 ; ·Gu id ing Light B, TO; 3 : ~
Another World 3,4,T5 ; General Hospital 6 ,13; Lil la•
Yoga &amp; You 20,33.
3 :3G--AII In The Family 8, 10; Co nsumer Surv ival Kit

ICOYTU~
I KI

THR EE :.. BEDR O OM
ho u se , EXC AVATING , doze r, loode r and ELWOOD BOWERS REPA IR Sweepers. toos ters , iron~ . a ll
play room , uTility room , foye r,
backhoe wo rk: dum p trucks
smo !! appliances . lawn mower ,
Ior ge kitchen a nd liv ing room .
and lo"boys to r hire: will ho u!
next to State Highway Coro9'mos tly carpeted with firepla ce
lilt d !rt, 10 !.oil , limes lone and
on Rou te 7. Phone {614 ) 985 ·
on 'It a cre of land near tow n.
grovel._ Call Bob or Reger J ef :_~
For mo re information , coli
le rs . day pho ne 992-7089 , ni gh t . 3825 .
__,_
~2-3923 .
phone 992-3525 or ~2 - 5232 .
------------,
18 ACR E-S on Lin coln Hi ll with EXC AVATING . dozer . backh oe
water and sewage. Mak e on ofand ditcher. Charl es R. Ha ll ee . Pho ne 992 -633 3 oc
fi e ld , Bo ck Hoe Serv lce ,
Q92-5739.
Rutland , Ohio . Pho ne 742-2008 .
TWO NEW 3 bedroom house!
under cons trucTion at Mor ning
St ar He ighTs . Rec room ,
fire place. goroge and base ment. Read y lor occupancy in
nea r f uture . l e e Co ns tructio n,
992-1-454 or 614 -446-9568 .

I

·-

Roofing, Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

THREE BEDROOM frame home in
Mid dl e po rt. Call ~2- 3457 .

~~PUIUD1ll5

1\lAT'~ ~Mf..T f,. ~MAIJ

Ches t e- r , Ohio
10· 30-c

BoX 3

... --v v· -~

VA-FHA , 30 yr. t'inancilig. also
refinan cing . lre lond Mortgage,
77 E. Sto te . Athens. phone (6 14)
5q2.3os 1.

~our.~.

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

Installation Service

Ph. t92-2848'

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

byHenriArnotct· andBo~ Lee

fir;~if'f:.::;:;~\\:~1---\~

fo ur o rdinary wordS.

BORN LOsER

.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1978
5 :45-F ar m Repor t 13; 5 : 5G-PTL Club T3 .
6 :0Q-PTL Club 15; Summe r Semester 10.
6: 3Q-F oc us on Columbus 4; News 6 : Summer
Semester 8; Concerns &amp; Co mme nt s 10; • :45-Mo rnlng Report 3.
·;
6 : 5~Good Morning , W e st Vi rgi nia 13i 6 : 55-News Tl .
7 :0Q-Today 3,4,1 5; ' G ood Morning A mer ica 6. 13; CBS
t&gt;!ews 8;· Underdog 10 ; 7: 25-C hu c k While Reports
10.
0
7 : 30-Sc hool le s 10 ; 8 : 00~ Ca pt . Ka ng ar oo 8, 1 ;
,
Se s ame Sf. 33.
9 :00- Merv Gr itf ln 3 ; P h il Donah u e 4.13.15 ;
Eme rgen cy One ! 6; B rad y Bunc h 8; Ti c Tac Dough
13 .
9 :3G--Andy Gr iftl t h 8; Fam ily Affai r 10.
TO :oo-card Sharks 3.~.T5 ;; Edge of Night 6 ; Tit T.a c
Dough B; J o ker 's W ild 10; To Tell Th e Truth 13;
Over Easy 33.
IO:lll'-Ho llywood Squares 3,4, T5; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right8, 10; $20,000 Pyra m id 13; Paint Along With
Nal)cy Kom lnsky 33.
11: 0Q-High Rollers 3,4,1 5; Happy Days 6, T3 .
11 :lit-Wheel ·of Fortune 3,15; Family F e ud 6,1 3;
Par tridge Fam li ly 4 ; Love of Life 8,10 ; 11 :5s-cBS
News B; Loving F r ee 10.
12 :QO-Newscenter 3; News ~ .6 , 10; Ameri c a Alive! 15;
Young &amp; the Rest less 8; Wat ch Your Mouth 33.
12 : 3~Ryan' s Hope 6, T3; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomor row 8, 10; French Chef 33.
1:OQ-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not f or Women
Only 15; Aust in C it y Limits 33.
1:3o-Day s of Our lives J ,-4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2 :-.0ne L ife to Live 6,13j Affair In The Air
33

~~
. THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

'

For The Best'
Price In Town
See
. Denver Kapple
At

.

Mister Rogers' Neigh bor hood 20.33 ; Vo ya ge to The
Bottom of t he Sea 10; Emergency One! Tl ; Pet ticoat J u nction 15. •
i
5: 3(}-()dd Couple ·, , News 6; E lec . Co . 20,33; Hoga n' s
He roes 15.
6 :0Q-News 3,o&amp;,8, 10, 13,1S; AB C Ne ws 6; Zocm 20;
Mak ing Things Gr ow 33 . .
6:31f-NBC News l ,4,15; ABC News 1_3 ; And y G riffith 6;
CBS News 6, 10; OYer Eas y 20; Antique s 33.
7:01l-Cross-W it s 3,4; Newlywed ·Gam e 6, 13; Ma rty
Rob.b lns ' Spotlight 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is . T5;
Daniel Fosler. M .D . 20; Shepherd' s P ie 33.
7:31f-That NashYII Ie Mus ic 3; In Search Of 4; Muppef
Show 6 ; Match Game PM 8; MacNe il -Lehrer
Reporl 20,33 ; W ild K ingdom 10; Candid Ca m e ra T3;
NashYIIIe On The Road 15.
B:OQ-Litlle House On The Pra ir ie 3, 4, 15; Baseball
6, 13; Jeffersons 8, 10; Consu mer Sur vi val Kit 20;
Person to "PersOn : Se le ctect IJ'ferv iews 33r
&gt;8:31f-Good Time s B, tO; Turnabout 20.33 .
9:GO-Mash 8.10; Faces of Communis m 20; Opera
Theater 33.
-- ,
9 :31f-Columbo 3.4.15 ; One Day At A Time B. 10
TO :OQ-Lou Grant B, 10; News 20 .
T0 :3()--()v0 r Eas l!' 20.

I

·• ·4-T mo.

NOTICE

WANT-AD

~
MODERN SUPPLY

11 :OQ-News 3, 4,6,8,1 0, 13,15; Dick Cavell 20; Over
Easy 33 .
11 :lit-J o hnny Carson 3,4,15; Soa p 6, 13; M c Mlllan &amp;
W ife 8; AB C News 33; MoYie " Story o f Three
Lo ves" 10; 12:00-Janllkl 33 .
12 :05--Pol lce St ory 6,1 3; I :OQ-Tom o rrow 3,4; 1: 15-Ne w s 13.
Movie Channel 4 :....
5 &amp; 9 P .M . ~ Hol ly wood Oldie (G)
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Orca
T he Killer Whale (PG)
.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

••

10 x 50 TWO bedroom mobil ...
.home . $1800. 992-5858 ,

~·3 ·3311 .

A position here will give you economic security .
The consumer finance business is steady - even
during · recessions.
.
· You c~n -win promotion rapidly . You will be pa1d a
good starting salary and receive

•

.

\

••

.

. I

I'M FLAT 9ROKE,
.HONEY-POT
.

A Nebraska reader wants
to know why we don ' t do a
Oswald ; " Th e 1978 · se ries of articles on the ...
c all e d we ak two bids.
Cavendish invitational t o urThese bids a r e popular
nament was won by Paul
with experts and tournaSwanson of Morgantown . W .
ment players but the great
Va ., and Roy Fox of Wash·
ington . · You and Pete r . majority pf the bridge playIn g public doesn ' t use them.
We ichsel finis hed a m ost
creditable third which
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRisE ASSN'. I
r epresented a slight c ome
(For a copy o f JA COBY MOOdown from 1977."
ERN, send $1 to: " Win 11
Alan : " With forty of the
Bridge , " care of this new•~­
best pairs in the world
per. P.O. Box 489, Radio City
entered; I am stiU pleas ed
Station, New York, N. Y. 10011.)
By Oowald Jacoby

lllld Alaa Soatas

�,_.

.

/\,jl

1~ The

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Mond~y. July 31, 1978

Amin

'
(Coolinued from p&amp;ll• 1&gt;

hlghelt policy-making body.

lbe radio r~ed.
"The Defenae Council has
· rwolved that Preaident• ldi
Amin .Dada be given the
green light to participate' in
the Ecorlomic War Motor
Rally in view of its historical
lligniflcance," the radio said.
WhUe Arnln races iii "his
old car, hia senior wife,
Medina Arnln, will command
the country in his absence,"
the radio said.
That was expected to be for
several days after the start of
the .raUy scheduled to begin
Aug. 4.
Amin has never bef&lt;re
turned over control of the
country to his wife.
"President Amin's car is
equipped -· with
radio
communications and the
police have been asked to
1 note its registralim number
because the number plates
are old," the radio said.
Amin inaugurated the
" Economic War Motor
~y" to commemorate the
launching · ol his own
economic war in 1973 against
Asian traders in Uganda,
some 40,000 of Wh(J(!I he
expelled m three months'
notice.
•
lliJice then the country's
economy, missing the Asian
expertise and reeling under
Amir 's unpredicta bie
policies, has . remained
virtually paralyzed.
WhUe Amin's road race
dominaied the headlines in
Uganda, neither.the radio or
newspapers made any reference to the U.S. Senate's vote
to halt aU imports from
Uganda, especially its main
casb crop, coffee.
.
Diplomatic sources in East
African capitals have
expre$Sed fears Amin could
try to use the 200 U.S. citize~
still living in Ug!lnda as
pawns as he did i8 mm ths
ago in a cmfrontation with
the Carter administration .
But thus far Amin has kept
unusually quiet on the
situation, which could have
serious political
cmsequences f&lt;r 1\is regime .
It is money from Uganda's
coffee which is largely
credited with giving Arnin
enough casb to keep his army
happy and the dictat&lt;r in
power.

conditions
·PUblic
r--Ai;e-a-De~iiis-, Two killed Rams ease drought
.
.
rContinutd from pqtl)
United
1nteruatlonal
Tropical Storm _Amerlia,
The rains were welcome in possibly with mualach•,
I BELVA H. SLOAN Athens County, a native ofI. in crash
Heavy rains associated . which intensifie,f from a . south and central portions of sitUng on a curb with a group

at y

.

Pre11

Belva Has~ins Sloan, 71 , Meigs County, died Monday
OSHKOSH, Wis. (UPI)- A with the season's first tropical depressio"h 'in a few Texas, where drought in the whoae faces do not lhow. The
Route 2, Pomeroy, died. morning at the Veterans · small plane staUed just sbort tropical stilrm helped ease hours late Sunday, moved past few months has caused Cllllllllltlee captlm aald mJy
Saturday afternoon at Holzer Hospital in Huntington, w_ of the runway at the drought conditions in south ashore north of Brownsville lakes' and reservoirs td drop that the picture was taken iii
Experin\ental Aircraft fly-in Texas today and thun- early today, carrying gliBly significantly.
Medical Center. Born March - Va.
Dealey Plaza "momenta
24, 1907 sbe was the daughter · Mr. Wingett was. a former Sunday, !Upped m ita top and derstomls drenched parts of winds and heavy rains but not
Thunderstorms, which •ter President Kennedy waa
of Henry and Lilly Haner Athens County sll!!riff and was "crushed like an egg," t)le Ohio Valley.
· the pOtency of a hurricane. moved through .the Ohio shot."
Haskins.
.
was a member of the Athens ldlling a Minneapolis man
VaUey Sunday, cauaed some · The other two photographs,
•
She was preceded in death . Collllty Fair Board for many and his 11-year-&lt;&gt;ld son.
property
damage
in according to the Cllllltlittee,
by her first husband, Don years. He was.a brother to E. · ' A crowd estimated at 10,000
Nicholasville and 'Richmond, ar,e "of two men who may
Grover; her second husband, A. Wingett of Racine. Mr. was within sight of the
Ky ., the National Weather- hive been in Mexico Qty In
Holzer Medical Center
Wayne Sloan; three sisters, Wingett was also an active accident which occurred Just Veterans Memorial Hospital
Service said. There were no the faD of 11183 when Lee
. (Discharge•, July 28)
Cathleen Haskins, Beulah member' of the Harrisonville bef&lt;re an air show.
Saturday Admissions reports of injuries. A fiasb
· Oswald ... waa
Audrey Adkins, Linda flood watch .for southwestern Harvey
Koster, and Bertha Gill, and Masonic Lodge in Meigs - 'lbe vicUms were identified Freda Lewis, Clifton; Elsie
there."
Arthur, ·Sharon Bailey., Indiana was ' lifted early
a brother, Stanley HBSkins. County. He was born in as Fred Kaeppel and his son, Smith, Portland.
One photograph lhows a
Richard Beller, Warren today.
Surviving are two sons, Bedford Township.
David_
Saturday Discharges handsome, apparently blondKenneth Grover, Chester,
Funeral arrangements are
Auth&lt;rities . seid Kaeppel Fannie Phillips, . Terry Berry, Lena Blackbu~n.
Another flash fiopd watch haired man iii hia 2011 &lt;r early
and Robert Sloan, Route 2, being completed at the wa.s · making a normal Proffitt, Betty Clark.
· Robert Clarke, · Eddie for southern Arizona expired 3CB. The other· photograph,
Coleman, Misti Davis, Jewell as thunderstorms moved out badly scratched and blurred,
~omeroy ; two brothers, Hughes Funeral Home h. approach for a l!lnding when
Sunday Admissions Elmer Haskins, Arcadia, Atnens. ·
the aircraft suddenly flipped Margaret Little, Middleport; Fife, Stella Forgey, Pamela of the area . . However, is - a side sbot or a light or
Fla ., and Noah Haskins,
over and rurned. An IUinois Kelbe! Hatfield, Dexter; Ina Fox, Leona Greenley, Martha traveler's advisories were gra;y-halred, aquUine-nosed
Middleport ; five grandIVAN A. GROVER
manwhosawthecr&amp;sh.saidit Bolin, Albany; Dottie Will, Hatfield, Effie llayes, Robert posted for blowing dust near man who could be In his late
Kevin
Lanier, Phoenix, Mesa and Chandler. 40s or 50!1.
children, one great-grandson, ·· Stricken while working on a looked like the Thorp T-18 Pomeroy; Inez Ash, Reeds- Henry,
and several nieces and grave in. · Gravel Hili staUed.
- ville; Timothy Cundiff, Dorothy Lavender, Gregory
Cool air brought an early
A sketch, captioned
Linton, Michael Ml!ilick, taste of autumn to the nor- "Ralph,"
nephews.
Cemetery, Ivan A_ Grover,
'lbe man, who asked not to Pomeroy.
·
'
shows a middleClarence McComas, Harvey thern states. Alpena, Mich., aged, . dark-haired,
Mrs- Sloan was a member , 83, died suddenly at 3:10p.m. be identified, said the plane
Sunday • Discharges squareof the Rock Springs United Sunday_ He had been flipped oo itS canopy and was Louise Eshe,lman, Lottie McCormick, Mrs. William set a, record low of 3 early. jawed man with l)igh
Morgan and daughter, today. Readings in the 40s
Methodist Church. Funeral caretaker and sexton of "crushed like an, egg."
Cohen.
c~bmes ''who allegedly
services will be held all p.m. Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Six persons have died in
Beulah Murray, Mrs. Paul and 50s were common was in Atlanta in 1967 or
Tuesday at Ewing Chapel in Cheshire for a quarter of a crashes at the annual
It
•
Musick and daughter, throughout the Great Lakes
Pomeroy with the. Rev. century.
. airplane convention since
'Bonnie Northup, Cynthia region.
The other composite
· James Corbitt ·and Chester
He was also a trustee of the 1975.
Norton, Shirley Richardson;:
drawing, captioned "Maurice
Lemley officiating. liurial cemetery.
Last year, one pilot · was
Debra
Russell,
Adda
Bishop," shows a man· with
will follow in the Gravel Hill
Ivan Grover 1"aS born July killed and another suffered
Salmans, Rosemary Samsel,
MEETS THURSDAY · close-cropped hair bearing
Cemetery. Friends may call '1:1, 1895. at Kyger to Arthur ininor injuries when their
Grace Shafer, Warner
The Drew Webster Post of resemblance to Prince
at the funeral home any time. and Bessie Frazier Grove, planes collided:
Sheets; Hazel Smith,. Robert the American Legion _will _Ptlillp, IIIBband of Queen
and he spent his entire life in
"Something like this is
Sorrell, Dannv Wilbur. meet Tuesday at 8 P-m- at the · Elizabeth of England.
Gallia
County.
He
married
·
never
easy,''
an
'EAA
official
Lawrence Wilks, Willard ' post home. Representatives
CARL L. SCOTT
'lbe committee said this
LeBlUle
H.
Darst
Sept.
28,
said.
"But
you
have
to
Williamson,
Christine Wilson. to Boys State. will be guests. man "rep&lt;rtedly represented
Carl L Scott, 1721 Ferbis
Have you ever dreamed of ·
Births, July 28
Ave., Columbus, died Thurs- 1922, in Gallipolis, and she remember thia is the w&lt;rld's
himself as a member of the
writing
your
own
book'
If
you
Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry
day at SL Anthony's Hospital preceded him ·in death Dec. biggest air show and for one
U.S. intelligence community
REVIVAL SCHEDULED
after"several weeks iUness. A 29, 1974. A brother, John, and wfl!k Wittman Field is the live in, or have lived in Meigs Caldwell, a daughter, Point
in
the 1960s and ... on 'OCCasion
County, your .dream has Pleasant. Mr. and Mrs.
The Carleton Church wiU
former Middleport resident, three sisters, Mrs. Eulah world's-busiest airport"
used
the name Maurice- come true!
Lester Adkins, a son, Oak have revival services August
Mr: Scott was the son of Mrs. Long, Mrs. Ethel Swisher,
Bisbop."
Charles
Blakeslee, HilL Mr. and Mrs. William 2·August 13 at 7:30 p.m. each
Ora Scott. Columbus, and the and Mrs _ .Ada Mack,
of
the
Meigs
County Venters, a son, Rodney. Mr. evening~ The Rev. John
president
preceded
him
in
death.
late Clem Scott.
Pioneer
and
Historical
and Mrs. John Spaul&lt;\ing, a Lanier of Junction City will
He
is
survived
·
by
two
VBS TO BE HELD.
Vacation Bible School is
Surviving are two sisters,
Society
has
announced
plans
daughters,
Mrs
.
Douglas
• d
son, v·mton. Mr . . ~nd Mrs. · be the guest. evangelist.
HEMLOCK GROVE being held at the Middleport
Mrs- Arleen Glenn and Mrs.
1
.There will be special . Vacation Bible School will be
Laura Ellen Baumgardner; (Elizabeth) Rile, Columbus, Church of Christ Monday to print an up-tv-uate h story William Nicholson; a son,
~nging each evening. The held from 6:30 to 9 p.m. each
an aunt, Mrs . Vernies and Mrs. Ray, (Leta) through Friday, July 3i to of the county- This volume Middleport.
(Discharges, July 29)
Soul Seekers of Chester will evening from this evening
Peterma.n; and several Shamblin, Islamorada, Fla.; Aug_ust 4 at 9-11 :30 a.m_ All will be unique in that it will be
written
by
you
the
residents
Ranford
Cox, Irene Darst, be singmg August 4 and 5 w1th through August 5 at the
and
·a
brother,
Jim
Grover,
children
ages
2
through
14
nieces and nephews, all of
Cheshire. ·
(grade 9) are invited to at- ol Meigs CoWlty. The new Carrie Deen, Demosthenes The Gaspe~ Tones, also from Hemlock Grove Christian
Columbus.
history will contain both Dukas, Anna HaU, Donna ~ster , smgmg on August Church_
·He
was
a
member
of
tendFuneral services will be
Sharon Stewart, director of Topical and Biographical Higginbotham, Edwin
held at I p_m. Tuesday at the Middleport's Feeney Bel)llett
The Country Hymn Timers
J . W. Ross Funeral Home, Post 128, American Legion, 'the school, armounces tllat sketches of Meigs County Hixson, June Huff, Wayne
950 E. Broad St. , Columbus, and of the Cheshire United the theme is "Our God - He places, people, and ·events. Kemp Jr., Cheryl Lish, Jane with Dan Dayman will sing
MEETING SLATED
with the Rev . A. C. Brogdon Methodist Church. He was an Is Alive." She says tll'e W1thm a f~w weeks a letter Phipps, Sandra Powell, Unda August 12.
Pomeroy Chapter · 186,
The church is located on Order of Eastern Star, will
officiating . Burial will follow Army veteran of World War I material, from College Press w1U be mailed to aU fanuhes Sexton, Mildred Sheward,
of Joplin, Missouri, is fresh, m the county further ex- . Bertie Slack · Don Smith Jr. Kingsbury Road ·and · is meet at 7:45p.m. Tuesday at
in the Glen Rest Memorial in France.
Mr. Grover in his earlier different, · and sure to piaining details of this ex· Mrs. Carl siewart and son' pastored by Gary King who the temple.
Estates.
Keith Suiter Sharra Wheeler' invites all to attend.
Friends may caU from 7·9 years worked for the SmaU brighten the sununer for all citing project.
Watch
thjs
news
source
for
Mrs. War~ie White and
Hardware
Company,
Midwho attend.
p.m. this evening. The family
continuing
information
about
daughter
Carolyn Zinn
dleport,
and
during·
World
There will be Bible stohes
may be contacted at 556 E.
our
new
history
book!
(Dis~harges
July 30)
War
II
for
the
Marietta
plant
about Creation, God's People,
1
Graham St., Columbus. or at
A
working
meeting
will
be
Debra
Bow~an,
Mrs.
in
Point
Pleasant.
The· Coming of Jesus, the
2aii-OOJ3.
Last n'tes will be held at I Resurrection,
and the · held on August 30, at 7 p.m. at Stanley Creech and _daughter,
Stephen Danford, Michael
p.m.
Wednesday
at
·
the
~ginning Of the Church. the museum.
WAVNE WINGETT
Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral
There will also be games,
Donnally, Brandon Hale,
Wavne Wwgett, 81, Lodi,
• ,
Home, where friends may contes~s . enthusiastic
0 Mrs. Ronald Huffman and
call Hand 7·9 p.m. Tuesaay. singing, refreshments, and
daughter, Mrs.' Leonard
!Continued from page 1)
Hurlow and daughter,
Military graveside services fun times.
will be conducted by Post
The closing program will !he scene of a vehicle fire William Ingalls, Ruth Mont4464, Veterans of Foreign be Sunday, August 6, at 7:30
'"
·
gomery, Paul Possman, Mrs_·
Sat urda y, a t 12 '""p.m.,
on W'JI'
p .
dda gh
----------------;;;;;;;;;-Wars, Gallipolis.
p.m.
SR 248, one mile west oi CR . I IBm arim an
u ter,
(Continued from pa11e I)
46,- in Meigs County.
Joshua Pope, William Ratliff,
ESP gives power lo spare
The system of fraud aUegedly was sanctioned by a
ACcording
to
the
patrol,
an
Mrs.
Gregory
Smith
and
son,
I
Picnic, swi.inming party set Aug.-5
o.r your carpeI care . . .
cmunanding o_fficer who told recruiters they would not "get
auto owned by Gregory R. Ch arIes Sml'th .
burned" if wrongdoing came to light.
Davis, 19, Syracuse, was
BirthJuly30
No other vac has ESP. Wl1h a flip olthe
I '·'
The Racine Baseball Cardone at 949-2449, Lillian
demolished
in
a
blaze
caused
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Jeffrey
switch
Ul(ll go from normal spead to
Association will hold a picnic Weese at 949-2034 or Sue
by
a
defective
fuei·Iine.
Evans,
a
daughter,
Oak
Hill.
ESP
power
and cut any cleaning'• chore
and
swimming
party Beegle at 247-2724.
The
Olive
Twp
.
Fire
_
_
_..._.._..._.._...._
._...
down
to
size
.
Saturday , August 5. The
EAST NORWICH, N_Y. (UPI) - The man walked into the picnic will be from 6-4 p.m. at
.-/ .
Dep~rtment was caUed to the vehicle operated by Charles
· restaurant with his undersbirt puUed over his head, announced the Syracuse Park with the
GET LICENSE
scene.
M'_Carmichliel, 57, Gallipolis,
a holdup and the cal!hierbbroke up lauihing_
Roger Lee Powell, 27, and "" Davis was cited on' charges backed out of a driveway and
swinuning party from 8-10
Then, while the man clutched what looked like a gun, an jl.m_ at the London pool.
Shirley Still, 18, both of of fictitious registration.
struck a mailbox, causing
off-duty security guard handcuffed him . But the man turned - The T-ball, Pee Wee, Little Portland, were granted a
Sunday, at 12:30 a.m ., minor damage.
around and said, "Hey. let me go, it's only a sorority prank," League, Pony League and marriage license in Meigs
officers investigated a threeAt 2: 10 a.m ., Sa turda y, a •
and the guard uncuffed him. The man his head stiU buried Girls League teams are in· Co un t Y Sat urda y.
vehicle crash on SR 141, one- vehicle operated by Patricia
beneath the shirt, fled .
·
'
. MEET TIJESDAY
tenth of a mile east of SR 775. L. Maynard, 19, Bidwell,
vited along with the coaches
'lbe Pomeroy Chamber of
According to the patrol, backed off the left side of
and families of the players.
will
meet
James A. Halslop, 32, Patriot, roadway, and struck a stop
Everyone is to br)ng a 'meat Commerce
":ent to sleep at the wheel of sign on Mitchell Rd- causing
and covered dish ·along with Tuesday, August I, at nQOn at
his auto. The vehicle passed minor damage.
their ·own table service . the Meigs Inn.
off the left side, and struck Sat urda y at 12 :30 p.m., a
Drinks will be provided_
two parked vehicles owned by vehicle driven by Joseph F.
Uniforms should be turned in
LADIES DAY
Lewis McCormick , 47, Black, Columbus, passed off
at this time and officers wiD
Ladies Day will be otr
the right side of the roadway
be elected.
served at the Pomeroy Golf Gallipolis.
Officers report moderate and went irito a field off
For more information caU Course tomorrow (Tuesday)
damage to aU autos. Haislop _Georges Creek Rd., two and
Libby Fisher at 949-2378, Jane beginning at 9 a.m.
was urunJured _
three-tenths of a mile west of
. There was no report of SR 7. There was minor
c1tat1~n.
damage to the Black auto.
Officers were called to the
At 10:45 p.m., Saturday,
scene of a two-auto m1shap ~n officers investigated a oneSR 7, three-tenths of a qule auto mishap on SR 160, just
south of TR 38, at 4:25 p.m. south of the Vinton - GaUia
S,Unday.
County Lines.
A~cordlng to thf patrol, a
According to the patrol, a
veh1cle dnven by Ja~es A. vehicle operated by Ronald
Bloomer, 35, Gallipolis, Davis, 19, Vinton, passed off
tra":ellng sou~h, swerved to the left side. of ·the roadway,
av01d a chall' which had and struck a fence while.
dropped o~to I~ · road~ay traveling south. There was
from an umdentlf1ed vehicle. minor damage to the Davis
EUREKA E.S.P.
The Bloomer auto struck auto .
• Six poaltlon Dial-A-Nap haa
the chli1r, went out of control,
Officers investigated a hitprecise aettlnga for maximum
and colllued With a north skip accident at the parking
power on every·oarpat-i!ven
bound .auto operated by lot at the Skyline Lanes
problem shags
Fredenck Stone. 66 , Pt. Sunday, at 1 a.m.
,
• Powerful 6-amp motor
• All-metal Vlbra-Groomer
Pleasant.
According to the patrol, an
• Wide, bright headlight
The
patrol
reports auto driven by Henry Swick,
• Kil)g-slze top-filling dust bag
moderate damag.e to . both 28, Bidw~ll, was struck by an
· al)d dual Edge Kleener
veh1~les. 'lbe drivers were unidelntified vehicle while
•
8 pi,'!PII .toPI, kit, model·2677,
uninJUred.
.
leaving the parking lot.
optional at additional coat.
Bloomer. was c1ted on
Officers report that the
charges of left of center.
unidentified auto, which was
Saturday, at 6:10p.m., the entering the· parking lot, left
Put yourself on a stead y sa vpatrol mvestigated a two the scene following the
vehicle Cl'asb on SR 7, two- colilsion.
ings diet now, and you 're sure to
tenths of a mile SOUth of SR
There was moderate
have a sweet ltttfe nes t egg for
2·rlng WldinO pool with
681, in Meigs County.
damage to the Swick vehicle.
cute epplet 'n' auntlme ·
th e future ! You 've nothing to
dl&gt;algn , lnc.luc* Mtf·stlck
A~cordmg to
the inStill under investigation Ia
Model 2017
rtpair PttCfl and 2 Nf.,.,.
lose . and high int erest to ga i n'
vest1gatmg officer, an auto a two-auto crash on U.S. 35,
Mtlvetl,n.
HOME FURNISHINGS
dr1ven by George Ratcliff, 22, one·t!ll'lth of a mile west of
Start your savi ngs accou nt soon!
'"
Reeds~llle, started to pass as Mitchell Rd ., Sunday at 2:15
.-DEPt.
a vehicle driven by Craig a.m.
Foley, 23, ' Tuppers Plains,
According to the patrol
1st FLOOR
began a left turn.
· autQs driven by · Jame;
'lbe autos collided. causing Thomas, '1:1, Columbia, S. C.,
mmor dam~ge to both . and Megan Riegel, 19,
Ra~cllff was c1ted on charges Jackson, incurred moderate
of Improper passing _
damage as a result of the
Officers were called to the accident.
·
scene of a mishap on SR S88,
two and five-tenths. of a mile . Before yuu 811 y an)'ll)ore,
.._ ...._ ....._ ..... ...
POMEROY, OHIO
east of U.S. 35, Saturday at U!ll us - how did you find out
anwu&lt;a
· • Member FDIC --"
6:45
p.m.
200 East Main ·
Uwt book was su absolutely
Pomeroy, 0 .
According to the patrol, a filthy'

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

.....

Up-to~date

,~.

history to
he printed

a

VBS unde..Way '

ELBERFELD$ '

ro-·

. wpecks.
14

I

O£.)..___rh__e__w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Robbery attempt prank

Getting your
share of the pie?

,, ,,.,.,

IRATMll POOL

Farmers
Bank

•

'"

POMEROY BEN FRANKUN

l

'In Pomeroy

I

Pom~roy-Middleport, Ohio

·Tuesdav. Aul(ust 1, 1978

No deaths result.· from

tropical storm Amelia
CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas
With the last of the
miulng boats accounted for
and their crews recovering
from Amelia's buffeting, the
tropical storm that alsrmed
the Gulf Coast drizzled away
today in the hUis of central

Texas.
The Coast Guard rep&lt;rted
nodeathsorinjurlesfromlhe
storm that had winds as high
as 70 mph and blew in
suddenly off the Gulf Sunday
afternoon, stranding at least
eight boats to ride out the

waves and await rescue .
What was left of the storm
~ had broken up into light
rainshowers around San
Antonio, Te:us.
"lt'sso weak right now you
can'tevenfindit(on radar)"
a NaUonlil Weather Servi~
spokesman in San Antonio
said today. "The circle is
gone. Right now we're getting
. good rain, and some
thunderstorms.''
'lbe storm 'stayed in the
Gulf long enough &amp;mday
afternoon to pick .UP wind
speed, and then hit the coast
between Brownsville and
Corpus Christi, Texas.
Amelia caught several
fisbing and pleasure boats
before they eould reach
shore.
"This storm sneaked up
and they didn't have a chance

en tine

'.:l!.fteen Cents

Vot. 29, No. 75

:;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

PAIR CHOSEN
Director of tbe All.Oblo
State Fair BIJII. Omar
Blackmlu, IDDOUDCed the
selection of 3Ge bleb school
atudeata who wm perform
In the 19'18 Baad.
The loUowln1 muslclaDI
from Meigs couaty have
been chosen to perform
wlth this prestigious
group:
David Hedrick lives at
38381 Wickham, Pomeroy.
He wiU play the trw!Jpelln r
the AU.Ohlo Slate Fair
Band.
Terri Zlerlde Uves In
Racine. She will play the
baritone horq.

to get ·back," said George
Reichwein of the Coast
Guard's Padre Island station.
'lbe. Coast Guard puUed a
father and hia two sons, one a
paraplegic, from the fishing
boat Frankie E. ih the Gulf 25
mUes east of ·Port Mansfeld,
which had been missing since
Sunday night. The three, ::: :::::::::::::::;::::~ ::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::.:;:::::::.:::;: :::::: ::::.
Clifton R. Fincher, 56, of Fort
Worth, and his sons, John, 31,
of Port Isabel and Victor
Paul, 24, of Fort Worth, were
hoisted .aboard .a helicopter
and were taken to a hospital
in Brownsville.
Clifton and John Fincher
WASIDNGTON (UPI) - Five congressmen, including
were treated and released
Rep. Charles Vanik, O.Ohio, have asked President Carter to
Monday. A spokesman at
place surcharges of up to 15 percent on Japanese imported
Brownsville Medical Center
goods .or set import quotas in order to correct imbalances
said Victor Paul, who was
which "are reaching-a danger point."
paralyzed from the waist·
&amp;lch a surcharge would increase significantly the cost of
Two hooded bandits robbed
down by a motorcycle
imported Japanese goods in the United States. An auto now
the
Kanauga Drive-In
accident
two
years
ago,
was
COBting $5,000 would be increa""~ by $750.
. FOR A NUMBER of years, harness horse racing at the Meigs Coun ty Fair has bt'On a
in fair but stable · condition Theatre Monday night, at 10
family
affalf featurmg the Spencers and the Humphreys. This year, another famil y is
.
today under treatment for p.m.
·getting mto the act, the Sayre family . Brooks Sayre, head of the clan's harness horse racing
Harry Wheeler, owner and
exposure.
a?llVIties, IS preparmg three horses for the racing program . One be longs to him , another tn
LAKEWOOD, Ohio (UPI) - On the whol~, Steven
Three other persons were operator of the theatre,
his brother, Paul Sayre of CoiW)'lbus, and the third to his son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and
Wickham, 24, would rather be back home in West Virginia
found clinging to the inside of stated this morning that,
Mrs
.. M1ke Watzei of Manetta. Brooks, in hi s spare time, assisted by his brother Howard
where lie kno.ws the swimming holes. Wickham was in the
the overturned Lorie Ann_ according to cashier Phyllis
servmg
as the groom, is training five other horses for futu re fairs , Harness horse r~cin g wili
intensive care ward at Lakewood Hoapital, having suffered
Rescue w&lt;rkers used an ax to Rowland, a vehicle pulled
be
held
begmnmg
at4p.m. 0!1 Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of this year's fa ir , Aug. w,
multiple injuries in a jump off an IKI-feet cliff overlooking Lake J
chop through the hull and puU into the drive lane next to the
17 and lB. In the photo above, Brooks Sayre, left, trainer, and his brother Howa rd groom.
Erie.
ticket booth just as the office
out· three men.
ready a trotter, "EI Townson" for a-workout on the track at tile Rock Sprlngs Fai~grounds.
He told pOlice he had been doing some drinking, gone to
Coast Guard spokesman was closing.
"El Townson," a yearling, won 't be racing at the Meigs Fair for another year ' but three
bed at his friend's apartment on the lakeshore and got up at
'lbe cashier reports that
Bob Baeton in New Orleans
other Sayre horses will be involved in this year's racinRprogram.
about 3 a.m. Mmday to take a swim.He ·said he thought he was
said. the three appeared in there were two men in the
back at his swimming hole iii SiBtersville, W. V.a. "where you
good condition despite the auto, one in the front and one
walk to the water's edge and jump in."
overnight ordeal. They were in the rear, both wearing
taken to a hopital as a paper bags over their heads.
'lbe man in the front seat
precaution.
demanded
the evening's
Two
other
persons
rep&lt;rted
CLEVELAND (t)PI) -The Cleveland Board of Education
receipts,
as
the
man in' the
missing
earlier
when
their
has again delayed setting the opening .cJate for the new school
Meig s County Sheriff . The vehi cle, a 1975 Ford . · mcnt was called to e•t ingu ish
hack
seat
held
a
gun
- either
catamaran
was
found
year because of financial and desegregation considerations.
James J. Proffitt reports owned by a Cec il Ramsey. the blaze, bu1 the car d"''
a
rifle
or
a
shotgun
on
beached
between
Port
Isabel
&amp;lperintendent Peter Carlin hss recommended Sept. 5 as
three adults have bee n Uneeda , W. Va ., was fo und on destroyed before fi re fi glltc·r·,
and Port Mansfield also were Rowland.
the starting date for employees and Sept. 6 as the starting date
charged
After
taking
an
undisclosed
with contributing to fire at Sugar Run Road about arr ived_ Sheriff Proffi tt ,
located, Baeton said.
for pupib. Boar,d members said Monday night they first must
of
money,
the
auto
the
delinquency
of minors one-half mile from the lzzac Ju venile Offi cer Ca rl Hysell
amount
"-''"'""" Earlier, a Coast Guard
learn if they can avoid paying unemploYJJK!nt compensation to
and
two
juveniles
with Walton Farm at · 1:10 p.m. · and OSP Trooper Will &gt;am',
swung
around
the
ticket
helicopter
rescued
19
BECKY WINDON
eri)ployees if the opening is delayed but no official opening day
delinquency
following
an Saturday aft ern oon tJy were su,mmoned lu the arl':'
booth,
traveled.
out
the
exit
crewmen from a wobbling
has been set
drive,
and
turned
onto
SR
7
InC
ident
over
the
weekend
in Deputy Rubert Beegle and _to assist in the search for th•
offsbore oil rig, the George R.
the
Chester
area.
Game Protector Andy Lyles. ftwo youths.
headed
down
river
toward
'·
.Farris, located 23 miles north
GaUipolis.
Sheriff Proffitt said the Lyles had been notifi ed by a
of Port 1..""1.
A short time later . t ll'l •
Wheeler said, in an in- incident started out as a motorist th at two 'yo un g youths and two men w cr~
ATHENS (UP!) - Christina unaaais' new husband, Serre!
reckless males had been seen taking found a\ a camp on Shad&lt;'
Kawov, baa agreed to ch•nge his name to Onassls, relatives of
terview this morning, that the complaint of
'tile Greek shipping heiress laid today.
cashier was unable to operation in the Chester area, the battery from the auto . River, a short distance from
Under Soviet law,a husband may take his wife's name and
describe the vehicle involved but it concluded when the ca r They were also seen bea ling the fire sce[le. Witnes:;r s
was finally pushed · over ·the the windshield with a 2 x 4. identified the individuals a:;
chU!k'en maybeartheirmother'smaiden name. The relatives,
in the armed robbery.
embankment
and set· on fire _·
The Chester Fire Depart· those seen in the auto ev d ier
After the thieves had left
who aaked not to be named, said that Kauzov has agreed to
· change·hls name to Onassls, thus malting possible continuation
the scene, Wheeler reports
in the day.
RIO GRANDE - The
of the name made famous by Christina's father, shipping Eastern
that
Rowland
began
Lat er Saturday .evenin g, ''
High 'School
magnate Aristotle Onassls.
screaming for help.
third man was found walkiur~
recipient of the Rio Grande
Hearing her call, Tom
along the township road and
College and Community
Wheeler,
who was worliing at
was also taken into custody
College District Scholarship
the
drive-in,
ran
to
the
box
Being 'held iri the Meig.:
was announced by Dean S.
1'EAST UBERTY, Ohio (UPI) - 'lbirty-three "18- Brown, director of adoffice, assessed the situation,
Co unty Jail are Jake Warner ,
wheelers" will begin to determine "ooce and for all" today if missions and records.
and caUed \he GaUia County
Randy Kirk, and Henry
they can best the U. S. Transportation Department at its
Sheriff's
Department.
Pett
ry , all of Boone Count y.
Becky Windon, daughter of
"Double Nickel &lt;llallenge" around the 7.5 mile oval at the Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Windon,
No further inforination was
West Virginia .
Tra111portation Rel!I!Brch Center.
Eleven-year old Steve damage.
available from Sheriff MontAccording to deta ils pi cc•·d
Pomeroy, becomes the first
'lbe .tractor-traDer drivers from across the United States Eastern
LONDON
(UP!) - British gomery's office this morning. Coleman, Reedsville . wa s
At
II
:45
p.m.,
the
patrol
together
by
Sher iff 's
High
School
listed in fair condition this investigated a two ·a ut o deputies, the suspects had
will be piloting their rigs for 50 miles around the test Jrack at 511 recipient of this newly health officials today warned
morning at St. J oseph 's collision on Buiavii le-Porter brought the autu to Meigs
mUes an hour and for 50 mUes at a higher speed they wiU
consumers not to eat salmoo
cboose. After each run, their fuel consiunption will be created armual schoiarhip. canned in the United States or
Ho spital ; Parkersbur g, Rd_, two-tenths of a mil e west County so that one of them
In making the an·
foUowing
a bicycle-&lt;:ar ac- of Georges Creek Rd .
)ll'~ly measured and their miles'@ determine.
Canada
following
an
could visit a brother.
nouncement, Brown noted
cident Monday.
outbreak
of
botulism
Officers report th ~t an autu
Enroute and after arriving
that class rank, school acThe Galila - Meig&gt; Post, operated by William Frazee, here the adults purchnscd
tivities and community· in· poisoning in which four
Hi ghway Patrol, was ca lled 21, Ga llipoli s, sidesw iped a beer and wine and perm itted
FORT JACKSON, S.C. (UPI)- 'lbe Army today headed volvement were the criteria people feU seriously ill.
to the scene of the mishap on vehicle driven by Mark C. the juveni les to drink it.
Food
stores
began
into the fourth day of closed door hearings to determine used in the selection.
TR 274, one and nine-tenths of Russell , 17, Ga llipolis.
whether two driU inlltructors sbould be court martialed in the
Juvenile Co urt authorities
The selection year old removing Canadian and
a mile south of SR 681, at 2: SO
According to the' patrol. report the juveniles will be
heat stroke deaths of two recruits after their first day of basic · Wiildon graduated fourth in American salmon from their
p.m.
training.
both utos incurred moderate trans ferred to West Virgi ni11 ,
-f.
..J _
her class at Eastern. She was sbelves.
_ Officers report a veh icle dam e. Fraz'ee wsa cited on after their hearing in Mei gs
Four elderly Birmingham J 8
r,Ouay
"We have no indication yet how much longer it will last " a member of the student
residents became ·-· ill late
operated by James Nutter, char cs
of
fi ct iti ous County's Juvenile Comt.
Army. spokesman Bruce Andrae said Monday.
_'
council, basketball and track
Monday night after eating a
34
,
Reedsville
,
was
wes
t
regi
ra
tion.
'lllere
were ·no
In other department action,
teams.and marching, concert
Deputy Sheriffs Robert bound when it went out of in ' ries .
can of "John West" brand red
deputi
es investigated . th ree
and pep bands at the school A salmon and were rusbed to Hartenbach and Robert
control
.
striking
the
bicycle
fl
eers
report
ed
that
at
accidents
Monday .
&amp;
member of the Chester
hospital
in
critical Meade late this morning were ridden by Coleman.
'
10:10
a.m
..
on
SR
7,
at
CH
26,
The.
first
accident
occurred
condition.
at the scene of a fatal fall of a
KILL DEVIL HILLS, N.C. (UPI)- A waterspout whirled United j'vfethodist Church,
Coleman displayed visible an auto driven by Hershel D at I :30 p.m. on SR 248 in Olive
Aspokesman for John West young woman patient from signs of injury, and was Norris, 52, Hacine. flipped a Townshi p. Nor bert p _ Neutz·
out of the Atlantic into this Outer Banks resort Monday,ldlling Windon's other interests
an elderly woman and damaging or destroying several include playing the piano and Foods, a popular brand in the top floor of Holzer transported to St. Joseph 's stone, which struck and broke ling, Jr ., who was traveling
organ. She has been an active
buildln(ls.
Britain, said ~s many as Medical Center.
. where he was admitted for the windshield of a vehicle east, sa id he fell asleep and
member of the 4·H for eight
14,000 cans of the salmon
The official statement from treatment.
. Three other persons suffered minor injuries in the years_
operated by Francis Tay lnr. his vehi cle ran off left side of
from the same consignment Holzer Medical Center ;.as
seaborne tornado, 'which hit land Just south of the spot where
A
hospital
spokesman
said
34, New Ha ven.
f Ct 11111 n ll t' rl ~m p~1 F:C IJ )
The scholarship Windon
as the contaminated can may released at 10 :30 a.m.:
the Wright Brothers made man's first powered flight. The
this
morning
the
youth
had
be on the market. The suspect
At 9:23 a.m. today Sharon been treated for a fractured
dead woman was identified as Alice Henrietta Dean Tillett 74 received is one of twelve full
tuition
scholarships
.
t
o
be
can
bore
the
words
"produce
Lynn
Long, 22, of Henderson, leg, and he is in fair cona resident of one of two cottages destroyed by the watersPot:
awarded to one student from
of Canada" and was Supplied W. Va., died of injuries dition . '
each of the high schools in
by an American cannery_
resulting from a fall 40
Nutter was cited on
Jackson, Meigs, GaUia and
Health ·authorities warned minutes before at Holzer charges of failure to yield
LAKE CITY, F!a. (UPI) - Theodore Bundy, already Vinton Counties. ReCipients
housewives to check the Medical Center, where she hail the roadway.
charged with slaying two Florida State University coeds was of the award are selected by a
&lt;rigin of any salmon they had been a patient since July
Officers were called to the
charged Mooday with the kidnap.murder of 11-yea'r-old . committee comprised of the
may have in their hm~es 28.
·
scene of a three-vehicle
·Kimberly Diane Leach.
high. school principal,
before conswning it. Salmon According to a hospital accident on U.S. 35, threeClrrult Judge WaUace Jopling, who had ordered the Leach guidance counselor, senior
imported from Japan or the spokesman, she and her tenths of a mile west of CR 57,
Indictment sealed when it was returned by the Columbia English and government
U_S,RR. was ~msidered safe, husband, Richard A. Long, at 2:06p.m.
County grand jury July 20, ordered it unsealed Monday. Local teachers and a represenbut health officials · said if a~pa rently had been visiting
According to the patrol,
auth&lt;rltlea Immediately filed a detainer for Bundy, who is tative of Rio Grande College
consumers were in doubt they with another patient on the motor vehicles operated by
being held In the Leon County Jau at Tallahassee.
and Community College.
should not eat any salmon. fifth floor of the hospital.
Michael D. Bane , 1~.
'lbe four illnesses are the She left · her husband Gallipolis, Cietus T. Harder,
first cases or' botulism l_l'IOm,entarUy supposedly to 16, Rutland , and Shirley
)Vi]]
reported in Britain in 23 return to her room to get an Spowers, 38, Bidwell, were
1
UNITED NATIONS (Ui&gt;l) -South Africa says It agrees
years.
ash tray. He heard a noise east bound on 35.
' with the United Natims that Namibia should be free, but
'lbe toxin, which can kill In and when he went to in·
The Bane auto stopped to
bellevel the West violated the "letter and spirit" of the plan by
24 hours, is produced by an vestigate saw the windnw tum left into a private drive.
I
Herman London, manager
bringiN the Walvis Bay Issue to the Security Council.
organism usually killed open and notified hospital The Warder vehicle was
"In 11pite of our rnlaclvlnp," Foreign Minister Boel of of the Syracuse swimming
during normal canning personnel.
unable to stop, and struck the
pool, has aMounced swim·
Both&amp; aald Monday, South Africa will welcome the next step
procedures.
No one was in Mrs. Long's .Bane auto in the rear. The
the Wellem plan - a villi to Namibia by U. N. speclsl ming lessons wlU be held at
room at the time.
Harder vehicle then went off
repr eniative Martti Ahtissaari. But Botha hedged South the pool from Aug. 7 through
'lbe GaUia County sberiff's the right side of the roadway.
Aug. 17.
Africa'• support.
department was sununoned
Swerving to avoid the
Lessons will be offered for
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
by management personnel at collision, the Spowers auto
beginner~.
advanced
Meigs County vliiages Holzer Medical Center.
passed off the right side of the
·beginners, intermediates, received ~ .375 as their share
g
road, and struck the Harder
basi~ water and rescue and of the July gasoline exdse
'
vehicle.
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The FBI II Investigating deaih advanced
Wesavina.
. taxes distrib,uted by the office
·
Officers report that Bane
HERE TONIGHT - George and Charlotte Dixon
lhrelltl Jllllde Mmday to three Marine Corpa sergeants who
H~rman London said there of State Auditor Thomas E.
claimed
Injury,
but
was
not
Nazarene
evangelists, .":ill be at the Rutland Church of th~
gave IIWOI'II utementa to congreulmal 'investigators are openings for at least 10 Ferguson_ Amounts received
Fair tonight, lows between
~azarene for one. exc1t1~g ~eeting Tuesday, Ang. 1, •t
Cllllcel'lllna wlclelpread fraudulent recruiting practices in more children in the begin- by each village Include : 60 and 65. Partly cloudy, inunediately treated.
7·.30 p.m · They Will. be smgJng original songs and Dixon
northern Ohio.
.
·
Harder_and Spowers were
ners group at the present Middleport, $2,153; Pomeroy, warmer Wednesday, highs in
cited
on
charges
of
assured
W~l pl~y the electriC Hawaiian guitar , The Dix ons ha vr
Bel DanaJd J. Robinette, a aeveland recruiter with an time. Interested persons may U ,324; Racine, $604 ; ' mid or upper 80s. Probability
tWice VISited the Holy Land , and plan on returning iQ 19'19
.WIIIIted telephone number, reported receiving one such sign'llp at the pool from I to 8 Rutland, $540, and Syracuse, of precipitation 20 percent clear distance. ·
According to the patrol, all
lhrelltlnlnc c:aU.
Pictures of the Holy Land will be sbown during thi~
p.m. each day.
through Wednesday.
fiM. I
serv1ce. 'lbe public is invited.
·
vehicles incurred moderate
I
(UP!) -

i.)..__r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_r_
Rep. Vanik wants surcharges

Theatre
cashier
robbed

Longs for .Mowuain state

5 charged by deputies

BOard delays setting date

·
HS
.
E astern
..,..recipient
is named Salmon

..

Husband will change name

•

33 truckers competing

warnmg

•
Bicyclist m

issued

fair condition

Woman, 22,

l!earing enters fourth day

killed in
ll ._

Watersp(&gt;ut causes death

-

Another charge expected

South Africa al8o agrees

Lessons
begin Aug. 7

tn

Death threats investigated

.

Weather

•

•

,,

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